Median pay for CFOs at large U.S. companies jumped 5.2 percent last year, to
$2.9 million, finds a study released Thursday, May 29.
More than half the overall CFO compensation consisted of equity awards, which
rose 8.2 percent to a median of $1.5 million in 2007, according to the study of
313 companies by Equilar, an executive compensation research firm. Base salaries
grew 9.1 percent to $525,000.
The percentage increases topped those for chief executives, whose median pay
rose 1.3 percent to $8.8 million last year, according to an April study by the
Redwood Shores, California, firm.
“The rising pay may indicate increasing visibility and risk for CFOs,”
Equilar research manager Alexander Cwirko-Godycki said in an interview. “And the
growing stock compensation may be an attempt to lock up CFOs for the long term
as the job gets tougher.”
He cited the growing demands placed on CFOs by Sarbanes-Oxley, including the
increasing risk created by the law’s requirement that finance chiefs certify
company financial statements.
The study also found that while salaries, stock and options rose, the median
CFO bonus fell 3.4 percent to $576,880. The bonuses consisted of discretionary
bonuses and annual and long-term cash bonuses.
Equilar’s study focused on executives who had been in place for at least two
years, to avoid those who may have gotten big pay increases with their
promotions or bonuses for joining a new company, Cwirko-Godycki said. (The
various forms of compensation do not add up to the total in part because of the
quirks of using median values.)
The study also found that accumulated pension benefits for CFOs soared 18
percent last year, to a median value of $1.1 million. Deferred compensation in
the form of pension plans jumped 21 percent to $779,388.
Filed by Neil Roland of Financial Week, a sister publication of Workforce
Management. To comment, e-mail editors@workforce.com.