This post comes to us from John J. Cannon, a partner in the Executive Compensation and Employee Benefits Group Shearman & Sterling LLP, and is based on a Shearman & Sterling Client Memorandum by Mr. Cannon, Linda E. Rappaport, Jeffrey P. Crandall, Kenneth J. Laverriere and Doreen E. Lilienfeld. Previous posts about the SEC’s say-on-pay regulations can be found here.
On October 18, 2010, the Securities and Exchange Commission issued proposed rules implementing the say-on-pay provisions of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act. [1] Section 951 of the Reform Act requires (1) a non-binding shareholder vote on executive compensation, (2) a non-binding vote on the frequency of the say-on-pay vote, (3) disclosure of “golden parachute” arrangements in connection with specified change in control transactions, and (4) a non-binding shareholder vote on golden parachute arrangements in connection with these change in control transactions.
The proposed rules clear up many issues on say-on-pay left unanswered by the Reform Act and expand issuer disclosure obligations in ways not required by the Act.