Tesla's Musk is not the only CEO testing new compensation limits

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It’s not just Tesla (TSLA) and Elon Musk: Other companies are also pushing pay packages higher.

Tesla stockholders will have a chance on June 13 to bless a $56 billion compensation deal Musk received in 2018 that was nullified by a Delaware judge earlier this year.

While Musk’s pay would be the biggest in US corporate history, he is not the only head of a company testing new compensation limits.

Median total CEO compensation rose 11.4% in fiscal 2023 to $23.7 million, according to an Equilar analysis of firms with with revenues greater than $1 billion. That followed a 7.7% boost in 2022.

The number of CEOs in the S&P 500 who nabbed total pay packages worth more than $50 million has also jumped in recent years, according to a recent analysis from the Wall Street Journal.

FILE PHOTO: Tesla CEO Elon Musk attends the AI Safety Summit at Bletchley Park in Bletchley, Britain on November 1, 2023.  Leon Neal/Pool via REUTERS/File Photo
Tesla CEO Elon Musk. (Leon Neal/Pool via REUTERS/File Photo) · via REUTERS / Reuters

The highest paid in 2023 was Broadcom (AVGO) boss Hock Tan, who made $162 million, predominantly from performance-based stock options exercised during the year.

The next highest was Palo Alto Networks (PANW) CEO Nikesh Arora, who took in $151 million in pay and exercised $266.4 million in performance-based stock options.

Pay for the top boss is rising at smaller companies too.

Median CEO compensation levels at Russell 3000 companies with revenue less than $50 million increased 19.3% between 2018 and 2022, according to a separate analysis conducted by data provider Gallagher.

That was a bigger leap than CEO pay at larger firms during that period. Those with annual revenue exceeding $20 billion had awards increase by 2.4%.

Not all CEOs have found shareholders receptive to these increases. Last week, 3M shareholders voted against $16.4 million in compensation for its former CEO Mike Roman, as well as other company executives.

A 'wild outlier'

Whether the outsized award to Musk in 2018 helped influence all of these increases is debatable.

Greg Varallo, a lawyer for the Tesla shareholders who successfully sued the company to undo Musk's pay package, called Musk's deal a "wild outlier" that "drags the average up materially."

"What we saw immediately after the Musk deal became final was a very rapid acceleration in the amount of pay packages," Varallo said. "It single-handedly skewed the compensation data."

James Reda, managing director for Gallagher’s executive compensation consulting practice, said "it skewed the average data a little bit," but "it wasn't like football, where someone got $25 million and someone making $15 million said, 'I want that money.'"

Companies were less influenced by Musk's pay deal, Reda said, because its structure was so unusual.