Our View On Emerald Resources' (ASX:EMR) CEO Pay

In This Article:

Morgan Hart has been the CEO of Emerald Resources NL (ASX:EMR) since 2014, and this article will examine the executive's compensation with respect to the overall performance of the company. This analysis will also look to assess whether the CEO is appropriately paid, considering recent earnings growth and investor returns for Emerald Resources.

See our latest analysis for Emerald Resources

Comparing Emerald Resources NL's CEO Compensation With the industry

At the time of writing, our data shows that Emerald Resources NL has a market capitalization of AU$327m, and reported total annual CEO compensation of AU$323k for the year to June 2020. That's a notable increase of 95% on last year. Notably, the salary which is AU$295.0k, represents most of the total compensation being paid.

On comparing similar companies from the same industry with market caps ranging from AU$138m to AU$550m, we found that the median CEO total compensation was AU$659k. In other words, Emerald Resources pays its CEO lower than the industry median. Moreover, Morgan Hart also holds AU$25m worth of Emerald Resources stock directly under their own name, which reveals to us that they have a significant personal stake in the company.

Component

2020

2019

Proportion (2020)

Salary

AU$295k

AU$151k

91%

Other

AU$28k

AU$14k

9%

Total Compensation

AU$323k

AU$165k

100%

Talking in terms of the industry, salary represented approximately 70% of total compensation out of all the companies we analyzed, while other remuneration made up 30% of the pie. Emerald Resources pays out 91% of remuneration in the form of a salary, significantly higher than the industry average. If salary dominates total compensation, it suggests that CEO compensation is leaning less towards the variable component, which is usually linked with performance.

ceo-compensation
ASX:EMR CEO Compensation November 9th 2020

Emerald Resources NL's Growth

Over the past three years, Emerald Resources NL has seen its earnings per share (EPS) grow by 30% per year. It saw its revenue drop 3.8% over the last year.

This demonstrates that the company has been improving recently and is good news for the shareholders. It's always a tough situation when revenues are not growing, but ultimately profits are more important. We don't have analyst forecasts, but you could get a better understanding of its growth by checking out this more detailed historical graph of earnings, revenue and cash flow.

Has Emerald Resources NL Been A Good Investment?

Emerald Resources NL has generated a total shareholder return of 32% over three years, so most shareholders would be reasonably content. But they probably don't want to see the CEO paid more than is normal for companies around the same size.