When it comes to "Say on Pay," Target Corp. shareholders say they increasingly don't like the way the company doles out cash and stock to its executives.
Despite Target's healthy stock price, investors last week approved the retailer's executive compensation policies with just 52.1 percent of the vote, a stunning rebuke to a company that Wall Street has long regarded as one of the best-run in the country.
"I'm pretty surprised," said Glenn Johnson, a portfolio manager with St. Paul-based Mairs & Power Inc., which owns about 2.95 million shares of Target stock. "Shareholders have been pretty happy with what's going on over there. I wouldn't have expected [the vote] to be that low."
Say on Pay votes are nonbinding, but they reflect shareholder sentiment. By the standards of good corporate governance, anything less than a 70 percent "yes" vote is the equivalent of a "no," experts say. That makes Target's recent vote all the more striking because 83 percent of shareholders voted yes in 2012, a reduction of 31 percentage points in just 12 months.
"At Target, we have a long-standing commitment to strong corporate governance and take the feedback we receive from shareholders very seriously," James Johnson, a director who chairs the board's compensation committee, said in a recent statement. "We appreciate the thoughtful and constructive discussions we have with our shareholders on an ongoing basis. The board of directors will carefully consider next steps and will work with management to evolve strategies and practices with the best interests of shareholders in mind."
But the company said similar things after the 2012 vote. The board subsequently decided to eliminate the "discretionary bonus" it pays out to CEO Gregg Steinhafel and replace it with a longer-term incentive bonus. But Target's board clearly has a lot more work to do, said Hillary Sale, a professor of corporate law at Washington University in St. Louis.
"Target definitely needs more outreach" to investors, Sale said. "In any company when the vote on pay is so low, there's a perception that there is a disconnect between pay and performance. Shareholders need a better explanation of what Target's executive compensation means."
From a performance standpoint, Target looks pretty good. For 2012, Target stock delivered nearly a 22 percent return to investors, a key reason that Steinhafel earned about $23.5 million last year, including $2.8 million in non-equity incentive pay.