The
struggling Internet company disclosed the details of Thompson's
compensation in a regulatory filing late Friday. Thompson starts his new
job Monday after spending the past four years running eBay Inc.'s PayPal service, where revenue more than doubled during his tenure. PayPal took in an estimated $4.4 billion last year.
That
kind of robust growth is a fuzzy memory for Yahoo Inc., a one-time
Internet star whose revenue has sagged as online advertising flowed
increasingly to rivals Google Inc. and Facebook.
Yahoo
has promised better times under three new CEOs in less than five years,
only to frustrate investors each time. They've been especially
disenchanted since the company squandered an opportunity to sell itself
to Microsoft Corp.
for $47.5 billion, or $33 per share, in May 2008. The stock hasn't
traded above $20 in more than three years, with the shares closing
Friday at $15.52. The last time it closed above $33 was 2006.
Yahoo offered Thompson a deal that includes a $1 million salary and a bonus of up to $2 million this year. Yahoo is guaranteeing to pay him $1 million of the bonus; the remaining $1 million will hinge on Yahoo's financial results this year.
Thompson also will receive stock incentives valued at $22.5 million. The stock awards could be worth more or less, depending how Yahoo's long-slumping shares fare under Thompson's leadership.
To
top it off, Yahoo is paying Thompson $1.5 million to offset money he
forfeited by leaving PayPal. A $6.5 million chunk of the stock awards
are also meant to offset some of the compensation Thompson would have
gotten at PayPal, according to the filing.
Thompson received a $10.4 million compensation package at PayPal in 2010. It included a $645,000 salary. EBay hasn't yet revealed how much it paid Thompson last year.
Unless more money and stock is added later in the year, Yahoo won't be paying Thompson as much as his predecessor, Carol Bartz,
who was hired three years ago and fired four months ago. Tim Morse,
Yahoo's chief financial officer, had been running Yahoo since Bartz's
ouster.
Bartz's compensation
package during her first year on the job was valued at $47.2 million.
Much of that, though, included stock incentives that haven't become as
valuable as the original calculations envisioned because the company's
shares remained in a funk during Bartz's regime. Bartz's salary was $1
million, like Thompson's.
Now
that Yahoo has a new CEO, it may be looking to replace some of the
directors on its 10-member board to placate unhappy shareholders. The
company, which is based in Sunnyvale, Calif., has hired the executive
search firm Heidrick & Struggles International Inc.
to hunt for possible replacements, according to a story published
Friday on The Wall Street Journal's website. The story quoted unnamed
people familiar with the matter.
The Journal's story didn't identify which Yahoo board members might be replaced.
The board approved Thompson's hiring and pay package. He is also joining the board.
By MICHAEL LIEDTKE | news.yahoo.com
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