Apr 26, 2012 03:16 PM EDT
GM CEO Earned $7.7 Million in Cash, Stock in 2011

General Motors Co  Chief Executive Dan Akerson earned $7.7 million in cash and stock in 2011, the year the automaker reclaimed its global sales crown and boosted its annual profit by 62 percent, GM said in a proxy filing on Thursday.

During his first full year as CEO, Akerson earned a $1.7 million salary, GM said in a proxy filed with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission.

The rest of his compensation, nearly $6 million, came in the form of salaried and restricted stock units. In 2010, Akerson earned about $2.5 million in cash and stock.

Last year, GM sold more vehicles than any other automaker in the world and reached a labor agreement with the United Auto Workers union that helped maintain its lower break-even level.

Still, GM's shares fell 45 percent last year, while the broader S&P 500 index was unchanged. Among investors' concerns was GM's troubled Opel unit in Europe, where GM lost $747 million last year. GM was also hurt by weakness in South America.

"Although, by objective measures, our 2011 results were an improvement over 2010, they did not compare favorably to some of our key competitors," GM said in the proxy. "This was reflected, in part, in the price of our common stock."

The drop in GM's stock price hurt the value of Akerson's stock-based compensation. Akerson's could have earned up to $9 million in cash and stock awards, according to the proxy.

Compensation of GM executives is governed by a special pay master from the federal government as part of provisions put in place after GM's U.S.-funded bankruptcy restructuring in 2009.

Before GM went public in 2010, the U.S. Treasury had a majority stake in GM. Now the U.S. Treasury owns 32 percent of GM's common shares outstanding.

Chief Financial Officer Dan Ammann earned $3.5 million last year, $2.8 million of which came in the form of stock awards.

Steve Girsky, the GM executive charged with overhauling Opel, received $5.3 million in compensation, with about $4.7 million coming from stock awards.

Last year, Ford Motor Co's  top executive, Alan Mulally, earned nearly $30 million in cash, bonuses and stock options. Sergio Marchionne, head of Chrysler Group LLC , declined a salary and a bonus for 2011.

But Marchionne was paid 14.5 million euros ($19.2 million) by Italian automaker Fiat SpA, the majority owner of Chrysler.

See Now: OnePlus 6: How Different Will It Be From OnePlus 5?

 PREVIOUS POST
NEXT POST 

EDITOR'S PICK    

Hyundai to Invest $16.1 Billion for EV Business; Sets Annual Sales Goal of 1.87M Electric Cars by 2030

World's Most Expensive and Most Heavily-optioned Porsche 928 GTS is Coming Home to the U.S.

Major Boost as Tesla Giga Berlin Facility in Final Phase of Approval Process; Delivery Event Set This Month

Audi Looking for e-tron Electric Vehicles to Spur Car Brand's Growth in India in 2022

Toyota Offers Free EV Charging to Owners of 2023 bZ4X After Partnership Agreement with EVgo

2022 Suzuki Baleno Finally Unveiled in India: What are the Specs and Features of this City Car?