Doing right on Executive Pay – the Warren Buffett Way

index trackersWarren Buffett has always argued that Remuneration Committee members should be like fierce dobermans instead of tail-wagging cocker spaniels. He lives his views. In the latest Berkshire Hathaway annual report Buffett confirmed his own salary at $100 000 a year – but this time issued a warning to his unnamed successor that he or she, too, shouldn’t be looking for a big income. It’s part of The Oracle of Omaha’s way of kicking back against the self-perpetuating culture of greed that seems to permeate corporations worldwide. – AH    
By Doni Bloomfield and Noah Buhayar

(Bloomberg) — Warren Buffett, the second-richest man in the U.S., has a message for the person who eventually replaces him as chief executive officer of Berkshire Hathaway Inc.: You’ll be plenty wealthy, so don’t complain about pay.

Buffett, 84, stuck with a $100,000 salary in 2014, as he has for decades, his Omaha, Nebraska-based company said in a regulatory filing Friday. On Feb. 28, in his annual letter, he said the next CEO needs to avoid being greedy.

“He can’t help but earn money far in excess of any possible need for it,” wrote Buffett, who is also chairman. “But it’s important that neither ego nor avarice motivate him to reach for pay matching his most lavishly compensated peers, even if his achievements far exceed theirs.”

In a longer-than-usual letter to shareholders celebrating his fiftieth year managing the company, Buffett explained what he expects of the next generation of leadership. He cited benefits of running a decentralized conglomerate and cautioned against diluting shareholders by using stock to fund takeovers.

His son Howard Buffett, as non-executive chairman, will be able to deal with an underperforming CEO, the billionaire wrote. Warren Buffett also contrasted the risks of arrogance, bureaucracy and complacency with the benefits of sending a company-first message.

“A CEO’s behavior has a huge impact on managers down the line,” Buffett wrote. “If it’s clear to them that shareholders’ interests are paramount to him, they will, with few exceptions, also embrace that way of thinking.”

Buffett’s Fortune

Buffett’s wealth, mostly in his company’s stock, is valued at more than $70 billion, second in the U.S. to Microsoft Corp. co-founder Bill Gates, who is a director at Berkshire. While Buffett’s security expenses are covered by Berkshire, he reimburses the firm for costs such as telephone calls or postage stamps for personal use, according to the filing.

“No one can replicate Warren Buffett, you can’t find someone to be him,” Gary Goldstein, head of executive-search firm Whitney Partners, said in an interview before Berkshire filed its proxy statement. “What you need to do is find someone who carries the same values and principles and philosophy to investing.”

Buffett has long said that the next CEO should have a more generous pay package. That includes stock options, which he has shunned, Buffett told Fortune magazine in 2014.

Paying Executives

The billionaire has also shown a willingness to provide Wall Street-sized compensation to reward growth at operating units such as insurers and the utility subsidiary. Greg Abel, the chairman and CEO of Berkshire Hathaway Energy, was paid $27.6 million in 2014, including an $11.5 million cash bonus and $12 million from an non-equity incentive plan. Abel also owns about 1 percent of the unit.

Goldstein said Buffett expects top managers to be motivated by the generation of performance-linked wealth, rather than their base pay. The billionaire has collected a $100,000 salary for more than a quarter century, as has Vice Chairman Charles Munger, 91.

“The compensation questions for the board are really not too important today,” Susan Decker, a director at the company, said in December at an event at Stanford University in California. “They could be important in the future, because it’s unlikely the next CEO at Berkshire is going to have the same arrangement that Warren and Charlie do.”

Chief Financial Officer Marc Hamburg, the only executive whose pay is listed in the proxy other than Buffett or Munger, saw his salary rise about 9 percent to $1.23 million in 2014. He also received a $500,000 bonus “in recognition of work performed in connection with a business acquisition.”

Buffett told Fortune magazine last year that Hamburg was heavily involved with negotiating Berkshire’s purchase of Van Tuyl Group, a collection of auto dealerships.

“I like the Van Tuyl people enormously,” Buffett told the publication. “But if I had had to deal with the contract’s complications, I probably wouldn’t have lasted it out.”

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