Summary:
In 2009
WN Made Money (+$99 million)
US Lost Money (
-$205 million)
WN paid its CEO $1.6 million
US paid its CEO $2.6 million
WN employed 35,000
US employed 32,000
(http://www.dallasnews.com/business/headlines/20100223-Nearly-a-quarter-of-U-S-896.ece)
http://travel-industry.uptake.com/blog/2010/05/04/airline-ceo-compensation/
Airline CEO Compensation Roundup
May 04, 2010 2:21 - By: P. Ling
As an industry, the CEOs of the top 10 publicly listed airlines in the US took home a combined $34.1 million in 2009, while all ten companies put together showed up a combined loss of $3.3 billion.
But some of them are admittedly doing a lot better than the airline industry as a whole. Also, the 2009 figures are a whole lot better than 2008.
In 2008, this same bunch took home nearly $40 million while leaving their airlines reeling under a stunning $19.5 billion loss.
To assign or absolve each of these CEOs from blame, we’ll have to list CEO compensation individually, followed by a brief assessment of each airline’s financial performance.
2009 Airline CEO Compensation (AP data):-
1. Richard H. Anderson, Delta Air Lines – $8.4 million
2. Gerard J. Arpey, American Airlines – $4.7 million
3. William S. Ayer, Alaska Airlines – $4.3 million
4. Glenn F. Tilton, United Airlines – $3.9 million
5. Lawrence W. Kellner – former CEO, Continental Airlines – $3.3 million
(Jeffery A. Smisek – current CEO, Continental Airlines – $0.0)
6.
Douglas Parker, US Airways – $2.6 million
7. Robert L. Fornaro, Airtran Airways – $2.0 million
8. Mark B. Dunkerley, Hawaiian Airlines – $1.8 million
9.
Gary C. Kelly, Southwest Airlines – $1.6 million
10. David Barger, Jetblue Airways – $1.5 million
Now let’s take a look at which of these CEOs actually earned their pay.
1. Southwest Airlines Co. (NYSE:LUV)
Net income: $99m
CEO compensation: $1.6m
Even though Southwest’s net income dropped from $178m in 2008 to $99m in 2009, Southwest came through the recession in better shape than most other airlines, maintaining a 37 year unbroken record of annual profitability. Widely accepted view that CEO Gary Kelly deserved his $1.6m compensation.
...
7. US Airways Group, Inc. (NYSE:LCC)
Net income: -$205m (loss)
CEO compensation: $2.6m
US Airways came a cropper in 2008 with a loss of $2.2b, followed by a loss of $205m in 2009. However, unlike United, US Airways CEO Doug Parker’s compensation did not rise. It actually dropped 31%, from $3.7m in 2008 to $2.6m in 2009.
US Airways did not award bonuses based on financial performance, but only as incentives for achieving specific goals, such as improvements in customer service and baggage handling. Shareholders won’t be happy with US Airways’ financial performance, but Doug Parker won’t be taking too much heat for his pay package.
...
In summary, if you’re looking for overall trends from all these numbers, take a look at the chart below.
It looks like the legacy carriers and discount airlines are marching to two different drummers.
Comparison chart - Airline CEO compensation vs. Airline Earnings
In the case of the
legacy carriers - the bigger the company, the bigger is the compensation for the CEO. They’re more concerned with stock price than actual earnings. But in this case, the biggest companies also happen to be the biggest loss-makers, so ironically enough –
a bigger loss corresponds to a bigger CEO compensation package.
In the case of the
discount airlines, bigger profits correspond to bigger CEO compensation – regardless of the size of the airline.
Read more: http://travel-industry.uptake.com/blog/2010/05/04/airline-ceo-compensation/#ixzz1XKQ79MXn