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Top Ten Highest Paid CEOs: What Would You Do?

by Flexo on August 17, 2009. Filed under Career and Work.

Are you on this list? Chances are the following list of the highest paid CEOs does not include you, Don’t feel bad; I am not included either. In 2008, these ten individuals accounted for $2.2 billion in compensation in aggregate.

Whether or not CEOs deserve compensation at levels 17,000 times higher than the average worker in the United States or 50,000 times higher than the average worker across the globe is still up for discussion, particularly if compensation is not based on results. But for whatever reason, here are the amounts of total compensation for the ten highest paid CEOs of American companies.

  1. Stephen Schwarzman, Blackstone Group: $702,440,573
  2. Lawrence Ellison, Oracle Corp.: $556,976,600
  3. Ray Irani, Occidental Petroleum Corp.: $222,639,705
  4. John Hess, Hess Corp.: $159,566,940
  5. Michael Watford, Ultra Petroleum Corp.: $116,929,392
  6. Aubrey McClendon, Chesapeake Energy Corp.: $114,286,867
  7. Bob Simpson, XTO Energy Inc.: $103,485,972
  8. Mark Papa, EOG Resources, Inc.: $90,471,784
  9. Eugene Isenberg, Nabors Industries Ltd.: $79,333,079
  10. Michael Jeffries, Abercrombie & Fitch Co.: $71,795,744

According to the report from The Corporate Library, the organization that reported these figures, Schwarzman’s compensation amount includes the vestment of equity shares in the company he was granted when taking the company public. Only twenty-five percent of his total grant vested in 2007, and another twenty-five percent will vest each year until complete. That will keep him on top of the list for a few more years.

What would you do with $702 million — let’s say $350 million after tax? That would leave me with more than enough to start a foundation with an endowment and still have some left over to invest conservatively and provide myself a nice income for the rest of my life.

The top 10 highest paid CEOs are…, David Goldman, CNN Money, August 14, 2009.

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Flexo, the owner and creator of Consumerism Commentary, has been blogging and writing for the internet since 1995 and has been building online communities since 1991. Find out more about him and follow him on Twitter.

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{ 7 comments… read them below or add one }

1 Candide August 17, 2009 at 12:04 pm

Correction: it’s $702 million, not billion.

Schwartzman made a promise to donate $100 million to the NY Public Library a year or so ago. Let’s see him up that.

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2 cherryblossom August 17, 2009 at 2:07 pm

So seven out of ten are in the energy sector. Makes ya think.

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3 KC August 17, 2009 at 10:36 pm

I’m in the wrong business.

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4 Flexo August 18, 2009 at 2:12 am

Yes — same here.

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5 Writer's Coin August 18, 2009 at 7:44 am

It’s funny because I’ve thought of this a million times and whenever I break it down and say, “I”ll invest half in a conservative series of index funds,” it hits me. Will I really invest hundreds of millions of dollars in index funds? It’s scary. Yet I have no problem investing all/most of my Roth IRA money (which is nowhere near that amount, obviously) in those funds.

I guess I feel like, if I had that much money, I wouldn’t “risk” it like that. I’d probably commit a cardinal sin and stash it in my house somewhere.

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6 Candide August 18, 2009 at 1:58 pm

I work with a client who’s worth well in excess of $100 million. He uses short term T-bills and notes.

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7 Jim August 18, 2009 at 4:49 pm

Yahoo finance shows the compensation of top executives. They have figures as of Dec 2008. Ellison’s base bay is about $11M. He exercised over $540M in stock options. Irani at Occidental had base salary of just under $5M and exercised about $185M in stock.

I bet that most of that compensation for those executives was in the form of cashed in stock incentives.

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