Financial Statements and Management Report - Thyssenkrupp
Financial Statements and Management Report - Thyssenkrupp
Financial Statements and Management Report - Thyssenkrupp
You also want an ePaper? Increase the reach of your titles
YUMPU automatically turns print PDFs into web optimized ePapers that Google loves.
1.7 <strong>Management</strong> report Legal informations<br />
decreases by 10%. More information on TKVA is provided in the section “Value-based management”. At the<br />
end of the performance period the granted stock rights are paid out on the basis of ThyssenKrupp’s average<br />
share price in the first three months after the end of the performance period. Payments under the LTI plan<br />
are limited to €1.5 million for an ordinary Executive Board member.<br />
Additional bonus<br />
This system of performance bonus <strong>and</strong> LTI is appropriate but requires supplementation under certain<br />
constellations. For example, due to the high negative TKVA in fiscal year 2008/2009 <strong>and</strong> despite substantial<br />
increases in the 2009/2010 <strong>and</strong> 2010/2011 fiscal years there will be no payments under the previous MTI<br />
plan for the reporting period – just as there were none for the last two fiscal years – owing to the plan’s longterm<br />
focus. In difficult economic years, which dem<strong>and</strong> particular efforts of the Executive Board, the work of<br />
the Executive Board should not be rewarded only with the fixed compensation, as was the case in<br />
2008/2009. In view of the tasks facing the Executive Board <strong>and</strong> its particular responsibility this would impair<br />
the competitiveness of our executive remuneration. It must also be considered that high financial discipline<br />
is essential in critical times. For this reason a performance-based compensation element based on a cash<br />
flow-related indicator has been established for a certain period. This indicator is the ratio of funds from<br />
operations to total debt (FFO/TD), which makes it possible to balance out fluctuations in EBT, net working<br />
capital <strong>and</strong> capital expenditures. The achievement of set targets by the Executive Board is to be rewarded<br />
with an additional bonus. The additional bonus is based 50% on the year-end values <strong>and</strong> 50% on the<br />
annual average values of FFO/TD; with a year-end value of 18.2% <strong>and</strong> an annual average value of 17.2%<br />
the additional bonus amounts to €350,000; it changes by €50,000 for each 1.1% change in the year-end<br />
value <strong>and</strong> 0.8% change in the annual average value. To ensure the sustainability <strong>and</strong> multi-year assessment<br />
basis required by the VorstAG particularly in the ratio between short-term <strong>and</strong> long-term compensation, 55%<br />
of the additional bonus is converted into ThyssenKrupp stock rights <strong>and</strong> paid out after a three-year lock-up<br />
period (as with the performance bonus). Whether this additional bonus is granted again, <strong>and</strong> if so at what<br />
level, will be decided each year.<br />
Pensions<br />
Pensions are paid to former Executive Board members who have either reached pension age or become<br />
permanently incapacitated for work. Under the amended contract provisions now applied, pensions<br />
(“transitional allowances”) are no longer paid upon premature termination or non-renewal of employment<br />
contracts.<br />
The pension of an Executive Board member already in office is a percentage of the final fixed salary they<br />
received before their employment contract ended. This percentage increases with the duration of the<br />
Executive Board member’s appointment. In general it is 30% at the start of the first five-year period of<br />
appointment, 50% at the start of the second <strong>and</strong> 60% at the start of the third. Dr. Heinrich Hiesinger’s<br />
pension is 50%. Current pensions are adjusted annually in line with the consumer price index. For new<br />
Executive Board members to be appointed in the future, this final-salary pension plan has been switched to<br />
a defined-contribution pension plan, with the annual pension benefit (“module”) amounting to 40% of the<br />
annual fixed salary.<br />
Under the surviving dependants’ benefits plan, a widow receives 60% of the pension <strong>and</strong> each dependant<br />
child (generally up to the age of 18, maximum age 25 years, in justified exceptional cases up to the age of<br />
27) 20%, up to a maximum of 100% of the pension amount.<br />
22