On May 16, 2025, the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission announced that it will host a Roundtable on Executive Compensation Disclosure Requirements on June 26, 2025. SEC Chairman Paul S. Atkins issued a statement on the upcoming roundtable, including questions he asked the staff to consider and on which the public is invited to share their views. The roundtable will provide an opportunity for the SEC to engage in a retrospective review of its executive compensation disclosure rules “to ensure that they continue to be cost-effective and result in disclosure of material information without an overload of immaterial information.” It will be held at the SEC’s headquarters in Washington, D.C., and livestreamed at SEC.gov. Details on the agenda and speakers will be provided by SEC staff at a later date.
The questions outlined by Chairman Atkins are set forth below. Interested parties are encouraged to provide their views on these questions using the SEC’s online submission form or via email to rule-comments@sec.gov with “4-855” included in the subject line.
Executive compensation decisions: setting compensation and making investment and voting decisions
- What is the process by which companies develop their executive compensation packages? What drives the development and decisions of compensation packages? What roles do the company’s management, the company’s compensation committee (or board of directors), and external advisors play in this development?
- Current disclosure requirements seek to unpack these processes for investors. How can our rules be revised to better inform investors about the material aspects of how executive compensation decisions are made?
- What level of detail regarding executive compensation information is material to investors in making their investment and voting decisions? Is there any information currently required to be disclosed in response to Item 402 of Regulation S-K that is not material to investors or that could be streamlined to improve the disclosure for investors? How do companies’ engagement with investors drive compensation decisions and compensation disclosure?
Executive compensation disclosure: past, present, and future
- The Commission substantially revised its executive compensation disclosure requirements in 2006 with requirements to provide, among other things, enhanced tabular disclosure of compensation amounts and a compensation discussion and analysis of the company’s compensation practices. The rules were intended to provide investors with a clearer and more complete picture of the compensation earned by a company’s executive officers. Have these disclosure requirements met these objectives? Do the required disclosures help investors to make informed investment and voting decisions? Given the complexity and length of these disclosures, are investors able to easily parse through the disclosure to identify the material information they need? In what ways could disclosure rules be revised to return to a simpler presentation and focus?
- The Dodd-Frank Act added several executive compensation related requirements to the securities laws, including shareholder advisory voting on various aspects of executive compensation. What types of disclosure do investors find material in making these voting decisions? Are companies able to provide such disclosure in a cost-effective manner? Do the current rules strike the right balance between eliciting material information and the costs to provide such information?
- With the experience of almost 20 years of implementing the 2006 rule amendments, how can the Commission address challenges that either companies or investors have encountered with executive compensation rules and the resulting disclosures in a cost-effective and efficient manner while continuing to provide material compensation information for investors? For example, are there requirements that are difficult or costly to comply with and that do not elicit material information for investors? Are there ways that we can reduce the cost or otherwise streamline the compensation information required by the rules?
Executive compensation hot topics: exploring the challenging issues
- The Commission recently adopted rules implementing the requirements of Dodd Frank related to pay-versus-performance and clawbacks. Now that companies have implemented the new rules, are there any lessons we can learn from their implementation? Can these rules be improved? If so, how? For example, which requirements of these rules are the most difficult to comply with and how could we reduce those burdens while continuing to provide investors with material information and satisfy these statutory mandates?
- Since adoption of the pay-versus performance rules, I have continued to hear concerns regarding the rule’s definition of “compensation actually paid” (CAP). What has been companies’ experience in calculating CAP and what has been investors’ experience in using the information to make investment and voting decisions?
- What has been companies’ experience in applying the two-part analysis articulated by the Commission in 2006 with respect to evaluating whether perquisites for executive officers must be disclosed? How do disclosure requirements resulting from the test, and whether a cost constitutes a perquisite, affect companies’ decisions on whether or not to provide a perquisite? For example, how has the application of the analysis affected evaluations relating to the costs of security for executive officers? Are there types of perquisites that have been particularly difficult to analyze? How do investors use information regarding perquisites in making investment and voting decisions?