By Sarah N. Lynch
WASHINGTON (Reuters) – Companies will have to
provide investors with a ratio showing how the median pay of their
workforce squares with their chief executive officers’ compensation,
according to new rules adopted by U.S. securities regulators on
Wednesday.
Under the Securities and Exchange Commission’s final
rules, companies will get some flexibility in how they find the median.
For instance, they can exclude 5 percent of their overseas workers when
arriving at the number and use statistical sampling.
In addition, only larger and mid-sized companies will need to comply, while smaller ones are exempt.
However,
those changes did not assuage corporate trade groups, which have
opposed any rule and are widely expected to file a legal challenge.
The
SEC has been under mounting pressure by Democrats, like Massachusetts
Senator Elizabeth Warren and unions such as the AFL-CIO, who support the
rule and have lamented delays in its adoption.
The measure was
tucked into the 2010 Dodd-Frank law amid concerns about the growing
disparity between compensation for chief executives and their corporate
workers.
“Pay ratio disclosure should provide a valuable piece of
information to investors,” said Democratic Commissioner Kara Stein said.
Republicans
and trade groups like the U.S. Chamber of Commerce have fought back
against the measure at every turn, saying it will be too expensive,
could mislead investors and is not material to a company’s financial
statements.
The Chamber has urged the SEC to defer working on the
rule at all, and it called for permitting companies to disclose the
ratio in an addendum instead of formal filings in order to reduce their
liability.
“This rule is more harmful than helpful,” David
Hirschmann, head of the Chamber’s Center for Capital Markets
Competitiveness, said in a statement. He said the Chamber would explore
options to “clean up the mess” it believes the rule has created.
Both SEC Republican commissioners also opposed the rule on Wednesday.
“To steal a line from Justice Scalia: This is pure applesauce,” said Republican Commissioner Daniel Gallagher.
Companies
will have to start reporting the new pay ratio disclosures in the first
fiscal year beginning on or after Jan. 1, 2017.
Heather Slavin
Corzo, a director at the AFL-CIO, said she was pleased that the SEC
completed the rule but remained concerned about “weaknesses that could
lead to loopholes,” including letting companies exclude a portion of
their overseas workers from the median.
(Reporting by Sarah N. Lynch; Editing by Lisa Von Ahn and Bernard Orr)
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