Paul O'Neill

Lead Independent Director
Celanese Corp

Paul O'Neill made $213,249 in total compensation as Lead Independent Director at Celanese Corp in 2012. $113,750 was received as Total Cash, $94,960 was received as Equity and $4,539 was received as Pension and other forms of compensation. This information is derived from proxy statements filed for the 2012 fiscal year.

This page is an excerpt of the much more complete compensation information available in ERI's Assessor Series.

$213,249

$113,750

$94,960

$4,539

info
Total Cash:
$113,750
info
Equity:
$94,960
info
Pension and Other:
$4,539

The sum of all cash payments made to an individual for services during a given year. It is comprised of yearly Base Pay and Bonuses

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The value of stock and option awards plus long term incentives granted.

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This covers all compensation that don't fit in any of these other standard categories

To view more detailed proxy data including previous years contact our sales team.

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Compensation Details
Year Salary Bonus Non Equity Total Cash Stock Awards Option Awards Pension Other Total
2012 $835000 $125000 $960000 $113,750 $1584000 $1462500 $37347 $679909 $213,249
2011 $755250 $125000 $880250 $1014800 $1150500 $1150500 $35727 $603414 $4835191
2010 $755250 $125000 $880250 $1014800 $1150500 $1150500 $35727 $603414 $4835191
2009 $906449 $125000 $1031449 $2158713 $1695200 $0 $34177 $474286 $5393825
2008 $906449 $125000 $1031449 $851548 $1342704 $1622016 $55793 $525062 $5428572
2007 $877838 $125000 $1002838 $1350685 $$619200 $695520 $60352 $639589 $4368184
2006 $877838 $125000 $1002838 $1350685 $$619200 $695520 $60352 $639589 $4368184
Contact us to find out more about the compensation structure for Paul O'Neill and other executives at comparable companies
Total Compensation Over Time
Connections
The following Interpublic Group (IPG) board members are connected to Mr. Paul O'Neill
Paul O'Neill
1st
1st
Mark Rohr Celanese Corp
2011 - 2019
Biography
Paul H. O'Neill, 76, has been a member of our board of directors since December 2004. Mr. O'Neill served as a Special Advisor at The Blackstone Group L.P. from 2003 until 2011. Prior to that time, he served as U.S. Secretary of the Treasury from 2001 to 2002 and was Chief Executive Officer of Alcoa, Inc. from 1987 to 1999 and chairman of the board of directors from 1987 to 2000. Mr. O'Neill also served as a member of the board of directors from February 2003 to April 2006, a member of the audit
Work History

Lead Independent Director

Celanese Corp
2006 - 2012   |   6 years

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What is Executive Compensation?
Executive compensation is a combination of the cash and non-cash pay that an executive-level employee receives. Unlike the contracts for lower-level employee compensation, contracts for executive compensation tend to have an explicit breakdown of their pay package, including:

  • Base salary
  • Short-term incentives
  • Long-term incentives, like stock and option awards
  • Non-qualified deferred compensation
  • Perquisites, like use of a company car or country club membership
The details of the pay package, including prevalence of each component, scale of each component and metrics for incentive plans, are negotiated each year. Executive compensation is often trickier to evaluate than those for a non-executive role, since an executive job is not necessarily tied to a preexisting paygrade. ERI’s Assessor Platform can help price an executive job title with access to our database of proxy statements and salary survey data.
What is provided in disclosures from public companies?
A proxy statement is a document that all publicly traded companies on the United States stock exchange are required to file annually. Internationally, companies are required to file Canadian Information Circulars, EU/UK Annual Reports, etc., depending on the company’s location. These documents are required to be sent out before a shareholder meeting to give shareholders insight into how the company is performing, as well as plans for how the company will be focused and managed in the upcoming year.

These disclosures include proposed compensation for directors and the top five executives, potential conflicts of interest, potential new board members, and any other issues that the shareholders will vote on during the meeting.
What compensation data can we get from these disclosures?
Disclosures are a great way to find executive compensation for publicly traded companies. The Summary Compensation table displayed in proxy statements includes data for Salary, Bonus, Stock Awards, Option Awards, Non-equity Incentive Plan Compensation, Pension and Nonqualified Deferred Compensation (NQDC) Earnings, All Other Compensation, and Total Compensation for the top five named executive officers (NEOs) in an organization. ERI gathers data from these proxy statements, as well as from salary surveys, and displays the executive compensation data for the latest year on executive data pages, like this one. ERI’s database has data from proxy statements going back to the year 2000 to help compensation professionals price executive compensation packages. To benchmark total compensation for executives, we recommend subscribing to ERI’s Assessor Platform. You can request a quote here.

These disclosures include proposed compensation for directors and the top five executives, potential conflicts of interest, potential new board members, and any other issues that the shareholders will vote on during the meeting.
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