Additional Proxy Soliciting Materials (definitive) (defa14a)
June 06 2022 - 5:02PM
Edgar (US Regulatory)
UNITED STATES
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
Washington, D.C. 20549
SCHEDULE 14A
Proxy Statement Pursuant to Section 14(a) of the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934
(Amendment No. )
Filed by the
Registrant ☒
Filed by a Party other than the Registrant ☐
Check the appropriate box:
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Preliminary Proxy Statement |
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Confidential, for Use of the Commission Only (as permitted by Rule
14a-6(e)(2)) |
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Definitive Proxy Statement |
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Definitive Additional Materials |
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Soliciting Material under §240.14a-12 |
EVERCORE INC.
(Name of
Registrant as Specified In Its Charter)
(Name of Person(s) Filing Proxy Statement, if other than the Registrant)
Payment of Filing Fee (Check all boxes that apply):
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Fee paid previously with preliminary materials |
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Fee computed on table in exhibit required by Item 25(b) per Exchange Act Rules
14a-6(i)(1) and 0-11 |
Dear Shareholder:
We are writing to ask for your critical support for the proposals to be voted on at Evercores 2022 Annual Meeting of Stockholders and to
express our appreciation for your independent analysis in conducting your evaluation. Our Board continues to unanimously recommend you cast your vote FOR all proposals, and we would like to draw your attention specifically to Proposal No. 4,
our proposal to increase the number of shares available under our equity incentive plan by 6.5 million shares. We are requesting additional shares because we do not have enough shares remaining to continue to provide a significant portion of
our annual incentive compensation in the form of equity, which aligns the interests of our employees and stockholders, and to continue to recruit and retain talented professionals, a key tenet of our growth strategy.
In its report (the ISS Report), Institutional Shareholder Services (ISS) supported our
say-on-pay proposal and overall compensation program, acknowledging the alignment of pay and performance among other best practices of our compensation program.
Nevertheless, ISS ultimately recommends shareholders vote against Proposal No. 4, consistent with its recommendation on prior years equity plan proposals, based on its application of quantitative tests that have significant flaws when
applied to our business model, industry and equity compensation needs. Given its recommendation, and the importance of the proposal to long-standing business and compensation strategy, we believe it is imperative that we highlight the flaws in the
ISS analysis, which we have described in detail in Attachment A.
In addition to the flaws with its analysis, the ISS Report does
not address the significant implications for us and our shareholders if their recommendation is followed. If our proposal fails, we will not have access to additional shares, and we would be required to take one or more actions that our Board
believes are not in the best interests of shareholders, including reducing the proportion of compensation paid to our employees in equity, decreasing their long-term alignment with investors and reducing cash available to return to shareholders. Our
Board believes that these actions would be detrimental to our ability to continue growing our business and creating value for shareholders.
As you make your voting decision, we ask that you bear in mind that as a human capital-based business, we use equity differently than many
other companies, including other financial companies. Equity is a fundamental element of our pay-forperformance compensation and retention philosophy that motivates our employees throughout the
organization. Over the past three years, more than 90% of all equity awards granted have been granted to non-executive officers. Related to our broad-based use of equity, we also appreciate your consideration
of our share repurchase program that has resulted in an average net negative burn rate of -2.6% over the past three years. In fact, we have worked to balance the feedback weve received over the years
with an equity compensation program that works for Evercore, cutting our 3-year average unadjusted burn rate under the ISS calculations by over 45% relative to 2018. We believe that if your analysis considers
the impact of our repurchase program, together with the benefit of broadly granting equity throughout the organization and our responsiveness to our shareholders, then any concerns you may have about our burn rate, potential dilution or other
quantitative metrics would be alleviated. To vote against our proposal would effectively undermine our overall compensation program and negatively impact our strategy and growth initiatives.
In response to shareholder feedback, our 2022 proposal requests only the amount of shares that we believe are necessary to manage and grow our
business in the current environment for approximately the next two years. We have a track record of prudent equity compensation management, and your approval of our proposal is critical to sustaining our momentum. Importantly, our prudent use of
equity compensation has been critical for employee retention and in our recruitment and promotion of our Senior Managing Directors (SMDs), which has been a key contributing factor to our strong revenue and earnings growth since 2020.
In closing, we would like to assure you of our commitment to continue to work hard to increase the value of Evercore within the compensation
framework set out in the proxy. We will continue to work with ISS in the hope that they will develop quantitative measures that accurately reflect our business. We thank you for the time you have focused on this matter and your careful consideration
of this proposal, and for all the previously discussed reasons, our Board recommends that you vote FOR Proposal No. 4.
Attachment A
I. |
ISS Report Positively Highlights Numerous Qualitative Aspects of our Overall Compensation Practices
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As a preliminary matter, in analyzing the ISS report, it is important to recognize that the adverse recommendation
was not due to concerns with the attributes of our overall compensation program or our underlying corporate governance policies. In fact, ISS supported our say-on-pay
proposal again this year. In particular, ISS found that the pay and performance of our CEO is reasonably aligned and found that support for our compensation committee members is warranted. It also acknowledged the best practices in our plan and our
compensation program more broadly:
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No repricing (or cash buybacks) of underwater stock options or stock appreciation rights |
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No hedging of equity securities |
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No evergreen provision |
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Four-year deferred vesting of RSUs |
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No reload equity awards |
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Alignment of Pay and Performance |
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No liberal share recycling |
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Short estimated plan duration |
While ISS is aligned with us in its support of our overall compensation program and our Compensation Committee
members, it does not support our use of equity compensation, which is a core component of that program and an important and effective vehicle for delivering a portion of overall compensation for a human capital-based business. Dating back to our
early years as a public company, our Compensation Committee, whose membership has been refreshed over the years, has consistently viewed equity compensation as a critical component of our overall compensation program. This structure has served us
well, as can be seen by the increase in quality SMDs over the years since our IPO and our strong growth and financial results, as described in our 2022 Proxy Statement.
Shareholders have also recognized the value of our compensation program. Over the last two years, more than 92 percent of votes cast have
supported our say-on-pay proposal and our shareholders have supported each of our two prior equity plan proposals. Our engagement with shareholders has revealed that the
broad support for our overall program and use of equity is due to our shareholders taking the time to understand our business model and the benefits of using equity compensation in a human capital-based business.
II. |
The ISS Report Provides no Qualitative Assessment of the Benefits of our Broad-Based Equity Plan Relative to
its Quantitative tests. |
The ISS recommendation against our equity plan proposal is based solely on our performance
under a series of flawed quantitative tests without any qualitative analysis or discussion as to mitigating factors. Instead, the discussion section in the ISS Report for our proposal is limited to two conclusory statements that the equity
compensation program is potentially excessively dilutive along with their estimation of dilution prior to factoring in our anti-dilutive actions. Quantitative tests that ignore half of the basis for our Boards recommendation should at a
minimum be accompanied by a qualitative analysis as to whether the benefits of a broad-based equity program offset by share repurchases justify the associated increased use of equity. Yet, this qualitative analysis (or even an acknowledgment of this
component of our equity compensation program) is entirely absent in the ISS Report.
Our historically successful compensation and business
model is inherently in conflict with the rigid quantitative tests that are an overriding factor in ISS recommendation. By the design of the quantitative tests in the ISS Report, it is nearly impossible for companies like us to have
meaningfully broad-based equity compensation programs and receive a positive recommendation, given the tests penalize broad-based equity grants, fail to credit the associated repurchases designed to offset the potential dilution and use the
resulting lower share count in the denominator to further penalize us.
Our broad-based use of equity, notwithstanding the impact it has on our ability to pass the
ISS quantitative tests, is deliberate. Our Board fundamentally believes the qualitative benefit of issuing deferred equity as compensation to our client-facing and revenue generating employees has a meaningful impact on our business that, when
coupled with our anti-dilutive actions, is in the best interests of our shareholders and outweighs the negative impact, if any, that broad equity grants may have. This long-held belief dates back to our early years as a public company, and we
believe the failure to provide any sort of qualitative rationale or assessment of our plan relative to the quantitative test results is a fundamental flaw in ISS analysis.
III. |
The ISS Report Excludes from Its Quantitative Burn-Rate and Dilution Analyses the Anti-Dilutive Impact of
our Share Repurchase Program. |
Our share repurchase program is a key component of our Boards belief in our
equity compensation program. While we have deployed equity broadly throughout our organization, we have done so without diluting our shareholders due to our share repurchase program. However, the ISS report fails to take into account our share
repurchase program, which mitigates concerns regarding our rate of equity usage and the dilutive impact of our equity plan proposal.
This
decision has a substantial impact on ISS burn rate analysis. ISS calculates our unadjusted 3-year average burn rate at 4.91%, even though over that period we have repurchased sufficient shares to more
than offset not only equity awards granted as part of annual incentive compensation, but also new hire and replacement equity awards, resulting in a net burn rate of -2.6% and satisfaction of the ISS
benchmarks. The impact of the exclusion is then compounded, as ISS adjusts the number of full-value awards, such as RSUs, based on stock volatility, which we believe is an inappropriate methodology. For Evercore, the adjustment results
in double the number of RSUs being considered outstanding when calculating our adjusted burn rate of 9.82%. This unfairly penalizes us, and firms like us, which use full-value awards such as RSUs instead of options, which are the subject of
significant scrutiny, particularly in the financial services sector.
The ISS models then penalize us twice, as the reduction of total
shares outstanding because of our share repurchase program decreases the denominator in their quantitative tests but fails to correspondingly offset overall equity issuances in the numerator consistent with our historical share repurchase practices.
By ignoring our anti-dilutive actions, which have offset plan dilution over the past three years, the ISS tests are fundamentally incompatible with our shareholder-approved equity compensation model. However, they are a gating factor for obtaining a
positive recommendation. In other words, the necessary result of tailoring our equity compensation plan to the ISS benchmark would be a significant overhaul of our longstanding compensation program that has been repeatedly approved by our Board and
shareholders and has contributed significantly to our growth and success.
IV. |
The ISS Report Compares Our Equity Compensation Practices to a Peer Group with Materially Different Capital
Structures and Business Models. |
Our Board, considering all relevant factors, has consistently determined it is in
the best interests of our shareholders to employ a broad-based equity compensation program paired together with anti-dilutive actions. Our direct peers, other publicly traded independent investment banking advisory firms, similarly operate human
capital based businesses and have decided to employ similar equity compensation programs. Our use of equity and related performance on quantitative tests is comparable to this peer group. For example, while we do not believe that traditional burn
rate calculations that are calculated without taking into account repurchases are a meaningful metric for us on a standalone basis, these metrics do demonstrate that our equity compensation practices are in line with our direct peer group.
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Three-Year Average Burn Rate (Excluding Share Repurchases)* |
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Evercore |
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5.4 |
% |
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Lazard |
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4.8 |
% |
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Moelis |
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5.5 |
% |
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PJT Partners |
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5.1 |
% |
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Greenhill |
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11.1 |
% |
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* |
See pg. 81 of our 2022 Proxy Statement, available at
https://investors.evercore.com/shareholder-services/online-investor-kit, for methodology. Information regarding stock compensation expense as a percentage of revenue for Houlihan
Lokey has not been included, as Houlihan Lokey does not separately report equity only compensation expense |
The core
of ISS analysis, however, is a comparison of our equity plan, practices and test results against benchmarks derived from a peer group that we believe is likely to be inappropriate for our business. Our ISS peer group is drawn from companies
within the broad Diversified Financials GICS sector designation a designation which includes many mortgage REITs, consumer and specialized finance companies, lending and trading firms and other
non-human capital-based businesses that do not share our rationale for broadly using equity, putting Evercore at a meaningful disadvantage relative to these. The ISS Report implicitly recognizes this. Its
analysis of our grant practices relative to our peer group reveals that our 3-year average of grants to our NEOs is nearly 4 times smaller than our GICS peer group average. In other words, we employ a
fundamentally different and broader equity compensation program than our ISS peer group, yet the merits of our program are measured against the same tests. Conclusions drawn from this peer group are likely to provide distorted results
and, not surprisingly, when compared against benchmarks derived from this inappropriate peer group, our results on quantitative tests are not comparable.
There are several reasons for this. Our core business is our provision of advisory services, which require limited financial capital but
substantial human capital. Several of the named peers in our group are lending and trading firms. These firms often generate revenue based upon financial capital through services such as prime brokerage, clearing transactions, loans and other
financings. They do not share the same alignment and retention benefit as us from broadly using equity compensation. In addition, these firms maintain large back-office staffs focused on the clearance and settlement of securities transactions,
maintenance of customer accounts, including margin lending, and support of principal trading activities, and these individuals tend to receive lower amounts of or no deferred compensation and therefore little or no equity compensation.
Our ISS peer group also includes several investment management focused firms. These firms often compensate individuals through deferred
compensation plans tied to the products offered by the asset manager, such as carried interest. This strategy aligns the interests of portfolio managers with their clients, rather than their firms shareholders. For these firms, equity plans
often focus on a smaller group of senior executives, in stark contrast with our broad-based program.
We recommend that you do not rely on
comparisons of equity programs across fundamentally different businesses. Instead, we continue to believe that our direct peers publicly traded independent investment banking advisory firms are the best comparison for purposes of
evaluating our equity compensation program. As discussed herein and in greater detail in our proxy statement, our equity compensation practices are comparable with our direct peer group.
V. |
No Consideration for Our Commitments or Progress in Responding to Shareholders |
In 2016 when the 2016 Plan was established, we committed to managing our net burn rate and using share repurchases to offset dilution. In
2020, we reaffirmed our commitment this approach, and dilution management has been a regular area of shareholder engagement as well.
ISSs own numbers show a substantial downward trend in our burn rate and other headline
figures around equity usage even as our employee base has grown:
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2018 |
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2020 |
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2022 |
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3-year average adjusted burn rate |
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17.82 |
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13.70 |
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9.82 |
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3-year average unadjusted burn rate |
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7.13 |
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5.48 |
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4.91 |
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Data from ISS reports for indicated years
When companies show this level of responsiveness to shareholders and stand by the commitments made around specific practices, proxy advisors
and shareholders alike approach them differently than companies who provide no guardrails and set no expectations. ISSs analysis shows an overly narrow focus and lacks appreciation for the discipline these results demonstrate. We cannot change
our broad-based pay program and company culture to meet overgeneralized expectations. However, we have worked to balance the feedback weve heard with the program that works for us.
In closing, we ask that as you make your voting decision, you consider the concerns identified in this Attachment when evaluating the ISS
recommendation. While we understand ISS rationale for maintaining a standard quantitative framework, we believe it does a disservice to our shareholders by failing to compare us to an appropriate peer group and refusing to adjust its analysis
for our anti-dilutive practices. We thank you for the time you have focused on this matter and your careful consideration of this proposal, and for all the previously discussed reasons, our Board recommends that you vote FOR Proposal
No. 4.
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