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Published byAubrey Ramsey Modified over 9 years ago
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Top Total Compensation Oracle chief Larry Ellison was the best paid among our group of 501 chief executives, with total 2001 compensation of $706 million. All of Ellison's compensation came from exercising stock options.
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Lowest Total Compensation Kinder Morgan's Chief Executive Richard Kinder is the lowest paid among Forbes 500s executives. The head of the Houston-based energy concern paid himself just $1 in 2001 and his three-year total compensation totaled only $8,000.
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Average Compensation Average total CEO compensation in 2001 was $9.7 million, down 7% from 2000. Average salary plus bonus was off 13% to $2.2 million
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Just A Jet Steve Jobs, chief executive of Apple Computer, had the highest salary plus bonus in 2001. Jobs' pay was also the most unusual: The billionaire CEO didn't take a conventional salary, but Apple's board bought him a Gulfstream V jet valued at $44 million. They also paid the taxes on the jet, bringing Jobs' total compensation to $84 million.
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The Dollar-A-Year Club Five chief executives on the Forbes 500s took less than $1 in salary and bonus in 2001. Of course, a nonexistent salary doesn't mean that these executives aren't profiting handsomely in other ways--Oracle's Larry Ellison, this year's top paid chief executive, for instance, didn't take any salary or bonus in 2001. The other $1-per-year men were Conseco's Gary Wendt, Kinder Morgan's Richard Kinder, Fox Entertainment's Rupert Murdoch and John W. Creighton Jr., head of UAL, United Airlines' parent corporation.
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About That Raise... Last year, 166 chief executives, or 33% of the total, took pay cuts, while 67%, or 335 CEOs, got raises or saw their compensation remain unchanged.
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The Billionaire Club Twenty-six of the CEOs hold company stock worth more than $1 billion. These executives' stock holdings account for 86% of the total market value of company stock held by the entire group of 501 chief executives
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Top Heavy The richest ten chief executives, in terms of company stock holdings, have stock valued at $109 billion, accounting for 68% of the total market value of company stock held by the group. The top five CEOs' market holdings are worth $85 billion, 53% of the group's total.
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The Best Of Times Four chief executives--Berkshire Hathaway's Warren Buffet, Nike's Philip Knight, USA Networks' Barry Diller and Fox's Rupert Murdoch--saw the value of their company stock increase by more than $1 billion in 2001.
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The Worst Of Times Oracle's Larry Ellison and AES Chief Executive Dennis Bakke saw the market value of their holdings shrink by more than $1 billion last year.
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Shareholder Value A full 75% of Forbes 500s CEOs have beaten the broader market in terms of total return to their shareholders over their tenure.
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