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. )
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International Paper Company
(Name of Registrant as Specified In Its Charter)
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Investor
Investor
Say
Say
on
on
Pay
Pay
Discussion
Discussion
April 2015 |
Shareowners
are asked annually to vote on a non-binding resolution to approve the
compensation of our named executive officers (Say-on-Pay
proposal), as disclosed in
our proxy statement.
To assist you in casting your 2015 Say-on-Pay vote, please
review the following summary slides together with the more
detailed information, including the Compensation
Discussion and Analysis (CD&A), the related
compensation tables and narrative disclosure, in our proxy
statement dated April 9, 2015.
2
2015
Proxy
Statement
Annual
Say-on-Pay
Vote |
2014 Strong
Financial Results Shareowner-Focused Plan Design Changes
Continued Emphasis on Pay for Performance
3
Table of Contents |
Delivered
record cash from operations and free cash flow of $2.1B N.A. Industrial Packaging
achieved EBITDA of $2.7B and 24% margins
ROIC above cost of capital for fifth consecutive year
Margin expansion across key businesses
Increased dividend by 14% to $1.60/share
Share buyback program purchases of ~ $1B in 2014
Courtland closure completed
Completed xpedx spin-off; $400MM received
$470MM operational EBITDA up 126% at Ilim JV; $56MM dividend
to IP
4
2014 Strong Financial Results |
5
Shareowner-Focused Plan Design Changes
(2012-2015)
Program Element
Design Change / Rationale
Peer Group Composition
Added and replaced companies from Compensation Comparator Group and both Performance
Share Plan (PSP) peer groups to more closely align with IP and our compensation
approach (2012; 2014; 2015) Management Incentive Plan (MIP) and
Performance Share Plan (PSP)
Eliminated ROI Stretch Goal (kicker) from both MIP and PSP (2012)
employed, for both MIP and PSP to more closely align with investment community
expectations (2013)
Performance achievement for relative TSR portion of PSP award now capped at 100% of
target if TSR over
Retroactively eliminated opportunity for executive officers to elect to have
additional shares withheld from PSP payouts to cover payment of federal taxes
(2015) Change in Control Agreements
2X for future agreements with SVPs to conform to compensation best practices
(2012)
Froze
participation
in
the
SERP,
Retirement
Plan
and
Restoration
Plan
effective
January
1,
2019
(2014)
Officer Stock Ownership Requirement
(2013)
Replaced Free Cash Flow with Cash Flow from Operations in MIP to eliminate
concern that capital expenses might be delayed to achieve MIP payout to
long-term detriment of business (2012) PSP performance achievement is now
measured over a single, three-year performance period, rather than using a
segmented approach to enhance long-term nature and reduce complexity of program (2012)
Return
on
investment
metric
now
defined
as
Return
on
Invested
Capital,
rather
than
return
on
capital
three-year performance period is negative (2015)
Reduced severance multiple, additional years of pension credit, and benefit
continuation period from 3X to Amended
all
agreements
and
plan
documents
to
move
from
a
single-trigger
to
a
double-trigger
approach
for acceleration of vesting of equity awards (2013; 2014)
SERP closed to new participants because of declining prevalence of SERP in market
(2012) Replaced four-year grace period with a 50% stock retention
requirement until ownership requirement is met Increased stock ownership
requirements for all executive officers (2015) Unfunded Supplemental Retirement
Plan for Senior Performance Metrics and Design of
Managers (SERP) |
2014
Compensation Comparator Group
3M Company
Alcoa Inc.
E.I. DuPont de Nemours
Eaton Corp.
Emerson Electric Company
FedEx Corp.
Goodyear Tire & Rubber Company
Hess Corp.
Honeywell International Inc.
Johnson Controls, Inc.
Kimberly-Clark Corp.
L-3 Communications Holdings
Lockheed Martin Corp.
Northrop Grumman Corp.
Parker-Hannifin Corp.
PPG Industries
Schlumberger Limited
United States Steel Corp.
Whirlpool Corp.
Xerox Corp.
6
IP compares well:
CEO
pay
at
50
percentile
of
CCG
while
TSR
is
at
80
percentile
th
th
Continued Emphasis on Pay for Performance |
Three-Year
Performance Period
Our CEOs
Realizable Pay Rank
Our Companys
TSR Rank
2011 -
2013
50th
80th
2010 -
2012
85th
80th
2009 -2011
60th
100th
2008 -2010
30th
40th
2007
2009
40th
40th
7
This table demonstrates the close correlation between
our CEOs pay and Companys performance over the
past four three-year performance periods.
Continued Emphasis on Pay for Performance |
8
This chart illustrates our commitment to pay at risk.
For 2014, 88% of our former and current CEOs target
compensation was
based on performance
and therefore at risk.
Continued Emphasis on Pay for Performance |
Questions?
Please contact our Investor Relations Team
Jay Royalty
Vice President, Investor Relations
901-419-1731
Michele Vargas
Manager, Investor Relations
901-419-7287
9 |