Medarex Execs Got 10% Pay Raise Despite Delivering Nothing
If there’s a pharma company that rewards executives for delivering absolutely nothing, thy name is Medarex. Consider its record in 2008:
- Revenues declined from $56.2 million to $52.3 million.
- Its net loss expanded from $27 million to $38.5 million.
- The company has never made a profit in the last five years. The deficit on its balance sheet accumulated to more than $1 billion.
- Its big melanoma cancer product, ipilimumab, a joint venture with Bristol-Myers Squibb, was nixed by the FDA, which asked the company to come back with more phase 3 data that will only be unblinded in late 2009.
- The stock started the year over $10, it ended at under $6.
- And next year’s revenues will be below analysts’ estimates.
How were management rewarded for this? Their pay was increased 10 percent* (see correction below). CEO Howard Pien received $5.1 million. All of the top five execs got raises in both cash and non-cash compensation. And while it is true that they didn’t get cash bonuses, some of their options were issued with strike prices as low as $3.43.
- Name, 2008 pay, 2007 pay
- CEO Howard Pien, $5.1 million, $2.7 million
- CFO Christian Schade, $2.5 million, $1.9 million
- SVP science Nils Lonberg, $1.8 million, $1.7 million
- SVP prod. dev. Geoffrey Nichol, $1.7 million, $1.6 million
- General counsel Ursula Bartels, $1.1 million, $187,000
Numbers are rounded, includes stock and options whose value changes over time.
Pien and Bartles only worked part of 2007, so a comparison makes it look like they got more money in 2008. Factoring that out, the five between them got 10 percent more in total compensation than last year.
The board’s compensation committee used this justification for the raises:
… individual performance is assessed on the basis of more subjective, non-formulaic criteria … [including] … contribution to the management team and application of managerial leadership skills …
CEO Pien seems to think he’s running a tight ship. In Medarex’s Q4 call, he told Wall Street:
Our business strategy is driven by our commitment to execution and governed by financial discipline…
“Financial discipline”? Twenty-eight percent of his G&A costs are compensation expenses for just five executives.
Here’s my promise: If the FDA approves ipilimumab, I’ll write a note apologizing to Pien et al for doubting them. In the meantime, Medarex’s leadership might want to consider making themselves less expensive for their investors.
* This item and its headline were corrected from the original to account for the part-year pay that Pien and Bartels received in 2007.
- See previous BNET stories on pharma executive compensation:
- Sepracor CEO Got 44% Raise as He Planned 940 Layoffs
- Medicis Doubled Pay of Exec Convicted of Off-Label Sales
- Elan CEO Martin’s Pay Cut by Half
- Mylan Execs Get 41% Raise; CEO Takes Company Jet on Vacation for “Security” Reasons
- Valeant Executive Pay Doubles to $19.7 Million Despite Quadrupling of Company’s Losses
- Shire CEO Compensation Report Successfully Conceals CEO Compensation
- Wyeth CEO Got 69% Pay Raise; Was “Required” to Use Helicopter; Plus $24 Million Pfizer Sale Bonus
- BMS Execs Get Cash Not to Ride Private Jets; 61% Pay Raise to $59 Million
- Allergan CEO Pyott Received Pay Raise to $11.9 Million
- Abbott CEO White Takes a Pay Cut
- Gilead Executive Pay: Modest Raises for Outstanding Performance
- Gilead Deal Gives CV Therapeutics CEO $8.4 Million Payday Despite Lack of Profits
- Pfizer’s Kindler Got $4.2 Million Pay Raise, Despite What Business Press Says
- Pfizer Execs’ Golden Parachute Is Actually a Pay Cut
- Genentech’s Levinson May Have No Change-of-Control Agreement in Roche Deal
- Amgen CEO Sharer: Options? No Thanks. I’ll Just Take the Cash.
- Schering CEO Hassan Has $59 Million Buyout Agreement in Merck Merger
- Merck Executive Pay: $36 million, Use of Private Jet, Cash Bonuses Despite Failures
- Eli Lilly Execs Receive $48 Million in Pay; Plus Chairman Taurel Adds $40 Million Nest Egg
- Novo Nordisk Executive Compensation: A Picture of Modesty (Except for the Car Expenses)
- As Layoffs Begin, Wyeth Execs Get $75 Million Severance Package
- How Pharma’s CEO Pay Packages Measure Up
Jim Edwards, a former managing editor of Adweek, has covered drug marketing at Brandweek for four years, and is a former Knight-Bagehot fellow at Columbia University's business and journalism schools. Follow him on Twitter or send him an email.







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