def14a
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
x
Filed by a Party other than the Registrant
o
Check the appropriate box:
o Preliminary
Proxy Statement
o Confidential,
for Use of the Commission Only (as permitted by
Rule 14a-6(e)(2))
x Definitive
Proxy Statement
o Definitive
Additional Materials
o Soliciting
Material Pursuant to
§ 240.14a-12
United Rentals, 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 the appropriate box):
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No fee required.
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o
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Fee computed on table below per Exchange Act
Rules 14a-6(i)(1)
and 0-11.
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(1)
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Title of each class of securities to which transaction applies:
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Aggregate number of securities to which transaction applies:
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Per unit price or other underlying value of transaction computed
pursuant to Exchange Act
Rule 0-11
(set forth the amount on which the filing fee is calculated and
state how it was determined):
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(4)
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Proposed maximum aggregate value of transaction:
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o
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Fee paid previously with preliminary materials.
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o
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Check box if any part of the fee is offset as provided by
Exchange Act
Rule 0-11(a)(2)
and identify the filing for which the offsetting fee was paid
previously. Identify the previous filing by registration
statement number, or the Form or Schedule and the date of its
filing.
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(1)
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Amount Previously Paid:
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Form, Schedule or Registration Statement No.:
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UNITED RENTALS,
INC.
Five Greenwich Office Park
Greenwich, Connecticut 06831
March 31, 2010
Dear Fellow Stockholders:
You are cordially invited to attend this years annual
meeting of stockholders, which will be held on Tuesday,
May 11, 2010, at the Hyatt Regency Greenwich, 1800 East
Putnam Avenue, Old Greenwich, Connecticut. The meeting will
start at 10:00 a.m., Eastern time.
Enclosed you will find a notice setting forth the business
expected to come before the meeting, the proxy statement, a
proxy card and a copy of our annual report to stockholders for
the fiscal year ended December 31, 2009.
Your vote is important. Whether or not you intend to be present
at the meeting, it is important that your shares be represented.
Voting instructions are provided on your proxy card and in the
accompanying proxy statement. We encourage you to submit your
proxy and vote via the Internet, by telephone or by mail.
Thank you for your continued support.
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Sincerely,
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JENNE K. BRITELL
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MICHAEL J. KNEELAND
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Chairman
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Chief Executive Officer
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UNITED RENTALS,
INC.
Five Greenwich Office Park
Greenwich, Connecticut 06831
NOTICE OF ANNUAL MEETING OF
STOCKHOLDERS
TO OUR
STOCKHOLDERS:
The annual meeting of stockholders of United Rentals, Inc. will
be held at the Hyatt Regency Greenwich, 1800 East Putnam Avenue,
Old Greenwich, Connecticut, on Tuesday, May 11, 2010, at
10:00 a.m., Eastern time, for the following purposes:
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1.
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Election of the 11 directors nominated and recommended by
our Board of Directors, as named in the accompanying proxy
statement;
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2.
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Approval of our 2010 Long Term Incentive Plan;
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3.
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Ratification of the appointment of Ernst & Young LLP
as our independent auditors for the fiscal year ending
December 31, 2010; and
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4.
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Transaction of such other business, if any, properly brought
before the meeting.
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The meeting may be adjourned or postponed from time to time. At
any reconvened or rescheduled meeting, action with respect to
the matters specified in this notice may be taken without
further notice to stockholders, except as may be required by our
by-laws. Stockholders of record at the close of business on
March 15, 2010 are entitled to notice of, and to vote on,
all matters at the meeting and any reconvened or rescheduled
meeting following any adjournment or postponement.
March 31, 2010
By Order of the Board of Directors,
JONATHAN M. GOTTSEGEN
Corporate Secretary
Important Notice Regarding the Availability of Proxy
Materials for the Annual Meeting of Stockholders to be held on
Tuesday, May 11, 2010. The Notice of and Proxy Statement
for the 2010 Annual Meeting of Stockholders and the
Companys 2009 Annual Report to Stockholders are available
electronically at
http://www.ur.com/index.php/investor/.
Table of
Contents
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A-1
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UNITED RENTALS,
INC.
Five Greenwich Office Park
Greenwich, Connecticut 06831
March 31, 2010
PROXY
STATEMENT
ANNUAL MEETING OF
STOCKHOLDERS
We are providing this proxy statement in connection with the
solicitation by the Board of Directors (the Board)
of United Rentals, Inc. (the Company) of proxies to
be voted at our 2010 annual meeting of stockholders to be held
at the Hyatt Regency Greenwich, 1800 East Putnam Avenue, Old
Greenwich, Connecticut, on Tuesday, May 11, 2010, at
10:00 a.m., Eastern time, and at any reconvened or
rescheduled meeting following any adjournment or postponement.
This proxy statement and the accompanying form of proxy card,
together with our 2009 annual report to stockholders, are first
being mailed to stockholders on or about March 31, 2010.
This proxy statement contains important information for you to
consider when deciding how to vote. Please read this information
carefully.
Record
Date
The record date for determining stockholders entitled to notice
of, and to vote at, the annual meeting (and at any reconvened or
rescheduled meeting following any adjournment or postponement)
has been established as the close of business on March 15,
2010.
Voting Securities
Outstanding on Record Date
As of the record date, there were 60,403,509 shares of our
common stock outstanding and entitled to vote. From May 1 to
May 10, 2010, a list of the stockholders entitled to vote
at the annual meeting will be available for inspection during
ordinary business hours at our principal executive offices
located at Five Greenwich Office Park, Greenwich, Connecticut.
The list will also be available at the annual meeting.
Right to
Vote
With respect to each matter properly brought before the annual
meeting, each holder of our common stock as of the record date
will be entitled to one vote for each share held on the record
date.
Voting
Voting Before
the Annual Meeting
If you are a stockholder of record, meaning that you hold your
shares in certificate form or through an account with our
transfer agent, American Stock Transfer &
Trust Company, you have three options to vote before the
annual meeting:
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VIA THE INTERNETVisit the website
http://www.voteproxy.com
and follow the on-screen instructions. Have your proxy card
available when you access the web page and use the Company
Number and Account Number shown on your proxy card. The
submission of your proxy via the Internet is available
24 hours a day. To be valid, a submission via the Internet
must be received by 11:59 p.m., Eastern time, on Monday,
May 10, 2010.
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BY TELEPHONECall 1-800-PROXIES
(1-800-776-9437)
in the United States or
1-718-921-8500
in foreign countries from any touch-tone telephone and follow
the instructions. Have your proxy card available when you call
and use the Company Number and Account Number shown on your
proxy card. The submission of your proxy by telephone is
available 24 hours a day. To be valid, a submission by
telephone must be received by 11:59 p.m., Eastern time, on
Monday, May 10, 2010.
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BY MAILSign, date and return your completed proxy card by
mail. To be valid, a submission by mail must be received by
5:00 p.m., Eastern time, on Monday, May 10, 2010.
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If you hold your shares in street name through an
account with a bank or broker, you will receive voting
instructions from your bank or broker.
Voting at the
Annual Meeting
If you are a stockholder of record, you may vote your shares at
the annual meeting if you attend in person. If you intend to
vote your shares at the annual meeting, you will need to bring
with you valid picture identification. We will confirm that you
were a stockholder of record on the record date and will provide
you with a blank proxy card, which will serve as a ballot on
which to record your vote.
If you hold your shares in street name, you must
obtain a legal proxy from your bank or broker in order to vote
at the annual meeting. A legal proxy is an authorization from
your bank or broker to vote the shares it holds in its name. In
addition to a legal proxy, you will need to bring with you valid
picture identification and a recent account statement from your
bank or broker, confirming your holdings on the record date.
Based on these documents, we will confirm that you have proper
authority to vote and will provide you with a blank proxy card
to serve as a ballot.
Even if you plan to attend the annual meeting, we encourage you
to vote your shares before the meeting via the Internet, by
telephone or by mail.
Directions to the annual meeting are available by calling the
Hyatt Regency Greenwich at
1-203-637-1234
or visiting its website at
http://greenwich.hyatt.com/hyatt/hotels/services/maps/index.jsp.
Failure to
Provide Specific Voting Instructions
If you are a stockholder of record and you properly sign, date
and return a proxy card, but do not indicate how you wish to
vote with respect to a particular nominee or proposal, then your
shares will be voted FOR the election of such nominee or FOR the
approval of such proposal. If you indicate a choice with respect
to any matter to be acted upon when voting via the Internet (or
by telephone or on your returned proxy card) and you do not
validly revoke it, your shares will be voted in accordance with
your instructions. If you do not vote via the Internet or by
telephone, or sign, date and return a proxy card, you must
attend the annual meeting in person in order to vote.
If you hold your shares through an account with a bank or
broker, your shares may be voted by the bank or broker if you do
not provide specific voting instructions. Banks and brokers have
the authority under New York Stock Exchange rules to vote shares
for which their customers do not provide voting instructions on
routine matters. The proposal to ratify the appointment of our
independent auditors is considered a discretionary
item under NYSE rules. This means that banks and brokers may
vote in their discretion on this matter on behalf of clients who
have not furnished voting instructions at least ten days before
the date of the annual meeting. However, some brokers will only
vote uninstructed shares in the same proportion as all other
shares are voted with respect to a proposal.
In a change from prior years, as a result of amendments to NYSE
rules, the proposal to elect directors is a non-routine matter
for which brokers do not have discretionary voting power and for
which specific instructions from beneficial owners are required.
Furthermore, the proposal to approve our 2010 Long Term
Incentive Plan is a non-routine matter for which specific
instructions from beneficial owners are required. As a result,
brokers are not allowed to vote on the election of directors or
the proposal to approve our 2010 Long Term Incentive Plan on
behalf of beneficial owners if such owners do not return
specific voting instructions.
Quorum
The presence at the annual meeting, in person or represented by
proxy, of a majority of the outstanding shares entitled to vote
will constitute a quorum for the transaction of business. If a
share is deemed present at the annual meeting for any matter, it
will be deemed present for all other matters. Abstentions are
treated as present for quorum purposes.
2
Right to Revoke
Proxies
If you are a stockholder of record (even if you voted via the
Internet, by telephone or by mail), you retain the power to
revoke your proxy or change your vote. You may revoke your proxy
or change your vote at any time prior to its exercise by
(i) sending a written notice of such revocation or change
to United Rentals, Inc., Five Greenwich Office Park, Greenwich,
Connecticut 06831, Attention: Corporate Secretary, which notice
must be received by 5:00 p.m., Eastern time, on Monday,
May 10, 2010, (ii) voting in person at the annual
meeting, (iii) submitting a new proxy via the Internet or
by telephone that is received by 11:59 p.m., Eastern time,
on Monday, May 10, 2010, or (iv) executing and mailing
a later-dated proxy card to American Stock Transfer &
Trust Company, Operation Center, 6201 15th Avenue,
Brooklyn, New York 11219, which proxy card must be received by
5:00 p.m., Eastern time, on Monday, May 10, 2010.
Street name stockholders who wish to revoke a proxy
already returned on their behalf must direct the institution
holding their shares to do so.
Method and Cost
of Solicitation
In addition to solicitation by mail, our directors, officers and
employees may solicit proxies by telephone, electronic
communication or other means. We have also retained Innisfree
M&A Incorporated, a proxy solicitation firm, to assist us
in soliciting proxies, for an estimated fee of $15,000, plus
reimbursement of reasonable
out-of-pocket
expenses and disbursements. Our directors, officers and
employees receive no additional compensation for solicitation of
proxies.
We will bear all costs associated with soliciting proxies for
the annual meeting. We will, upon request, and in accordance
with applicable regulations, reimburse banks, brokers, other
institutions, nominees and fiduciaries for their reasonable
expenses in forwarding solicitation materials to beneficial
owners.
Matters to Be
Acted upon
As discussed in more detail under
Proposal 1Election of Directors, each
director is required to be elected by a majority of votes cast
with respect to such director, i.e., the number of votes cast
for must exceed the number of votes cast
against. Abstentions and shares not represented at
the meeting will have no effect on the election of directors.
Brokers are not entitled to vote on director elections and thus
broker non-votes are not treated as votes cast and will have no
effect on the election of directors.
The matter described in Proposal 2Approval of
2010 Long Term Incentive Plan is required to be approved
by the affirmative vote of the majority of shares present in
person or represented by proxy at the annual meeting and
entitled to vote on the matter and, furthermore, the total votes
cast with regard to Proposal 2 must represent over 50% of
all shares of stock entitled to vote on Proposal 2.
Abstentions will have the same effect as a vote against such
matter, whereas shares not represented at the meeting will not
be counted for purposes of determining whether such matter has
been approved. Brokers are not entitled to vote on the proposal
to approve our 2010 Long Term Incentive Plan and thus broker
non-votes will have no effect on such matter.
The matter described in Proposal 3Ratification
of Appointment of Independent Auditors is required to be
approved by the affirmative vote of the majority of shares
present in person or represented by proxy at the annual meeting
and entitled to vote on the matter. Abstentions will have the
same effect as a vote against such matter, whereas shares not
represented at the meeting will not be counted for purposes of
determining whether such matter has been approved. Brokers may
vote in their discretion on the proposal to ratify the
appointment of our independent auditors on behalf of clients who
have not furnished voting instructions. As a result, broker
non-votes will not arise in connection with, and thus will have
no effect on, such matter.
Our Board unanimously recommends that you vote FOR the
election of each nominee and FOR the approval of each
proposal.
3
PROPOSAL 1
ELECTION OF
DIRECTORS
General
Our Board is currently comprised of the following 11 members:
Jenne K. Britell, José B. Alvarez, Howard L.
Clark, Jr., Bobby J. Griffin, Michael J. Kneeland,
Singleton B. McAllister, Brian D. McAuley, John S. McKinney,
Jason D. Papastavrou, Filippo Passerini and Keith Wimbush. Until
our 2008 annual meeting of stockholders, our Board was divided
into three classes of directors, with each class being elected
to serve a three-year term. As a result of an amendment to our
restated certificate of incorporation that was proposed by the
Board and approved by stockholders at our 2007 annual meeting,
we have transitioned our Board from a classified board to a
declassified board such that, beginning with our 2010 annual
meeting, all directors will be elected annually for one-year
terms. The Board, upon the recommendation of our Nominating and
Corporate Governance Committee (the Nominating
Committee), has nominated each of the aforementioned
directors to stand for re-election.
Election of
11 Directors
The terms of Drs. Britell and Papastavrou, Ms. McAllister
and Messrs. Alvarez, Clark, Griffin, Kneeland, McAuley,
McKinney, Passerini and Wimbush will expire at the 2010 annual
meeting. Upon the unanimous recommendation of the Nominating
Committee, the Board has nominated each of Drs. Britell and
Papastavrou, Ms. McAllister and Messrs. Alvarez,
Clark, Griffin, Kneeland, McAuley, McKinney, Passerini and
Wimbush to stand for re-election at the annual meeting.
Each director elected at the 2010 annual meeting will hold
office until our 2011 annual meeting of stockholders and,
subject to the resignation policy described below, until such
directors successor is elected and qualified.
Voting
Our by-laws require a director to be elected by a majority of
votes cast with respect to such director in uncontested
elections. The number of votes cast for a director
must exceed the number of votes cast against that
director. Abstentions and shares not represented at the meeting
have no effect on the election of directors. Directors will
continue to be elected by a plurality of votes cast in contested
elections. A contested election takes place at any
meeting in respect of which (i) our corporate secretary
receives a notice pursuant to our by-laws that a stockholder
intends to nominate a director or directors and (ii) such
proposed nomination has not been withdrawn by such stockholder
on or prior to the tenth day preceding the date on which the
Company first mails its notice of meeting for such meeting to
its stockholders.
If a nominee who is serving as a director is not elected at the
annual meeting, under Delaware law, the director would continue
to serve on the Board as a holdover director until
his successor is elected and qualified. However, under our
by-laws, any director who fails to be elected by majority vote
must offer to tender his or her resignation to the Board on the
date of the certification of the election results. The
Nominating Committee will then consider the resignation offer
and make a recommendation to the Board on whether to accept or
reject the resignation, or whether other action should be taken.
The Board will accept such resignation unless it determines that
the best interests of the Company and its stockholders would not
be served in doing so. The Board will act on the Nominating
Committees recommendation within 90 days from the
date of the certification of the election results, unless such
action would cause the Company to fail to comply with any
requirement of the NYSE or any rule or regulation under the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended (the Exchange
Act), in which event the Company will take action as
promptly as is practicable while continuing to meet those
requirements. The Board will promptly disclose its decision and
the rationale behind it in a
Form 8-K
report furnished to the Securities and Exchange Commission
(SEC). The
4
director who offers to tender his or her resignation will not
participate in the Nominating Committees recommendation or
in the Boards decision.
If a nominee who is not already serving as a director is not
elected at the annual meeting, under Delaware law, that nominee
would not be a holdover director and the process
described above would not apply.
All nominees for election at the 2010 annual meeting are
currently serving on the Board. Each person nominated has agreed
to continue to serve if elected. If any nominee becomes
unavailable for any reason to serve as a director at the time of
the annual meeting, then the shares represented by each proxy
may be voted for such other person as may be determined by the
holders of such proxy.
The Board unanimously recommends a vote FOR the election of
each of Drs. Britell and Papastavrou, Ms. McAllister
and Messrs. Alvarez, Clark, Griffin, Kneeland, McAuley,
McKinney, Passerini and Wimbush to hold office until the 2011
annual meeting of stockholders (designated as Proposal 1 on
the enclosed proxy card) and until such directors
successor is elected and qualified.
Information
Concerning Directors and Executive Officers
The table below identifies, and provides certain information
concerning, our current executive officers and directors.
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Position
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Michael J. Kneeland
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56
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President, Chief Executive Officer and Director
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William B. Plummer
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Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer
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Jonathan M. Gottsegen
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Senior Vice President, General Counsel and Corporate Secretary
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Matthew J. Flannery
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Senior Vice PresidentOperations
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John J. Fahey
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Vice PresidentController
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Joseph A. Dixon
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Vice PresidentSales
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Kenneth E. DeWitt
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60
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Vice PresidentChief Information Officer
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Jenne K. Britell, Ph.D.
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67
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Chairman and Director
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José B. Alvarez
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Director
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Howard L. Clark, Jr.
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Director
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Bobby J. Griffin
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61
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Director
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Singleton B. McAllister
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58
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Director
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Brian D. McAuley
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Director
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John S. McKinney
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Director
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Jason D. Papastavrou, Ph.D.
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Director
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Filippo Passerini
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Director
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Keith Wimbush
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Director
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Michael J. Kneeland has been our president and chief
executive officer and a director of the Company since August
2008, having previously served as our interim chief executive
officer since June 2007. Prior to that time, Mr. Kneeland
served as our executive vice president and chief operating
officer since March 2007 and as our executive vice
presidentoperations since September 2003.
Mr. Kneeland joined the Company as a district manager in
1998 upon our acquisition of Equipment Supply Co., and was
subsequently named vice presidentaerial operations and
then vice presidentsoutheast region.
Mr. Kneelands more than 30 years of experience
in the equipment rental industry includes a number of senior
management positions with Free State Industries, Inc. and
Equipment Supply Co.
William B. Plummer joined the Company as our executive
vice president and chief financial officer in December 2008.
Before joining the Company, Mr. Plummer served as chief
financial officer of Dow
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Jones & Company, Inc., a leading provider of global
business news and information services, from September 2006 to
December 2007. Prior to Dow Jones & Company,
Mr. Plummer was vice president and treasurer of Alcoa Inc.,
one of the worlds leading producers of aluminum, since
2000. He also held similar executive positions at Mead
Corporation and GE Capital, the financial services subsidiary of
General Electric. Mr. Plummer is also a director of John
Wiley & Sons, Inc.
Jonathan M. Gottsegen joined the Company as our senior
vice president, general counsel and corporate secretary in
February 2009. Before joining the Company, Mr. Gottsegen
directed the Corporate and Securities Practice Group at The Home
Depot, Inc., the worlds largest home improvement retailer,
from 2004 to 2009, where he led a team responsible for oversight
of the companys key legal matters. Prior to The Home
Depot, Mr. Gottsegen served as securities counsel for Time
Warner Inc., a leading media and entertainment company, from
2003 to 2004, responsible for corporate, securities and
corporate governance matters. From 1999 to 2003,
Mr. Gottsegen was an associate in the New York office of
Kaye Scholer Fierman Hays & Handler in its corporate
and securities transactional practice. From 1996 to 1999,
Mr. Gottsegen was a senior staff attorney with the SEC in
its Division of Corporation Finance.
Matthew J. Flannery was appointed senior vice
presidentoperations in March 2010. Mr. Flannery has
extensive experience in all areas of the Companys
operations, having previously served as senior vice
presidentoperations East, and in two regional vice
president roles in aerial operations. Mr. Flannery has also
served as a district manager, direct sales manager and branch
manager. He has almost two decades of sales, management and
operations experience in the rental industry. Mr. Flannery
joined the Company in 1998 as part of the Companys
acquisition of Connecticut-based McClinch Equipment.
John J. Fahey was appointed our vice
presidentcontroller in January 2008 and, in that role,
continues to serve the Company as principal accounting officer,
as he has since August 2006. Mr. Fahey joined the Company
in September 2005 as vice presidentassistant corporate
controller. His prior experience includes senior positions as
managercorporate business development for Xerox
Corporation, a leading document management technology and
services company, from June 2003 to September 2005, and vice
president and chief financial officer for Xerox Engineering
Systems, Inc., a provider of solutions for technical documents,
from January 2000 to June 2003. Mr. Fahey has also served
as vice presidentfinance and controller for Faulding
Pharmaceutical Company, an international health care company.
Mr. Fahey is a licensed certified public accountant who
previously served as a general practice manager in accounting
and auditing for Deloitte & Touche LLP, one of the
four largest international accounting and consulting firms.
Joseph A. Dixon joined the Company as vice
presidentsales in June 2008 and, in that role, bears
responsibility for the strategic leadership of the
Companys sales and business development efforts. Before
joining the Company, Mr. Dixon served as global vice
president and general manager for JLG Industries, Inc., a
worldwide aerial equipment manufacturer, from January 2006 to
May 2008, with responsibility for aftermarket services. He held
senior positions as vice presidentpro business and tool
rental for The Home Depot from May 2002 to December 2005, with
sales and management responsibility for 1,450 North American
locations. Mr. Dixon also previously held the position of
division vice presidentoperations and field sales for
Hertz Equipment Rental Corporation, with executive
responsibility for the companys equipment rental business.
Kenneth E. DeWitt joined the Company as vice
presidentchief information officer in May 2008.
Mr. DeWitt has more than 15 years of executive
experience leading information technology at several companies.
During the period from July 2002 through March 2008,
Mr. DeWitt held senior vice presidentchief
information officer positions with Brand Technology Services LLC
(a DSW Company), Retail Ventures Services, Inc. and Value City
Department Stores, Inc. Mr. DeWitts prior experience
also includes senior information technology management positions
with responsibility for planning and integration, corporate
systems and credit systems for Sears, Roebuck and Company and
vice
6
presidentmanagement information systems for Saks Fifth
Avenue. He began his information technology career with Lerner
Stores Corp.
Jenne K. Britell, Ph.D. became a director of the
Company in December 2006 and Chairman of the Board in June 2008.
In March 2010, she was named a Senior Managing Director of Brock
Capital Group LLC, an advisory and investment banking firm.
Dr. Britell was chairman and chief executive officer of
Structured Ventures, Inc., advisors to U.S. and
multinational companies, from 2001 to 2009. From 1996 to 2000,
Dr. Britell was a senior executive of GE Capital. At GE
Capital, she most recently served as the executive vice
president of Global Consumer Finance and president of Global
Commercial and Mortgage Banking. From January 1998 to July 1999,
she was president and chief executive officer of GE Capital,
Central and Eastern Europe, based in Vienna. Before joining GE
Capital, she held significant management positions with Dime
Bancorp, Inc., HomePower, Inc., Citicorp and Republic New York
Corporation. Earlier, she was the founding chairman and chief
executive officer of the
Polish-American
Mortgage Bank in Warsaw, Poland. Dr. Britell is also a
director of Crown Holdings, Inc., Quest Diagnostics, Inc. and
the
U.S.-Russia
Investment Fund. During the past five years, Dr. Britell
has served as a member of the board of directors of West
Pharmaceutical Services, Aames Investment Corp. and Lincoln
National Corp.
José B. Alvarez became a director of the Company in
January 2009. Mr. Alvarez has been on the faculty of the
Harvard Business School since February 2009. Until December
2008, he was the executive vice presidentglobal business
development for Royal Ahold NV, one of the worlds largest
grocery retailers. Mr. Alvarez joined Royal Ahold in 2001
and subsequently held several key senior management positions,
including president and chief executive officer of the
companys Stop & Shop and
Giant-Landover
brands. Previously, he served in executive positions at
Shaws Supermarket, Inc. and American Stores Company.
Mr. Alvarez also serves as a director of The TJX Companies,
Inc.
Howard L. Clark, Jr. became a director of the
Company in April 2004. Mr. Clark has been vice chairman of
Barclays Capital Inc., the investment banking division of
Barclays Bank PLC, since September 2008. Prior to assuming his
current position, Mr. Clark was vice chairman of Lehman
Brothers Inc., an international investment bank, since 1993.
From 1990 until 1993, Mr. Clark was chairman, president and
chief executive officer of Shearson Lehman Brothers Holdings
Inc. Mr. Clark was previously a senior executive at
American Express Company from 1981 to 1990, and a managing
director of Blyth Eastman Paine Webber Incorporated or
predecessor firms from 1968 to 1981. While at American Express,
his positions included five years as executive vice president
and chief financial officer. Mr. Clark is also a director
of Walter Energy, Inc. (formerly known as Walter Industries,
Inc.), White Mountains Insurance Group, Ltd. and Mueller Water
Products, Inc.
Bobby J. Griffin became a director of the Company in
January 2009. From March 2005 to March 2007, he served as
presidentinternational operations for Ryder System, Inc.,
a global provider of transportation, logistics and supply chain
management solutions. Beginning in 1986, Mr. Griffin served
in various other management positions with Ryder, including as
executive vice presidentinternational operations from 2003
to March 2005 and executive vice presidentglobal supply
chain operations from 2001 to 2003. Prior to Ryder,
Mr. Griffin was an executive at ATE Management and Service
Company, Inc., which was acquired by Ryder in 1986. He also
serves as a director of Hanesbrands Inc.
Singleton B. McAllister became a director of the Company
in April 2004. Ms. McAllister is a partner in the law firm
of LeClairRyan where she has worked since October 2007. Before
joining LeClairRyan, Ms. McAllister had been a partner in
the law firms of Mintz Levin Cohen Ferris Glovsky and Popeo
since July 2005, Sonnenschein, Nath & Rosenthal LLP
since 2003 and Patton Boggs LLP since 2001. Prior to entering
private practice, Ms. McAllister served for five years as
the general counsel for the United States Agency for
International Development. Ms. McAllister is also a
director of Alliant Energy Corporation, Interstate Power and
Light Company and Wisconsin Power and Light Company.
Brian D. McAuley became a director of the Company in
April 2004. Mr. McAuley has served as chairman of Pacific
DataVision, Inc. (PDV) since August 2004. PDV is a
privately held telecommunications software applications and
hosting company. He has also been a partner at NH II,
7
LLC, a consulting firm that specializes in telecommunications
businesses, since 2003. Mr. McAuley is a co-founder of
Nextel Communications, Inc. and held senior executive positions
at Nextel from the companys inception in 1987 until 1996,
including seven years as president and chief executive officer.
Upon leaving Nextel, he joined Imagine Tile, Inc., a custom tile
manufacturer, where he served as chairman and chief executive
officer from 1996 to 1999 and continues to serve as chairman. He
also served as president and chief executive officer of NeoWorld
Communications, Inc., a wireless telecommunications company,
from 1999 until the sale of that company to Nextel in 2003.
Mr. McAuley is a certified public accountant and, prior to
co-founding Nextel, his positions included chief financial
officer of Millicom Incorporated, corporate controller at Norton
Simon Inc. and manager at Deloitte & Touche LLP.
John S. McKinney became a director of the Company in
September 1998 following the merger of the Company with
U.S. Rentals, Inc. He also served as a vice president of
the Company until the end of 2000. Mr. McKinney served as
chief financial officer of U.S. Rentals from 1990 until the
merger and as controller of U.S. Rentals Inc., and as a
staff auditor and audit manager at the accounting firm of Arthur
Andersen & Co. Mr. McKinney was assistant dean of
the Ira A. Fulton College of Engineering and Technology at
Brigham Young University from November 2006 to January 2008.
Jason D. Papastavrou, Ph.D. became a director of the
Company in June 2005. Dr. Papastavrou has served as chief
executive officer and chief investment officer of ARIS Capital
Management, an investment management firm, since founding the
company in January 2004. He previously held senior positions at
Banc of America Capital Management, also an investment
management firm, where he served as managing directorFund
of Hedge Funds strategies from 2001 to 2003, and at Deutsche
Asset Management, where he served as directoralternative
investments group from 1999 to 2001. Dr. Papastavrou, who
holds a Ph.D. in electrical engineering and computer science
from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, taught at Purdue
Universitys School of Industrial Engineering from 1990 to
1999 and is the author of numerous academic publications.
Filippo Passerini became a director of the Company in
January 2009. He is currently president of The
Procter & Gamble Companys global business
services organization and chief information officer, positions
he has held since February 2008 and July 2004, respectively.
Mr. Passerini joined Procter & Gamble, a
multinational manufacturer of consumer goods, in 1981 and has
held executive positions in the United Kingdom, Greece, Italy,
the United States, Latin America and Turkey. He is a native of
Italy, with a degree from the University of Rome.
Keith Wimbush became a director of the Company in April
2006. From January 2003 until August 2005, Mr. Wimbush was
with Korn/Ferry International, an executive search firm, where
he served as a senior client partner in the firms
Stamford, Connecticut office, and was also co-practice leader of
the firms legal specialist group. From April 1997 until
January 2003, Mr. Wimbush served as senior vice president
and general counsel of Diageo North America, Inc. and
predecessor companies. Mr. Wimbush, who holds a J.D. from
Harvard Law School, has served as an adjunct professor of law at
Thomas Cooley Law School during the fall of 2007 and 2008.
See Corporate Governance MattersBoard Consideration
of Director Qualifications for additional information
regarding the specific experience, qualifications, attributes
and skills of the directors named herein that led the Board to
conclude that each such director should serve as a director of
the Company.
8
BOARD
MATTERS
Declassification
of Directors
Our Board is currently comprised of the following 11 members:
Jenne K. Britell, José B. Alvarez, Howard L.
Clark, Jr., Bobby J. Griffin, Michael J. Kneeland,
Singleton B. McAllister, Brian D. McAuley, John S. McKinney,
Jason D. Papastavrou, Filippo Passerini and Keith Wimbush. Until
our 2008 annual meeting, our Board was divided into three
classes of directors, with each class being elected to serve a
three-year term. As a result of an amendment to our restated
certificate of incorporation that was proposed by the Board and
approved by stockholders at our 2007 annual meeting, we have
transitioned our Board from a classified board to a declassified
board such that, beginning with our 2010 annual meeting, all
directors will be elected annually for one-year terms.
The Board, upon the recommendation of the Nominating Committee,
has nominated each of the aforementioned directors to stand for
re-election at the annual meeting.
Meetings of the
Board and its Committees
During 2009, the Board met twelve times. During 2009, each
current member of the Board attended in excess of 75% of the
aggregate of (i) the total number of Board meetings held
during the period for which he or she was a director and
(ii) the total number of meetings of each committee of the
Board on which the director served during the period for which
he or she was on the committee.
Committees of the
Board
During the first quarter of 2009, the Board had six standing
committees: the Audit Committee, Compensation Committee,
Nominating Committee, Special Committee, Transaction Committee
and Litigation Committee. However, in February 2009, the Board
dissolved three of these standing committeesthe Special,
Transaction and Litigation Committeesand established two
new standing committeesthe Finance and Strategy
Committees. The following table summarizes the current
composition of the five current standing committees of the
Board: the Audit Committee, the Compensation Committee, the
Nominating Committee, the Finance Committee and the Strategy
Committee. Consistent with best practice, our chairman,
Dr. Britell, is not a member of any of the Boards
standing committees. However, she regularly attends meetings of
the Boards committees, as all directors are invited to do.
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Audit
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Compensation
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Finance
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Committee
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Committee
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Nominating Committee
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Committee
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Strategy Committee
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José B. Alvarez
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X
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X
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Howard L. Clark, Jr.
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Chairman
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X
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Bobby J. Griffin
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X
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X
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Michael J. Kneeland
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X
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Singleton B. McAllister
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Chairman
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X
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Brian D. McAuley
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Chairman
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X
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John S. McKinney
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X
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Chairman
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Jason D. Papastavrou
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X
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Chairman
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Filippo Passerini
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X
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X
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Keith Wimbush
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X
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X
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Audit
Committee
We have a separately-designated Audit Committee established in
accordance with the Exchange Act. The Audit Committee operates
pursuant to a written charter that complies with the corporate
governance standards of the NYSE. You can access this document,
and other committee charters, on
9
our website at
http://www.ur.com
under Corporate Governance in the Investor
Relations section. The document, and each of the other committee
charters, is also available in print to any stockholder upon
written request to our corporate secretary at United Rentals,
Inc., Five Greenwich Office Park, Greenwich, Connecticut 06831.
The general purposes of the Audit Committee are to:
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assist the Board in monitoring (i) the integrity of the
Companys financial statements, (ii) the independent
auditors qualifications and independence, (iii) the
performance of the Companys internal audit function and
independent auditors, and (iv) the Companys
compliance with legal and regulatory requirements; and
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prepare the report required by the rules and regulations of the
SEC to be included in the Companys annual proxy statement
and any other reports that the rules and regulations of the SEC
may require of a companys audit committee.
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The Audit Committee also has the sole authority to appoint or
replace the independent auditor (subject, if applicable, to
stockholder ratification) and to approve compensation
arrangements for the independent auditor.
The current members of the Audit Committee are
Messrs. McAuley, McKinney, Passerini and Wimbush and
Dr. Papastavrou. Each member of the Audit Committee meets
the general independence requirements of the NYSE and the
additional independence requirements for audit committees
specified by
Rule 10A-3
under the Exchange Act. The Board has determined that each of
Messrs. McAuley and McKinney and Dr. Papastavrou
qualifies as an audit committee financial expert as
defined by the SEC and has accounting or related financial
management expertise within the meaning of the corporate
governance standards of the NYSE, and that each member of the
Audit Committee is financially literate within the meaning of
the corporate governance standards of the NYSE.
In 2009, the Audit Committee met nine times.
Compensation
Committee
The Compensation Committee operates pursuant to a written
charter that complies with the corporate governance standards of
the NYSE.
The general purpose of the Compensation Committee is to aid the
Board in discharging its responsibilities relating to:
(i) the oversight of executive officer and director
compensation and (ii) the development of compensation
policies that support the Companys business goals and
objectives. The Compensation Committee is also responsible for
producing an annual report on executive compensation and
assisting management in the preparation of a Compensation
Discussion and Analysis. For additional information concerning
the Compensation Committee, see Executive
CompensationCompensation Discussion &
Analysis.
The current members of the Compensation Committee are
Ms. McAllister and Messrs. Griffin and Wimbush. Each
member of the Compensation Committee meets the independence
requirements of the NYSE. In addition, each member qualifies as
an outside director within the meaning of Internal
Revenue Code Section 162(m) and as a non-employee
director within the meaning of
Rule 16b-3
under the Exchange Act.
The Compensation Committee may select, retain and terminate
outside compensation consultants to advise with respect to
director, chief executive officer or executive officer
compensation. The Compensation Committee also has the authority
to obtain advice and assistance from internal or external legal,
accounting and other advisors. Although the Company pays for any
compensation consultant, the Compensation Committee, in its sole
discretion, approves the fees to the compensation consultant and
other terms related to the consultants engagement. The
Compensation Committees use of compensation consultants is
described below under Executive
CompensationCompensation Discussion and Analysis.
10
The Compensation Committee may delegate all or any portion of
its duties and responsibilities to a subcommittee consisting of
one or more members of the Compensation Committee.
In 2009, the Compensation Committee met nine times.
Nominating
Committee
The Nominating Committee operates pursuant to a written charter
that complies with the corporate governance standards of the
NYSE.
The general responsibilities of the Nominating Committee
include: (i) developing criteria for evaluating prospective
candidates to the Board (or its committees) and identifying and
recommending such candidates to the Board; (ii) taking a
leadership role in shaping the corporate governance of the
Company and developing the Companys corporate governance
guidelines; and (iii) coordinating and overseeing the
evaluation processes for the Board and management which are
required by the Companys corporate governance guidelines.
For additional information concerning this committee, see
Corporate Governance MattersDirector Nomination
Process.
The current members of the Nominating Committee are
Messrs. Clark and Alvarez and Ms. McAllister. Each
member of the Nominating Committee meets the independence
requirements of the NYSE.
In 2009, the Nominating Committee met three times.
Finance
Committee
In February 2009, we established the Finance Committee to
oversee all policies, activities and transactions affecting the
financial condition of the Company and not otherwise assigned to
the Audit Committee.
The current members of the Finance Committee are
Dr. Papastavrou and Messrs. Clark and McAuley.
In 2009, the Finance Committee met ten times.
Strategy
Committee
In February 2009, we established the Strategy Committee to
assist the Board in overseeing and facilitating the development
and implementation of the Companys corporate strategy,
including long- and short-term strategic plans and related
operational decision-making.
The current members of the Strategy Committee are
Mr. McKinney and Messrs. Alvarez, Griffin, Kneeland
and Passerini.
In 2009, the Strategy Committee met seven times.
Risk
Oversight
Pursuant to its charter, the Audit Committee is primarily
responsible for overseeing the Companys risk management
processes on behalf of the Board. The Audit Committee (and/or
the Board) receives reports from management regarding the
Companys assessment of risks and members of the Audit
Committee (as well as other Board members) participate in
meetings held by the Companys enterprise risk management
committee. The Audit Committee and the full Board focus on the
most significant risks facing the Company and the Companys
general risk management strategy.
Although the Audit Committee oversees the Companys risk
management, Company management is responsible for
day-to-day
risk management processes. We believe this division of
responsibilities is the most effective approach for addressing
the risks facing our Company.
Director
Attendance at Previous Annual Meeting
We encourage our directors to attend annual meetings of
stockholders, and we typically schedule Board and committee
meetings to coincide with the annual meeting. All directors
attended the 2009 annual meeting of stockholders.
11
CORPORATE
GOVERNANCE MATTERS
Corporate
Governance Guidelines
We have adopted corporate governance guidelines to promote the
effective functioning of the Board. The guidelines address,
among other things, criteria for selecting directors and
director duties and responsibilities. We have also adopted
categorical independence standards (in addition to the
requirements of the NYSE) by which we assess the independence of
our directors. You can access these documents on our website at
http://www.ur.com
under Corporate Governance in the Investor
Relations section. The documents are also available in print to
any stockholder upon written request to our corporate secretary
at United Rentals, Inc., Five Greenwich Office Park, Greenwich,
Connecticut 06831.
Code of Business
Conduct
We have adopted a code of business conduct for our employees,
officers and directors. You can access this document on our
website at
http://www.ur.com
under Corporate Governance in the Investor
Relations section. This document is also available in print to
any stockholder upon written request to our corporate secretary
at United Rentals, Inc., Five Greenwich Office Park, Greenwich,
Connecticut 06831. This code constitutes a code of
ethics as defined by the rules of the SEC.
Board Leadership
Structure
Our Board has separated the roles of Chairman of the Board and
Chief Executive Officer. The current Chairman, Dr. Jenne
Britell, is an independent director. We believe that an
independent Chairman is better able to provide oversight and
guidance to management, especially in relation to the
Boards essential role in risk management oversight, and to
ensure the efficient use and accountability of resources. The
separation of the Chairman and Chief Executive Officer roles,
together with our other comprehensive corporate governance
practices, are designed to establish and preserve management
accountability, provide a structure that allows the Board to set
objectives and monitor performance, and enhance stockholder
value.
Director
Independence
In assessing director independence, we follow the criteria of
the NYSE. In addition, and without limiting the NYSE
independence requirements, we apply our own categorical
independence standards. Under these standards, we do not
consider a director to be independent if he or she is, or in the
past three years has been:
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employed by the Company or any of its affiliates;
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an employee or owner of a firm that is one of the Companys
or any of its affiliates paid advisors or consultants
(unless the Companys relationship, or the directors
relationship, with such firm does not continue after the
director joins the Board, or the Companys annual payments
to such firm did not exceed 1% of such firms revenues in
any year);
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employed by a significant customer or supplier;
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party to a personal service contract with the Company or the
chairman, chief executive officer or other executive officer of
the Company or any of its affiliates;
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an employee or director of a foundation, university or other
non-profit organization that receives significant grants or
endowments from the Company or any of its affiliates or a direct
beneficiary of any donations to such an organization;
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a relative of any executive officer of the Company or any of its
affiliates; or
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part of an interlocking directorate in which the chief executive
officer or other executive of the Company serves on the Board of
a third-party entity (for-profit or
not-for-profit)
employing the director.
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A substantial majority of our directors must be independent
under our corporate governance guidelines, which are more
stringent than NYSE rules in this regard. Ten of our eleven
directors have been determined by the Board to be independent
under those criteria: Jenne K. Britell; José B. Alvarez;
Howard L. Clark, Jr.; Bobby J. Griffin; Singleton B.
McAllister; Brian D. McAuley; John S. McKinney; Jason D.
Papastavrou; Filippo Passerini; and Keith Wimbush. In addition,
the Board has determined that each of these directors also meets
the categorical independence standards described above. Michael
J. Kneeland, our chief executive officer, is not considered
independent because he is an employee of the Company.
In accordance with SEC regulations, with respect to the
directors that we have identified as being independent under
NYSE rules, we discuss below certain relationships considered by
the Board in making its independence determinations. Each of
these relationships was determined by the Board to be an
immaterial relationship that would not disqualify
the particular director from being classified as an independent
director.
José B. Alvarez became a director of the Company in
January 2009. Until December 2008, he was the executive vice
presidentglobal business development for Royal Ahold NV,
one of the worlds largest grocery retailers.
Mr. Alvarez joined Royal Ahold in 2001 and subsequently
held several key senior management positions, including
president and chief executive officer of the companys
Stop & Shop and
Giant-Landover
brands. Stop & Shop obtained certain equipment and
services from the Company for which the Company received
monetary compensation in 2009. Mr. Alvarez was not involved
in the decision by Stop & Shop to use the
Companys services. The Board determined that the foregoing
relationship was an immaterial relationship given that
Mr. Alvarez is not employed by, and had no involvement in
the procurement decision of, Stop & Shop and the
amounts paid by Shop & Shop to the Company represent
less than 1% of Stop & Shops annual revenues and
less than 1% of the Companys annual revenues.
Howard L. Clark, Jr. became a director of the
Company in April 2004. He has been vice chairman of Barclays
Capital Inc., the investment banking division of Barclays PLC,
since September 2008. During 2009, the Company engaged Barclays
Capital to provide investment banking services to the Company
which resulted in Barclays Capital receiving compensation in the
form of underwriting discounts
and/or
commissions. The Board determined that the foregoing
relationship was an immaterial relationship given that
Mr. Clark had no involvement in the decision by the Company
to engage Barclays Capital and the amounts paid by the Company
to Barclays Capital represent less than 1% of Barclays
Capitals annual revenues.
Filippo Passerini became a director of the Company in
January 2009. He is currently president of Procter &
Gambles global business services organization and chief
information officer. Procter & Gamble rents equipment
from the Company for which the Company received monetary
compensation in 2009. Mr. Passerini was not involved in the
decision by Procter & Gamble to use the Companys
services. The Board determined that the foregoing relationship
was an immaterial relationship given that Mr. Passerini had
no involvement in the procurement decision of
Procter & Gamble and the amounts paid by
Procter & Gamble to the Company represent less than 1%
of Procter & Gambles annual revenues and less
than 1% of the Companys annual revenues.
Board
Consideration of Director Qualifications
In addition to the independence matters described above, the
Board considered the specific experience, qualifications,
attributes and skills of the directors named herein and
concluded that based on the aforementioned factors, and
including each directors integrity and collegiality, such
directors should serve as directors of the Company. Although
each director offers a multitude of unique and valuable skills
and attributes, the Board identified the following specific
experience,
13
qualifications, attributes and skills that led the Board to
conclude that such persons should serve as directors.
Mr. Alvarez has held several key management
positions with Royal Ahold NV, one of the worlds largest
grocery retailers, providing him with business leadership
experience in the retail industry. He also serves as a director
of The TJX Companies, Inc. and has taught marketing and
retailing as a current member of the faculty of the Harvard
Business School.
Dr. Britell has served in senior management
positions with both public and private companies and has
significant experience with public company directorships, which
provides her with leadership and consensus-building skills to
guide the Board, as well as exposure to a broad array of best
practices.
Mr. Clarks current and past experience serving
in senior management positions in the finance industry and his
public company directorships provide him with a practical and
informed perspective on matters relating to corporate
governance, investment banking and finance.
Mr. Griffin has notable business experience in the
areas of transportation, logistics and supply chain management,
including extensive international experience, due to his past
senior leadership positions with Ryder System, Inc. He serves as
a director of Hanesbrands Inc. and other public companies. Such
service can provide a valuable perspective for the Board and the
Company.
Mr. Kneeland has served in a variety of positions in
the equipment rental industry for over 30 years. He has
extensive experience and knowledge of the competitive
environment in which the Company operates. Further, he has
demonstrated strategic and operational acumen that the Board
believes has been of significant value to the Company.
Ms. McAllister, who has served as the general
counsel of the United States Agency for International
Development and currently helps lead the federal government
relations practice of the law firm of LeClairRyan, serves as an
important resource to the Board with regard to legal and
regulatory matters. Like other Board members,
Ms. McAllisters service on other public company
boards serves as an important benefit by providing the Company a
broad perspective at the Board level.
Mr. McAuley brings business leadership skills from
his career in the telecommunications and manufacturing
industries and has exhibited valuable entrepreneurial abilities.
He also has extensive financial and accounting experience as a
result of his past positions as chief financial officer and
controller at public and private companies and as a manager at
the accounting firm Deloitte & Touche LLP.
Mr. McKinney has significant accounting and finance
experience unique to the Company and its industry as a result of
his past positions as vice presidentfinance of the
Company, chief financial officer and controller of
U.S. Rentals Inc., and as a staff auditor and audit manager
at the accounting firm Arthur Andersen & Co.
Dr. Papastavrou currently serves as the chief
executive officer and chief investment officer of ARIS Capital
Management, and has held senior positions at other investment
management firms, which allows him to contribute a valuable
perspective on finance-related matters.
Mr. Passerini has gained significant business and
leadership experience in the consumer goods industry through his
various senior level positions with Procter & Gamble
during the past 25 years. Mr. Passerini has particular
strength with international operations.
Mr. Wimbush has gained significant legal experience
through his formal legal training, as well as his subsequent
positions in the legal department of Diageo North America, Inc.
and as an adjunct professor of law at Thomas Cooley Law School.
He complements his legal experience with experience gained
through his position as the senior client partner with
Korn/Ferry International.
14
Executive
Sessions of the Board
Our corporate governance guidelines provide that our
non-management directors should meet, at least twice a year, in
executive sessions without the presence of management.
Non-management directors who do not qualify as
independent may participate in these meetings.
However, the corporate governance guidelines provide that, at
least once a year, the independent directors should meet in
executive session without the presence of either management or
any non-independent directors. The purpose of executive session
meetings is to facilitate free and open discussion among the
participants. The chairman of the Board (or, in the absence of
the chairman, the chairman of the Audit Committee or such other
independent director as may be selected by the Board) should
preside over executive sessions and, as required, provide
feedback to the chief executive officer, and to such other
directors as is appropriate, based upon the matters discussed at
such meetings.
Director
Nomination Process
General
The Board has established the Nominating Committee, as described
above. The responsibilities of this committee include, among
other things: (i) developing criteria for evaluating
prospective candidates to the Board or its committees;
(ii) identifying individuals qualified to become members of
the Board or its committees; and (iii) recommending to the
Board those individuals that should be nominees for election or
re-election to the Board or otherwise appointed to the Board or
its committees (with authority for final approval remaining with
the Board).
Process for
Identifying and Evaluating Candidates
The Nominating Committee may identify potential Board candidates
from a variety of sources, including recommendations from
current directors or management, recommendations of security
holders or any other source the Nominating Committee deems
appropriate. The Nominating Committee may also engage a search
firm to assist in identifying director candidates. The
Nominating Committee has been given sole authority to select,
retain and terminate any such search firm and to approve its
fees and other retention terms.
In considering candidates for the Board, the Nominating
Committee evaluates the entirety of each candidates
credentials. In accordance with our corporate governance
guidelines, the Nominating Committee considers, among other
things: (i) business or other relevant experience;
(ii) expertise, skills and knowledge; (iii) contacts
in the communities in which the Company does business and in the
Companys industry or other industries relevant to the
Companys business; (iv) personal qualities and
characteristics, accomplishments, integrity and reputation in
the business community; (v) the extent to which the
candidate will enhance the objective of having directors with
diverse viewpoints, backgrounds, experience, expertise, skills
and other demographics; (vi) willingness and ability to
commit sufficient time to Board and committee duties and
responsibilities; and (vii) qualification to serve on
specialized Board committees of the Board, such as the Audit
Committee or the Compensation Committee. The Nominating
Committee recommends candidates based on its consideration of
each individuals specific skills and experience and its
annual assessment of the composition and needs of the Board as a
whole, including with respect to diversity. Consideration of
diversity as one of many attributes relevant to a nomination to
the Board is implemented through the Nominating Committees
standard evaluation process. In particular, the Nominating
Committee obtains and reviews questionnaires, interviews
candidates as appropriate and engages in thorough discussions at
Committee meetings in an effort to identify the best candidates
and to populate an effective Board. The effectiveness of the
Boards diverse mix of viewpoints, backgrounds, experience,
expertise, skills and other demographics is considered as part
of the Nominating Committees assessment.
The 11 nominees for election as directors at the 2010 annual
meeting are: Jenne K. Britell, who has been a director since
December 2006; José B. Alvarez, who has been a director
since January
15
2009; Howard L. Clark, Jr., who has been a director since
April 2004; Bobby J. Griffin, who has been a director since
January 2009; Michael J. Kneeland, who has been a director since
August 2008; Singleton B. McAllister, who has been a director
since April 2004; Brian D. McAuley, who has been a director
since April 2004; John S. McKinney, who has been a director
since September 1998; Jason D. Papastavrou, who has been a
director since June 2005; Filippo Passerini, who has been a
director since January 2009; and Keith Wimbush, who has been a
director since April 2006. Each of these directors is standing
for re-election. In making its recommendation to the Board, the
Nominating Committee reviewed and evaluated, in addition to each
nominees background and experience and other criteria set
forth in the Companys corporate governance guidelines,
each directors performance during his or her recent tenure
with the Board and whether each was likely to continue to
contribute positively to the Board.
Procedure for
Submission of Recommendations by Security Holders
Our security holders may recommend potential director candidates
by following the procedure described below. The Nominating
Committee will evaluate recommendations from security holders in
the same manner that it evaluates recommendations from other
sources.
If you wish to recommend a potential director candidate for
consideration by the Nominating Committee, please send your
recommendation to United Rentals, Inc., Five Greenwich Office
Park, Greenwich, Connecticut 06831, Attention: Corporate
Secretary. Any notice relating to candidates for election at the
2011 annual meeting must be received by December 31, 2010.
You should use first class, certified mail in order to ensure
the receipt of your recommendation.
Any recommendation must include (i) your name and address
and a list of the securities of the Company that you own;
(ii) the name, age, business address and residence address
of the proposed candidate; (iii) the principal occupation
or employment of the proposed candidate over the preceding ten
years and the persons educational background; (iv) a
statement as to why you believe such person should be considered
a potential candidate; (v) a description of any affiliation
between you and the person you are recommending; and
(vi) the consent of the proposed candidate to your
submitting him or her as a potential candidate. You should note
that the foregoing process relates only to bringing potential
candidates to the attention of the Nominating Committee.
Following this process will not give you the right to directly
propose a nominee at any meeting of stockholders. See
Other MattersStockholder Proposals for the 2011
Annual Meeting.
Direct
Communications with Directors
We have adopted procedures to enable our security holders and
other interested parties to communicate with our Board or with
any individual director or directors. If you wish to send a
communication, you should do so in writing. Security holders and
other interested parties may send communications to the Board or
the particular director or directors, as the case may be, in the
manner described in the Companys written policy available
on its website at
http://www.ur.com
under Corporate Governance in the Investor Relations
section.
16
EXECUTIVE
COMPENSATION
Compensation
Discussion and Analysis
The Compensation Committee (which we refer to as the
Committee in this Compensation Discussion and
Analysis) of the Board is responsible for establishing,
implementing and continually monitoring adherence to the
Companys compensation philosophy. The Committee seeks to
ensure that the total compensation paid to our chief executive
officer, our chief financial officer and our other executive
officers is fair, reasonable and competitive.
The Committees specific responsibilities are set forth in
its charter, which may be found on the Companys website at
http://www.ur.com
under Corporate Governance in the Investor
Relations section. Among other things, the Committee is required
to: (i) determine and approve the compensation of the chief
executive officer; (ii) review and approve the compensation
of the Companys other executive officers;
(iii) review and approve any incentive compensation plan or
equity-based plan for the benefit of executive officers; and
(iv) review and approve any employment agreement, severance
arrangement or
change-in-control
arrangement for the benefit of executive officers.
Throughout this proxy statement, the individuals who served as
the Companys chief executive officer and chief financial
officer during the fiscal year 2009, as well as the other
individuals included in the Summary Compensation Table (which
include, pursuant to SEC regulations, our former executive vice
president and general counsel), are referred to as named
executive officers. This Compensation Discussion and
Analysis explains our executive compensation philosophy and
objectives and each element of our executive compensation
program for our named executive officers in 2009 (and decisions
with respect thereto), as well as certain significant
developments in 2010. In addition, the compensation and benefits
provided to our named executive officers in 2009 are set forth
in detail in the Summary Compensation Table (which, if required
by SEC regulations, also details compensation and benefits
provided in 2008 and 2007) and other tables that follow
this analysis, and in the footnotes and narrative material that
accompany those tables.
Executive
Compensation Philosophy
Our overall compensation program seeks to align executive
compensation with the achievement of the Companys business
objectives and with individual performance towards these
objectives. It also seeks to enable the Company to attract,
retain and reward executive officers and other key employees who
contribute to our success and to incentivize them to enhance
long-term stockholder value. In reviewing the components of
compensation for each executive officer, the Committee
emphasizes pay for performance on both an annual basis and over
the long term.
To implement this philosophy, the total compensation program is
designed to be competitive with the programs of other companies
with which the Company competes for executives, and to be fair
and equitable to both the Company and the executives.
Consideration is given to each executives overall
responsibilities, professional qualifications, business
experience, job performance, technical expertise and career
potential, and the combined value of these factors to the
Companys long-term performance and growth.
We are interested in the views of our stockholders as it relates
to the Companys executive compensation practices,
philosophy and disclosures. To this end, we are surveying our
stockholders to solicit such views. If you are a stockholder,
and you would like to participate, please contact Fred Bratman
at fbratman@ur.com. The survey results will be reviewed by the
Compensation Committee.
17
Objectives of
Executive Compensation
The objectives of our executive compensation program are to:
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attract and retain quality executive leadership;
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enhance the individual executives performance;
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align incentives with the business unit and Company areas most
directly impacted by the executives leadership and
performance;
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create incentives that will focus executives on, and reward them
for, increasing stockholder value;
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maintain equitable levels of overall compensation both among
executives and as compared to other employees;
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encourage management ownership of our common stock; and
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improve our overall performance.
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The Committee strives to meet these objectives while maintaining
market-competitive pay levels and ensuring that we make
efficient use of equity compensation and have predictable
expense recognition.
The Committee seeks to properly compensate executive officers
for their services to the Company and to create incentives to
focus on the specific goals identified as significant to the
Company. The Committee identifies and considers a wide range of
measures for Company performance and, as appropriate, also
considers measures tied to individual performance or share price
appreciation. With the assistance of its advisors, the Committee
then selects the measures it believes most closely align with
the Companys business
and/or
financial objectives (or other measures of performance, if
applicable), or are otherwise most likely to support those
objectives, and defines specific performance goals based on
those measures. In addition, the Committee endeavors to preserve
the Companys tax deduction for all compensation paid,
which can be accomplished primarily by conditioning compensation
on the achievement of certain performance goals, as further
discussed below. The Committee also includes so-called
clawback provisions in most of our employment and
award agreements, which generally require reimbursement of
received or vested amounts if their receipt or vesting resulted
from financial results that have subsequently been the subject
of certain mandatory restatements.
With the assistance of its compensation and legal advisors, the
Committee regularly reviews governance best practices with
respect to the Companys executive compensation program. In
October 2009, Towers Perrin (now known as Towers
Watson as a result of a merger with Watson Wyatt on
January 1, 2010), the Committees compensation
consultant, led an in-depth review of recent trends in corporate
governance best practices with respect to executive
compensation. One of the key outcomes of this review was the
Committees adoption, in February 2010, of stock ownership
guidelines for senior management, which are described in detail
below.
Role of the
Compensation Consultant
While the Committee has overall responsibility for establishing
the elements, level and administration of our executive
compensation programs, our chief executive officer and members
of the Companys human resources department routinely
participate in this process. The Committee also utilizes outside
compensation experts. As it had during the second half of 2008,
the Committee continued to engage Towers Perrin throughout 2009
to provide consulting services with respect to the
Companys compensation practices.
The compensation consultant generally reviews, analyzes and
provides advice about the Companys executive compensation
programs for senior executives in relation to the objectives of
those programs, including comparisons to designated peer group
companies and comparisons to
18
best practices, and provides information and advice
on competitive compensation practices and trends, along with
specific views on the Companys compensation programs. The
compensation consultant responds on a regular basis to questions
from the Committee and the Committees other advisors,
providing them with their opinions with respect to the design
and implementation of current or proposed compensation programs.
The compensation consultant reports directly to the Committee
and, as directed by the Committee, works with management and the
chairman of the Committee, and also regularly attends Committee
meetings. Towers Perrin also provided services to the Company on
various matters unrelated to the executive compensation
consulting services provided to the Committee. In 2009, these
unrelated services on behalf of the Company were for an
aggregate fee of less than $120,000. The Committee considered
the nature and extent of the services provided by Towers Perrin
to the Company, other than at the Committees discretion,
prior to engaging Towers Perrin. None of these other services
had a role in determining the amount or form of executive
compensation for our executive officers (other than as described
under Performance-Based CompensationLong Term
Performance-Based Cash Incentives) and the Committee
believes that Towers Perrin took adequate steps to ensure its
impartiality.
Benchmarking of
Compensation Levels
In making compensation decisions, the Committee compares each
component of the total compensation package of the chief
executive officer, chief financial officer and, when
compensation information for a sufficient number of comparable
executive positions is publicly available, the other named
executive officers against the compensation components of
comparable executive positions of a peer group of publicly
traded companies. While the Committee does not use a specific
formula to determine the allocation between performance-based
and fixed compensation, it does review the total compensation
and competitive benchmarking when determining the allocation.
The Committee, based on input from its outside compensation
consultant, reviews the makeup of its peer group annually and
makes adjustments to the composition of the group as it deems
appropriate. In December 2008, Towers Perrin reviewed the
then-current peer group and recommended that the Committee
replace the existing 15-company peer group with a 17-company
peer group composed entirely of companies in the construction
and distribution industries, including RSC Holdings Inc., which
is a direct competitor of the Company, and Hertz Global
Holdings, Inc., which is often considered a competitor of the
Company in light of its large equipment rental division. In
2009, the following 17 companies comprised the peer group
used to evaluate the total compensation package of the chief
executive officer and the chief financial officer:
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AECOM Technology Corporation
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Quanta Services, Inc.
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Applied Industrial Technologies, Inc.
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Perini Corporation
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BlueLinx Holdings Inc.
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RSC Holdings Inc.
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EMCOR Group, Inc.
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Rush Enterprises, Inc.
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Fastenal Company
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The Shaw Group Inc.
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Foster Wheeler AG (formerly Foster Wheeler Ltd.)
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URS Corporation
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Granite Construction Incorporated
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WESCO International, Inc.
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Hertz Global Holdings, Inc.
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W.W. Grainger, Inc.
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Jacobs Engineering Group Inc.
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In December 2009, Towers Perrin once again reviewed the current
peer group and recommended to the Committee that the Company
continue to use a peer group of comparably sized companies in
the construction and distribution industries. However, for 2010,
Towers Perrin recommended that three companies (Hertz, Jacobs
Engineering, and URS) be removed from the peer group due to the
fact that they had become approximately 2.5 to 3 times as large
as the Company when measured by annual revenue. The new peer
group did not have any impact on compensation paid for 2009.
For other named executive officers, the Company utilized general
industry executive compensation benchmarking data from Towers
Perrins compensation data bank, adjusted for better
19
comparability to the Companys most recent fiscal year-end
revenue levels through a regression analysis (a commonly
accepted statistical method for rendering companies of different
sizes more comparable) since compensation information for a
sufficient number of comparable executive positions in the peer
group was not publicly available. For benchmarking in 2009, the
sample from Towers Perrins compensation data bank
consisted of 416 representative non-energy, non-financial
services companies and in 2010, it consisted of 428
representative non-energy, non-financial services companies.
In February 2009, Towers Perrin reviewed the compensation of the
Companys named executive officers (other than
Mr. Schwed who had stepped down from his position by that
time) compared to competitive benchmarks. Based on this review,
the current level of total target compensation for the named
executive officers covered in the review (including base salary,
annual incentives and long-term incentives) ranged from 18%
below to 21% above the projected competitive
50th percentile of the comparison group for 2009. Towers
Perrin advised the Committee that the current level of total
target compensation for the named executive officers covered in
the review was generally within a reasonable range of
competitive norms, and the Committee considered these findings
when determining base salaries, target incentives and long-term
incentive grants for 2009. An analysis of actual compensation,
replacing the target bonus payments with actual bonus paid, was
not done in February 2009 for any of the named executive
officers because such named executive officers were either not
employed with the Company or were holding different positions
during the time period for which competitive data on actual
bonuses were available.
In February 2010, Towers Watson (formerly known as Towers
Perrin) again reviewed the compensation of the Companys
named executive officers compared to competitive benchmarks.
Based on this review, the current level of total target
compensation for the named executive officers covered in the
review (including base salary, annual incentives and long-term
incentives) ranged from 18% below to 23% above the projected
competitive 50th percentile of the comparison group for
2010. Towers Watson advised the Committee that the current level
of total target compensation for the named executive officers
covered in the review is generally within a reasonable range of
competitive norms, and the Committee considered these findings
when determining base salaries, target incentives and long-term
incentive grants for 2010.
Executive
Compensation Components
The principal components of compensation for the Companys
named executive officers in 2009 were:
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base salary;
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performance-based compensation, composed of:
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annual performance-based cash incentives,
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equity compensation, and
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long-term performance-based cash incentives;
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discretionary cash bonuses (in limited instances);
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severance and change in control benefits;
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retirement benefits; and
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perquisites and other personal benefits.
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We believe that the use of relatively few straightforward
compensation components promotes the effectiveness and
transparency of our executive compensation program.
20
Base
Salary
The Company provides named executive officers and other
employees with a base salary to compensate them for services
rendered during the fiscal year. Base salaries provide stable
compensation to executives, allow us to attract competent
executive talent, maintain a stable management team and, through
periodic merit increases, provide a basis upon which executives
may be rewarded for individual performance.
The base salary levels of continuing executives are reviewed
annually. The Committees outside compensation consultant
recommends a salary for the chief executive officer, and the
chief executive officer, in consultation with the chief
financial officer, recommends a salary for the other named
executive officers. In considering whether to adopt these
suggestions, the Committee considers the Companys
performance; the executives individual performance; the
executives experience, career potential and length of
tenure with the Company; the applicable terms, if any, of the
executives employment agreement; the salary levels of
similarly situated officers at peer group companies, as
collected and presented by the consultant; and the salary levels
of the Companys other officers.
When an executive is initially hired, the Committee considers
the same factors, as well as the executives salary in his
or her previous employment and the compensation of other Company
executives with similar responsibilities.
During the first quarter of each year, based on this process and
a review conducted by Towers Perrin of the compensation of the
named executive officers, the Committee considers merit
increases to the base salaries of the Companys named
executive officers. In March 2009, the Committee determined,
consistent with senior managements recommendation, not to
increase any base salaries in 2009 for any of its named
executive officers. This decision reflected the deepening
economic recession and the Companys continued focus on
controlling its costs.
At the beginning of 2009, Mr. Kneeland suggested (and the
Committee agreed) to a reduction of his annual base salary by
20% to $600,000 for 2009 (although this reduction does not
affect ancillary benefits, such as incentive targets and
severance pay, which, to the extent any had become applicable in
2009, would have been based on an annual base salary of
$750,000). Mr. Kneeland believed this reduction was an
important leadership step to take, given the cutbacks and other
sacrifices being asked of the Companys other employees. On
January 1, 2010, Mr. Kneelands annual base
salary reverted back to its previous annual rate of $750,000,
consistent with the Committees actions in 2009.
In March 2010, the Committee again considered merit increases to
the base salaries of the Companys named executive
officers. Based on managements recommendation, the
Committee determined not to increase any named executive
officers base salary for 2010. This decision reflected the
continued challenges in the Companys end markets and the
ongoing focus on cost control. Although the Committee did not
exercise its discretion to increase base salaries based on any
named executive officers individual performance in 2009 or
2010, it reserves its discretion to do so in subsequent years.
Performance-Based
Compensation
Performance-based compensation primarily serves two functions.
First, it creates an incentive to focus on and achieve the
objectives we identify as significant. Historically, the
performance goals have varied depending on the individual
executives functions in the Company. The Committee works
with its compensation consultant and with senior management,
including the named executive officers, to identify the specific
areas to be addressed by performance goals and decide on
appropriate targets.
Second, performance-based compensation provides a mechanism by
which named executive officers compensation fluctuates
with the performance of the Company, thus helping to align named
executive officers interests with those of stockholders.
This is accomplished with comprehensive performance measures,
such as earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and
amortization
21
(EBITDA), EBITDA as a percentage of revenue
(EBITDA Margin), free cash flow and reduction in
SG&A expense, which focus more on the Companys
profitability or cash flows than the achievement of a specific
goal. In addition, performance-based awards that are
equity-based fluctuate in value with the stock price, directly
aligning executives interests with those of stockholders.
For Messrs. Kneeland and Plummer, the Committee decided
that performance measures for 2009 should primarily be tied to
specific objective Company performance criteria and applied with
equal weight to each executive. In making this determination,
the Committee determined that the achievement of the 2009
performance criteria be subject to an additional objective
threshold funding formula tied to the achievement of EBITDA. The
performance goals selected for 2009 related to specific
objective Company performance criteria, and the Company criteria
themselves were ones highly correlated to enhancing stockholder
value: EBITDA, EBITDA Margin, free cash flow, and reduction in
SG&A expense. In addition, given the role of management in
the important strategic initiatives underway at the Company, the
Committee also established a discretionary performance objective
tied to growth in the Companys national accounts rental
revenue as a percentage of total Company rental revenue and to
the implementation of certain key technology programs focused on
pricing and logistics. The discretionary performance objective
was also tied to the threshold EBITDA funding formula described
above.
For 2009, the Companys performance compensation program
for named executive officers was comprised of three components:
(i) an annual cash incentive, (ii) restricted stock
units that vest based upon continued employment with the
Company, and (iii) stock options that reward executives for
improvement in the Companys stock price. Performance-based
awards typically are granted simultaneously to all employees in
connection with a Committee meeting held in March of each year.
The date of the meeting is set several months in advance of the
meeting, which usually occurs after the announcement of the
Companys results for the previous fiscal year and before
the end of the first fiscal quarter.
The decision to award stock options in 2009 was reflective of
the deepening recession and the increasing difficulty of
forecasting results, principally in lieu of a cash-based
long-term incentive award (which requires forecasts as to
three-year cumulative EBITDA) and performance-based restricted
stock unit grants (which, depending on the performance measure
and award design, require one- to three-year forecasts). In
2010, the Committee decided to once again grant stock options as
a performance-based award due to the continuing economic
uncertainty and difficulty in forecasting three-year results.
Annual
Performance-Based Cash Incentives
In 2009, the Company maintained the 2009 Annual Incentive
Compensation Plan (the Executive Plan) to provide
annual cash compensation to its executives upon the achievement
of pre-established performance goals. The Executive Plan is
important for creating incentives that will focus certain
executives on, and reward them for, increasing stockholder value
as well as improving the Companys overall performance. The
Committee determines the specific performance goals under the
Executive Plan, while the Executive Plan itself sets general
parameters for the performance goals. The Executive Plan defines
these parameters in order to qualify payments made under this
plan as performance-based for purposes of Internal Revenue Code
Section 162(m). By setting the performance goals annually,
the Committee is able to design compensation that is appropriate
for the specific year, encouraging and rewarding attention to
the specific areas that are significant to the Company in that
year. Consequently, the specific performance goals and the
extent to which they differ among executives may vary from year
to year. In 2009, Messrs. Kneeland and Plummer were the
only named executive officers to participate in the Executive
Plan since they were the only named executive officers
(Mr. Plummer only if he qualified as a named executive
officer and was not our chief financial officer) with
compensation that, in certain circumstances, could have
approached the limit on deductibility under Internal Revenue
Code Section 162(m); the other named executive officers
participated in the Companys corporate incentive program
which is described below.
22
The Executive Plan permits awards up to $5 million per
year. In 2009, the Committee established a target incentive for
Mr. Kneeland of 125% of base salary and limited his maximum
award benefit to 150% of base salary, which was consistent with
the incentive targets specified in Mr. Kneelands
employment agreement. The Committee also established a target
incentive of 80% of base salary for Mr. Plummer and
provided for a maximum award benefit of 125% of base salary,
which was consistent with the incentive targets specified in
Mr. Plummers employment agreement.
In 2009, awards under the Executive Plan were designed so that
achievement of EBITDA targets (0.2% for Mr. Kneeland and
0.1% for Mr. Plummer) would establish the maximum award
level for each of Messrs. Kneeland and Plummer, with actual
award levels determined by formulas based on additional
performance criteria and the exercise of negative discretion by
the Committee. The additional performance criteria for 2009 were
based on the achievement of specific objective Company goals,
with their selection intended to support the Companys
strategic plan focused on EBITDA, EBITDA margin, the generation
of significant free cash flow in a challenging economic
environment, and a continued focus on reducing SG&A
expense. In addition, the additional performance criteria for
2009 included a key component of the Companys evolving
strategy, a discretionary objective tied to growth in national
accounts rental revenue as a percentage of total Company rental
revenue. The Committee determined to apply each of the
aforementioned performance criteria equally to
Messrs. Kneeland and Plummer. While the Company ceased
providing earnings guidance in 2009, the bonus target payout
levels based on EBITDA and EBITDA margin were set to goals
significantly higher than the internal operating plan approved
by the Board. And, in the case of free cash flow and SG&A
expense reduction, the bonus target payout levels were set at or
higher than the public guidance. In setting target measures for
these goals, the Committee believed that correlating them to
achievement well in excess of the internal operating plan was
appropriate as an alignment of Messrs. Kneeland and Plummer
and stockholder interests. If the internal operating plan was
achieved for each of these metrics at their top end, the target
incentive amounts would be paid and if the actual internal
operating plan was achieved, reduced incentives would be paid.
And, finally, if the certain thresholds below the internal
operating plan were not achieved, then no incentives would be
paid. At the time they are set, achievement of the performance
goals established by the Committee is substantially uncertain.
The threshold-level goals can be characterized as stretch
but attainable goals, meaning that, based on historical
performance, although attainment of this performance level is
uncertain, it can reasonably be anticipated that the threshold
level of performance may be achieved, while the target and
maximum goals represent increasingly challenging and aggressive
levels of performance.
The Committee established the following threshold, target and
maximum payout amounts as a percentage of base salary under the
Executive Plan.
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2009 Annual Performance-Based Cash Incentives
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Estimated Future Payouts under Executive Plan as a Percentage
of Base Salary
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Eligible
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Payout
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Operating Plan
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Based on
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(Board
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|
|
|
|
|
Actual
|
|
Actual
|
|
|
Threshold
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|
Approved)
|
|
Bonus Target
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|
Maximum
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Performance
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|
Payout
|
|
Michael Kneeland
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|
54%($405,000)
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94%($705,000
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)
|
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125%($937,500
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)
|
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150%($1,125,000
|
)
|
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|
$538,200
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|
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$202,500
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|
William Plummer
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|
34%($161,500)
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|
60%($285,000
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)
|
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|
80%($380,000
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)
|
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|
125%($593,750
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)
|
|
|
$268,660
|
|
|
|
$82,080
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|
Throughout 2009, as the economy continued its downturn, the
Companys operating results were negatively affected. As a
result, only two of the four objective performance measures set
for 2009 under the Executive Plan, free cash flow and reduction
in SG&A expense, were achieved above their threshold level.
Neither of the remaining objective performance measures set for
2009, EBITDA and EBIDTA Margin, were met even at their threshold
level under the Executive Plan. The table below
23
summarizes the threshold-, target- and maximum-level goals
established by the Committee and the actual performance of the
Company.
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Weighting of
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Performance
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Performance
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2009 Actual
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Metric
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Metric
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2009 Performance Goals
(1)
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Results
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Operating Plan
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|
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(Board
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|
Bonus
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Threshold
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|
Approved)
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Target
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Maximum
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|
EBITDA
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|
20%
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|
$642 million
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|
$789 million
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|
$920 million
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|
$1.104 billion
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|
$589 million
|
EBITDA Margin
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|
10%
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|
26%
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|
28%
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|
30%
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|
32%
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|
25%
|
Free Cash Flow
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|
30%
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|
$296 million
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|
$316 million
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|
$356 million
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|
$376 million
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|
$367 million
|
SG&A Expense Reduction
|
|
20%
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|
$30 million
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|
$30 million
|
|
$50 million
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|
$70 million
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|
$101 million
|
Discretionary
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|
20%
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|
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(1)
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For performance between threshold
and target levels or target and maximum levels, payout is
determined linearly based on a straight line interpolation of
the applicable payout range.
|
Based on the pre-established bonus formula under the Executive
Plan, Mr. Kneeland was entitled to a bonus of $538,200 and
Mr. Plummer was entitled to a bonus of $268,660. While the
formula under the Executive Plan would have generated a higher
bonus funding, Messrs. Kneeland and Plummer requested that
the Committee set their annual bonus funding to the
discretionary pool determined under the Companys corporate
incentive program to ensure that they were receiving the same
consideration as other corporate employees. While the Committee
believed that both Messrs. Kneeland and Plummer had put
forth their best efforts under very difficult circumstances in
2009, and through their leadership had helped to steer the
Company during the downturn, the Committee agreed with the
fairness of their request. As a result, the Committee determined
to use its discretion to reduce the incentive payments to
Messrs. Kneeland and Plummer to be consistent with the
funding formula used under the Companys corporate
incentive program at the maximum level. As a result, for 2009,
Mr. Kneeland received a bonus of $202,500 and
Mr. Plummer received a bonus of $82,080.
In 2009, the Company did not implement any annual incentive
formulas or entitlements for Messrs. Gottsegen, Dixon and
DeWitt. Instead, annual incentive compensation for these
executives was entirely discretionary. We believe this provided
us the flexibility we needed to support our success during these
difficult times and to respond to changing market conditions.
Fiscal 2009 was a volatile year for us and the Company and the
Committee took these factors into account as well as performance
reviews provided by Messrs. Kneeland and Plummer when
determining annual incentive compensation for
Messrs. Gottsegen, Dixon and DeWitt. The Company and the
Committee also considered Mr. Gottsegens partial year
of service in 2009 when determining his annual incentive
compensation.
In determining the amount of bonuses to pay for 2009, the
Company considered achievement of the performance goals used
under the Executive Plan and the executives
pre-established target bonus. Due primarily to the significant
year-over-year
decline in the Companys EBITDA, the incentive funding
reflected the Companys achievements in generating free
cash flow and cost reduction efforts. Such funding was the
lowest in the Companys history and reflects the
Companys performance in 2009. As a result,
Messrs. Gottsegen, Dixon and DeWitt received payments of
$36,000 (reflecting partial year of service), $40,000 and
$42,000, respectively.
Equity
Compensation
The Committee believes that equity compensation is an important
component of performance-based compensation in its ability to
directly align the interests of the named executive officers
with those of stockholders. The Committee recognizes that
different types of equity compensation afford different benefits
to the Company and the recipients. In the past, the Company
utilized stock options and restricted shares as the primary
equity compensation vehicles for named executive officers.
24
Beginning in 2006 and continuing through 2008, the Company
utilized restricted stock units (RSUs), both RSUs
that vested based on achievement of certain performance goals
(performance-vested awards) and RSUs that vested
based simply on continued employment (time-vested
awards), as the primary means of equity compensation. As noted
above and described below, for 2009 and 2010, the Committee
decided to use stock options as the performance-based component
of long-term equity incentive compensation, in conjunction with
time-vested RSUs. This move away from granting performance-based
RSUs is in large part due to the continued difficulty of
forecasting long-term performance in the current economic
environment.
Stock-settled RSUs are full value grants, meaning
that, upon vesting, the recipient is awarded the full share. As
a result, while the value executives realize in connection with
an award of RSUs does depend on our stock price, time-vested
RSUs generally have some value even if the Companys stock
price significantly decreases following their grant (unlike
performance-based RSUs that do not vest unless the performance
level is achieved). As a result, time-vested RSUs help to secure
and retain executives and instill an ownership mentality,
regardless of whether the Companys stock price increases
or decreases. In contrast, stock options aim to align the
executives interest with that of stockholder interests by
providing the opportunity for executives to realize value only
when the Companys stock price increases relative to the
exercise price following their grant. Accordingly, stock options
may end up having no value if, subsequent to the date of grant,
the Companys common stock price declines below the
exercise price and does not recover before the expiration of the
stock option. Furthermore, if the stock price does increase
relative to the exercise price, the vesting period helps to
retain executives. Because the expense to the Company is less
for each stock option than for each RSU, the Committee can award
an executive significantly more stock options than RSUs when
attempting to provide a specified valuewhich means that
stock options potentially provide more upside potential and,
therefore, greater incentive to increase stockholder value
through an appreciated share price. Historically, neither the
Companys RSUs nor its stock options earned any dividend
equivalents.
In determining the size of each equity award granted, the
Committee considers a variety of factors, including benchmarking
data on competitive long-term incentive values, the percentage
of long-term incentive value to be allocated to time-vested RSUs
as opposed to performance-vested RSUs and stock options, the
strategic importance of the executives position within the
Company as a whole and, in the case of new hires, the
compensation such executive received from his or her prior
employer. In terms of the actual allocation between time-vested
RSUs as opposed to stock options, we allocate 60% of the total
equity awards to stock options because, as discussed above, we
believe stock options aim to align the executives interest
with that of stockholder interests by providing the opportunity
for executives to realize value only when the Companys
stock price increases relative to the exercise price following
their grant. In prior years, once the dollar value of the size
of the equity award had been determined (using the factors
described above), the actual number of RSUs or options to be
granted would be calculated by dividing the dollar value of the
proposed award by the share price of the Companys stock on
the equity award grant date. However, for the equity awards
granted in March 2009, the Committee deviated from this
methodology because it believed that the Companys stock
price did not reflect its implied value based on a variety of
key performance factors. As a result, the Committee used an
assumed stock price of $8 to determine the number of RSUs or
stock options (but not the exercise price) to be granted in 2009
versus the actual price of $3.375 on the date the awards were
approved by the Committee. This more conservative approach to
determining the amount of RSUs and stock options to be granted
resulted in a lower number of overall shares granted from the
equity pool in 2009 than would have been granted under the
previous methodology since the assumed stock price exceeded the
actual stock price on the grant date.
In Proposal 2Approval of 2010 Long Term
Incentive Plan, the Company is soliciting stockholder
approval of the 2010 Long Term Incentive Plan, which was adopted
by the Committee in March 2010. If approved, the 2010 Long Term
Incentive Plan will replace our existing equity compensation
plans and become the vehicle for future equity compensation.
25
Time-Vested RSUs. In 2009, the Committee
awarded time-vested RSUs to each of Messrs. Gottsegen,
Dixon, and DeWitt. Messrs. Kneeland and Plummer did not
receive an award of time-vested RSUs in 2009 as
Mr. Kneeland had received a grant of 80,000 time-vested
RSUs in 2008 in recognition of the fact that he did not receive
an equity grant in 2007 and Mr. Plummer received an award
of 40,000 time-vested RSUs in connection with his initial hire
in December 2008.
In determining the size and terms of the RSU awards, the
Committee reviewed benchmark data on competitive long-term
incentive values, existing equity awards and vesting schedules.
As a result, the Committee awarded Mr. Gottsegen 17,000
RSUs (in connection with his 2009 employment), Mr. Dixon
10,000 RSUs and Mr. DeWitt 10,000 RSUs (each with vesting
for one-third of the shares on each anniversary of the grant
date, with full vesting occurring after three years).
Stock Options. Recognizing that longer-term
forecasts were becoming increasingly difficult in the current
environment, the Committee decided to grant stock options in
2009 as the Companys performance-based long-term incentive
awards.
Mr. Plummers December 2008 hire and related
employment agreement required the Company to grant him during
2009 a performance-based long-term incentive award with an
anticipated target value of $450,000, based on the valuation
method used by the Company with respect to other awards to
senior executives, but without specifying the form of award. The
target value of $450,000 reflected the value of his incentive
awards at his prior employer and benchmarking data on
competitive long-term incentive values. Based on the
considerations outlined above, the Committee determined to
fulfill this obligation in March 2009 by awarding him a stock
option to purchase 100,000 shares of the Companys
common stock, with equal annual installments vesting over a
three-year period. The award, as is the case with all the
Companys stock option awards, was granted at an exercise
price equal to the average of high and low trading prices of the
Companys common stock on the date of grant.
Reflecting similar considerations, the Committee, in March 2009,
authorized a stock option award to Mr. Kneeland to purchase
160,000 shares of the Companys common stock (with the
same vesting terms as Mr. Plummers grant), in lieu of
the 45,000 performance-based RSUs (assuming target performance)
required under the terms of his employment agreement. The
performance-based RSUs had a target value of $720,000,
reflecting benchmarking data for competitive long-term incentive
values, and the contemplated RSU award was converted into a
stock option award of equivalent value based on the same
estimated value per option that was used to determine the size
of option grants to other executives.
In connection with his commencing employment in 2009,
Mr. Gottsegen received a stock option award to purchase
40,000 shares of the Companys common stock. Also in
2009, Mr. Dixon received a stock option award to purchase
35,000 shares of the Companys common stock and
Mr. DeWitt received a stock option award to purchase
30,000 shares of the Companys common stock. The size
and terms of the stock option awards were determined by the
Committee based on a review of benchmark data on competitive
long-term incentive values and existing equity awards.
Long-Term
Performance-Based Cash Incentives
In 2008, the Committee engaged Towers Perrin to assist in
redesigning its long-term cash incentive plan for non-executive
employees. The Committee ultimately decided to adopt the
performance measures in the new plan for purposes of
establishing the performance goals for its 2008 grants of
performance-based long-term incentive units (Units)
to its executives because it felt that it was desirable to have
the Companys executives strive for and focus on achieving
performance goals more directly comparable to the goals asked of
non-executive employees. Mr. Kneeland is the only current
named executive officer who received such a grant in the amount
of 105,000 Units, reflecting the fact that neither
Messrs. Plummer, Gottsegen, DeWitt, nor Dixon had been
hired until after such grants had been made and did not receive
formal grants. For 2008, the grants of Units replaced awards of
performance-based RSUs.
26
In considering the grants of Units for 2008, the Committee, as
it had with setting 2008 goals under the Executive Plan, desired
to align executive incentives more precisely with objective
Company performance criteria and, more specifically, with the
Company-wide performance objective of achieving profitable,
long-term EBITDA growth. As a result, the Units have a single
performance goal, focused on EBITDA growth and margin and
measured solely at the end of the three-year performance period
(December 31, 2010). Depending upon the extent to which the
performance goal is achieved or surpassed, the Units will
achieve a cash-settled formulaic
per-unit
value. The Committee believed that these features were
appropriate to re-align our long-term incentive grants with the
Companys revised 2008 strategic plan.
Accordingly, the Units, which will vest on December 31,
2010, have a
per-unit
value that will be based primarily upon the extent to which the
Company achieves or surpasses a target level of
$3.648 billion in cumulative EBITDA over the three-year
period beginning January 1, 2008 and ending
December 31, 2010. The
per-unit
value is then further adjusted depending upon whether average
EBITDA margin over the same three-year period falls below,
within or above a target range of between 34% and 35%
(inclusive).
It is presently anticipated based on the Companys
performance in 2008 and 2009 (the first two years of the three
year performance period), that the performance targets will not
be met, even at the threshold level. As a result, it is
anticipated that Mr. Kneeland will forfeit all Units
awarded to him under this plan on December 31, 2010.
Severance and
Change in Control Benefits
The Committee believes that agreeing to provide reasonable
severance benefits is common among similar companies and is
essential to recruiting and retaining key executives, which is a
fundamental objective of our executive compensation program.
Accordingly, the employment agreements with the named executive
officers generally provide for varying levels of severance in
the event that the Company terminates the executive without
cause or the executive terminates for good
reason (each as defined in the employment agreement with
the executive, as set forth in more detail under Benefits
upon Termination of Employment). Mr. Kneeland would
receive 450% of his base salary prior to the voluntary reduction
in 2009 paid over a two-year period. Mr. Plummer would
receive 180% of his base salary paid over one year.
Mr. Gottsegen would receive 160% of his base salary paid
over one year. Mr. DeWitt would receive a severance payment
equal to 100% of his base salary paid over one year and
Mr. Dixon would receive a severance payment equal to 100%
of his base salary paid over one year plus the pro-rata portion
of his target annual cash bonus.
In addition, the Companys time-vested RSU grants to
Messrs. Kneeland, Plummer, Dixon and DeWitt in 2008 and to
Mr. Gottsegen in 2009, as well as the 2009 awards of stock
options granted to Messrs. Kneeland, Plummer and Gottsegen,
provide that, if the Company terminates the executive without
cause or the executive terminates for good
reason, a pro-rata portion of such RSUs or stock options
scheduled to vest during the year of termination will vest on
the date of termination. However, the Company does not currently
expect that its future equity awards will provide for pro-rata
vesting upon termination of employment. The Companys
time-vested RSU grants to Messrs. Dixon and DeWitt in 2009,
as well as their 2009 awards of stock options, provide that, if
the Company terminates the executive without cause,
all unvested RSUs or stock options will be cancelled, unless
such termination occurs within twelve months following a change
in control, in which case all such unvested RSUs and stock
options will immediately vest. The Company also typically
provides its executives with COBRA continuation coverage for a
period coterminous with the duration of their severance benefit,
although variations exist.
The prospect of a change in control of the Company can cause
significant distraction and uncertainty for executive officers
and, accordingly, the Committee believes that appropriate change
in control provisions in employment agreements
and/or
equity awards are important tools for aligning executives
interests in change in control scenarios with those of
stockholders by allowing our
27
executive officers to focus on strategic transactions that may
be in the best interest of our stockholders without undue
concern regarding the effect of such transactions on their
continued employment. In addition, changes to the Company
following a change in control may affect the ability to achieve
previously set performance measures. Consequently, 2009 RSU and
stock option awards to the named executive officers include the
following provisions:
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|
|
if the change in control results in none of the common stock of
the Company being publicly traded, then all such RSUs and stock
options will vest in full upon the change in control; and
|
|
|
|
if the change in control results in shares of common stock of
the Company being publicly traded, then all such RSUs and stock
options will vest in full if there is a termination by the
Company without cause or by the individual for
good reason within 12 months following the
change in control.
|
A change in control for this purpose is defined in
the employment agreement with the executive or in the applicable
award agreement, as set forth in more detail under
Benefits upon a Change in Control.
Older RSU awards for executives, both time-based and
performance-based, generally include comparable, if not
substantially identical, provisions (although some awards had
full vesting of time-based RSUs solely upon the occurrence of a
change in control). While we believe that the Companys
severance and change in control benefits are in line with the
most prevalent practices of comparably-sized companies, we
believe that the current requirement of a double
trigger for full vesting of time-based RSUs, which is less
common, is more appropriate in the current economic environment.
The existence of arrangements providing for severance and change
in control benefits did not affect decisions that the Committee
made regarding other compensation elements.
The Internal Revenue Code imposes an excise tax on the value of
certain payments that are contingent upon a change in control,
referred to as parachute payments, which exceed a safe harbor
amount. The Company does not provide any executive with a
gross-up for
any excise tax that may be triggered. Mr. Kneelands
employment agreement provides that, if he receives payments that
would result in the imposition of the excise tax, such payments
will be reduced to the safe harbor amount so that no excise tax
is triggered if the net after-tax benefit to him is greater than
the net after-tax benefit that he would receive if no reduction
occurred.
The severance and change in control provisions of our named
executive officers employment agreements and other
arrangements are described in detail in the sections
Benefits upon Termination of Employment and
Benefits upon a Change in Control, respectively.
Retirement
Benefits
The Committee believes that providing a cost-effective
retirement benefit for the Companys executives is an
important recruitment and retention tool. Accordingly, the
Company maintains a 401(k) plan for all employees, and provides
discretionary employer-matching contributions (subject to
certain limitations including for 2009, an annual limit of $500)
based on an employees contributions.
The Company affords the named executive officers an opportunity
to defer a portion of their compensation in excess of the
amounts that are legally permitted to be deferred under the
Companys 401(k) plan and to defer the receipt of the
shares of the Companys common stock that ordinarily would
be received upon the vesting of RSUs. Any deferred compensation
is credited with earnings based on the investment performance of
investments selected by the executive. No such earnings would be
considered above market or preferential. The deferred RSUs are
not credited with earnings, but changes in the value of our
common stock similarly change the value of the deferred RSUs.
The deferred compensation, which may be of significant benefit
to the executives and entails a minimal administrative expense
for the Company, is a common benefit provided to senior
executives of
28
similarly situated companies. Consequently, the Committee
believes that it is appropriate to provide such deferred
compensation.
Perquisites and
Other Personal Benefits
We also maintain employee benefit programs for our executives
and other employees. Our named executive officers generally
participate in our employee health and welfare benefits on the
same basis as all employees.
The Company does not have a formal perquisite policy, although
the Committee periodically reviews perquisites for our named
executive officers. Rather, there are certain specific
perquisites and benefits with which the Company has agreed to
compensate particular executives based on their specific
situations. Among these are relocation costs, including
temporary housing and living expenses, and use of Company
vehicles.
Recoupment
Policy
Beginning with Mr. Kneelands new employment agreement
entered into in August 2008, and continuing with
Mr. Plummers December 2008 employment agreement and
Mr. Gottsegens February 2009 employment agreement,
the Committee has included clawback provisions in
its agreements that generally require reimbursement of amounts
paid under performance provisions (in the case of cash
incentives and performance-based RSUs) if amounts were paid or
shares vested based on financial results that subsequently
become subject to certain mandatory restatements (as
defined in the applicable employment agreement) that would have
led to lower payments or forfeiture of all or a portion of
shares subject to an award. More generally, for all 2009 RSU and
stock option awards, including RSUs with time-based vesting, the
award forms now include an injurious conduct
provision that requires forfeiture of the award or, to the
extent the award has vested or been exercised within six months
prior to the occurrence of the relevant conduct, mandates
reimbursement of shares or amounts realized. The injurious
conduct concept is generally focused on actions that would
constitute cause under an employment agreement,
which are in material competition with the Company or breach the
executives duty of loyalty to the Company.
Stock Ownership
Guidelines
The Committee believes stock ownership guidelines are a key
vehicle for aligning the interests of management and the
Companys stockholders. Moreover, a meaningful direct
ownership stake by our officers demonstrates to our investors a
strong commitment to the Companys success. Accordingly, in
February 2010, the Committee adopted stock ownership guidelines
for our named executive officers and approximately 30 other
officers with a title of vice president and above. Under the
stock ownership guidelines, the Companys chief executive
officer is required to hold five times his base salary in the
Companys common stock, the chief financial officer is
required to hold three times his base salary in the
Companys common stock, and all other officers are required
to hold one times their base salary in the Companys common
stock. The following shares count towards meetings these
ownership guidelines: shares that are directly owned by the
executive; shares that are beneficially owned by the executive,
such as shares held in street name through a broker
or shares held in trust; amounts credited to the
executives deferred compensation or 401(k) accounts that
are invested or deemed invested in the Companys common
stock; unvested restricted stock or restricted stock units that
vest based on continued service; and the value of the spread
(the difference between the exercise price and the full market
value of the Companys common stock) of fully vested stock
options. The named executive officers and the other officers are
required to be in compliance with such guidelines within five
years of their effective date in February 2010. The Committee
will periodically monitor progress towards meeting the stock
ownership guidelines.
In addition, to further align our executives with the interests
of the Companys stockholders, the Companys insider
trading policy and the 2010 Long Term Incentive Plan for which
we are soliciting
29
stockholder approval in Proposal 2Approval of
2010 Long Term Incentive Plan, prohibit transactions
designed to limit or eliminate economic risks to our executives
from owning the Companys common stock, such as
transactions involving options, puts, calls or other derivative
securities tied to the Companys common stock.
Tax and
Accounting Implications
When it reviews compensation matters, the Committee considers
the anticipated tax and accounting treatment of various payments
and benefits to the Company and, when relevant, to the
executive. Internal Revenue Code Section 162(m) limits to
$1 million the annual tax deduction for compensation paid
to each of the chief executive officer and the three other
highest paid executive officers employed at the end of the year
(other than the chief financial officer). However, compensation
that does not exceed $1 million during any fiscal year or
that qualifies as performance-based compensation (as
defined in Internal Revenue Code Section 162(m)) is
deductible. The Committee considers these requirements when
designing compensation programs for named executive officers.
Although the Company has plans that permit the award of
deductible compensation under Internal Revenue Code
Section 162(m), the Committee does not necessarily limit
executive compensation to the amount deductible under that
provision. Rather, it considers the available alternatives and
acts to preserve the deductibility of compensation to the extent
reasonably practicable and consistent with its other
compensation objectives. As a result, most of the Companys
compensation programs (including annual performance-based cash
incentives, long-term performance-based cash incentives, stock
options and performance-based RSUs) are designed to qualify for
deductibility under Section 162(m). However, in certain
situations, the Committee may approve compensation that will not
meet these requirements in order to ensure competitive levels of
total compensation for the named executive officers or for other
reasons.
New employment or similar agreements and employee benefit plans
are prepared with the assistance of outside counsel and will be
designed to comply with Section 409A and the applicable
regulations, a tax law enacted in 2004 that governs
nonqualified deferred compensation.
The Company accounts for stock-based compensation in accordance
with Financial Accounting Standards Board Accounting Standards
Codification Topic 718 (ASC 718), which requires the
Company to recognize a compensation expense relating to
share-based payments (including stock options and other forms of
equity compensation). ASC 718 is taken into account by the
Committee in determining which types of equity awards should be
granted.
30
Compensation
Committee Report
The Compensation Committee has reviewed the Compensation
Discussion and Analysis required by Item 402(b) of
Regulation S-K
and discussed that analysis with management and with the
Compensation Committees independent compensation
consultant. Based on this review and discussion, the
Compensation Committee recommended to the Board of Directors
that the Compensation Discussion and Analysis be included in
this proxy statement.
THE COMPENSATION COMMITTEE*
Singleton B. McAllister, Chairman
Bobby J. Griffin
L. Keith Wimbush
* In connection with a realignment of Board committees on
October 28, 2009, Messrs. Alvarez and McAuley
relinquished their roles as members of the Compensation
Committee. As such, they did not participate in the review,
discussions and recommendation with respect to the Compensation
Discussion and Analysis included in this proxy statement.
31
Summary
Compensation Table
The table below summarizes the total compensation paid or earned
by each of the named executive officers for the fiscal years
ended December 31, 2009, 2008 and 2007.
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|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Non Equity
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Stock
|
|
Option
|
|
Incentive Plan
|
|
All Other
|
|
|
Name and
|
|
|
|
Salary
|
|
Bonus
|
|
Awards(1)(2)
|
|
Awards(1)(2)
|
|
Compensation(3)
|
|
Compensation(4)
|
|
Total
|
Principal Position
|
|
Year
|
|
($)
|
|
($)
|
|
($)
|
|
($)
|
|
($)
|
|
($)
|
|
($)
|
|
Michael Kneeland
|
|
|
2009
|
|
|
$
|
601,731
|
(5)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
$
|
304,000
|
|
|
$
|
202,500
|
|
|
$
|
500
|
|
|
$
|
1,108,731
|
|
President and
|
|
|
2008
|
|
|
$
|
602,993
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
$
|
1,486,400
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
$
|
105,861
|
|
|
$
|
2,000
|
|
|
$
|
2,197,254
|
|
Chief Executive Officer
|
|
|
2007
|
|
|
$
|
493,750
|
|
|
$
|
318,173
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
$
|
331,827
|
|
|
$
|
35,823
|
|
|
$
|
1,179,573
|
|
William Plummer
|
|
|
2009
|
|
|
$
|
475,000
|
(7)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
$
|
190,000
|
|
|
$
|
82,080
|
|
|
$
|
500
|
|
|
$
|
747,580
|
|
Executive Vice President and Chief Financial
Officer(6)
|
|
|
2008
|
|
|
$
|
36,538(8
|
)
|
|
|
|
|
|
$
|
285,800
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
$
|
322,338
|
|
Jonathan Gottsegen
|
|
|
2009
|
|
|
$
|
300,192
|
(10)
|
|
$
|
86,000
|
(11)
|
|
$
|
57,375
|
|
|
$
|
76,000
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
$
|
139,232
|
|
|
$
|
658,799
|
|
Senior Vice President, General Counsel & Corporate
Secretary(9)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Kenneth DeWitt
|
|
|
2009
|
|
|
$
|
310,000
|
|
|
$
|
42,000
|
|
|
$
|
33,750
|
|
|
$
|
57,000
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
$
|
29,489
|
|
|
$
|
472,239
|
|
Vice PresidentChief Information
Officer(12)
|
|
|
2008
|
|
|
$
|
205,077
|
(13)
|
|
$
|
1,797
|
(14)
|
|
$
|
286,350
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
$
|
108,203
|
|
|
$
|
80,776
|
|
|
$
|
682,203
|
|
Joseph Dixon
|
|
|
2009
|
|
|
$
|
300,000
|
|
|
$
|
40,000
|
|
|
$
|
33,750
|
|
|
$
|
66,500
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
$
|
37,822
|
|
|
$
|
478,072
|
|
Vice
PresidentSales(15)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Roger Schwed
|
|
|
2009
|
|
|
$
|
136,704
|
(17)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
$
|
1,097,741
|
(18)(19)
|
|
$
|
1,234,445
|
|
Former Executive Vice
|
|
|
2008
|
|
|
$
|
425,000
|
|
|
$
|
69,530
|
(19)
|
|
$
|
780,360
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
$
|
12,051
|
|
|
$
|
1,286,941
|
|
President & General
Counsel(16)
|
|
|
2007
|
|
|
$
|
418,750
|
(20)
|
|
$
|
129,836
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
$
|
345,164
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
$
|
893,750
|
|
|
|
|
(1)
|
|
Except as otherwise noted, the
amount in this column represents the grant date fair value of
the stock awards computed in accordance with stock-based
compensation accounting rules (ASC Topic 718), disregarding for
this purpose the estimate of forfeitures related to
service-based vesting conditions. Amounts for 2008 and 2007 have
been recomputed under the same methodology in accordance with
SEC rules.
|
|
(2)
|
|
The weighted average fair value of
options granted in 2009 was $1.90. The grant date fair value is
estimated using an option pricing model which uses subjective
assumptions which can materially affect fair value estimates
and, therefore, does not necessarily provide a single measure of
fair value of options. Under this model, for options granted in
2009, we used a risk-free interest rate average of 2.81%, a
volatility factor for the market price of our common stock of
56%, and a weighted-average expected life of options of
approximately 7 years.
|
|
(3)
|
|
Represents the amount earned under
the Executive Plan or the Companys corporate incentive
program, as the case may be, with respect to the applicable
fiscal year.
|
|
(4)
|
|
As part of our compensation
program, we provide our executives with certain perquisites and
personal benefits. In 2009, (i) Mr. Gottsegen received
benefits in an aggregate amount of $138,732 in connection with
his relocation (which includes $18,427 of reimbursement of taxes
owed with respect to the relocation benefits)
(ii) Mr. DeWitt received benefits in an aggregate
amount of $28,989 in connection with his relocation (which
includes $49,569 of reimbursement of taxes owed with respect to
the relocation benefits) and (iii) Mr. Dixon received
benefits in an aggregate amount of $37,322 in connection with
his relocation (which includes $1,557 of reimbursement of taxes
owed with respect to the relocation benefits). In accordance
with SEC regulations, perquisites and personal benefits have
been omitted where the total annual value for a named executive
officer is less than $10,000. This column also includes the
Companys matching contributions to the Companys
401(k) plan, which for 2009 was $500.
|
|
(5)
|
|
Represents base salary earned in
2009. In August 2008, Mr. Kneelands base salary was
increased to $750,000 in connection with his promotion to chief
executive officer. Mr. Kneeland suggested and the Committee
agreed to a reduction of his annual base salary by 20% to
$600,000 for 2009. On January 1, 2010,
Mr. Kneelands annual base salary reverted back to its
previous annual rate of $750,000, consistent with the
Committees actions in 2009.
|
|
(6)
|
|
Mr. Plummer joined the Company
as executive vice president and chief financial officer in
December 2008.
|
|
(7)
|
|
Represents base salary earned in
2009. Mr. Plummer elected to defer $95,000 of his annual
base salary under the Deferred Compensation Plan as described
below under Nonqualified Deferred Compensation in
2009.
|
|
(8)
|
|
Represents base salary earned in
2008. Mr. Plummers annual base salary was $475,000
for 2008.
|
|
(9)
|
|
Mr. Gottsegen joined the
Company as senior vice president, general counsel and corporate
secretary in February 2009.
|
|
(10)
|
|
Represents base salary earned in
2009. Mr. Gottsegens annual base salary is $350,000.
|
|
(11)
|
|
Includes a $50,000 sign-on bonus in
connection with Mr. Gottsegens commencing employment
in 2009.
|
|
(12)
|
|
Mr. DeWitt joined the Company
as vice president and chief information officer in May 2008.
|
|
(13)
|
|
Represents base salary earned in
2008. Mr. Dewitts annual salary was $310,000 for 2008.
|
|
(14)
|
|
Represents a discretionary amount
of $1,797 in recognition of individual performance awarded to
Mr. DeWitt as part of his total 2008 cash payment.
|
32
|
|
|
(15)
|
|
Mr. Dixon joined the Company
as vice presidentsales in June 2008.
|
|
(16)
|
|
Effective February 18, 2009,
Mr. Schwed relinquished his role as executive vice
president and general counsel.
|
|
(17)
|
|
Represents base salary earned until
the end of the transition period on March 31, 2009.
|
|
(18)
|
|
Represents (i) $807,500 total
severance payment Mr. Schwed is entitled to pursuant to his
separation agreement, representing 190% of his annual base
salary ($425,000), paid over a one-year period,
(ii) $17,170 total COBRA payments for up to the
12-month
period contemplated in his employment agreement,
(iii) $147,901 as consulting fee payments, and
(iv) $14,200 representing the Kelley Blue Book trade in
value for the automobile transferred to the executive on an
as is basis in exchange for incremental consulting
services, with the automobiles fair market value being
taxable to the executive. In addition, Mr. Schwed received
pro-rata vesting of 10,107 outstanding time-vested RSUs, with a
value of $98,341 (based on the closing price per share of the
Companys common stock of $9.73 on October 1, 2009),
which are included in the total of 24,107 shares acquired on
vesting as reported in the Option Exercises and Stock
Vested table.
|
|
(19)
|
|
In connection with the execution of
his separation agreement with the Company, Mr. Schwed
received a lump-sum amount of $180,000 in lieu of any cash
incentive for 2008 and 2009 performance. The listed amount is
the amount that Mr. Schwed would have earned under the
Executive Plan for 2008 if he had still been a participant at
the time performance goals were certified and awards were paid,
and is presented herein as a discretionary bonus for 2008. The
balance of the $180,000 payment is included under the All
Other Compensation column for 2009 and discussed under
Benefits upon Termination of Employment.
|
|
(20)
|
|
Represents base salary earned in
2007. Mr. Schweds annual base salary was $400,000
through March 31, 2007 and $425,000 thereafter.
|
Many of the components of the compensation for the named
executive officers are based on their employment agreements with
us. The following discussion explains the material terms of the
employment agreements and also explains other compensation
components not included in such agreements. The rights of the
named executive officers to receive certain benefits upon
termination of employment or a change in control of the Company
are described below under Benefits upon Termination of
Employment and Benefits upon a Change in
Control, respectively.
Mr. Kneeland
Base Salary. Mr. Kneeland suggested and the
Committee agreed to a reduction of his annual base salary by 20%
to $600,000 for 2009. On January 1, 2010,
Mr. Kneelands annual base salary reverted back to its
previous annual rate of $750,000, consistent with the
Committees actions in 2009. The Committee determined not
to change Mr. Kneelands base salary for 2010 (other
than restoring it to pre-2009 levels).
2009 Annual Incentive Compensation Plan.
Mr. Kneeland is eligible to participate in the plan each
year and, in 2009, as required by his employment agreement,
Mr. Kneelands target incentive was 125% of base
salary and his maximum incentive was 150% of base salary. The
maximum incentive established by the Committee was 0.2% of
EBITDA, subject to the limits included in
Mr. Kneelands employment agreement and the
Committees exercise of discretion to reduce the amount of
Mr. Kneelands incentive payment. Mr. Kneeland
received his performance-based cash incentive for 2009 in the
amount of $202,500.
Restricted Stock Units. Mr. Kneeland did not receive
a restricted stock unit award in 2009.
Stock Options. Mr. Kneeland was granted a stock
option to purchase 160,000 shares of the Companys
common stock on March 13, 2009, in lieu of the 45,000
performance-based RSUs (assuming target performance) required
under the terms of his employment agreement.
Mr. Plummer
Base Salary. Mr. Plummers annual base salary
in 2009 was $475,000. The Committee determined not to change
Mr. Plummers base salary for 2010.
2009 Annual Incentive Compensation Plan. Mr. Plummer
is eligible to participate in the plan each year and, in 2009,
as required by his employment agreement, Mr. Plummers
target incentive was 80% of base salary and his maximum
incentive was 125% base salary. The maximum incentive
33
established by the Committee was 0.1% of EBITDA, subject to
limits included in Mr. Plummers employment agreement
and the Committees exercise of discretion to reduce the
amount of Mr. Plummers incentive payment.
Mr. Plummer received his performance-based cash incentive
for 2009 in the amount of $82,080.
Restricted Stock Units. Mr. Plummer did not receive
a restricted stock unit award in 2009.
Stock Options. Mr. Plummer was granted a stock
option to purchase 100,000 shares of the Companys
common stock on March 13, 2009.
Mr. Gottsegen
Base Salary. Mr. Gottsegens annual base salary
in 2009 was $350,000. The Committee determined not to change
Mr. Gottsegens base salary for 2010.
Annual Cash Incentive. Mr. Gottsegen received a
discretionary bonus payment of $36,000 for 2009. The calculation
of this payment is described in Compensation Discussion
and AnalysisPerformance-Based Compensation.
Restricted Stock Units. The Committee granted
Mr. Gottsegen 17,000 time-vested RSUs on March 13,
2009. The terms of this grant are described in
Compensation Discussion and
AnalysisPerformance-Based Compensation.
Stock Options. The Committee granted to
Mr. Gottsegen a stock option to purchase 40,000 shares
of the Companys common stock on March 13, 2009.
Relocation Expense. In connection with his February 2009
hire, Mr. Gottsegen received benefits in an aggregate
amount of $138,732 in connection with his relocation.
Mr. DeWitt
Base Salary. Mr. DeWitts annual base salary in
2009 was $310,000. The Committee determined not to change
Mr. DeWitts base salary for 2010.
Annual Cash Incentive. Mr. DeWitt received a
discretionary bonus payment of $42,000 for 2009. The calculation
of this payment is described in Compensation Discussion
and AnalysisPerformance-Based Compensation.
Restricted Stock Units. The Committee granted
Mr. DeWitt 10,000 time-vested RSUs on March 13, 2009.
The terms of this grant are described in Compensation
Discussion and AnalysisPerformance-Based
Compensation.
Stock Options. The Committee granted to Mr. DeWitt a
stock option to purchase 30,000 shares of the
Companys common stock on March 13, 2009.
Relocation Expense. In connection with his May 2008 hire,
Mr. DeWitt received benefits in an aggregate amount of
$28,989 in connection with his relocation.
Mr. Dixon
Base Salary. Mr. Dixons annual base salary in
2009 was $300,000. The Committee determined not to change
Mr. Dixons base salary for 2010.
Annual Cash Incentive. Mr. Dixon received a
discretionary bonus payment of $40,000 for 2009. The calculation
of this payment is described in Compensation Discussion
and AnalysisPerformance-Based Compensation.
Restricted Stock Units. The Committee granted
Mr. Dixon 10,000 time-vested RSUs on March 13, 2009.
The terms of this grant are described in Compensation
Discussion and AnalysisPerformance-Based
Compensation.
34
Stock Options. The Committee granted to Mr. Dixon a
stock option to purchase 35,000 shares of the
Companys common stock on March 13, 2009.
Relocation Expense. In connection with his June 2008
hire, Mr. Dixon received benefits in an aggregate amount of
$37,322 in connection with his relocation.
Mr. Schwed
Mr. Schwed relinquished his position as executive vice
president, general counsel and corporate secretary, effective
February 18, 2009. The Company and Mr. Schwed entered
into a separation agreement pursuant to which Mr. Schwed
agreed to stay on for a transition period until March 31,
2009.
Base Salary. Mr. Schweds annual base salary in
2009 (until the end of the transition period on March 31,
2009) was $425,000.
Annual Incentive Compensation Plan. Mr. Schwed was
eligible to participate in the plan each year and, as required
by his employment agreement, in 2008, Mr. Schweds
target incentive was 90% of his base salary and his maximum
incentive was 125% of his base salary. Pursuant to the
separation agreement between the Company and Mr. Schwed,
which was entered into when Mr. Schwed relinquished his
position, he received a lump-sum amount of $180,000 in lieu of
any cash incentive for 2008 and 2009.
Restricted Stock Units. Mr. Schwed did not receive a
restricted stock unit award in 2009.
Stock Options. Mr. Schwed did not receive a stock
option to purchase shares in 2009.
Severance Benefits. Mr. Schwed received the
severance benefits to which he was entitled under his employment
agreement, including 190% of his base salary paid over a
one-year period, as further described under Benefits upon
Termination of Employment.
Benefits
The employment agreements of the named executive officers
generally provide that they are entitled to participate in, to
the extent otherwise eligible under the terms thereof, the
benefit plans and programs, and receive the benefits and
perquisites, generally provided by us to our executives,
including family medical insurance (subject to applicable
employee contributions).
Indemnification
We have entered into indemnification agreements with
Messrs. Kneeland, Plummer and Gottsegen and former named
executive officer, Mr. Schwed. Each of these agreements
provides, among other things, for us to indemnify and advance
expenses to each such officer against certain specified claims
and liabilities that may arise in connection with such
officers services to the Company.
35
Grants of
Plan-Based Awards in 2009
The table below summarizes the equity and non-equity awards
granted to the named executive officers in 2009.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Closing
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Market
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
All Other
|
|
All Other
|
|
|
|
Price on
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Stock
|
|
Option
|
|
|
|
Grant
|
|
Grant
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Awards:
|
|
Awards:
|
|
Exercise
|
|
Date of
|
|
Date Fair
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Number of
|
|
Number of
|
|
or Base
|
|
Option
|
|
Value of
|
|
|
|
|
Estimated Future
|
|
Shares of
|
|
Securities
|
|
Price of
|
|
Awards,
|
|
Stock and
|
|
|
|
|
Payouts Under
|
|
Stock
|
|
Underlying
|
|
Option
|
|
if
|
|
Option
|
|
|
Grant
|
|
Non-Equity Incentive Plan
|
|
Units
|
|
Options
|
|
Awards(1)
|
|
different
|
|
Awards(2)
|
Name
|
|
Date
|
|
Awards
|
|
(#)
|
|
(#)
|
|
($/Sh)
|
|
($)
|
|
($)
|
|
|
|
|
Threshold
|
|
Target
|
|
Maximum
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
($)
|
|
($)
|
|
($)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Michael Kneeland
|
|
|
(3
|
)
|
|
|
405,000
|
|
|
|
937,500
|
|
|
|
1,125,000
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
President Chief Executive Officer
|
|
|
3/13/2009 option
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
160,000
|
|
|
$
|
3.375
|
|
|
$
|
3.44
|
|
|
$
|
304,000
|
|
William Plummer
|
|
|
(3
|
)
|
|
|
161,500
|
|
|
|
380,000
|
|
|
|
593,750
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Executive Vice
|
|
|
3/13/2009 option
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
100,000
|
|
|
$
|
3.375
|
|
|
$
|
3.44
|
|
|
$
|
190,000
|
|
President and Chief Financial Officer
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Jonathan Gottsegen
|
|
|
3/13/2009 RSU
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
17,000
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
$
|
57,375
|
|
Senior Vice
|
|
|
3/13/2009 option
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
40,000
|
|
|
$
|
3.375
|
|
|
$
|
3.44
|
|
|
$
|
76,000
|
|
President, General Counsel & Corporate Secretary
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Kenneth DeWitt
|
|
|
3/13/2009 RSU
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
10,000
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
$
|
33,750
|
|
Vice President
|
|
|
3/13/2009 option
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
30,000
|
|
|
$
|
3.375
|
|
|
$
|
3.44
|
|
|
$
|
57,000
|
|
Chief Information Officer
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Joseph Dixon
|
|
|
3/13/2009 RSU
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
10,000
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
$
|
33,750
|
|
Vice PresidentSales
|
|
|
3/13/2009 option
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
35,000
|
|
|
$
|
3.375
|
|
|
$
|
3.44
|
|
|
$
|
66,500
|
|
Roger Schwed
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Former General Counsel
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(1)
|
|
The exercise price of the stock
option awards was determined by calculating the average of the
high and low trading prices of the Companys common stock
on the grant date.
|
|
(2)
|
|
The amounts in this column
represents the grant date fair value of the stock awards
computed in accordance with stock-based compensation accounting
rules (ASC Topic 718) for 2009. The valuation methodology
is based on the fair market value of the Companys common
stock on the grant date. Fair market value is determined by the
average of the high and low of stock prices on the grant date.
|
|
(3)
|
|
For Messrs. Kneeland and
Plummer the threshold, target and maximum figures represent the
respective ranges of incentive opportunity under the Executive
Plan, which reflect percentages of base salary established by
the Committee.
|
36
Outstanding
Equity Awards at Fiscal Year-End
The table below summarizes the amount of unexercised and
unvested stock options, unvested shares of restricted stock,
unvested RSUs and RSUs with performance conditions not yet
satisfied for each named executive officer as of
December 31, 2009. The vesting schedule for each grant can
be found in the footnotes to this table, based on the grant
date. For additional information about equity awards, see
Compensation Discussion and
AnalysisPerformance-Based Compensation.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Option Awards
|
|
Stock Awards
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Market
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Number
|
|
Value of
|
|
|
Number of
|
|
Number of
|
|
|
|
|
|
of Shares or
|
|
Shares or
|
|
|
Securities
|
|
Securities
|
|
|
|
|
|
Units of
|
|
Units of
|
|
|
Underlying
|
|
Underlying
|
|
Option
|
|
|
|
Stock That
|
|
Stock That
|
|
|
Unexercised Options
|
|
Unexercised Options
|
|
Exercise
|
|
Option
|
|
Have Not
|
|
Have Not
|
|
|
Exercisable
|
|
Unexercisable(1)
|
|
Price
|
|
Expiration
|
|
Vested
|
|
Vested
|
Name and Principal Position
|
|
(#)
|
|
(#)
|
|
($)
|
|
Date
|
|
(#)
|
|
($)(2)
|
|
Michael Kneeland
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
President Chief Executive Officer
|
|
|
13,333
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
$
|
13.750
|
|
|
|
3/15/2010
|
(3)
|
|
|
50,000
|
(4)
|
|
$
|
490,500
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
160,000
|
|
|
$
|
3.375
|
|
|
|
3/12/2019
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
William Plummer
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
100,000
|
|
|
$
|
3.375
|
|
|
|
3/12/2019
|
|
|
|
26,667
|
(5)
|
|
$
|
261,603
|
|
Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Jonathan Gottsegen
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
40,000
|
|
|
$
|
3.375
|
|
|
|
3/12/2019
|
|
|
|
17,000
|
(6)
|
|
$
|
166,770
|
|
Senior Vice President, General Counsel &
Corporate Secretary
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Kenneth DeWitt
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
30,000
|
|
|
$
|
3.375
|
|
|
|
3/12/2019
|
|
|
|
25,000
|
(7)
|
|
$
|
245,250
|
|
Vice PresidentChief Information Officer
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Joseph Dixon
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
35,000
|
|
|
$
|
3.375
|
|
|
|
3/12/2019
|
|
|
|
20,000
|
(8)
|
|
$
|
196,200
|
|
Vice PresidentSales
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Roger Schwed
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Former General Counsel
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(1)
|
|
All options vest in equal
installments on each of the first three anniversaries of the
grant date.
|
|
(2)
|
|
Amounts in this column reflect a
closing price per share of the Companys common stock of
$9.81 on December 31, 2009.
|
|
(3)
|
|
These options have expired without
being exercised.
|
|
(4)
|
|
Represents 50,000 unvested RSUs
remaining from a grant of 80,000 RSUs on March 2008, of which
30,000 vested on March 10, 2009 and 50,000 will vest
ratably in two equal installments on March 10 of each of 2010
and 2011.
|
|
(5)
|
|
Represents 26,667 unvested RSUs
remaining from a grant of 40,000 RSUs on December 1, 2008,
of which 13,333 vested on December 1, 2009 and the
remaining 26,667 will vest on December 1, 2011.
|
|
(6)
|
|
Represents 17,000 unvested RSUs
awarded on March 13, 2009, of which 5,667 will vest on
March 13, 2010 and the remaining 11,333 will vest ratably
in two equal installments on March 13 of each of 2011 and 2012.
|
|
(7)
|
|
Represents 15,000 unvested RSUs
awarded on May 1, 2008 scheduled to vest on May 1,
2011 and 10,000 unvested RSUs awarded on March 13, 2009, of
which 3,334 will vest on March 13, 2010 and the remaining
6,666 will vest ratably in two equal installments on March 13 of
each of 2011 and 2012.
|
|
(8)
|
|
Represents 10,000 unvested RSUs
awarded on June 9, 2008 scheduled to vest on June 9,
2011 and 10,000 unvested RSUs awarded on March 13, 2009, of
which 3,334 will vest on March 13, 2010 and the remaining
6,666 will vest ratably in two equal installments on March 13 of
each of 2011 and 2012.
|
37
Option Exercises
and Stock Vested in 2009
The table below summarizes, for each named executive officer,
the number of shares acquired upon the exercise of stock options
and the vesting of stock awards (with the value realized, based
on the closing price per share of our common stock on the date
of vesting).
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Option Awards
|
|
Stock Awards
|
|
|
Number of Shares
|
|
|
|
Number of Shares
|
|
|
|
|
Acquired on
|
|
Value Realized
|
|
Acquired on
|
|
Value Realized
|
Name
|
|
Exercise (#)
|
|
on Exercise ($)
|
|
Vesting (#)
|
|
on Vesting ($)
|
|
Michael Kneeland
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
46,667
|
|
|
$
|
184,368
|
|
William Plummer
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
13,333
|
|
|
$
|
123,064
|
|
Jonathan Gottsegen
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
$
|
|
|
Kenneth DeWitt
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
$
|
|
|
Joseph Dixon
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
$
|
|
|
Roger Schwed
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
24,107
|
|
|
$
|
144,401
|
|
Pension
Benefits
The Company does not maintain any defined benefit pension plans.
Nonqualified
Deferred Compensation in 2009
The deferrals reflected in the table below were made under two
plans: the United Rentals, Inc. Restricted Stock Unit Deferral
Plan (the RSU Deferral Plan) and the United Rentals,
Inc. Deferred Compensation Plan (the Deferred Compensation
Plan). Both plans are unfunded plans and the participants
in the plans are unsecured general creditors of the Company. The
Company did not make any contributions to either plan in 2009.
The RSU Deferral Plan permits executives to elect to defer
receipt of shares of our common stock when RSUs vest.
Ordinarily, when an RSU vests, the recipient of the RSU receives
a share of our common stock in payment of the RSU. Under the RSU
Deferral Plan, receipt of that share may be deferred to a date
selected by the individual, consistent with the plan and
applicable Internal Revenue Service regulations. The value of
the deferred RSUs will fluctuate corresponding to changes in the
value of our common stock; no other income is credited to the
deferred RSUs.
The Deferred Compensation Plan permits executives to defer all
or part of the individuals base salary, annual cash
incentive award or restricted stock awards. Consistent with the
plan and applicable Internal Revenue Service regulations, the
individual selects the date that payment of the deferred amounts
will begin and the payment schedule, which may be a lump sum or
up to 15 annual installments. Deferred amounts are credited with
earnings (or losses) based on the investment experience of
measurement indices selected by the participant from among the
choices offered by the plan.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Executive
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Contributions in
|
|
Aggregate Earnings
|
|
Aggregate
|
|
Aggregate Balance at
|
|
|
Last Fiscal Year
|
|
in Last Fiscal Year
|
|
Withdrawals/(Distributions)
|
|
Last Fiscal Year
|
Name
|
|
($)
|
|
($)(1)
|
|
($)
|
|
($)
|
|
Michael Kneeland
|
|
|
|
|
|
$
|
5,336
|
|
|
$
|
0
|
|
|
$
|
52,423
|
(2)
|
William Plummer
|
|
$
|
95,000
|
(3)
|
|
$
|
19,570
|
|
|
$
|
0
|
|
|
$
|
114,570
|
(2)
|
|
|
|
(1)
|
|
Amounts in this column are not
included in the Summary Compensation Table for 2009 because no
such earnings would be considered above market or preferential.
|
|
(2)
|
|
This amount represents
Mr. Kneeland and Mr. Plummers aggregate balances
under the RSU Deferral Plan and the Deferred Compensation Plan
at the end of 2009. No amount was previously reported as
compensation for Mr. Kneeland or Mr. Plummer in the
Summary Compensation Table in 2008 or 2007.
|
|
(3)
|
|
This amount is included in the
salary column in the Summary Compensation Table for
2009.
|
38
Benefits upon
Termination of Employment
We summarize below the benefits in effect as of
December 31, 2009, which the named executive officers would
receive upon a termination of employment (other than
Mr. Schwed, who is no longer an employee).
If the employment of any of the named executive officers is
terminated by us without cause or by the executive
(other than Mr. DeWitt and Mr. Dixon) for good
reason, the executives would be entitled to the following
benefits:
|
|
|
|
|
Mr. Kneeland would receive a severance payment equal to
450% of his annual base salary prior to the voluntary reduction
in 2009, and would receive the payment over a two-year period.
|
|
|
|
Mr. Plummer would receive a severance payment equal to 180%
of his annual base salary, and would receive the payment over a
one-year period.
|
|
|
|
Mr. Gottsegen would receive a severance payment equal to
160% of his annual base salary, and would receive the payment
over a one-year period.
|
|
|
|
Each of Messrs. DeWitt and Dixon would receive a severance
payment at the rate of 1/26th of the executives
annual base salary every two weeks for a period of
12 months and Mr. Dixon would also receive the
pro-rata portion of his target annual cash bonus.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Each of Messrs. Kneeland, Plummer and Gottsegen would be
entitled to pro-rata vesting of the next tranche of RSUs and
stock options that would have vested based on the
executives continued employment with the Company.
|
|
|
|
Each of Messrs. DeWitt and Dixons unvested RSUs and
options would be cancelled, except, pursuant to their employment
agreements, they would be entitled to pro-rata vesting of the
next tranche of their 2008 RSUs (granted at the time of
commencing of employment) that would have vested based on the
executives continued employment with the Company.
|
|
|
|
Mr. Kneeland would receive COBRA continuation coverage for
18 months at no cost. Each of Messrs. Plummer,
Gottsegen and DeWitt would receive COBRA continuation coverage
for one year at no cost.
|
If the employment of any of the named executive officers is
terminated due to death or disability, the executive (or his
spouse or estate) would be entitled to the following benefits:
|
|
|
|
|
Each of Messrs. Kneeland, Plummer, Gottsegen, DeWitt and
Dixon would receive pro-rata vesting of the next tranche of RSUs
and stock options that would have vested based on the
executives continued employment with the Company, except
each of Messrs. Dewitt and Dixon, with respect to 2008 RSU
grants (granted at the time of commencing of employment), would
receive vesting of RSUs that would have vested based on
continued employment with the Company.
|
|
|
|
Mr. Kneeland would receive pro-rata vesting of Units that
would have vested based on the actual achievement of performance
goals as determined at the end of the performance period.
|
|
|
|
Mr. Kneeland would receive COBRA continuation coverage for
18 months at no cost. Messrs. Plummer and Gottsegen
would receive COBRA continuation coverage for one year at no
cost.
|
39
The table below summarizes the compensation that the named
executive officers would have received had they been terminated
as of December 31, 2009.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Termination by the Company
|
|
|
|
|
without cause or by the executive
|
|
|
|
|
for good
reason(1)
|
|
Death or disability
|
|
|
Cash severance, plus
|
|
Accelerated vesting of
|
|
|
|
|
|
Accelerated vesting of
|
|
|
|
|
COBRA payments,
|
|
RSUs and stock
|
|
|
|
|
|
RSUs, Units and stock
|
|
|
Executive
|
|
if any ($)
|
|
options
($)(2)
|
|
Total ($)
|
|
COBRA payments ($)
|
|
options
($)(2)
|
|
Total ($)
|
|
Michael Kneeland
|
|
$3,398,234 $(3,375,000 paid over two years and $23,234 paid over
18 months)(3)
|
|
$475,829 (value of acceleration of vesting of 20,342 RSUs and
42,933 stock options)
|
|
|
$3,874,063
|
|
|
$
|
23,234
|
|
|
$1,875,829 (value of acceleration of vesting of 20,342 RSUs,
70,000 Units and 42,933 stock
options)(4)
|
|
|
$1,899,063
|
|
William Plummer
|
|
$872,170 (paid over one
year)(5)
|
|
$266,846 (value of acceleration of vesting of 9,600 RSUs and
26,833 stock options)
|
|
|
$1,139,016
|
|
|
$
|
17,170
|
|
|
$266,846 (value of acceleration of vesting of 9,600 RSUs and
26,833 stock options)
|
|
|
$284,016
|
|
Jonathan Gottsegen
|
|
$577,170 (paid over one
year)(6)
|
|
$113,810 (value of acceleration of vesting of 4,561 RSUs and
10,733 stock options)
|
|
|
$690,980
|
|
|
$
|
17,170
|
|
|
$113,810 (value of acceleration of vesting of 4,561 RSUs and
10,733 stock options)
|
|
|
$130,980
|
|
Kenneth DeWitt
|
|
$319,811 (paid over one
year)(7)
|
|
$82,404 (value of acceleration of vesting of 8,400 RSUs)
|
|
|
$402,215
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
$225,272 (value of acceleration of vesting of 17,683 RSUs and
8,050 stock options)
|
|
|
$225,272
|
|
Joseph Dixon
|
|
$540,000 (paid over one
year)(8)
|
|
$51,012 (value of acceleration of vesting of 5,200 RSUs)
|
|
|
$591,012
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
$184,858 (value of acceleration of vesting of 12,683 RSUs and
9,392 stock options)
|
|
|
$184,858
|
|
|
|
|
(1)
|
|
Except in Messrs. DeWitt and
Dixons case, where such benefits apply only if his
employment is terminated by the Company without cause.
|
|
(2)
|
|
Except as otherwise noted, amounts
in this column reflect a closing price per share of the
Companys common stock of $9.81 on December 31, 2009.
The value of unvested stock options for which vesting is
accelerated is calculated as the excess between the closing
price per share of the Companys common stock of $9.81 on
December 31, 2009 over the exercise price for those stock
options.
|
|
(3)
|
|
Representing the sum of
(i) 450% of Mr. Kneelands annual base salary as
of December 31, 2009 (for purposes of calculating the
severance amounts, Mr. Kneelands annual base salary
was deemed to be $750,000) paid over two years, and
(ii) $23,234, being the cost of COBRA for 18 months,
paid in the form of COBRA continuation coverage at no cost to
Mr. Kneeland.
|
|
(4)
|
|
The value of acceleration of
vesting of 70,000 Units has been calculated assuming the target
unit value of $20. The actual unit value would be determined at
the end of the applicable performance period based on actual
performance.
|
|
(5)
|
|
Representing the sum of
(i) 180% of Mr. Plummers annual base salary as
of December 31, 2009 ($475,000) paid over one year, and
(ii) $17,170, being the cost of COBRA coverage for one
year, paid in the form of COBRA continuation coverage at no cost
to Mr. Plummer.
|
|
(6)
|
|
Representing the sum of
(i) 160% of Mr. Gottsegens annual base salary as
of December 31, 2009 ($350,000) paid over one year and
(ii) $17,170, being the cost of COBRA coverage for one
year, paid in the form of COBRA continuation coverage at no cost
to Mr. Gottsegen.
|
|
(7)
|
|
Representing the sum of
(i) Mr. DeWitts annual base salary as of
December 31, 2009 ($310,000) paid in bi-weekly installments
over one year, and (ii) $9,811, being the cost of COBRA
coverage for one year, paid in the form of COBRA continuation
coverage at no cost to Mr. DeWitt.
|
|
(8)
|
|
Representing Mr. Dixons
annual base salary as of December 31, 2009 ($300,000) paid
in bi-weekly installments over one year and his target annual
cash bonus, estimated as equal to $240,000 target amount
incentive payment he was eligible to receive in 2009.
|
For each of Messrs. Kneeland, Plummer, Gottsegen, DeWitt
and Dixon, cause generally includes, among other
things, and subject to compliance with specified procedures: his
willful misappropriation or destruction of our property; his
conviction of a felony or other crime that materially impairs
his ability to perform his duties or that causes material harm
to us; his engagement in willful
40
conduct that constitutes a breach of fiduciary duty to us and
results in material harm to us; and his material failure to
perform his duties. For each of Messrs. Kneeland, Plummer
and Gottsegen, good reason includes, among other
things: demotion from the position set forth in the
executives employment agreement; a decrease in
compensation provided for under such agreement; a material
diminution of the executives duties and responsibilities;
or required relocation to another facility that is based more
than 50 miles from Greenwich, Connecticut.
The definitions summarized above vary in some respects among the
named executive officers agreements and are described in
greater detail in such agreements, which have previously been or
will be filed as exhibits to our periodic reports with the SEC.
Mr. Schwed is not included in the above table because
Mr. Schwed relinquished his role as executive vice
president and general counsel, effective February 18, 2009.
Pursuant to the separation agreement between Mr. Schwed and
the Company, Mr. Schwed continued to receive his regular
salary during a transition period ending on March 31, 2009.
Mr. Schwed also is entitled to receive (i) $807,500,
representing 190% of his annual base salary ($425,000), paid
over a one-year period, (ii) COBRA payments for up to the
12-month
period contemplated in his employment agreement in the aggregate
amount of $17,170, (iii) pro-rata vesting of 10,107
outstanding time-vested RSUs, with a value of $98,341 (based on
the closing price per share of the Companys common stock
of $9.73 on October 1, 2009), and (iv) $14,200
representing the Kelley Blue Book trade in value for the
automobile transferred to the executive on an as is
basis for incremental consulting services, with the
automobiles fair market value being taxable to the
executive. As discussed above, Mr. Schwed received a
lump-sum amount of $180,000 in lieu of any cash incentive for
2008 and 2009 performance.
Separately, the Company also entered into a six-month consulting
agreement with Mr. Schwed pursuant to which he received,
among other things, $147,901 and COBRA continuation coverage
(subject to his continuing to pay the employee contribution
portion).
Benefits upon a
Change in Control
We summarize below the benefits in effect as of
December 31, 2009, which the named executive officers would
receive upon a change in control (other than Mr. Schwed,
who is no longer an employee).
Pursuant to the applicable award agreement, in the event of a
change of control of the Company, Mr. Kneeland would
receive vesting of RSUs that would have vested based on
continued employment with the Company and pro-rata vesting of
Units that would have vested based on the actual achievement of
performance goals as determined at the end of the performance
period.
In addition, if we terminate Mr. Kneelands employment
without cause or he resigns for good
reason within 12 months following a change in control
of the Company, Mr. Kneeland would receive the following
benefits:
|
|
|
|
|
an amount equal to 2.99 times the sum of his annual base salary
and his target incentive under the Executive Plan, subject to
reduction to the amount that would not trigger any excise tax on
parachute payments if the reduction would result in
a higher after-tax payment; and
|
|
|
|
COBRA continuation coverage for 18 months at no cost.
|
Pursuant to his award agreement, in the event of a change of
control of the Company, Mr. Plummer would receive vesting
of RSUs, that would have vested based on continued employment
with the Company.
Pursuant to the applicable award agreement, each of
Messrs. Gottsegen, DeWitt and Dixon would receive vesting
of all RSUs and stock options and each of Messrs. Kneeland
and Plummer
41
would receive vesting of all stock options that would have
vested based on continued employment with the Company:
|
|
|
|
|
if the change in control results in the Company ceasing to be
publicly traded; or
|
|
|
|
if the employment of the executive is terminated by the Company
without cause or by the executive for good
reason within 12 months following any other type of
change in control.
|
The table below summarizes the compensation that the named
executive officers would have received in the event of a change
in control of the Company as of December 31, 2009. Because
the calculations in the table are based upon SEC disclosure
rules and made as of a specific date, there can be no assurance
that an actual change in control, if one were to occur, would
result in the same or similar compensation being paid.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Payments (in addition to payments in the first
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
column) upon termination by the Company
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
without cause or by the executive for good reason
|
|
|
Executive
|
|
Payments upon a change in control
($)(1)
|
|
within 12 months following a change in control
($)(1)
|
|
Total ($)
|
|
Michael Kneeland
|
|
$1,890,500 (value of acceleration of vesting of 50,000 RSUs and
70,000 Units)
|
|
$6,098,459(2)
|
|
$
|
7,988,959(3
|
)
|
William Plummer
|
|
$261,603 (value of acceleration of vesting of 26,667 RSUs)
|
|
$1,515,670(4)
|
|
$
|
1,777,273
|
|
Jonathan Gottsegen
|
|
|
|
$1,001,340(5)
|
|
$
|
1,001,340
|
|
Kenneth DeWitt
|
|
|
|
$758,111(6)
|
|
$
|
758,111
|
|
Joseph Dixon
|
|
|
|
$961,425(7)
|
|
$
|
961,425
|
|
|
|
|
(1)
|
|
Amounts in this column reflect a
closing price per share of the Companys common stock of
$9.81 on December 31, 2009, except that the value of
acceleration of vesting of Mr. Kneelands 70,000 Units
has been calculated using the target unit value of $20 in
accordance with the applicable award agreement.
|
|
(2)
|
|
Representing the sum of
(i) $5,045,625, being 2.99 times 225% of
Mr. Kneelands annual base salary as of
December 31, 2009 (for purposes of calculating the
severance amounts, Mr. Kneelands annual base salary
was deemed to be $750,000), (ii) $23,234, being the cost of
COBRA for 18 months, paid in the form of COBRA continuation
coverage at no cost to the Mr. Kneeland, and
(iii) $1,029,600, being the value of all unvested stock
options for which vesting is accelerated, calculated as the
excess between the closing price per share of the Companys
common stock of $9.81 on December 31, 2009 over the
exercise price for those stock options. The vesting of
Mr. Kneelands stock options also will be accelerated
in the event of a change in control that results in the Company
ceasing to be publicly traded.
|
|
(3)
|
|
In the scenario illustrated in this
table, the total amount payable to Mr. Kneeland would have
been reduced, under the terms of his employment agreement, by
$1,549,952 to a total of $6,439,007 in order to avoid triggering
excise tax under 280G.
|
|
(4)
|
|
Representing the sum of
(i) 180% of Mr. Plummers annual base salary as
of December 31, 2009 ($475,000) paid over one year,
(ii) $17,170, being the cost of COBRA coverage for one
year, paid in the form of COBRA continuation coverage at no cost
to Mr. Plummer, and (iii) $643,500, being the value of
all unvested stock options for which vesting is accelerated,
calculated as the excess between the closing price per share of
the Companys common stock of $9.81 on December 31,
2009 over the exercise price for those stock options. The
vesting of Mr. Plummers stock options also will be
accelerated in the event of a change in control that results in
the Company ceasing to be publicly traded.
|
|
(5)
|
|
Representing the sum of
(i) 160% of Mr. Gottsegens annual base salary as
of December 31, 2009 ($350,000) paid over one year,
(ii) $17,170, being the cost of COBRA coverage for one
year, paid in the form of COBRA continuation coverage at no cost
to Mr. Gottsegen, (iii) $166,770, being the value of
acceleration of vesting of 17,000 RSUs, and (iv) $257,400,
being the value of all unvested stock options for which vesting
is accelerated, calculated as the excess between the closing
price per share of the Companys common stock of $9.81 on
December 31, 2009 over the exercise price for those stock
options. The vesting of Mr. Gottsegens RSUs and stock
options also will be accelerated in the event of a change in
control that results in the Company ceasing to be publicly
traded.
|
|
(6)
|
|
Representing the sum of
(i) Mr. DeWitts annual base salary as of
December 31, 2009 ($310,000) paid in bi-weekly installments
over one year, (ii) $9,811, being the cost of COBRA
coverage for one year, paid in the form of COBRA continuation
coverage at no cost to Mr. DeWitt, (iii) $245,250,
being the value of acceleration of vesting of 25,000 RSUs, and
(iv) $193,050, being the value of all unvested stock
options for which vesting is accelerated, calculated as the
excess between the closing price per share of the Companys
common stock of $9.81 on December 31, 2009 over the
exercise price for those stock options. The vesting of
Mr. DeWitts RSUs and stock options also will be
accelerated in the event of a change in control that results in
the Company ceasing to be publicly traded.
|
|
(7)
|
|
Representing the sum of
(i) Mr. Dixons annual base salary as of
December 31, 2009 ($300,000) paid in bi-weekly installments
over one year, (ii) Mr. Dixons target annual
cash bonus, estimated as equal to the $240,000 target annual
incentive payment he was eligible to receive,
(iii) $196,200, being the value of acceleration of vesting
of 20,000 RSUs and
|
42
|
|
|
|
|
(iv) $225,225, being the value
of all unvested stock options for which vesting is accelerated,
calculated as the excess between the closing price per share of
the Companys common stock of $9.81 on December 31,
2009 over the exercise price for those stock options. The
vesting of Mr. Dixons RSUs and stock options also
will be accelerated in the event of a change in control that
results in the Company ceasing to be publicly traded.
|
For purposes of the named executive officers grants, a
change in control generally includes a person or
entity acquiring more than 50% of the total voting power of the
Companys outstanding voting securities, as well as any
merger, sale or disposition by the Company of all or
substantially all of its assets or business combination
involving the Company (other than a merger or business
combination that leaves the voting securities of the Company
outstanding immediately prior thereto continuing to
representeither by remaining outstanding or by being
converted into voting securities of the surviving
entitymore than 50% of the total voting power represented
by the voting securities of the Company or such surviving entity
outstanding immediately after such merger or business
combination). This definition varies in some respects among the
named executive officers agreements and is described in
greater detail in such agreements. In particular, earlier award
agreements may contain different definitions.
Compensation
Risks
The Companys management reviews the Companys
compensation policies and practices, with a focus on incentive
programs, to ensure they appropriately balance short and
long-term goals and risks and rewards. Specifically, this review
includes the annual cash incentive program and the long-term
cash incentive plans that cover all senior management and a
broad employee population, and equity compensation. These plans
are designed to focus senior management and employees on
increasing stockholder value and enhancing financial results.
Based on this comprehensive review, we concluded that our
compensation program does not encourage excessive-risk taking
for the following reasons:
|
|
|
|
|
Our programs appropriately balance short- and long-term
incentives, with approximately 40% of total target compensation
for the named executive officers provided in equity and focused
on long-term performance. We feel that these variable elements
of compensation are a sufficient percentage of overall
compensation to motivate executives to produce superior short-
and long-term results and we believe that the significant use of
long-term incentives for executives provides a safeguard against
excessive short-term risk-taking.
|
|
|
|
Our executive compensation program pays for performance against
financial targets that are set to be challenging to motivate a
high degree of business performance, with an emphasis on
longer-term financial success and prudent risk management.
|
|
|
|
All incentive plans concerning senior management and our
employees include a profit metric as a significant component of
performance to promote disciplined progress toward financial
goals. None of the Companys incentive plans are based
solely on signings or revenue targets, which mitigates the risk
of employees focusing exclusively on the short-term.
|
|
|
|
Qualitative factors beyond the quantitative financial metrics
are a key consideration in the determination of individual
compensation payments. Prudent risk management is one of the
qualitative factors that are taking into account in making
compensation decisions.
|
|
|
|
Our stock ownership guidelines require that senior management
holds a significant amount of the Companys common stock to
further align their interests with stockholders over the long
term by having a portion of their personal investment portfolio
consist of Company stock and we expect this component to be a
risk mitigator on a prospective basis. In addition, we prohibit
|
43
|
|
|
|
|
transactions designed to limit or eliminate economic risks to
our executives of owning the Companys common stock, such
as options, puts and calls, so our executives cannot insulate
themselves from the effects of poor stock price performance.
|
|
|
|
|
|
The Companys RSU and stock option award agreements have a
policy providing for the clawback of payments under
such awards in the event that an officers conduct leads to
certain mandatory restatements of the Companys financial
results that would have led to lower payments or forfeiture of
all or a portion of shares subject to an award. In addition, the
Companys 2009 equity awards have an injurious
conduct provision that requires the forfeiture of the
award or, to the extent the reward has vested or been exercised
within six months prior to the occurrence of the relevant
conduct, mandates reimbursement of shares or amounts realized.
|
We are confident that our program is aligned with the interests
of our stockholders and rewards for performance.
44
DIRECTOR
COMPENSATION
Director
Fees
Directors who are executive officers of the Company are not paid
additional compensation for serving as directors.
Our non-executive chairman receives total annual compensation of
$351,000, with (i) one-half paid in cash, in arrears,
quarterly at the same time that other non-management directors
receive the cash component of their pay (described below), and
(ii) one-half paid in fully vested RSUs, granted on the
date of the Companys annual meeting and, subject to
acceleration in certain circumstances, settled three years after
the date of grant. For any partial year, a pro-rata portion of
such compensation is paid. Such compensation is in lieu of any
other directors pay (e.g., annual retainer fees, meeting
attendance fees and RSU grants).
The compensation program for the other non-management directors
is as set forth below. We believe our compensation arrangements
for non-management directors are comparable to the compensation
levels for non-management directors at the majority of our peer
companies.
The current compensation arrangements are as follows:
|
|
|
|
|
annual retainer fees of (i) $60,000 for serving as
director, (ii) $7,500 for serving as lead director (if
any), (iii) $12,500 for serving as chairman of the Audit
Committee, and (iv) $7,500 for serving as chairman of the
Compensation Committee, the Nominating Committee, the Finance
Committee or the Strategy Committee;
|
|
|
|
meeting attendance fees of (i) $2,000 for each Board and
Audit Committee meeting, and (ii) $1,500 for each
Compensation Committee, Nominating Committee, Finance Committee
and Strategy Committee meeting; and
|
|
|
|
an annual equity grant of $60,000 in fully vested RSUs,
generally to be paid after three years (subject to acceleration
in certain circumstances).
|
The Board has adopted stock ownership guidelines for
non-management directors. These guidelines state that, within
four years after joining the Board (or May 1, 2006 in the
case of existing members), non-management members of the Board
should achieve and maintain a target minimum level of stock
ownership of three times the annual cash retainer paid to each
member.
We also maintain a medical benefits program, comparable to that
offered to our employees, in which our directors are eligible to
participate at their own cost. See Director Compensation
for Fiscal Year 2009 for additional information on
directors compensation in 2009.
Deferred
Compensation Plan for Directors
We maintain the United Rentals, Inc. Deferred Compensation Plan
for Directors, under which our non-management directors may
elect to defer receipt of the fees that would otherwise be
payable to them. Deferred fees are credited to a book-keeping
account and are deemed invested, at the directors option,
in either a money market fund or shares of our common stock. In
such event, the directors account either is credited with
shares in the money market fund or shares of our common stock
equal to the deferred amount, and the account is fully vested at
all times.
45
Director
Compensation for Fiscal Year 2009
The table below summarizes the compensation paid by the Company
to non-management directors for the fiscal year ended
December 31, 2009.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Fees
|
|
Stock
|
|
|
|
|
Earned in
|
|
Award
|
|
|
Name
|
|
Cash 2009 ($)
|
|
($)(1)(2)
|
|
Total ($)
|
|
Jenne K. Britell
|
|
$
|
175,500(3
|
)
|
|
$
|
148,740(4
|
)
|
|
$
|
324,240
|
|
Jose B. Alvarez
|
|
$
|
92,034
|
|
|
$
|
50,850
|
|
|
$
|
142,884
|
|
Howard L. Clark, Jr.
|
|
$
|
107,500
|
|
|
$
|
50,850
|
|
|
$
|
158,350
|
|
Bobby J. Griffin
|
|
$
|
95,534
|
|
|
$
|
50,850
|
|
|
$
|
146,384
|
|
Singleton B. McAllister
|
|
$
|
107,500
|
|
|
$
|
50,850
|
|
|
$
|
158,350
|
|
Brian D. McAuley
|
|
$
|
143,383
|
|
|
$
|
50,850
|
|
|
$
|
194,233
|
|
John S. McKinney
|
|
$
|
121,870
|
|
|
$
|
50,850
|
|
|
$
|
172,720
|
|
Jason D. Papastavrou
|
|
$
|
127,870
|
|
|
$
|
50,850
|
|
|
$
|
178,720
|
|
Filippo Passerini
|
|
$
|
100,034
|
|
|
$
|
50,850
|
|
|
$
|
150,884
|
|
Keith Wimbush
|
|
$
|
120,767
|
|
|
$
|
50,850
|
|
|
$
|
171,617
|
|
|
|
|
(1) |
|
The amounts in this column represents the grant date fair value
of RSU awards computed in accordance with stock-based
compensation accounting rules (ASC Topic 718) for 2009. The
valuation methodology is based on the fair market value of the
Companys common stock on the grant date. Fair market value
is determined by the average of the high and low of stock prices
on the grant date. |
|
(2) |
|
Each non-management director received an award of 7,500 RSUs on
June 12, 2009, except for Dr. Britell, who received
21,938 as the equity component of her compensation arrangement
as non-executive chairman of the Company. For purposes of
determining the number of RSUs to grant, a stock price of $8 was
used. All RSUs are fully vested as of the date of grant, but are
not paid to a director until the earlier of
(i) June 11, 2012, (ii) the fifth business day
following the directors termination of service for any
reason, and (iii) the date of a change in control of the
Company. |
|
(3) |
|
Represents $175,500 in cash compensation earned in 2009 under
the compensation arrangement for the non-executive chairman of
the Company (total annual compensation under this arrangement is
$351,000, $175,500 of which is paid in cash and the remainder in
fully vested RSUs, as further described in (4) below). |
|
(4) |
|
As the equity component of her compensation arrangement as a
non-executive chairman of the Company, Dr. Britell also
received an award of 21,938 RSUs on June 12, 2009. The size
of the RSU award was determined on the grant date based on the
annual value of the equity component of her compensation of
$175,000. All 21,938 RSUs are fully vested as of the date of
grant, but are not paid to Dr. Britell until the earlier of
(i) June 11, 2012, (ii) the fifth business day
following her termination of service for any reason, and
(iii) the date of a change in control of the Company. |
46
SECURITY
OWNERSHIP OF CERTAIN BENEFICIAL OWNERS AND MANAGEMENT
The table below and the notes thereto set forth, as of
March 16, 2010 (unless otherwise indicated in the
footnotes), certain information concerning the beneficial
ownership (as defined in
Rule 13d-3
under the Exchange Act) of our common stock by (i) each
director and named executive officer of the Company,
(ii) all executive officers and directors of the Company as
a group and (iii) each person known to us to be the owner
of more than 5% of our common stock.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Number of Shares of
|
|
|
|
|
Common Stock
|
|
Percent of
|
|
|
Beneficially
|
|
Common Stock
|
Name and
Address(1)
|
|
Owned
(#)(2)
|
|
Owned
(%)(2)
|
|
Michael J. Kneeland
|
|
|
199,687(3
|
)
|
|
|
|
*
|
William B. Plummer
|
|
|
56,472(4
|
)
|
|
|
|
*
|
Jonathan M. Gottsegen
|
|
|
18,999(5
|
)
|
|
|
|
*
|
Kenneth E. DeWitt
|
|
|
13,333(6
|
)
|
|
|
|
*
|
Joseph A. Dixon
|
|
|
17,829(7
|
)
|
|
|
|
*
|
Roger Schwed
|
|
|
10,000(8
|
)
|
|
|
|
*
|
Jenne K. Britell
|
|
|
37,994(9
|
)
|
|
|
|
*
|
José B. Alvarez
|
|
|
9,900(10
|
)
|
|
|
|
*
|
Howard L. Clark, Jr.
|
|
|
20,310(11
|
)
|
|
|
|
*
|
Bobby J. Griffin
|
|
|
7,500(12
|
)
|
|
|
|
*
|
Singleton B. McAllister
|
|
|
19,310(13
|
)
|
|
|
|
*
|
Brian D. McAuley
|
|
|
23,310(14
|
)
|
|
|
|
*
|
John S. McKinney
|
|
|
23,042(15
|
)
|
|
|
|
*
|
Jason D. Papastavrou
|
|
|
16,310(16
|
)
|
|
|
|
*
|
Filippo Passerini
|
|
|
7,500(17
|
)
|
|
|
|
*
|
Keith Wimbush
|
|
|
13,310(18
|
)
|
|
|
|
*
|
All executive officers and directors as a group
(17 persons)(19)
|
|
|
548,675(20
|
)
|
|
|
|
*
|
BlackRock, Inc.
|
|
|
6,064,818(21
|
)
|
|
|
10.0
|
%
|
FMR LLC
|
|
|
3,228,631(22
|
)
|
|
|
5.4
|
%
|
WEDGE Capital Management L.L.P.
|
|
|
3,956,958(23
|
)
|
|
|
6.6
|
%
|
|
|
|
* |
|
Less than 1%. |
|
(1) |
|
The address of each executive officer and director is
c/o United
Rentals, Inc., Five Greenwich Office Park, Greenwich,
Connecticut 06831. |
|
(2) |
|
Unless otherwise indicated, each person or group of persons
named above has sole investment and voting power with respect to
the shares indicated. For purposes of this table, a person or
group of persons is deemed to have beneficial
ownership of any shares, which, as of a given date, such
person or group has the right to acquire within 60 days
after such date. For purposes of computing the percentage of
outstanding shares held by each person or group of persons named
above on a given date, any security, which such person or group
has the right to acquire within 60 days after such date, is
deemed to be outstanding for the purpose of computing the
percentage ownership of such person or group, but is not deemed
to be outstanding for the purpose of computing the percentage
ownership of any other person or group. |
|
(3) |
|
Consists of 146,354 outstanding shares, 53,333 shares
issuable upon the exercise of currently exercisable stock
options. |
|
(4) |
|
Consists of 23,139 outstanding shares and 33,333 shares
issuable upon the exercise of currently exercisable stock
options. |
47
|
|
|
(5) |
|
Consists of 5,666 outstanding shares and 13,333 shares
issuable upon the exercise of currently exercisable stock
options. |
|
(6) |
|
Consists of 3,333 outstanding shares and 10,000 shares
issuable upon the exercise of currently exercisable stock
options. |
|
(7) |
|
Consists of 6,163 outstanding shares and 11,666 shares
issuable upon the exercise of currently exercisable stock
options. |
|
(8) |
|
Consists of 10,000 outstanding shares as of March 16, 2010.
Mr. Schwed relinquished his role as Executive Vice
President and General Counsel effective February 18, 2009. |
|
(9) |
|
Consists of 6,772 outstanding shares and 31,222 shares
issuable upon settlement of RSUs that have vested (but with
respect to which settlement of 1,330 RSUs is deferred until May
2010, settlement of 2,774 RSUs is deferred until May 2011,
settlement of 5,180 RSUs is deferred until October 2011 and
settlement of 21,938 shares is deferred until June 2012,
subject to acceleration in certain conditions). |
|
(10) |
|
Consists of 2,400 outstanding shares and 7,500 shares
issuable upon settlement of RSUs that have vested (but with
respect to which settlement is deferred until June 2012, subject
to acceleration in certain conditions). |
|
(11) |
|
Consists of 2,706 outstanding shares, 6,000 shares issuable
upon the exercise of currently exercisable stock options and
11,604 shares issuable upon settlement of RSUs that have
vested (but with respect to which settlement of 1,330 RSUs is
deferred until May 2010, settlement of 2,774 RSUs is deferred
until May 2011 and settlement of 7,500 RSUs is deferred until
June 2012, subject to acceleration in certain conditions). |
|
(12) |
|
Consists of 7,500 shares issuable upon settlement of RSUs
that have vested (but with respect to which settlement is
deferred until June 2012, subject to acceleration in certain
conditions). |
|
(13) |
|
Consists of 1,706 outstanding shares, 6,000 shares issuable
upon the exercise of currently exercisable stock options and
11,604 shares issuable upon settlement of RSUs that have
vested (but with respect to which settlement of 1,330 RSUs is
deferred until May 2010, settlement of 2,774 RSUs is deferred
until May 2011 and settlement of 7,500 RSUs is deferred until
June 2012, subject to acceleration in certain conditions). |
|
(14) |
|
Consists of 5,706 outstanding shares, 6,000 shares issuable
upon the exercise of currently exercisable stock options and
11,604 shares issuable upon settlement of RSUs that have
vested (but with respect to which settlement of 1,330 RSUs is
deferred until May 2010, settlement of 2,774 RSUs is deferred
until May 2011 and settlement of 7,500 RSUs is deferred until
June 2012, subject to acceleration in certain conditions). |
|
(15) |
|
Consists of 5,250 outstanding shares, 11,604 shares
issuable upon settlement of RSUs that have vested (but with
respect to which settlement of 1,330 RSUs is deferred until May
2010, settlement of 2,774 RSUs is deferred until May 2011 and
settlement of 7,500 RSUs is deferred until June 2012, subject to
acceleration in certain conditions) and 6,188 shares
issuable upon the conversion of Quarterly Income Preferred
Securities issued by a subsidiary trust. |
|
(16) |
|
Consists of 1,706 outstanding shares, 3,000 shares issuable
upon the exercise of currently exercisable stock options and
11,604 shares issuable upon settlement of RSUs that have
vested (but with respect to which settlement of 1,330 RSUs is
deferred until May 2010 and settlement of 2,774 RSUs is deferred
until May 2011 and settlement of 7,500 RSUs is deferred until
June 2012, subject to acceleration in certain conditions). |
|
(17) |
|
Consists of 7,500 shares issuable upon settlement of RSUs
that have vested (but with respect to which settlement is
deferred until June 2012, subject to acceleration in certain
conditions). |
|
(18) |
|
Consists of 1,706 outstanding shares and 11,604 shares
issuable upon settlement of RSUs that have vested (but with
respect to which settlement of 1,330 RSUs is deferred until May
2010, |
48
|
|
|
|
|
settlement of 2,774 RSUs is deferred until May 2011 and
settlement of 7,500 RSUs is deferred until June 2012, subject to
acceleration in certain conditions). |
|
(19) |
|
Does not include Roger Schwed, as he was not an executive
officer as of March 16, 2010. |
|
(20) |
|
Consists of 238,344 outstanding shares, 162,665 shares
issuable upon the exercise of currently exercisable stock
options, 123,346 shares issuable upon settlement of RSUs
that have vested (but with respect to which settlement is
deferred) or will vest within the next 60 days and
6,188 shares issuable upon the conversion of Quarterly
Income Preferred Securities issued by a subsidiary trust. Does
not include 10,000 shares beneficially owned by
Mr. Schwed, who was not an executive officer as of
March 16, 2010. |
|
(21) |
|
Derived from a 13G/A filed with the SEC on March 9, 2010,
by BlackRock, Inc. with respect to holdings as of
February 26, 2010. According to the Schedule 13G/A,
BlackRock, Inc. is a parent holding company or control person in
accordance with
Rule 13d-1(b)(1)(ii)(G)
of the Securities Exchange Act. On December 1, 2009,
BlackRock, Inc. completed its acquisition of Barclays Global
Investors from Barclays Bank PLC. As a result, substantially all
of Barclays Global Investors, NA. and certain of its affiliates
are included as subsidiaries of BlackRock, Inc. for purposes of
Schedule 13G filings. BlackRock, Inc. is the beneficial
owner of 6,064,818 shares, of which it has sole power to
vote or direct the vote of 6,064,818 shares and the sole
power to dispose or to direct the disposition of
6,064,818 shares. BlackRock, Inc.s address is 40 East
52nd Street, New York, New York 10022. |
|
(22) |
|
According to a Schedule 13G filed with the SEC on
February 16, 2010, FMR LLC (FMR) is the
beneficial owner of 3,228,631 shares, of which it has sole
voting power with respect to 1,938,247 shares, shared
voting power with respect to no shares and sole dispositive
power with respect to all 3,228,631 shares. According to
the Schedule 13G, the address of FMR is 82 Devonshire
Street, Boston, Massachusetts 02109. Fidelity
Management & Research Company (Fidelity),
a wholly-owned subsidiary of FMR and an investment adviser
registered under the Investment Advisers Act of 1940 (the
Investment Advisers Act), is the beneficial owner of
1,235,491 shares as a result of acting as investment
adviser to various investment companies registered under the
Investment Company Act of 1940 (the Investment Company
Act). Edward C. Johnson 3d, the Chairman of FMR, and FMR,
through its control of Fidelity, and the funds each has sole
power to dispose of the 1,235,491 shares owned by the
funds. Neither FMR nor Edward C. Johnson 3d has the sole power
to vote or direct the voting of the shares owned directly by the
Fidelity funds, which power resides with the funds boards
of trustees. Fidelity carries out the voting of the shares under
written guidelines established by the funds Boards of
Trustees. Pyramis Global Advisors, LLC (PGALLC), an
indirect wholly-owned subsidiary of FMR and an investment
adviser registered the Investment Advisers Act, is the
beneficial owner of 1,317,940 shares as a result of its
serving as investment adviser to institutional accounts,
non-U.S.
mutual funds, or investment companies registered under the
Investment Company Act owning such shares. Edward C. Johnson 3d
and FMR, through its control of PGALLC, each has sole
dispositive power over 1,317,940 shares and sole power to
vote or to direct the voting of 1,317,940 shares owned by
the institutional accounts or funds advised by PGALLC as
reported above. Pyramis Global Advisors Trust Company
(PGATC), an indirect wholly-owned subsidiary of FMR
and a bank as defined in Section 3(a)(6) of the Exchange
Act, is the beneficial owner of 597,810 shares as a result
of its serving as investment manager of institutional accounts
owning such shares. Edward C. Johnson 3d and FMR, through its
control of PGATC, each has sole dispositive power over
597,810 shares and sole power to vote or to direct the
voting of 542,917 shares owned by the institutional
accounts managed by PGATC as reported above. FIL Limited
(FIL), and various foreign-based subsidiaries
provide investment advisory and management services to a number
of non-U.S.
investment companies and certain institutional investors. FIL is
the beneficial owner of 77,390 shares. Partnerships
controlled predominantly by members of the family of Edward C.
Johnson 3d and FIL, or trusts for their benefit, own shares of
FIL voting stock with the right to cast approximately 47% of the
total votes which may be cast |
49
|
|
|
|
|
by all holders of FIL voting stock. FMR and FIL are separate and
independent corporate entities, and their boards of directors
are generally composed of different individuals. |
|
(23) |
|
Derived from a Schedule 13G/A filed with the SEC on
February 9, 2010 with respect to holdings as of
December 31, 2009. According to the Schedule 13G/A,
WEDGE Capital Management L.L.P. is an investment advisor
registered under Section 203 of the Investment Advisers
Act. It is the beneficial owner of 3,956,958 shares, with
the sole power to vote or direct the vote of
3,222,236 shares and the sole power to dispose or to direct
the disposition of 3,956,958 shares. WEDGE Capitals
address is 301 S. College Street, Suite 2920,
Charlotte, North Carolina 28202. |
50
COMPENSATION
COMMITTEE INTERLOCKS AND INSIDER PARTICIPATION
None of the current members of the Compensation Committee has
ever been an officer or employee of the Company or its
subsidiaries or had any relationship with the Company requiring
disclosure as a related party transaction under applicable rules
of the SEC. During fiscal year 2009, none of our executive
officers served as a member of the compensation committee of
another entity, one of whose executive officers served on our
Compensation Committee; none of our executive officers served as
a director of another entity, one of whose executive officers
served on our Compensation Committee; and none of our executive
officers served as a member of the compensation committee of
another entity, one of whose executive officers served as a
member of our Board.
51
CERTAIN
RELATIONSHIPS AND RELATED PERSON TRANSACTIONS
The Board has adopted a written policy for the review and
approval of any related party transaction, which is
defined under the policy as any relationship, arrangement,
transaction or series of similar transactions between the
Company and one of our executive officers, directors, director
nominees (or their respective immediate family members), 5%
stockholders or an entity in which any of the foregoing has a
direct or indirect material interest, including transactions
requiring disclosure under Item 404(a) of
Regulation S-K
under the Exchange Act, other than the following:
|
|
|
|
|
transactions available to all employees generally;
|
|
|
|
transactions where the related partys interest arises
solely from the ownership of our securities and all holders of
the securities receive the same benefit on a pro-rata basis,
unless, in the case of securities other than our common stock,
related parties participating in the transaction in the
aggregate own more than 25% of the outstanding shares or
principal amount of the securities;
|
|
|
|
transactions involving (or reasonably expected to involve) less
than $120,000 in any
12-month
period when aggregated;
|
|
|
|
transactions involving director or executive officer retention,
services, benefits or compensation approved or recommended by
the Compensation Committee or approved by the Board; or
|
|
|
|
transactions between the Company and another entity in which
(i) the related party is an immediate family member of a
director or executive officer of the Company and his or her only
relationship with the other entity is as an employee (other than
an executive officer)
and/or less
than 3% beneficial owner of the entity, and (ii) the
aggregate amount involved does not exceed 5% of the other
entitys annual revenues.
|
Any proposed related party transaction will be reviewed and, if
deemed appropriate, approved by the Audit Committee. When
practicable, the review and approval will occur prior to entry
into the transaction. If advance review and approval is not
practicable, the Audit Committee will review, and, if deemed
appropriate, ratify the transaction. In either case, the Audit
Committee will take into account, among other factors deemed
appropriate, whether the transaction is on terms no less
favorable than terms generally available to an unaffiliated
third party under the same or similar circumstances and the
extent of the related partys interest in the transaction.
The Board has also delegated to the chairman of the Audit
Committee the authority to approve or ratify related party
transactions in which the aggregate amount involved is
reasonably expected to be less than $1 million, subject to
reporting at the next Audit Committee meeting any such approval
or ratification.
52
AUDIT COMMITTEE
REPORT
The Audit Committee operates pursuant to a written charter,
which complies with the corporate governance standards of the
NYSE. The Audit Committee reviews and reassesses its charter
annually, and recommends any proposed changes to the full Board
for approval. The Audit Committee charter was most recently
reviewed and amended in April 2009. A copy of the current
charter is available on our website at
http://www.ur.com
under Corporate Governance in the Investor
Relations section.
Pursuant to its charter, the Audit Committee assists the Board
in monitoring, among other things, the integrity of the
Companys financial statements and the performance of the
Companys internal audit function and independent auditors.
Management is responsible for the Companys financial
reporting process, the system of internal controls, including
internal control over financial reporting, and procedures
designed to ensure compliance with accounting standards and
applicable laws and regulations. The Companys independent
registered public accounting firm, Ernst & Young LLP
(E&Y), is responsible for the integrated audit
of the consolidated financial statements and internal control
over financial reporting.
In the discharge of its responsibilities, the Audit Committee
has reviewed and discussed with management and E&Y the
Companys audited consolidated financial statements as of
and for the fiscal year ended December 31, 2009.
The Audit Committee has also discussed and reviewed with
E&Y all communications required under the standards of the
Public Company Accounting Oversight Board (the
PCAOB), including the matters required to be
discussed by E&Y with the Audit Committee under Statement
on Auditing Standards No. 61, as amended (Communication
with Audit Committees).
In addition, E&Y provided to the Audit Committee a formal
written statement describing all relationships between E&Y
and the Company that might bear on E&Ys independence
as required by the applicable requirements of the PCAOB
regarding independent auditors communications with the
audit committee concerning independence. The Audit Committee
reviewed and discussed with E&Y any relationships that may
impact E&Ys objectivity and independence from the
Company and management, including the provision of non-audit
services to the Company, and satisfied itself as to
E&Ys objectivity and independence.
The Audit Committee also has discussed and reviewed with the
Companys vice presidentinternal audit
(VP-IA) and E&Y, with and without management
present, the Companys work in complying with the
requirements of Section 404 under the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of
2002 regarding internal control over financial reporting. In
connection therewith, the Audit Committee also discussed with
the VP-IA, with and without management present,
managements assessment of the effectiveness of internal
control over financial reporting as of December 31, 2009
and, with management and E&Y, E&Ys audit report
on internal control over financial reporting as of
December 31, 2009.
Based upon the reviews and discussions outlined above, the Audit
Committee recommended to the Board that the Companys
audited consolidated financial statements as of and for the
fiscal year ended December 31, 2009 be included in the
Companys annual report on
Form 10-K
for such fiscal year for filing with the SEC.
THE AUDIT COMMITTEE
Brian D. McAuley, Chairman
John S. McKinney
Jason D. Papastavrou
Filippo Passerini
Keith Wimbush
53
PROPOSAL 2
APPROVAL OF 2010
LONG TERM INCENTIVE PLAN
General
At the annual meeting, stockholders will be asked to approve the
United Rentals, Inc. 2010 Long Term Incentive Plan, or the 2010
Plan. On March 11, 2010, our Compensation Committee (which
we refer to as the Committee in this
Proposal 2) approved the adoption of the 2010 Plan, subject
to approval by our stockholders at the 2010 annual meeting. The
2010 Plan will be effective as of the date of the annual meeting
if approved by our stockholders. The 2010 Plan is intended to
replace our 2001 Comprehensive Stock Plan (formerly the 2001
Senior Stock Plan), our 2001 Stock Plan and our
1998-2 Stock
Option Plan, collectively, the predecessor plans. If the 2010
Plan is approved by our stockholders, no additional awards will
be made under the predecessor plans but the terms and conditions
of any outstanding awards granted under the predecessor plans
will not be affected. If the 2010 Plan is not approved by
stockholders, the plan will be null and void, but the
predecessor plans will remain in full force and effect in
accordance with their terms and conditions.
We operate in a challenging marketplace in which our success
depends to a great extent on our ability to attract and retain
employees of the highest caliber. One of the tools the Committee
regards as essential in addressing these human resource
challenges is a competitive long-term incentive program. The
2010 Plan will continue an employee long-term incentive program
that we believe is very important for retention and motivation
of our employees, and the 2010 Plan will provide us with a range
of incentive tools and sufficient flexibility to permit the
Committee to implement them in ways that will make the most
effective use of the shares our stockholders authorize for
incentive purposes.
The 2010 Plan authorizes the grant to employees (including
prospective employees), directors and consultants of stock
options, stock appreciation rights, shares of restricted stock,
restricted stock unit awards and other stock-based or cash-based
awards. Under the 2010 Plan, we will be authorized to issue up
to 2,649,742 shares (which includes 249,742 shares of
common stock available for grant under the predecessor plans as
of the record date), increased by not more than
5,068,883 shares comprised of the number of shares subject
to that portion of any option or other award outstanding
pursuant to a predecessor plan which expires or is forfeited,
terminated or cancelled for any reason without having been
exercised or settled in full on or after the effective date of
the 2010 Plan. As of the record date, a total of
3,601,040 shares were subject to outstanding stock option
awards under the predecessor plans which had a weighted average
exercise price of $13.74 per share and a weighted average
remaining term of 6.58 years. There were also
1,467,843 shares subject to outstanding stock awards under
the predecessor plans in the form of restricted stock units. The
additional 2,400,000 shares of common stock the Committee
has reserved for issuance under the 2010 Plan (i.e., shares not
already available for grant under the predecessor plans)
represent less than 4.0% of our outstanding common shares and
less than 3.7% of our fully diluted common shares.
We continue to actively manage our use of shares of common stock
available for equity-based compensation each year to maintain an
acceptable burn rate, and our average annual burn rate over the
three-year period ending December 31, 2009 was 1.47%. The
following table sets forth information regarding the number of
shares of common stock subject to stock options and restricted
stock units grants in each of 2007, 2008 and 2009:
|
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|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Number of Shares of Common Stock Subject to Equity Grant
|
|
Type of Equity Grant
|
|
2007
|
|
|
2008
|
|
|
2009
|
|
|
Stock Options
|
|
|
165,000
|
|
|
|
70,000
|
|
|
|
910,000
|
|
Restricted Stock Units
|
|
|
268,600
|
|
|
|
968,376
|
|
|
|
584,538
|
|
Total
|
|
|
433,600
|
|
|
|
1,038,376
|
|
|
|
1,494,538
|
|
54
In order to facilitate approval of this proposal, in designing
the 2010 Plan, we have taken into account our stockholders
interests by including many features that are consistent with
the guidelines established by proxy advisory firms and
institutional shareholders and other compensation and governance
best practices, including:
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|
each share subject to a full value award (i.e., an
award settled in stock, other than an option, stock appreciation
right or other award that requires the grantee to pay the grant
date intrinsic value) will reduce the number of shares remaining
available for grant under the 2010 Plan by 1.26 shares;
|
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|
|
the exercise price for stock options and stock appreciation
rights may not be less than fair market value on the grant date;
|
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stockholder approval is required for any (i) increase in
the maximum aggregate number of shares of common stock that may
be issued under the plan, (ii) material modification of the
requirements for participation in the plan, (iii) increase
in the benefits accrued to grantees under the plan,
(iv) repricing of stock options or stock appreciation
rights and (v) other change to the extent such approval is
necessary to comply with any applicable laws, regulations or
rules, including the rules of a securities exchange or
self-regulatory agency;
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subject to accelerated vesting in the event of a change in
control or a grantees retirement, disability or death,
(i) awards of stock options and stock appreciation rights
are subject to a minimum one-year vesting period,
(ii) time-based vesting awards of full value
awards are subject to a minimum three-year vesting period and
(iii) performance-based vesting awards of full
value awards will have a minimum
12-month
performance period; provided that a maximum of 10% of the
maximum aggregate number of shares of common stock reserved for
issuance under the plan can be subject to full value
awards without regard to the limits in (ii) and (iii),
above;
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awards are subject to a so-called double trigger for
accelerated vesting of awards following a change in control,
which means that in order for awards to vest: (1) the
change in control must be consummated and (2) the grantee
must be involuntarily terminated within 12 months after
such change in control. However, if our common stock (or the
stock of any direct or indirect parent entity) is not publicly
traded, or awards are not honored or assumed, or substantially
equivalent awards substituted therefor, the awards will vest as
of the date of such change in control;
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dividends and dividend equivalents will not be paid on unvested
or unearned performance shares or units;
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to preserve our ability to deduct the compensation recognized by
certain executive officers in connection with certain types of
awards, the 2010 Plan establishes a list of measures of
performance criteria from which the Committee may construct
predetermined performance goals that must be met for an award to
vest;
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|
|
awards may not be transferred to third parties for consideration;
|
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|
|
the 2010 Plan has a fixed term of ten years; and
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|
|
the 2010 Plan will generally be administered by the Committee,
which is comprised entirely of independent directors.
|
The Committee believes that the 2010 Plan will serve a critical
role in attracting and retaining the high caliber employees,
directors and consultants essential to our success and in
motivating these individuals to strive to enhance our growth and
profitability. The Committee also believes that stock ownership
by employees provides performance incentives and fosters
long-term commitment to our benefit and to the benefit of our
stockholders. Therefore, the Board urges you to vote to approve
the adoption of the 2010 Plan.
55
Summary of the
2010 Plan
The following summary of the material terms of the 2010 Plan is
qualified in its entirety by reference to the complete text of
the 2010 Plan, which is attached hereto as Appendix A.
Overview
The purpose of the 2010 Plan is to attract, retain and motivate
employees (including prospective employees), directors and
consultants and others who may perform services for the Company
and its subsidiaries, to compensate them for their contributions
to the long-term growth and profits of the Company, and to
encourage them to acquire a proprietary interest in the
Companys success.
Administration
The Committee will administer the 2010 Plan unless a different
committee is appointed by the Board. Among other things, the
Committee will determine the persons who will receive awards
under the 2010 Plan, when awards will be granted, the terms of
the awards and the number of shares of the Companys common
stock subject to the awards. To the extent permitted by
applicable law, the Committee may allocate among its members
and/or
delegate to any person who is not a member of the Committee or
to any administrative group within the Company, any of its
powers, responsibilities or duties, subject to the provisions of
the 2010 Plan and guidelines established by the Committee. Our
Board, in its sole discretion, also may grant awards or
administer the 2010 Plan.
The Committee will have discretion to make all determinations in
respect of the 2010 Plan (including, for example, the ability to
determine whether individual awards may be settled in cash,
shares of common stock, other awards or other property), and all
such determinations will be final, binding and conclusive on all
persons having an interest in the 2010 Plan or any award. The
2010 Plan provides, subject to certain limitations, for
indemnification by the Company of any director or employee
against all expenses, including attorneys fees, incurred
in connection with any legal action arising from such
persons action or failure to act in administering the 2010
Plan.
Eligibility
Awards may be made to employees, directors and consultants and
other individuals who may perform services for the Company and
its subsidiaries. As of the record date, approximately
150 employees, including 7 executive officers, and
10 directors would have been eligible to receive awards
under the 2010 Plan. The Committee reserves the right to
determine which employees and directors will receive awards
under the 2010 Plan and reserves the right to grant no awards in
any particular year.
Common Stock
Available for Awards under the Plan
Subject to adjustment as described below, the maximum aggregate
number of shares of the Companys common stock subject to
awards granted under the 2010 Plan is 2,649,742 shares
(which includes 249,742 shares available under the
predecessor plans as of the record date), which may be increased
by not more than 5,068,883 shares comprised of the number
of shares subject to that portion of any option or other award
outstanding pursuant to a predecessor plan which expires or is
forfeited, terminated or canceled for any reason after the
adoption of the 2010 Plan. Any shares subject to a full
value award (i.e., an award settled in stock, other than
an option, stock appreciation right or other award that requires
the grantee to pay the grant date intrinsic value) will count
against this limit as 1.26 shares for every share granted.
If any award granted under the 2010 Plan is forfeited, expires,
terminates or otherwise lapses without delivery of the
Companys common stock free and clear of any restrictions
or conditions that are part of such award, then the shares of
the Companys common stock underlying any such award will
again become available for grant under the 2010 Plan on a
one-for-one basis for each share subject to such award that is
not a full value award and on a 1.26-for-one basis
for each share subject to an award that is a full
value award. Shares of the Companys common stock
56
will not be treated as having been issued under the 2010 Plan
and will therefore not reduce the number of shares available for
issuance to the extent an award is settled in cash. Shares
withheld by the Company in satisfaction of a tax withholding
obligation will not again become available under the 2010 Plan.
The number of shares available under the 2010 Plan will be
reduced upon the exercise of a stock option or a stock
appreciation right by the gross number of shares for which the
award is exercised even if the option is exercised by means of a
net-settlement exercise procedure. Shares of the Companys
common stock issued or assumed under the 2010 Plan in connection
with any merger, consolidation, acquisition of property or
stock, reorganization or similar transaction will not count
against the number of shares that may be granted under the 2010
Plan.
Shares issued under the 2010 Plan may be authorized but unissued
shares of the Companys common stock or authorized and
previously issued shares of the Companys common stock
reacquired by the Company. On the record date, the closing price
of our common stock on the New York Stock Exchange was $8.25 per
share.
Individual Award
Limitations
To enable compensation provided in connection with certain types
of awards to qualify as performance-based
compensation within the meaning of Section 162(m) of the
Internal Revenue Code, the 2010 Plan establishes a limit on the
maximum aggregate number of shares for which any
performance-based award may be granted to an employee in any
12-month
period of 2,649,742 shares. The maximum aggregate dollar
value for which any performance-based award denominated in
dollars may be granted to a grantee in any
12-month
period is $15,000,000 for each
12-month
period contained in the performance period for such award. These
limits may be adjusted upward or downward as applicable, on a
pro-rata basis for each full or partial
12-month
period in the applicable performance period.
Adjustments for
Capital Structure Changes
The Committee will adjust the terms of any outstanding award,
the number and kind of shares of the Companys common stock
issuable under the 2010 Plan, the aggregate number of shares of
common stock authorized from issuance under the predecessor
plans that may become authorized for issuance under the 2010
Plan, the number of shares of common stock that can be issued
through stock options intended to be incentive stock
options under Section 422 of the Internal Revenue
Code and the individual limits on the number of shares subject
to awards in any one fiscal year, in such manner as it deems
appropriate (including, without limitation, by payment of cash)
in order to prevent the enlargement or dilution of rights as a
result of any increase or decrease in the number of issued
shares of the Companys common stock resulting from a
recapitalization, stock split, reverse stock split, stock
dividend, spinoff, splitup, combination, reclassification or
exchange of shares of the Companys common stock, merger,
consolidation, rights offering, separation, reorganization,
liquidation, or any other change in the corporate structure or
shares of the Companys common stock, including any
extraordinary cash dividend or extraordinary distribution.
Types of
Awards
The 2010 Plan provides for grants of stock options (both stock
options intended to be incentive stock options under
Section 422 of the Internal Revenue Code and non-qualified
stock options), stock appreciation rights, restricted shares,
restricted stock units, dividend equivalent rights and other
stock-based or cash-based awards (including the grant or offer
for sale of unrestricted shares of common stock, performance
share awards and performance units settled in cash and
performance-based awards intended to comply with the exception
for performance-based compensation under Section 162(m) of
the Internal Revenue Code) pursuant to which the Companys
common stock, cash or other property may be delivered. Each
award granted under the 2010 Plan will be evidenced by a written
or electronic award agreement, which will govern that
awards terms and conditions.
57
Stock
Options
A stock option entitles the recipient to purchase shares of the
Companys common stock at a fixed exercise price. The
exercise price per share will be determined by the Committee but
will not be less than 100% of the fair market value of the
Companys common stock on the date of grant and for
incentive stock options granted to 10% stockholders, 110% of the
fair market value. Fair market value will be the closing price
of the Companys common stock on the New York Stock
Exchange on the date of grant. Stock options must be exercised
within 10 years from the date of grant or 5 years for
incentive stock options granted to 10% stockholders. Any
reduction in the exercise price will require the approval of
stockholders of the Company, except pursuant to the adjustment
provisions or in other limited circumstances described above. No
more than 2,649,742 shares of the Companys common
stock (subject to adjustment as described above) may be issued
upon the exercise of incentive stock options granted under the
2010 Plan.
Stock
Appreciation Rights
A stock appreciation right entitles the recipient to receive
shares of the Companys common stock, cash or other
property equal in value to the appreciation of the
Companys common stock over the stated exercise price. The
exercise price per share will be determined by the Committee,
but will not be less than 100% of the fair market value of the
Companys common stock on the date of grant. Fair market
value will be the closing price of the Companys common
stock on the New York Stock Exchange on the date of grant. Stock
appreciation rights must be exercised within 10 years from
the date of grant. Any reduction in the exercise price will
require the approval of stockholders of the Company, except
pursuant to the adjustment provisions described above.
Restricted
Stock
Restricted stock is shares of the Companys common stock
that are registered in the recipients name, but that are
subject to transfer
and/or
forfeiture restrictions for a period of time. The Committee may
grant or offer for sale restricted shares of the Companys
common stock in such amounts, and subject to such terms and
conditions, as the Committee may determine. The Committee may
also grant restricted shares of the Companys common stock
in a manner which is intended to be deductible by the Company
under Section 162(m) of the Internal Revenue Code, as
discussed below. Subject to such limits as the Committee may
determine from time to time, the recipient will have the same
voting and dividend rights as any other stockholder of the
Company.
Restricted
Stock Units
A restricted stock unit is an unfunded, unsecured right to
receive a share of the Companys common stock, cash or
other property at a future date. The Committee may grant
restricted stock units in such amounts, and subject to such
terms and conditions, as the Committee may determine. The
Committee may also grant restricted stock units in a manner
which is intended to be deductible by the Company under
Section 162(m) of the Internal Revenue Code, as discussed
below. The recipient will have only the rights of a general
unsecured creditor of the Company and no rights as a stockholder
of the Company until the Companys common stock underlying
the restricted stock units, if any, is delivered.
Dividend
Equivalent Rights
The Committee may, in its discretion, include in the award
agreement (other than for a stock option or a stock appreciation
grant) a dividend equivalent right entitling the recipient to
receive an amount equal to all or any portion of the regular
cash dividends that would be paid on the shares of the
Companys common stock covered by such award as if such
shares had been delivered. Dividend equivalent rights may be
payable in cash, shares of the Companys common stock or
other property as determined by the Committee. Notwithstanding
the foregoing, unless otherwise specified in an
58
award agreement, a grantees right to dividend equivalent
payments in the case of an award that is subject to vesting
conditions will be treated as unvested so long as such award
remains unvested, and any such dividend equivalent payments that
would otherwise have been paid during the vesting period will
instead be accumulated (and, if paid in cash, reinvested in
additional shares of common stock based on the fair market value
or the date of reinvestment) and paid within 30 days
following the date on which such award is determined by the
Company to have vested.
Other
Stock-Based or Cash-Based Awards
The Committee may grant other types of equity-based or
cash-based awards, including the grant or offer for sale of
unrestricted shares of the Companys common stock,
performance share awards and performance units settled in cash,
in such amounts, and subject to such terms and conditions, as
the Committee may determine. The Committee may also grant other
awards in a manner which is intended to be deductible by the
Company under Section 162(m) of the Internal Revenue Code,
as discussed below.
Other stock-based or cash-based awards (and awards of restricted
stock and restricted stock units) may, at the discretion of the
Committee, be granted in a manner which is intended to be
deductible by the Company under Section 162(m) of the
Internal Revenue Code. For such awards, each performance period,
the Committee will establish the performance goals, which must
be objective, and will prescribe a formula to determine the
amount of the incentive that may be payable based upon the level
of attainment of the performance goals during the performance
period.
The performance goals will be based on one or more of the
following business criteria (either separately or in
combination) with regard to the Company (or a subsidiary,
division, other operational unit or administrative department of
the Company):
|
|
|
|
|
enterprise value or value creation targets;
|
|
|
|
revenue;
|
|
|
|
after-tax or pre-tax profits (including net operating profit
after taxes) or net income (including that attributable to
continuing
and/or other
operations);
|
|
|
|
operational cash flow or earnings before income tax or other
exclusions (including free cash flow, cash flow per share or
earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization);
|
|
|
|
reduction of, or limiting the level of increase in, all or a
portion of the Companys indebtedness, or those of its
affiliates;
|
|
|
|
earnings per share or earnings per share from continuing
operations;
|
|
|
|
return on capital employed (including return on invested capital
or return on committed capital) or return on assets;
|
|
|
|
after-tax or pre-tax return on stockholder equity;
|
|
|
|
market share;
|
|
|
|
the fair market value of the shares of the Companys common
stock;
|
|
|
|
the growth in the value of an investment in the Companys
common stock assuming the reinvestment of dividends;
|
|
|
|
reduction of, or limiting the level of or increase in, all or a
portion of controllable expenses or costs or other expenses or
costs (including SG&A expenses or costs (excluding
advertising) as a percentage of sales and cost of rental
equipment sales);
|
|
|
|
economic value-added targets based on a cash flow return on
investment formula; or
|
|
|
|
customer service measures or indices (including net promoter
score).
|
59
The business criteria may also be combined with cost of capital,
assets, invested capital and stockholder equity to form an
appropriate measure of performance.
In addition, performance goals may be based upon the attainment
of specified levels of the Companys or its
affiliates performance (or that of any subsidiary,
division, other operational unit or administrative department of
the Company) under one or more of the measures described above
relative to the performance of other corporations or the
historic performance of the Company. To the extent permitted
under Section 162(m) of the Internal Revenue Code, the
Committee may (i) designate additional business criteria on
which the performance goals may be based, or (ii) adjust,
modify or amend the aforementioned business criteria.
The business criteria for performance goals under the 2010 Plan
must be re-approved by the stockholders no later than the first
stockholder meeting that occurs in the fifth year following the
year in which stockholders previously approved the business
criteria for performance goals in order for awards to qualify as
performance-based compensation within the meaning of
Section 162(m) of the Internal Revenue Code.
Vesting
The Committee will determine the time or times at which awards
become vested, unrestricted or may be exercised, subject to the
following limitations. Subject to accelerated vesting in the
event of a change in control or a grantees retirement,
disability or death (i) awards of stock options and stock
appreciation rights will be subject to a minimum one-year
vesting period, (ii) time-based vesting awards of
full value awards will be subject to a minimum
three-year vesting period and (iii) performance-based
vesting awards of full value awards will have a
minimum
12-month
performance period. Notwithstanding the foregoing, a maximum of
10% of the maximum aggregate number of shares of common stock
reserved for issuance under the plan can be subject to
full value awards without regard to the minimum
vesting limits in the preceding sentence.
Change in
Control
Unless otherwise provided in an award agreement, the 2010 Plan
provides that, if a change in control occurs and (i) the
common stock of the Company (or of any direct or indirect parent
entity) is publicly traded and (ii) outstanding awards will
be honored or assumed, or substantially equivalent awards
substituted therefor, if a grantees employment is
involuntarily terminated within 12 months after such change
in control, (x) time-based vesting awards will become fully
vested and exercisable as of the date such grantees
employment is terminated and (y) performance-based vesting
awards will be deemed earned at the target level (or if no
target level is specified, the maximum level) with respect to
all open performance periods, as of the date such grantees
employment is terminated. However, if our common stock (or the
stock of any direct or indirect parent entity) is not publicly
traded, or awards are not honored or assumed, or substantially
equivalent awards substituted therefor, the awards will vest as
of the date of such change in control.
For purposes of the 2010 Plan, a change in control
generally includes a person or entity acquiring more than 50% of
the total voting power of the Companys outstanding voting
securities, as well as any merger, sale or disposition by the
Company of all or substantially all of its assets or business
combination involving the Company (other than a merger or
business combination that leaves the voting securities of the
Company outstanding immediately prior thereto continuing to
representeither by remaining outstanding or by being
converted into voting securities of the surviving
entitymore than 50% of the total voting power represented
by the voting securities of the Company or such surviving entity
outstanding immediately after such merger or business
combination), unless otherwise specified by the Committee. In no
event will stockholder approval of a transaction be sufficient
to constitute a change in control.
In addition, in the event of a change in control, the Committee
may cancel awards for fair value (as determined in the sole
discretion of the Committee), provide for the issuance of
substitute awards
60
or provide that for a period of at least 20 days prior to
the change in control, stock options or stock appreciation
rights that would not otherwise become exercisable prior to a
change in control will be exercisable as to all shares of common
stock subject thereto and that any stock options or stock
appreciation rights not exercised prior to the consummation of
the change in control will terminate and be of no further force
or effect as of the consummation of the change in control.
Federal Income
Tax Implications of Stock Options and Stock Appreciation
Rights
The following is a brief description of the U.S. federal
income tax consequences generally arising with respect to the
grant of stock options and stock appreciation rights. This
summary is not intended to constitute tax advice and is not
intended to be exhaustive and, among other things, does not
describe state, local or foreign tax consequences.
Incentive
Stock Options
The recipient of an incentive stock option will not be required
to recognize income for federal income tax purposes on the grant
or exercise of such option, and the Company and its subsidiaries
will not be entitled to a deduction. However, the excess of the
fair market value of the Companys common stock received on
the date of exercise over the exercise price paid will be
included in the recipients alternative minimum taxable
income. The recipients basis in shares of the
Companys common stock received on exercise will be equal
to the exercise price, and the recipients holding period
in such shares will begin on the day following the date of
exercise.
If an optionee does not dispose of the Companys common
stock acquired upon exercise within either the one-year period
beginning on the date of exercise or the two-year period
beginning on the date of grant of the incentive stock option,
then any gain or loss realized by the optionee upon the
subsequent disposition of such shares will be taxed as long-term
capital gain or loss. In such event, no deduction will be
allowed to the Company or any of its subsidiaries. If the
optionee disposes of the Companys common stock within the
one-year or two-year periods referred to above (a
disqualifying disposition), the optionee will
recognize ordinary income at the time of disposition in an
amount equal to the excess of the fair market value of the
Companys common stock on the date of exercise over the
exercise price (or, if less, the net proceeds of the
disposition), and the Company or one of its subsidiaries will
generally be entitled to a corresponding deduction. Any excess
of the amount realized on the disqualifying disposition over the
fair market value of the shares on the date of exercise will be
taxable as capital gain. If the amount realized is less than the
exercise price, and the loss sustained on the disqualifying
disposition would otherwise be recognized, the optionee will not
recognize any ordinary income from the disposition and instead
will recognize a capital loss.
Non-Qualified
Stock Options and Stock Appreciation Rights
The recipient of a stock option or a stock appreciation right
will not be required to recognize income for federal income tax
purposes upon the grant of such award, and the Company and its
subsidiaries will not be entitled to a deduction. Upon the
exercise of an option or a stock appreciation right, the
recipient will recognize ordinary income in the amount by which
the fair market value of the Companys common stock at the
time of exercise exceeds the exercise price, and the Company or
one of its subsidiaries will be entitled to a corresponding
deduction. The recipients basis in the Companys
common stock received will equal the fair market value of the
shares on the exercise date, and the recipients holding
period will begin on the day following the exercise date.
Section 162(m)
Any entitlement to a tax deduction on the part of the Company or
its subsidiaries is subject to the applicable tax rules,
including, without limitation, Section 162(m) of the
Internal Revenue Code. In general, Section 162(m) of the
Internal Revenue Code denies a publicly held corporation a
deduction for federal income tax purposes for compensation in
excess of $1 million per year per person to its
61
covered employees, subject to certain exceptions.
The 2010 Plan is intended to satisfy the performance-based
compensation exception under Section 162(m) of the
Internal Revenue Code with respect to stock options, stock
appreciation rights and certain grants of restricted stock,
restricted stock units and other stock-based or cash-based
awards.
Transfer
Restrictions
Except to the extent otherwise provided in any award agreement,
no award (or any rights or obligations thereunder) granted to
any person under the 2010 Plan may be sold, exchanged,
transferred, assigned, pledged, hypothecated or otherwise
disposed of or hedged (including through the use of any
cash-settled instrument), other than by will or by the laws of
descent and distribution. No award may be transferred for value
or consideration. All awards (and any rights thereunder) will be
exercisable during the life of the recipient only by the
recipient or by the recipients legal representative.
Amendment and
Termination
Generally, our Board may from time to time suspend, discontinue,
revise or amend the 2010 Plan. The 2010 Plan provides that our
Board may, but is not required to, seek stockholder approval of
amendments to the 2010 Plan, except that no amendment can be
made without stockholder approval that would increase the
maximum aggregate number of shares of Common Stock that may be
issued under the Plan, materially modify the requirements for
participation in the Plan, increase in the benefits accrued to
grantees under the Plan or result in a repricing of stock
options or stock appreciation rights. Our Board must also submit
amendments to the 2010 Plan to stockholders if required by
applicable law, regulation or rules, including the rules of a
securities exchange or self-regulatory agency.
Unless previously terminated by our Board, the 2010 Plan will
terminate on January 31, 2020, but any outstanding award
will remain in effect until the underlying shares are delivered
or the award lapses.
New Plan
Benefits
No awards will be granted under the 2010 Plan prior to its
approval by our stockholders. Awards under the 2010 Plan will be
granted at the discretion of the Committee. As a result, it is
not possible to determine the number or type of awards that will
be granted to any person under the 2010 Plan.
Equity
Compensation Plan Information
The Company currently maintains three equity incentive plans
that provide for the issuance of our common stock to employees,
directors and consultants. These plans consist of the 2001
Comprehensive Stock Plan (formerly the 2001 Senior Stock Plan),
the 2001 Stock Plan and the
1998-2 Stock
Option Plan. In 2006, in connection with the amendment and
restatement of the 2001 Comprehensive Stock Plan, all shares
then remaining available for grant under all of the
Companys then outstanding equity incentive plans,
including the 2001 Stock Plan and the
1998-2 Stock
Option Plan, were transferred to the 2001 Comprehensive Stock
Plan. Following the adoption of the 2001 Comprehensive Stock
Plan, additional grants were generally not permitted under the
Companys other equity incentive plans, but additional
grants were permitted solely to the extent that any shares again
became available due to the cancellation or expiration of
existing options or other grants under such plans. In addition,
stock options and other equity awards remain outstanding under
the 1997 Stock Option Plan. The 2001 Comprehensive Stock Plan
was last approved by stockholders in 2006. Neither the 2001
Stock Plan nor the
1998-2 Stock
Option Plan have been approved by the Companys
stockholders.
62
The following table sets forth information regarding outstanding
options and shares reserved for future issuance under the
foregoing plans (but not the 2010 Plan) as of December 31,
2009:
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(c)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Number of Securities
|
|
|
(a)
|
|
|
|
Remaining Available for
|
|
|
Number of Securities
|
|
(b)
|
|
Future Issuance Under
|
|
|
to be Issued Upon
|
|
Weighted Average
|
|
Equity Compensation
|
|
|
Exercise of
|
|
Exercise Price of
|
|
Plans (Excluding
|
|
|
Outstanding Options,
|
|
Outstanding Options,
|
|
Securities Reflected in
|
Plan Category
|
|
Warrants and Rights
|
|
Warrants and Rights
|
|
Column (a))
|
|
Equity compensation plans approved by security holders
|
|
|
3,330,482(1
|
)
|
|
|
17.94412
|
|
|
|
1,193,692(2
|
)
|
Equity compensation plan not approved by security holders
|
|
|
712,186(3
|
)
|
|
|
8.003121
|
|
|
|
443,490(4
|
)
|
Total
|
|
|
4,042,668
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
1,637,182
|
|
|
|
|
(1) |
|
Consists of awards issued under the 2001 Comprehensive Stock
Plan and the 1997 Stock Option Plan. This amount includes
1,260,557 restricted stock units. The weighted-average
exercise price information in column (b) does not include
these restricted stock units. |
|
(2) |
|
Consists of shares available under the 2001 Comprehensive Stock
Plan, which may be subject to awards of stock options, stock
appreciation rights, shares of restricted stock, restricted
stock units and performance awards as determined by the
Committee in its discretion. In addition, shares covered by
outstanding awards become available for new awards if the award
is forfeited or expires before delivery of the shares. No
additional awards may be granted under the 1997 Stock Option
Plan. |
|
(3) |
|
Consists of awards issued under the
1998-2 Stock
Option Plan. The plans that were not approved by our
stockholders are our 1998 Supplemental Stock Option Plan and our
2001 Stock Plan, although there are no awards outstanding under
our 2001 Stock Plan. Only employees who are not officers or
directors are eligible for awards under these plans. The 1998
Supplemental Stock Option Plan provides for the grant of stock
options, and the 2001 Stock Plan provides for the award of
equity and equity-based awards including stock options and
shares of restricted stock. As noted above, no further shares
are authorized for grant under these plans other than shares
that become available for grant due to the cancellation or
termination of outstanding awards. If approved by stockholders,
the 2010 Plan will replace our existing equity compensation
plans and become the vehicle for future equity compensation. |
|
(4) |
|
This amount includes 418,251 shares available under the
1998-2 Stock
Option Plan for future awards of stock options and
25,239 shares available under the 2001 Stock Plan. Under
the 2001 Stock Plan, the Company may award stock options, stock
appreciation rights, shares of restricted stock and stock units
as determined by the Committee in its discretion. In addition,
shares covered by outstanding awards become available for new
awards if the award is forfeited or expires before delivery of
the shares. |
If the 2010 Plan is approved by stockholders, no additional
grants will be made under the 2001 Comprehensive Stock Plan, the
2001 Stock Plan or the
1998-2 Stock
Option Plan and shares remaining available for grant under the
plans will be transferred to, and available for grant under, the
2010 Plan. In addition, any shares which would again become
available due to cancellation or expiration of existing awards
under the 2001 Comprehensive Stock Plan, the 2001 Stock Plan and
the 1998-2
Stock Option Plan will become available for grant under the 2010
Plan, except that no more than 5,068,883 shares subject to
existing awards under the 2001 Comprehensive Stock Plan, the
2001 Stock Plan and the
1998-2 Stock
Option Plan in the aggregate may become available for grant
under the 2010 Plan. Additionally, the number of shares
authorized under the plan will be adjusted by the Committee to
prevent the enlargement or dilution of rights as a result of any
increase or decrease in the number of issued shares of common
stock resulting from a recapitalization, stock split, reverse
stock split, stock dividend, spinoff, splitup, combination,
reclassification or exchange of shares of
63
Common Stock, merger, consolidation, rights offering,
separation, reorganization or liquidation, or any other change
in the corporate structure or shares of Common Stock, including
any extraordinary cash dividend or extraordinary distribution.
Vote
Required
Approval of the 2010 Plan requires the affirmative vote of a
majority of the shares present or represented by proxy at the
annual meeting at which quorum is present and entitled to vote
on this proposal and furthermore requires that the total votes
cast with regard to the 2010 Plan must represent over 50% of all
shares of stock entitled to vote on the 2010 Plan. Abstentions
will have the same effect as a vote against this proposal,
whereas shares not represented at the meeting will not be
counted for purposes of determining whether the plan has been
approved. Broker non-votes will have no effect on the outcome of
this vote. Abstentions and broker non-votes will each be counted
as present for purposes of determining the presence of a quorum.
Board
Recommendation
The Board believes that the proposed adoption of the 2010 Plan
is in the best interests of the Company and its stockholders for
the reasons stated above.
Therefore, the Board unanimously recommends a vote FOR the
proposal to approve the adoption of the 2010 Long Term Incentive
Plan (designated as Proposal 2 on the enclosed proxy
card).
64
PROPOSAL 3
RATIFICATION OF
APPOINTMENT OF INDEPENDENT AUDITORS
General
The Audit Committee has reappointed E&Y as independent
auditors to audit the financial statements and the internal
control over financial reporting of the Company for 2010,
subject to ratification by stockholders and execution of an
engagement letter in a form satisfactory to the Audit Committee.
In the event that our stockholders fail to ratify this
reappointment, or an engagement letter is not finalized, other
certified public accountants will be appointed by the Audit
Committee. Even if this reappointment is ratified, the Audit
Committee, in its discretion, may appoint a new independent
accounting firm at any time during the year if the Audit
Committee believes that such a change would be in the best
interest of the Company and its stockholders.
A representative of E&Y is expected to be present at the
2010 annual meeting with an opportunity to make a statement if
he or she so desires and will be available to respond to
questions.
Information
Concerning Fees Paid to Our Auditors
The following table sets forth the fees paid or accrued by the
Company for the audit and other services provided by E&Y
for fiscal years 2009 and 2008.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
2009
|
|
|
2008
|
|
|
Audit Fees
|
|
$
|
4,014,075
|
|
|
$
|
4,431,027
|
|
Audit-Related Fees
|
|
$
|
283,800
|
|
|
$
|
535,000
|
|
Tax Fees
|
|
$
|
20,000
|
|
|
$
|
15,000
|
|
All Other Fees
|
|
$
|
6,000
|
|
|
$
|
6,000
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Total
|
|
$
|
4,323,875
|
|
|
$
|
4,987,027
|
|
Audit Fees. Audit fees consist of fees
associated with the integrated audit of our annual financial
statements and internal control over financial reporting, review
of our quarterly reports on
Form 10-Q,
and other services that are normally provided by the independent
auditor in connection with statutory and regulatory filings or
engagements.
Audit-Related Fees. Audit-related fees
consist of fees for services, other than the services described
under Audit Fees, which are reasonably related to
the audit of our annual financial statements and review of our
quarterly reports on
Form 10-Q.
These fees included fees for (i) services related to audits
of the Companys employee benefit plans of $140,000 in
fiscal 2009 and $150,000 in fiscal 2008, and (ii) services
related to controls assessments of $143,800 in fiscal 2009 and
$385,000 in fiscal 2008.
Tax Fees. Tax fees consist of fees for
services rendered for tax compliance, tax advice and tax
planning. These fees included fees for (i) assistance with
international tax compliance of $20,000 in fiscal 2009 and $0 in
fiscal 2008, and (ii) state and local tax services of $0 in
fiscal 2009 and $15,000 in fiscal 2008.
All Other Fees. All other fees consist
of fees for services, other than services described in the above
three categories totaling $6,000 in fiscal 2009 and 2008,
principally including support services.
Policy on Audit
Committee Pre-Approval of Audit and Non-Audit Services of
Independent Auditor
The charter of the Audit Committee requires that the committee
pre-approve all auditing services and permitted non-audit
services (including the fees and terms thereof) to be performed
for the
65
Company by its independent auditor, subject to the de minimis
exceptions for non-audit services described in
Section 10A(i)(1)(B) of the Exchange Act and
Rule 2-01
of
Regulation S-X
thereunder. The Audit Committee pre-approved 100% of the
auditing services and permitted non-audit services rendered by
E&Y in 2009 and 2008.
The Audit Committees policy is to either pre-approve
specific services or specific categories of services. In each
case, a fee budget is approved for the service or category, as
the case may be, and such budget may not be exceeded without
further approval by the Audit Committee. When a category of
service is pre-approved, sufficient details must be provided to
enable the members of the Audit Committee to understand the
nature of the services being approved. In addition, the
categories must be sufficiently narrow that management will not
later be placed in the position of deciding the scope of the
services that have been pre-approved.
The Audit Committee may delegate its pre-approval authority to a
subcommittee consisting of one or more members of the Audit
Committee; provided that any pre-approval by an individual
member is required to be reported to the full committee for its
review at its next scheduled meeting. Currently,
Mr. McAuley exercises such delegated pre-approval authority
on behalf of the Audit Committee.
Policy on Hiring
Current or Former Employees of Independent Auditor
The Audit Committee has adopted a policy regarding the hiring of
current or former employees of the Companys independent
auditor. Pursuant to this policy, the Company generally will not
hire or permit to serve on the Board any person who is
concurrently a partner, principal, shareholder or professional
employee of its independent auditor or, in certain cases, an
immediate family member of such a person. In addition, the
Company generally will not hire a former partner, principal,
shareholder or professional employee of its independent auditor
in a financial reporting oversight role if he or she was a
member of the audit engagement team who provided more than ten
hours of audit, review or attest services for the Company
without waiting for a required two-year cooling-off
period to elapse. Further, the Company generally will not hire a
former partner, principal, shareholder or professional employee
of its independent auditor in an accounting role or a financial
oversight role if he or she remains in a position to influence
the independent auditors operations or financial policies,
has capital balances in the independent auditor or maintains
certain other financial arrangements with the independent
auditor.
This policy is subject to certain limited exceptions, such as
with respect to individuals employed by the Company as a result
of a business combination between an entity that is also an
audit client of the independent auditor and individuals employed
by the Company in an emergency or other unusual circumstance,
provided that the Audit Committee determines that the
relationship is in the best interest of the Companys
stockholders.
Voting
Ratification of the reappointment of E&Y as independent
auditors to audit the financial statements of the Company for
2010 requires the affirmative vote of a majority of the shares
present in person or represented by proxy at the annual meeting
and entitled to vote on the matter. Abstentions will have the
same effect as a vote against such ratification, whereas shares
not represented at the meeting will not be counted for purposes
of determining whether such ratification has been approved.
The Board unanimously recommends a vote FOR the ratification
of the reappointment of E&Y as independent auditors
(designated as Proposal 3 on the enclosed proxy card).
66
OTHER
MATTERS
Other Matters to
be Presented at the 2010 Annual Meeting
As of the date of this proxy statement, the Board does not know
of, or have reason to expect that there will be, any matter to
be presented for action at the annual meeting other than the
proposals described herein. If any other matters not described
herein should properly come before the annual meeting for
stockholder action, it is the intention of the persons named in
the accompanying proxy to vote, or otherwise act, in respect
thereof in accordance with the Boards recommendations.
Availability of
Annual Report on
Form 10-K
and Proxy Statement
Upon the written request of any record holder or beneficial
owner of shares entitled to vote at the annual meeting, we will
provide, without charge, a copy of our annual report on
Form 10-K
for the fiscal year ended December 31, 2009, as filed with
the SEC, including financial statements and financial statement
schedules, but excluding exhibits. Such requests should be
mailed to United Rentals, Inc., Five Greenwich Office Park,
Greenwich, Connecticut 06831, Attention: Corporate Secretary.
Stockholders of record sharing an address who wish to receive
separate paper copies of the proxy statement and annual report
to stockholders, or who wish to begin receiving a single paper
copy of such materials, may make such request as follows:
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if you are a stockholder of record, by writing to our transfer
agent, American Stock Transfer & Trust Company,
at 59 Maiden Lane, New York, NY 10038 or by calling
1-800-937-5449; or
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if you are a beneficial owner, by contacting your bank, broker
or other nominee or fiduciary to make such request.
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Stockholders of record sharing an address who elect to receive a
single paper copy of the proxy statement and annual report will
continue to receive separate proxy cards.
If you would like to receive future stockholder communications
via the Internet exclusively, and no longer receive any material
by mail, please visit
http://www.amstock.com
and click on Shareholder Account Access to
enroll. Please enter your account number and tax identification
number to log in, then select Receive Company Mailings via
E-Mail
and provide your
e-mail
address.
Incorporation by
Reference
To the extent that this proxy statement has been or will be
specifically incorporated by reference into any other filing by
the Company under the Securities Act of 1933, as amended (the
Securities Act) or the Exchange Act, the sections of
this proxy statement entitled Compensation Committee
Report and Audit Committee Report (to the
extent permitted by SEC rules) shall not constitute soliciting
materials and should not be deemed filed or so incorporated,
except to the extent the Company specifically incorporates such
report in such filing.
Section 16(a)
Beneficial Ownership Reporting Compliance
Section 16(a) of the Exchange Act requires our officers and
directors, and persons who own more than 10% of a registered
class of our equity securities, to file reports of ownership and
changes in ownership with the SEC. Officers, directors and
greater-than-10% stockholders are required by SEC regulations to
furnish us with copies of all Section 16(a) reports that
they file.
Based solely upon review of the copies of such reports furnished
to us and written representations from certain of our executive
officers and directors that no other such reports were required,
we believe that during the period from January 1, 2009
through December 31, 2009, all Section 16(a) filing
requirements applicable to our officers, directors and
greater-than-10% beneficial owners were complied with on a
timely basis, except that, due to administrative errors:
67
(i) Mr. Kneelands disposition of 16,667 RSUs,
acquisition of 16,667 shares of common stock and
disposition of 5,242 shares of common stock on May 15,
2009 was not reported on Form 4 until June 4, 2009 and
(ii) Dr. Britells disposition of 1,772 RSUs and
acquisition of 1,772 shares of common stock on May 15,
2009 was not reported on Form 4 until January 7, 2010.
Stockholder
Proposals for the 2011 Annual Meeting
A stockholder proposal for business to be brought before the
2011 annual meeting of stockholders will be acted upon only in
the following circumstances:
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if the proposal is to be included in next years proxy
statement, pursuant to Rule
14a-8 under
the Exchange Act, the proposal (meeting all the requirements set
forth in the SECs rules and regulations) is received by
our corporate secretary on or before December 1,
2010; or
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if the proposal is not to be included in next years proxy
statement, pursuant to our by-laws, a written proposal (meeting
all other requirements set forth in our by-laws) is received by
our corporate secretary after January 11, 2011 but on or
before February 10, 2011 (unless the 2011 annual meeting is
not scheduled to be held within the period between April 11 and
June 10, in which case our by-laws prescribe an alternate
deadline).
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In addition, the stockholder proponent must appear in person at
the 2011 annual meeting or send a qualified representative to
present such proposal.
Proposals should be sent to United Rentals, Inc., Five Greenwich
Office Park, Greenwich, Connecticut 06831, Attention: Corporate
Secretary.
68
APPENDIX A
UNITED RENTALS,
INC.
2010 LONG TERM INCENTIVE PLAN
ARTICLE I
GENERAL
1.1 Purpose
The purpose of the United Rentals, Inc. 2010 Long Term Incentive
Plan is to attract, retain and motivate employees (including
prospective employees), directors, consultants and others who
may perform services for the Company, to compensate them for
their contributions to the long-term growth and profits of the
Company and to encourage them to acquire a proprietary interest
in the success of the Company.
This 2010 Long Term Incentive Plan replaces the Predecessor
Plans for Awards granted on or after the Effective Date. Awards
may not be granted under the Predecessor Plans beginning on the
Effective Date, but the adoption and effectiveness of this is
2010 Long Term Incentive Plan will not affect the terms or
conditions of any outstanding grants under the Predecessor Plans
prior to the Effective Date.
1.2 Definitions of
Certain Terms
For purposes of this 2010 Long Term Incentive Plan, the
following terms have the meanings set forth below:
1.2.1 Award means an award
made pursuant to the Plan.
1.2.2 Award Agreement means
the written document by which each Award is evidenced, and which
may, but need not be (as determined by the Committee) executed
or acknowledged by a Grantee as a condition to receiving an
Award or the benefits under an Award (such execution or
acknowledgement to be in writing or through an electronic grant
notification system maintained by or on behalf of the Company),
and which sets forth the terms and provisions applicable to
Awards granted under the Plan to such Grantee. Any reference
herein to an agreement in writing will be deemed to include an
electronic writing to the extent permitted by applicable law.
1.2.3 Board means the Board
of Directors of United Rentals.
1.2.4 Cause means, when used
in connection with the termination of a Grantees
Employment, (a) if the Grantee has an effective employment
agreement with the Company at the time of grant, the definition
used in such employment agreement at the time of grant, or
(b) if the Grantee does not have an effective employment
agreement at the time of grant, unless otherwise provided in the
Grantees Award Agreement, the termination of the
Grantees Employment with the Company on account of:
(i) a Grantees continued failure to substantially
perform his or her duties (other than as a result of total or
partial incapacity due to physical or mental illness);
(ii) a Grantees commission of a crime constituting
(x) a felony under the laws of the United States or any
state thereof or (y) a misdemeanor involving moral
turpitude; (iii) a Grantees fraud, misappropriation,
misconduct or dishonesty in connection with his or her duties;
(iv) any act or omission which is, or is reasonably likely
to be, materially adverse or injurious (financially,
reputationally or otherwise) to the Company; (v) a
Grantees breach of any material obligations contained in
the Grantees employment agreement or offer letter with the
Company, including, but not limited to, any restrictive
covenants or obligations of confidentiality contained therein or
(vi) a Grantees breach of the Companys Code of
Conduct; or (vii) a Grantees material breach of any
Company policies and procedures applicable to the Grantee. If,
subsequent to a Grantees termination of Employment, it is
discovered that such Grantees Employment could have been
A-1
terminated for Cause, the Grantees Employment shall, at
the election of the Committee, in its sole discretion, be deemed
to have been terminated for Cause retroactively to the date the
events giving rise to Cause occurred.
1.2.5 Certificate means a
stock certificate (or other appropriate document or evidence of
ownership) representing shares of Common Stock.
1.2.6 Change in
Control means, unless otherwise provided in
the Grantees Award Agreement, (a) any person or
business entity is or becomes a beneficial owner (as
defined in
Rule 13d-3
under the Exchange Act), directly or indirectly, of securities
of United Rentals representing more than 50% of the total voting
power represented by then outstanding voting securities of
United Rentals or (b) there shall be consummated a merger
of United Rentals, the sale or disposition by United Rentals of
all or substantially all of its assets within a
12-month
period, or any other business combination of United Rentals with
any other corporation or business entity, but not including any
merger or business combination of United Rentals which would
result in the voting securities of United Rentals outstanding
immediately prior thereto continuing to represent (either by
remaining outstanding or by being converted into voting
securities of the surviving entity) more than 50% of the total
voting power represented by the voting securities of United
Rentals or such surviving entity outstanding immediately after
such merger or business combination. Notwithstanding anything
herein to the contrary, in no event shall shareholder approval
of a transaction which, if consummated, would constitute a
Change in Control constitute a Change in Control.
1.2.7 Code means the
Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended from time to time, or
any successor thereto, and the applicable rulings and
regulations thereunder.
1.2.8 Committee has the
meaning set forth in Section 1.3.1.
1.2.9 Common Stock means the
common stock of United Rentals, par value $0.01 per share, and
any other securities or property issued in exchange therefor or
in lieu thereof pursuant to Section 1.6.4.
1.2.10 Company means United
Rentals and its consolidated subsidiaries.
1.2.11 Consent has the
meaning set forth in Section 3.3.2.
1.2.12 Consultant means any
individual, corporation, partnership, limited liability company
or other entity that provides bona fide consulting or advisory
services to the Company pursuant to a written agreement.
1.2.13 Covered Person has
the meaning set forth in Section 1.3.4.
1.2.14 Director means a
member of the Board or a member of the board of directors of a
consolidated subsidiary of United Rentals.
1.2.15 Effective Date means
the later of (a) the date the Board approves the Plan and
(ii) the date the Plan is approved by the stockholders of
United Rentals.
1.2.16 Employee means a
regular, active employee and a prospective employee of the
Company.
1.2.17 Employment means
(a) a Grantees employment if the Grantee is an
Employee of the Company, (b) a Grantees services as a
Director if the Grantee is a Director or (c) a
Grantees services as a Consultant if the Grantee is a
Consultant to the Company. The terms employ and
employed will have their correlative meanings. The
Committee in its sole discretion may determine (i) whether
and when a Grantees leave of absence results in a
termination of Employment (for this purpose, unless the
Committee determines otherwise, a Grantee will be treated as
terminating Employment with the Company upon the occurrence of
an Extended Absence), (ii) whether and when a change in a
Grantees association with the Company results in
A-2
a termination of Employment and (iii) the impact, if any,
of any such leave of absence or change in association on
outstanding Awards. Unless expressly provided otherwise, any
references in the Plan or any Award Agreement to a
Grantees Employment being terminated will include both
voluntary and involuntary terminations. Notwithstanding the
foregoing, with respect to any Award subject to
Section 409A (and not exempt therefrom), a Grantees
termination of Employment means a Grantees
separation from service (as such term is defined and
used in Section 409A).
1.2.18 Exchange Act means
the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended from time to
time, or any successor thereto, and the applicable rules and
regulations thereunder.
1.2.19 Extended
Absence means the Grantees inability to
perform for six continuous months, due to illness, injury or
pregnancy-related complications, substantially all the essential
duties of the Grantees occupation, as determined by the
Committee.
1.2.20 Fair Market
Value means, with respect to a share of
Common Stock, the closing price reported for the Common Stock on
the applicable date as reported on the New York Stock Exchange
or, if not so reported, as determined in accordance with a
valuation methodology approved by the Committee, unless
determined as otherwise specified herein. For purposes of the
grant of any Award, the applicable date will be the trading day
on which the Award is granted or, if the date the Award is
granted is not a trading day, the trading day immediately prior
to the date the Award is granted. For purposes of the exercise
of any Award, the applicable date is the date a notice of
exercise is received by the Company or, if such date is not a
trading day, the trading day immediately following the date a
notice of exercise is received by the Company.
1.2.21 Full Value
Award means an Award other than a stock
option, stock appreciation right or other Award for which the
Grantee pays the grant date intrinsic value (whether directly or
by forgoing a right to receive a cash payment from the Company),
and which is settled by the issuance of shares of Common Stock.
1.2.22 Grantee means an
Employee, Director or Consultant who receives an Award.
1.2.23 Incentive Stock
Option means a stock option to purchase
shares of Common Stock that is intended to be an incentive
stock option within the meaning of Sections 421 and
422 of the Code, as now constituted or subsequently amended, or
pursuant to a successor provision of the Code, and which is
designated as an Incentive Stock Option in the applicable Award
Agreement.
1.2.24 Other Stock-Based or Cash-Based
Awards means awards granted pursuant to
Section 2.8.
1.2.25 Performance-Based
Awards means certain Other Stock-Based or
Cash-Based Awards granted pursuant to Section 2.8.2.
1.2.26 Plan means this
United Rentals, Inc. 2010 Long Term Incentive Plan, as amended
from time to time.
1.2.27 Plan Action will have
the meaning set forth in Section 3.3.1.
1.2.28 Predecessor
Plan means each of the 2001 Comprehensive
Stock Plan of United Rentals, Inc. (formerly the 2001 Senior
Stock Plan), the 2001 Stock Plan of United Rentals, Inc. and the
1998-2 Stock
Option Plan of United Rentals, Inc., each as amended to the
Effective Date.
1.2.29 Section 162(m) means
the exception for performance-based compensation under
Section 162(m) of the Code, including any amendments or
successor provisions to that section, and any Treasury
Regulations and other administrative guidance thereunder, in
each case as they may be from time to time amended or
interpreted through further administrative guidance.
A-3
1.2.30 Section 409A means
the nonqualified deferred compensation rules under
Section 409A of the Code, including any amendments or
successor provisions to that section, and any Treasury
Regulations and other administrative guidance thereunder, in
each case as they may be from time to time amended or
interpreted through further administrative guidance.
1.2.31 Securities Act means
the Securities Act of 1933, as amended from time to time, or any
successor thereto, and the applicable rules and regulations
thereunder.
1.2.32 Ten Percent
Stockholder means a person owning stock
possessing more than 10% of the total combined voting power of
all classes of stock of United Rentals and of any subsidiary or
parent corporation of United Rentals.
1.2.33 Treasury
Regulations means the regulations promulgated
under the Code by the United States Treasury Department, as
amended.
1.2.34 United Rentals means
United Rentals, Inc., or a successor entity thereto.
1.3 Administration
1.3.1 The Compensation Committee of the Board (as
constituted from time to time, and including any successor
committee, the Committee) will
administer the Plan unless a different committee is appointed by
the Board. In particular, the Committee will have the authority
in its sole discretion to:
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(a)
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exercise all of the powers granted to it under the Plan;
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(b)
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construe, interpret and implement the Plan and all Award
Agreements;
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(c)
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prescribe, amend and rescind rules and regulations relating to
the Plan, including rules governing the Committees own
operations;
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(d)
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make all determinations necessary or advisable in administering
the Plan;
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(e)
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correct any defect, supply any omission and reconcile any
inconsistency in the Plan;
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(f)
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amend the Plan to reflect changes in applicable law but, subject
to Section 1.6.4 or as otherwise specifically provided
herein, no such amendment shall adversely impair the rights of
the Grantee of any Award without the Grantees consent;
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(g)
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grant Awards and determine who will receive Awards, when such
Awards will be granted and the terms of such Awards, including
setting forth provisions with regard to the effect of a
termination of Employment on such Awards;
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(h)
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amend any outstanding Award Agreement in any respect, including,
without limitation, to (1) accelerate the time or times at
which the Award becomes vested, unrestricted or may be exercised
(and, in connection with such acceleration, the Committee may
provide that any shares of Common Stock acquired pursuant to
such Award will be restricted stock, which is subject to
vesting, transfer, forfeiture or repayment provisions similar to
those in the Grantees underlying Award),
(2) accelerate the time or times at which shares of Common
Stock are delivered under the Award (and, without limitation on
the Committees rights, in connection with such
acceleration, the Committee may provide that any shares of
Common Stock delivered pursuant to such Award will be restricted
stock, which is subject to vesting, transfer, forfeiture or
repayment provisions similar to those in the Grantees
underlying Award), (3) waive or amend any goals,
restrictions or conditions set forth in such Award Agreement, or
impose new goals, restrictions and conditions or
(4) reflect a change in the Grantees circumstances
(e.g., a change to part-time employment status or a
change in position, duties or responsibilities), provided,
however, that, subject to Section 1.6.4 or as
otherwise specifically provided herein, no such amendment shall
adversely impair the rights of the Grantee of any Award without
the Grantees consent; and
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(i)
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determine at any time whether, to what extent and under what
circumstances and method or methods, subject to
Section 3.13, (1) Awards may be
(A) settled in cash, shares of Common Stock, other
securities, other Awards or other property (in which event, the
Committee may specify what other effects such settlement will
have on the Grantees Award, including the effect on any
repayment provisions under the Plan or Award Agreement),
(B) exercised or (C) canceled, forfeited or suspended,
(2) shares of Common Stock, other securities, other Awards
or other property and other amounts payable with respect to an
Award may be deferred either automatically or at the election of
the Grantee thereof or of the Committee, (3) to the extent
permitted under applicable law, loans (whether or not secured by
Common Stock) may be extended by the Company with respect to any
Awards, (4) Awards may be settled by United Rentals, any of
its subsidiaries or affiliates or any of its or their designees
and (5) subject to Section 2.3.6 and
Section 2.4.5, as applicable, the exercise price for
any stock option (other than an Incentive Stock Option, unless
the Committee determines that such a stock option will no longer
constitute an Incentive Stock Option) or stock appreciation
right may be reset.
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1.3.2 Actions of the Committee may be taken by the vote of
a majority of its members present at a meeting (which may be
held telephonically). Any action may be taken by a written
instrument signed by a majority of the Committee members, and
action so taken will be fully as effective as if it had been
taken by a vote at a meeting. The determination of the Committee
on all matters relating to the Plan or any Award Agreement will
be final, binding and conclusive. To the extent permitted by
applicable law, the Committee may allocate among its members and
delegate to any person who is not a member of the Committee or
to any administrative group within the Company, any of its
powers, responsibilities or duties. In delegating its authority,
the Committee will consider the extent to which any delegation
may cause Awards to fail to be deductible under
Section 162(m) or to fail to meet the requirements of
Rule 16(b)-3(d)(1)
or
Rule 16(b)-3(e)
under the Exchange Act.
1.3.3 Notwithstanding anything to the contrary contained
herein, the Board may, in its sole discretion, at any time and
from time to time, grant Awards or administer the Plan. In any
such case, the Board will have all of the authority and
responsibility granted to the Committee herein.
1.3.4 No Director or Employee (each such person, a
Covered Person) will have any
liability to any person (including any Grantee) for any action
taken or omitted to be taken or any determination made in good
faith with respect to the Plan or any Award. Each Covered Person
will be indemnified and held harmless by United Rentals against
and from (a) any loss, cost, liability or expense
(including attorneys fees) that may be imposed upon or
incurred by such Covered Person in connection with or resulting
from any action, suit or proceeding to which such Covered Person
may be a party or in which such Covered Person may be involved
by reason of any action taken or omitted to be taken under the
Plan or any Award Agreement, in each case, in good faith and
(b) any and all amounts paid by such Covered Person, with
United Rentals approval, in settlement thereof, or paid by
such Covered Person in satisfaction of any judgment in any such
action, suit or proceeding against such Covered Person,
provided that United Rentals will have the right, at its
own expense, to assume and defend any such action, suit or
proceeding and, once United Rentals gives notice of its intent
to assume the defense, United Rentals will have sole control
over such defense with counsel of United Rentals choice.
The foregoing right of indemnification will not be available to
a Covered Person to the extent that a court of competent
jurisdiction in a final judgment or other final adjudication, in
either case, not subject to further appeal, determines that the
acts or omissions of such Covered Person giving rise to the
indemnification claim resulted from such Covered Persons
bad faith, fraud or willful misconduct. The foregoing right of
indemnification will not be exclusive of any other rights of
indemnification to which Covered Persons may be entitled under
United Rentals Amended and Restated Certificate of
Incorporation or By-laws, as a matter of law, or otherwise, or
any other power that United Rentals may have to indemnify such
persons or hold them harmless.
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1.4 Persons Eligible
for Awards
Awards under the Plan may be made to Employees, Directors and
Consultants.
1.5 Types of Awards
Under Plan
Awards may be made under the Plan in the form of any of the
following, in each case in respect of Common Stock:
(a) stock options, (b) stock appreciation rights,
(c) restricted stock, (d) restricted stock units,
(e) dividend equivalent rights and (f) Other
Stock-Based or Cash-Based Awards, that the Committee determines
to be consistent with the purposes of the Plan and the interests
of the Company.
1.6 Shares of Common
Stock Available for Awards
1.6.1 Common Stock Subject to the Plan; Share
Counting. Subject to the other provisions of this
Section 1.6, the maximum aggregate number of shares
of Common Stock that may be granted under the Plan is 2,649,742,
which includes 249,742 shares of Common Stock available for
grant under the Predecessor Plans as of March 15, 2010.
Such shares of Common Stock may, in the discretion of the
Committee, be either authorized but unissued shares or shares
previously issued and reacquired by United Rentals. Any shares
of Common Stock that are subject to Awards that are not Full
Value Awards shall be counted against this limit as one share
for every share granted; shares of Common Stock that are subject
to any Full Value Awards shall be counted against this limit as
1.26 shares for every share granted (as adjusted pursuant
to the provisions of Section 1.6.4). The number of
shares of Common Stock available for the purpose of Awards under
the Plan shall be reduced by (i) the gross number of shares
of Common Stock for which stock options or stock appreciation
right are exercised, regardless of whether any of the shares of
Common Stock underlying such Awards are not actually issued to
the Grantee as the result of a net settlement and (ii) any
shares of Common Stock withheld pursuant to
Section 3.2 to satisfy any tax withholding
obligation with respect to any Award. Shares of Common Stock
shall not be deemed to have been issued pursuant to the Plan
with respect to any portion of an Award that is settled in cash.
1.6.2 Adjustment for Unissued Predecessor Plan
Shares. The maximum aggregate number of shares of
Common Stock that may be granted under the Plan, as set forth in
Section 1.6.1, shall be cumulatively increased from
time to time by the number of shares of Common Stock subject to,
or acquired pursuant to, that portion of any option or other
award outstanding pursuant to a Predecessor Plan as of the
Effective Date which, on or after the Effective Date, expires or
is forfeited, terminated or canceled for any reason without
having been exercised or settled in full; provided,
however, that the aggregate number of shares of Common Stock
authorized for issuance under the Predecessor Plans that may
become authorized for issuance under the Plan pursuant to this
Section 1.6.2 shall not exceed 5,068,883 (as
adjusted pursuant to the provisions of
Section 1.6.4).
1.6.3 Replacement of Shares. If any
Award is forfeited, expires, terminates or otherwise lapses, in
whole or in part, without the delivery of Common Stock free and
clear of any restrictions or conditions that are part of such
Award, then the shares of Common Stock covered by such
forfeited, expired, terminated or lapsed award will again be
available for grant under the Plan; provided, however,
that the number of shares of Common Stock that shall again be
available for the grant under the Plan shall be increased by
1.26 shares for each share of Common Stock subject to a
Full Value Award at the time such Full Value Award is forfeited,
expires, terminates or otherwise lapses (as adjusted pursuant to
the provisions of Section 1.6.4). For the avoidance
of doubt, the following will not again become available for
issuance under the Plan: (A) any shares of Common Stock
withheld pursuant to Section 3.2 to satisfy any tax
withholding obligation with respect to any Award and
(B) any shares of Common Stock tendered or withheld to pay
the exercise price of stock options or stock appreciation rights.
1.6.4 Adjustments. The Committee will
adjust the number and kind of shares of Common Stock authorized
pursuant to Section 1.6.1, adjust the aggregate
number of shares of Common Stock authorized for issuance under
the Predecessor Plans that may become authorized for issuance
under
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the Plan pursuant to Section 1.6.2, adjust the
individual Grantee limitations set forth in
Section 1.7, adjust the number of shares of Common
Stock set forth in Section 2.3.2 that can be issued
through Incentive Stock Options and adjust the terms of any
outstanding Awards (including, without limitation, the number of
shares of Common Stock covered by each outstanding Award, the
type of property to which the Award relates and the exercise or
strike price of any Award), in such manner as it deems
appropriate (including, without limitation, by payment of cash)
to prevent the enlargement or dilution of rights, as a result of
any increase or decrease in the number of issued shares of
Common Stock (or issuance of shares of stock other than shares
of Common Stock) resulting from a recapitalization, stock split,
reverse stock split, stock dividend, spinoff, splitup,
combination, reclassification or exchange of shares of Common
Stock, merger, consolidation, rights offering, separation,
reorganization or liquidation, or any other change in the
corporate structure or shares of Common Stock, including any
extraordinary cash dividend or extraordinary distribution;
provided that no such adjustment shall be made if or to the
extent that it would cause an outstanding Award to cease to be
exempt from, or to fail to comply with, Section 409A. After
any adjustment made pursuant to this Section 1.6.4,
the number of shares of Common Stock subject to each outstanding
Award will be rounded down to the nearest whole number.
1.6.5 Assumption or Substitution of
Awards. The Committee may, without affecting the
number of shares of Common Stock available pursuant to
Section 1.6.1, authorize the issuance or assumption
of benefits under the Plan in connection with any merger,
consolidation, acquisition of property or stock, reorganization
or similar transaction upon such terms and conditions as it may
deem appropriate, subject to compliance with Section 409A
and any other applicable provisions of the Code.
1.7 Individual
Limitations.
The maximum number of shares of Common Stock with respect to
which Awards may be granted during any
12-month
period to any Employee shall be 2,649,742 (as adjusted pursuant
to the provisions of Section 1.6.4). The maximum
payment under any Award denominated in dollars under the Plan
that may be granted during any
12-month
period to any Employee shall be $15,000,000 for each
12-month
period contained in the performance period for such Award. The
grant limits under the preceding sentences shall (i) apply to an
Award other than a stock option or stock appreciation right only
if the Award is intended to be performance-based
compensation as that term is used in Section 162(m)
and (ii) be adjusted upward or downward, as applicable, on a pro
rata basis for each full or partial 12-month period in the
applicable performance period.
1.8 Full Value Award
Vesting Limitations
Notwithstanding any other provision of the Plan to the contrary,
Full Value Awards (a) which vest on the basis of the
Grantees continued Employment shall be subject to a
minimum vesting schedule of at least three years following the
date of grant of the Award (with no more than one-third of the
shares of Common Stock subject thereto vesting on each of the
first three anniversaries of the date on which such Award is
granted) and (b) which vest on the basis of the attainment
of performance goals shall provide for a performance period of
not less than 12 months measured from the commencement of
the period over which performance is evaluated; provided,
however, that the foregoing limitations shall not preclude
the acceleration of vesting of any such Award upon the death,
disability or retirement of the Grantee or upon or following a
Change in Control, as determined by the Committee in its
discretion, and shall not apply to Full Value Awards that are
granted in lieu of cash compensation or pursuant to
Section 1.6.5. Notwithstanding the
foregoing, Full Value Awards with respect to 10% of the maximum
aggregate number of shares of Common Stock that may be granted
under the Plan pursuant to Section 1.6.1 may be
granted under the Plan to any one or more Grantees without
respect to such minimum vesting provisions.
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ARTICLE II
AWARDS UNDER THE PLAN
2.1 Agreements
Evidencing Awards
Each Award granted under the Plan will be evidenced by an Award
Agreement that will contain such provisions and conditions as
the Committee deems appropriate. Unless otherwise provided
herein, the Committee may grant Awards in tandem with or,
subject to Section 3.13, in substitution for any
other Award or Awards granted under the Plan or any award
granted under any other plan of United Rentals. No Award or
purported Award shall be a valid and binding obligation of
United Rentals unless evidenced by a fully executed Award
Agreement, which execution may be evidenced by electronic means.
By accepting an Award pursuant to the Plan, a Grantee thereby
agrees that the Award will be subject to all of the terms and
provisions of the Plan and the applicable Award Agreement.
2.2 No Rights as a
Stockholder
No Grantee (or other person having rights pursuant to an Award)
will have any of the rights of a stockholder of United Rentals
with respect to shares of Common Stock subject to an Award until
the delivery of such shares. Except as otherwise provided in
Section 1.6.4, no adjustments will be made for
dividends, distributions or other rights (whether ordinary or
extraordinary, and whether in cash, Common Stock, other
securities or other property) for which the record date is
before the date the Certificates for the shares are delivered.
2.3 Options
2.3.1 Grant. Stock options may be
granted to eligible recipients in such number and at such times
during the term of the Plan as the Committee may determine.
2.3.2 Incentive Stock Options. At the
time of grant, the Committee will determine (a) whether all
or any part of a stock option granted to an eligible Employee
will be an Incentive Stock Option and (b) the number of
shares subject to such Incentive Stock Option; provided,
however, that (1) the aggregate Fair Market Value
(determined as of the time the option is granted) of the stock
with respect to which Incentive Stock Options are exercisable
for the first time by an eligible Employee during any calendar
year (under all such plans of United Rentals and of any
subsidiary or parent corporation of United Rentals) will not
exceed $100,000 and (2) no Incentive Stock Option (other
than an Incentive Stock Option that may be assumed or issued by
the Company in connection with a transaction to which
Section 424(a) of the Code applies) may be granted to a
person who is not eligible to receive an Incentive Stock Option
under the Code. The form of any stock option which is entirely
or in part an Incentive Stock Option will clearly indicate that
such stock option is an Incentive Stock Option or, if
applicable, the number of shares subject to the Incentive Stock
Option. The maximum aggregate number of shares of Common Stock
that may be issued under the Plan pursuant to the exercise of
Incentive Stock Options shall not exceed 2,649,742 shares
of Common Stock (as adjusted pursuant to the provisions of
Section 1.6.4).
2.3.3 Exercise Price. The exercise price
per share with respect to each stock option will be determined
by the Committee but, except as otherwise permitted by
Section 1.6.4, may never be less than the Fair
Market Value of the Common Stock (or, in the case of an
Incentive Stock Option granted to a Ten Percent Stockholder,
110% of the Fair Market Value). Unless otherwise noted in the
Award Agreement, the Fair Market Value of the Common Stock will
be its closing price on the New York Stock Exchange on the date
of grant of the Award of stock options.
2.3.4 Term of Stock Option. In no event
will any stock option be exercisable after the expiration of
10 years (or, in the case of an Incentive Stock Option
granted to a Ten Percent Stockholder, 5 years) from the
date on which the stock option is granted.
2.3.5 Exercise of Stock Option and Payment for
Shares. A stock option may be exercised at such
time or times and subject to such terms and conditions as will
be determined by the
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Committee at the time the stock option is granted and set forth
in the Award Agreement; provided, however, that stock
options shall be subject to a minimum vesting schedule of at
least one year, except that unvested stock options may become
vested prior to the completion of the one-year period upon a
Change in Control or the Grantees retirement, disability
or death, in each case, to the extent provided in the applicable
Award Agreement. Subject to any limitations in the applicable
Award Agreement, any shares not acquired pursuant to the
exercise of a stock option on the applicable vesting date may be
acquired thereafter at any time before the final expiration of
the stock option. To exercise a stock option, the Grantee must
give written notice to United Rentals specifying the number of
shares to be acquired and accompanied by payment of the full
purchase price therefor in cash or by certified or official bank
check or in another form as determined by the Company,
including: (a) personal check, (b) shares of Common
Stock of the same class as those to be granted by exercise of
the stock option having a Fair Market Value equal to the
aggregate exercise price for the shares of Common Stock being
purchased, based on the Fair Market Value as of the exercise
date, (c) if there is a public market for the Common Stock
at such time, through the delivery of irrevocable instructions
to a broker to sell shares of Common Stock obtained upon the
exercise of the stock option and to deliver promptly to United
Rentals an amount out of the proceeds of such sale equal to the
aggregate exercise price for the shares of Common Stock being
purchased, (d) by surrender of all or part of the Common
Stock issuable upon exercise of the option by the largest whole
number of shares of Common Stock with a Fair Market Value that
does not exceed the aggregate exercise price; provided,
however, that the Company shall accept a cash or other
payment from the Grantee to the extent of any remaining balance
of the aggregate exercise price not satisfied by such reduction
in the number of whole shares to be issued, (e) any other
form of consideration approved by the Company and permitted by
applicable law and (f) any combination of the foregoing.
Any person exercising a stock option will make such
representations and agreements and furnish such information as
the Committee may in its discretion deem necessary or desirable
to assure compliance by United Rentals on terms acceptable to
United Rentals with the provisions of the Securities Act and any
other applicable legal requirements. If a Grantee so requests,
shares acquired pursuant to the exercise of a stock option may
be issued in the name of the Grantee and another jointly with
the right of survivorship.
2.3.6 Repricing. Except as otherwise
permitted by Section 1.6.4, reducing the exercise
price of stock options issued and outstanding under the Plan,
including through amendment, cancellation in exchange for the
grant of a substitute Award or repurchase for cash or other
consideration (in each case that has the effect of reducing the
exercise price), will require approval of the stockholders of
United Rentals.
2.3.7 Repayment if Conditions Not
Met. If the Committee determines that all terms and
conditions of the Plan and a Grantees stock option Award
Agreement in respect of exercised stock options were not
satisfied, then the Grantee will be obligated to pay the Company
immediately upon demand therefor, an amount equal to the excess
of the Fair Market Value (determined at the time of exercise) of
the shares of Common Stock that were delivered in respect of
such exercised stock option over the exercise price paid
therefor, without reduction for any shares of Common Stock
applied to satisfy withholding tax or other obligations in
respect of such shares.
2.4 Stock
Appreciation Rights
2.4.1 Grant. Stock appreciation rights
may be granted to eligible recipients in such number and at such
times during the term of the Plan as the Committee may determine.
2.4.2 Exercise Price. The exercise price
per share with respect to each stock appreciation right will be
determined by the Committee but, except as otherwise permitted
by Section 1.6.4, may never be less than the Fair
Market Value of the Common Stock. Unless otherwise noted in the
Award Agreement, the Fair Market Value of the Common Stock will
be its closing price on the New York Stock Exchange on the date
of grant of the Award of stock appreciation rights.
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2.4.3 Term of Stock Appreciation
Right. In no event will any stock appreciation
right be exercisable after the expiration of 10 years from
the date on which the stock appreciation right is granted.
2.4.4 Exercise of Stock Appreciation Right and
Delivery of Shares. Each stock appreciation right
may be exercised in such installments as may be determined in
the Award Agreement at the time the stock appreciation right is
granted; provided, however, that stock appreciation
rights shall be subject to a minimum vesting schedule of at
least one year, except that unvested stock appreciation rights
may become vested prior to the completion of the one-year period
upon a Change in Control or the Grantees retirement,
disability or death, in each case, to the extent provided in the
applicable Award Agreement. Subject to any limitations in the
applicable Award Agreement, any stock appreciation rights not
exercised on the applicable installment date may be exercised
thereafter at any time before the final expiration of the stock
appreciation right. To exercise a stock appreciation right, the
Grantee must give written notice to United Rentals specifying
the number of stock appreciation rights to be exercised. Upon
exercise of stock appreciation rights, shares of Common Stock,
cash or other securities or property, or a combination thereof,
as specified by the Committee, equal in value to (a) the
excess of (1) the Fair Market Value of the Common Stock on
the date of exercise over (2) the exercise price of
such stock appreciation right multiplied by (b) the
number of stock appreciation rights exercised will be delivered
to the Grantee. Any person exercising a stock appreciation right
will make such representations and agreements and furnish such
information as the Committee may in its discretion deem
necessary or desirable to assure compliance by United Rentals on
terms acceptable to United Rentals with the provisions of the
Securities Act and any other applicable legal requirements. If a
Grantee so requests, shares purchased may be issued in the name
of the Grantee and another jointly with the right of
survivorship.
2.4.5 Repricing. Except as otherwise
permitted by Section 1.6.4, reducing the exercise
price of stock appreciation rights issued and outstanding under
the Plan, including through amendment, cancellation in exchange
for the grant of a substitute Award or repurchase for cash or
other consideration (in each case that has the effect of
reducing the exercise price), will require approval of the
stockholders of United Rentals.
2.4.6 Repayment if Conditions Not
Met. If the Committee determines that all terms and
conditions of the Plan and a Grantees stock appreciation
right Award Agreement in respect of exercised stock appreciation
rights were not satisfied, then the Grantee will be obligated to
pay the Company immediately upon demand therefor, an amount
equal to the excess of the Fair Market Value (determined at the
time of exercise) of the shares of Common Stock that were
delivered in respect of such exercised stock appreciation rights
over the exercise price paid therefor, without reduction for any
shares of Common Stock applied to satisfy withholding tax or
other obligations in respect of such stock appreciation rights.
2.5 Restricted
Stock
2.5.1 Grants. The Committee may grant or
offer for sale restricted stock in such amounts and subject to
such terms and conditions as the Committee may determine. Upon
the delivery of such stock, the Grantee will have the rights of
a stockholder with respect to the restricted stock, subject to
any other restrictions and conditions as the Committee may
include in the applicable Award Agreement. Each Grantee of an
Award of restricted stock will be issued a Certificate in
respect of such shares, unless the Committee elects to use
another system, such as book entries by the transfer agent, as
evidencing ownership of shares of such shares. In the event that
a Certificate is issued in respect of restricted stock, such
Certificate may be registered in the name of the Grantee, and
shall, in addition to such legends required by applicable
securities laws, bear an appropriate legend referring to the
terms, conditions, and restrictions applicable to such Award,
but will be held by United Rentals or its designated agent until
the time the restrictions lapse.
2.5.2 Right to Vote and Receive Dividends on
Restricted Stock. Each Grantee of an Award of
restricted stock will, during the period of restriction, be the
beneficial and record owner of such
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restricted stock and will have full voting rights with respect
thereto. Unless the Committee determines otherwise in an Award
Agreement, during the period of restriction, all dividends
(whether ordinary or extraordinary and whether paid in cash,
additional shares or other property) or other distributions paid
upon any restricted stock will be retained by the Company for
the account of the relevant Grantee and, if paid in cash,
reinvested in additional shares of Common Stock based on the
Fair Market Value of the Common Stock on the date of
reinvestment. Such dividends or other distributions will revert
back to the Company if for any reason the restricted stock upon
which such dividends or other distributions were paid reverts
back to the Company. Upon the expiration of the period of
restriction, all such dividends or other distributions made on
such restricted stock and retained by the Company will be paid
to the relevant Grantee.
2.5.3 Repayment if Conditions Not
Met. If the Committee determines that all terms and
conditions of the Plan and a Grantees restricted stock
Award Agreement in respect of restricted stock which has become
vested were not satisfied, then the Grantee will be obligated to
pay the Company immediately upon demand therefor, an amount
equal to the Fair Market Value (determined at the time such
stock became vested) of such restricted stock, without reduction
for any amount applied to satisfy withholding tax or other
obligations in respect of such restricted stock.
2.5.4 Performance-Based
Grants. Notwithstanding anything to the contrary
herein, restricted stock granted under this
Section 2.5 may, at the discretion of the Committee,
be granted in a manner which is intended to be deductible by the
Company under Section 162(m). In such event, the Committee
shall follow procedures substantially equivalent to those set
forth in Section 2.8.2.
2.6 Restricted Stock
Units
2.6.1 Grant. The Committee may grant
Awards of restricted stock units in such amounts and subject to
such terms and conditions as the Committee may determine. A
Grantee of a restricted stock unit will have only the rights of
a general unsecured creditor of United Rentals, until delivery
of shares of Common Stock, cash or other securities or property
is made as specified in the applicable Award Agreement. On the
delivery date specified in the Award Agreement, the Grantee of
each restricted stock unit not previously forfeited or
terminated will receive one share of Common Stock, cash or other
securities or property equal in value to a share of Common Stock
or a combination thereof, as specified by the Committee.
2.6.2 Repayment if Conditions Not
Met. If the Committee determines that all terms and
conditions of the Plan and a Grantees restricted stock
unit Award Agreement in respect of the delivery of shares
underlying such restricted stock units were not satisfied, then
the Grantee will be obligated to pay the Company immediately
upon demand therefor, an amount equal to the Fair Market Value
(determined at the time of delivery) of the shares of Common
Stock delivered with respect to such delivery date, without
reduction for any shares applied to satisfy withholding tax or
other obligations in respect of such shares of Common Stock.
2.6.3 Performance-Based
Grants. Notwithstanding anything to the contrary
herein, restricted stock units granted under this
Section 2.6 may, at the discretion of the Committee,
be granted in a manner which is intended to be deductible by the
Company under Section 162(m). In such event, the Committee
shall follow procedures substantially equivalent to those set
forth in Section 2.8.2.
2.7 Dividend
Equivalent Rights
The Committee may include in the Award Agreement with respect to
any Award (other than a stock option or a stock appreciation
right) a dividend equivalent right entitling the Grantee to
receive amounts equal to all or any portion of the regular cash
dividends that would be paid on the shares of Common Stock
covered by such Award if such shares had been delivered pursuant
to such Award. The grantee of a dividend equivalent right will
have only the rights of a general unsecured creditor of United
Rentals until payment of such amounts is made as specified in
the applicable Award Agreement.
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In the event such a provision is included in an Award Agreement,
the Committee will determine whether such payments will be made
in cash, in shares of Common Stock or in another form, whether
they will be conditioned upon the exercise of the Award to which
they relate, the time or times at which they will be made, and
such other terms and conditions as the Committee will deem
appropriate. Notwithstanding the foregoing, unless otherwise
provided in the Grantees Award Agreement, a Grantees
right under an Award Agreement to dividend equivalent payments
in the case of an Award that is subject to vesting conditions
shall be treated as unvested so long as such Award remains
unvested, and any such dividend equivalent payments that would
otherwise have been paid during the vesting period shall instead
be accumulated (and, if paid in cash, reinvested in additional
shares of Common Stock based on the Fair Market Value of the
Common Stock on the date of reinvestment) and paid within
30 days following the date on which such Award is
determined by the Company to have vested.
2.8 Other
Stock-Based or Cash-Based Awards
2.8.1 Grant. The Committee may grant
other types of equity-based or cash-based Awards (including the
grant or offer for sale of unrestricted shares of Common Stock
and performance stock and performance units settled in cash) in
such amounts and subject to such terms and conditions as the
Committee may determine. Such Awards may entail the transfer of
actual shares of Common Stock to Award recipients and may
include Awards designed to comply with or take advantage of the
applicable local laws of jurisdictions other than the United
States.
2.8.2 Performance-Based
Awards. Notwithstanding anything to the contrary
herein, Other Stock-Based or Cash-Based Awards may, at the
discretion of the Committee, be granted in a manner which is
intended to be deductible by the Company under
Section 162(m). In such event, the Committee shall follow
the following procedures:
(a) Establishment of the Performance Period,
Performance Goals and
Formula. A Grantees Performance-Based
Award shall be determined based on the attainment of written
objective performance goals approved by the Committee for a
performance period of not less than one year established by the
Committee (i) while the outcome for that performance period
is substantially uncertain and (ii) no more than
90 days after the commencement of the performance period to
which the performance goal relates or, if less, the number of
days which is equal to 25% of the relevant performance period.
At the same time as the performance goals are established, the
Compensation Committee will prescribe a formula to determine the
amount of the Performance-Based Award that may be payable based
upon the level of attainment of the performance goals during the
performance period.
(b) Performance Criteria. The
performance goals shall be based on one or more of the following
business criteria (either separately or in combination) with
regard to United Rentals (or a subsidiary, division, other
operational unit or administrative department of United
Rentals): (i) the attainment of certain levels of, or a
specified increase in, enterprise value or value creation
targets; (ii) the attainment of certain levels of, or a
percentage increase in revenue; (iii) the attainment of
certain levels of, or a percentage increase in after-tax or
pre-tax profits (including net operating profit after taxes); or
net income, including without limitation that attributable to
continuing
and/or other
operations; (iv) the attainment of certain levels of, or a
specified increase in, operational cash flow or earnings before
income tax or other exclusions (including free cash flow, cash
flow per share or earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation
and amortization); (v) the attainment of a certain level of
reduction of, or other specified objectives with regard to
limiting the level of increase in, all or a portion of the
Companys bank debt or other long-term or short-term public
or private debt or other similar financial obligations of the
Company, which may be calculated net of cash balances
and/or other
offsets and adjustments as may be established by the Committee;
(vi) the attainment of certain levels of, or a specified
percentage increase in, earnings per share, earnings per diluted
share or earnings per share from continuing operations;
(vii) the attainment of certain levels of, or a specified
increase in, return on capital employed
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(including, without limitation, return on invested capital or
return on committed capital) or return on assets;
(viii) the attainment of certain levels of, or a percentage
increase in, return on stockholder equity; (ix) the
attainment of certain levels of, or a percentage increase in,
market share; (x) the attainment of certain levels of, or a
percentage increase in, the fair market value of the shares of
Common Stock; (xi) the growth in the value of an investment
in Common Stock assuming the reinvestment of dividends;
(xii) the attainment of a certain level of, reduction of,
or other specified objectives with regard to limiting the level
of or increase in, all or a portion of controllable expenses or
costs or other expenses or costs (including selling, general and
administrative expenses or costs (excluding advertising) as a
percentage of sales and cost of rental equipment sales);
(xiii) the attainment of certain levels of, or a specified
increase in, economic value added targets based on a cash flow
return on investment formula; or (xiv) the attainment of
certain levels of, or a specified increase in, customer service
measures or indices (including net promoter score). The
aforementioned business criteria may be combined with cost of
capital, assets, invested capital and stockholder equity to form
an appropriate measure of performance.
In addition, the performance goals may be based upon the
attainment of specified levels of United Rentals (or subsidiary,
division, other operational unit or administrative department of
United Rentals) performance under one or more of the measures
described above relative to the performance of other
corporations or the historic performance of United Rentals. To
the extent permitted under Section 162(m) (including,
without limitation, compliance with any requirements for
stockholder approval), the Committee may: (i) designate
additional business criteria on which the performance goals may
be based or (ii) adjust, modify or amend the aforementioned
business criteria. The performance goals may incorporate, if and
only to the extent permitted under Section 162(m),
provisions for disregarding (or adjusting for) changes in
accounting methods, corporate transactions (including, without
limitation, dispositions and acquisitions) and other similar
type events or circumstances. To the extent any such provision
would create impermissible discretion under Section 162(m)
or otherwise violate Section 162(m), such provision shall
be of no force or effect.
(c) Certification of Performance
Goals. Following the completion of each performance
period, the Committee shall have the sole discretion to
determine whether the applicable performance goals have been met
with respect to a given Grantee and, if they have, shall so
certify and ascertain the amount of the applicable
Performance-Based Award. No Performance-Based Awards will be
paid for such performance period until such certification is
made by the Committee. The amount of the Performance-Based Award
actually paid to a given Grantee may be less (but not more than)
than the amount determined by the applicable performance goal
formula, at the discretion of the Committee. The amount of the
Performance-Based Award determined by the Committee for a
performance period shall be paid to the Grantee at such time as
determined by the Committee in its sole discretion after the end
of such performance period.
ARTICLE III
MISCELLANEOUS
3.1 Amendment of the
Plan
3.1.1 Unless otherwise provided in the Plan or in an Award
Agreement, the Board or the Committee may from time to time
suspend, discontinue, revise or amend the Plan in any respect
whatsoever but, subject to Section 1.6.4 or as
otherwise specifically provided herein, no such amendment shall
adversely impair the rights of the Grantee of any Award without
the Grantees consent.
3.1.2 Unless otherwise determined by the Board or the
Committee, stockholder approval of any suspension,
discontinuance, revision or amendment will be obtained only to
the extent necessary to comply with any applicable laws,
regulations or rules, including the rules of a securities
exchange or
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self-regulatory agency; provided, however, without
stockholder approval, there shall be (a) no increase in the
maximum aggregate number of shares of Common Stock that may be
issued under the Plan, (b) no material modification of the
requirements for participation in the Plan or (c) no
increase in the benefits accrued to Grantees under the Plan;
provided, further, that if and to the extent the Board or
the Committee determines that it is appropriate for Awards
granted under the Plan to constitute performance-based
compensation within the meaning of Section 162(m)(4)(C) of
the Code, no amendment that would require stockholder approval
in order for amounts paid pursuant to the Plan to constitute
performance-based compensation within the meaning of
Section 162(m)(4)(C) of the Code will be effective without
the approval of the stockholders of United Rentals as required
by Section 162(m) and, if and to the extent the Board or
the Committee determines it is appropriate for the Plan to
comply with the provisions of Section 422 of the Code, no
amendment that would require stockholder approval under
Section 422 of the Code will be effective without the
approval of the stockholders of United Rentals.
3.2 Tax
Withholding
Grantees shall be solely responsible for any applicable taxes
(including, without limitation, income and excise taxes) and
penalties, and any interest that accrues thereon, that they
incur in connection with the receipt, vesting or exercise of any
Award (including upon making an election under
Section 83(b) of the Code). As a condition to the delivery
of any shares of Common Stock, cash or other securities or
property pursuant to any Award or the lifting or lapse of
restrictions on any Award, or in connection with any other event
that gives rise to a federal or other governmental tax
withholding obligation on the part of the Company relating to an
Award (including, without limitation, FICA tax), (a) the
Company may deduct or withhold (or cause to be deducted or
withheld) from any payment or distribution to a Grantee whether
or not pursuant to the Plan (including shares of Common Stock
otherwise deliverable), (b) the Committee will be entitled
to require that the Grantee remit cash to the Company (through
payroll deduction or otherwise) or (c) the Company may
enter into any other suitable arrangements to withhold, in each
case in an amount not to exceed in the opinion of the Company
the minimum statutory amounts of such taxes required by law to
be withheld.
3.3 Required
Consents and Legends
3.3.1 If the Committee at any time determines that any
Consent (as hereinafter defined) is necessary or desirable as a
condition of, or in connection with, the granting of any Award,
the delivery of shares of Common Stock or the delivery of any
cash, securities or other property under the Plan, or the taking
of any other action thereunder (each such action a
Plan Action), then, subject to
Section 3.13 such Plan Action will not be taken, in
whole or in part, unless and until such Consent will have been
effected or obtained to the full satisfaction of the Committee.
The Committee may direct that any Certificate evidencing shares
delivered pursuant to the Plan will bear a legend setting forth
such restrictions on transferability as the Committee may
determine to be necessary or desirable, and may advise the
transfer agent to place a stop transfer order against any
legended shares.
3.3.2 The term Consent as
used in this Article III with respect to any Plan Action
includes (a) any and all listings, registrations or
qualifications in respect thereof upon any securities exchange
or under any federal, state, or local law, or law, rule or
regulation of a jurisdiction outside the United States,
(b) any and all written agreements and representations by
the Grantee with respect to the disposition of shares, or with
respect to any other matter, which the Committee may deem
necessary or desirable in order to comply with the terms of any
such listing, registration or qualification or to obtain an
exemption from the requirement that any such listing,
qualification or registration be made, (c) any and all
other consents, clearances and approvals in respect of a Plan
Action by any governmental or other regulatory body or any stock
exchange or self-regulatory agency, (d) any and all
consents by the Grantee to (i) the Companys supplying
to any third party recordkeeper of the Plan such personal
information as the Committee deems advisable to administer the
Plan, (ii) the Companys deducting amounts from the
Grantees wages, or another arrangement satisfactory to the
Committee, to reimburse the Company for advances made on the
Grantees behalf to satisfy certain
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withholding and other tax obligations in connection with an
Award and (iii) the Companys imposing sales and
transfer procedures and restrictions and hedging restrictions on
shares of Common Stock delivered under the Plan and (e) any
and all consents or authorizations required to comply with, or
required to be obtained under, applicable local law or otherwise
required by the Committee. Nothing herein will require the
Company to list, register or qualify the shares of Common Stock
on any securities exchange.
3.4 Right of
Offset
The Company will have the right to offset against its obligation
to deliver shares of Common Stock (or other property or cash)
under the Plan or any Award Agreement any outstanding amounts
(including, without limitation, travel and entertainment or
advance account balances, loans, repayment obligations under any
Awards, or amounts repayable to the Company pursuant to tax
equalization, housing, automobile or other employee programs)
that the Grantee then owes to the Company and any amounts the
Committee otherwise deems appropriate pursuant to any tax
equalization policy or agreement. Notwithstanding the foregoing,
if an Award provides for the deferral of compensation within the
meaning of Section 409A, the Committee will have no right
to offset against its obligation to deliver shares of Common
Stock (or other property or cash) under the Plan or any Award
Agreement if such offset could subject the Grantee to the
additional tax imposed under Section 409A in respect of an
outstanding Award.
3.5 Nonassignability;
No Hedging
Unless otherwise provided in an Award Agreement, no Award (or
any rights and obligations thereunder) granted to any person
under the Plan may be sold, exchanged, transferred, assigned,
pledged, hypothecated or otherwise disposed of or hedged, in any
manner (including through the use of any cash-settled
instrument), whether voluntarily or involuntarily and whether by
operation of law or otherwise, other than by will or by the laws
of descent and distribution, and all such Awards (and any rights
thereunder) will be exercisable during the life of the Grantee
only by the Grantee or the Grantees legal representative.
Notwithstanding the foregoing, the Committee may permit, under
such terms and conditions that it deems appropriate in its sole
discretion, a Grantee to transfer any Award to any person or
entity that the Committee so determines; provided,
however, that under no circumstances shall any such transfer
be made for value or consideration. Any sale, exchange,
transfer, assignment, pledge, hypothecation, or other
disposition in violation of the provisions of this
Section 3.5 will be null and void and any Award
which is hedged in any manner will immediately be forfeited. All
of the terms and conditions of the Plan and the Award Agreements
will be binding upon any permitted successors and assigns.
3.6 Change in
Control
3.6.1 Unless otherwise provided in the applicable Award
Agreement, (a) if the Committee determines that, in
connection with a Change in Control, (x) the Common Stock
of United Rentals (or of any direct or indirect parent entity)
will not be publicly traded or (y) Awards will not be
honored or assumed, or new rights that substantially preserve
the terms of Awards substituted therefor, (i) any
outstanding Awards then held by a Grantee which are
unexercisable or otherwise unvested or subject to lapse
restrictions will automatically be deemed exercisable or
otherwise vested or no longer subject to lapse restrictions, as
the case may be, as of the date of such Change in Control and
(ii) any outstanding performance-based Awards shall be
deemed earned at the target level (or if no target level is
specified, the maximum level) with respect to all open
performance periods and (b) if the Committee determines
that, in connection with a Change in Control, (x) the
Common Stock of United Rentals or of any direct or indirect
parent entity will be publicly traded and (y) Awards will
be honored or assumed, or new rights that substantially preserve
the terms of Awards substituted therefor, if a Grantees
Employment is terminated without Cause within 12 months
after such Change in Control, (i) any outstanding Awards
then held by a Grantee which are unexercisable or otherwise
unvested or subject to lapse restrictions will automatically be
deemed exercisable or otherwise vested or no longer subject to
lapse restrictions, as the case may be, as of the date such
Grantees Employment is
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terminated and (ii) any outstanding performance-based
Awards shall be deemed earned at the target level (or if no
target level is specified, the maximum level) with respect to
all open performance periods, as of the date such Grantees
Employment is terminated.
3.6.2 In the event of a Change in Control, a Grantees
Award shall be treated, to the extent determined by the
Committee to be permitted under Section 409A, in accordance
with one of the following methods as determined by the Committee
in its sole discretion: (i) cancel such awards for fair
value (as determined in the sole discretion of the Committee)
which, in the case of stock options and stock appreciation
rights, may equal the excess, if any, of the value of the
consideration to be paid in the Change in Control transaction to
holders of the same number of shares of Common Stock subject to
such stock options or stock appreciation rights over the
aggregate exercise price of such stock options or stock
appreciation rights, as the case may be; (ii) provide for
the issuance of substitute awards that will substantially
preserve the otherwise applicable terms of any affected Awards
previously granted under the Plan, as determined by the
Committee in its sole discretion; or (iii) provide that for
a period of at least 20 days prior to the Change in
Control, any stock options or stock appreciation rights that
would not otherwise become exercisable prior to the Change in
Control will be exercisable as to all shares of Common Stock
subject thereto (but any such exercise will be contingent upon
and subject to the occurrence of the Change in Control and if
the Change in Control does not take place within a specified
period after giving such notice for any reason whatsoever, the
exercise will be null and void) and that any stock options or
stock appreciation rights not exercised prior to the
consummation of the Change in Control will terminate and be of
no further force and effect as of the consummation of the Change
in Control. For the avoidance of doubt, in the event of a Change
in Control, the Committee may, in its sole discretion, terminate
any stock option or stock appreciation right for which the
exercise price is equal to or exceeds the per share value of the
consideration to be paid in the Change in Control transaction
without payment of consideration therefor.
3.7 Right of
Discharge Reserved
Neither the grant of an Award nor any provision in the Plan or
in any Award Agreement will confer upon any Grantee the right to
continued Employment by the Company or affect any right which
the Company may have to terminate or alter the terms and
conditions of such Employment.
3.8 Nature of
Payments
3.8.1 Any and all grants of Awards and deliveries of Common
Stock, cash, securities or other property under the Plan will be
in consideration of services performed or to be performed for
the Company by the Grantee. Awards under the Plan may, in the
discretion of the Committee, be made in substitution in whole or
in part for cash or other compensation otherwise payable to a
Grantee. Only whole shares of Common Stock will be delivered
under the Plan. Awards will, to the extent reasonably
practicable, be aggregated in order to eliminate any fractional
shares. Fractional shares may, in the discretion of the
Committee, be forfeited or be settled in cash or otherwise as
the Committee may determine.
3.8.2 All such grants and deliveries of shares of Common
Stock, cash, securities or other property under the Plan will
constitute a special discretionary incentive payment to the
Grantee and will not be required to be taken into account in
computing the amount of salary or compensation of the Grantee
for the purpose of determining any contributions to or any
benefits under any pension, retirement, profit-sharing, bonus,
life insurance, severance or other benefit plan of the Company
or under any agreement with the Grantee, unless the Company
specifically provides otherwise.
3.9 Non-Uniform
Determinations
3.9.1 The Committees determinations under the Plan
and Award Agreements need not be uniform and any such
determinations may be made by it selectively among persons who
receive, or are eligible to receive, Awards under the Plan
(whether or not such persons are similarly situated). Without
limiting the generality of the foregoing, the Committee will be
entitled, among other things, to
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make non-uniform and selective determinations under Award
Agreements, and to enter into non-uniform and selective Award
Agreements, as to (a) the persons to receive Awards,
(b) the terms and provisions of Awards and (c) whether
a Grantees Employment has been terminated for purposes of
the Plan.
3.9.2 To the extent the Committee deems it necessary,
appropriate or desirable to comply with foreign law or practices
and to further the purposes of the Plan, the Committee may,
without amending the Plan, establish special rules applicable to
Awards to Grantees who are foreign nationals, are employed
outside the United States or both and grant Awards (or amend
existing Awards) in accordance with those rules.
3.10 Other Payments
or Awards
Nothing contained in the Plan will be deemed in any way to limit
or restrict the Company from making any award or payment to any
person under any other plan, arrangement or understanding,
whether now existing or hereafter in effect.
3.11 Plan
Headings
The headings in the Plan are for the purpose of convenience only
and are not intended to define or limit the construction of the
provisions hereof.
3.12 Termination of
Plan
The Board and the Committee reserve the right to terminate the
Plan at any time; provided, however, that in any case,
the Plan will terminate on March 11, 2020, and provided
further, that all Awards made under the Plan before its
termination, and the Committees authority to administer
the terms of such Awards, will remain in effect until such
Awards have been satisfied or terminated in accordance with the
terms and provisions of the Plan and the applicable Award
Agreements; provided, further, that no Awards (other than
a stock option or stock appreciation right) that are intended to
be performance-based under Section 162(m)
(including any Performance-Based Awards) shall be granted on or
after the first stockholder meeting that occurs in the fifth
year following the year in which stockholders of United Rentals
previously approved the performance criteria in
Section 2.8.2(b) unless the performance criteria are
reapproved (or other designated performance criteria are
approved) by the stockholders of United Rentals on or before
such stockholder meeting.
3.13 Section 409A
3.13.1 All Awards made under the Plan that are intended to
be deferred compensation subject to
Section 409A shall be interpreted, administered and
construed to comply with Section 409A, and all Awards made
under the Plan that are intended to be exempt from
Section 409A shall be interpreted, administered and
construed to comply with and preserve such exemption. The Board
and the Committee shall have full authority to give effect to
the intent of the foregoing sentence. To the extent necessary to
give effect to this intent, in the case of any conflict or
potential inconsistency between the Plan and a provision of any
Award or Award Agreement with respect to an Award, the Plan
shall govern. Notwithstanding the foregoing, neither the Company
nor the Committee shall have any liability to any person in the
event Section 409A applies to any Award in a manner that
results in adverse tax consequences for the Grantee or any of
his beneficiaries or transferees.
3.13.2 Without limiting the generality of
Section 3.13.1, with respect to any Award made under
the Plan that is intended to be deferred
compensation subject to Section 409A: (a) any
payment to be made with respect to such Award in connection with
the Grantees separation from service to the Company within
the meaning of Section 409A (and any other payment that
would be subject to the limitations in
Section 409A(a)(2)(b) of the Code) shall be delayed until
six months after the Grantees separation from service (or
earlier death) in accordance with the requirements of
Section 409A; (b) if any payment to be made with
respect to such Award would occur at a time when the tax
deduction with respect to such payment would be limited or
eliminated by Section 162(m), such payment may be deferred
by the Company under the circumstances described in
Section 409A until the earliest date
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that the Company reasonably anticipates that the deduction or
payment will not be limited or eliminated; (c) to the
extent necessary to comply with Section 409A, any other
securities, other Awards or other property that the Company may
deliver in lieu of shares of Common Stock in respect of an Award
shall not have the effect of deferring delivery or payment
beyond the date on which such delivery or payment would occur
with respect to the shares of Common Stock that would otherwise
have been deliverable (unless the Committee elects a later date
for this purpose in accordance with the requirements of
Section 409A); (d) with respect to any required
Consent described in Section 3.3 or the applicable
Award Agreement, if such Consent has not been effected or
obtained as of the latest date provided by such Award Agreement
for payment in respect of such Award and further delay of
payment is not permitted in accordance with the requirements of
Section 409A, such Award or portion thereof, as applicable,
will be forfeited and terminate notwithstanding any prior
earning or vesting; (e) if the Award includes a
series of installment payments (within the meaning
of
Section 1.409A-2(b)(2)(iii)
of the Treasury Regulations), the Grantees right to the
series of installment payments shall be treated as a right to a
series of separate payments and not as a right to a single
payment; (f) if the Award includes dividend
equivalents (within the meaning of
Section 1.409A-3(e)
of the Treasury Regulations), the Grantees right to the
dividend equivalents shall be treated separately from the right
to other amounts under the Award; and (g) for purposes of
determining whether the Grantee has experienced a separation
from service to the Company within the meaning of
Section 409A, subsidiary shall mean a
corporation or other entity in a chain of corporations or other
entities in which each corporation or other entity, starting
with United Rentals, has a controlling interest in another
corporation or other entity in the chain, ending with such
corporation or other entity. For purposes of the preceding
sentence, the term controlling interest has the same
meaning as provided in
Section 1.414(c)-2(b)(2)(i)
of the Treasury Regulations, provided that the language at
least 20 percent is used instead of at least
80 percent each place it appears in
Section 1.414(c)-2(b)(2)(i)
of the Treasury Regulations.
3.14 Governing
Law
THE PLAN WILL BE GOVERNED BY AND CONSTRUED IN ACCORDANCE WITH
THE LAWS OF THE STATE OF CONNECTICUT, WITHOUT REGARD TO
PRINCIPLES OF CONFLICT OF LAWS.
3.15 Choice of
Forum
3.15.1 Jurisdiction. The Company and
each Grantee, as a condition to such Grantees
participation in the Plan, hereby irrevocably submit to the
exclusive jurisdiction of any state or federal court of
appropriate jurisdiction located in the County of Fairfield,
State of Connecticut over any suit, action or proceeding arising
out of or relating to or concerning the Plan that is not
otherwise arbitrated or resolved according to
Section 3.16. The Company and each Grantee, as a
condition to such Grantees participation in the Plan,
acknowledge that the forum designated by this
Section 3.15.1 has a reasonable relationship to the
Plan and to the relationship between such Grantee and the
Company. Notwithstanding the foregoing, nothing herein will
preclude the Company from bringing any action or proceeding in
any other court for the purpose of enforcing the provisions of
Section 3.15.1.
3.15.2 Acceptance of Jurisdiction. The
agreement by the Company and each Grantee as to forum is
independent of the law that may be applied in the action, and
the Company and each Grantee, as a condition to such
Grantees participation in the Plan, (i) agree to such
forum even if the forum may under applicable law choose to apply
non-forum law, (ii) hereby waive, to the fullest extent
permitted by applicable law, any objection which the Company or
such Grantee now or hereafter may have to personal jurisdiction
or to the laying of venue of any such suit, action or proceeding
in any court referred to in Section 3.15.1,
(iii) undertake not to commence any suit, action or
proceeding arising out of or relating to or concerning the Plan
in any forum other than the forum described in this
Section 3.15 and (iv) agree that, to the
fullest extent permitted by applicable law, a final and
non-appealable judgment in any such suit, action or proceeding
in any such court will be conclusive and binding upon the
Company and each Grantee.
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3.15.3 Service of Process. Each Grantee,
as a condition to such Grantees participation in the Plan,
hereby irrevocably appoints the General Counsel of United
Rentals as such Grantees agent for service of process in
connection with any action, suit or proceeding arising out of or
relating to or concerning the Plan that is not otherwise
arbitrated or resolved according to Section 3.16,
who will promptly advise such Grantee of any such service of
process.
3.15.4 Confidentiality. Each Grantee, as
a condition to such Grantees participation in the Plan,
agrees to keep confidential the existence of, and any
information concerning, a dispute, controversy or claim
described in Section 3.15, except that a Grantee may
disclose information concerning such dispute, controversy or
claim to the arbitrator or court that is considering such
dispute, controversy or claim or to such Grantees legal
counsel (provided that such counsel agrees not to disclose any
such information other than as necessary to the prosecution or
defense of the dispute, controversy or claim).
3.16 Dispute
Resolution.
Subject to the provisions of Section 3.15, any
dispute, controversy or claim between the Company and a Grantee,
arising out of or relating to or concerning the Plan or any
Award shall be finally settled by binding arbitration in New
York, New York before, and in accordance with the rules then
obtaining of, the American Arbitration Association (the
AAA) in accordance with the commercial
arbitration rules of the AAA. Prior to arbitration, all claims
maintained by a Grantee must first be submitted to the Committee
in accordance with claims procedures determined by the Committee.
3.17 Severability;
Entire Agreement
If any of the provisions of the Plan or any Award Agreement is
finally held to be invalid, illegal or unenforceable (whether in
whole or in part), such provision will be deemed modified to the
extent, but only to the extent, of such invalidity, illegality
or unenforceability and the remaining provisions will not be
affected thereby; provided that if any of such provisions
is finally held to be invalid, illegal, or unenforceable because
it exceeds the maximum scope determined to be acceptable to
permit such provision to be enforceable, such provision will be
deemed to be modified to the minimum extent necessary to modify
such scope in order to make such provision enforceable
hereunder. The Plan and any Award Agreements contain the entire
agreement of the parties with respect to the subject matter
thereof and supersede all prior agreements, promises, covenants,
arrangements, communications, representations and warranties
between them, whether written or oral with respect to the
subject matter thereof.
3.18 Waiver of
Claims
Each Grantee of an Award recognizes and agrees that before being
selected by the Committee to receive an Award he or she has no
right to any benefits under the Plan. Accordingly, in
consideration of the Grantees receipt of any Award
hereunder, he or she expressly waives any right to contest the
amount of any Award, the terms of any Award Agreement, any
determination, action or omission hereunder or under any Award
Agreement by the Committee, the Company or the Board, or any
amendment to the Plan or any Award Agreement (other than an
amendment to the Plan or an Award Agreement to which his or her
consent is expressly required by the express terms of an Award
Agreement).
3.19 No Liability
With Respect to Tax Qualification or Adverse Tax Treatment
Notwithstanding anything to the contrary contained herein, in no
event shall the Company be liable to a grantee on account of an
Awards failure to (a) qualify for favorable United
States or foreign tax treatment or (ii) avoid adverse tax
treatment under United States or foreign law, including, without
limitation, Section 409A.
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3.20 No Third Party
Beneficiaries
Except as expressly provided in an Award Agreement, neither the
Plan nor any Award Agreement will confer on any person other
than the Company and the Grantee of any Award any rights or
remedies thereunder. The exculpation and indemnification
provisions of Section 1.3.4 will inure to the
benefit of a Covered Persons estate and beneficiaries and
legatees.
3.21 Successors and
Assigns of United Rentals
The terms of the Plan will be binding upon and inure to the
benefit of United Rentals and any successor entity contemplated
by Section 3.6.
3.22 Date of
Adoption, Approval of Stockholders and Effective Date
The Plan was adopted on March 11, 2010 by the Compensation
Committee of the Board, subject to the approval by the
stockholders of United Rentals at the 2010 Annual Meeting of
Stockholders on May 11, 2010. The Plan will only be
effective if it is approved by the stockholders of United
Rentals at the 2010 Annual Meeting of Stockholders. If the Plan
is not so approved by the stockholders of United Rentals, then
the Plan will be null and void in its entirety and the
Predecessor Plans will remain in full force and effect.
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UNITED RENTALS, INC.
THIS PROXY IS SOLICITED ON BEHALF OF THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS
As an alternative to completing this form, you may enter your vote instruction by telephone at
1-800-PROXIES or via the Internet at WWW.VOTEPROXY.COM and follow the simple instructions. Use the
Company Number and Account Number shown on your proxy card.
The undersigned hereby appoints Michael J. Kneeland, William B. Plummer, Jonathan M. Gottsegen
or any of them, with full power of substitution, proxies to represent and to vote at the annual
meeting of stockholders of United Rentals, Inc. (the Company) to be held on May 11, 2010 at
10:00 a.m., Eastern time, at the Hyatt Regency Greenwich, 1800 East Putnam Avenue, Old Greenwich,
Connecticut 06870 and at any adjournment or postponement thereof, hereby revoking any proxies
heretofore given, all shares of common stock of the Company held or owned by the undersigned as
directed on the reverse side, and in their discretion upon such other matters as may come before
the meeting.
(Continued and to be signed and dated on the reverse side)
ANNUAL MEETING OF STOCKHOLDERS OF
UNITED RENTALS, INC.
Five Greenwich Office Park
Greenwich, Connecticut 06831
May 11, 2010
PROXY VOTING INSTRUCTIONS
INTERNET - Access www.voteproxy.com and follow the on-screen
instructions. Have your proxy card available when you access the web
page, and use the Company Number and Account Number shown on your
proxy card.
TELEPHONE - Call toll-free 1-800-PROXIES (1-800-776-9437) in the
United States or 1-718-921-8500 from foreign countries from any
touch-tone telephone and follow the instructions. Have your proxy
card available when you call and use the Company Number and Account
Number shown on your proxy card.
Vote online/phone until 11:59 PM EST the day before the meeting.
MAIL
- Sign, date and mail your proxy card in the envelope provided as
soon as possible.
IN PERSON - You may vote your shares in person by attending the
Annual Meeting.
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Important Notice Regarding the Availability of Proxy Materials for the Annual Meeting of
Stockholders to be Held on Tuesday, May 11, 2010: The Notice of and Proxy Statement for the 2010
Annual Meeting of Stockholders and the Companys 2009 Annual Report to Stockholders are available
electronically at http://www.ur.com/index.php/investor/.
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Please detach along perforated line and mail in the envelope provided IF you are not
voting via telephone or the Internet.
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00003333333333301000 1 |
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THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS RECOMMENDS A VOTE FOR ALL NOMINEES AND FOR PROPOSALS 2 AND 3.
PLEASE SIGN, DATE AND RETURN PROMPTLY IN THE ENCLOSED ENVELOPE. PLEASE MARK YOUR VOTE IN BLUE OR BLACK INK AS SHOWN HERE ý
THE SHARES REPRESENTED BY THIS PROXY WILL BE VOTED AS DIRECTED BY
THE UNDERSIGNED. IF NO DIRECTION IS GIVEN WITH RESPECT TO A NOMINEE
OR PROPOSAL, THIS PROXY WILL BE VOTED FOR SUCH NOMINEE AND FOR
SUCH PROPOSAL.
The undersigned acknowledges receipt of the accompanying Notice of
and Proxy Statement for the 2010 Annual Meeting of Stockholders and
the Companys 2009 Annual Report to Stockholders.
ELECTRONIC ACCESS TO FUTURE DOCUMENTS
If you would like to receive future shareholder communications over
the Internet exclusively, and no longer receive any material by
mail, please visit http://www.amstock.com. Click on Shareholder
Account Access to enroll. Please enter your account number and tax
identification number to log in, then select Receive Company
Mailings via E-Mail and provide your e-mail address.
To change the address on your account, please check the box at
right and indicate your new address in the address space
above. Please note that changes to the registered name(s) on
the account may not be submitted via this method.
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Election of Directors |
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Jenne K. Britell |
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José B. Alvarez
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Howard L. Clark, Jr.
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Bobby J. Griffin
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Michael J. Kneeland
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Singleton B. McAllister
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Brian D. McAuley
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John S. McKinney
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Jason D. Papastavrou
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Filippo Passerini
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Keith Wimbush
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Approval of 2010 Long Term Incentive Plan
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Ratification of Appointment of Independent Auditors
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MARK X HERE IF YOU PLAN TO ATTEND THE MEETING. |
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Note: Please sign exactly as your name or names appear on this Proxy. When shares are held jointly,
each holder should sign. When signing as executor, administrator, attorney, trustee or guardian,
please give full title as such. If the signer is a corporation, please sign full corporate name by
duly authorized officer, giving full title as such. If signer is a partnership, please sign in
partnership name by authorized person. |
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