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Fee computed on table in exhibit required by Item 25(b) per Exchange Act Rules 14a-6(i)(1) and 0-11
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2024 PROXY STATEMENT
|
1
|
You are cordially invited to attend the Annual Meeting of Shareholders (“Annual Meeting”) of Aflac Incorporated. This year’s Annual Meeting will be held virtually.
You will be able to attend the Annual Meeting, vote, and submit your questions during the webcast. The Annual Meeting will be held for the following purposes, all of which are described in the accompanying Proxy Statement:
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Logistics | |||||||||||||||||||
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DATE AND TIME
May 6, 2024 10:00 a.m. Eastern Time |
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VIRTUAL (ONLINE ONLY)
www.virtualshareholdermeeting.com/ AFL2024 using your 16-digit control number included on your proxy card or notice |
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To elect as Directors of the Company the ten nominees named in the accompanying Proxy Statement to serve until the next Annual Meeting and until their successors are duly elected and qualified
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Each of the ten director nominees
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RECORD DATE
February 27, 2024
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To consider a non-binding advisory proposal on the Company’s executive compensation (“say-on-pay”) |
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How to Vote
It is important that you vote your shares. We offer several easy and cost-effective voting methods for your convenience. |
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To ratify the appointment of KPMG LLP as the Company’s independent registered public accounting firm for the year ending December 31, 2024
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See
page
7
7
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In addition, any other business properly presented may be acted upon at the meeting and at any adjournments or postponements of the meeting.
The accompanying proxy is solicited by the Company’s Board of Directors on behalf of the Company. The Proxy Statement and the Company’s Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2023, are enclosed.
(1)
The record date for determining which shareholders are entitled to vote at the Annual Meeting is February 27, 2024. Only shareholders of record at the close of business on that date, or their duly appointed proxies, will be entitled to vote at the Annual Meeting and any adjournment thereof. For more information on how to attend the
virtual
Annual Meeting,
please see Appendix B of the Proxy Statement.
Your vote is important! Even if you expect to attend the virtual Annual Meeting, please vote in advance. If you attend the Annual Meeting online, you may revoke your proxy by submitting a vote during the Annual Meeting.
We are making the Proxy Statement and the form of proxy first available on or about March 21, 2024.
By order of the Board of Directors,
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INTERNET
Visit www.proxyvote.com. You will need the 16-digit control number that appears on your proxy card or notice. |
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TELEPHONE
If your shares are held in the name of a broker, bank, or other nominee, follow the telephone voting instructions, if any, provided on your proxy card. If your shares are registered in your name, call 1-800-690-6903 and follow the telephone voting instructions. You will need the 16-digit control number that appears on your proxy card. |
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MAIL
If you received a full package by mail, complete and sign the proxy card and return it in the enclosed postage pre-paid envelope. |
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J. Matthew Loudermilk
Corporate Secretary March 21, 2024 Columbus, Georgia |
(1)
Important Notice Regarding the Availability of Proxy Materials for the Annual Meeting to be held on May 6, 2024: This Proxy Statement and the Annual Report are available at proxyvote.com.
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TABLET OR SMARTPHONE
Scan the QR code that appears on your proxy card or notice using your mobile device. |
2
|
AFLAC INCORPORATED |
As I reflect on 2023, I am very proud that our management, employees and sales distribution teams have continued to be resilient stewards of our business. Our goal is to provide customers with the best value in supplemental insurance products in the United States and Japan.
As we embark on 2024, we will celebrate our 50th year of doing business in Japan and 50th year as a publicly traded company on the NYSE. We also are reminded that one thing has not changed since our founding in 1955: families and individuals still seek to protect themselves from financial hardship that not even the best health insurance covers. Today’s complex health care environment has produced incredible medical advancements – with incredible costs – and it’s more important than ever to have a partner. With our inventive approach to offering relevant products, we believe we are that partner.
Growth
For 2023, Aflac Incorporated reported $4.7 billion in net earnings, or $7.78 earnings per diluted share. As a result, net earnings per diluted share rose 12.3%. Adjusted earnings per diluted share* were $6.23, the best year in history despite a weakening yen and the impact of a reinsurance retrocession late in the fourth quarter. When adjusting for the $0.19 per diluted share impact of the yen, adjusted earnings per diluted share excluding the impact of foreign currency* were $6.43, which was a 13.4% increase year over year.
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I am pleased with our sales growth in both Japan and the U.S. In early 2023, Aflac Japan completed the rollout of our new cancer product, and we rolled out our new medical product in mid-September that appeals to younger policyholders and provides an opportunity to older policyholders to update their coverage. In the U.S., we enhanced our cancer policy, delivering even greater value to our policyholders. At the same time, we continue to concentrate on scaling up our network dental and vision and our group life and disability businesses in the U.S. in an additional effort to grow our core supplemental health business.
We have also improved persistency in the United States while maintaining strong persistency in Japan well above 90%. We will continue to pursue profitable growth in both the U.S. and Japan with an eye toward improving and maintaining strong persistency.
Strategic Capital Deployment
We place significant importance on continuing to achieve strong capital ratios in the U.S. and Japan on behalf of our policyholders and shareholders. In addition, we have taken proactive steps in recent years to defend cash flow and deployable capital against a weakening yen. We pursue value creation through a balance of actions including growth investments, stable dividend growth and disciplined, tactical stock repurchase.
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2023 marked the 41st consecutive year of dividend increases. We treasure our track record of dividend growth and remain committed to extending it, supported by the strength of our capital and cash flows. Last quarter, the Board put us on a path to continue this record when it increased the first quarter 2024 dividend 19% to $0.50. Additionally, we have remained tactical in our approach to repurchasing shares throughout 2023, which led to the historically high $700 million per quarter. As a result, we deployed $2.8 billion in capital to repurchase nearly 39 million of our shares in 2023. Combined with dividends, this means we delivered over $3.8 billion back to shareholders in 2023, while also investing in the growth of our business. At the same time, we have maintained our position among companies with the highest return on capital and lowest cost of capital in the industry.
I like to think that it is efforts like the above that lead to recognition such as appearing on Fortune’s List of World’s Most Admired Companies for the 23rd time, ranking No. 1 in the Insurance: Life and Health industry as a long-term investment for the second consecutive year. Overall, I think we can say that 2023 was another strong year.
We believe in the underlying strengths of our business and our potential for continued growth in Japan and the U.S. – two of the largest life insurance markets in the world. We are well-positioned as we work toward achieving long-term growth while also ensuring we deliver on our promise to policyholders.
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* Adjusted earnings per diluted share and adjusted earnings per diluted share excluding foreign currency impact are not calculated in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles in the United States (GAAP). See Appendix A to this Proxy Statement for the definition of these non-GAAP measures and reconciliation to the most comparable GAAP financial measure.
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LETTER FROM THE CHAIRMAN, CHIEF EXECUTIVE OFFICER AND PRESIDENT
|
2024 PROXY STATEMENT
|
3
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“
We are well-positioned as we work toward achieving long-term growth while also ensuring we deliver on our promise to policyholders.
”
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Doing the Right Thing: The Aflac Way
Doing the right thing is engrained in The Aflac Way, which has been the cornerstone of how we do business in the U.S. and Japan. Operating this way, we are privileged to help provide financial protection to our policyholders during their time of need. We believe in cultivating and welcoming diversity in our operations, workforce, management team, and Board. We have found that this approach makes good business sense by enabling us to serve our customers better. Plus, we believe people want to do business with a company doing the right thing. As the pioneer of supplemental cancer insurance in both the U.S. and Japan, it has perhaps been most visible in our dedication to children facing cancer and other serious diseases. 2023 marked the 28th year of our partnership with the Aflac Cancer and Blood Disorders Center of Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta, which has become nationally renowned as one of the leading childhood cancer, hematology, and blood and marrow transplant programs in the United States. Contributions from our all-
commission sales force, our employees, our executives
and Board have exceeded the $173 million mark. 2023 also represented the 23rd year of our partnership with the Aflac Parents House in Japan. Over the years, more than 150,000 pediatric patients and their family members have
|
called one of the three Aflac Parents House locations a home-away-from home while receiving treatment for cancer or other serious diseases. We also just completed the fifth full year in the U.S. and the fourth full year in Japan of offering My Special Aflac Duck, our smart comforting companion that helps children feel less alone by using state-of-the-art interactive technology during their cancer treatment.
As you will note, Dr. Barbara Rimer will be retiring and not standing for re-
election at the 2024 annual meeting. I would like to take this opportunity to express my gratitude to Dr. Rimer for her many years of insightful contributions and dedicated service to the Company since 1995. Her service was invaluable, especially during the pandemic, and we are so grateful.
With these topics as a backdrop, we are privileged to be stewards of the trust and resources you, our owners, place in Aflac Incorporated every day, and we thank you for your support.
It
is my pleasure to invite you to virtually attend the 2024 Annual Meeting of Shareholders on Monday, May 6, 2024, where you can learn more about Aflac Incorporated’s recent business performance and strategy for the future. I encourage you to review the proxy materials and Annual Report on Form 10-K as well as Aflac Incorporated’s most recent Business
|
and Sustainability Report. Then, please vote your shares, even if you plan to attend the virtual Annual Meeting. We want to be sure your shares and your viewpoints are represented.
Sincerely,
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Daniel P. Amos
CHAIRMAN, CHIEF
EXECUTIVE OFFICER AND PRESIDENT
|
4
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AFLAC INCORPORATED |
It is an honor to serve you as Lead Non-Management Director, alongside such an eminent team of Directors. These fellow Board members bring their skills, expertise and experience from such a broad range of fields, industries and companies. In 2023, we maintained our focus on overseeing the risk and strategy of the Company. In this letter, I want to highlight some of the key topics of oversight in 2023.
Risk Oversight
Our Board provided oversight of the pertinent risks both for the industry and to the Company, while carefully monitoring traditional risks associated with investments and our products and maintaining strong capital ratios. The Board has overseen significant advancements in information security and enhanced information security policy. The goal is to ensure that the Company’s information assets, data, and the data of our customers, are protected.
Board Succession, Refreshment and Onboarding
Our Board retains its balance of tenured members as well as a refreshment with newer members. Independent Board members average about six years of service that provide a balance of expertise for you, the shareholders. Our Board is diverse not only with women and/or people of color comprising approximately 60% of its membership, but also in terms of experience and expertise in a wide range of disciplines, including public health, cybersecurity, investment and finance, insurance operations, the Japanese market, regulatory and risk
|
management, and marketing and public relations. By combining a diversified membership with such broad expertise and multi-disciplinary skills, we have established an adaptable, insightful and cohesive board that is equipped to pivot quickly to navigate ever-evolving markets.
I also want to thank Dr. Barbara Rimer for her many years of service on the Board. In anticipation of this event, the Board was fortunate to have maintained public health expertise on the Board with the addition of Dr. Miwako Hosoda in 2023. Dr. Hosoda brings nearly 30 years of experience in the field of public health in Japan, our largest market.
Corporate Finance and Investments
In 2023, our investment portfolio continued to benefit from our disciplined strategic asset allocation process. This approach serves as the core to managing long-term asset performance expectations to meet our objectives for capital, risk and liquidity. We also placed equity investments in specialized asset classes as well as Sustainability investments. The Aflac Global Investments team has built a high-quality portfolio that we believe will serve our stakeholders well no matter the economic environment.
Strategic Corporate Development
As we pursue new ways to meet the needs of consumers, businesses and shareholders, we will continue to invest in our network dental and vision and group life, disability, and absence management platforms.
|
These new business lines modestly impact the top line in 2023. We will continue to leverage these new platforms to enable our core products for future long-term growth.
Commitment To Sustainability
Aflac Incorporated has been carbon neutral in Scope 1 and Scope 2 emissions since 2020 and focused on being and achieving net zero emissions by 2050. We will continue to evaluate and evolve our approach to achieving our objectives.
We have posted our Sustainability Policies and Statements at investors.aflac.com under “Sustainability” for several years, and we updated them in 2023 with Occupational Health and Safety in the Workplace and Responsible Investment Stewardship and Engagement policies. Such transparency and efforts to improve our sustainability have received external recognition, too. In 2023, Aflac Incorporated was included on the Dow Jones Sustainability North America Index for the 10th time and on Bloomberg’s Gender-Equality Index for the fourth consecutive year. Most recently, Ethisphere recognized Aflac Incorporated as one of the World’s Most Ethical Companies for the 18th consecutive year, remaining the only insurance company in the world to receive this honor every year since this award was first introduced in 2007.
|
LETTER FROM THE LEAD NON-MANAGEMENT DIRECTOR |
2024 PROXY STATEMENT
|
5
|
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“As we shape the Aflac of the future, we do so knowing the Company’s success and financial performance are rooted in our commitment to our purpose.”
|
In addition, we have also worked to be a reflection of the communities that we serve by being an inclusive workplace and cherishing the value that diversity can bring. To reinforce our commitment to sustainability, officers have had a short-term incentive compensation modifier based on core sustainability targets since 2021. While the modifier led to no adjustment to officers’ short-term incentive compensation in 2023, we are still proud of our achievements related to responsible investing, diverse leadership and use of sustainable electricity.
Shareholder Engagement
We are proud to have been the first publicly traded company in the United States to voluntarily allow shareholders a say-on-pay vote. This is a prime example of how we are responsive as a Board and as a Company to our shareholders. We communicate with our shareholders on a regular basis to understand the issues and concerns that are important. We incorporate this feedback into our
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decision-making process. We believe that open communications can have a positive influence on our performance, and we look forward to continuing open discussion with our shareholders going forward.
As Lead Non-Management Director, I will continue to engage with our investors, seek insight into their perspectives, and explore the viewpoints and positions of those who invest in our business.
The Board looks forward to continuing its ongoing dialogue with investors and applying that feedback to help inform business matters as they emerge. We thank you for your support and the privilege of representing you in Aflac Incorporated.
|
With these vital topics in mind, I encourage you to review the accompanying Proxy Statement and associated materials and vote before our virtual Annual Meeting on May 6, 2024. It is my pleasure, and my privilege, to serve on Aflac Incorporated’s Board, and I look forward, as a fellow shareholder, to witness how the Company works every day to uphold its promises.
Sincerely,
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W. Paul Bowers
LEAD NON-MANAGEMENT
DIRECTOR
|
6
|
AFLAC INCORPORATED |
2024 PROXY STATEMENT
|
7
|
2023 BUSINESS HIGHLIGHTS
In 2023, the Company delivered strong operating results.
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NET EARNINGS |
EARNINGS PER DILUTED
SHARE (EPS)
|
RETURN ON EQUITY (ROE) | |||||||||||||||||||||
$4.7B
5.5%
p
|
$7.78
12.3%
p
|
22.1%
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ADJUSTED EARNINGS EX-FX*
|
ADJUSTED EPS EX-FX* |
ADJUSTED RETURN ON
EQUITY (AROE) EX-FX*
|
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$3.8B
6.4%
p
|
$6.43
13.4%
p
|
14.2%
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NEW ANNUALIZED PREMIUM
SALES
(1)
- AFLAC JAPAN
(IN YEN)
|
NEW ANNUALIZED PREMIUM
SALES
(1)
- AFLAC U.S.
|
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10.9%
p
|
5.0%
p
|
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CASH DIVIDEND
|
REPURCHASED SHARES |
3-YEAR TOTAL
SHAREHOLDER
RETURN (“TSR”)
|
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5.0%
p
|
$2.8B
|
+99.6%
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*
Adjusted earnings and adjusted earnings per diluted share, excluding foreign currency impact, and AROE, excluding foreign currency impact, are not calculated in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles in the United States (GAAP). See Appendix A to this Proxy Statement for definitions of these non-GAAP measures and reconciliations to the most comparable GAAP financial measures.
(1)
As discussed in Item 7. Management’s Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations in the Company’s 2023 Annual Report on Form 10-K.
Prior-year amounts have been adjusted for the adoption of accounting guidance on January 1, 2023 related to accounting for long-duration insurance contracts. For more complete information regarding the Company’s 2023 performance, please review the Company’s Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2023.
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8
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AFLAC INCORPORATED |
2023 BUSINESS HIGHLIGHTS
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Workforce Diversity
•
As of December 31, 2023, women accounted for 54% of Aflac Japan employees and 33% of Aflac Japan leadership roles. Women also held 27% of Aflac Japan management roles, as part of Aflac Life Insurance Japan Ltd’s longer-term plan to increase this percentage to 30% by 2025.
•
As of December 31, 2023, 49% of Aflac U.S. and the Company employees located in the U.S. were people of color and 66% were women. Women also occupied 51% of leadership roles located in the U.S. and 37% of senior management roles located in the U.S. In
2023
, 57% of new hires located in the U.S. were people of color and 68% were women.
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Community Investment and Philanthropy
•
My Special Aflac Duck®
is a “smart” robotic companion designed to help children
with cancer and sickle cell
disease
. We ai
m to put a
My Special Aflac Duck
in the hands of every child, age 3 and above, diagnosed with cancer and sickle cell disease in the U.S., Japan and Northern Ireland and has given
My Special Aflac Ducks
to more than 27,000 children through 2023.
•
We and our employees and ag
ents are responsible for:
•
More than 150,000
pediatric patients
and their
family members
who have called
Aflac Parents House
a home-
away-from-home while receiving treatment for serious illnesses, like cancer.
•
$173
million
in support of
Aflac Cancer and Blood Disorders Center of Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta
, helping make it one of the top pediatric cancer programs in the United States by
U.S. News and World Report
.
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Environment
•
Reduced combined Scope 1 and 2 market-based greenhouse gas emissions by more than 90% from 2007 to 2022
•
Expect 2023 to be the 4th consecutive year for being carbon neutral for Scope 1 and 2 emissions
•
Goal of net zero emissions by 2050
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Principles for Responsible Investment (PRI) Signatory
In 2021, Aflac Incorporated became a PRI Signatory, which works to understand the investment implications of ESG factors and to support its international network of investor signatories in incorporating these factors into investment and ownership decisions.
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Dow Jones Sustainability North America Index (10th year),
In 2023, the Company was included in the North American index and received high marks for Corporate Governance, Information Security/Cybersecurity & System Availability, and Tax Strategy.
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Fortune’s World’s Most Admired Companies (23rd year),
ranking No. 1 in the Insurance: Life and Health category as a long-term investment for the second consecutive year.
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Points of Light’s Civic 50 List (6th consecutive year),
which showcases how leading companies are moving social impact, civic engagement and community to the core of their business.
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Ethisphere’s World’s Most Ethical Companies (18th consecutive year),
making it the only insurance company in the world to hold this distinction every year since the inception of the honor in 2007.
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Bloomberg’s Gender-Equality Index (4th consecutive year),
which tracks the financial performance of public companies committed to supporting gender equality through policy development, representation, and transparency.
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2024 PROXY STATEMENT
|
9
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The Board of Directors
recommends a vote
FOR each of the ten
nominees named in this
proxy statement.
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Election of Directors
Each Director stands for election annually. The following provides summary information about the nominees, all of whom are named in this Proxy Statement. Our Board believes it is appropriate to maintain a diverse balance of longer tenured members, who bring stability and valuable Company-specific knowledge with a historical perspective, and newer members, who bring fresh viewpoints and new ideas.
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page
13
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The Board of Directors
recommends a vote
FOR our executive
compensation program.
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Executive Compensation
(“Say-on-Pay”)
We are committed to achieving a high level of total return for our shareholders and believe our executive compensation program is designed to strongly link executive pay to Company performance. From the end of August 1990, when Daniel P. Amos was appointed the Chief Executive Officer (CEO), through December 31, 2023, the Company’s total return to shareholders, including reinvested cash dividends, has exceeded
15,446%
, compared with 3,075% for the Dow Jones Industrial Average, 2,812% for the S&P 500 Index, and 1,471% for the S&P 500 Life & Health Insurance Index over the same period.
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See
page
38
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The Board of Directors
and the Audit and Risk
Committee recommend a
vote FOR the ratification of
the selection of KPMG LLP.
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Ratification of Auditors
In February 2024, the Audit and Risk Committee voted to appoint KPMG LLP, an independent registered public accounting firm, to perform the annual audit of the Company’s consolidated financial statements for fiscal year 2024, subject to ratification by its shareholders.
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page
77
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10
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AFLAC INCORPORATED | VOTING ROADMAP |
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Lead Non-Management Director
|
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DANIEL P. AMOS, 72
Chairman, Chief Executive Officer and President,
Aflac Incorporated
Director Since
1983
Committees:
E
, FI
|
W. PAUL BOWERS, 67
Retired Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, Georgia Power Co.
Director Since
2013
Committees:
AR*,
CD
, CSR, E
|
ARTHUR R. COLLINS, 64
Founder and Chairman of theGROUP
Director Since
2022
Committees:
CG, CSR
|
MIWAKO HOSODA, 54
Professor, Seisa University
Director Since
2023
|
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THOMAS J. KENNY, 60
Former Partner and Co-Head of Global Fixed Income, Goldman Sachs Asset Management
Director Since
2015
Committees:
CD, CSR,
FI
|
GEORGETTE D. KISER, 56
Operating Executive, The Carlyle Group
Director Since
2019
Committees:
AR*, C
|
KAROLE F. LLOYD, 65
Certified Public Accountant and retired Ernst & Young LLP audit partner
Director Since
2017
Committees:
AR*
, CD, E, FI
|
NOBUCHIKA MORI, 67
Representative Director, Japan Financial and Economic Research Co. Ltd.
Director Since
2020
Committees:
CG, FI
|
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JOSEPH L.
MOSKOWITZ, 70 Retired Executive Vice President, Primerica, Inc.
Director Since
2015
Committees:
AR*,
C
, CD, E
|
KATHERINE T.
ROHRER, 70 Vice Provost Emeritus, Princeton University
Director Since
2017
Committees:
C,
CG
, E
|
Committee Key | |||||||||||||||||||||||
AR | Audit & Risk | C | Compensation | CD |
Corporate Development
|
CG | Corporate Governance | ||||||||||||||||
CSR |
Corporate Social
Responsibility & Sustainability |
E | Executive | FI | Finance & Investment | l | Chair | ||||||||||||||||
![]() |
Independent |
*
|
Financial Expert
|
||||||||||||||||||||
VOTING ROADMAP |
2024 PROXY STATEMENT
|
11
|
![]() |
2
|
0-3 Years
|
6 of 9
Independent
Director Nominees
are people of color
and/or women
|
||||||||
4
|
4-7 Years
|
||||||||||
3
|
8+ Years
|
![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
12
|
AFLAC INCORPORATED | VOTING ROADMAP |
Independent
Oversight |
•
The Board’s independent Compensation Committee oversees the program.
•
The Compensation Committee retains an independent compensation consultant that reports only to that Committee.
•
The independent compensation consultant briefs the full Board annually on CEO pay and performance alignment.
|
||||
Shareholder Alignment
|
•
All employees are prohibited from hedging Company stock.
•
Officers and Directors may not pledge the Company’s stock or, unless approved by the Compensation Committee, enter into 10b5-1 plans.
•
We do not provide change-in-control excise tax gross-ups.
•
All employment agreements contain double trigger change-in-control requirements.
|
||||
Long-Standing Commitment
|
•
We have had a clawback policy
since 2007
.
•
We were the
first public company in the U.S.
to voluntarily provide shareholders with a say-on-pay vote –
three years before
such votes became mandatory.
•
Executive officers and Directors have been subject to stock ownership guidelines for
almost two decades.
|
CEO TARGET COMPENSATION MIX | OTHER NEOs AVERAGE TARGET COMPENSATION MIX | |||||||||||||
![]() |
10%
Base Salary
|
![]() |
19%
Base Salary
|
|||||||||||
24%
Management Incentive Plan
|
33%
Management Incentive Plan
|
|||||||||||||
66%
Long-Term Incentive
|
48%
Long-Term Incentive
|
|||||||||||||
We are pleased that our named executive compensation program received the voting support of over 97% of our shareholders last year. We believe this continued support reflects favorably on changes we have made to our executive compensation program over the past few years to more tightly link compensation metrics to our business strategy while incorporating feedback received from our shareholders. We work hard to ensure we implement best practices in executive compensation while staying focused on performance-based program elements that align with shareholder interests. We will continue to review our compensation program each year to determine if additional changes are warranted.
|
2023 SAY-ON-PAY
SUPPORT
97.3%
![]() |
FIVE-YEAR AVERAGE
SAY-ON-PAY SUPPORT
96.6%
![]() |
||||||||||||
![]() |
Learn more in the
Compensation Discussion & Analysis
|
2024 PROXY STATEMENT
|
13
|
![]() |
![]() |
|||||||||||||||||||
Election of Directors
Each Director stands for election annually. The Directors up for election at the Annual Meeting are named in this Proxy Statement. The following provides summary information about the nominees. Our Board believes it is appropriate to maintain a diverse balance of longer tenured members, who bring stability and valuable Company-specific knowledge with a historical perspective, and newer members, who bring fresh viewpoints and new ideas.
|
||||||||||||||||||||
The Board of Directors recommends a vote FOR each of the ten nominees named in this Proxy Statement.
|
||||||||||||||||||||
14
|
AFLAC INCORPORATED | CORPORATE GOVERNANCE MATTERS |
Daniel P. Amos
CHAIRMAN, CHIEF
EXECUTIVE OFFICER AND PRESIDENT OF AFLAC INCORPORATED
|
![]() |
W. Paul Bowers
RETIRED CHAIRMAN AND CHIEF EXECUTIVE OFFICER OF GEORGIA POWER CO.
LEAD NON-MANAGEMENT DIRECTOR
|
![]() |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
AGE
72
|
DIRECTOR
SINCE
1983
|
COMMITTEES
E
FI
|
AGE
67
|
DIRECTOR
SINCE
2013
|
COMMITTEES
AR*
CD
CSR E
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
•
Chief Executive Officer of Aflac Incorporated and Aflac since 1990
•
Chairman of Aflac Incorporated and Aflac since 2001
•
President of Aflac from July 2017 to May 2018
•
President of Aflac Incorporated since January 2024 and from February 2018 through December 2019
•
Spent 50 years in various positions at Aflac
Notable Experience Aligned with Our Strategy and Key Board Contributions
Mr. Amos’ more than 40 years of experience at Aflac Incorporated provides invaluable expertise and insights to both the leadership team and the Board on how to effectively execute strategic priorities in unpredictable macroeconomic and competitive landscapes. His experience and approach deliver insightful expertise and guidance to the Board on topics relating to corporate governance, people management, and risk management.
Mr. Amos has appeared five times on
Institutional Investor
magazine’s lists of America’s Best CEOs for the insurance category, has been recognized as one of the 100 Best-Performing CEOs in the World by the
Harvard Business Review
five times, and has received a Lifetime Achievement Award for his dedication to corporate responsibility by
CR
Magazine
.
Public Company Boards
•
Synovus Financial Corp.
(2001-2011)
•
Southern Company
(2000-2006)
|
•
Retired as chairman and chief executive officer of Georgia Power, the largest subsidiary of Southern Company, a gas and electricity utility holding company, on July 1, 2021, a position that he held since 2011
•
President of Georgia Power from 2011 until November 2020
•
Chief financial officer of Southern Company from 2008 to 2010
•
Served in various senior executive positions across Southern Company in Southern Company Generation, Southern Power, and the company’s former U.K. subsidiary, where he was president and chief executive officer of South Western Electricity LLC/Western Power Distribution
Notable Experience Aligned with Our Strategy and Key Board Contributions
Mr. Bowers brings to the Board a valuable and unique perspective from his considerable financial knowledge, national and international business experience operating in a highly regulated industry, and expertise in corporate development and managing the evolving risks associated with cybersecurit
y
.
Public Company Boards
•
Brand Industrial Holding, Inc.
(since 2019
)
•
Audit Committee Chair
(since 2019)
•
Exelon Corporation
(since 2021)
•
Audit Committee and Corporate Governance Committee
(since 2022)
Other Board or Leadership Positions, Professional Memberships or Awards
•
Chair, Atlanta Committee for Progress
(2016)
•
Nuclear Electric Insurance Ltd.
(since 2009)
; Chairman
(2017-2019)
•
Board of Regents of the University System of Georgia
(2014-2018)
•
Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta’s Energy Policy Council
(2008-2018)
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
LEGEND:
* Financial Expert •
AR
Audit and Risk •
C
Compensation •
CD
Corporate Development •
CG
Corporate Governance
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
CSR
Corporate Social Responsibility and Sustainability •
E
Executive •
FI
Finance and Investment •
|
![]() |
Independent • |
![]() |
Chair • |
![]() |
Member |
CORPORATE GOVERNANCE MATTERS |
2024 PROXY STATEMENT
|
15
|
Arthur R. Collins
FOUNDER AND CHAIRMAN
OF theGROUP
|
![]() |
Miwako Hosoda
PROFESSOR, SEISA UNIVERSITY
|
![]() |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
AGE
64
|
DIRECTOR
SINCE
2022
|
COMMITTEES
CG CSR
|
AGE
54
|
DIRECTOR
SINCE
2023
|
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
•
Founder and Chairman of theGROUP, a government relations and strategic communications consulting firm, since 2011
•
Chairman and CEO of Public Private Partnership, Inc., which he established, from 1989 to 2011
•
Experienced and trusted strategic advisor to corporate leaders and domestic and foreign governments with concentrations in real estate, healthcare, and global public policy
•
Additional areas of expertise include financial services, trade, energy, information technology, consumer products, agriculture, transportation, manufacturing, and national security
Notable Experience Aligned with Our Strategy and Key Board Contributions
Mr. Collins has more than 30 years of experience as a trusted advisor and strategist providing counsel to corporate leaders, heads of state and their governments, and non-profit executives and their boards. He brings his expertise in governmental affairs and regulatory matters and provides our Board with the relevant skills and perspective to effectively navigate the challenges of the regulatory and geopolitical environments and continue to execute our strategic priorities.
Public Company Boards
•
KB Home
(since 2020)
•
Nominating and Corporate Governance Committee
•
Management Development and Compensation Committee
•
RLJ Lodging Trust
(since 2016)
•
Compensation, Nominating and Corporate Governance Committees
Other Board or Leadership Positions, Professional Memberships or Awards
•
Member, Council on Foreign Relations
(since 2023)
•
Member, Ford’s Theatre Board of Trustees
(since 2023)
•
Member, Smithsonian’s National Museum of Asian Art Board of Trustees
(since 2022)
•
Vice Chair, Brookings Institution Board of Trustees
(2014-2023)
•
Member, Economic Club of Washington, D.C.
(since 2012)
•
Chairman, Morehouse School of Medicine Board of Trustees
(since 2009)
•
Member, Meridian International Center Board of Trustees
(2009-2017
)
•
Chairman, Florida A&M University Board of Trustees
(2001-2003
)
|
•
Professor, Seisa University, Faculty of Life Network Science from 2012 to present
•
Vice President from 2013 to 2021
•
Research fellow, Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health
•
Abe Fellow in the Department of Society, Human Development and Health from 2010 to 2012
•
Takemi Fellow in the Department of Global Health and Population, The Takemi Program in International Health from 2008 to 2010
•
Associate, Columbia University, Mailman School of Public Health, Department of Sociomedical Sciences from 2005 to 2008
•
Research Fellow, Japan Society for the Promotion of Science from 2002 to 2005
Notable Experience Aligned with Our Strategy and Key Board Contributions
Dr. Hosoda brings over 30 years of extensive experience and expertise in the field of sociology of health. Her research on the social aspects of healthcare, collaborative efforts among welfare, education, and medical sectors for complex health problem-solving, and patient community engagement. These areas include a wide range of topics such as international comparisons of health governance, peer support among individuals with illnesses or disabilities, and practical implementation of community care. In addition to her primary interests, Dr. Hosoda is also an expert in public health, bioethics, social welfare, and environmental science. Her interdisciplinary expertise provides our Board with a profound technical understanding of our customer’s needs and priorities in the Japanese public health landscape.
Other Board or Leadership Positions, Professional Memberships or Awards
•
Board of Directors, The University of Tokyo, New York Office, Inc. (Since 2023)
•
Board of Directors, Brain Injury Caring Communities Society (
2017 to 2020
), President
(since 2023)
•
Representative Director, Inclusive Action For All
(since 2020
)
•
Vice president, Asia Pacific Sociological Association (
since 202
1); President
(2017 to 2020)
•
Board of Trustees, The Japanese Foundation for Cancer Research
(2015 to 2021)
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
LEGEND:
* Financial Expert •
AR
Audit and Risk •
C
Compensation •
CD
Corporate Development •
CG
Corporate Governance
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
CSR
Corporate Social Responsibility and Sustainability •
E
Executive •
FI
Finance and Investment •
|
![]() |
Independent • |
![]() |
Chair • |
![]() |
Member |
16
|
AFLAC INCORPORATED | CORPORATE GOVERNANCE MATTERS |
Thomas J. Kenny
FORMER PARTNER AND CO-HEAD OF GLOBAL FIXED INCOME, GOLDMAN SACHS ASSET MANAGEMENT
|
![]() |
Georgette D. Kiser
OPERATING EXECUTIVE, THE CARLYLE GROUP
|
![]() |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
AGE
60
|
DIRECTOR
SINCE
2015
|
COMMITTEES
CD CSR
FI
|
AGE
56
|
DIRECTOR
SINCE
2019
|
COMMITTEES
AR* C
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
•
Co Chair of Nuveen Funds (a TIAA Company) since January 2024
•
Held a variety of leadership positions at Goldman Sachs for twelve years, most recently serving as partner and advisory director
•
Served as co-head of the Global Cash and Fixed Income Portfolio team at Goldman Sachs Asset Management, where he was responsible for overseeing the management of more than $600 billion in assets across multiple strategies with teams in London, Tokyo, and New York
•
Spent thirteen years at Franklin Templeton
•
CFA charter holder
Notable Experience Aligned with Our Strategy and Key Board Contributions
Mr. Kenny has extensive experience in asset and investment management and, specifically, portfolio solutions for insurance companies. His significant accounting and finance knowledge, as well as experience from serving in leadership roles on several company boards, provides the Board with valuable insight and expertise that supports our capital allocation decision-making and the evaluation of potential strategic transactions that drive long-term shareholder value.
Other Board or Leadership Positions, Professional Memberships or Awards
•
Nuveen Funds (a TIAA Company), Co-Chair
(since January 2024
):
•
Executive Committee, Chair
(since January 2024)
•
Investment Committee
(since January 2024)
•
Compliance Committee
(since January 2024)
•
Nomination and Governance Committee
(since January 2024)
•
Open End Fund Committee
(since January 2024)
•
ParentSquare
(since 2021
)
•
CREF Board of Trustees, Chairman
(2017 through 2023)
•
TIAA-CREF Fund Complex:
•
Executive Committee, Chair
(2017 through 2023)
•
Investment Committee
(2011 through 2023)
•
Audit and Compliance Committee
(2018 through 2023)
•
Nominating and Governance Committee
(2017 through 2023)
•
Ad Hoc CREF Special Projects Committee
(2020 through 2023)
|
•
Operating Executive at The Carlyle Group, a global alternative asset management firm, since May 2019, where she advises Carlyle professionals through the investment process, from sourcing deals, conducting diligence, managing companies and exiting transactions
•
Helps set IT strategy for Carlyle Portfolio companies and drives IT/digital diligence and advisory efforts.
•
Former managing director and chief information officer, where she was responsible for leading the firm’s global technology and solutions organization from February 2015 until May 2019
•
Developed and drove information technology strategies across the global enterprise, which includes the firm’s application development, data, digital, infrastructure, cybersecurity, and program management and outsourcing activities
•
Serves as an independent advisor who helps lead due diligence and technical strategies across various middle market private equity and venture capital firms
•
Led teams that provided creative solutions for investment front office, trading, and back-office operations at T. Rowe Price
•
Worked for General Electric within their aerospace unit
Notable Experience Aligned with Our Strategy and Key Board Contributions
Throughout Ms. Kiser’s three-plus decade career, she has established extensive experience and success developing and leading talented teams to deliver decision support systems and technical solutions, including cybersecurity, for financial services firms. She has consistently been recognized for bringing credibility to solutions and technical organizations in addition to building strong business partnerships, leveraging human and technical resources, implementing investment and customer management systems, and producing advanced data management solutions.
Public Company Boards
•
Jacobs Engineering
(since 2019)
•
Adtalem Global Education
(since 2018)
•
NCR Voyix Corporation (formerly NCR Corporation)
(since 2020)
Other Board or Leadership Positions, Professional Memberships or Awards
•
Brown Advisory Board mutual fund
(since 2022)
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
LEGEND:
* Financial Expert •
AR
Audit and Risk •
C
Compensation •
CD
Corporate Development •
CG
Corporate Governance
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
CSR
Corporate Social Responsibility and Sustainability •
E
Executive •
FI
Finance and Investment •
|
![]() |
Independent • |
![]() |
Chair • |
![]() |
Member |
CORPORATE GOVERNANCE MATTERS |
2024 PROXY STATEMENT
|
17
|
Karole F. Lloyd
CERTIFIED PUBLIC ACCOUNTANT
AND RETIRED ERNST & YOUNG LLP AUDIT PARTNER
|
![]() |
Nobuchika Mori
REPRESENTATIVE DIRECTOR, JAPAN FINANCIAL AND ECONOMIC RESEARCH CO. LTD.
|
![]() |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
AGE
65
|
DIRECTOR
SINCE
2017
|
COMMITTEES
AR*
CD
E FI
|
AGE
67
|
DIRECTOR
SINCE
2020
|
COMMITTEES
CG FI
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
•
Certified public accountant and retired as vice chair and regional managing partner for Ernst & Young, LLP (“EY”), a global accounting firm, in December 2016
•
Brings more than 37 years of work experience and leadership, most recently as part of the US Executive Board, Americas Operating Executive and the Global Practice Group for EY, and has extensive experience in the audits of large financial services, insurance, and health care companies
•
Served many of EY’s highest profile clients through mergers, IPOs, acquisitions, divestitures, and across numerous industries including banking, insurance, consumer products, transportation, real estate, manufacturing, and retail
•
Served as an audit partner for publicly held companies in both the United States and Canada
•
Other experience includes leadership and consulting with respect to financial reporting, board governance and legal matters, regulatory compliance, internal audit, and risk management
Notable Experience Aligned with Our Strategy and Key Board Contributions
Ms. Lloyd’s extensive accounting and advisory experience across the financial services industry, combined with her leadership skills and strategic thinking, supports our Board’s oversight of risk and helps inform our capital allocation decision-making and the evaluation of potential strategic transactions that drive long-term shareholder value.
Public Company Boards
•
Churchill Downs Incorporated
(since 2018)
•
Audit Committee
Other Board or Leadership Positions, Professional Memberships or Awards
•
CERT Certificate in Cybersecurity Oversight
•
The University of Alabama President’s Advisory Council
(since 2003)
•
The University of Alabama Board of Visitors for the Commerce and Business School
(since 2001)
•
Atlanta Symphony Orchestra Board of Directors
(since 2010)
•
Metro Atlanta Chamber of Commerce, Board of Trustees and Executive Committee
(2009-2016)
|
•
Representative director of the Japan Financial and Economic Research Co. Ltd., a research and consulting firm
•
Responsible for providing research and consulting services to companies in Japan and abroad since July 2018
•
Eminent guest professor at the Center for Advanced Research in Finance, Graduate School of Economics, University of Tokyo (since July 2022)
•
Senior research scholar and adjunct professor at Columbia University’s School of International and Public Affairs (2018 to 2021)
•
Commissioner of the Financial Services Agency of Japan (the “JFSA”), Japan’s integrated financial regulator, from July 2015 until his retirement in July 2018
•
Led supervision of financial institutions including banks, securities firms and insurance companies
•
Directed legislative and regulatory planning to ensure financial stability and enhance economic growth in Japan
•
More than 30 years in senior positions at JFSA and Japan’s Ministry of Finance (the “MOF”) before becoming the head of JFSA, including:
•
JFSA Vice Commissioner for Policy Coordination
•
JFSA Director General for Inspection
•
JFSA Director General for Supervision
•
Served in a range of diplomatic posts reflecting his expertise in international financial markets and regulatory standards, including:
•
Chief Representative in New York for the MOF
•
Minister of the Embassy of Japan in the United States of America
•
Deputy Treasurer at the Inter-American Development Bank
Notable Experience Aligned with Our Strategy and Key Board Contributions
Over a three-plus decade career immersed in Japan’s finance industry as a financial regulator, policymaker, and standard setter in Japan and internationally, Mr. Mori gained extensive specialized economic, policy, and financial regulatory expertise, knowledge and experience. He brings to the Board indispensable, significant insight with respect to the Company’s Japanese business operations from his considerable financial and economic knowledge, international business experience, and regulatory acumen spanning highly regulated industries in Japan and internationally.
Other Board or Leadership Positions, Professional Memberships or Awards
•
Center on Japanese Economy and Business (CJEB) Professional Fellow
(since 2018)
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
LEGEND:
* Financial Expert •
AR
Audit and Risk •
C
Compensation •
CD
Corporate Development •
CG
Corporate Governance
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
CSR
Corporate Social Responsibility and Sustainability •
E
Executive •
FI
Finance and Investment •
|
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Independent • |
![]() |
Chair • |
![]() |
Member |
18
|
AFLAC INCORPORATED | CORPORATE GOVERNANCE MATTERS |
Joseph L. Moskowitz
RETIRED EXECUTIVE VICE PRESIDENT, PRIMERICA, INC.
|
![]() |
Katherine T. Rohrer
VICE PROVOST EMERITUS, PRINCETON UNIVERSITY
|
![]() |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
AGE
70
|
DIRECTOR
SINCE
2015
|
COMMITTEES
AR*
C
CD E
|
AGE
70
|
DIRECTOR
SINCE
2017
|
COMMITTEES
C
CG
E
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
•
Executive vice president of Primerica, Inc., an insurance and investments company, from 2009 until 2014, leading the Product Economics and Financial Analysis Group
•
Joined Primerica in 1988 and served in various capacities, including managing the group responsible for financial budgeting, capital management support, earnings analysis, and analyst and stockholder communications support
•
Chief actuary from 1999 to 2004
•
Vice president of Sun Life Insurance Company from 1985 to 1988
•
Senior manager at KPMG from 1979 to 1985
Notable Experience Aligned with Our Strategy and Key Board Contributions
With forty years of actuarial experience and leadership roles in the insurance industry, Mr. Moskowitz provides our Board with vital insight into the analysis and evaluation of actuarial and financial models, which form the basis of various aspects of corporate planning, financial reporting, and risk assessment.
Other Board or Leadership Positions, Professional Memberships or Awards
•
Fellow, Society of Actuaries
(since 1979)
•
Member, American Academy of Actuaries
(since 1979)
|
•
Vice provost emeritus at Princeton University
•
Vice provost for Academic Programs from 2001 until 2015
•
Held several senior leadership positions including associate dean of the faculty and assistant dean of the college, starting in 1988
•
Served as interim associate dean of the graduate school in 2016 to 2017
•
Assistant professor at Columbia University from 1982 to 1988
•
Trustee of Emory University, where she serves on the executive committee as well as the academic affairs committee, which she chaired from 2013 to 2020
Notable Experience Aligned with Our Strategy and Key Board Contributions
With more than 30 years as a university leader, Dr. Rohrer provides our Board with a wealth of experience highlighted by a commitment to academic rigor and financial management. Her operational expertise includes: executing on institutional budgetary decisions; leading academic governance and priority-setting; spearheading the recruitment of deans and other senior academic administrators; developing university-level messaging and communications; and managing endowments. Dr. Rohrer’s management career has included a focus on social responsibility, inclusion, and diversity.
Other Board or Leadership Positions, Professional Memberships or Awards
•
Emory University Board of Trustees
(2008-2022)
•
Academic
Affairs Committee
(Chair 2013-2020)
•
Executive Committee
(2012-2022)
•
Finance
Committee
(2014-2020)
•
Previously served on the boards of Morristown-Beard School, Morristown, NJ; Trinity Church, Princeton, NJ; Crisis Ministry of Trenton and Princeton (now “Arm in Arm”); and Dryden Ensembl
e
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
LEGEND:
* Financial Expert •
AR
Audit and Risk •
C
Compensation •
CD
Corporate Development •
CG
Corporate Governance
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
CSR
Corporate Social Responsibility and Sustainability •
E
Executive •
FI
Finance and Investment •
|
![]() |
Independent • |
![]() |
Chair • |
![]() |
Member |
CORPORATE GOVERNANCE MATTERS |
2024 PROXY STATEMENT
|
19
|
a diverse balance of longer
tenured members and
newer members
|
![]() |
Board Changes since 2019
4 of 4
new nominees have been
women and/or people
of color
|
Skills of Directors Joining the Board since 2019
|
||||||||||
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INVESTMENT AND FINANCIAL | ||||||||||
![]() |
REGULATORY AND RISK MANAGEMENT | ||||||||||
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PUBLIC HEALTH | ||||||||||
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OPERATIONS | ||||||||||
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JAPANESE MARKET | ||||||||||
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INDUSTRY | ||||||||||
![]() |
DIGITAL/CYBERSECURITY |
20
|
AFLAC INCORPORATED | CORPORATE GOVERNANCE MATTERS |
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|||||||||||||||||||||||
Skills and Experience
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
MARKETING AND PUBLIC RELATIONS:
Understanding of the Company’s strong brand and its role in developing and marketing our insurance products offering financial protection.
|
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|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
CURRENT OR FORMER CEO:
Chief executive officer (CEO) experience brings an understanding of how to oversee and lead complex organizations.
|
![]() |
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|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
OPERATIONS EXPERIENCE:
Provides valuable senior executive experience and organizational management perspective relevant to management and operations.
|
![]() |
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||||||||||||||||||||||||
JAPANESE MARKET EXPERIENCE:
Involvement working for an international company or working or living in Japan provides insight into our business and strategy in the market.
|
![]() |
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|||||||||||||||||||||||||||
INVESTMENT AND FINANCIAL EXPERTISE:
Understanding of investment markets and financial statements that assists in evaluating and overseeing our investment strategy, asset management, capital structure, and financial reporting.
|
![]() |
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|||||||||||||||||||||||
REGULATORY AND RISK MGMT. EXPERIENCE:
Involvement and understanding of the operating environment for a highly regulated industry and impact of government action as well as identifying and controlling business and financial risks.
|
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INDUSTRY EXPERIENCE:
Experience providing in-
depth knowledge of the insurance and/or financial services industry.
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PUBLIC HEALTH EXPERIENCE:
Expertise that provides insight with respect to the public health sector, medical care, and medical ethics, which is relevant to our strategy, business, and operations.
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DIGITAL/CYBERSECURITY EXPERIENCE:
Understanding of new technology or the management of information security and cybersecurity risks, risk mitigation, regulation and policy.
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INDEPENDENT
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Race/Ethnicity
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WHITE
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BLACK OR AFRICAN AMERICAN
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ASIAN
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Gender
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MALE
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FEMALE
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CORPORATE GOVERNANCE MATTERS |
2024 PROXY STATEMENT
|
21
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1 | SUCCESSION PLANNING | ||||||||||
The Committee considers the current and long-term needs of our business and seeks potential candidates in light of evolving needs, current Board structure, tenure, skills, experience, and diversity. | |||||||||||
2 | IDENTIFICATION OF CANDIDATES | ||||||||||
The Committee may identify potential candidates from three sources:
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3 | THRESHOLD QUALIFICATIONS | ||||||||||
The Committee believes that, at a minimum, nominees for Director must have:
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4
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ADDITIONAL QUALIFICATIONS | ||||||||||
The Committee strives to build a diverse Board that is strong in its collective knowledge. Among other skill sets, the Committee looks for nominees with experience in the following areas:
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In addition, the Committee considers such factors as values and disciplines, ethical standards, diversity (including gender, ethnicity, race, color, and national origin), and background, within the context of the characteristics and needs of the Board as a whole in nominating Directors. Directors may sit on no more than four public company boards (including our own) or no more than one additional public company board if the Director is an officer of the Company. All of our Director nominees currently comply with our policy on outside board service. The Committee reviews requests from Directors to serve on the board of other public companies.
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5 | MEETING WITH CANDIDATES | ||||||||||
Once the Committee identifies one or more potential nominees, its members:
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This process enables the Committee to compare the accomplishments and qualifications of all potential nominees.
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6 | DECISION AND NOMINATION | ||||||||||
The Committee nominates the candidates best qualified to serve the interests of the Company and all shareholders for approval by the Board. | |||||||||||
7 | ELECTION | ||||||||||
Shareholders consider the nominees and elect Directors at the Annual Meeting of Shareholders to serve one-year terms. The Board may also appoint Directors during the year when determined to be in the best interests of the Company and its shareholders. |
22
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AFLAC INCORPORATED | CORPORATE GOVERNANCE MATTERS |
Consideration of Director Candidates from Shareholders
The Corporate Governance Committee will consider Director candidates recommended by shareholders. As with any potential nominee, the Corporate Governance Committee will evaluate shareholder-nominated candidates in light of the needs of the Board and the qualifications of the particular individuals. In addition, the Corporate Governance Committee may consider the number of shares held by the recommending shareholder and the length of time such shares have been held.
To recommend a candidate for the Board, a shareholder must submit the recommendation in writing, including: (i) the name of the shareholder and evidence of the person’s ownership of common stock of the Company (“Common Stock”), including the number of shares owned and the length of time of ownership; (ii) the name of the candidate, the candidate’s principal occupation or employment or qualifications to be a Director; (iii) the candidate’s consent to be named as a Director if nominated by the Board, and (iv) other requirements specified in our Bylaws.
The shareholder recommendation and information described above generally must be received by the Corporate Secretary not less than 90 nor more than 120 days prior to the anniversary date of the immediately preceding annual meeting of shareholders. However, if the annual meeting is called for a date that is not within 25 days before or after such anniversary date, notice by the shareholder, to be timely, must be received no later than the close of business on the 10th day following the day on which notice of the date of the annual meeting was mailed or public disclosure of that date was made, whichever occurs first. In the case of a special meeting of shareholders called for the purpose of electing directors, the recommendation and accompanying information must be received by the Corporate Secretary not later than the close of business on the 10th day following the day on which notice of the special meeting was mailed or public disclosure of the date of the special meeting was made, whichever first occurs.
Shareholder recommendations and accompanying information should be sent to the Corporate Secretary at Aflac Incorporated as described at the end of this Proxy Statement under the heading “Other Proposals or Director Nominations to be Brought Before our 2025 Annual Meeting.”
Our proxy access bylaw permits a shareholder (or group of up to twenty shareholders) owning shares of our outstanding Common Stock representing at least 3% of the votes entitled to be cast on the election of Directors to nominate and include in our proxy materials Director candidates constituting up to 20% of the Board. The nominating shareholder or group of shareholders must have owned their shares continuously for at least three years, and the nominating shareholder(s) and nominee(s) must satisfy other requirements specified in our Bylaws.
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Board Self-Evaluation
The effectiveness of our Board is of the utmost importance. The Board recognizes that we live in a dynamic world that requires regular self-
evaluation to ensure that we have the best skill set and experience to serve the Company and that the Board is fulfilling its responsibilities.
1
ANNUAL ASSESSMENT OVERSIGHT
The Corporate Governance Committee is charged with overseeing an annual process of self-evaluation for the Board as a whole and for its individual members.
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2
COMMITTEE SELF-EVALUATIONS
The charters of each Board committee also require annual evaluations of the performance of the committee, which are typically overseen by each committee’s chair.
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3
ONE-ON-ONE DISCUSSIONS
The annual process, which includes completion of written questionnaires for the Board and for each committee on which the Director serves, involves an interview of each Director.
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4
EXECUTIVE SESSIONS
The Chairman discusses the results of the surveys and interviews with the full Board in executive sessions. In addition, the Lead Non-Management Director leads executive sessions with the Board, without the Chairman, to discuss the self-evaluation results.
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5
FEEDBACK INCORPORATED
Based on the self-evaluation results, any follow-ups including changes in practices or procedures are considered and implemented, as appropriate.
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AGENDA TOPICS DISCUSSED
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•
Board structure and composition
•
Effectiveness of oversight and other responsibilities
•
Access to management, information, and other resources
|
•
Meetings and materials
•
Quality of director participation
•
Fulfillment of charter responsibilities
•
Refreshment and succession
|
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In addition to the formal self-evaluation process, the Non-employee Directors regularly meet in executive session, during which the Board’s performance and oversight responsibilities are frequently discussed.
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CORPORATE GOVERNANCE MATTERS |
2024 PROXY STATEMENT
|
23
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Daniel P. Amos
CHAIRMAN, CEO AND PRESIDENT
Mr. Amos has served as Chairman of the Board since 2001 and as CEO since 1990. The Board believes the most effective Board leadership structure for the Company is for the CEO to continue to serve as Chairman, working with a Lead Non-Management Director. This structure has served the Company well for many years. The CEO is ultimately responsible for the day-to-day operation of the Company and for executing the Company’s strategy, and the Company’s performance is an integral part of Board deliberations. Accordingly, the Board believes that Mr. Amos is the Director most qualified to act as Chairman. The Board believes that Mr. Amos’ in-depth, long-term knowledge of the Company’s operations and his vision for the Company’s development provides decisive and effective leadership for the Board. However, the Board retains the authority to modify this structure to best advance the interests of all shareholders if circumstances warrant such a change.
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W. Paul Bowers
LEAD NON-MANAGEMENT DIRECTOR
The Corporate Governance Committee has nominated Mr. Bowers to serve as Lead Non-Management Director, a position he has held since May 2019. Mr. Bowers’ experience at Southern Company, particularly his strong leadership and operational background, make him well-suited to serve as our Lead Non-Management Director. He has also served as Chair of the Corporate Development Committee and is a member of the Audit and Risk, Corporate Social Responsibility and Sustainability, and Executive Committees.
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Lead Non-Management Director
The responsibilities of the Lead Non-Management Director, as outlined in our Guidelines on Significant Corporate Governance Issues, include:
•
consulting with the Chairman and Corporate Secretary to establish the agenda for each Board meeting;
•
setting the agenda for, and leading, all executive sessions of the Non-employee Directors;
•
when appropriate, discussing with the Chairman matters addressed at such executive sessions;
•
presiding over meetings of the Board at which the Chairman is not present;
•
presiding over discussions of the Board when the topic presents a potential conflict of interest for the Chairman;
•
facilitating discussions among the Non-employee Directors between Board meetings;
•
serving as a liaison between the Non-employee Directors and the Chairman;
•
when appropriate, serving as a liaison between management and the Board;
•
representing the Board in shareholder outreach; and
•
facilitating the annual Board self-evaluation in coordination with the Chairman.
The Lead Non-Management Director has the authority to call meetings of the independent Directors.
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24
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AFLAC INCORPORATED | CORPORATE GOVERNANCE MATTERS |
The Audit and Risk Committee
NUMBER OF
MEETINGS IN 2023
9
All members of the committee
are Financial Experts
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Karole F. Lloyd
(Chair)
|
W. Paul
Bowers
|
Georgette D.
Kiser
|
Joseph L.
Moskowitz
|
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Responsibilities
|
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•
ensuring that management maintains the reliability and integrity of the financial reporting process and systems of internal controls of the Company and its subsidiaries regarding finance, accounting, and legal matters;
•
issuing annually the Audit and Risk Committee Report set forth below;
•
selecting, overseeing, evaluating, determining funding for, and, where appropriate, replacing or terminating the independent registered public accounting firm;
•
monitoring the independence and performance of the independent registered public accounting firm;
•
pre-approving audit and non-audit services provided by the independent registered public accounting firm;
|
•
pre-approving or ratifying all related person transactions that are required to be disclosed in this Proxy Statement;
•
overseeing the performance of the Company’s internal auditing department;
•
assisting with Board oversight of the Company’s compliance with legal and regulatory requirements as well as the Company's code of business ethics and policy on conflict of interest;
•
overseeing the Company’s policies, process, and structure related to enterprise risk engagement and management, including information security; and
•
providing an open avenue of communication among the independent registered public accounting firm, management, the internal auditing department, and the Board.
|
CORPORATE GOVERNANCE MATTERS |
2024 PROXY STATEMENT
|
25
|
The Compensation Committee
NUMBER OF
MEETINGS IN 2023
6
|
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Joseph L.
Moskowitz
(Chair)
|
Georgette D.
Kiser
|
Katherine T.
Rohrer
|
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Responsibilities
|
|||||
•
reviewing and approving compensation levels, equity-linked incentive compensation, and annual incentive awards under the Company’s Management Incentive Plan;
•
reviewing, at least annually, the goals and objectives of the Company’s executive compensation plans;
•
evaluating annually the performance of the CEO with respect to such goals and objectives and determining the appropriate compensation level;
|
•
evaluating annually the performance of the Company’s other executive officers in light of such goals and objectives and setting their compensation levels based on this evaluation and the recommendation of the CEO;
•
reviewing the Company’s incentive compensation programs to determine whether they encourage excessive risk taking, and evaluating compensation policies and practices that could mitigate any such risk; and
•
reviewing the Company’s other compensation and benefit plans to ensure they promote our goals and objectives.
|
The Corporate Development Committee
NUMBER OF
MEETINGS IN 2023
5
|
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W. Paul Bowers
(Chair)
|
Thomas J.
Kenny
|
Karole F.
Lloyd
|
Joseph L.
Moskowitz
|
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Responsibilities
|
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•
reviewing the Company’s corporate and strategic organizational development to identify, evaluate, and execute on appropriate opportunities that could enhance long-term growth and build shareholder value;
•
assisting the Board in reviewing, evaluating, and approving specific strategic plans for corporate development activities, including mergers, acquisitions, dispositions, joint venture, marketing and distribution arrangements, and strategic equity investments;
|
•
assisting the Board in reviewing proposals to enter new geographic markets;
•
reviewing corporate development proposals prepared by the Company’s officers and managers and other strategic projects as determined by the Board to ensure consistency with the Company’s long-term strategic objectives; and
•
assisting the Board in monitoring the nature of investments made as part of Aflac Ventures in both the U.S. and Japan, including the Company’s overall corporate venture capital strategy.
|
26
|
AFLAC INCORPORATED | CORPORATE GOVERNANCE MATTERS |
The Corporate Governance Committee
NUMBER OF
MEETINGS IN 2023
3
|
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Katherine T.
Rohrer (Chair) |
Arthur R.
Collins
|
Nobuchika
Mori
|
Barbara K.
Rimer, DrPH
(until May 6, 2024)
|
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Responsibilities
|
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•
selecting individuals qualified to serve as Directors to be nominated to stand for election to the Board;
•
recommending assignments to the Board’s standing committees;
•
advising the Board with respect to matters of Board structure, composition, and procedures;
|
•
developing and recommending to the Board a set of corporate governance principles applicable to the Company;
•
monitoring compliance with the Company’s political participation program;
•
overseeing the evaluation of the Board; and
•
ensuring that the Company’s management development and succession plans are appropriate.
|
The Corporate
Social Responsibility and Sustainability Committee
NUMBER OF
MEETINGS IN 2023
3
|
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Barbara K. Rimer,
DrPH
(Chair)
(until May 6, 2024)
|
W. Paul
Bowers
|
Arthur R.
Collins
|
Thomas J.
Kenny
|
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Responsibilities
|
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CORPORATE SOCIAL RESPONSIBILITY
•
overseeing the Company’s policies, procedures, and practices with respect to corporate social responsibility and sustainability, recognizing that these goals and initiatives vary widely among industries, organizations and geographies, in the context of what is appropriate and relevant to the Company, our people and the communities we serve;
•
monitoring and reviewing the impact of the Company’s activities on customers, employees, communities, and other stakeholders in light of the Board’s fundamental duty to preserve and promote long-term value creation for the Company’s shareholders; the Company’s strategies, procedures, and practices related to corporate social responsibility on a global basis, including significant philanthropic and community engagement activities; and the development of metrics, information systems, and procedures to track progress toward achievement of the Company’s corporate social responsibility objectives;
•
reviewing the Company’s annual corporate social responsibility and sustainability report before it is published; and
•
monitoring and reviewing the Company’s support of charitable, educational, and business organizations.
|
SUSTAINABILITY
•
monitoring and reviewing the Company’s policies, procedures, and practices related to corporate social responsibility and sustainability in light of the Company’s intent to foster the sustainable growth* of the Company on a global basis; the Company’s strategies, policies, procedures, and practices related to environmental and related health and safety matters; and the Company’s policies, procedures, and practices that enable us to proactively respond to evolving regulatory and investor expectations with regard to sustainability, especially in the areas of environmental stewardship, energy use, recycling, and carbon emissions (i.e., our carbon footprint);
•
reviewing the goals and objectives of the Company’s environmental stewardship policy, and amending or, to the extent an amendment requires Board approval, recommending that the Board amend, these goals and objectives if the Committee deems appropriate; and
•
reviewing the Company’s communication and marketing strategies related to sustainability.
|
CORPORATE GOVERNANCE MATTERS |
2024 PROXY STATEMENT
|
27
|
The Finance
and Investment Committee
NUMBER OF
MEETINGS IN 2023
4
|
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Thomas J. Kenny
(Chair)
|
Daniel P.
Amos
|
Karole F.
Lloyd
|
Nobuchika
Mori
|
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Responsibilities
|
|||||
FINANCE
|
|||||
•
reviewing and reassessing significant financial policies and matters of Treasury and corporate finance, including the Company’s overall capital structure, dividend policy, share repurchase program and liquidity, and the issuance or retirement of debt and other capital securities;
•
reviewing and providing guidance to the Board on significant reinsurance transactions and strategies; the Company’s credit ratings, ratings strategy, and overall rating agency dialogue; and financing strategy and capital impact of corporate development activities and multiyear strategic capital project expenditures;
•
reviewing and reassessing the Company’s overall hedging strategy, including foreign exchange and cash flow hedging, and ensuring proper governance over policies and procedures associated with trading in derivative instruments;
|
•
in partnership with the Compensation Committee, overseeing the Company’s processes for managing the finances of the employee pension and defined contribution benefit plans, including the related investment policies, actuarial assumptions, and funding policies;
•
in partnership with the Audit and Risk Committee, reviewing and providing guidance on the Company’s corporate insurance coverages; and
•
in partnership with the Corporate Social Responsibility and Sustainability Committee, review and provide guidance on corporate social responsibility and sustainability factors relating to issuance and application of proceeds of sustainability bonds and other social and/or sustainability-oriented debt of the Company.
|
INVESTMENT
|
|||||
•
overseeing the investment process and the policies, strategies, and programs of the Company and its subsidiaries relating to investment risk management;
•
periodically reviewing and assessing the adequacy of the Global Investment Policy of the Company and its subsidiaries, and approving any changes to that policy;
|
•
reviewing the performance of the investment portfolios and transactions made on behalf of the Company and its subsidiaries; and
•
in partnership with the Corporate Social Responsibility and Sustainability Committee, review and provide guidance on integration of corporate social responsibility and sustainability factors into the investment process and investment risk management policies, strategies and programs.
|
The Executive Committee
NUMBER OF
MEETINGS IN 2023
3
|
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Daniel P. Amos (Chair)
|
W. Paul
Bowers
|
Karole F.
Lloyd
|
Joseph L.
Moskowitz
|
Katherine T.
Rohrer |
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Responsibilities
|
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PURPOSE
|
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During the intervals between meetings of the Board, the Executive Committee may exercise all of the powers of the Board that may be delegated under Georgia law.
COMPOSITION
Under the Company’s Bylaws, the Executive Committee must consist of at least five Directors, including those Directors who are officers of the Company, and such additional Directors as
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the Board may from time to time determine. Currently, the membership of the Executive Committee also includes the Chairs of the Audit and Risk, Compensation, and Corporate Governance Committees, and includes the Company’s Lead Non-Management Director. The Chairman of the Board (or another member of the Executive Committee chosen by him) is the Chairman of the Executive Committee.
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28
|
AFLAC INCORPORATED | CORPORATE GOVERNANCE MATTERS |
Board of Directors
Our Board oversees our enterprise-wide risk management system, which is designed to achieve organizational and strategic objectives, improve long-term performance, and enhance shareholder value. The Board must understand the risks the Company faces and the steps management takes to manage those risks as well as what level of risk is appropriate for the Company. Our Directors are equipped to make all of these determinations because they are integral to the process of setting the Company’s business strategy.
The Board oversees the risk-management process in conjunction with Board and management committees, each with varying aspects of enterprise risk management as part of their responsibilities. Examples of Board committee risk management oversight are noted below.
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AUDIT AND RISK COMMITTEE
Under its charter, the Audit and Risk Committee’s responsibilities include risk management and compliance oversight.
Specifically, the Audit and Risk Committee:
|
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•
discusses guidelines and policies governing the process by which senior management and the relevant departments of the Company assess and manage exposure to risk, as well as the Company’s major financial risk exposures and the steps management has taken to monitor and control such exposures;
•
reviews the Company’s risk assessment and enterprise risk-management framework, including risk-management guidelines, risk appetite, risk tolerances, key risk policies, and control procedures;
•
reviews critical regulatory risk-management filings and enterprise risk-management material shared with regulators and rating agencies;
|
•
reviews the general structure, staffing models, and engagement of the Company’s risk governance departments and practices;
•
reviews the Company’s major financial risk exposures and evaluates processes and controls that management has adopted to monitor and manage those risks;
•
meets in executive session with key senior leaders involved in risk management;
|
•
reviews with the internal auditors, the independent auditor, and the Company’s financial management team the adequacy and effectiveness of our internal controls, including information security policies and internal controls regarding information security, and any special steps adopted in light of material control deficiencies; and
•
reports to the Board, at least annually, with respect to matters related to key enterprise risks and risk management areas of concentration.
|
||||||
FINANCE AND INVESTMENT COMMITTEE
The Finance and Investment Committee oversees the investment process and investment risk management of the Company and its subsidiaries by monitoring investment policies, strategies, and transactions and reviewing the performance of the investment portfolio and overall capital and liquidity position of the Company. Specific risk oversight responsibilities include:
|
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•
Investment risk:
Includes liquidity risk, market risk, and credit risk.
•
Liquidity risk:
When an investment is not marketable and cannot be bought or sold quickly enough to prevent or minimize a loss.
|
•
Market risk:
The risk that market movements will cause fluctuations in the value of our assets, the amount of our liabilities, or the income from our assets.
•
Credit risk:
The risk of loss arising from the failure of a counterparty to perform its contractual obligations.
|
•
Enterprise: Capital & Liquidity risk:
Review of enterprise capital adequacy, access to capital, and maintenance of liquidity position to protect credit ratings and the Company’s ability to meet short and long-term obligations.
|
||||||
COMPENSATION COMMITTEE
The Compensation Committee oversees the Company’s compensation plans and practices and strives to create incentives that encourage a level of risk-taking behavior consistent with the Company’s business strategy. Specific risk oversight responsibilities include:
|
||||||||
•
reviewing the Company’s incentive compensation arrangements to determine whether they encourage unnecessary or excessive risk-taking;
|
•
reviewing at least annually the relationship between the Company’s compensation and risk management policies and practices; and
|
•
evaluating compensation policies and practices that could mitigate any such risk.
|
||||||
As more fully discussed in the Compensation Discussion and Analysis section of this Proxy Statement, the Compensation Committee establishes incentive compensation performance objectives for management that are directly linked to the Company’s results, aligned with shareholder interests, and realistically attainable so as not to encourage excessive risk taking.
|
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CORPORATE GOVERNANCE MATTERS |
2024 PROXY STATEMENT
|
29
|
Role of Management
The Company’s management is responsible for day-to-day risk management. Our enterprise risk-management framework, which is aligned with and overseen by the Board and its committees, includes several executive management committees whose roles incorporate risk management across the enterprise. For example, executive management’s Global Risk Committee oversees the processes for identifying, assessing, measuring, monitoring, and mitigating key risks in addition to ensuring transparency and appropriateness of reporting to executive leadership. Other management committees, and specific management positions such as the Company’s Global Chief Risk Officer, its General Counsel, and its Global Chief Compliance Officer, are responsible for implementing policies and risk-management processes relating to strategic, operational, investment, competitive, regulatory and legislative, product, reputational, and compliance risks.
|
||
Spotlight on Information Security Risk Oversight
The Board has adopted an information security policy directing management to establish and operate a global information security program with the goals of identifying, assessing and monitoring existing and emerging cybersecurity threats and ensuring that the Company’s information assets and data, and the data of its customers, are appropriately protected. The Board has delegated oversight of the Company’s information security program to the Audit and Risk Committee. The Company’s senior officers, including its Global Security and Chief Information Security Officer, are responsible for the operation of the global information security program and communicate quarterly with the Audit and Risk Committee on the program, including with respect to the state of the program, compliance with applicable regulations, current and evolving threats, and recommendations for changes in the global information security program. The information security program also includes a cybersecurity incident response plan that is designed to provide a management framework across Company functions for a coordinated assessment and response to potential security incidents. This framework establishes a protocol to report certain incidents to the Global Security and Chief Information Security Officer and other senior officers, with the goal of timely assessing such incidents, determining applicable disclosure requirements, and communicating with the Audit and Risk Committee. The incident response plan directs the executive officers to report certain incidents immediately and directly to the Lead Non-Management Director or the Chair of the Audit and Risk Committee.
For more information, see the Aflac Incorporated Cybersecurity Disclosure at investors.aflac.com under the “Sustainability” tab, then “Policies and Statements.” See also Item 1C of the Company’s Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2023.
|
||
30
|
AFLAC INCORPORATED | CORPORATE GOVERNANCE MATTERS |
Board of Directors
Our Board plays critical environment, social, and governance oversight and leadership roles through its efforts to identify, promote, and monitor responsible and ethical corporate governance mechanisms, corporate social responsibility and sustainability goals and related compensation programs, and risk management policies that identify and assess climate-related risks.
|
||
Corporate Social Responsibility and
Sustainability Committee
•
Oversees the Company’s policies, procedures, and practices with respect to corporate social responsibility (CSR) and sustainability
•
Monitors the preparation of and reviews the Company’s annual report that provides more detail around CSR and sustainability initiatives
•
Coordinates with:
•
The Finance and Investment Committee regarding guidance on CSR and sustainability factors relating to issuance and application of proceeds of sustainability bonds and other social and/or sustainability oriented debt of the Company and oversight of the investment process
•
The Compensation Committee relating to incorporating CSR and sustainability factors into executive compensation programs
•
The Corporate Governance Committee to incorporate diversity, equity, and inclusion efforts with regards to the Company’s policies and principles relating to succession planning and management development
|
|||||||||||
Updates received by the Board through the Corporate Social Responsibility and Sustainability Committee | |||||||||||
•
U.N. Sustainable Development Goals
•
Environmental initiatives
|
•
Workplace diversity and inclusion efforts
•
Philanthropic activities
|
||||||||||
Audit and Risk Committee
•
Oversees the Company’s policies, process, and structure related to enterprise risk engagement and management, which includes CSR and sustainability risks and opportunities
|
|||||||||||
Role of Management
Management periodically meets with the Corporate Social Responsibility and Sustainability Committee, as well as other Board Committees, to report on how sustainability-related risks and opportunities inform actions that are coordinated and aligned with the broader goals of the Company and are integrated into organizational strategy, plans of action, management policies, and performance objectives, including how progress is monitored against targets and goals.
|
||
CORPORATE GOVERNANCE MATTERS |
2024 PROXY STATEMENT
|
31
|
Board of Directors
Our Board is actively engaged in overseeing the Company’s people and culture strategy. Several committees review and report back to the Board on a broad range of human capital management topics and related risks.
|
||
Compensation Committee
•
Reviews the Company’s compensation plans to ensure promotion of the Company’s goals and objectives, including sustainability goals and objectives
|
|||||||||||
Corporate Governance Committee
•
Oversees the Company’s policies and principles relating to succession planning and management development, and ensures that appropriate succession plans are in place
|
|||||||||||
Corporate Social Responsibility and Sustainability Committee
•
Provides guidance and oversight of the Company’s corporate social responsibility activities, including metrics and procedures to track progress toward achievement of the Company’s goals
|
|||||||||||
To see Aflac Incorporated’s most recent Business and Sustainability Report, other sustainability disclosures including the most recent EEO-1 report and the sustainability policy statements, please visit investors.aflac.com under the “Sustainability” tab.
|
||
32
|
AFLAC INCORPORATED | CORPORATE GOVERNANCE MATTERS |
Who We Engage | How We Engage | Topics of Engagement | ||||||||||||
SHAREHOLDERS, FIXED INCOME INVESTORS, AND AGENCIES
Aflac Incorporated’s Investor and Rating Agency Relations team proactively engages year-round with shareholders and fixed income investors, including:
•
current and prospective,
•
retail and institutional,
•
portfolio management, and stewardship teams
T
hese efforts often include executive management and occasionally the Lead Non-Management Director and extend to:
•
proxy advisory firms,
•
ESG rating firms, and
•
credit rating agencies
|
Year-Round
Engagement
Both outside of and leading up to the annual meeting, the Vice President of Investor Relations and Corporate Secretary conduct meetings (in person when possible and by videoconference) and calls to update investors and regularly relay feedback to the Chairman, Lead Non-
Management Director, and the Board.
|
During 2023 engagements, we discussed our policy statements as well as the following topics:
•
Business Update:
Provided an update on our strategic focus areas, succession planning, and recent performance in light of the recent challenging macroeconomic and geopolitical environment;
•
Board Composition:
Discussed the alignment of board composition and skills with Company strategy and performance;
•
Executive Compensation:
Reviewed key features of our compensation program and its continued alignment with Company strategy and performance;
•
Environmental & Social Initiatives:
Discussed our sustainability objectives and achievements for the year, including detail on our diversity, equity, and inclusion goals and initiatives; and
•
Disclosure Enhancements:
Added descriptions of skills and experience in the Director nominee matrix based on engagement feedback.
|
||||||||||||
![]() |
CORPORATE GOVERNANCE MATTERS |
2024 PROXY STATEMENT
|
33
|
34
|
AFLAC INCORPORATED | CORPORATE GOVERNANCE MATTERS |
The Compensation Committee assesses Director compensation and uses its independent compensation consultant to benchmark against the peer group at least every other year.
|
||
All Non-employee Directors (annual cash retainer)
|
$135,000 annually | ||||
All Audit and Risk Committee members | Additional $15,000 annually | ||||
Chairs—Compensation, Corporate Governance, Corporate Social Responsibility and Sustainability, Corporate Development, Finance and Investment | Additional $25,000 annually | ||||
Chair—Audit and Risk | Additional $35,000 annually | ||||
Lead Non-Management Director | Additional $50,000 annually |
Timing of equity grant |
Form of equity grant
(1)
|
Value of equity grant
(2)
|
||||||
Upon joining the Board | nonqualified stock options, restricted stock, stock appreciation rights, or a combination thereof | aggregate value as determined by the Board not in excess of the value of a nonqualified stock option covering 20,000 shares of Common Stock | ||||||
Annually, at the discretion
of the Board |
restricted stock, nonqualified stock options, stock appreciation rights, or a combination thereof |
aggregate dollar value of approximately $165,000
(3)
|
Position | Ownership Guideline |
What Counts
|
What Does Not Count
|
||||||||
Non-employee Directors |
5x
annual cash retainer
|
Ownership includes all shares beneficially owned by the Non-
employee Director, as well as time-based, unvested restricted shares.
|
Stock options (vested or unvested) do not count toward these stock ownership guidelines.
|
CORPORATE GOVERNANCE MATTERS |
2024 PROXY STATEMENT
|
35
|
Name
(1)
|
Fees
Earned
or Paid in
Cash
(2)
($)
|
Stock
Awards
(3)
($)
|
Option
Awards
($)
|
Change in
Pension
Value and
Nonqualified
Deferred
Compensation
Earnings
(4)
($)
|
All Other
Compensation
(5)
($)
|
Total
($)
|
||||||||||||||
W. Paul Bowers | 225,011 | 165,065 | — | — | — | 390,076 | ||||||||||||||
Arthur R. Collins | 135,000 | 165,065 | — | — | 17,618 | 317,683 | ||||||||||||||
Toshihiko Fukuzawa*
|
45,000 | — | — | — | — | 45,000 | ||||||||||||||
Miwako Hosoda
|
90,000 | 346,804 | — | — | — | 436,804 | ||||||||||||||
Thomas J. Kenny | 160,000 | 165,065 | — | — | 13,077 | 338,142 | ||||||||||||||
Georgette D. Kiser | 150,000 | 165,065 | — | — | — | 315,065 | ||||||||||||||
Karole F. Lloyd | 185,000 | 165,065 | — | — | — | 350,065 | ||||||||||||||
Nobuchika Mori | 135,000 | 165,065 | — | — | — | 300,065 | ||||||||||||||
Joseph L. Moskowitz | 175,000 | 165,065 | — | — | 16,628 | 356,693 | ||||||||||||||
Barbara K. Rimer, DrPH | 160,000 | 165,065 | — | — | 16,483 | 341,548 | ||||||||||||||
Katherine T. Rohrer | 160,000 | 165,065 | — | — | — | 325,065 |
36
|
AFLAC INCORPORATED | CORPORATE GOVERNANCE MATTERS |
CASH DIVIDEND
+5.0%
|
3-YEAR TSR
+99.6%
|
|||||||
NET EARNINGS
$4.7B
|
REPURCHASED SHARES
$2.8B
|
|||||||
RETURN ON EQUITY (ROE)
22.1%
|
EARNINGS PER DILUTED SHARE (EPS)
$7.78
12.3%
p
|
|||||||
ADJUSTED RETURN ON EQUITY (AROE) EX-FX*
14.2%
|
ADJUSTED EPS EX-FX*
$6.43
13.4%
p
|
|||||||
AFLAC JAPAN SOLVENCY
MARGIN RATIO (SMR)
1,219%
|
AFLAC U.S. COMBINED RISK-BASED CAPITAL (RBC) RATIO
(1)
710%
|
Pay-For-Performance
Compensation Philosophy
|
||||||||
OUR COMPENSATION PHILOSOPHY PILLARS
|
||||||||
1 | We Pay for Performance. | |||||||
2 | We Seek to Attract and Retain Talent. | |||||||
3 | We Use Compensation “Best Practices.” | |||||||
CEO TARGET COMPENSATION MIX | OTHER NEOs AVERAGE TARGET COMPENSATION MIX | |||||||||||||
![]() |
10%
Base Salary
24%
Management Incentive Plan
66%
Long-Term Incentive
|
![]() |
19%
Base Salary
33%
Management Incentive Plan
48%
Long-Term Incentive
|
|||||||||||
CORPORATE GOVERNANCE MATTERS |
2024 PROXY STATEMENT
|
37
|
Performance
|
Result
|
|||||||
Corporate Metric:
|
||||||||
Adjusted Earnings per Diluted Share on a Consolidated Basis for the Company (Excluding Foreign Currency Effect)
|
$6.56*
|
![]() |
||||||
U.S. Segment Metrics:
|
||||||||
Increase in New Annualized Premium
|
5.06%
|
![]() |
||||||
Increase in Net Earned Premium
|
1.89% |
![]() |
||||||
Cost Savings from Transformation Initiatives
|
$55.0 million
|
![]() |
||||||
Japan Segment Metrics:
|
||||||||
New Annualized Premium (in billions of yen)
|
¥60.7
|
![]() |
||||||
Decrease in Net Earned Premium (as adjusted for MIP)**
|
(6.84)% |
![]() |
||||||
Cost Savings from Transformation Initiatives (in billions of yen)
|
¥4.9 |
![]() |
||||||
Global Investments Metrics:
|
||||||||
Net Investment Income (U.S. and Japan GAAP Segments Only)
|
Budget plus 5.66%
|
![]() |
||||||
Credit Losses/Impairments
|
$(200 million)
|
![]() |
||||||
MIP Modifier:
|
||||||||
Four Sustainability Objectives
|
+0%
|
Three Sustainability
Objectives Achieved |
Performance | Result | |||||||
Metrics:
|
||||||||
Currency Neutral AROE Result
(70% Weighted) |
15.0%
|
![]() |
||||||
SMR
(15% Weighted) |
917%
|
![]() |
||||||
RBC
(15% Weighted) |
675%
|
![]() |
||||||
RTSR Modifier
|
96th percentile
|
![]() |
![]() |
Exceeded Maximum Goal |
![]() |
Below Minimum Goal |
![]() |
Between Target and Maximum Goal |
![]() |
Between Minimum and Target Goal |
38
|
AFLAC INCORPORATED |
![]() |
|||||||||||||||||
Named Executive Officer Compensation
(“Say-on-Pay”)
We are committed to achieving a high level of total return for our shareholders. From the end of August 1990, when Daniel P. Amos was appointed the CEO, through December 31, 2023, the Company’s total return to shareholders, including reinvested cash dividends, has exceeded 15,446%, compared with 3,075% for the Dow Jones Industrial Average, 2,812% for the S&P 500 Index, and 1,471% for the S&P 500 Life & Health Insurance Index over the same period.
|
|||||||||||||||||
![]() |
|||||||||||||||||
The Board of Directors recommends a vote FOR our executive compensation program. | |||||||||||||||||
Compensation Discussion and Analysis
This Compensation Discussion and Analysis (“CD&A”) provides a detailed description of our executive compensation philosophy and programs, the decisions made by the Compensation Committee related to those programs, and the factors considered when making those decisions.
|
IN THIS SECTION
|
|||||||||||||
2023
Business Overview
|
||||||||||||||
EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION |
2024 PROXY STATEMENT
|
39
|
This CD&A focuses on our named executive officers (“NEOs”) for 2023, who were:
|
||||||||||||||
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
||||||||||
Daniel P. Amos
CHAIRMAN AND
CHIEF EXECUTIVE
OFFICER (CEO)
|
Max K. Brodén
EXECUTIVE
VICE PRESIDENT,
CHIEF FINANCIAL
OFFICER (CFO)
|
Frederick J.
Crawford (1)
PRESIDENT AND
CHIEF OPERATING
OFFICER (COO)
|
Bradley E. Dyslin
EXECUTIVE
VICE PRESIDENT,
GLOBAL CHIEF
INVESTMENT OFFICER;
PRESIDENT, AFLAC
GLOBAL INVESTMENTS
|
Audrey Boone Tillman
EXECUTIVE
VICE PRESIDENT,
GENERAL COUNSEL
|
1
|
2 | 3 | |||||||||||||||
A pay-for-performance philosophy and compensation program structure that directly motivates our executives to achieve our annual and long-
term strategic and operational goals
|
Compensation elements that help us attract and retain high-caliber talent to lead the Company
|
“Best practice” compensation governance policies, such as stock ownership guidelines, clawback provisions, and no change-in-control excise tax gross-ups
|
|||||||||||||||
40
|
AFLAC INCORPORATED | EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION |
2023 Business Overview
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||
Total
Shareholder
Return (“TSR”)
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||
CASH DIVIDEND
+5.0%
We increased our cash dividend, marking the 41st
consecutive year of increasing the dividend.
|
3-YEAR TSR
+ 99.6%
Our three-year TSR* was 99.6%, versus 57.8% for the S&P 500 Life and Health Insurance index. Our annual TSR* was 17.4%, versus 4.6% for the S&P 500 Life and Health Insurance index.
|
3-YEAR TSR RELATIVE
TO PEER GROUP (“RTSR”)
Percentile Rank 96.0%
|
|||||||||||||||||||||
Financial
Highlights
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||
RETURN ON EQUITY (ROE)
|
NET EARNINGS
|
EARNINGS PER DILUTED
SHARE (EPS)
|
|||||||||||||||||||||
22.1%
|
$4.7B
|
$7.78
12.3%
p
|
|||||||||||||||||||||
AROE EX-FX
(1)
14.2%
|
ADJUSTED EARNINGS EX-FX
(1)
$3.8B
|
ADJUSTED EPS EX-FX
(1)
$6.43
13.4%
p
|
|||||||||||||||||||||
Aflac U.S.:
Sales were up 5.0% .
Net Earned Premium was
up 1.9%, which was above the target MIP goal
.
|
Aflac Japan:
Sales were up 10.9% .
Net Earned Premium (as adjusted for MIP)
(2)
was
down 6.8%, which was slightly below the target MIP goal
.
|
||||||||||||||||||||||
Capital | |||||||||||||||||||||||
REPURCHASED SHARES
|
REGULATORY
CAPITAL RATIOS* |
||||||||||||||||||||||
$2.8B
We repurchased approximately 38.9 million of the Company’s shares as part of a balanced capital allocation program.
|
1,219%
Aflac Japan Solvency Margin Ratio (SMR)
710%
Aflac U.S. Combined Risk-Based Capital (RBC) Ratio
(3)
|
||||||||||||||||||||||
* As of December 31, 2023
(1)
The adjusted return on equity (AROE), excluding the impact of foreign currency, and adjusted earnings and adjusted earnings per diluted share (adjusted EPS), excluding the impact of foreign currency, metrics are our principal financial measures used to evaluate management’s performance, and we believe they continue to be a key driver of shareholder value. See Appendix A to this Proxy Statement for definitions of these non-GAAP measures and reconciliation to the most comparable GAAP financial measures.
(2)
See Appendix A to this Proxy Statement for the definition of this non-GAAP financial measure, which describes how the measure is calculated from our audited financial statements.
(3)
The Company calculates its combined RBC ratio to include all U.S. regulated life insurance entities as if a single combined U.S. RBC entity net of intercompany items related to capital resources and risk.
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||
EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION |
2024 PROXY STATEMENT
|
41
|
For 2023, the Company reported net earnings per diluted share of $7.78 and adjusted earnings per diluted share of $6.23, or $6.43 excluding the effect of foreign currency, which was the Company's best year in its history. Earnings per share reflected a decline in Aflac Japan net earned premiums as a result of reinsurance and limited pay policies reaching paid up status, and elevated expenses associated with the build of the growth platforms in the U.S., Aflac network dental and vision, group life and disability, and consumer markets.
For the year, the Company generated a strong return on equity of 22.1% and our AROE, excluding the impact of foreign currency, for the full year was 14.2%. Leverage fell below a conservative range of 20% to 25%.
Management and the Board are committed to ensuring comprehensive risk management and to safeguarding the Company’s financial strength. Aflac Japan ended the year with an SMR of 1,219%, and Aflac U.S. had a combined RBC ratio of 710%. The Company’s strong capital and cash flow continue to support our financial strength ratings, which are among the highest in the industry,$2.8 billion in share repurchase, and our 41-year track record of increased Common Stock dividends.
|
|||||
RETURN ON EQUITY
22.1%
|
|||||
ADJUSTED RETURN ON
EQUITY (AROE) EX-FX
14.2%
|
|||||
AFLAC JAPAN’S SMR RATIO
1,219%
|
|||||
AFLAC U.S.
COMBINED
RBC RATIO
710%
|
2023
HIGHLIGHTS
|
||
•
Aflac U.S. continued on a path to recovery by generating more than $1.5 billion in sales and the strongest fourth quarter in its history with $559 million in sales. While representing approximately 15% of our sales in 2023, the U.S. growth platforms, dental and vision, group life and disability and consumer markets, are key elements in our strategy to sell our core supplemental health policies.
•
Productivity of average weekly producers was at an all-time high.
•
Cancer insurance sales increased nearly 25% after the introduction of our new Cancer Protection Assurance policy in the second quarter of 2023.
•
Aflac network dental and vision and group life and disability sales were up 24% and 22%, respectively, for the year. In addition, approximately $0.78 of supplemental health and life products were sold with every dollar of dental and vision, and the life and disability platform had another successful renewal year, recording 99% premium persistency.
|
||
42
|
AFLAC INCORPORATED | EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION |
2023
HIGHLIGHTS
|
||
•
Aflac Japan generated an extremely strong profit margin of 30.5%.
•
Persistency reflected the impact of individuals lapsing policies to update coverage at 93.4% for the year.
•
Aflac Japan’s sales grew 10.9% for the year.
•
Cancer insurance sales increased 26% with very significant contributions from Japan Post Company and Japan Post Insurance, as well as other alliances, Dai-ichi Life and Daido Life.
•
Strong fourth quarter 2023 medical sales were due to the mid-September launch of a new medical insurance product.
•
Aflac Japan revised WAYS and child endowment policies in November 2022, which contributed to the strong sales in the first half of 2023. The revision of the two products is part of a strategy to promote sales of third sector policies.
•
Aflac Japan kept general adjusted expenses below target due to company-wide cost-reduction efforts.
|
||
2023
HIGHLIGHTS
|
||
•
The portfolio posted very strong performance with net investment income benefiting from the sharp uptick in interest rates and increasing yields within our floating rate portfolio of middle market and transitional real estate loans. Tactical asset allocation decisions contributed to our outperformance. These benefits more than offset the negative impact from translating yen net investment income due to the strengthening U.S. dollar.
•
In 2023, Aflac Global Investments produced adjusted net investment income of ¥365.6 billion for Aflac Japan and $820 million for Aflac U.S., which represented increases of 4.0% and 8.6%, respectively, from the prior year.
•
Our growing alternatives portfolio contributed $113 million of variable investment income in 2023, $10 million higher than 2022. We remain committed to a disciplined approach to building an alternatives portfolio.
•
Importantly, Aflac Global Investments has navigated volatile market conditions without realizing material losses, impairments, or credit losses while managing a $104.7 billion book value portfolio. This portfolio includes multiple public and private asset classes and a fixed maturities portfolio with an average single-A rating.
|
||
EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION |
2024 PROXY STATEMENT
|
43
|
CEO Pay Mix and Element | Terms | Performance Measure(s) | Objective(s) | ||||||||||||||||||||
BASE SALARY
![]() |
The fixed amount of annual cash compensation for performing day-to-day responsibilities. Generally reviewed biennially for potential increase based on a number of factors, including market levels, performance, and internal equity.
|
Levels set based on market data, job scope, responsibilities, experience, and individual performance. |
•
Attract and retain talent
|
||||||||||||||||||||
MANAGEMENT INCENTIVE PLAN (“MIP”)
![]() |
Annual variable cash incentive compensation based on the achievement of predetermined annual performance goals.
Weighting of performance metrics varies based on NEO role
|
Performance metrics align with our business strategy, geographic segment goals, and key value drivers:
•
Corporate goal: adjusted earnings per diluted share, excluding the impact of foreign currency
•
U.S. goals: new annualized premium, net earned premium, cost savings from transformation initiatives
•
Japan goals: new annualized premium, net earned premium, cost savings from transformation initiatives
•
Global Investments goals: net investment income; credit losses/impairments
Performance goals are rigorous and set to align the Company’s business plan with the expectation of achieving target performance.
|
•
Motivate executives and reward annual operational and strategic performance
•
Drive enterprise growth
•
Focus on key near-
term drivers of long-term value for our business
•
Retain key talent
•
Exercise sound
risk-management practices
|
||||||||||||||||||||
![]() |
|||||||||||||||||||||||
MIP Modifier can adjust total MIP compensation up or down by 5% based on achievement of sustainability goals.
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||
LONG-TERM INCENTIVES (“LTI”)
![]() |
Long-term variable equity awards granted annually in performance-based restricted stock (“PBRS”) (100% of LTI for the CEO and other NEOs) under the Company’s Long-Term Incentive Plan. PBRS vests based on three-year financial performance and relative total shareholder return.
100% performance-based LTI with 3-year performance period
|
Adjusted Return on Shareholders’ Equity (AROE) EX-FX
![]()
Risk-Based Capital (RBC)
![]()
Solvency Margin Ratio (SMR)
![]()
Relative TSR Modifier
|
AROE, RBC, and SMR are metrics that affect our long-term business strategy and operating environment. Payout is also contingent on a relative TSR modifier, which can adjust PBRS payouts up or down by 20%.
|
•
Motivate executives and reward long-term operational and strategic performance
•
Focus on key long-
term value drivers for our business
•
Align executives’ interests with shareholders’ interests
•
Retain key talent
•
Exercise sound
risk-management practices
|
|||||||||||||||||||
44
|
AFLAC INCORPORATED | EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION |
The Company has a history and a well-earned reputation with its shareholders as a transparent organization. That commitment to transparency on all levels was a driving force behind our decision in 2008 to allow shareholders a “say-on-pay” advisory vote, years before such votes became mandatory for most public companies. In 2023, over 97% of our shareholders voted in favor of our NEO executive compensation program.
Consistent with our approach in prior years, the Company engaged in shareholder outreach efforts throughout 2023. The feedback from these conversations, together with a thorough analysis of best practices and guidance from our independent compensation consultant, was incorporated into the Compensation Committee’s regular review of our compensation programs.
Compensation program changes, if any, are made with a focus on ensuring that pay is linked to Company performance and corporate strategy. We continually analyze our compensation program to ensure that we remain current in our approaches, a leader in executive compensation best practices, and cognizant of shareholder concerns. Moreover, we pride ourselves on incorporating ethics and transparency into everything we do, including compensation design and disclosure. Accordingly, we will continue our review and dialogue with investors to determine if additional changes are warranted.
After careful consideration, the Compensation Committee did not make any changes to our executive compensation program and policies for 2023 as a result of the most recent say-on-pay vote in 2023.
|
2023 SAY-ON-PAY SUPPORT
97.3%
![]() |
What We Do |
![]() |
![]() |
What We Don't Do | ||||||||
![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION |
2024 PROXY STATEMENT
|
45
|
Compensation Committee
|
with assistance from its
Independent Compensation Consultant
who
|
and input from
Management who |
||||||
•
reviews the Company's executive compensation plans
•
evaluates the performance of the CEO
•
determines and approves the CEO's compensation level
•
evaluates annually the performance of the other executive officers of the Company
•
reviews and approves the compensation level of other executive officers
•
reviews perquisites or other personal benefits to the Company's executive officers and Non-employee Directors
|
•
provides comparative company performance to assess proposed NEO compensation;
•
provides competitiveness evaluations of the Company’s executive compensation and benefit programs;
•
reviews plan design issues and recommends improvements;
•
reports on trends and developments in the marketplace;
•
provides assessments on the relationship between executive pay and performance;
•
provides assessments on proposed performance goals and ranges for incentive plans;
•
conducts training sessions for the Compensation Committee; and
•
proposes the compensation for Non-
employee Directors.
|
•
recommends to the Compensation Committee the specific Company performance objectives
•
ensures performance objectives are aligned with corporate strategy, and thus will drive shareholder value and ensure financial soundness.
|
46
|
AFLAC INCORPORATED | EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION |
2023 PEER GROUP
|
||||||||
•
The Allstate Corporation
•
Assurant, Inc.
•
Brighthouse Financial
•
Chubb Limited
•
Equitable Holdings
|
•
The Hartford Financial Services Group, Inc.
•
Humana Inc.
•
Lincoln National Corporation
•
Manulife Financial Corporation
•
MetLife, Inc.
|
•
Principal Financial Group, Inc.
•
The Progressive Corporation
•
Prudential Financial, Inc.
•
The Travelers Companies, Inc.
•
Unum Group
|
||||||
($ millions) |
Revenue
(1)
|
Total Assets
(2)
|
Market Value
(2)
|
||||||||
Aflac Incorporated | $18,701 | $126,724 | $48,211 | ||||||||
Peer Median | $36,121 | $228,861 | $36,631 | ||||||||
Percentile Rank for Aflac Incorporated vs. Peers
|
39th
|
43rd
|
78th
|
EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION |
2024 PROXY STATEMENT
|
47
|
Performance-Based Compensation: How Performance Goals Are Set
The Board and the Compensation Committee believe it is important for the Company to manage its business to provide long-term value to our shareholders. Therefore, performance goals under the MIP and LTI programs involve metrics that drive shareholder returns, and payouts depend entirely upon the level of achievement of those goals. The following sections provide detail on how we select metrics under the MIP and LTI program, determine performance target amounts and other important considerations in setting these targets.
While performance goals are continually evaluated and refreshed as appropriate, we have used the same methodology for setting MIP and LTI goals for many years. Segment metrics for Aflac U.S., Aflac Japan, and Global Investments are consistent with assumptions used in developing segment financial projections (described below) based on the Company’s best estimates for the coming year. The segment projections are consolidated into the corporate financial projection used to develop performance targets.
|
The goal-setting process generally proceeds in two stages:
1
RECOMMEND
•
The Company’s CEO and CFO, in consultation with Mercer, recommend to the Compensation Committee the specific Company performance objectives that are aligned with corporate strategy, and thus will drive shareholder value and ensure financial soundness.
•
Recommended ranges are based, in part, on past performance results and scenario tests of the Company’s financial outlook as projected by a complex financial model.
•
The model projects the impact on various financial measures using different levels of total new annualized premium, investment returns, budgeted expenses, morbidity, persistency, return on equity, and capital ratios.
|
|||||||
2
ESTABLISH
•
The Compensation Committee refers to these modeled results to establish a target performance level, as well as a minimum and maximum level, for each performance goal.
•
The target goal is not necessarily equidistant between the minimum and maximum goals. Instead, for certain key metrics the MIP payout curve is “sloped” to require significant above-target performance to achieve a maximum payout.
•
Correspondingly, the payout for a minimum result is one-half of the target payout, while the payout for the maximum goal (or better) is twice the target payout.
•
No payouts are made for performance below the minimum goal.
•
Interpolation is used to calculate incentive payouts for results between minimum and target goals or target and maximum goals.
•
The 2023 MIP goals were approved by the Compensation Committee in March 2023.
|
48
|
AFLAC INCORPORATED | EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION |
Metric |
Performance
Measures
|
Factors Considered in Setting Goal Levels | ||||||
Corporate Metric
|
•
Adjusted EPS
|
In 2022, the Company generated $4.4 billion in net earnings, up 4.4% for the year, or $6.93 per diluted share. The Company also reported a 7.9% decrease in adjusted earnings for the year, which were $3.6 billion, and adjusted earnings per diluted share on a currency-neutral basis of $6.08, which was up 4.8%. This increase was supported by the repurchasing of $2.4 billion (39.2 million) of the Company’s shares and lower adjusted earnings as pandemic conditions in Japan gradually improved but impacted operations throughout the year resulting in lower revenues and elevated benefit ratios. Meanwhile, pandemic conditions in the U.S. had largely subsided, and results reflected revenue pressure due to lower persistency and elevated expenses due to costs of initiatives to drive future earned premium growth and efficiency.
When looking at the Company’s currency-neutral adjusted EPS estimates for 2023 and normalizing for roughly $0.03 per share of items identified and called out in 2022, the 2023 adjusted earnings outlook included headwinds to revenue resulting from slow to recover pandemic pressures in Japan, higher hedge costs and elevated expense ratios. The elevated expense ratios were tied to the build-out of Aflac Dental & Vision and consumer markets and investments to address the challenges we face to grow the top line in both Japan and the U.S. These headwinds were offset by lower benefit ratio expectations in Japan reflecting return to normal claims assumptions as “deemed” hospitalization rules were lifted toward the end of 2022.
|
||||||
U.S. and Japan Segment Metrics
|
•
New Annualized Premium
•
Net Earned Premium
•
Cost Savings from Transformation initiatives
|
In 2022, Aflac U.S. sales increased 16.1% to $1.5 billion, reflecting significant contributions from both our existing voluntary business and our more recently acquired growth properties. However, persistency experienced a significant decline, with the largest contributor being a significant migration of workers within the workforce, resulting in a persistency rate of 77.3% at the end of 2022. Moving into 2023, our business focus continues to be building out our growth properties, while continuing to strengthen our distribution reach for our core voluntary products. The Company expects sales growth in 2023 and the Compensation Committee set a range of 4% to 14% increase in sales for the year. After considering current economic volatility, our expected sales growth and persistency initiatives, the Company expected net earned premium growth in the -1% to +4% range. A new metric for costs savings related to transformation initiatives with a range of $15 million to $35 million was added to further incentivize progress on key goals.
Similarly, in Japan, the focus was on post-pandemic recovery and realization of investment in product development. The Company expected sales to continue to improve in the second half of 2022, if conditions continued to allow more face-to-face interactions, Japan Post resumed proactive sales of Aflac Cancer insurance, and Aflac had a successful launch of a new cancer insurance policy in the second half of 2022. Moving into 2023, the Compensation Committee determined a relatively flat range for sales was appropriate for 2023 given the continued uncertainty around recovery. Additionally, net earned premium was expected to decline largely due to lower sales environment and limited pay third sector policies becoming paid-up. The Compensation Committee set a range of approximately ¥ 54.8 billion to ¥ 65.5 billion for sales including Japan Post and set a range of -8.25% to -5.00% for net earned premium. A new metric for cost savings related to transformation initiatives with a range of ¥ 3.2 billion to ¥ 4.6 billion was added to further align short-term management incentive compensation with an initiative to reduce run-rate expenses across the global enterprise.
|
||||||
EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION |
2024 PROXY STATEMENT
|
49
|
Metric |
Performance
Measures
|
Factors Considered in Setting Goal Levels | ||||||
Global Investment Metrics
|
•
Net Investment Income
•
Credit Losses/ Impairments
|
For 2023, Aflac Japan net investment income including hedge costs was expected to be lower than the prior year, driven by higher hedge costs and lower call income, partially offset by higher yields. The Company expected net investment income for Aflac U.S. to increase, reflecting higher yields. Our planning assumes a positive 10% return each year for variable net investment income for both Aflac Japan and Aflac US.
Target levels for credit losses and impairments are determined with consideration of current asset quality, current and expected market conditions, and potential trading activity to improve the overall health of the portfolio.
In order to properly balance income and risk, targets for 2023 were expressed as a range around budget based on a bottom-up review of asset allocation and cash flows. As in 2022, we continued to slope the ranges to require above budget targeted performance for maximum payout, while not encouraging excessive risk-taking.
|
||||||
MIP Modifier
|
•
Responsible Investing
•
Climate: Net Zero
•
Diversity, Equity & Inclusion (Japan)
•
Diversity, Equity & Inclusion (U.S.)
|
The objectives for the MIP Modifier continued to advance the Company’s progress toward longer-
term sustainability goals that are important to its success. Having fully allocated the proceeds of the sustainability bond and received attestation for Scopes 1 and 2, as well as five categories of Scope 3 in 2022, the Company maintained four objectives for the MIP Modifier in 2023 that focused on sustainability and diversity, equity and inclusion.
First, the Company maintained its target for responsible investing of the general account (portfolio) by continuing to allocate at least 10% of “available investable cash,” which excludes funding to existing commitments, to support a transition to a lower carbon economy over time and address global issues, like economic mobility, gender inequality and social inequity.
As part of our longer-term objective to source 100% of electricity for our owned and controlled facilities from sustainable sources, the Company continued to target improvement in 2023 by setting a minimum target of sourcing 33% of electricity from sustainable sources.
In addition, the Company continued to target progress toward longer-term diversity, equity and inclusion within its leadership in both Japan and the U.S. For Japan, this translated into women filling at least 26.5% of Manager or General Manager positions with Staff within Aflac Life Insurance Japan (ALIJ), and this is part of ALIJ’s path to reach 30% or more by the end of 2025. As part of a longer-term goal to increase the overall diversity (i.e., female or person of color) of Senior Management 5% in the U.S. by 2026, the Company aimed to achieve at least 48% diverse Senior Management in 2023 after ending 2022 at 47%.
|
||||||
50
|
AFLAC INCORPORATED | EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION |
Named Executive Officer |
2023 Base Salary
($) |
2022 Base Salary
($) |
% Change 2023
vs. 2022 |
||||||||
Daniel P. Amos | 1,441,100 | 1,441,100 | 0.0 | % | |||||||
Max K. Brodén | 750,000 | 655,000 | 14.5 | % | |||||||
Frederick J. Crawford | 997,500 | 950,000 | 5.0 | % | |||||||
Bradley E. Dyslin
|
625,000 | 525,000 | 19.0 | % | |||||||
Audrey Boone Tillman | 740,000 | 740,000 | 0.0 | % |
Named Executive Officer |
Target MIP
(as percent of base salary) |
||||
Daniel P. Amos | 250 | % | |||
Max K. Brodén | 175 | % | |||
Frederick J. Crawford | 200 | % | |||
Bradley E. Dyslin
|
200 | % | |||
Audrey Boone Tillman | 120 | % |
EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION |
2024 PROXY STATEMENT
|
51
|
Metric | Compensation Rationale |
Daniel P.
Amos
|
Max K.
Brodén
|
Frederick J.
Crawford
|
Bradley E.
Dyslin
|
Audrey
Boone
Tillman
|
||||||||||||||
Corporate Objective | ||||||||||||||||||||
Adjusted earnings per diluted share on a consolidated basis for the Company (excluding foreign currency effect) | Non-GAAP metric that reflects the overall profitability of the business and focuses management on a combination of top-line growth as well as prudent expense management. | 45.60 | % | 40.00 | % | 42.50 | % | 20.00 | % | 33.33 | % | |||||||||
This is calculated as: Adjusted earnings, excluding the impact of foreign currency* ÷ Weighted-average diluted shares outstanding | ||||||||||||||||||||
Subtotal | 45.60 | % | 40.00 | % | 42.50 | % | 20.00 | % | 33.33 | % | ||||||||||
U.S. Segment | ||||||||||||||||||||
New Annualized Premium (increase over 2022)
|
Metrics that focus on increasing insurance product sales in the US, while also driving market share growth in the insurance product lines we provide our customers. | 7.60 | % | 8.00 | % | 8.00 | % | 2.50 | % | 14.17 | % | |||||||||
Net Earned Premium (increase over 2022)
|
7.60 | % | 8.00 | % | 8.00 | % | 2.50 | % | 14.17 | % | ||||||||||
Cost Savings from Transformation Initiatives
|
3.00 | % | 5.00 | % | 3.00 | % | 5.00 | % | 5.00 | % | ||||||||||
Subtotal | 18.20 | % | 21.00 | % | 19.00 | % | 10.00 | % | 0.33 | % | ||||||||||
Japan Segment | ||||||||||||||||||||
New Annualized Premium | Focuses on maintaining our leadership position in cancer and medical (third sector) insurance while also offering first sector protection products. Both third sector and first sector protection products are less interest-rate sensitive than savings-type products and have strong and stable margins. | 11.60 | % | 12.57 | % | 12.75 | % | 3.75 | % | 14.17 | % | |||||||||
Net Earned Premium (decrease over 2022)
|
11.60 | % | 12.57 | % | 12.50 | % | 3.75 | % | 14.17 | % | ||||||||||
Cost Savings from Transformation Initiatives
|
7.00 | % | 5.00 | % | 7.00 | % | 5.00 | % | 5.00 | % | ||||||||||
Subtotal | 30.20 | % | 30.14 | % | 32.25 | % | 12.50 | % | 33.33 | % | ||||||||||
Global Investments | ||||||||||||||||||||
Net Investment Income (U.S. and Japan GAAP Segments only) | Recognizes the need to responsibly invest the premium and other cash flows to maximize the risk-adjusted performance of our portfolio, subject to our liability profile and capital requirements. | 6.00 | % | 8.86 | % | 6.25 | % | 40.00 | % | — | ||||||||||
Credit Losses/Impairments | — | — | — | 17.50 | % | — | ||||||||||||||
Subtotal | 6.00 | % | 8.86 | % | 6.25 | % | 57.50 | % | — | |||||||||||
Total | 100 | % | 100 | % | 100 | % | 100 | % | 100 | % | ||||||||||
MIP modifier
allows for a
–5%, flat, or +5%
adjustment to total MIP compensation based on achieving specific critical path sustainability objectives for 2023.
|
52
|
AFLAC INCORPORATED | EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION |
Objectives
|
Notable Achievements | ||||
Responsible Investing (Insurance subsidiary portfolios)
— Allocate at least 10% of “available investable cash” to new Sustainable and DEI Investments and Commitments
|
![]() |
||||
Climate: Net Zero
— Source ≥ 33% of electricity used for owned and controlled facilities from renewable resources and submission of a formal path to 100% by 2030
|
![]()
•
Aflac U.S. solar production was less than anticipated due to cloudy weather and supply chain issues leading to a delay in the expansion of our U.S. solar array
•
Aflac Japan, which has achieved 100% renewable electricity at Aflac Square since March 2021, achieved a 16% reduction in electricity consumption compared to 2022
|
||||
Diversity, Equity, & Inclusion (Japan)
— Achieve “Women in Leadership” of at least 26.5% as part of Aflac Life Insurance Japan Ltd.’s path to reach 30% or more by 2025
|
![]() |
||||
Diversity, Equity & Inclusion
(U.S.)
— Increase overall U.S. diversity of Senior Management population by 1% as part of the objective to increase by 5% by 2026
|
![]() |
EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION |
2024 PROXY STATEMENT
|
53
|
Minimum
Goal
|
Target
Goal
|
Maximum
Goal
|
2022 Payout
Percentages vs
Target
|
|||||||||||
Corporate Metric:
|
||||||||||||||
Adjusted Earnings per Diluted Share on a Consolidated Basis for the Company (Excluding Foreign Currency Effect)
(1)
|
![]() |
200.00%
|
||||||||||||
U.S. Segment Metrics:
|
||||||||||||||
Increase in New Annualized Premium
|
![]() |
60.00%
|
||||||||||||
Increase in Net Earned Premium
|
![]() |
115.71%
|
||||||||||||
Cost Reduction from Transformation Initiatives
|
![]() |
200.00%
|
||||||||||||
Japan Segment Metrics:
|
||||||||||||||
New Annualized Premium (in billions of yen)
|
![]() |
111.67%
|
||||||||||||
Decrease in Net Earned Premium (as adjusted for MIP)
|
![]() |
98.09%
|
||||||||||||
Cost Reduction from Transformation Initiatives
|
![]() |
200.00%
|
||||||||||||
Global Investments Metrics:
|
||||||||||||||
Net Investment Income
(U.S. and Japan GAAP Segments Only)
(1)
|
![]() |
200.00%
|
||||||||||||
Credit Losses/Impairments (in millions)
(2)
|
![]() |
90.00%
|
||||||||||||
MIP Modifier:
|
||||||||||||||
MIP Modifier
|
![]() |
+0%
|
54
|
AFLAC INCORPORATED | EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION |
As a % of
base salary |
||||||||
NEO | Target | Earned | ||||||
Daniel P. Amos | 250 | % | 402 | % | ||||
Max K. Brodén | 175 | % | 277 | % | ||||
Frederick J. Crawford | 200 | % | 316 | % | ||||
Bradley E. Dyslin
|
200 | % | 336 | % | ||||
Audrey Boone Tillman | 120 | % | 170 | % |
NEO | Target LTI (as percent of base salary) | ||||
Max K. Brodén | 250 | % | |||
Frederick J. Crawford | 300 | % | |||
Bradley E. Dyslin
|
175 | % | |||
Audrey Boone Tillman | 260 | % |
EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION |
2024 PROXY STATEMENT
|
55
|
Metric | Compensation Committee Rationale | Weighting | ||||||
Adjusted Return on Shareholders’ Equity (AROE)
We define AROE (or currency neutral AROE) as: Adjusted Earnings, excluding the impact of foreign currency ÷ Adjusted Book Value*
|
•
Enables shareholders to evaluate our financial achievements relative to other organizations in terms of how effectively we use capital to generate earnings
•
We believe this metric has a significant influence on the value our shareholders place on the Company
|
70% | ||||||
Risk-Based Capital (RBC)
|
•
Current regulatory solvency measure in the U.S.
•
Capital adequacy is a significant concern for the financial markets and shareholder confidence
•
Critical metric determining cash flow capacity in support of Common Stock dividend and share repurchase
|
15% | ||||||
Solvency Margin Ratio (SMR)
|
•
Principal capital adequacy measure in Japan
•
Capital adequacy is a significant concern for the financial markets and shareholder confidence
•
Critical metric determining cash flow capacity in support of Common Stock dividend and share repurchase
|
15% | ||||||
Total Shareholder Return Relative to Peer Group (RTSR)
|
•
Align LTI payouts with relative performance to peer group
|
Modifier
(up to ± 20%) |
Maximum
Performance Level |
Target
Performance Level |
Threshold
Performance Level |
2023-
2025 |
||||||||||||||
3-yr. avg. currency-neutral
AROE goal |
16.0% | 13.0% | 11.0% | ||||||||||||||
3-yr. avg. RBC
(1)
goal
|
500% | 400% | 350% | ||||||||||||||
3-yr. avg. SMR
(2)
goal
|
700% | 600% | 500% | ||||||||||||||
Payout (% of Target)
|
200%
|
100%
|
50%
|
||||||||||||||
×
|
|||||||||||||||||
3-yr. RTSR percentile
rank vs. peer group |
75
th
percentile or greater
|
Between 25
th
and
75 th percentile |
25
th
percentile or lower
|
||||||||||||||
RTSR Modifier to
Earned Amounts |
1.20x | 1.00x | 0.80x | ||||||||||||||
Payout
|
u |
2026
|
56
|
AFLAC INCORPORATED | EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION |
A | B | A*B=C | D | C*D | ||||||||||||||||
Performance Objective 2021 to 2023
|
Weightings |
Actual Attainment
(3 year average) |
Earned
Percent of Target |
Percent of Target*
Weighting = Earned Amounts |
RTSR
Modifier |
Payout Percentage
(Earned Percent* Modifier) (4) |
||||||||||||||
Aflac Incorporated AROE
(1)
|
70% | 15.0% | 158.7% | 111.1% | ||||||||||||||||
RBC
(2)
|
15% | 675% | 200% | 30.0% | ||||||||||||||||
SMR
(3)
|
15% | 917% | 200% | 30.0% | ||||||||||||||||
Total | 171.1% |
1.20
|
205.0% |
NEO |
Target Number
of Shares Awarded |
Actual number of
Shares Awarded |
||||||||||||
Daniel P. Amos |
![]() |
|||||||||||||
Max K. Brodén |
![]() |
|||||||||||||
Frederick J. Crawford |
![]() |
|||||||||||||
Audrey Boone Tillman |
![]() |
EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION |
2024 PROXY STATEMENT
|
57
|
58
|
AFLAC INCORPORATED | EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION |
Position | Ownership guideline |
What Counts
|
What Does Not Count
|
|||||||||||
Chairman of the Board/CEO |
8x
base salary
|
Ownership includes all shares beneficially owned by the officer or Non-employee Director, as well as time-based, unvested restricted shares.
|
PBRS and stock options (vested or unvested) do not count toward these stock ownership guidelines.
|
|||||||||||
President of Aflac Incorporated |
5x
base salary
|
|||||||||||||
Chairman/President of Aflac U.S.
|
4x
base salary
|
|||||||||||||
Chairman/President of Aflac Japan
|
4x
base salary
|
|||||||||||||
All other Section 16 Officers |
3x
base salary
|
|||||||||||||
Non-Section 16 Executive Vice Presidents and Senior Vice Presidents
|
1x
base salary
|
|||||||||||||
Vice Chairman of Aflac Japan
|
1x
base salary
|
|||||||||||||
Non-employee Directors |
5x
annual cash retainer
|
|||||||||||||
Compliance Period
|
Officers have four years from their hire or promotion date to satisfy their respective stock ownership requirements.
Non-employee Directors have five years from the date first elected to the Board to satisfy these requirements.
Upon any increase in these stock ownership guidelines or an increase in base salary or annual cash retainer, impacted individuals will have an additional two years from the effective date of the change to comply with the increased requirements.
|
|||||||||||||
Compliance Status
|
Each current NEO and Non-employee Director has stock ownership that exceeds the ownership guidelines or is working toward meeting the requisite guideline within the allowed time frame. Progress toward meeting the guidelines is reviewed regularly and reported to the Board.
|
EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION |
2024 PROXY STATEMENT
|
59
|
Pay mix
|
•
Balanced approach between cash and equity
•
MIP and LTI (PBRS) plan designs and target levels are benchmarked annually to relevant market comparables
|
||||
Performance metrics
|
•
MIP and LTI (PBRS) metrics provide a balance between short-term, mid-term, and longer-term performance objectives - -use of multiple metrics ensures performance on one metric is not “over-emphasized”
•
MIP’s metrics reflect a balanced, multi-faceted approach to performance assessment: (1) Corporate objectives (adjusted EPS), (2) US and Japan business segment objectives (new annualized premium; net earned premium), (3) Global Investments metrics (net investment income; credit loss/impairments), and (4) sustainability-related goals
•
PBRS program focuses on Adjusted Return on Shareholders’ Equity (AROE) EX-FX, RBC, and SMR. Relative TSR modifier to financial results provides a “market check” for alignment with shareholders
•
Business unit leaders are linked to overall Company performance via plan designs
|
||||
Goal Setting and Payout Curves
|
•
Rigorous goal-setting process conducted by 100% independent Compensation Committee, with final metrics, goals, and payouts approved by the Compensation Committee
•
Payouts for both MIP ($s) and PBRS (# of shares/units) programs are capped at 200% of target - - 200% of target maximum payout levels are within typical market practices
|
||||
60
|
AFLAC INCORPORATED | EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION |
Payment Timing & Adjustments
|
•
Payments for both MIP and LTI (PBRS) programs are approved following review of performance results by Compensation Committee
•
Adjustments to actual results are defined and include reasonable items, with consistent treatment from year to year
|
||||
Equity Incentives
|
•
Equity-based LTI grants provide alignment with multi-year performance horizon and long-term value creation
•
PBRS’s design includes multiple metrics, ensuring that performance is measured holistically versus placing emphasis on a single metric’s performance
•
Target grant levels are benchmarked regularly to assess competitiveness
•
Run rate and overhang are reviewed regularly to ensure appropriate management and usage of equity share pool
•
Stock incentive plans prohibit option repricing or buy-outs without stockholder approval
|
||||
Risk mitigation policies
|
•
The Company maintains the following policies:
— Meaningful stock ownership guidelines
— Clawback policy
— Anti-hedging policy
— Anti-pledging policy
— Caps on incentive plan payments (relative to target amounts) – described previously
|
||||
Individual Performance Assessment
|
•
Individual performance is assessed in certain limited circumstances to adjust MIP results; individual performance is also a factor when determining size of target LTI grants
•
Inappropriate behavior and unacceptable risk-taking are incorporated into an individual’s compensation evaluation process
|
||||
EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION |
2024 PROXY STATEMENT
|
61
|
Name and
Principal Position |
Year |
Salary
(1)
($) |
Bonus
($) |
Stock
Awards (2) ($) |
Option
Awards (2) ($) |
Non-equity
Incentive Plan Compensation ($) |
Change in
Pension Value and Nonqualified Deferred Compensation Earnings (3) ($) |
All Other
Compensation (4) ($) |
Total
($) |
Total
without Change in Pension Value* ($) |
|||||||||||||||||||||||||
Daniel P. Amos
Chairman and CEO |
2023 | 1,441,100 | — | 10,270,666 | — | 5,796,333 | 2,720,265 | 474,889 | 20,703,253 | 17,982,988 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
2022 | 1,441,100 | — | 9,495,081 | — | 4,548,167 | — | 291,943 | 15,776,291 | 15,776,291 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
2021 | 1,441,100 | — | 9,122,025 | — | 4,809,396 | — | 355,712 | 15,728,233 | 15,728,233 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Max K. Brodén
Executive Vice President, CFO |
2023 | 750,000 | — | 2,428,668 | — | 2,075,603 | — | 479,749 | 5,734,020 | 5,734,020 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
2022 | 655,000 | — | 1,724,741 | — | 1,303,206 | — | 356,238 | 4,039,185 | 4,039,185 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
2021 | 620,000 | — | 2,292,401 | — | 1,128,701 | — | 304,452 | 4,345,554 | 4,345,554 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Frederick J. Crawford
President and COO |
2023 | 997,500 | — | 3,078,084 | — | 3,153,222 | — | 967,690 | 8,196,496 | 8,196,496 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
2022 | 950,000 | — | 3,000,921 | — | 2,599,237 | — | 589,982 | 7,140,140 | 7,140,140 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
2021 | 908,333 | — | 2,149,596 | — | 2,649,889 | — | 558,729 | 6,266,547 | 6,266,547 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Bradley E. Dyslin
Executive Vice President, Global Chief Investment Officer; President, Aflac Global Investments |
2023 | 625,000 | — | 1,125,293 | — | 2,100,111 | 49,952 | 426,855 | 4,327,211 | 4,277,259 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
Audrey Boone Tillman
Executive Vice President, General Counsel |
2023 | 740,000 | — | 1,979,004 | — | 1,254,524 | 2,509,620 | 27,508 | 6,510,656 | 4,001,036 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
2022 | 740,000 | — | 2,025,875 | — | 1,045,629 | — | 20,435 | 3,831,939 | 3,831,939 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
2021 | 700,000 | — | 1,823,926 | — | 1,100,700 | — | 17,493 | 3,642,119 | 3,642,119 |
62
|
AFLAC INCORPORATED | EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION |
Name |
Perquisites and
Other Personal Benefits (1) ($) |
Company
Contributions to 401(k) Plan ($) |
Company
Contribution to Nonqualified Deferred Compensation ($) |
Total
($) |
||||||||||
Daniel P. Amos | 461,689 | 13,200 | — | 474,889 | ||||||||||
Max K. Brodén | 29,509 | 26,400 | 423,840 | 479,749 | ||||||||||
Frederick J. Crawford | 318,682 | 26,400 | 622,608 | 967,690 | ||||||||||
Bradley E. Dyslin
|
4,888 | 13,200 | 408,767 | 426,855 | ||||||||||
Audrey Boone Tillman | 14,308 | 13,200 | — | 27,508 |
Name |
Personal Use of
Company
Aircraft
(1)
($) |
Security
Services (2) ($) |
International
Assignment
Allowance
(3)
($) |
Tax Related
Reimbursements
(4)
($) |
Other
(5)
($) |
Total Perquisites
and Other
Personal
Benefits (6) ($) |
||||||||||||||
Daniel P. Amos | 205,733 | 249,621 | — | — | 6,335 | 461,689 | ||||||||||||||
Max K. Brodén | — | — | — | — | 29,509 | 29,509 | ||||||||||||||
Frederick J. Crawford | 18,840 | 420 | 212,612 | 62,879 | 23,931 | 318,682 | ||||||||||||||
Bradley E. Dyslin
|
— | — | — | — | 4,888 | 4,888 | ||||||||||||||
Audrey Boone Tillman | 5,275 | — | — | — | 9,033 | 14,308 |
EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION |
2024 PROXY STATEMENT
|
63
|
Estimated Possible Payouts
Under Non-Equity Incentive Plan Awards (1) |
Estimated Future Payouts
Under Equity Incentive Plan Awards (2) |
All Other
Stock Awards: Number of Shares of Stock or Units (#) |
Grant Date
Fair Value of Stock and Option Awards ($) |
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Name |
Grant
Date |
Threshold
($) |
Target
($) |
Maximum
($) |
Threshold
(#) |
Target
(#) |
Maximum
(#) |
|||||||||||||||||||||||||
Daniel P. Amos |
2/9/2023
|
— | — | — | 71,703 | 143,405 | 286,810 | — | 10,270,666 | |||||||||||||||||||||||
N/A | 1,801,375 | 3,602,750 | 7,205,500 | — | — | — | — | — | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Max K. Brodén |
2/9/2023
|
— | — | — | 13,465 | 26,929 | 53,858 | — | 1,928,655 | |||||||||||||||||||||||
2/9/2023
|
— | — | — | — | — | — | 7,181 | 500,013 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
N/A | 656,250 | 1,312,500 | 2,625,000 | — | — | — | — | — | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Frederick J. Crawford |
2/9/2023
|
— | — | — | 21,489 | 42,978 | 85,956 | — | 3,078,084 | |||||||||||||||||||||||
N/A | 997,500 | 1,995,000 | 3,990,000 | — | — | — | — | — | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Bradley E. Dyslin
|
2/9/2023
|
— | — | — | 7,856 | 15,712 | 31,424 | — | 1,125,293 | |||||||||||||||||||||||
N/A | 625,000 | 1,250,000 | 2,500,000 | — | — | — | — | — | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Audrey Boone Tillman |
2/9/2023
|
— | — | — | 13,816 | 27,632 | 55,264 | — | 1,979,004 | |||||||||||||||||||||||
N/A | 444,000 | 888,000 | 1,776,000 | — | — | — | — | — |
64
|
AFLAC INCORPORATED | EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION |
Option Awards | Stock Awards | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Equity Incentive Plan Awards: | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Option
Grant Date |
Number of Securities
Underlying Unexercised Options |
Option
Exercise Price ($) |
Option
Expiration Date |
Stock
Award Grant Date |
Number
of Shares or Units of Stock That Have Not Vested (#) |
Market
Value of Shares or Units of Stock That Have Not Vested (2) ($) |
Number of
Unearned Shares, Units or Other Rights That Have Not Vested (#) |
Market or
Payout Value of Unearned Shares, Units or Other Rights That Have Not Vested (2) ($) |
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Name |
Exercisable
(#) |
Unexercisable
(#) |
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Daniel P. Amos |
2/11/21
|
401,671 |
(3)
|
33,137,858 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
2/10/22
|
288,922 |
(4)
|
23,836,065 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
2/09/23
|
293,557 |
(5)
|
24,218,453 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Max K. Brodén | 6/26/17 | 4,668 | 38.755 | 6/26/27 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
2/11/21
|
56,907 |
(3)
|
4,694,828 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
2/10/22
|
52,481 | (4) | 4,329,683 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
2/09/23
|
55,125 |
(5)
|
4,547,813 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
4/29/21
|
19,712 |
(1)
|
1,626,240 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
2/09/23
|
7,350 |
(1)
|
606,375 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Frederick J. Crawford
|
2/11/21
|
94,654 |
(3)
|
7,808,955 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
2/10/22
|
91,314 |
(4)
|
7,533,405 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
2/9/23
|
87,978 |
(5)
|
7,258,185 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Bradley E. Dyslin
|
2/11/21
|
3,442 |
(1)
|
283,965 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
3/25/21
|
10,450 |
(1)
|
862,125 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
2/10/22
|
14,419 |
(6)
|
1,189,568 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
2/09/23
|
32,163 |
(5)
|
2,653,448 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Audrey Boone
Tillman |
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
2/11/14 | 13,194 | 31.205 | 2/11/24 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
8/12/14 | 3,086 | 29.665 | 8/12/24 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
2/10/15 | 24,744 | 30.725 | 2/10/25 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
2/09/16 | 19,314 | 28.965 | 2/09/26 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
2/11/21
|
80,314 |
(3)
|
6,625,905 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
2/10/22
|
61,645 |
(4)
|
5,085,713 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
2/09/23
|
56,564 |
(5)
|
4,666,530 |
EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION |
2024 PROXY STATEMENT
|
65
|
Stock Award
Grant Date |
Stock Award Vesting Schedule | ||||
02/11/21, 02/10/22 and 02/09/23
|
Cliff vesting on the third anniversary of the grant date based on the attainment of the cumulative three-year average target
performance goals for AROE, SMR, and RBC for three consecutive calendar years beginning with the year of grant. For the three-year period, stock will vest at 50% if the threshold of the three ratios is achieved, and 200% if the maximum is attained. Earned amounts can then be modified based on the Company’s TSR performance versus our peer group (maximum payout up to 200%). |
||||
02/11/21 |
For the RSU grant, vesting ratably on the first, second and third anniversaries of the grant date.
|
||||
03/25/21 and 04/29/21
|
Cliff vesting on the third anniversary of the grant date. | ||||
02/09/23 |
For the RSU grant, cliff vesting on the third anniversary of the grant date.
|
Name | Option Awards | Stock Awards | |||||||||||||||
Number of
Shares
Acquired
on Exercise (#) |
Value
Realized on Exercise ($) |
Number of
Shares
Acquired
on Vesting (#) |
Value
Realized on Vesting ($) |
||||||||||||||
Daniel P. Amos | 274,713 | 19,507,370 | |||||||||||||||
Max K. Brodén | 31,721 | 2,252,508 | |||||||||||||||
Frederick J. Crawford | 87,764 | 3,373,233 | 66,759 | 4,740,557 | |||||||||||||
Bradley E. Dyslin
|
6,453 | 454,427 | |||||||||||||||
Audrey Boone Tillman | 56,644 | 4,022,290 |
1% of average final
monthly compensation |
× |
years of credited
service up to 25 years |
+ |
0.5% of average final
monthly compensation |
× |
years of credited service
in excess of 25 years |
||||||||||||||
66
|
AFLAC INCORPORATED | EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION |
Name | Plan Name |
Number of Years
Credited Service (#) |
Present Value
of Accumulated Benefit* ($) |
Change from
Prior Year ($) |
Payments During
Last Fiscal Year ($) |
||||||||||||
Daniel P. Amos | Retirement Plan for Senior Officers | 50 | 47,873,711 | 2,474,253 | — | ||||||||||||
Aflac Incorporated Defined Benefit Pension Plan | 50 | 2,106,695 | 246,012 | — | |||||||||||||
Bradley E. Dyslin
|
Aflac Incorporated Defined Benefit Pension Plan | 12 | 287,170 | 49,952 | — | ||||||||||||
Audrey Boone Tillman | Supplemental Executive Retirement Plan | 28 | 10,614,845 | 2,452,488 | — | ||||||||||||
Aflac Incorporated Defined Benefit Pension Plan | 28 | 1,084,460 | 57,132 | — |
EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION |
2024 PROXY STATEMENT
|
67
|
Name |
Executive
Contributions in Last Fiscal Year ($) |
Registrant
Contributions in Last Fiscal Year ($) |
Aggregate
Earnings (Loss) in Last Fiscal Year (3) ($) |
Aggregate
Withdrawals/ Distributions (4) ($) |
Aggregate
Balance at Last Fiscal Year-End (5) ($) |
||||||||||||
Daniel P. Amos
(1)
|
— | 441,100 | 2,485,400 | — | 15,420,305 | ||||||||||||
Max K. Brodén
(2)
|
886,924 | 423,840 | 459,846 | — | 3,150,908 | ||||||||||||
Frederick J. Crawford
(2)
|
— | 622,608 | 185,996 | — | 3,796,177 | ||||||||||||
Bradley E. Dyslin
(2)
|
— | 408,767 | 771,921 | (185,298) | 4,752,644 | ||||||||||||
Audrey Boone Tillman | 44,400 | — | 443,358 | — | 2,529,880 |
68
|
AFLAC INCORPORATED | EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION |
EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION |
2024 PROXY STATEMENT
|
69
|
70
|
AFLAC INCORPORATED | EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION |
EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION |
2024 PROXY STATEMENT
|
71
|
Before Change in Control | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Name | Benefit |
Company
Termination without “Good Cause” or by Employee for “Good Reason” (1) ($) |
Company
Termination for “Good Cause” (2) ($) |
Voluntary
Termination without “Good Reason” and No Competition (3) ($) |
Voluntary
Termination with Competition (4) ($) |
Death
(5)
($) |
Disability
(6)
($) |
Change
in Control Termination without “Good Cause” or for “Good Reason” (7) ($) |
||||||||||||||||||
Daniel P.
Amos |
Salary | — | — | — | — | 4,323,300 | 2,161,650 | — | ||||||||||||||||||
Non-equity Incentive Award
(8)
|
— | — | — | — | 13,091,736 | 5,796,333 | — | |||||||||||||||||||
Severance | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | |||||||||||||||||||
Retirement
(9)
|
47,873,711 | 47,873,711 | 47,873,711 | — | 25,375,913 | 47,893,511 | 47,873,711 | |||||||||||||||||||
Health & Welfare Benefits
(10)
|
1,595,073 | 1,595,073 | 1,595,073 | — | 89,946 | 1,622,712 | 1,595,073 | |||||||||||||||||||
Equity Awards
(11)
|
81,192,313 | — | 56,973,885 | 56,973,885 | 81,192,313 | 81,192,313 | 81,192,313 | |||||||||||||||||||
Totals | 130,661,097 | 49,468,784 | 106,442,669 | 56,973,885 | 124,073,208 | 138,666,519 | 130,661,097 | |||||||||||||||||||
Max K. Brodén |
Salary
|
1,750,000 | — | — | — | 2,025,000 | 1,125,000 | — | ||||||||||||||||||
Non-equity Incentive Award
(8)
|
4,843,074 | — | — | — | 3,052,579 | 2,075,603 | — | |||||||||||||||||||
Severance | — | — | — | — | — | — | 8,476,809 | |||||||||||||||||||
Retirement
(9)
|
61,600 | — | — | — | 1,709,831 | 2,385,191 | 1,709,831 | |||||||||||||||||||
Health & Welfare Benefits
(10)
|
30,228 | — | — | — | — | 19,432 | 38,864 | |||||||||||||||||||
Equity Awards
(11)
|
15,804,918 | — | — | — | 15,804,918 | 15,804,918 | 15,804,918 | |||||||||||||||||||
Totals | 22,489,820 | — | — | — | 22,592,328 | 21,410,144 | 26,030,423 | |||||||||||||||||||
Frederick J.
Crawford |
Salary | 332,500 | — | — | — | 2,855,833 | 1,496,250 | — | ||||||||||||||||||
Non-equity Incentive Award
(8)
|
1,051,074 | — | — | — | 7,056,864 | 3,153,222 | — | |||||||||||||||||||
Severance | — | — | — | — | — | — | 12,452,166 | |||||||||||||||||||
Retirement
(9)
|
8,800 | — | — | — | 3,796,176 | 4,769,688 | 3,796,176 | |||||||||||||||||||
Health & Welfare Benefits
(10)
|
6,295 | — | — | — | — | 28,326 | 56,651 | |||||||||||||||||||
Equity Awards
(11)
|
22,600,469 | — | 22,600,469 | — | 22,600,469 | 22,600,469 | 22,600,469 | |||||||||||||||||||
Totals | 23,999,137 | — | 22,600,469 | — | 36,309,342 | 32,047,954 | 38,905,462 | |||||||||||||||||||
Bradley E. Dyslin
|
Salary | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | ||||||||||||||||||
Non-equity Incentive Award
|
— | — | — | — | — | — | — | |||||||||||||||||||
Severance | 2,500,000 | — | — | — | — | — | 4,375,000 | |||||||||||||||||||
Retirement
|
— | — | — | — | 408,767 | 408,767 | 408,767 | |||||||||||||||||||
Health & Welfare Benefits
(10)
|
35,488 | — | — | — | — | — | 70,977 | |||||||||||||||||||
Equity Awards
(11)
|
2,119,766 | — | — | — | 3,265,853 | 3,265,853 | 3,265,853 | |||||||||||||||||||
Totals | 4,655,254 | — | — | — | 3,674,620 | 3,674,620 | 8,120,597 | |||||||||||||||||||
Audrey Boone
Tillman |
Salary
|
1,808,889 | — | — | — | 2,180,000 | 1,110,000 | — | ||||||||||||||||||
Non-equity Incentive Award
(8)
|
3,062,413 | — | — | — | 2,859,979 | 1,254,524 | — | |||||||||||||||||||
Severance | — | — | — | — | — | — | 5,983,572 | |||||||||||||||||||
Retirement
(9)
|
32,267 | — | 10,614,845 | — | 4,829,627 | 10,634,645 | 10,614,845 | |||||||||||||||||||
Health & Welfare Benefits
(10)
|
57,352 | — | — | — | — | 35,193 | 70,387 | |||||||||||||||||||
Equity Awards
(11)
|
16,378,031 | — | 11,711,501 | 11,711,501 | 16,378,031 | 16,378,031 | 16,378,031 | |||||||||||||||||||
Totals | 21,338,952 | — | 22,326,346 | 11,711,501 | 26,247,637 | 29,412,393 | 33,046,835 |
72
|
AFLAC INCORPORATED | EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION |
EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION |
2024 PROXY STATEMENT
|
73
|
Based on this information, the ratio of the annual total compensation of our Chief Executive Officer to the median of the annual total compensation of all employees is 324 to 1.
|
||
74
|
AFLAC INCORPORATED | EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION |
Year |
Summary
Compensation Table
Total for PEO
(1)
|
Compensation
Actually Paid to
PEO
(2)(7)
|
Average Summary
Compensation Table
Total for Non-PEO
NEOs
(3)
|
Average
Compensation
Actually Paid to
Non-PEO
NEOs
(2)(7)
|
Value of Initial Fixed $100
Investment Based On: |
Net
Income*
(5)
|
Adjusted
Return on
Equity
(5)(6)
|
|||||||||||||||||||
Total Shareholder
Return
|
Peer Group Total
Shareholder
Return
(4)
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||
2023 |
$
|
$
|
$
|
$
|
$
|
$
|
$
|
|
% | |||||||||||||||||
2022 |
$
|
$
|
$
|
$
|
$
|
$
|
$
|
|
% | |||||||||||||||||
2021 |
$
|
$
|
$
|
$
|
$
|
$
|
$
|
|
% | |||||||||||||||||
2020 |
$
|
$
|
$
|
$
|
$
|
$
|
$
|
|
% |
Year | Executive(s) |
Summary
Compensation
Table Total
|
Subtract change
in actuarial
present value of
pension
|
Subtract grant
date fair value of
stock awards
granted during
the fiscal year
|
Add aggregate
value of service
costs and prior
service costs of
pension
benefits
|
Add year-end
value of stock
awards
granted
during the
fiscal year
|
Add change in
value of stock
awards
granted in
prior years
|
Add change in
value of
vested stock
awards
granted in
prior years
|
Compensation
Actually Paid
|
||||||||||||||||||||
2023 | CEO |
$
|
($
|
($
|
$
|
$
|
$
|
($
|
$
|
||||||||||||||||||||
Other NEOs |
$
|
($
|
($
|
$
|
$
|
$
|
($
|
$
|
|||||||||||||||||||||
2022 | CEO |
$
|
$
|
($
|
$
|
$
|
$
|
$
|
$
|
||||||||||||||||||||
Other NEOs |
$
|
$
|
($
|
$
|
$
|
$
|
$
|
$
|
|||||||||||||||||||||
2021 | CEO |
$
|
$
|
($
|
$
|
$
|
$
|
$
|
$
|
||||||||||||||||||||
Other NEOs |
$
|
($
|
($
|
$
|
$
|
$
|
$
|
$
|
|||||||||||||||||||||
2020 | CEO |
$
|
($
|
($
|
$
|
$
|
$
|
($
|
$
|
||||||||||||||||||||
Other NEOs |
$
|
($
|
($
|
$
|
$
|
($
|
($
|
$
|
EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION |
2024 PROXY STATEMENT
|
75
|
CAP vs. Company and Peer Group TSR
|
CAP vs. Company Net Income |
CAP vs. Adjusted Return on Equity |
Seven Most Important Company Performance Measures for Determining NEO Compensation:
|
||||||||
|
|
|
||||||
|
|
|
||||||
|
||||||||
76
|
AFLAC INCORPORATED | EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION |
Plan Category |
Number of Securities
to be Issued Upon Exercise of Outstanding Options, Warrants and Rights (a) |
Weighted-Average
Exercise Price of Outstanding Options, Warrants and Rights (b) |
Number of Securities
Remaining Available for Future Issuance Under Equity Compensation Plans Excluding Securities Reflected in Column(a) (c) |
|||||||||||
Equity Compensation Plans Approved by Shareholders | 1,050,774 | $32.90 | 34,752,112 | * | ||||||||||
Equity Compensation Plans Not Approved by Shareholders | — | — | — | |||||||||||
Total | 1,050,774 | $32.90 | 34,752,112 |
2024 PROXY STATEMENT
|
77
|
![]() |
![]() |
|||||||||||||||||||
Ratification of Auditors
In February 2024, the Audit and Risk Committee voted to appoint KPMG LLP, an independent registered public accounting firm, to perform the annual audit of the Company’s consolidated financial statements for fiscal year 2024, subject to ratification by the shareholders. Although ratification of the Audit and Risk Committee’s appointment of KPMG LLP by the shareholders is not required, the Board values the opinions of our shareholders and believes that shareholder ratification of the appointment is a good corporate governance practice. In the event of a negative vote on this proposal, the Audit and Risk Committee will reconsider its selection.
|
||||||||||||||||||||
The Board of Directors and the Audit and Risk Committee recommend a vote FOR the ratification of the selection of KPMG LLP.
|
||||||||||||||||||||
2023
($) |
2022
($) |
|||||||
Audit fees — Audit of the Company’s consolidated financial statements for the years ended December 31
(1)
|
10,255,467 | 10,835,331 | ||||||
Audit-related fees
(2)
|
942,500 | 889,500 | ||||||
Tax fees
(3)
|
100,000 | 160,000 | ||||||
All Other fees
(4)
|
— | — | ||||||
Total fees:
|
11,297,967 | 11,884,831 |
78
|
AFLAC INCORPORATED | AUDIT MATTERS |
AUDIT MATTERS |
2024 PROXY STATEMENT
|
79
|
80
|
AFLAC INCORPORATED | AUDIT MATTERS |
2024 PROXY STATEMENT
|
81
|
Name and Address of Beneficial Owner |
Title of Class
Common Stock |
Amount of
Beneficial Ownership Shares |
Amount of
Beneficial Ownership Votes |
Percent of
Class (2) |
Percent of
Available Votes (3) |
||||||||||||
The Vanguard Group
(1)
100 Vanguard Boulevard Malvern, PA 19355 |
1 Vote Per Share | 52,438,841 | 52,438,841 |
9.1
|
3.8
|
||||||||||||
J&A Alliance Holdings Corporation,
as trustee of J&A Alliance Trust
(4)
1007 Fukoku Seimei Building 2-2-2 Uchisaiwai-cho, Chiyoda-ku Tokyo 100-0011, Japan |
1 Vote Per Share | 52,300,000 | 523,000,000 |
9.1
|
20.0
|
||||||||||||
BlackRock, Inc.
(1)
50 Hudson Yards New York, NY 10001 |
1 Vote Per Share | 42,164,887 | 42,164,887 | 7.3 | 3.0 |
Name |
Shares of Common Stock
Beneficially Owned (1) |
Percent of
Outstanding Shares |
Voting Rights
(2)
|
Percent of
Available Votes |
||||||||||
Daniel P. Amos | 3,076,179 | .5 | 17,749,509 | 1.3 | ||||||||||
W. Paul Bowers | 61,817 | * | 335,616 | * | ||||||||||
Arthur R. Collins | 5,592 | * | 5,592 | * | ||||||||||
Miwako Hosoda | 5,014 | * | 5,014 | * | ||||||||||
Thomas J. Kenny | 22,778 | * | 136,546 | * | ||||||||||
Georgette D. Kiser | 15,377 | * | 15,377 | * | ||||||||||
Karole F. Lloyd | 44,896 | * | 44,896 | * | ||||||||||
Nobuchika Mori | 11,106 | * | 11,106 | * | ||||||||||
Joseph L. Moskowitz | 60,164 | * | 260,891 | * | ||||||||||
Barbara K. Rimer, DrPH | 73,965 | * | 502,194 |
*
|
||||||||||
Katherine T. Rohrer | 19,240 | * | 19,240 | * |
82
|
AFLAC INCORPORATED | STOCK OWNERSHIP |
Name |
Shares of Common Stock
Beneficially Owned (1) |
Percent of
Outstanding Shares |
Voting Rights
(2)
|
Percent of
Available Votes |
||||||||||
Max K. Brodén | 171,017 | * | 213,029 | * | ||||||||||
Frederick J. Crawford | 189,645 | * | 189,645 | * | ||||||||||
Bradley E. Dyslin
|
39,761 | * | 39,761 | * | ||||||||||
Audrey Boone Tillman | 371,752 | .1 | 768,348 | .1 | ||||||||||
All Directors, nominees, and executive officers as a group (
22
individuals)
|
4,648,120 |
.8
|
21,087,701 |
1.5
|
2024 PROXY STATEMENT
|
83
|
84
|
AFLAC INCORPORATED | SOLICITATION AND REVOCATION OF PROXY |
Number of shares | Votes per share | Yields this many votes | |||||||||||||||
484,220,652
|
@ | 1 | = |
484,220,652
|
|||||||||||||
91,187,460
|
@ | 10 | = |
911,874,600
|
|||||||||||||
575,408,110
|
Total |
1,396,095,252
|
SOLICITATION AND REVOCATION OF PROXY |
2024 PROXY STATEMENT
|
85
|
Proposal | Vote required to Pass | Effect of abstentions and broker non-votes | ||||||
Uncontested election of directors
|
Votes cast for a nominee exceed votes cast against that nominee | Abstentions and broker non-votes are not counted as votes cast and have no effect | ||||||
Advisory say-on-pay | Majority of the votes cast | Abstentions and broker non-votes are not counted as votes cast and have no effect | ||||||
Ratification of the Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm
|
Majority of the votes cast |
Abstentions are not counted as votes cast and have no effect. Brokers and other nominees may vote without instructions with respect to this proposal, so we do not expect broker non-votes.
|
86
|
AFLAC INCORPORATED |
OTHER MATTERS |
2024 PROXY STATEMENT
|
87
|
•
expect
|
•
anticipate
|
•
believe
|
•
goal
|
•
objective
|
•
aims
|
||||||||||||
•
may
|
•
should
|
•
estimate
|
•
intends
|
•
projects
|
•
plans to
|
||||||||||||
•
will
|
•
assumes
|
•
potential
|
•
target
|
•
outlook
|
88
|
AFLAC INCORPORATED |
APPENDIX A - DEFINITION OF NON-U.S. GAAP MEASURES AND RECONCILIATIONS TO CORRESPONDING U.S. GAAP MEASURES |
2024 PROXY STATEMENT
|
89
|
90
|
AFLAC INCORPORATED | APPENDIX A - DEFINITION OF NON-U.S. GAAP MEASURES AND RECONCILIATIONS TO CORRESPONDING U.S. GAAP MEASURES |
RECONCILIATION OF U.S. GAAP NET EARNINGS TO ADJUSTED EARNINGS
(Excluding Foreign Currency)
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
In Millions | Per Diluted Share | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Twelve Months Ended December 31, | 2023 | 2022 | 2023 | 2022 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Net earnings | $ | 4,659 | $ | 4,418 | $ | 7.78 | $ | 6.93 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Items impacting net earnings: | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Adjusted net investment (gains) losses
(1)
|
(914) | (447) | (1.53) | (.70) | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Other and non-recurring (income) loss | (39) | (1) | (.07) | .00 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Income tax (benefit) expense on items excluded from adjusted earnings
(2)
|
26 | (357) | .04 | (.56) | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Adjusted earnings | 3,733 | 3,614 | 6.23 | 5.67 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Current period foreign currency impact
(3)
|
113 | N/A | .19 | N/A | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Adjusted earnings excluding current period foreign currency impact | $ | 3,847 | $ | 3,614 | $ | 6.43 | $ | 5.67 |
RECONCILIATION OF U.S. GAAP NET INVESTMENT (GAINS) LOSSES TO ADJUSTED NET INVESTMENT (GAINS) LOSSES
|
|||||||||||||||||
In Millions | |||||||||||||||||
Twelve Months Ended December 31, | 2023 | 2022 | |||||||||||||||
Net investment (gains) losses | $ | (590) | $ | (363) | |||||||||||||
Items impacting net investment (gains) losses: | |||||||||||||||||
Amortized hedge costs | (157) | (112) | |||||||||||||||
Amortized hedge income | 121 | 68 | |||||||||||||||
Net interest cash flows from derivatives associated with certain investment strategies | (328) | (90) | |||||||||||||||
Interest rate component of the change in fair value of foreign currency swaps on notes payable | 41 | 50 | |||||||||||||||
Adjusted net investment (gains) losses | $ | (914) | $ | (447) |
RECONCILIATION OF U.S. GAAP NET INVESTMENT INCOME TO ADJUSTED NET INVESTMENT INCOME
|
|||||||||||||||||
In Millions | |||||||||||||||||
Twelve Months Ended December 31, | 2023 | 2022 | |||||||||||||||
Net investment income | $ | 3,811 | $ | 3,656 | |||||||||||||
Items impacting net investment income: | |||||||||||||||||
Amortized hedge costs | (157) | (112) | |||||||||||||||
Amortized hedge income | 121 | 68 | |||||||||||||||
Net interest cash flows from derivatives associated with certain investment strategies | (328) | (90) | |||||||||||||||
Adjusted net investment income | $ | 3,447 | $ | 3,522 |
APPENDIX A - DEFINITION OF NON-U.S. GAAP MEASURES AND RECONCILIATIONS TO CORRESPONDING U.S. GAAP MEASURES |
2024 PROXY STATEMENT
|
91
|
RECONCILIATION OF U.S. GAAP RETURN ON EQUITY (ROE) TO ADJUSTED ROE
(Excluding Impact of Foreign Currency)
|
||||||||||||||
Twelve Months Ended December 31, | 2023 | 2022 | ||||||||||||
U.S. GAAP ROE - Net earnings
(1)
|
22.1 | % | 23.8 | % | ||||||||||
Impact of excluding unrealized foreign currency translation gains (losses) | (3.1) | % | (2.5) | % | ||||||||||
Impact of excluding unrealized gains (losses) on securities and derivatives | .2 | % | 4.1 | % | ||||||||||
Impact of excluding effect of changes in discount rate assumptions
|
(1.9) | % | (8.2) | % | ||||||||||
Impact of excluding pension liability adjustment | — | % | (.1) | % | ||||||||||
Impact of excluding AOCI | (4.9) | % | (6.8) | % | ||||||||||
U.S. GAAP ROE - less AOCI | 17.2 | % | 17.0 | % | ||||||||||
Differences between adjusted earnings and net earnings
(2)
|
(3.4) | % | (3.1) | % | ||||||||||
Adjusted ROE - reported | 13.8 | % | 13.9 | % | ||||||||||
Less: Impact of foreign currency
(3)
|
(.4) | % | N/A | |||||||||||
Adjusted ROE, excluding impact of foreign currency | 14.2 | % | 13.9 | % |
RECONCILIATION OF U.S. GAAP TOTAL REVENUES TO ADJUSTED REVENUES
(Excluding Current Period Foreign Currency Impact)
|
|||||||||||||||||
In Millions | |||||||||||||||||
Twelve Months Ended December 31, | 2023 | 2022 | |||||||||||||||
Total Revenues - U.S. GAAP | $ | 18,701 | $ | 19,140 | |||||||||||||
Add: Total U.S. GAAP Realized Losses | (590) | (363) | |||||||||||||||
Add: Realized capital gain/loss items included in Adjusted Revenue | |||||||||||||||||
Amortized hedge costs | (157) | (112) | |||||||||||||||
Amortized hedge income | 121 | 68 | |||||||||||||||
Interest cash flows on derivatives associated with investment strategies | (328) | (90) | |||||||||||||||
Differences between adjusted revenues and total revenues | |||||||||||||||||
Adjusted revenues | $ | 17,747 | $ | 18,643 | |||||||||||||
Less: Impact of foreign currency
(1)
|
(729) | N/A | |||||||||||||||
Adjusted revenues, excluding foreign currency impact | $ | 18,476 | $ | 18,643 |
RECONCILIATION OF U.S. GAAP BOOK VALUE TO ADJUSTED BOOK VALUE
|
|||||||||||||||||
In Millions | |||||||||||||||||
December 31, | 2023 | 2022 | |||||||||||||||
U.S. GAAP book value | $ | 21,985 | $ | 20,140 | |||||||||||||
Less: | |||||||||||||||||
Unrealized foreign currency translation gains (losses) | (4,069) | (3,564) | |||||||||||||||
Unrealized gains (losses) on securities and derivatives | 1,117 | (729) | |||||||||||||||
Effect of changes in discount rate assumptions
|
(2,560) | (2,100) | |||||||||||||||
Pension liability adjustment | (8) | (36) | |||||||||||||||
Total AOCI
|
(5,520) | (6,429) | |||||||||||||||
Adjusted book value | $ | 27,505 | $ | 26,569 |
92
|
AFLAC INCORPORATED |
|
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||||||||
INTERNET
Visit www.proxyvote.com. You will need the 16-digit control number that appears on your proxy card or notice. |
TELEPHONE
If your shares are held in the name of a broker, bank, or other nominee, follow the telephone voting instructions, if any, provided on your proxy card. If your shares are registered in your name, call 1-800-690-6903 and follow the telephone voting instructions. You will need the 16-digit control number that appears on your proxy card. |
MAIL
If you received a full package by mail, complete and sign the proxy card and return it in the enclosed postage pre-paid envelope.
|
TABLET OR SMARTPHONE
Scan the QR code that appears on your proxy card or notice using your mobile device. |
||||||||
The meeting webcast will begin promptly at 10 a.m., Eastern Time, on Monday, May 6, 2024. We encourage you to access the meeting prior to the start time, as check-in will begin at 9:45 a.m. If you experience technical difficulties during the check-in process or during the meeting, please call the technical support number that will be posted on the virtual Annual Meeting log-in page for assistance.
|
||
No information found
* THE VALUE IS THE MARKET VALUE AS OF THE LAST DAY OF THE QUARTER FOR WHICH THE 13F WAS FILED.
FUND | NUMBER OF SHARES | VALUE ($) | PUT OR CALL |
---|
DIRECTORS | AGE | BIO | OTHER DIRECTOR MEMBERSHIPS |
---|
No information found
No Customers Found
Suppliers
Supplier name | Ticker |
---|---|
Johnson & Johnson | JNJ |
Abbott Laboratories | ABT |
Merck & Co., Inc. | MRK |
Eli Lilly and Company | LLY |
Pfizer Inc. | PFE |
Amgen Inc. | AMGN |
Bristol-Myers Squibb Company | BMY |
AbbVie Inc. | ABBV |
Price
Yield
Owner | Position | Direct Shares | Indirect Shares |
---|