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| ☐ | Preliminary Proxy Statement. | |||||||
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| ☐ | Confidential, for Use of the Commission Only (as permitted by Rule 14a-6(e)(2)). | |||||||
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Definitive Proxy Statement. | |||||||
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| ☐ | Definitive Additional Materials. | |||||||
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| ☐ | Soliciting Material Pursuant to §240.14a-12. | |||||||
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AMERICAN TOWER CORPORATION
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| ☐ | Fee computed on table below per Exchange Act Rules 14a-6(i)(1) and 0-11. | |||||||
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Title of each class of securities to which transaction applies:
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Aggregate number of securities to which transaction applies:
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Per unit price or other underlying value of transaction computed pursuant to Exchange Act Rule 0-11 (set forth the amount on which the filing fee is calculated and state how it was determined):
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Proposed maximum aggregate value of transaction:
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| ☐ | Check box if any part of the fee is offset as provided by Exchange Act Rule 0-11(a)(2) and identify the filing for which the offsetting fee was paid previously. Identify the previous filing by registration statement number, or the Form or Schedule and the date of its filing. | |||||||
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Amount Previously Paid:
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Form, Schedule or Registration Statement No.:
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Filing Party:
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Date Filed:
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Date:
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Time:
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Live Audio Webcast at: |
Record Date:
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| Wednesday, May 26, 2021 | 11:00 a.m. Eastern Time | www.virtualshareholdermeeting.com/AMT2021 | March 29, 2021 | ||||||||||||||
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At the Annual Meeting you will be asked to:
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| Proposal 1 |
Elect twelve Directors for the ensuing year or until their successors are elected and qualified;
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| Proposal 2 |
Ratify the selection of Deloitte & Touche LLP as our independent registered public accounting firm for 2021;
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| Proposal 3 | Approve, on an advisory basis, our executive compensation; | ||||||||||||||||
| Proposal 4 |
Consider a stockholder proposal regarding the ownership threshold required to call a special meeting;
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| Proposal 5 |
Consider a stockholder proposal regarding the creation of a human rights oversight committee of the Board; and
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Transact such other business as may properly come before the meeting or any adjournments or postponements thereof.
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| Online | By Telephone | By Mail | At the Virtual Meeting | ||||||||||||||||||||
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Live Audio Webcast
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•
You will be able attend the Annual Meeting this year online through live audio webcast at
www.virtualshareholdermeeting.com/AMT2021
. You may log in with your 16-digit control number, included on your notice of internet availability of the proxy materials, on your proxy card, or on the instructions that accompanied your proxy materials (if applicable). For more information, please see "How do I attend the Annual Meeting?" in the "Questions & Answers" section beginning on page 82 of this Proxy Statement.
•
The Annual Meeting will begin at approximately 11:00 a.m. Eastern Time, with registration beginning at 10:30 a.m., on Wednesday, May 26, 2021.
•
You will be able to vote and submit live questions during the Annual Meeting at: w
ww.virtualshareholdermeeting.com/AMT2021
.
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| Key Corporate Governance Best Practices | 10 | ||||
| Stockholder Outreach and Rights | 11 | ||||
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Executive Sessions
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| Human Capital Management | |||||
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Compensation Committee Report
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PROPOSAL 4 -
STOCKHOLDER PROPOSAL
REGARDING THE OWNERSHIP THRESHOLD REQUIRED TO
CALL A SPECIAL MEETING
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PROPOSAL
1
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Election of Directors
The Board of Directors unanimously recommends that you vote
FOR
the election of each of the 12 nominee Directors. (see page 66)
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PROPOSAL
2
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Ratification of Independent Accountant
The Board of Directors unanimously recommends that you vote
FOR
this proposal. (see page 74)
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PROPOSAL
3
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Advisory Vote on Executive Compensation
The Board of Directors unanimously recommends that you vote
FOR
this proposal. (see page 75)
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PROPOSAL
4
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Stockholder Proposal Regarding the Ownership Threshold Required to Call a Special Meeting
The Board of Directors unanimously recommends that you vote
AGAINST
this proposal. (see page 77)
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PROPOSAL
5
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Stockholder Proposal Regarding the Creation of a Human Rights Oversight Committee of the Board
The Board of Directors unanimously recommends that you vote
AGAINST
this proposal. (see page 80)
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•
Grew total property revenue
(2)
by approximately 6.5% to $7.95 billion and grew Adjusted EBITDA
(2)
by approximately 8.7% to
$5.16 billion;
•
Achieved Total Tenant Billings Growth of 9.7%;
•
Declared an aggregate of over $2 billion in cash dividends to common stockholders;
•
More than $8 billion of capital deployed in 2020, with the majority of spending on growth-oriented, discretionary investments;
|
•
Consolidated AFFO per Share
(3)
for the full year was $8.49 and ROIC
(3)
as of the end of the year was 10.4%;
•
Maintained our investment grade rating;
•
Repurchased 0.3 million shares of Common Stock for a total of $56 million;
•
Raised nearly $9.9 billion in the debt capital markets, including through new unsecured senior notes issuances and term loans; and
•
Acquired approximately 3,000 communications sites as part of the acquisition of InSite Wireless Group, LLC.
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| NEW SITE BUILDS | TOTAL PROPERTY REVENUE INCREASED | ADJUSTED EBITDA INCREASED | CONSOLIDATED AFFO INCREASED | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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~5,900
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6.5%
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8.7%
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7.6%
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|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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New Sites Added
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to $7.95 billion | to $5.16 billion | to $3.79 billion | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Ethics |
•
Conduct our
Excellence Through Ethics
training for new hires and training for all employees regarding our Code of Ethics and Business Conduct Policy (Code of Conduct) and the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act.
•
Maintain a zero tolerance policy for bribery and corruption.
•
Require vendors to comply with our global Vendor Code of Conduct, which addresses protection of human rights, payment of fair wages, prohibition of forced labor, child labor and human trafficking and compliance with non-discrimination, anti-harassment and health and safety regulations.
•
Provide multiple channels to employees and other stakeholders to report violations, including to our Ethics Committee, local human resources and legal departments, and through a confidential third-party hotline.
•
Track all reported incidents of misconduct and manage resolutions; substantive matters are reported to the Board of Directors (Board) through the Audit Committee.
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| People |
•
Listen to employee feedback through
Ask
Our CEO
communications, focus groups, town hall meetings, team meetings and biennial companywide surveys.
•
Provide extensive programs for professional development and performance management to support employees in navigating their career paths.
•
Promote and cultivate diversity, equity and inclusion through CEO-led discussions with employees, including through launching the CEO Advisory Council and implementing robust conscious inclusiveness training.
•
Implement leading safety standards for the wireless industry, provide extensive safety training and certification and verify that vendors working on our communications sites meet the same standards.
•
Named one of America's Best Employers for Diversity by Forbes in 2019 and 2020.
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| Environment |
•
Minimize the telecommunications industry's impact on the environment and maximize efficient use of land, water, energy and other resources through our shared infrastructure model.
•
Commit to clear quantitative goals for reducing fossil fuel emissions consistent with the Paris Agreement goals, including through the Company's investment of over $100 million in energy-efficient technologies at the site level.
•
Include targeted reduction goals relating to fuel usage and generator run time in emerging markets in the CEO's short-term incentive plan.
•
Invest in transition to LED lighting to reduce lighting-related energy consumption, while also actively pursuing solar energy generation, including use of lithium-ion batteries to support and enhance solar photovoltaics deployments.
•
Continue to minimize the impact of and preserve the environment around communications sites to protect ecosystems and wildlife, including migratory birds and endangered and threatened species.
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| Society |
•
Enable meaningful change in communities across the globe through the American Tower Foundation, including expanded access to education and technology, support for youth services, homeless shelters and hunger relief efforts.
•
Engage the American Tower Foundation to match employees’ charitable donations.
•
Support communication and relief efforts during natural disasters and catastrophic events.
•
Promote digital literacy and employment opportunities for underserved communities in India, Nigeria, Ghana, Uganda, Colombia and Mexico through our Digital Communities program.
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| Performance |
•
Consistently deliver strong financial performance and growth guided by our
Stand and Deliver
strategic plan.
•
Target attractive long-term total stockholder returns through the combination of strong organic growth, accretive new build programs and M&A transactions, complemented by dividends.
•
Provide sustainable growth to our stockholders across three distinct platform expansion workstreams: advanced tenant services, connectivity, and energy and the environment.
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PROPOSAL
1
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Election of Directors
The Board of Directors unanimously recommends that you vote
FOR
the election of each nominee.
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Name and Title
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Age
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Director Since
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Independent
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Committee Memberships
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Other Public Company Boards
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Audit
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Compensation
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Nominating
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THOMAS A. BARTLETT†
President & CEO,
American Tower Corporation
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62 | 2020 | Equinix, Inc. | ||||||||||||||||||||||
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RAYMOND P. DOLAN
Chairman and CEO,
Cohere Technologies, Inc.
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63 | 2003 |
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None | ||||||||||||||||||||
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KENNETH R. FRANK
CEO,
Turning Technologies
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53 | 2021 |
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None | ||||||||||||||||||||
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ROBERT D. HORMATS
Managing Director,
Tiedemann Advisors
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78 | 2015 |
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None | ||||||||||||||||||||
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GUSTAVO LARA CANTU
Former CEO, Monsanto Company
(Latin America North Division)
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71 | 2004 |
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None | ||||||||||||||||||||
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GRACE D. LIEBLEIN
Former VP, Global Quality, General Motors
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60 | 2017 |
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Southwest Airlines Co.; Honeywell International Inc. | ||||||||||||||||||||
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CRAIG MACNAB
Former CEO and Chairman,
National Retail Properties, Inc.
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65 | 2014 |
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VICI Properties, Inc. | ||||||||||||||||||||
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JOANN A. REED
Healthcare consultant and
former SVP, Finance and CFO,
Medco Health Solutions, Inc.
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65 | 2007 |
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Mallinckrodt plc;
Waters Corporation |
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PAMELA D.A. REEVE*
Former President and CEO,
Lightbridge, Inc.
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71 | 2002 |
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Frontier Communications Corporation | ||||||||||||||||||||
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DAVID E. SHARBUTT
Former CEO and Chairman,
Alamosa Holdings, Inc.
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71 | 2006 |
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None | ||||||||||||||||||||
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BRUCE L. TANNER
Former EVP and CFO, Lockheed Martin Corporation
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62 | 2019 |
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Truist Financial Corporation | ||||||||||||||||||||
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SAMME L. THOMPSON
President, Telit Associates, Inc.
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75 | 2005 |
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None | ||||||||||||||||||||
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†
Sole Management Director Nominee
*
Chairperson of the Board
|
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Member |
|
Chair |
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Audit Committee Financial Expert | ||||||||||||||
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| 92% | 50% | 33% | ||||||||||||
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11 of our 12 Director nominees are
independent
|
6 of our Director nominees are gender or ethnically
diverse
(3 women; 3 ethnic
minorities)
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4 Director nominees have a
tenure
of 5 years or less
|
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12/12
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12/12
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9/12
|
||||||||||||||||||
| Prior Experience in a Leadership/Executive Role | Human Capital Experience | International Experience | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
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12/12
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7/12
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10/12
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| Thought Leadership and/or Public Policy Experience | Wireless Industry and/or REIT Experience | Prior Board and/or Governance Experience | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
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12/12
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12/12
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12/12
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|
Finance/Capital
Allocation Experience |
Operational and Management Experience | Risk Management Experience | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
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|
12/12
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Financial Expertise | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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PROPOSAL
2
|
Ratification of Independent Accountant
The Board of Directors unanimously recommends that you vote
FOR
this proposal.
|
|||||||||||||
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PROPOSAL
3
|
Advisory Vote on Executive Compensation
The Board of Directors unanimously recommends that you vote
FOR
this proposal.
|
|||||||||||||
| WE REWARD BASED ON | KEY FEATURES | ||||
|
•
Company annual and three-year performance relative to pre-established financial goals;
•
Company annual financial performance relative to that of competitor and peer group companies;
•
Successful completion of key near-term goals and strategic objectives, while positioning the Company to generate attractive long-term return for stockholders; and
•
Other relevant considerations, such as retention of executives with above-average performance and proven leadership ability.
|
•
Equity awards weighted toward long-term performance-based metrics;
•
Reasonable retirement and welfare benefits, and no pension arrangements;
•
Claw back provisions;
•
Stock ownership guidelines;
•
Anti-insider trading policy, including prohibition on hedging and pledging;
•
Double-trigger equity vesting and no tax gross-ups in the event of a change of control;
•
Use of an independent compensation consultant; and
•
Regular risk assessment of compensation programs.
|
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| OVERVIEW | ||||||||||||||
|
ANNUAL BASE SALARY
|
||||||||||||||
| American Tower provides a competitive level of compensation to its executive officers to attract and retain highly-qualified executive talent and reward sustained performance over time. The base salary is determined on an annual basis. | ||||||||||||||
| ANNUAL PERFORMANCE INCENTIVE PROGRAM | ||||||||||||||
| American Tower provides at-risk, variable cash pay opportunity for performance over one year to motivate its executive officers to achieve or exceed annual goals within appropriate risk parameters. | ||||||||||||||
| Target annual performance incentive award for the CEO: | Target annual performance incentive awards for the other NEOs: | |||||||||||||
|
tied to achievement of the pre-established
Company
financial goals
|
|
tied to achievement of the pre-established
Company
financial goals
|
|||||||||||
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tied to achievement of pre-established
individual
performance goals
|
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| LONG-TERM INCENTIVE (LTI) PLAN | ||||||||||||||
| American Tower provides long-term, equity-based pay opportunity for sustained operating performance to focus its executive officers on the creation of long-term stockholder value. | ||||||||||||||
| Target grant award values for the CEO: | Target grant award values for the other NEOs: | |||||||||||||
|
allocated to performance-based restricted stock units (PSUs) |
|
allocated to PSUs | |||||||||||
|
allocated to time-based restricted stock units (RSUs) |
|
allocated to RSUs | |||||||||||
|
The number of PSUs earned is based on achievement of pre-established performance goals for a three-year performance period:
70%
based on cumulative Consolidated AFFO per Share
(1)
30%
based on average ROIC
(1)
The actual payout is based on performance levels against these goals:
|
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|
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| Each RSU grant vests 25% annually over four years, commencing one year from the date of grant. See “Compensation Discussion and Analysis” beginning on page 32. | ||||||||||||||
| CEO Target Compensation |
|
|||||||
| Average of Other NEOs Target Compensation |
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PROPOSAL
4
|
Stockholder Proposal Regarding the Ownership Threshold Required to Call a Special Meeting
The Board of Directors unanimously recommends that you vote
AGAINST
this proposal.
|
|||||||||||||
|
PROPOSAL
5
|
Stockholder Proposal Regarding the Creation of a Human Rights Oversight Committee of the Board
The Board of Directors unanimously recommends that you vote
AGAINST
this proposal.
|
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■
Annual Election of All Directors
■
All Directors Except One Management Director are Independent
■
Independent Chairperson
■
Only Independent Directors Serve on Board’s Standing Committees
■
Majority Voting for Directors
■
Independent Directors Meet Without Management Present
■
Periodic Review of Board Composition and Succession Planning
■
One Vote per Share of Common Stock
■
Regular Stockholder Engagement
■
Proxy Access (3%, 3 years, 25% of Board)
■
Code of Conduct
■
Vendor Code of Conduct
■
Corporate Governance Guidelines
■
Global Human Rights Statement
■
Disclosure Committee for Financial Reporting
■
Stock Ownership Requirements for Directors and Executives
|
■
Stockholder Ability to Call Special Meetings (25% Ownership Threshold)
■
Stockholders' Right to Act by Written Consent
■
Anti-Insider Trading Policy, including Anti-Hedging and Anti-Pledging Provisions
■
Claw Back Provisions
■
Double-Trigger Equity Vesting and No Tax Gross-Ups in a Change of Control
■
Annual Enterprise Risk Assessment Review
■
Approval Policy for Related Party Transactions
■
Independent Compensation Consultant
■
Annual Review of CEO Performance, Overseen by our Independent Chairperson
■
Onboarding Program for New Directors
■
Continuing Education Programs for Directors
■
No Stockholder Rights Plans
■
Annual Advisory Vote on Executive Compensation
■
No Supermajority Voting Provisions
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We made presentations at financial and industry conferences.
|
We met with financial and governance analysts and investment firms.
|
We held meetings with institutional stockholders.
|
We responded to inquiries from our stockholders.
|
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| Our By-Laws permit a group of up to 20 stockholders who have owned at least three percent (3%) of American Tower stock continuously for at least three (3) years the ability to submit Director nominees—up to twenty-five percent (25%) of the Board—for inclusion in our proxy statement if the stockholder(s) and the nominee(s) satisfy the requirements specified in our By-Laws. | ||||||||||||||
| PROXY ACCESS | ||||||||||||||
|
Holders of at least
3%
of AMT stock
held by up to 20 stockholders
|
Holding the stock
continuously for at least
3
years
|
Can nominate up to
25%
of the Board for election at an
annual meeting of stockholders
|
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|
1
|
BOARD COMPOSITION REVIEW
|
On a quarterly basis, the Nominating Committee reviews the size and composition of the Board using a rigorous matrix of identified skills, experience and other criteria relevant to a global, publicly traded company in the mobile telecommunications infrastructure industry. | |||||||||
|
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|
2
|
ASSESSMENT OF DIRECTOR CANDIDATES’ SKILLS AND QUALIFICATIONS
|
As described in our Corporate Governance Guidelines, the Nominating Committee assesses Director candidates based on specific criteria, as outlined under “Director Skills and Qualifications Criteria” on page 15. Although the Nominating Committee does not assign specific numeric weights to these skills in its assessments, any Director candidate is expected to possess substantive knowledge or experience in several of the areas specified in the criteria. | |||||||||
|
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|
3
|
EVALUATION OF INDEPENDENT CONSULTANT’S FEEDBACK
|
Our Board believes it is important to review its effectiveness and that of its standing committees on an annual basis and, accordingly, engages with an outside independent consultant to conduct that evaluation and provide critical feedback. The feedback generated from this process assists the Board, and particularly the Nominating Committee, in determining the composition and skill set required for our Board to function effectively and oversee management’s implementation of the Company’s strategic goals and priorities.
|
|||||||||
|
|||||||||||
|
4
|
BOARD RECOMMENDATIONS
|
In considering candidates for inclusion in the Board’s slate of recommended Director nominees, the Nominating Committee recommends individuals whom it believes can best enhance the success of the business and represent stockholder interests through the exercise of sound judgment in light of the full Board’s experience. The Nominating Committee considers diversity to be a key criterion in searching for new Director candidates. To identify and evaluate Director candidates, the Nominating Committee requests recommendations from Board members and others, reviews and discusses biographical information and background material relating to potential candidates and, along with other Board members, interviews selected potential candidates. In addition, the Nominating Committee considers all candidates proposed by stockholders in accordance with the By-Laws if appropriate biographical and background material is provided, applying the same criteria and following substantially the same process as it does in considering other candidates. The Nominating Committee may then choose to present such candidates to the Board for consideration. | |||||||||
|
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|
5
|
SELECTION OF CANDIDATE
|
Upon selection of a candidate, the individual is interviewed by members of the Board and an analysis is prepared to further assess the suitability of the candidate to address the needs of the Board. If the candidate is selected for recommendation to the Board, a review of his or her independence and potential conflicts is conducted.
|
|||||||||
|
Our Board is committed to strong corporate governance practices and dedicated to ensuring that American Tower is managed for the long-term benefit of our stockholders and other stakeholders. To fulfill this goal, the Board and its three standing committees—Audit; Compensation; and Nominating—meet throughout the year and engage in meaningful discussions with management to ensure the Board is informed regarding the Company’s activities, operating plans and strategic initiatives.
During the 2020 fiscal year, our Board held four regular meetings and six special meetings. Each Director attended at least 75% of the aggregate number of meetings of our Board and the committees on which he or she served. All of our Director nominees as of the date of our 2020 Annual Meeting of Stockholders attended the meeting. Mr. Frank was appointed to the Board in January 2021 and, therefore, did not attend any meetings in 2020. We encourage, but do not require, our Directors to attend each Annual Meeting of Stockholders.
In determining whether to recommend a Director for re-election, the Nominating Committee considers the Director’s past attendance at meetings and participation in, and contributions to, the activities of the Board and standing committees.
EXECUTIVE SESSIONS
The independent Directors periodically meet in executive sessions, which, from time to time include our CEO and/or another member(s) of senior management with expertise relevant to the matter being discussed at the executive session. An executive session is typically scheduled immediately after each regular Board or committee meeting. The Chairperson presides at such sessions, and in her absence, the Board can designate the Chair of the Nominating Committee, or, alternatively, the Chair of the Board committee relevant to the matter being discussed, to preside. Upon reasonable notice to the other independent Directors, any independent Director may call for an executive session, with or without the presence of the Chairperson, if he or she deems it necessary or appropriate.
|
||||||||||||||
|
The American Tower Board: By the Numbers in 2020
4
Regular meetings held by the Board
6
Special meetings held by the Board
|
||||||||||||||
|
|
At least
75%
|
|||||||||||||
|
of meetings attended by each current Director
|
||||||||||||||
|
100%
|
|||||||||||||
|
of the Directors attended the Annual Meeting of Stockholders
|
||||||||||||||
|
Director Skills/Qualifications
|
Relevance to American Tower
|
||||
|
PRIOR EXPERIENCE IN A
LEADERSHIP/EXECUTIVE ROLE |
Directors with leadership experience, especially in an executive role, strongly enhance the Board’s ability to manage risk and oversee operations. | ||||
| THOUGHT LEADERSHIP AND/OR PUBLIC POLICY EXPERIENCE | Directors with experience in working with thought leaders from business, government and policy help further our strategic vision to lead wireless connectivity around the globe. | ||||
| FINANCE / CAPITAL ALLOCATION EXPERIENCE | Directors with finance experience assist in evaluating our financial vision and capital allocation strategy. | ||||
| FINANCIAL EXPERTISE | Directors with financial expertise allow effective oversight and understanding of financial reporting, accounting, financing transactions, complex acquisitions and internal controls. | ||||
| HUMAN CAPITAL EXPERIENCE | Directors with human capital experience are valuable to help attract, motivate and retain top candidates for positions at the Company and implement effective development and succession planning. | ||||
| WIRELESS INDUSTRY AND/OR REIT EXPERIENCE | Directors with experience in our industry or with REITs have the knowledge needed to leverage business relationships, develop new business, provide operational insight and optimize effective strategies within the REIT structure, while understanding the qualifications to maintain REIT status. | ||||
|
OPERATIONAL AND MANAGEMENT
EXPERIENCE |
Individuals who possess managerial and day-to-day operational experience enhance the Board’s ability to understand the development, implementation and assessment of our operations and business strategy. | ||||
| INTERNATIONAL EXPERIENCE | Given that we operate in 22 countries across six continents, international experience helps with understanding and anticipating opportunities and challenges in a variety of international markets. | ||||
| PRIOR BOARD AND/OR GOVERNANCE EXPERIENCE | Corporate governance experience supports our goals of having strong Board and management accountability, transparency and protection of stockholder interests. | ||||
| RISK MANAGEMENT EXPERIENCE | Directors with experience in risk management help the Company in identifying, managing and mitigating enterprise risks, including strategic, regulatory, operational and financial risks. | ||||
| Audit Committee | |||||||||||
|
Members:
JoAnn A. Reed (Chair)
Grace D. Lieblein
Bruce L. Tanner
Kenneth R. Frank
(1)
|
Key Responsibilities: | ||||||||||
|
•
Oversees management’s financial reporting processes.
•
Meets with our independent registered public accounting firm, outside the presence of management, to discuss our financial reporting, including internal accounting controls and policies and procedures.
•
Approves all fees related to audit and non-audit services provided by the independent public accounting firm.
•
Has the sole authority to select, retain, terminate and determine the compensation of our independent registered public accounting firm.
•
Oversees our systems of internal accounting and financial controls.
•
Reviews the global internal audit plan, including the annual fraud risk assessment.
•
Reviews the annual independent audit of our financial statements.
•
Reviews our financial disclosures.
•
Reviews and implements our Code of Conduct in conjunction with oversight of the Ethics Committee.
•
Oversees the establishment and implementation of “whistle-blowing” procedures.
•
Oversees risk, litigation, cybersecurity and other compliance matters.
|
|||||||||||
|
Meetings in 2020:
8
|
|||||||||||
| Compensation Committee | |||||||||||
|
Members:
Craig Macnab (Chair)
Gustavo Lara Cantu
Raymond P. Dolan
|
Key Responsibilities: | ||||||||||
|
•
Leads the Board in establishing compensation policies for our executive officers and the Board, including approving employment agreements or arrangements with executive officers.
•
Reviews and approves individual and overall corporate goals and objectives related to executive compensation; evaluates executive performance in light of those goals and objectives; and determines executive compensation levels based on this evaluation, including as it relates to our CEO.
•
Regularly assesses our compensation plans to determine whether any elements create an inappropriate level of risk.
•
Administers our equity incentive plans, approving any proposed amendments or modifications.
•
Reviews our compensation programs.
•
Oversees our stock ownership guidelines.
•
Regularly reviews executive compensation market trends, recommending changes to programs or processes accordingly.
•
Reviews Compensation Committee reports and CEO pay ratio for inclusion in appropriate regulatory filings.
|
|||||||||||
| Meetings in 2020: 5 | |||||||||||
| Nominating and Corporate Governance Committee | |||||||||||
|
Members:
David E. Sharbutt (Chair)
Robert D. Hormats
Pamela D.A. Reeve
Samme L. Thompson
|
Key Responsibilities: | ||||||||||
|
•
Identifies and recommends individuals to serve on the Board and its committees.
•
Develops and makes recommendations with respect to our Corporate Governance Guidelines, including the appropriate size, composition and responsibilities of the Board and its committees.
•
Reviews corporate governance best practices and market trends.
•
Reviews and approves or ratifies any related party transactions.
•
Reviews any contemplated outside directorships of current Board members.
•
Establishes performance criteria for the annual evaluation of the Board and its committees, and oversees the annual self-evaluation by Board members.
•
Responds to stockholder requests and inquiries.
•
Reviews and recommends Director training initiatives, and reviews Director onboarding program.
•
Oversees and periodically reviews the Company's environmental, social and governance programs and corporate responsibility policies, including environmental initiatives, human capital management, the development and diversity of its workforce and sustainability reporting.
•
Advises the Board with respect to Board committee charters, composition and protocol, including the current Board structure.
|
|||||||||||
|
Meetings in 2020:
6
|
|||||||||||
| 1 | Identification of Third-Party Consultant: Information Gathering | ||||||||||
|
The Nominating Committee hired an independent consultant to conduct the Director self-evaluation process. The consultant used a variety of evaluation formats, including:
•
interviews and discussion sessions with individual Directors, standing committees, the full Board and members of senior management who interact with the Board;
•
surveys of each Board member to facilitate an objective, independent assessment of the effectiveness of the Board and applicable committees; and
•
meetings of the Board and each committee to assess the Board and committee performance firsthand.
This process was intended to encourage candid feedback from Directors regarding the actions of the Board and the standing committees. Information gathered included Board and committee effectiveness and performance, agenda topics, materials, tenure, skills, leadership and strategy. Board members were also invited to discuss the performance of the Chairperson.
|
|||||||||||
|
|||||||||||
| 2 |
Review and Assessment: Report to Nominating Committee and Board
|
||||||||||
|
The independent consultant:
•
aggregated the results of its observations, interviews, feedback and surveys regarding Director performance, Board dynamics and effectiveness of the Board and the committees; and
•
presented the findings to our Nominating Committee and full Board.
The data identified any themes or issues that had emerged and included suggestions for areas of improvement for each committee and the Board and an action plan for implementation of the changes suggested. The full Board reviewed the results of the consultant’s assessment and each committee reviewed its results.
|
|||||||||||
|
|||||||||||
| 3 |
Action by the Nominating Committee
|
||||||||||
|
The Nominating Committee:
•
used these results to review and assess the Board’s and each committee’s composition and required skill sets, responsibilities, structure, processes and effectiveness; and
•
assessed the responsive actions to be taken to address areas of improvement in the performance of the Board and each of the committees. This included succession planning and an assessment as to the need for specific skills, experience and perspectives, which would benefit the Board in the future. The findings were compared against the strategic objectives of the Company and the skills matrix to address future needs of the business.
|
|||||||||||
| Director Compensation Element | Payment | BOARD SERVICE MIX OF COMPENSATION | ||||||||||||||||||
| Board Service |
|
|||||||||||||||||||
| Annual Retainer |
$100,000
|
|||||||||||||||||||
| Additional Annual Payment to Chairperson |
$100,000
|
|||||||||||||||||||
| Committee Service | Chair | Member | ||||||||||||||||||
| Audit Committee |
$15,000
|
$15,000
|
||||||||||||||||||
| Compensation Committee |
$15,000
|
$10,000
|
||||||||||||||||||
| Nominating Committee |
$10,000
|
$10,000
|
||||||||||||||||||
|
Name
(a) |
Fees Earned or
Paid in Cash
($)
(b)
|
Stock Awards
($)
(1)(2)
(c)
|
Total($)
(h) |
||||||||
|
Raymond P. Dolan
|
$ | 110,000 | $ | 180,220 | $ | 290,220 | |||||
| Robert D. Hormats | $ | 110,000 | $ | 180,220 | $ | 290,220 | |||||
|
Gustavo Lara Cantu
(3)
|
$ | 113,835 | $ | 180,220 | $ | 294,055 | |||||
|
Grace D. Lieblein
|
$ | 115,000 | $ | 180,220 | $ | 295,220 | |||||
|
Craig Macnab
(4)
|
$ | 132,500 | $ | 180,220 | $ | 312,720 | |||||
|
JoAnn A. Reed
|
$ | 130,000 | $ | 180,220 | $ | 310,220 | |||||
|
Pamela D.A. Reeve
(5)
|
$ | 172,022 | $ | 180,220 | $ | 352,242 | |||||
|
David E. Sharbutt
|
$ | 120,000 | $ | 180,220 | $ | 300,220 | |||||
| Bruce L. Tanner | $ | 115,000 | $ | 180,220 | $ | 295,220 | |||||
|
Samme L. Thompson
|
$ | 110,000 | $ | 180,220 | $ | 290,220 | |||||
|
Name
|
Number of Unvested
Shares Underlying RSU Award (#) |
Market Value of Unvested
Shares Underlying Unvested RSUs ($)(i) |
RSU Grant
Date |
Number of Securities
Underlying Outstanding Options (#) |
Option
Exercise Price ($) |
Option
Grant Date |
||||||||||||||
|
Raymond P. Dolan
|
3,239 | $ | 76.90 | 3/11/2013 | ||||||||||||||||
| 5,054 | $ | 81.18 | 3/10/2014 | |||||||||||||||||
| 4,971 | $ | 94.57 | 3/10/2015 | |||||||||||||||||
| 739 | $ | 165,876 | 3/10/2020 | |||||||||||||||||
| Robert D. Hormats | 739 | $ | 165,876 | 3/10/2020 | ||||||||||||||||
| Gustavo Lara Cantu | 739 | $ | 165,876 | 3/10/2020 | ||||||||||||||||
|
Grace D. Lieblein
|
739 | $ | 165,876 | 3/10/2020 | ||||||||||||||||
|
Craig Macnab
|
739 | $ | 165,876 | 3/10/2020 | ||||||||||||||||
|
JoAnn A. Reed
|
3,590 | $ | 62.00 | 3/12/2012 | ||||||||||||||||
| 3,239 | $ | 76.90 | 3/11/2013 | |||||||||||||||||
| 5,054 | $ | 81.18 | 3/10/2014 | |||||||||||||||||
| 4,971 | $ | 94.57 | 3/10/2015 | |||||||||||||||||
| 739 | $ | 165,876 | 3/10/2020 | |||||||||||||||||
|
Pamela D.A. Reeve
|
3,653 | $ | 50.78 | 3/10/2011 | ||||||||||||||||
| 3,590 | $ | 62.00 | 3/12/2012 | |||||||||||||||||
| 3,239 | $ | 76.90 | 3/11/2013 | |||||||||||||||||
| 5,054 | $ | 81.18 | 3/10/2014 | |||||||||||||||||
| 4,971 | $ | 94.57 | 3/10/2015 | |||||||||||||||||
| 739 | $ | 165,876 | 3/10/2020 | |||||||||||||||||
|
David E. Sharbutt
|
2,854 | $ | 81.18 | 3/10/2014 | ||||||||||||||||
| 4,971 | $ | 94.57 | 3/10/2015 | |||||||||||||||||
| 739 | $ | 165,876 | 3/10/2020 | |||||||||||||||||
| Bruce L. Tanner | 739 | $ | 165,876 | 3/10/2020 | ||||||||||||||||
|
Samme L. Thompson
|
3,653 | $ | 50.78 | 3/10/2011 | ||||||||||||||||
| 3,590 | $ | 62.00 | 3/12/2012 | |||||||||||||||||
| 3,239 | $ | 76.90 | 3/11/2013 | |||||||||||||||||
| 5,054 | $ | 81.18 | 3/10/2014 | |||||||||||||||||
| 4,971 | $ | 94.57 | 3/10/2015 | |||||||||||||||||
| 739 | $ | 165,876 | 3/10/2020 | |||||||||||||||||
|
|
Board of Directors | |||||||||||||
|
•
Reviews the Company’s most significant risks and ensures management responds appropriately with risk-informed strategic decisions.
•
Monitors risk exposure to ensure it is in line with the Company’s overall tolerance for, and ability to manage, risk.
•
The Chairperson discusses management’s assessment of risks in executive sessions and determines whether further review or action by the full Board or a particular committee would be appropriate.
|
||||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
The Audit Committee
|
The Compensation Committee
|
The Nominating Committee
|
||||||||||||
|
•
Has primary responsibility for reviewing financial risk for the Company.
•
Considers material litigation instituted against the Company and reviews cybersecurity issues and the resolution of issues raised through our Ethics Committee process.
•
Identifies and assesses audit, accounting, financial reporting, compliance and legal risks, and oversees the methodologies that management implements to address those risks.
|
•
Reviews and balances risk in our compensation practices, programs and policies.
•
Regularly assesses, with its independent compensation consultant and management, the Company’s compensation programs to determine if any elements of these plans create an inappropriate level of risk and to evaluate management’s methods to mitigate any potential risks.
|
•
Oversees risks associated with Board and committee composition, including the current Directors’ skill sets and the Company’s anticipated future needs.
•
Oversees risks associated with the Company’s corporate governance structure and related party transactions.
|
||||||||||||
|
|
Management
|
|||||||||||||
|
•
Conducts a comprehensive, annual enterprise risk assessment to identify the most significant existing and emerging risks to the successful achievement of the Company’s strategic and operational goals, along with the procedures and initiatives in place to address those risks.
•
Presents results of assessment to the Board for discussion, thereby enabling the Board to successfully oversee the Company’s risk management activities.
•
Provides quarterly updates to the Board concerning the strategic, operational and emerging risks to the Company’s ability to achieve its business goals and initiatives for each geographic area and functional group, along with updates to the mitigation activities underway to address the risks.
|
||||||||||||||
|
MONITORING OF
COMMUNICATIONS FROM STOCKHOLDERS |
FORWARDING OF
COMMUNICATIONS TO DIRECTORS |
RESPONSE TO
STOCKHOLDERS |
||||||||||||
|
Under most circumstances, the Chairperson of the Nominating Committee is, with the assistance of our General Counsel, primarily responsible for monitoring communications from stockholders and for providing copies or summaries of such communications to the other Directors as he or she considers appropriate.
|
|
Communications that relate to substantive matters and include suggestions or comments the Chairperson of the Nominating Committee considers to be important for the Directors to consider will be forwarded to all Directors. In general, communications relating to corporate governance and long-term corporate strategy are more likely to be forwarded than are communications relating to ordinary business affairs or matters that are personal or otherwise not relevant to the Company, including mass mailings and repetitive or duplicative communications.
|
|
Responses are made to stockholders by the most suited person, including a Director or member of senior leadership. We use the feedback received from stockholders to improve our corporate governance, sustainability and disclosure practices. In response, we have made numerous changes to executive compensation to align compensation to long-term stockholder value, improve transparency and implement stock ownership guidelines for all executives.
|
||||||||||
| Name of Beneficial Owner |
Number of
Shares |
Percent of
Common Stock |
||||||
| Directors and Named Executive Officers | ||||||||
|
Thomas A. Bartlett
(1)
|
198,153 | * | ||||||
|
Edmund DiSanto
(2)
|
412,935 | * | ||||||
|
Raymond P. Dolan
(3)
|
28,975 | * | ||||||
| Robert D. Hormats | 5,859 | * | ||||||
| Gustavo Lara Cantu | 10,768 | * | ||||||
| Grace D. Lieblein | 2,953 | * | ||||||
| Craig Macnab | 9,127 | * | ||||||
| Olivier Puech | — | * | ||||||
|
JoAnn A. Reed
(4)
|
64,914 | * | ||||||
|
Pamela D.A. Reeve
(5)
|
32,565 | * | ||||||
|
David E. Sharbutt
(6)
|
8,588 | * | ||||||
|
Amit Sharma
(7)
|
583,190 | * | ||||||
|
Rodney M. Smith
(8)
|
183,595 | * | ||||||
|
James D Taiclet
(9)
|
1,341,277 | * | ||||||
| Bruce L. Tanner | 739 | * | ||||||
|
Samme L. Thompson
(10)
|
37,191 | * | ||||||
|
Steven O. Vondran
(11)
|
67,146 | * | ||||||
|
All Directors and executive officers as a group (19 persons)
(12)
|
3,010,359 | |||||||
| Five-Percent Stockholders | ||||||||
|
The Vanguard Group
(13)
|
||||||||
| 100 Vanguard Blvd., Malvern, PA 19355 | 56,124,669 | 12.62 | % | |||||
|
BlackRock, Inc.
(14)
|
||||||||
| 55 East 52nd Street, New York, NY 10055 | 34,348,573 | 7.72 | % | |||||
| 2020 | 2019 | |||||||
| Audit Fees | $ | 6,928 | $ | 6,800 | ||||
| Audit-Related Fees | $ | 1,600 | $ | 1,980 | ||||
| Tax Fees | $ | 1,050 | $ | 1,050 | ||||
| Total Fees | $ | 9,578 | $ | 9,830 | ||||
| Name | Title | ||||
|
Thomas A. Bartlett
(1)
|
President and Chief Executive Officer | ||||
|
Rodney M. Smith
(2)
|
Executive Vice President, Chief Financial Officer and Treasurer | ||||
| Edmund DiSanto | Executive Vice President, Chief Administrative Officer, General Counsel and Secretary | ||||
| Olivier Puech | Executive Vice President and President, Latin America and EMEA | ||||
|
Amit Sharma
(3)
|
Executive Vice President and President, Asia | ||||
| Steven O. Vondran | Executive Vice President and President, U.S. Tower Division | ||||
|
James D. Taiclet
(4)
|
Former Chairman of the Board, President and Chief Executive Officer | ||||
| COMPENSATION COMMITTEE OVERSIGHT AND GOVERNANCE PRINCIPLES | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Responsibility | Competitiveness | Balance | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Compensation should take into account each executive’s responsibility to act in accordance with our ethical and sustainability objectives at all times; financial and operating performance must not compromise these values
|
Total compensation should be sufficiently competitive to attract, retain and motivate a leadership team capable of maximizing American Tower’s performance
|
Annual and long-term incentive compensation opportunities should reward the appropriate balance of short- and long-term financial, strategic and business results
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Long-Term Focus | Pay for Performance | Stakeholder Alignment | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Long-term, stock-based compensation opportunities should outweigh short-term, cash-based opportunities; annual objectives should complement sustainable long-term performance
|
A majority of compensation should be at risk and directly linked to American Tower performance
|
The financial interests of executives should be aligned with the long-term interests of our stakeholders through stock-based compensation and performance metrics that correlate with long-term stockholder value
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Element | ||||||||||||||||||||
| Objectives | Metrics | |||||||||||||||||||
| Not At-Risk | ||||||||||||||||||||
|
Annual Base Salary
|
•
Provides competitive level of compensation to attract and retain highly qualified executive talent
•
Rewards sustained performance over time and is intended to provide a degree of financial stability to the executive
|
We review
roles and responsibilities,
performance, tenure, and historical and expected contributions
to Company's long-term success.
|
||||||||||||||||||
|
CEO: 7%
|
Other NEOs: 12%
|
|||||||||||||||||||
|
|
|||||||||||||||||||
| At- Risk | ||||||||||||||||||||
|
Annual Performance Incentive Program
|
•
Provides at-risk, variable cash pay opportunity for performance over one year
•
Annual incentive targets are designed to motivate our executives to achieve or exceed annual goals within appropriate risk parameters
|
We use
total property revenue
(1)
, excluding pass-through revenue, and
Adjusted EBITDA
(1)
as the two quantitative performance measures in our annual executive incentive program. We believe these performance metrics encourage management to grow our business profitably, while also increasing cash generation and controlling costs. Both metrics are reported in our quarterly results and guidance to the market.
|
||||||||||||||||||
|
CEO: 11%
|
Other NEOs: 12%
|
|||||||||||||||||||
|
|
|||||||||||||||||||
|
Long-Term Incentive
|
•
Provides at-risk, variable, equity-based pay opportunity for sustained operating performance
•
Long-term retention tool that provides both time-based and performance-based restricted stock units
•
Focuses executives on the creation of long-term stockholder value
•
More than 50% of long-term incentive award is performance based
|
For PSUs, we use
Consolidated AFFO per Share
(1)
and
ROIC
(1)
as the two quantitative performance measures in our long-term incentive program. Consolidated AFFO is widely used in the telecommunications real estate sector to adjust Nareit FFO (common stockholders) for items that may otherwise cause material fluctuations in Nareit FFO (common stockholders) growth from period to period that would not be representative of the underlying performance of property assets in those periods. Utilizing the Consolidated AFFO per Share metric encourages management to reserve the use of Company stock as a funding mechanism only for those opportunities where it is strategically warranted and accretive over the long term for existing stockholders. ROIC encourages management to focus on earning adequate returns on invested capital over a sustained period.
We believe focusing on growth opportunities that combine long-term Consolidated AFFO per Share accretion with maintaining desired ROIC levels will continue to benefit stockholders.
|
||||||||||||||||||
|
CEO: 82%
|
Other NEOs: 76%
|
|||||||||||||||||||
|
ANNUAL PERFORMANCE INCENTIVE METRICS
(1)
|
|||||
|
TOTAL PROPERTY REVENUE
(2)(3)
|
ADJUSTED EBITDA
(2)
|
||||
|
|
||||
|
PSU AWARD METRICS
(1)
|
|||||
|
CONSOLIDATED AFFO PER SHARE
(4)
|
ROIC
(4)
|
||||
|
|
||||
| 1 |
Leading wireless connectivity is linked to total stockholder return
|
2 |
Innovating for a mobile future is measured by our innovation and platform expansion initiatives and our sustainability goal to reduce our reliance on fossil fuels and increase usage of renewable energy sources
|
3 |
Driving efficiency is demonstrated by total property revenue
(2)
and Adjusted EBITDA
(2)
|
4 |
Growing our assets and capabilities is measured by Consolidated AFFO per Share
(4)
growth and maintaining an attractive average ROIC;
(4)
these financial metrics are then used in the incentive award plan designs for our executives
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||
| TOTAL STOCKHOLDER RETURN (TSR) |
2020 CEO TOTAL COMPENSATION
(1)
|
||||
|
|
||||
|
Capital Returned to Common
Stockholders (dividends and
share repurchases)
(1)
|
Dividends
(Growth) |
Total Compound Annual
Stockholder Return
(year end 2020)
(2)
|
|||||||||||||||||||||
|
$2B+
|
20%
|
18.6% | 20.6% | 17.8% | |||||||||||||||||||
| in 2020 | compared to 2019 | 3-year | 5-year | 10-year | |||||||||||||||||||
|
Available
Liquidity |
A Leading
S&P 500 Company |
Compound Annual Consolidated
AFFO per Share Growth
Since 2012
(3)
|
|||||||||||||||||||||
|
$4.9B
|
$127B
|
13.6% | |||||||||||||||||||||
| As of 12/31/2020 | enterprise value as of 12/31/2020 | ||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Scheduled meetings in 2020 with stockholders
|
|||||||||||
|
|||||||||||
| Regular engagement with stockholders on a broad range of topics | |||||||||||
|
2020 Discussion Topics included:
•
Performance
•
Impact of COVID-19 Pandemic
•
Leadership Changes, Succession Planning and Board Refreshment
|
•
Diversity, Equity and Inclusion
•
Environmental, Social and Governance Matters
•
Executive Compensation
|
||||||||||
|
Report to Board of Directors
|
|||||||||||
| Senior management regularly updates each committee on relevant topics highlighting items discussed and feedback received during stockholder outreach campaigns, as well as the outcome of the advisory vote results on executive compensation. | |||||||||||
| Outcomes | |||||||||||
|
Consideration of Most Recent “Say On Pay” Vote
Each year, the Committee considers the outcome of the advisory vote on our executive compensation program. Stockholders continued to show strong support of our executive compensation program, with over 97% of the votes cast for the approval of the “say-on-pay” proposal at our 2020 Annual Meeting of Stockholders and over 95% approval for this proposal in each of the last 3 years. Given stockholder response, we made no significant changes to our executive compensation program in 2020.
|
|
||||||||||
|
AT AMERICAN TOWER
WE DO
…
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||
|
We do
tie a high ratio of our executives’ pay to performance.
|
|
We do
weight incentives toward quantitative metrics.
|
|
We do
use multiple performance metrics.
|
||||||||||||||||||
|
As described above in "Summary of Executive Compensation Program", 93% and 88% of the total direct compensation opportunity (assuming target performance) for our CEO and other NEOs, respectively, was in the form of short- and long-term incentive compensation.
|
Our annual performance incentive program is based solely on quantitative metrics relating to pre-established Company financial goals for all our executive officers except the CEO, for whom the program is also heavily weighted in favor of quantitative metrics (80%).
|
We use multiple performance metrics in our short- and long-term incentive programs to discourage unnecessary short-term risk taking.
|
|||||||||||||||||||||
|
We do
require significant stock ownership.
|
|
We do
subject incentive compensation to claw back provisions.
|
|
We do
provide a consistent level of severance.
|
||||||||||||||||||
|
We maintain aggressive guidelines to reinforce the importance of stock ownership (6x the annual base salary for the CEO, 3x the annual base salary for the NEOs and 5x the annual retainer for Directors). This is intended to align the interests of our executive officers and Directors with those of our stockholders and to focus our senior management team on our long-term success.
|
The terms of our annual performance incentive awards and long-term, equity-based awards allow American Tower in certain circumstances to “claw back” cash and shares received pursuant to such awards or to require the repayment of all gains realized upon disposition of such shares.
|
We maintain a competitive and responsible severance program to provide a consistent approach to executive severance and to provide eligible employees with certainty and security. Under this program, severance benefits are available only upon a “Qualifying Termination.”
|
|||||||||||||||||||||
|
We do
use an independent compensation consultant.
|
|
We do
engage directly with our stockholders.
|
|||||||||||
|
The Committee has engaged Meridian as its independent compensation consultant. Meridian has no other ties to American Tower or its management and meets stringent selection criteria.
|
We maintain direct and open communication with our stockholders throughout the year, conduct active stockholder engagement initiatives and respond to all inquiries in a timely manner.
|
|||||||||||||
|
AT AMERICAN TOWER
WE DO NOT
...
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||
|
We do not
permit hedging or pledging of American Tower securities.
|
|
We do not
encourage excessive or inappropriate risk taking through our compensation program.
|
|
We do not
reprice stock options or repurchase underwater stock options.
|
||||||||||||||||||
|
Our Anti-Insider Trading Policy and Code of Conduct prohibit short sales and hedging transactions, as well as pledging of our securities, by all of our employees and Directors. In addition, our policies impose limits as to when and how our employees, including our executive officers and Directors, can engage in transactions in our securities.
|
The Committee, together with its independent compensation consultant and management, conducts a regular risk review of American Tower’s compensation programs to determine if any elements of these programs create an inappropriate level of risk and reviews management’s mitigation activities with respect to any significant potential risks.
|
Our equity incentive plan prohibits, without stockholder approval, (i) the amendment of any outstanding stock option to reduce its exercise price or replace it with a new award exercisable for our Common Stock at a lower exercise price; and (ii) the purchase of an underwater stock option for cash.
|
|||||||||||||||||||||
|
We do not
provide golden parachute tax gross-ups.
|
|
We do not
provide excessive perquisites.
|
|
We do not
provide uncapped incentive awards.
|
||||||||||||||||||
|
We do not provide excise tax gross-ups to our NEOs.
|
We do not provide excessive perquisites to our executive officers, nor do we offer them any deferred compensation plans, supplemental executive retirement plans or loans of any kind.
|
Our annual incentive awards cannot exceed 200% of the performance incentive target.
|
|||||||||||||||||||||
|
We do not
provide single trigger acceleration of equity.
|
||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Our severance program provides acceleration of equity only upon a “double trigger,” meaning that executives are only entitled to acceleration in the event of a “Qualifying Termination” within 14 days before, or two years following, a “Change of Control.”
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||
|
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
Attract and retain top talent
|
Motivate and engage our
executive officers
|
Drive sustainable, long-term growth and stockholder value consistent with our values, vision and growth strategy
|
||||||||||||
| PEER GROUP FOR 2020 COMPENSATION DECISIONS | |||||
|
•
Adobe Inc.
|
•
Motorola Solutions, Inc.
|
||||
|
•
Booking Holdings Inc.
|
•
NextEra Energy, Inc.
|
||||
|
•
Boston Properties, Inc.
|
•
NVIDIA Corporation
|
||||
|
•
Broadcom Inc.
|
•
Public Storage
|
||||
|
•
Crown Castle International Corp.
|
•
Salesforce.com, Inc.
|
||||
|
•
Equinix, Inc.
|
•
SBA Communications Corporation
|
||||
|
•
Equity Residential
|
•
Simon Property Group, Inc.
|
||||
|
•
Fidelity National Information Services, Inc.
|
•
Texas Instruments Incorporated
|
||||
|
•
Intuit Inc.
|
•
Ventas, Inc.
|
||||
|
•
L3 Harris Technologies Inc.
|
•
Welltower Inc
|
||||
|
•
MasterCard Incorporated
|
|||||
|
AMERICAN TOWER POSITIONING RELATIVE TO ITS PEER GROUP
(1)
|
||
|
||
|
||
| Name | 2019 Base Salary | 2020 Base Salary | Percent Change | ||||||||
|
Thomas A. Bartlett
(1)
|
$ | 789,495 | $ | 1,000,000 | 27 | % | |||||
|
Rodney M. Smith
(2)
|
— | $ | 575,000 | N/A | |||||||
|
Edmund DiSanto
|
$ | 631,596 | $ | 656,860 | 4 | % | |||||
|
Olivier Puech
(3)
|
— | $ | 627,785 | N/A | |||||||
|
Amit Sharma
|
$ | 633,489 | $ | 658,829 | 4 | % | |||||
|
Steven O. Vondran
|
$ | 592,250 | $ | 627,785 | 6 | % | |||||
|
James D. Taiclet
(4)
|
$ | 1,100,000 | $ | 1,100,000 | 0 | % | |||||
| ANNUAL INCENTIVE AWARD METRICS AND WEIGHTINGS | |||||
| CEO | Other NEOs | ||||
|
|
||||
| PAYOUTS BASED ON PERFORMANCE LEVELS | |||||
|
|||||
| Weighting | ||||||||||||||||||||
| CEO | NEOs | Metrics | Below Threshold 0% | Threshold 50% |
Target
(1)
100%
|
Maximum 200% | ||||||||||||||
| 30% | 40% |
Total Property Revenue
(2)
|
|
|||||||||||||||||
| 50% | 60% |
Adjusted EBITDA
(3)
|
|
|||||||||||||||||
|
Weighting
|
Achievement
|
Weighted Achievement
|
|||||||||
|
Total Property Revenue
(1)
|
40% | 143% | 156 | % | |||||||
|
Adjusted EBITDA
(2)
|
60% | 164% | |||||||||
|
Weighting
|
Achievement
|
Weighted Achievement
|
|||||||||
| 2020 Financial Goals | |||||||||||
|
Total Property Revenue
(1)
|
30% | 143% | 125 | % | |||||||
|
Adjusted EBITDA
(2)
|
50% | 164% | |||||||||
|
2020 Individual Performance Goals
(3)
|
20% | 200% | 40 | % | |||||||
| PILLAR | METRICS MEASURED BY COMMITTEE | CEO PERFORMANCE ACHIEVEMENTS | |||||||||||||||
|
Lead wireless connectivity around the globe
|
•
Advance the Company's position as a global leader in the industry
•
Expand business relationships with existing and potential tenants and partners
|
ü | Expanded leadership roles with NGOs, trade and industry associations | ||||||||||||||
| ü | Enhanced relationships with key tenants to drive business initiatives and pursue potential partnership opportunities | ||||||||||||||||
| ü | Secured a new long-term agreement with T-Mobile to drive significant value for both parties over its nearly 15-year term | ||||||||||||||||
| Innovate for a mobile future | |||||||||||||||||
|
•
Explore broader opportunities to elevate and extend the Company's growth in shared communications infrastructure
•
Participate in development/testing of new technologies and energy alternatives
•
Drive pursuit and assessment of U.S. and global expansion initiatives in connectivity and advanced tenant services
|
ü | Advanced shared generator program in U.S. and build to suit project in India | |||||||||||||||
| ü | Advanced power and fuel program in Africa and India by deploying lithium-ion battery and new solar technology, thereby reducing diesel fuel consumption and generator run time | ||||||||||||||||
| ü |
Determined platform expansion initiatives to pursue and implemented an efficient governance model based on return on investment criteria
|
||||||||||||||||
| Drive efficiency throughout the industry |
•
Meet targeted profitability and cost savings goals
•
Develop and apply intellectual and organizational capital to maximize performance of asset base
|
ü |
Oversaw efficiency initiatives to maximize financial performance of our asset base as evidenced by exceeding targets for Adjusted EBITDA
(1)
, Selling, General, Administrative and Development Expense, IT costs and tax benefits
|
||||||||||||||
| ü | Executed record level of refinancings to generate over $100 million of interest expense savings on an annualized basis | ||||||||||||||||
| Grow our assets and capabilities to meet customer needs |
•
Pursue attractive acquisitions in existing and select new markets within a disciplined capital allocation program
•
Execute effective CEO transition process and ensure successful business continuity programs through pandemic
|
ü | Guided investment committee through acquisition initiatives to drive long-term results, including entry into three new markets: Canada, Australia and Poland | ||||||||||||||
| ü | Completed CEO transition process, onboarded new CFO and new director, and implemented significant diversity, equity and inclusion initiatives, including creation of a CEO Advisory Council | ||||||||||||||||
| ü | Implemented global COVID-19 response business continuity process, including enabling workforce to work from home leveraging significant new IT and logistical initiatives | ||||||||||||||||
|
Target Annual Incentive Award
|
Actual Annual Incentive Awards
|
|||||||||||||||||||
|
Name
|
Year
|
Target Bonus
(%) |
Amount
($)
|
% Achievement of Target Bonus |
Amount
($) |
Percentage
Change |
||||||||||||||
|
Thomas A. Bartlett
(1)
|
2019 | 100 | % | $ | 789,495 | 174 | % | $ | 1,374,511 | |||||||||||
| 2020 | 150 | % | $ | 1,500,000 | 165 | % | $ | 2,210,720 | 61 | % | ||||||||||
|
Rodney M. Smith
(2)
|
2019 | — | — | — | — | |||||||||||||||
| 2020 | 100 | % | $ | 575,000 | 156 | % | $ | 760,665 | N/A | |||||||||||
| Edmund DiSanto | 2019 | 100 | % | $ | 631,596 | 174 | % | $ | 1,099,609 | |||||||||||
| 2020 | 100 | % | $ | 656,860 | 156 | % | $ | 1,024,702 | (7) | % | ||||||||||
|
Olivier Puech
(3)
|
2019 | — | — | — | — | |||||||||||||||
| 2020 | 100 | % | $ | 627,785 | 156 | % | $ | 979,345 | N/A | |||||||||||
| Amit Sharma | 2019 | 100 | % | $ | 633,489 | 174 | % | $ | 1,102,905 | |||||||||||
| 2020 | 100 | % | $ | 658,829 | 156 | % | $ | 1,027,773 | (7) | % | ||||||||||
| Steven O. Vondran | 2019 | 100 | % | $ | 592,250 | 174 | % | $ | 1,031,107 | |||||||||||
| 2020 | 100 | % | $ | 627,785 | 156 | % | $ | 979,345 | (5) | % | ||||||||||
|
James D. Taiclet
(4)
|
2019 | 150 | % | $ | 1,650,000 | 180 | % | $ | 2,961,750 | |||||||||||
| 2020 | 150 | % | $ | 1,650,000 | 145 | % | $ | 1,086,195 | (63) | % | ||||||||||
|
CEO
(1)
|
Other NEOs | ||||
|
|
||||
|
(1)
Mr. Bartlett's promotional equity grant was allocated 70% to PSUs and 30% to RSUs, excluding his special RSU equity grant discussed below.
|
|||||
| Name | 2019 Target Equity Value | 2020 Target Equity Value |
Percent Change
(2020 over 2019) |
||||||||
|
Thomas A. Bartlett
(1)
|
$ | 4,750,000 | $ | 11,500,000 | 142 | % | |||||
|
Rodney M. Smith
(2)
|
— | $ | 2,850,000 | N/A | |||||||
| Edmund DiSanto | $ | 4,500,000 | $ | 4,800,000 | 7 | % | |||||
|
Olivier Puech
(3)
|
— | $ | 3,500,000 | N/A | |||||||
| Amit Sharma | $ | 4,250,000 | $ | 4,600,000 | 8 | % | |||||
| Steven O. Vondran | $ | 2,800,000 | $ | 3,500,000 | 25 | % | |||||
|
James. D. Taiclet
(4)
|
$ | 14,000,000 | $ | 14,000,000 | 0 | % | |||||
|
Name
|
2018 PSU Award Granted | % of Target 2018 PSU Award Earned | Total Number of PSU Shares Vested | ||||||||
|
Thomas A. Bartlett
|
17,784 | 133 | % | 23,653 | |||||||
|
Rodney M. Smith
(1)
|
— | — | — | ||||||||
|
Edmund DiSanto
|
16,750 | 133 | % | 22,278 | |||||||
|
Olivier Puech
(2)
|
— | — | — | ||||||||
| Amit Sharma | 15,716 | 133 | % | 20,903 | |||||||
|
Steven O. Vondran
(3)
|
— | — | — | ||||||||
|
James D. Taiclet
(4)
|
45,493 | 133 | % | 48,742 | |||||||
|
CUMULATIVE CONSOLIDATED AFFO PER SHARE (70%)
(1)
|
AVERAGE ROIC (30%)
(1)
|
||||
|
|
||||
| Multiple of Annual Base Salary | |||||
|
CEO
|
|
||||
| Executive Officers directly reporting to the CEO |
|
||||
| Directors |
|
||||
|
Name
|
Stock Ownership Guideline
|
Ownership as of December 31, 2020
(1)
|
|||||||||
| Thomas A. Bartlett | 6x Base Salary | 59x | Base Salary | ||||||||
| Rodney M. Smith | 3x Base Salary | 57x | Base Salary | ||||||||
| Edmund DiSanto | 3x Base Salary | 124x | Base Salary | ||||||||
| Olivier Puech | 3x Base Salary | 13x | Base Salary | ||||||||
| Amit Sharma | 3x Base Salary | 174x | Base Salary | ||||||||
| Steven O. Vondran | 3x Base Salary | 26x | Base Salary | ||||||||
|
Name and Principal Position (a)
|
Year
(b)
|
Salary
($)
(c)
|
Stock Awards
($)
(1)
(e)
|
Non-Equity
Incentive Plan
Compensation
($)
(2)
(g)
|
All Other
Compensation
($)
(3)
(i)
|
Total
($)
(j)
|
||||||||||||||
|
Thomas A. Bartlett
(4)
President and
Chief Executive Officer
|
2020 | $ | 955,448 | $ | 11,500,732 | $ | 2,210,720 | $ | 34,404 | $ | 14,701,304 | |||||||||
| 2019 | $ | 789,495 | $ | 4,750,280 | $ | 1,374,511 | $ | 34,969 | $ | 6,949,255 | ||||||||||
| 2018 | $ | 766,500 | $ | 4,300,171 | $ | 1,019,445 | $ | 33,415 | $ | 6,119,531 | ||||||||||
|
Rodney M. Smith
(5)
Executive Vice President,
Chief Financial Officer and Treasurer
|
2020 | $ | 532,026 | $ | 2,850,291 | $ | 760,665 | $ | 29,119 | $ | 4,172,101 | |||||||||
| 2019 | — | — | — | — | — | |||||||||||||||
| 2018 | — | — | — | — | — | |||||||||||||||
|
Edmund DiSanto
Executive Vice President, Chief Administrative Officer, General Counsel and Secretary
|
2020 | $ | 656,860 | $ | 4,800,337 | $ | 1,024,702 | $ | 31,887 | $ | 6,513,786 | |||||||||
| 2019 | $ | 631,596 | $ | 4,500,129 | $ | 1,099,609 | $ | 33,880 | $ | 6,265,214 | ||||||||||
| 2018 | $ | 613,200 | $ | 4,050,198 | $ | 815,556 | $ | 33,146 | $ | 5,512,100 | ||||||||||
|
Olivier Puech
(6)
Executive Vice President and President, Latin America and EMEA
|
2020 | $ | 627,785 | $ | 3,500,266 | $ | 979,345 | $ | 33,984 | $ | 5,141,380 | |||||||||
| 2019 | — | — | — | — | — | |||||||||||||||
| 2018 | — | — | — | — | — | |||||||||||||||
|
Amit Sharma
Executive Vice President and President,
Asia
|
2020 | $ | 658,829 | $ | 4,600,364 | $ | 1,027,773 | $ | 1,381,052 | $ | 7,668,018 | |||||||||
| 2019 | $ | 633,489 | $ | 4,250,163 | $ | 1,102,905 | $ | 697,734 | $ | 6,684,291 | ||||||||||
| 2018 | $ | 615,038 | $ | 3,800,080 | $ | 818,001 | $ | 905,524 | $ | 6,138,643 | ||||||||||
|
Steven O. Vondran
(7)
Executive Vice President and President, U.S. Tower Division
|
2020 | $ | 627,785 | $ | 3,500,266 | $ | 979,345 | $ | 32,387 | $ | 5,139,783 | |||||||||
| 2019 | $ | 592,250 | $ | 2,800,175 | $ | 1,031,107 | $ | 32,215 | $ | 4,455,747 | ||||||||||
| 2018 | — | — | — | — | — | |||||||||||||||
|
James D. Taiclet
(8)
Former Chairman of the Board, President and Chief Executive Officer
|
2020 | $ | 624,023 | $ | 14,000,333 | $ | 1,086,195 | $ | 24,759 | $ | 15,735,310 | |||||||||
| 2019 | $ | 1,100,000 | $ | 14,000,318 | $ | 2,961,750 | $ | 33,220 | $ | 18,095,288 | ||||||||||
| 2018 | $ | 1,100,000 | $ | 11,000,256 | $ | 2,173,600 | $ | 34,080 | $ | 14,307,936 | ||||||||||
|
Name
|
Granted in 2020 | Granted in 2019 | Granted in 2018 | ||||||||
|
Thomas A. Bartlett
(4)
|
$ | 12,260,491 | $ | 5,700,336 | $ | 5,160,205 | |||||
|
Rodney M. Smith
(5)
|
$ | 2,220,216 | — | — | |||||||
| Edmund DiSanto | $ | 5,760,209 | $ | 5,400,006 | $ | 4,860,180 | |||||
|
Olivier Puech
(6)
|
$ | 4,200,417 | — | — | |||||||
| Amit Sharma | $ | 5,520,241 | $ | 5,100,047 | 4,560,155 | ||||||
|
Steven O. Vondran
(7)
|
$ | 4,200,417 | $ | 3,360,284 | — | ||||||
|
James D. Taiclet
(8)
|
$ | 19,600,320 | $ | 19,600,297 | $ | 13,200,249 | |||||
|
Name
|
Retirement Match
(a)
|
Car Expenses
(b)
|
Ex-Pat
(c)
|
Other
(d)
|
Total
|
||||||||||||
|
Thomas A. Bartlett
|
$ | 14,250 | $ | 16,743 | — | $ | 3,411 | $ | 34,404 | ||||||||
|
Rodney M. Smith
|
$ | 14,251 | $ | 12,572 | — | $ | 2,296 | $ | 29,119 | ||||||||
|
Edmund DiSanto
|
$ | 14,250 | $ | 15,342 | — | $ | 2,295 | $ | 31,887 | ||||||||
| Olivier Puech | $ | 14,250 | $ | 16,873 | — | $ | 2,861 | $ | 33,984 | ||||||||
|
Amit Sharma
|
$ | 14,200 | $ | 3,335 | $ | 511,379 | $ | 852,138 | $ | 1,381,052 | |||||||
|
Steven O. Vondran
|
$ | 14,619 | $ | 15,722 | — | $ | 2,046 | $ | 32,387 | ||||||||
| James D. Taiclet | $ | 14,250 | $ | 8,735 | — | $ | 1,774 | $ | 24,759 | ||||||||
|
Name
(a)
|
Grant Date
(b)
|
Approval
Date
|
Estimated Future Payouts Under
Non-Equity Incentive Plan Awards
(1)
|
Estimated Future Payouts
Under Equity Incentive Plan Awards
(2)(3)
|
All Other
Stock Awards:
Number of
Shares of
Stock or Units
(#)
(3)
(i)
|
Grant Date
Fair Value
of Stock
and Option
Awards
(4)
(l)
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Threshold
($)
(c)
|
Target
($)
(d)
|
Maximum
($)
(e)
|
Threshold
(#)
(f)
|
Target
(#)
(g)
|
Maximum
(#)
(h)
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Thomas A. Bartlett | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Annual incentive awards | $ | 750,000 | $ | 1,500,000 | $ | 3,000,000 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| RSUs | 3/10/2020 | 2/25/2020 | 8,530 | $ | 2,080,211 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| RSUs | 5/1/2020 | 4/11/2020 | 14,049 | $ | 3,290,276 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| PSUs | 3/10/2020 | 2/25/2020 | 6,397 | 12,794 | 25,588 | $ | 3,120,073 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
| PSUs | 5/1/2020 | 4/11/2020 | 6,427 | 12,853 | 25,706 | $ | 3,010,173 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Rodney M. Smith | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Annual incentive awards | $ | 287,500 | $ | 575,000 | $ | 1,150,000 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| RSUs | 3/10/2020 | 2/19/2020 | 4,101 | $ | 1,000,111 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| RSUs | 5/1/2020 | 4/11/2020 | 3,160 | $ | 740,072 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| PSUs | 5/1/2020 | 4/11/2020 | 2,370 | 4,740 | 9,480 | $ | 1,110,108 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Edmund DiSanto | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Annual incentive awards | $ | 328,430 | $ | 656,860 | $ | 1,313,720 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| RSUs | 3/10/2020 | 2/25/2020 | 7,874 | $ | 1,920,232 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| PSUs | 3/10/2020 | 2/25/2020 | 5,905 | 11,810 | 23,620 | $ | 2,880,105 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Olivier Puech | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Annual incentive awards | $ | 313,893 | $ | 627,785 | $ | 1,255,570 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| RSUs | 3/10/2020 | 2/25/2020 | 5,741 | $ | 1,400,058 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| PSUs | 3/10/2020 | 2/25/2020 | 4,306 | 8,612 | 17,224 | $ | 2,100,208 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Amit Sharma | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Annual incentive awards | $ | 329,415 | $ | 658,829 | $ | 1,317,658 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| RSUs | 3/10/2020 | 2/25/2020 | 7,546 | $ | 1,840,243 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| PSUs | 3/10/2020 | 2/25/2020 | 5,659 | 11,318 | 22,636 | $ | 2,760,121 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Steven O. Vondran | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Annual incentive awards | $ | 313,893 | $ | 627,785 | $ | 1,255,570 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| RSUs | 3/10/2020 | 2/25/2020 | 5,741 | $ | 1,400,058 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| PSUs | 3/10/2020 | 2/25/2020 | 4,306 | 8,612 | 17,224 | $ | 2,100,208 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
James D. Taiclet
(5)
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Annual incentive awards | $ | 825,000 | $ | 1,650,000 | $ | 3,300,000 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| RSUs | 3/10/2020 | 2/25/2020 | 17,223 | $ | 4,200,173 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| PSUs | 3/10/2020 | 2/25/2020 | 20,093 | 40,186 | 80,372 | $ | 9,800,160 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Name
|
RSUs
|
PSUs
|
Grant Date Fair Value Per Share
|
||||||||
|
Thomas A. Bartlett
|
$ | 3,600,000 | $ | 8,400,000 | $ | 204.42 | |||||
|
Rodney M. Smith
|
$ | 1,300,000 | $ | 1,950,000 | $ | 204.42 | |||||
|
Edmund DiSanto
|
$ | 2,320,000 | $ | 3,480,000 | $ | 204.42 | |||||
|
Olivier Puech
|
$ | 1,680,000 | $ | 2,520,000 | $ | 204.42 | |||||
| Steven O. Vondran | $ | 1,680,000 | $ | 2,520,000 | $ | 204.42 | |||||
|
Option Awards
(1)
|
Stock Awards
(2)
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Name
(a) |
Number of
Securities
Underlying
Unexercised
Options (#)
Exercisable
(b)
|
Number of
Securities
Underlying
Unexercised
Options (#)
Unexercisable
(c)
|
Option
Exercise
Price
($)
(e)
|
Option
Expiration
Date
(f)
|
RSU/PSU
Grant
Date
|
Number
of Shares
or Units of
Stock That
Have Not
Vested
(#)
(3)(5)
(g)
|
Market Value
of Shares or
Units of Stock
That Have Not
Vested
($)
(4)(5)
(h)
|
Equity
Incentive
Plan Awards:
Number of
Unearned
Shares, Units
or Other
Rights That
Have Not
Vested
(#)
(4)(5)
(i)
|
Equity
Incentive
Plan Awards:
Market or
Payout Value
of Unearned
Shares, Units
or Other
Rights That
Have Not
Vested
($)
(4)(5)
(j)
|
||||||||||||||||||||
|
Thomas A. Bartlett
|
30,401 | — | $ | 94.57 | 3/10/2025 | — | — | — | — | — | |||||||||||||||||||
| — | — | — | — | 3/10/2017 | 3,521 | $ | 790,324 | — | — | ||||||||||||||||||||
| — | — | — | — | 3/12/2018 | 5,928 | $ | 1,330,599 | — | — | ||||||||||||||||||||
| — | — | — | — | 3/11/2019 | 7,696 | $ | 1,727,444 | — | — | ||||||||||||||||||||
| — | — | — | — | 3/10/2020 | 8,530 | $ | 1,914,644 | — | — | ||||||||||||||||||||
| — | — | — | — | 5/1/2020 | 5,509 | $ | 1,236,550 | — | — | ||||||||||||||||||||
| — | — | — | — | 5/1/2020 | 8,540 | $ | 1,916,888 | — | — | ||||||||||||||||||||
| — | — | — | — | 3/12/2018 | 23,653 | $ | 5,309,152 | — | — | ||||||||||||||||||||
|
Option Awards
(1)
|
Stock Awards
(2)
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Name
(a) |
Number of
Securities
Underlying
Unexercised
Options (#)
Exercisable
(b)
|
Number of
Securities
Underlying
Unexercised
Options (#)
Unexercisable
(c)
|
Option
Exercise
Price
($)
(e)
|
Option
Expiration
Date
(f)
|
RSU/PSU
Grant
Date
|
Number
of Shares
or Units of
Stock That
Have Not
Vested
(#)
(3)(5)
(g)
|
Market Value
of Shares or
Units of Stock
That Have Not
Vested
($)
(4)(5)
(h)
|
Equity
Incentive
Plan Awards:
Number of
Unearned
Shares, Units
or Other
Rights That
Have Not
Vested
(#)
(4)(5)
(i)
|
Equity
Incentive
Plan Awards:
Market or
Payout Value
of Unearned
Shares, Units
or Other
Rights That
Have Not
Vested
($)
(4)(5)
(j)
|
||||||||||||||||||||
| — | — | — | — | 3/11/2019 | — | — | 7,697 | $ | 1,727,669 | ||||||||||||||||||||
| — | — | — | — | 3/10/2020 | — | — | 6,397 | $ | 1,435,871 | ||||||||||||||||||||
| — | — | — | — | 5/1/2020 | — | — | 6,427 | $ | 1,442,604 | ||||||||||||||||||||
| Rodney M. Smith | 17,232 | — | $ | 62.00 | 3/12/2022 | — | — | — | — | — | |||||||||||||||||||
| 3,956 | — | $ | 71.07 | 10/1/2022 | — | — | — | — | — | ||||||||||||||||||||
| 25,389 | — | $ | 76.90 | 3/11/2023 | — | — | — | — | — | ||||||||||||||||||||
| 33,019 | — | $ | 81.18 | 3/10/2024 | — | — | — | — | — | ||||||||||||||||||||
| 33,135 | — | $ | 94.57 | 3/10/2025 | — | — | — | — | — | ||||||||||||||||||||
| 34,341 | — | $ | 94.71 | 3/10/2026 | — | — | — | — | — | ||||||||||||||||||||
| — | — | — | — | 3/10/2017 | 2,201 | $ | 494,036 | — | — | ||||||||||||||||||||
| — | — | — | — | 3/12/2018 | 3,446 | $ | 773,489 | — | — | ||||||||||||||||||||
| — | — | — | — | 3/11/2019 | 4,050 | $ | 909,063 | — | — | ||||||||||||||||||||
| — | — | — | — | 3/10/2020 | 4,101 | $ | 920,510 | — | — | ||||||||||||||||||||
| — | — | — | — | 5/1/2020 | 3,160 | $ | 709,294 | — | — | ||||||||||||||||||||
| — | — | — | — | 5/1/2020 | — | — | 2,370 | $ | 531,970 | ||||||||||||||||||||
| Edmund DiSanto | 35,000 | — | $ | 76.90 | 3/11/2023 | — | — | — | — | — | |||||||||||||||||||
| 101,079 | — | $ | 81.18 | 3/10/2024 | — | — | — | — | — | ||||||||||||||||||||
| 114,977 | — | $ | 94.57 | 3/10/2025 | — | — | — | — | — | ||||||||||||||||||||
| — | — | — | — | 3/10/2017 | 3,301 | $ | 740,942 | — | — | ||||||||||||||||||||
| — | — | — | — | 3/12/2018 | 5,583 | $ | 1,253,160 | — | — | ||||||||||||||||||||
| — | — | — | — | 3/11/2019 | 7,291 | $ | 1,636,538 | — | — | ||||||||||||||||||||
| — | — | — | — | 3/10/2020 | 7,874 | $ | 1,767,398 | — | — | ||||||||||||||||||||
| — | — | — | — | 3/12/2018 | 22,278 | $ | 5,000,520 | — | — | ||||||||||||||||||||
| — | — | — | — | 3/11/2019 | — | — | 7,291 | $ | 1,636,538 | ||||||||||||||||||||
| — | — | — | — | 3/10/2020 | — | — | 5,905 | $ | 1,325,436 | ||||||||||||||||||||
|
Olivier Puech
|
— | — | — | — | 3/10/2017 | 2,201 | $ | 494,036 | — | — | |||||||||||||||||||
| — | — | — | — | 3/12/2018 | 3,791 | $ | 850,928 | — | — | ||||||||||||||||||||
| — | — | — | — | 1/2/2019 | 1,316 | $ | 295,389 | — | — | ||||||||||||||||||||
| — | — | — | — | 3/11/2019 | 4,536 | $ | 1,018,151 | — | — | ||||||||||||||||||||
| — | — | — | — | 3/10/2020 | 5,741 | $ | 1,288,625 | — | — | ||||||||||||||||||||
| — | — | — | — | 3/11/2019 | — | — | 4,537 | $ | 1,018,375 | ||||||||||||||||||||
| — | — | — | — | 3/10/2020 | — | — | 4,306 | $ | 966,525 | ||||||||||||||||||||
| Amit Sharma | 63,183 | — | $ | 62.00 | 3/12/2022 | — | — | — | — | — | |||||||||||||||||||
| 64,767 | — | $ | 76.90 | 3/11/2023 | — | — | — | — | — | ||||||||||||||||||||
| 90,971 | — | $ | 81.18 | 3/10/2024 | — | — | — | — | — | ||||||||||||||||||||
| 101,061 | — | $ | 94.57 | 3/10/2025 | — | — | — | — | — | ||||||||||||||||||||
| — | — | — | — | 3/10/2017 | 3,081 | $ | 691,561 | — | — | ||||||||||||||||||||
| — | — | — | — | 3/12/2018 | 5,238 | $ | 1,175,721 | — | — | ||||||||||||||||||||
| — | — | — | — | 3/11/2019 | 6,886 | $ | 1,545,632 | — | — | ||||||||||||||||||||
| — | — | — | — | 3/10/2020 | 7,546 | $ | 1,693,775 | — | — | ||||||||||||||||||||
| — | — | — | — | 3/12/2018 | 20,903 | $ | 4,691,887 | — | — | ||||||||||||||||||||
|
Option Awards
(1)
|
Stock Awards
(2)
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Name
(a) |
Number of
Securities
Underlying
Unexercised
Options (#)
Exercisable
(b)
|
Number of
Securities
Underlying
Unexercised
Options (#)
Unexercisable
(c)
|
Option
Exercise
Price
($)
(e)
|
Option
Expiration
Date
(f)
|
RSU/PSU
Grant
Date
|
Number
of Shares
or Units of
Stock That
Have Not
Vested
(#)
(3)(5)
(g)
|
Market Value
of Shares or
Units of Stock
That Have Not
Vested
($)
(4)(5)
(h)
|
Equity
Incentive
Plan Awards:
Number of
Unearned
Shares, Units
or Other
Rights That
Have Not
Vested
(#)
(4)(5)
(i)
|
Equity
Incentive
Plan Awards:
Market or
Payout Value
of Unearned
Shares, Units
or Other
Rights That
Have Not
Vested
($)
(4)(5)
(j)
|
||||||||||||||||||||
| — | — | — | — | 3/11/2019 | — | — | 6,886 | $ | 1,545,632 | ||||||||||||||||||||
| — | — | — | — | 3/10/2020 | — | — | 5,659 | $ | 1,270,219 | ||||||||||||||||||||
| Steven O. Vondran | 3,265 | — | $ | 81.18 | 3/10/2024 | — | — | — | — | — | |||||||||||||||||||
| 21,537 | — | $ | 94.57 | 3/10/2025 | — | — | — | — | — | ||||||||||||||||||||
| 33,482 | — | $ | 94.71 | 3/10/2026 | — | — | — | — | — | ||||||||||||||||||||
| — | — | — | — | 3/10/2017 | 2,421 | $ | 543,418 | — | — | ||||||||||||||||||||
| — | — | — | — | 3/12/2018 | 3,791 | $ | 850,928 | — | — | ||||||||||||||||||||
| — | — | — | — | 9/4/2018 | 928 | $ | 208,299 | — | — | ||||||||||||||||||||
| — | — | — | — | 3/11/2019 | 4,536 | $ | 1,018,151 | — | — | ||||||||||||||||||||
| — | — | — | — | 3/10/2020 | 5,741 | $ | 1,288,625 | — | — | ||||||||||||||||||||
| — | — | — | — | 3/11/2019 | — | — | 4,537 | $ | 1,018,375 | ||||||||||||||||||||
| — | — | — | — | 3/10/2020 | — | — | 4,306 | $ | 966,525 | ||||||||||||||||||||
|
James D. Taiclet
(6)
|
298,211 | — | $ | 94.57 | 6/14/2023 | — | — | — | — | — | |||||||||||||||||||
| — | — | — | — | 3/12/2018 | 48,742 | $ | 10,940,629 | — | — | ||||||||||||||||||||
| — | — | — | — | 3/11/2019 | — | — | 12,497 | $ | 2,805,077 | ||||||||||||||||||||
|
Name
|
PSUs
|
||||
| Thomas A. Bartlett | 23,653 | ||||
|
Rodney M. Smith
(1)
|
— | ||||
| Edmund DiSanto | 22,278 | ||||
|
Olivier Puech
(2)
|
— | ||||
| Amit Sharma | 20,903 | ||||
|
Steven O. Vondran
(3)
|
— | ||||
|
James D. Taiclet
(4)
|
48,742 | ||||
|
Option Awards
|
Stock Awards
|
|||||||||||||
|
Name
|
Number of Shares
Acquired on Exercise
(#)
(b)
|
Value Realized
Upon Exercise
($)
(1)
(c)
|
Number of Shares
Acquired on Vesting
(#)
(d)
|
Value Realized
on Vesting
($)
(2)
(e)
|
||||||||||
| Thomas A. Bartlett | — | $ | — | 51,597 | $ | 12,477,629 | ||||||||
| Rodney M. Smith | 16,073 | $ | 3,228,744 | 6,595 | $ | 1,548,635 | ||||||||
| Edmund DiSanto | — | $ | — | 48,442 | $ | 11,714,179 | ||||||||
| Olivier Puech | 8,156 | $ | 1,398,393 | 7,303 | $ | 1,708,266 | ||||||||
| Amit Sharma | 52,601 | $ | 10,004,184 | 45,265 | $ | 10,945,390 | ||||||||
| Steven O. Vondran | 6,000 | $ | 952,170 | 8,010 | $ | 1,890,264 | ||||||||
|
James D. Taiclet
(3)
|
536,396 | $ | 93,970,750 | 186,437 | $ | 46,033,823 | ||||||||
|
Name and Type of Payment/Benefit
|
Termination on
12/31/20: “for
Cause”
|
Termination on
12/31/20: voluntary
or retirement
|
Qualifying Termination
on 12/31/20: with
no Change of Control
|
Qualifying Termination
on 12/31/20: with
Change of Control
|
||||||||||
| Thomas A. Bartlett | ||||||||||||||
|
Base salary
(1)
|
$ | — | $ | — | $ | 2,000,000 | $ | 2,000,000 | ||||||
|
Annual incentive awards
(2)
|
— | — | 1,500,000 | 1,500,000 | ||||||||||
|
Value of accelerated equity awards
(3)(4)(5)
|
— | 23,437,441 | 23,437,441 | 23,437,441 | ||||||||||
|
Health benefits
(6)
|
— | — | 35,656 | 35,656 | ||||||||||
| Total | $ | — | $ | 23,437,441 | $ | 26,973,097 | $ | 26,973,097 | ||||||
|
Rodney M. Smith
|
||||||||||||||
|
Base salary
(1)
|
$ | — | $ | — | $ | 862,500 | $ | 862,500 | ||||||
|
Annual incentive awards
(2)
|
— | — | 575,000 | 575,000 | ||||||||||
|
Value of accelerated equity awards
(3)(4)(5)
|
— | 4,870,333 | 4,870,333 | 4,870,333 | ||||||||||
|
Health benefits
(6)
|
— | — | 36,781 | 36,781 | ||||||||||
| Total | $ | — | $ | 4,870,333 | $ | 6,344,614 | $ | 6,344,614 | ||||||
|
Name and Type of Payment/Benefit
|
Termination on
12/31/20: “for
Cause”
|
Termination on
12/31/20: voluntary
or retirement
|
Qualifying Termination
on 12/31/20: with
no Change of Control
|
Qualifying Termination
on 12/31/20: with
Change of Control
|
||||||||||
| Edmund DiSanto | ||||||||||||||
|
Base salary
(1)
|
$ | — | $ | — | $ | 985,290 | $ | 985,290 | ||||||
|
Annual incentive awards
(2)
|
— | — | 656,860 | 656,860 | ||||||||||
|
Value of accelerated equity awards
(3)(4)(5)
|
— | 16,322,507 | 16,322,507 | 16,322,507 | ||||||||||
|
Health benefits
(6)
|
— | — | 26,742 | 26,742 | ||||||||||
| Total | $ | — | $ | 16,322,507 | $ | 17,991,399 | $ | 17,991,399 | ||||||
| Olivier Puech | ||||||||||||||
|
Base salary
(1)
|
$ | — | $ | — | $ | 941,678 | $ | 941,678 | ||||||
|
Annual incentive awards
(2)
|
— | — | 627,785 | 627,785 | ||||||||||
|
Value of accelerated equity awards
(3)(4)
|
— | — | — | 5,949,537 | ||||||||||
|
Health benefits
(6)
|
— | — | 36,781 | 36,781 | ||||||||||
| Total | $ | — | $ | — | $ | 1,606,244 | $ | 7,555,781 | ||||||
| Amit Sharma | ||||||||||||||
|
Base salary
(1)
|
$ | — | $ | — | $ | 988,244 | $ | 988,244 | ||||||
|
Annual incentive awards
(2)
|
— | — | 658,829 | 658,829 | ||||||||||
|
Value of accelerated equity awards
(3)(4)(5)
|
— | 15,430,279 | 15,430,279 | 15,430,279 | ||||||||||
|
Health benefits
(6)
|
— | — | 26,742 | 26,742 | ||||||||||
| Total | $ | — | $ | 15,430,279 | $ | 17,104,094 | $ | 17,104,094 | ||||||
| Steven O. Vondran | ||||||||||||||
|
Base salary
(1)
|
$ | — | $ | — | $ | 941,678 | $ | 941,678 | ||||||
|
Annual incentive awards
(2)
|
— | — | 627,785 | 627,785 | ||||||||||
|
Value of accelerated equity awards
(3)(4)
|
— | — | — | 5,911,828 | ||||||||||
|
Health benefits
(6)
|
— | — | 26,742 | 26,742 | ||||||||||
| Total | $ | — | $ | — | $ | 1,596,205 | $ | 7,508,033 | ||||||
|
James D. Taiclet
(7)
|
||||||||||||||
| Base salary | $ | — | $ | — | $ | — | $ | — | ||||||
| Annual incentive awards | — | — | — | — | ||||||||||
|
Value of accelerated equity awards
(3)
|
— | 29,615,253 | — | — | ||||||||||
| Health benefits | — | — | — | — | ||||||||||
| Total | $ | — | $ | 29,615,253 | $ | — | $ | — | ||||||
|
Plan Category
|
Number of Securities
to Be Issued Upon
Exercise of Outstanding
Options, Warrants and
Rights
(2)
(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)
(3)
(c)
|
||||||||
|
Equity compensation plans/arrangements approved by the stockholders
(1)
|
3,828,015 | $88.36 | 9,403,847 | ||||||||
| Equity compensation plans/arrangements not approved by the stockholders | N/A | N/A | N/A | ||||||||
| Total | 3,828,015 | $88.36 | 9,403,847 | ||||||||
|
PROPOSAL
1
|
Election of Directors
Under our By-Laws, the number of members of our Board is fixed from time to time by the Board and may be increased or decreased by a vote of the stockholders or by the majority of Directors then in office.
All twelve of our directors are standing for re-election at the Annual Meeting. The Board has nominated for election at the Annual Meeting the twelve Directors listed below, all of whom were recommended for nomination to the Board by the Nominating Committee.
Each Director elected at the Annual Meeting will hold office until the 2022 Annual Meeting or until his or her successor is elected and qualified, subject to earlier retirement, resignation or removal. Unless otherwise instructed, we will vote all proxies we receive
FOR
each nominee listed below. If a nominee becomes unavailable to serve, we will vote the shares represented by proxies for the election of such other person as the Board may recommend.
|
The Board of Directors unanimously recommends that you vote
FOR
the election of each nominee listed below to serve as Director until the next Annual Meeting or until his or her successor is duly elected and qualified.
|
||||||||||||||||||
|
Thomas A. Bartlett
|
||||||||||||||
|
Career
Mr. Bartlett is American Tower Corporation’s President and Chief Executive Officer. From April 2009 through March 2020, he served as Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer and assumed the role of Treasurer from February 2012 until December 2013 and again from July 2017 until August 2018. Prior to joining American Tower, Mr. Bartlett served as Senior Vice President and Corporate Controller with Verizon Communications. During his 25-year career with Verizon Communications and its predecessor companies and affiliates, he served in numerous operations and business development roles, including President and Chief Executive Officer of Bell Atlantic International Wireless from 1995 through 2000, where he was responsible for wireless activities in North America, Latin America, Europe and Asia.
|
Qualifications
•
Effective leadership and executive experience, including as our President and Chief Executive Officer
•
Seasoned financial expert with operational, international and strategic experience with global large-cap companies
Other Public Company Boards
•
Equinix, Inc. (April 2013–present)
Other Positions
•
Advisor, Rutgers Business School
•
Member, World Economic Forum’s Information and Communications Technologies (ICT) Board of Governors
•
Executive Committee, National Association of Real Estate Investment Trusts (NAREIT)
•
Member, Business Roundtable
|
||||||||||||
|
President & CEO
American Tower Corporation
|
||||||||||||||
|
Director Since
- May 2020
|
||||||||||||||
|
Age
62
|
||||||||||||||
|
Raymond P. Dolan
|
||||||||||||||
|
Career
Mr. Dolan is the Chairman and CEO of Cohere Technologies, Inc., a wireless communications and solutions company. He previously served as the President and CEO of Sonus Networks, Inc., a supplier of voice, video and data infrastructure solutions for wireline and wireless telephone service providers, from October 2010 to December 2017. Prior to that, he served as CEO of QUALCOMM Flarion Technologies and Senior Vice President at QUALCOMM until January 2008. He was Chairman and CEO of Flarion Technologies, Inc., a provider of mobile broadband communications systems, from May 2000 until its acquisition by QUALCOMM in 2006. Before that, he served as Chief Operating Officer of NextWave Telecom and as Executive Vice President of marketing of Bell Atlantic/NYNEX Mobile.
|
Qualifications
•
Extensive leadership experience in the wireless communications industry
•
Experience with thought leaders help further our strategic vision
•
International, operational and strategic expertise
•
Strong management and board experience
Other Public Company Boards
•
Sonus Networks, Inc. (October 2010–December 2017)
|
||||||||||||
|
Chairman and CEO
Cohere Technologies, Inc.
|
||||||||||||||
|
Director Since
February 2003
•
Compensation Committee (February 2003–May 2011; June 2016–present)
•
Nominating and Corporate Governance Committee (January 2004–June 2016; Chair, February 2005–May 2015)
|
||||||||||||||
|
Age
63
|
||||||||||||||
|
Kenneth R. Frank
|
||||||||||||||
|
Career
Mr. Frank is CEO of Turning Technologies, an education technology company, and has led other enterprise software and services companies, such as Kibo Software as CEO, from January 2016 to December 2018, and Aptean Software as Chief Operating Officer, from October 2011 to December 2015. Prior to that, Mr. Frank held a series of leadership positions at Alcatel-Lucent, between February 2005 and October 2012, including President, Solutions and Marketing, member of the Executive Committee, Chief Technology Officer of Alcatel North America and President of the Global Professional Services Division. Mr. Frank previously held positions at AT&T Bell Laboratories, BellSouth Telecommunications and venture-backed communications startups, Broadband Office and Masergy Communications.
|
Qualifications
•
Extensive executive and international experience in the telecommunications and technology industries
•
Sophisticated leadership skills and familiarity with various global regions, including Europe and Asia
•
Venture capital knowledge and financial acumen
Other Public Company Boards
•
None
Other Positions
•
Member of Board of Councilors for the Marshall School of Business at the University of Southern California
|
||||||||||||
|
CEO
Turning Technologies
|
||||||||||||||
|
Director Since
January 2021
•
Audit Committee (January 2021–present)
|
||||||||||||||
|
Age
53
|
||||||||||||||
|
Robert D. Hormats
|
||||||||||||||
|
Career
Mr. Hormats was appointed Managing Director of Tiedemann Advisors in March 2020, following his five-year tenure as a member of Tiedemann's Investment Advisory Committee. He served as Vice Chairman of Kissinger Associates, Inc., a strategic international consulting firm, from 2013 to 2019. From 2009 to 2013, he served as Under Secretary of State for Economic Growth, Energy and the Environment. Prior to that, he was Vice Chairman, Goldman Sachs (International) and a managing director of Goldman, Sachs & Co., which he joined in 1982. Mr. Hormats formerly served as Assistant Secretary of State for Economic and Business Affairs, Ambassador and Deputy U.S. Trade Representative, and Senior Deputy Assistant Secretary for Economic and Business Affairs. He also served as a senior staff member for International Economic Affairs on the National Security Council.
|
Qualifications
•
Significant international experience in both the public and private sectors, including key business and trade positions with the U.S. Federal government
•
Extensive knowledge of global capital markets
•
Well-developed leadership skills and financial acumen
Other Public Company Boards
•
None
Other Positions
•
Member, Council on Foreign Relations
|
||||||||||||
|
Managing Director
Tiedemann Advisors
|
||||||||||||||
|
Director Since
October 2015
•
Nominating and Corporate Governance Committee (February 2016–present)
|
||||||||||||||
|
Age
78
|
||||||||||||||
|
Gustavo Lara Cantu
|
||||||||||||||
|
Career
Mr. Lara is a retired business executive, who most recently served as CEO of Monsanto Company’s Latin America North division. Prior to retiring in 2004, Mr. Lara had worked for the Monsanto Company in various capacities for more than 24 years.
|
Qualifications
•
Executive and governance experience with a global company
•
Insight into business operations in Latin America
•
Extensive knowledge of financial and business developments in Mexico
Other Public Company Boards
•
None
|
||||||||||||
|
Former CEO
Monsanto Company, Latin America North Division
|
||||||||||||||
|
Director Since
November 2004
•
Compensation Committee (May 2009–present)
•
Nominating and Corporate Governance Committee (February 2005–May 2009)
|
||||||||||||||
|
Age
71
|
||||||||||||||
|
Grace D. Lieblein
|
||||||||||||||
|
Career
Ms. Lieblein most recently served as Vice President, Global Quality of General Motors Company (GM), a multinational corporation that designs, manufactures, markets and distributes vehicles, from November 2014 to December 2015. Ms. Lieblein joined GM in 1978 and has held a variety of leadership positions at GM in engineering, supply chain management and international operations. Ms. Lieblein’s leadership positions have included serving as Vice President, Global Purchasing and Supply Chain from 2012 to 2014, GM Brazil President from 2011 to 2012, GM Mexico President from 2008 to 2011 and Vehicle Chief Engineer from 2004 to 2008.
|
Qualifications
•
Extensive management and international experience in a global large-cap company
•
Experience in working with industry leaders to help further our innovation initiatives
•
Financial expertise
•
International experience in Latin America
Other Public Company Boards
•
Southwest Airlines Co. (January 2016– present)
•
Honeywell International Inc. (December 2012–present)
|
||||||||||||
| Former VP, Global Quality General Motors | ||||||||||||||
|
Director Since
June 2017
•
Audit Committee (June 2017–present)
|
||||||||||||||
|
Age
60
|
||||||||||||||
|
Craig Macnab
|
||||||||||||||
|
Career
Mr. Macnab served as CEO of National Retail Properties, Inc., a publicly traded REIT, from February 2004, and as that company’s Chairman of the board from February 2008, until April 2017. Prior to joining National Retail Properties, Mr. Macnab was the CEO, President and a director of JDN Realty Corporation, also a publicly traded REIT, from April 2000 through March 2003.
|
Qualifications
•
Extensive management experience with publicly traded REITs and global large-cap companies
•
Financial expertise
•
Experience as a director of other public companies
Other Public Company Boards
•
VICI Properties, Inc. (October 2017–present)
•
Forest City Realty Trust, Inc. (June 2017–May 2018)
•
National Retail Properties, Inc. (February 2008–April 2017)
Other Positions
•
Trustee, Cadillac Fairview Corporation Limited, a private company and a wholly owned subsidiary of the Ontario Teachers’ Pension Plan
|
||||||||||||
| Former Chief Executive Officer National Retail Properties, Inc. | ||||||||||||||
|
Director Since
December 2014
•
Compensation Committee (May 2018–present; Chair since May 2019)
•
Audit Committee (December 2014–December 2019)
|
||||||||||||||
|
Age
65
|
||||||||||||||
|
JoAnn A. Reed
|
||||||||||||||
|
Career
Before becoming a healthcare services consultant, Ms. Reed served as CFO and SVP of Finance at Medco Health Solutions, a leading pharmacy benefit manager. After joining Medco in 1988, she spent 20 years with the company, serving in finance and accounting roles of increasing responsibility; she was appointed SVP of Finance in 1992 and CFO in 1996. Prior to joining Medco, Ms. Reed held finance roles at Aetna/ American Re-Insurance Co., CBS Inc., Standard and Poor’s Corp. and Unisys/ Timeplex Inc.
|
Qualifications
•
Financial and accounting expertise
•
Extensive board experience
•
More than 25 years of leadership experience with multinational companies in financial, strategic and business development initiatives
Other Public Company Boards
•
Waters Corporation (May 2006–present)
•
Mallinckrodt plc (June 2013–present)
|
||||||||||||
|
Healthcare Services Consultant
|
||||||||||||||
|
Director Since
May 2007
•
Audit Committee (November 2007–present; Chair since May 2015)
|
||||||||||||||
|
Age
65
|
||||||||||||||
|
Pamela D.A. Reeve
|
||||||||||||||
|
Career
A retired business executive, Ms. Reeve served from November 1989 to August 2004 as the President and CEO and a director of Lightbridge, Inc., a public company and a global provider of mobile business solutions to the wireless communications industry. Prior to joining Lightbridge in 1989, Ms. Reeve spent 11 years as a consultant and in a series of executive positions at the Boston Consulting Group, Inc.
|
Qualifications
•
Operational, strategic and corporate governance expertise, particularly in the communications and technology industries
•
Financial expertise
•
Extensive institutional knowledge and effective leadership as former Lead Director and now Chairperson
Other Public Company Boards
•
Frontier Communications Corporation (May 2010–present and Chairperson since April 2016)
•
Sonus Networks, Inc. (August 2013–May 2017)
Other Positions
•
Chair of the Board, The Commonwealth Institute (June 2004–present)
|
||||||||||||
|
Former President and CEO Lightbridge, Inc.
|
||||||||||||||
|
Director Since
March 2002
•
Chairperson (May 2020–present)
•
Lead Director (May 2004–May 2020)
•
Nominating and Corporate Governance Committee (May 2009–present; August 2002–February 2005)
•
Compensation Committee (April 2004–June 2016; Chair, April 2004–May 2009)
•
Audit Committee (August 2002–July 2007)
|
||||||||||||||
|
Age
71
|
||||||||||||||
|
David E. Sharbutt
|
||||||||||||||
|
Career
Mr. Sharbutt is a retired business executive who most recently served as CEO and Chairman of Alamosa Holdings, Inc., a provider of wireless communications services, which was acquired by Sprint Nextel Corporation in February 2006. Mr. Sharbutt had been Alamosa’s Chairman and a director since the company was founded in July 1998 and was named CEO in October 1999. Before joining Alamosa, Mr. Sharbutt was President and CEO of Hicks & Ragland Engineering Co., an engineering consulting company (now known as CHR Solutions).
|
Qualifications
•
Board experience with wireless communications companies
•
Financial expertise
•
Strategic, operational and advisory roles in leading complex telecommunications enterprises
Other Public Company Boards
•
None
Other Positions
•
Director, Flat Wireless, LLC, a private company
|
||||||||||||
|
Former CEO and Chairman Alamosa Holdings, Inc.
|
||||||||||||||
|
Director Since
July 2006
•
Nominating and Corporate Governance Committee (May 2007–present; Chair since May 2015)
•
Audit Committee (April 2017–May 2018; May 2007–November 2007)
|
||||||||||||||
|
Age
71
|
||||||||||||||
|
Bruce L. Tanner
|
||||||||||||||
|
Career
Mr. Tanner served as the Executive Vice President and CFO of Lockheed Martin Corporation from September 2007 until February 2019. Mr. Tanner joined Lockheed Martin Corporation in 1982, and prior to being appointed CFO, he held a variety of leadership positions at Lockheed Martin in finance, including as Vice President of Finance and Business Operations, Lockheed Martin Aeronautics, from April 2006 to September 2007, and Vice President of Finance and Business Operations, Lockheed Martin Electronic Systems, from May 2002 to March 2006.
|
Qualifications
•
Extensive executive experience with global large-cap company
•
Financial expertise
•
Strategic, operational and advisory roles in complex financial transactions
Other Public Company Boards
•
Truist Financial Corporation (November 2015–present)
|
||||||||||||
|
Former EVP and CFO Lockheed Martin Corporation
|
||||||||||||||
|
Director Since
September 2019
•
Audit Committee (December 2019–present)
|
||||||||||||||
|
Age
62
|
||||||||||||||
|
Samme L. Thompson
|
||||||||||||||
|
Career
A business executive with more than 35 years of management experience, Mr. Thompson has served as president of Telit Associates, Inc., a financial and strategic advisory firm, since joining the firm in 2002. From 1999 to 2002, he served as SVP and Director of Strategy and Corporate Development for Motorola, Inc. Mr. Thompson also served as director of Strategic Planning and Development with AT&T Information Systems; as an SVP with Kidder, Peabody & Co.; and as a strategy consultant with McKinsey & Company.
|
Qualifications
•
Significant strategic and global advisory experience
•
Comprehensive board experience with companies in the wireless communications industry
•
Strong leadership skills, including managing business operations
Other Public Company Boards
•
Spok Holdings, Inc. (November 2004–July 2020)
Other Positions
•
Board of Visitors, Joseph M. Katz Graduate School of Business
•
Member, Global Affairs Council of Chicago
•
Trustee, University of Chicago, Marine Biological Laboratory
|
||||||||||||
|
President
Telit Associates, Inc.
|
||||||||||||||
|
Director Since
August 2005 (served as director of SpectraSite, Inc. from June 2004 until our acquisition in August 2005)
•
Nominating and Corporate Governance Committee (May 2019–present)
•
Compensation Committee (May 2006–May 2019; Chair, May 2009–May 2019)
|
||||||||||||||
|
Age
75
|
||||||||||||||
|
PROPOSAL
2
|
Ratification of Selection of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm
The Audit Committee has selected, and the Audit Committee and the Board of Directors recommend stockholder ratification of, Deloitte & Touche LLP as our independent registered public accounting firm for the year ending December 31, 2021.
|
The Audit Committee and the Board of Directors unanimously recommend that you vote
FOR
the ratification of the selection of Deloitte & Touche LLP to serve as our independent registered public accounting firm for the current fiscal year.
|
||||||||||||||||||
|
PROPOSAL
3
|
Advisory Vote on Executive Compensation
We are providing our stockholders the opportunity to approve, on an advisory basis (a “say on pay” vote), the compensation of our named executive officers as described in “Compensation Discussion and Analysis” and related tabular and narrative disclosures in this Proxy Statement in accordance with Section 14A of the Exchange Act. We intend to submit our executive compensation to an advisory vote annually, consistent with the advisory vote of our stockholders on the frequency of the say on pay vote at our 2017 Annual Meeting of Stockholders. The next advisory say on pay vote of our stockholders will be held at our 2022 Annual Meeting of Stockholders.
|
The Board of Directors unanimously recommends that you vote
FOR
the approval, on an advisory basis, of the compensation of our named executive officers as disclosed in this Proxy Statement pursuant to the compensation disclosure rules of the SEC.
|
||||||||||||||||||
|
PROPOSAL
4
|
Stockholder Proposal Regarding the Ownership Threshold Required to Call a Special Meeting
John Chevedden, 2215 Nelson Ave., No. 205 Redondo Beach, CA 90278, the beneficial owner of at least 100 shares of Common Stock, has notified us that he intends to present a proposal at the Annual Meeting. The proposal appears as we received it, and we accept no responsibility for the accuracy of the proposal or the proponent’s statements below.
|
The Board of Directors unanimously recommends that you vote
AGAINST
this proposal.
|
||||||||||||||||||
| Board's Statement in Opposition | ||||||||
| The Board of Directors has carefully considered the foregoing stockholder proposal and unanimously recommends that stockholders vote “AGAINST” this proposal for the following reasons: | ||||||||
|
The existing 25% threshold has continually been upheld by stockholders and continues to protect against narrow or short-term interests, while minimizing the financial and administrative burdens associated with conducting a special meeting of stockholders.
|
||||||||
|
Our existing special meeting threshold has been upheld by our stockholders twice before, during our Annual Meetings in 2016 and last year. The Board continues to believe that the current special meeting ownership threshold of 25% strikes the appropriate balance between providing stockholders with a meaningful right to call a special meeting and protecting against the risk of a single stockholder, or small minority group of stockholders, unilaterally misusing the Company’s resources for potentially narrow or short-term interests that do not benefit the greater stockholder base. A single stockholder or small minority group of stockholders has no duty to act in the best interests of the Company or other stockholders.
|
||||||||
|
The Board believes the current 25% threshold also aligns with the mainstream of special meeting rights at S&P 500 companies. As of March 2021, only approximately 27% of the S&P 500 companies surveyed by FactSet provide stockholders with a special meeting right at a level below our current special meeting threshold.
|
||||||||
|
Although the concept of a virtual meeting has become commonplace in light of the COVID-19 pandemic, coordinating a special stockholder meeting continues to be a substantial undertaking and requires considerable use of the Company’s time and resources. The Company is still required to prepare, print and mail disclosure documents to stockholders, solicit proxies, hold the special meeting and tabulate votes. There is also a further cost to the Company and its stockholders, as the time required to prepare and conduct a special meeting distracts the Board and management from their primary focus of leading and operating our business.
|
||||||||
|
There are significant protections of stockholder rights under law and regulation
.
|
||||||||
|
Stockholders can be assured their right to submit a proposal and vote on significant matters is protected by state law and other regulations. Under Delaware law and NYSE rules, the Company must submit certain significant matters to a stockholder vote, including mergers and consolidations, large asset purchases or share issuances, the adoption of equity compensation plans and amendments to the Company’s certificate of incorporation. Additionally, under Rule 14a-8 of the Exchange Act, stockholders can present proposals, such as this one, at annual meetings.
|
||||||||
|
Our current corporate governance structure promotes transparency and accountability
.
|
||||||||
|
The Board and Company are committed to governance best practices. We have long supported and continue to support various means for our stockholders to effectively communicate with the Board and management to hold them accountable, as we believe such communication is imperative to the success of our business.
|
||||||||
|
The following governance policies and practices demonstrate that the Company has taken a number of steps to achieve greater transparency and accountability to protect stockholder rights, without the additional expense and risk associated with a lower special meeting threshold:
|
||||||||
|
•
Special Meeting Right
. The holders of 25% of our common stock can request the call of a special meeting.
•
Action by Written Consent
. Stockholders may act by written consent instead of a meeting.
•
Proxy Access
. We adopted a market-standard proxy access right for nominating Directors.
•
Annual Director Elections
. All of our Directors are elected annually by our stockholders; we do not have a classified or staggered board.
•
Majority Voting
. We have a majority voting standard for the election of Directors in uncontested elections.
•
No Supermajority Voting Provisions
. Our governance documents do not contain provisions requiring a supermajority stockholder vote on any issue.
•
Annual Say-On-Pay Vote
. We solicit feedback from our stockholders every year on executive compensation.
|
||||||||
|
•
No Stockholder Rights Plan
. We do not maintain a stockholder rights plan or “poison pill.”
•
One Share, One Vote
. We have equal voting rights for all of our stockholders.
|
||||||||
|
We are committed to providing opportunities for stockholders to communicate with the Board and senior leadership.
|
||||||||
|
We provide opportunities for our stockholders to communicate with our Board through our extensive stockholder engagement program, which is also more cost effective than a special meeting. Our leaders meet regularly with stockholders to discuss strategy, operational performance and governance. In 2020, we engaged with stockholders representing nearly 80% of our actively managed outstanding stock. For additional information about the Company’s stockholder engagement program and actions it has taken in response to these discussions, please see page 38 of this Proxy Statement.
|
||||||||
|
The Board continues to believe that reducing the threshold required to call a special meeting to 10% is not in the best interests of the Company or our stockholders. Special meetings should be limited to extraordinary circumstances, such as when fiduciary or strategic considerations affecting a significant stockholder base require the matter be addressed on an expeditious basis.
|
||||||||
|
For the reasons discussed above, the Board believes this proposal is not in the best interests of the Company or its stockholders.
|
||||||||
|
PROPOSAL
5
|
Stockholder Proposal Regarding The Creation of a Human Rights Oversight Committee of the Board
Walter O. Garcia and Maria Luisa Garcia, 2151 Overland Avenue, Los Angeles, CA 90025, the beneficial owner of at least 100 shares of Common Stock, have notified us that they intend to present a proposal at the Annual Meeting. The proposal appears as we received it, and we accept no responsibility for the accuracy of the proposal or the proponents' statements below.
|
The Board of Directors unanimously recommends that you vote
AGAINST
this proposal.
|
||||||||||||||||||
| Board's Statement in Opposition | |||||
| The Board of Directors has carefully considered the foregoing stockholder proposal and unanimously recommends that stockholders vote “AGAINST” this proposal for the following reasons: | |||||
|
The Board already has oversight of the Company’s response to human rights issues through its Nominating Committee
.
|
|||||
|
Pursuant to its charter, the Nominating Committee has direct oversight of the Company’s environmental, social and governance policies and practices, including those related to the Company’s corporate social responsibility and environmental sustainability programs, which encompass our initiatives related to social justice and human capital management. As a result, the current governance structure allows for the Board, through the Nominating Committee, to regularly review and assess environmental, social and governance matters, including human rights, and allows management to continue implementing policies to make strides in this area. The formation of a new human rights oversight committee will lead to a duplication of efforts, cause confusion and be an inefficient use of the Company’s resources.
|
|||||
|
The Company has appointed a Chief Sustainability Officer who works with other employees to oversee sustainability matters, including human rights. The Chief Sustainability Officer periodically reports to the Nominating Committee on sustainability and the Company’s initiatives related to human capital management and human rights.
|
|||||
|
The Company has a number of policies in place that highlight a commitment to human rights matters.
|
|||||
|
Respect for human rights is an essential value of the Company and vital to the operation of our global business, as stated in our Global Human Rights Statement which can be found at
www.americantower.com/corporate-responsibility/people.html
. This Statement is guided by the principles contained within the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, the UN Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights and the OECD Guidelines for Multinational Enterprises.
|
|||||
|
We seek to avoid infringing on the rights of others and endeavor to address adverse human rights impacts within all the communities in which we conduct our business. Other examples that highlight the Company’s commitment to human rights include the following policies:
|
|||||
|
•
Diversity Statement
•
Vendor Code of Conduct
•
Code of Ethics and Business Conduct Policy
•
Sanctions Compliance Policy
|
|||||
|
We expect our employees, vendors and other stakeholders to comply with the above policies and share our commitment to respect and promote human rights throughout our business. These documents, except the Sanctions Compliance Policy, are available on our Company website. Additionally, the Company’s employees and other stakeholders around the globe can report any ethics or human rights violations through our anonymous, confidential, third-party hotline.
|
|||||
|
The Company reiterates its commitment to human rights in our Sustainability Report. Among other things, the report includes details of initiatives such as diversity, equity and inclusion, social justice, health and safety management, disaster relief, empowerment and education through technology, philanthropic efforts and community engagement.
|
|||||
|
For the reasons discussed above, the Board believes this proposal is not in the best interests of the Company or its stockholders.
|
|||||
| By Order of the Board of Directors, | ||
|
||
|
Thomas A. Bartlett
President and Chief Executive Officer
Boston, Massachusetts
April 14, 2021
|
||
|
Reconciliation of Net Income to Adjusted EBITDA
|
2010 | 2011 | 2012 | 2013 | 2014 | 2015 | 2016 | 2017 |
2018
(1)
|
2019 | 2020 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Net income
|
$ | 374 | $ | 382 | $ | 594 | $ | 482 | $ | 803 | $ | 672 | $ | 970 | $ | 1,225 | $ | 1,265 | $ | 1,917 | $ | 1,692 | |||||||||||||
|
Income from discontinued operations, net
|
(0) | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Income from continuing operations
|
$ | 374 | $ | 382 | $ | 594 | $ | 482 | $ | 803 | $ | 672 | $ | 970 | $ | 1,225 | $ | 1,265 | $ | 1,917 | $ | 1,692 | |||||||||||||
|
Income from equity method investments
|
(0) | (0) | (0) | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Income tax provision (benefit)
|
182 | 125 | 107 | 60 | 63 | 158 | 156 | 31 | (110) | (0) | 130 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Other (income) expense
|
(0) | 123 | 38 | 207 | 62 | 135 | 48 | (31) | (24) | (18) | 241 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Loss (gain) on retirement of long-term obligations
|
2 | — | 0 | 39 | 3 | 80 | (1) | 70 | 3 | 22 | 72 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Interest expense
|
246 | 312 | 402 | 458 | 580 | 596 | 717 | 750 | 826 | 814 | 794 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Interest income
|
(5) | (7) | (8) | (10) | (14) | (16) | (26) | (35) | (55) | (47) | (40) | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Other operating expenses
|
36 | 58 | 62 | 72 | 69 | 67 | 73 | 256 | 513 | 166 | 266 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Depreciation, amortization and accretion
|
461 | 556 | 644 | 800 | 1,004 | 1,285 | 1,526 | 1,716 | 2,111 | 1,778 | 1,882 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Stock-based compensation expense
|
53 | 47 | 52 | 68 | 80 | 91 | 90 | 109 | 138 | 111 | 121 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
ADJUSTED EBITDA
|
$ | 1,348 | $ | 1,595 | $ | 1,892 | $ | 2,176 | $ | 2,650 | $ | 3,067 | $ | 3,553 | $ | 4,090 | $ | 4,667 | $ | 4,745 | $ | 5,156 | |||||||||||||
|
Consolidated AFFO
Reconciliation
(1)
|
2010 | 2011 | 2012 | 2013 | 2014 | 2015 | 2016 | 2017 |
2018
(2)
|
2019 | 2020 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Adjusted EBITDA (from above)
|
$ | 1,348 | $ | 1,595 | $ | 1,892 | $ | 2,176 | $ | 2,650 | $ | 3,067 | $ | 3,553 | $ | 4,090 | $ | 4,667 | $ | 4,745 | $ | 5,156 | |||||||||||||
|
Straight-line revenue
|
(105) | (144) | (166) | (148) | (124) | (155) | (132) | (194) | (88) | (184) | (322) | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Straight-line expense
|
22 | 31 | 34 | 30 | 38 | 56 | 68 | 62 | 58 | 44 | 52 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Cash interest
|
(238) | (301) | (381) | (435) | (572) | (573) | (694) | (723) | (807) | (800) | (824) | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Interest income
|
5 | 7 | 8 | 10 | 14 | 16 | 26 | 35 | 55 | 47 | 40 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Cash paid for income taxes
(3)
|
(36) | (54) | (69) | (52) | (69) | (64) | (96) | (137) | (164) | (147) | (146) | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Dividends on preferred stock
|
— | — | — | — | (24) | (90) | (107) | (87) | (9) | — | — | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Dividend to noncontrolling interest
|
— | — | — | — | — | — | — | (13) | (14) | (13) | (8) | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Capital improvement capital expenditures
|
(31) | (61) | (75) | (81) | (75) | (90) | (110) | (114) | (150) | (160) | (150) | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Corporate capital expenditures
|
(12) | (19) | (20) | (30) | (24) | (16) | (16) | (17) | (9) | (11) | (9) | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Consolidated AFFO
|
$ | 953 | $ | 1,055 | $ | 1,223 | $ | 1,470 | $ | 1,815 | $ | 2,150 | $ | 2,490 | $ | 2,902 | $ | 3,539 | $ | 3,521 | $ | 3,788 | |||||||||||||
|
Divided by: Weighted Average Diluted Shares
|
404.1 | 400.2 | 399.6 | 399.1 | 400.1 | 423.0 | 429.3 | 431.7 | 443.0 | 445.5 | 446.1 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Consolidated AFFO Per Share
|
$ | 2.36 | $ | 2.64 | $ | 3.06 | $ | 3.68 | $ | 4.54 | $ | 5.08 | $ | 5.80 | $ | 6.72 | $ | 7.99 | $ | 7.90 | $ | 8.49 | |||||||||||||
|
Return on
Invested
Capital
(4)
|
2010 | 2011 | 2012 |
2013
(5)
|
2014 |
2015
(5)
|
2016
(5)
|
2017
(6)
|
2018
(6)(7)
|
2019
(6)
|
2020
(6)
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Adjusted EBITDA
|
$ | 1,348 | $ | 1,595 | $ | 1,892 | $ | 2,401 | $ | 2,650 | $ | 3,206 | $ | 3,743 | $ | 4,149 | $ | 4,725 | $ | 4,917 | $ | 5,280 | |||||||||||||
|
Cash Taxes
|
(36) | (54) | (69) | (114) | (69) | (107) | (98) | (137) | (172) | (168) | (146) | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Maintenance capital expenditures
|
(31) | (61) | (75) | (81) | (75) | (124) | (159) | (115) | (150) | (160) | (150) | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Corporate capital expenditures
|
(12) | (19) | (20) | (23) | (24) | (26) | (27) | (17) | (9) | (11) | (9) | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Numerator
|
$ | 1,268 | $ | 1,462 | $ | 1,728 | $ | 2,183 | $ | 2,482 | $ | 2,948 | $ | 3,459 | $ | 3,880 | $ | 4,394 | $ | 4,579 | $ | 4,974 | |||||||||||||
|
Gross property and equipment
|
$ | 6,376 | $ | 7,889 | $ | 9,047 | $ | 10,844 | $ | 11,659 | $ | 14,397 | $ | 15,652 | $ | 16,950 | $ | 17,717 | $ | 19,326 | $ | 20,672 | |||||||||||||
|
Gross intangibles
|
3,213 | 3,978 | 4,892 | 8,471 | 9,172 | 12,671 | 14,795 | 16,183 | 16,323 | 18,474 | 20,734 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Gross goodwill
(8)
|
2,660 | 2,824 | 2,991 | 3,928 | 4,180 | 4,240 | 4,363 | 4,879 | 4,797 | 5,492 | 6,600 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Denominator
|
$ | 12,249 | $ | 14,691 | $ | 16,930 | $ | 23,243 | $ | 25,011 | $ | 31,308 | $ | 34,809 | $ | 38,012 | $ | 38,837 | $ | 43,292 | $ | 48,006 | |||||||||||||
|
ROIC
|
10.4 | % | 10.0 | % | 10.2 | % | 9.4 | % | 9.9 | % | 9.4 | % | 9.9 | % | 10.2 | % | 11.3 | % | 10.6 | % | 10.4 | % | |||||||||||||
| Property Revenue Excluding Pass-Through | 2010 | 2011 | 2012 | 2013 | 2014 | 2015 | 2016 | 2017 | 2018 | 2019 | 2020 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Property revenue
|
$ | 1,936 | $ | 2,386 | $ | 2,803 | $ | 3,287 | $ | 4,007 | $ | 4,680 | $ | 5,713 | $ | 6,566 | $ | 7,315 | $ | 7,465 | $ | 7,954 | |||||||||||||
|
Pass-through revenue
|
(100) | (176) | (229) | (296) | (363) | (423) | (739) | (918) | (952) | (994) | (1,010) | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Property revenue excluding pass-through revenue
|
$ | 1,836 | $ | 2,210 | $ | 2,574 | $ | 2,991 | $ | 3,644 | $ | 4,257 | $ | 4,975 | $ | 5,648 | $ | 6,363 | $ | 6,471 | $ | 6,943 | |||||||||||||
|
Net Leverage Ratio
|
4Q20
|
||||
|
Total debt
|
$ | 29,287 | |||
|
Cash and cash equivalents
|
1,746 | ||||
|
Net debt
|
$ | 27,541 | |||
|
The quarter’s annualized (LQA) Adjusted EBITDA
|
$ | 5,502 | |||
|
LQA Net Leverage Ratio
|
5.0 | x | |||
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
No Suppliers Found
Price
Yield
| Owner | Position | Direct Shares | Indirect Shares |
|---|