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Preliminary Proxy Statement | |||||||
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Mastercard Incorporated | ||||||||
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Proposal 6: Approval of amendments to the Certificate of Incorporation
to remove supermajority voting requirements
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2021 MASTERCARD PROXY |
2
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On grit, rebuilding and the longest year
Dear Fellow Stockholder: April 29, 2021
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It will be important to take from 2020 the lesson of dogged grit and use it to work together, even when the path ahead isn’t easy.
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When looking back at 2020, we need to take note of so many things – the lost social connections, the lost jobs, the lost lives. But something else deserves attention as well. It’s the perseverance that carried people into the new year and created space for hope to survive and eventually flourish.
That sentiment was exemplified by Michelle Cadore, a fashion boutique owner in Brooklyn, New York, who knows the path for a business is never a straight line forward.
“You lose some, you win some, you start over, you try again,” she said matter-of-factly earlier this year.
The same resilience came through from hospital staff, emergency responders, delivery workers, grocery clerks, parents and teachers. We saw it with our business partners around the world, the startups we mentor, our government contacts, our suppliers and especially our 21,000 employees.
It’s in that drive to get back up Cadore describes that we will rebuild together. How we rebuild is not only the most difficult part but also the most exciting. It’s up to us to push for real changes to make for a better, more inclusive world. For Mastercard, we need to keep advancing the technologies that supported people through the last year. It will be important to take from 2020 the lesson of dogged grit and use it to work together, even when the path ahead isn’t easy.
But to talk about where we are going, we first need to appreciate where we’ve been.
The innovation engine
Mastercard was built on a solid foundation that sustained our business through these difficult times. Every year, we invested in new technologies to chart the future. This work was especially beneficial last year. When the world had to shut down for health reasons, people still needed to buy essentials, businesses needed to maintain their customers and governments needed to distribute aid. When the world needed to go digital, our people were already there, ready to handle transactions of all types: account-to-account, card or online. Our work to develop new payment technologies was critical for this transition to be possible.
These efforts also helped us grow our revenue over time, allowing us to keep pushing forward. Financial performance over the past decade has stood ahead of the competition, with an over 40% return on capital and a total shareholder return approaching 1,600%.
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3
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2021 MASTERCARD PROXY |
For small businesses, our innovations made a difference. Mastercard research found that American small businesses that started accepting e-commerce transactions during the pandemic saw average monthly sales growth of 6%, compared to those that didn’t create a digital presence.
We also expanded our open banking capabilities, powering the services that help people take greater control of their financial data. We worked with government officials in the Bahamas to support the digital Sand Dollar currency, which can be a powerful tool for disaster relief and developed digital identity tools to help students in Australia take tests remotely. We put our data analytics to work making sense of new spending trends to help businesses and governments plan for the new world.
We’re now plotting out our next steps in our decades-long journey as a company. Our work to support new fintechs and expand our capabilities in digital currencies and real-time payments will unlock people’s ability to do more with digital money. Our multi-rail strategy providing a one-stop shop for payments will grow our support for our customers. And our new horizons beyond payments such as health care and cybersecurity will be valuable building blocks to expanding our services capabilities.
As we’ve seen an additional $900 billion spent in retail online globally in 2020, this work becomes even more critical to respond to consumers’ changing needs and making sure smaller merchants and people with few digital tools aren’t left behind amid this shift online.
Our commitment to decency
Kendra Brown, a Mastercard director of public policy, worked with the Vera Institute of Justice in New Orleans to further its work supporting equality in the criminal justice system. She joined on through our virtual pro bono program created in the wake of racial injustice protests last year.
“Knowing that there is still injustice that exists,” she said, “we have a duty to advocate for policies that will ensure we are doing well by doing good.”
This kind of work is fundamental to our mission because we believe that we only thrive when the world thrives. It’s our responsibility to make the digital economy work for everyone, everywhere. Our teams looked at this rapid move to digital and worked even harder to build the tools people would need. At the same time, we looked at more ways to level the playing field for all people and all businesses.
This may be best demonstrated by our financial inclusion commitments. Having met our initial goal of bringing 500 million more people into the digital economy, we’ve extended the goal to 1 billion people – and 50 million micro and small merchants – by 2025. As part of this effort, we’ll provide 25 million women entrepreneurs with tools to help them grow their businesses.
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2021 MASTERCARD PROXY |
4
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We showed our commitment to real action by tying our executives’ compensation to Environmental, Social and Governance goals.
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Small businesses are a critical piece of the world economy, delivering up to half of the world’s GDP. They’ve shown great perseverance. Now it’s imperative we help them recover from the crisis. That’s why we have put our money – and our muscle – into their success. Within the past year, we pledged $250 million in products, insights and analytics services to help small businesses evolve and transition to meet their customers’ needs and expectations.
Actions driving trust
The pandemic has exposed and exacerbated a number of environmental, economic and social issues we can’t ignore. Mastercard is working to address these issues head-on, using fairness and trust.
We need to actively engage in building a more sustainable world because every economy depends on it. We are pushing for greater sustainability through the Priceless Planet Coalition pledge to restore 100 million trees. We’ve also deepened our connections to governments – which had started as a way to accelerate financial inclusion, but this work grew to involve cybersecurity, transit and helping small businesses develop digital tools.
Added to that, we showed our commitment to real action by tying our executives’ compensation to our Environmental, Social and Governance (ESG) goals.
To us, it is as much about what we do as it is about how we do it. This starts with a commitment to transparency and a principled approach to innovation. All of that calls for trust.
When we do all these things – and do them together – more people have an opportunity to succeed.
We’ve all been challenged by this yearlong crisis. But, with a strong long-term vision, solid partnerships and the know-how to deliver even in an evolving situation, we’ve been able to navigate 2020 and set a course for the possibilities ahead.
The road forward isn’t a straight line, but we’re gratified to be taking these steps with the people mentioned in this letter and the hundreds of millions of others who, like Cadore, the boutique owner from Brooklyn, interact with our business every day because they know we’re going to be there to help them move forward, too.
Sincerely,
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Ajay Banga
Executive Chairman |
Michael Miebach
President and CEO |
5
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2021 MASTERCARD PROXY |
Notice of 2021 annual meeting of stockholders
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When
Tuesday, June 22, 2021
at 8:30 a.m. (Eastern time) |
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Record date
April 23, 2021
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Who can vote
Holders of Mastercard’s Class A common stock at the close of business on April 23, 2021
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Location
Live webcast at:
www.virtualshareholdermeeting.com/MA2021 |
Dear Stockholder:
You are invited to attend the Annual Meeting of Stockholders of Mastercard Incorporated (Annual Meeting), which will be held virtually on Tuesday, June 22, 2021 at 8:30 a.m. (Eastern time) at www.virtualshareholdermeeting.com/MA2021.
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Items of business |
Board Vote
Recommendation
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For more
Information |
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1 |
Election of the 14 nominees named in the proxy statement to serve on Mastercard’s Board of Directors
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FOR
each director nominee
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See pg
22
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2 |
Advisory approval of Mastercard’s executive compensation
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FOR |
See pg
55
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3 |
Ratification of the appointment of PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP as the independent registered public accounting firm for Mastercard for 2021
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FOR |
See pg
100
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4 | Approval of the amendment and restatement of the 2006 Long Term Incentive Plan | FOR |
See pg
105
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5 | Approval of the amendment and restatement of the 2006 Non-Employee Director Equity Compensation Plan | FOR |
See pg
116
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6 | Approval of amendments to the Certificate of Incorporation to remove supermajority voting requirements |
FOR
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See pg
121
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Annual meeting website and voting in advance
We have created an annual meeting website to make it easy for you to access our Annual Meeting materials at www.mastercardannualmeeting.com. There you will find an overview of the voting items, the proxy statement and the annual report to read online or download, as well as a link to vote your shares.
Your vote is important. Please vote as soon as possible by one of the methods shown below. Be sure to have your proxy card, voting instruction form or Notice of Internet Availability of Proxy Materials in hand and follow the below instructions:
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By telephone
You can vote your shares by calling 800.690.6903 toll-free
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By Internet
You can vote your shares online at www.proxyvote.com
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By mail
Complete, sign, date and return your proxy card or voting instruction form in the postage-paid envelope provided
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7
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2021 MASTERCARD PROXY |
Attending the Virtual Annual Meeting
The Annual Meeting will be a virtual-only meeting held on June 22, 2021 at 8:30 am. Stockholders of record as of April 23, 2021 will be able to participate in the annual meeting by visiting our annual meeting website at www.virtualshareholdermeeting.com/MA2021 .
Stockholders will be able to attend the virtual Annual Meeting online, vote their shares electronically and submit questions online during the meeting by logging in to the website listed above using the unique 16-digit control number included in their Notice of Internet Availability of proxy materials, proxy or voting instruction card, email or on any additional instructions accompanying these proxy materials. Those without a control number may attend as guests of the meeting but will not have the option to vote their shares, ask questions or otherwise participate in the virtual Annual Meeting. Stockholders are encouraged to log in at www.virtualshareholdermeeting.com/MA2021 to check-in to the webcast up to 15 minutes before the virtual Annual Meeting’s start time.
Stockholders may submit questions during the meeting by entering a question in the Q&A field; we will respond to questions as time permits. If we receive substantially similar questions, we may group them together and provide a single response to avoid repetition and allow time for additional topics to be discussed at the virtual Annual Meeting. Stockholders may submit questions in advance of the meeting by entering their control number and submitting a question under the “Questions for Management” tab at proxyvote.com.
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All participants in the virtual Annual Meeting should reference the meeting rules of conduct that will be posted to the “Investor Relations” section of Mastercard’s website at https://investor.mastercard.com. You can find more information under “About the Annual Meeting and voting” on pg 126 of the proxy statement that follows.
Audio webcast
In addition to participating in the virtual Annual Meeting, you can listen to a live audio webcast of our virtual Annual Meeting by visiting https://investor.mastercard.com/investor-relations/default.aspx, the “Investor Relations” page of our website, beginning at 8:30 a.m. (Eastern time) on June 22, 2021.
Date of mailing
We will begin mailing our Proxy Materials on or about April 29, 2021.
Unless you attend (and vote at) the virtual Annual Meeting, Mastercard must receive your vote either by telephone, Internet, proxy card or voting instruction form by 11:59 p.m. (Eastern time) on June 21, 2021 for your vote to be counted. Telephone and Internet voting facilities will close at that time.
Voting by telephone or Internet or by returning your proxy card or voting instruction form in advance of the virtual Annual Meeting does not deprive you of your right to attend or vote at the virtual Annual Meeting.
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By Order of the Board of Directors
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Janet McGinness
Corporate Secretary
Purchase, New York
April 29, 2021
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IMPORTANT NOTICE REGARDING THE AVAILABILITY OF PROXY MATERIALS FOR THE ANNUAL MEETING OF STOCKHOLDERS
Mastercard Incorporated’s Proxy Statement for the 2021 Annual Meeting of Stockholders (the Proxy Statement) and 2020 Annual Report on Form 10-K (the 2020 Form 10-K) are available at www.proxyvote.com.
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2021 MASTERCARD PROXY |
8
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Our Board nominees
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Director
since |
Committee membership
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Name | Age |
Primary occupation
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Audit
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HRCC
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NCG
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Ajay Banga, Executive Chairman | 61 | 2010 | Executive Chairman | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Richard K. Davis | 63 | 2018 | CEO, Make-A-Wish America |
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Steven J. Freiberg |
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64 | 2006 | Former CEO, E*TRADE Financial Corporation |
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● | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Julius Genachowski | 58 | 2014 | Managing Director, The Carlyle Group | ● | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Choon Phong Goh | 57 | 2018 | CEO, Singapore Airlines Limited | ● | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Merit E. Janow, Lead Director | 63 | 2014 | Dean, School of International and Public Affairs, Columbia University | ● |
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Oki Matsumoto | 57 | 2016 | Founder, Chairman and CEO, Monex Group, Inc. | ● | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Michael Miebach | 53 | 2021 | President & CEO | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Youngme Moon | 57 | 2019 | Donald K. David Professor of Business Administration, Harvard Business School | ● | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Rima Qureshi | 56 | 2011 | Executive Vice President and Chief Strategy Officer, Verizon Communications Inc. | ● | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
José Octavio Reyes Lagunes | 69 | 2008 | Former Vice Chairman, The Coca-Cola Export Corporation, The Coca-Cola Company | ● | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Gabrielle Sulzberger | 61 | 2018 | Strategic Advisor, Two Sigma Impact | ● | ● | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Jackson Tai |
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70 | 2008 | Former Vice Chairman and CEO, DBS Group and DBS Bank, Ltd. | ● | ● | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Lance Uggla | 59 | 2019 | Chairman and CEO, IHS Markit Ltd. | ● | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Committee
chair
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● | Committee member |
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Audit Committee financial expert
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9
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2021 MASTERCARD PROXY |
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86%
12 of our 14
director nominees are
independent
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57%
8 of our 14 director
nominees identify as
racially diverse
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64%
9 of our 14 director
nominees are non-U.S. citizens
and/or have
international experience
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61
Average age
of our independent director nominees
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6.4
Average tenure
in years of our independent director nominees
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29%
4 of our 14 director
nominees identify as
female
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42%
5 of our 12
independent director nominees have
a tenure of
4 years or less
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Public company
board experience |
Global
perspective |
Financial | Sustainability | Consumer |
Digital &
innovation |
CEO experience |
Regulatory
& governmental |
Information
security |
Payments | ||||||||||||||||||||
13 | 13 | 12 | 12 | 11 | 11 | 10 | 10 | 8 | 8 |
2021 MASTERCARD PROXY |
10
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Stockholder Engagement
Management, and where appropriate, directors engage with stockholders in the boardroom, via video conference, telephone, and at conferences on a variety of topics. The exchanges we and our Board have had with stockholders provide us with a valuable understanding of our stockholders’ perspectives and meaningful opportunities to share views with them.
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Sustainability Engagement
We welcome the views of a broad range of stakeholders who serve as critical partners in identifying our key sustainability areas of impact. We regularly engage with these stakeholders to better understand their views and sustainability concerns and ensure we are prioritizing issues important to both our stakeholders and our long-term business success.
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Commitment to Transparency
Our website disclosures address critical matters of interest to our stakeholders, including our commitment to social responsibility.
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Business strategy
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Compensation practices
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Data privacy
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Our response to COVID-19
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Talent and culture
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Sustainability
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Risk oversight
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Data privacy
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Board refreshment
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Employees, financial institutions, merchants and customers
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Stockholders
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Suppliers
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Governments and regulators
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International organizations
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Community and nongovernmental organizations
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Human Rights Statement
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Political activity/political spending
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Our response to COVID-19
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Sustainability Report
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Diversity and inclusion
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Talent and culture
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Privacy and data protection
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Engagement and Transparency |
11
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2021 MASTERCARD PROXY |
GAAP | |||||||||||||||||||||||
Net revenue | Net income | Diluted EPS | |||||||||||||||||||||
$15.3B | $6.4B | $6.37 | |||||||||||||||||||||
down | 9% | down | 21% | down | 20% | ||||||||||||||||||
NON-GAAP
1
(currency-neutral)
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Net revenue | Adjusted net income | Adjusted diluted EPS | |||||||||||||||||||||
$15.3B | $6.5B | $6.43 | |||||||||||||||||||||
down | 8% | down | 17% | down | 16% |
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Gross dollar volume
YOY (growth on a local currency basis) |
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Cross-border
volume growth (on a local currency basis) |
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Switched transactions
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$6.3T | 90.1B | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
down 29% | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
flat | up 3% |
Capital returned to stockholders in 2020 | Cash flow from operations | |||||||||||||
Total
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Repurchased shares
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Dividends paid
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2020 | |||||||||||
$6.1B | $4.5B |
$1.6B
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$7.2B | |||||||||||
The coronavirus (“COVID-19”) outbreak and its negative impact on the global economy affected our 2020 performance. We saw unfavorable trends compared to historical periods, primarily due to travel restrictions and stay-at-home orders implemented by governments in many regions and countries across the globe. The full extent to which the pandemic, and measures taken in response, affect our business will depend on future developments, including the duration of the pandemic and its impact on the global economy which are uncertain and cannot be predicted at this time.
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2021 MASTERCARD PROXY |
12
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Align the long-term interest of our executives with stockholders
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Pay for performance
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Pay competitively
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13
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2021 MASTERCARD PROXY |
Balancing Stakeholder Interests
COVID-19 gave rise to significant and unique talent management challenges, from ensuring the health, safety, and well-being of our employees around the world, to retaining and motivating them to perform at the highest levels in the face of unprecedented uncertainty. To manage these challenges, the company quickly executed several actions, including a commitment to make no COVID-19-related layoffs in 2020 and introduction of new COVID-19-related benefits, including additional paid leave for illness, childcare, and eldercare, 100% coverage for the cost of COVID-19 testing, and flexibility for how and where employees get work done.
While our employees’ safety was our primary concern, we relied on them to remain focused and to maximize business results in the face of uncertainty. To achieve this, management and the Board committed to monitoring the development of the pandemic and its impact on Mastercard to ensure that all employees, including our NEOs, would be fairly rewarded for their contributions while balancing the interests of our stockholders. This commitment was made in consideration of the fact that financial targets under in-process incentive plans had been established pre-pandemic, rendering them obsolete as the economic impact of the pandemic became better understood.
Linking Pay to Performance in Unprecedented Times
As disclosed on Form 8-K, on December 31, 2020, the HRCC made certain adjustments to the terms of annual incentive awards for 2020 and Performance Stock Unit awards with the three-year performance period ending December 31, 2020 scheduled to vest in 2021 (2018 PSU awards) to account for the effect of the COVID-19 pandemic. The modifications, as described on pgs 65-66 (annual incentive plan) and pgs 70-71 (PSU awards), were intended to ensure that compensation appropriately reflected operating performance that was reasonably within our employees’ control while carefully considering the experience of our stockholders, whose one- and three-year annualized returns through December 31, 2020 were 20% and 34%, respectively, corresponding to 68th and 94th percentile performance against S&P 500 companies, respectively, as shown in the charts below. Although the modifications would have resulted in payouts in excess of target, the HRCC capped payouts under both plans at 100%.
As described on pg 76, the HRCC approved new design features for our 2021 incentive plans to address continuing economic uncertainty related to COVID-19. These features are generally aimed at improving our employees’ line of sight to operating performance and are intended to be temporary, under the assumption that economic activity will gradually revert to pre-pandemic levels. As described below, many of the design features included in our 2021 incentive plans are consistent with modifications made to our 2020 annual incentive plan and 2018 PSU awards, utilizing a predetermined, formulaic approach to adjusting targets on the basis of independent third-party economic data so as to create greater alignment between incentive outcomes and controllable operating performance.
Due to the extraordinary circumstances related to COVID-19, the HRCC made exceptional efforts outside of the typical annual decision-making process. Those efforts took the form of additional meeting time and contemplation of methodologies to address the alignment of pay and performance in a unique environment. In particular, the HRCC determined that in considering the application of discretion to modify incentive payouts, it would only do so using a highly structured approach based on independent, third-party data, including PCE data from Oxford Economics and international travel data from IATA, intended to control for the economic impact of COVID-19 on operating performance. Furthermore, the HRCC determined that payouts would not exceed target as a result of the application of structured discretion and that modified payouts would only occur if supported by strong stockholder returns.
Connecting Pay to Sustainability in 2021
To reinforce the importance of sustainability, which is already a critical part of our culture of decency, the HRCC approved formulaically linking executive annual incentives to Environmental, Social, and Governance (ESG) performance through an ESG modifier, which can increase or decrease payouts by up to +/- 10 percentage points based on performance against quantitative goals for carbon emissions, financial inclusion, and gender pay.
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2021 MASTERCARD PROXY |
14
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15
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2021 MASTERCARD PROXY |
(For more information on 2021 compensation decisions, see pgs 78-79.)
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2021 MASTERCARD PROXY |
16
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Our response to COVID-19 focused on supporting an inclusive recovery for our company, employees, customers and communities. |
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In Solidarity, a company-wide long-term initiative, was created in 2020 to stand against racism and advance equal opportunity for all. | ||||||||||||||||||||
•
Had no COVID-19 related layoffs in 2020
•
Introduced a COVID-19 global employee benefit for up to 10 business days of additional paid leave for sickness, childcare or eldercare
•
Covered 100% of costs of COVID-19 testing for all employees
•
Provided employees with flexibility to decide where and how they work and put precautionary health and safety measures in place at all offices
•
Introduced more mental health benefits to bolster employee well-being and curb stress
•
Engaged with several hundred national and local governments globally to help digitize relief programs and support recovery planning, such as the secure delivery of social disbursements
•
Committed up to $300 million, including $250 million in financial, technology, product and insight assets over the next five years, to help communities and small businesses recover and build resilience
|
•
Committed to investing $500 million in Black communities in the U.S. over the next five years
•
Pledged to expand spending with Black suppliers in the U.S. by 70% to $100 million annually by 2025
•
Committed to growing our Black leadership at the Vice President level and above globally by 50% by 2025
•
Adapting regional inclusion plans globally to address the unique needs of local markets and communities and combat racism and discrimination around the globe
|
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We have increased our commitment to environmental sustainability because economic growth cannot come at the expense of the planet. | ||||||||||||||||||||||
•
Aligned with the Task Force on Climate-related Financial Disclosures (TCFD) recommendations and will be increasing our transparency in 2021
•
In January 2021, pledged to reach net zero emissions by 2050, building on our existing commitments to reduce greenhouse gas emissions aligned with a 1.5-degree Celsius climate trajectory
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||
17
|
2021 MASTERCARD PROXY |
Strategy
|
|||||
01 |
Mastercard is a technology company in the global payments industry that connects consumers, financial institutions, merchants, governments, digital partners, businesses and other organizations worldwide, enabling them to use electronic forms of payment instead of cash and checks. We grow, diversify and build our business through a combination of organic and inorganic growth and strategic initiatives. Our success is driven by the skills, experience, integrity and mindset of the talent we hire.
|
19
|
2021 MASTERCARD PROXY |
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||||||||||||
Grow
Core
|
Diversify
Customers & geographies
|
Build
New areas
|
||||||||||||
• Credit
• Debit
• Commercial
• Prepaid
• Digital-physical convergence
• Acceptance
• Multi-rail solutions
|
• Financial inclusion
• New markets
• Businesses
• Governments
• Merchants
• Digital businesses
• Local schemes/switches
|
• Data analytics
• Consulting
• Marketing services
• Loyalty
• Cybersecurity & intelligence
• Processing
• New payment flows
• Open banking
|
||||||||||||
Enabled by brand, data, technology and people
|
2021 MASTERCARD PROXY |
20
|
Corporate governance
|
|||||
02 |
We are committed to enhancing our corporate governance practices, which we believe help us sustain our success and build long-term value for our stockholders. Our Board of Directors oversees Mastercard’s strategic direction and the performance of our business and management. Our governance structure enables independent, experienced, diverse and accomplished directors to provide advice, insight, guidance and oversight to advance the interests of the company and our stockholders. We have long maintained strong governance standards and a commitment to transparent financial reporting and strong internal controls.
|
Proposal 1: Election of directors
|
The Board unanimously recommends that stockholders vote FOR each nominee to serve as director
|
![]() |
Election process
|
Each member of our Board is elected annually by our Class A stockholders for a one-year term that expires at our next annual meeting. When our Board members are elected, they also are automatically appointed as directors of our operating subsidiary, Mastercard International Incorporated (Mastercard International). Our directors are elected by an affirmative vote of the majority of the votes cast at the annual meeting of stockholders, subject to our majority voting policy. You can find more about this in “About the Annual Meeting and voting” on pg
126
.
|
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Board composition, including director skills, is analyzed at least annually to ensure alignment with strategy and robust diversity
|
Candidate list is developed based on a number of inputs and recommendations
|
Personal qualities, skills and background of potential candidates are considered
|
The NCG meets with qualified candidates and makes recommendations
|
Board recommends nominees for election by the stockholders
|
Stockholders vote on nominees
|
Five new independent directors
have been nominated to our Board in the past four years
|
2021 MASTERCARD PROXY |
22
|
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||||||
57%
8 of our 14 director nominees identify as racially diverse
•
6 identify as Asian
•
1 identifies as Black
•
1 identifies as Latino
|
29%
4 of our 14 director nominees identify as female |
64%
9 of our 14 director nominees are non-U.S. citizens and/or have international experience |
Average tenure in years of our
independent director nominees
|
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|||||||||||||||
6.4 |
42%
5 of our 12 independent director nominees
have a
tenure of 4 years or less
|
61
Average age of independent director nominees |
23
|
2021 MASTERCARD PROXY |
Our director nominees reflect our corporate values
|
|||||||||||||||||
Trust | Initiative | ||||||||||||||||
Agility | Partnership | ||||||||||||||||
Ajay Banga
(Executive Chairman) |
Michael Miebach
(President & CEO)
|
|||||||
Richard K. Davis | Youngme Moon | |||||||
Steven J. Freiberg | Rima Qureshi | |||||||
Julius Genachowski | José Octavio Reyes Lagunes | |||||||
Choon Phong Goh | Gabrielle Sulzberger | |||||||
Merit E. Janow
(Lead Director) |
Jackson Tai | |||||||
Oki Matsumoto | Lance Uggla |
Stockholder Recommendations of Director Candidates
|
|||||
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Submit recommendations to:
Office of the Corporate Secretary
2000 Purchase Street
Purchase, NY 10577 Attention: Janet McGinness |
||||
The NCG evaluates stockholder recommendations using the same process it follows for other candidates. Candidate nominations under our bylaws are to be submitted not less than 90 days nor more than 120 days prior to the anniversary date of the immediately preceding annual meeting and must meet the requirements under our by-laws. The NCG may request such information from the nominee or stockholders as it deems appropriate.
|
|||||
2021 MASTERCARD PROXY |
24
|
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Public company board experience
both U.S. and non-U.S.
|
13 | ||||||||||||
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Global perspective
including significant experience in the geographic regions in which we operate
|
13 | ||||||||||||
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Financial & Risk
including risk management orientation
|
12 | ||||||||||||
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Sustainability
including environmental/climate change, talent and culture, and social responsibility initiatives
|
12 | ||||||||||||
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Consumer
including deep engagement with regulators as part of a business and/or through positions with governments and regulatory bodies
|
11 | ||||||||||||
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Technology, Digital & Innovation
including application of technology in payments, mobile and digital, as well as Internet, retail and social media experience
|
11 | ||||||||||||
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C-suite experience
including service as a chief executive officer at a publicly traded or private company
|
10 | ||||||||||||
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Regulatory & governmental
including brand, marketing and retail experience and other merchant background
|
10 | ||||||||||||
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Information security
including cybersecurity and data privacy
|
8 | ||||||||||||
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Payments
including within retail banking, payments infrastructure, telecommunications, technology and data
|
8 | ||||||||||||
25
|
2021 MASTERCARD PROXY |
Ajay Banga
Executive Chairman
(since January 2021)
|
Merit E. Janow
Dean, School of International and Public Affairs, Columbia University,
a private unive
rsity (sin
ce July 2013)
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Mr. Banga, Executive Chairman, contributes to the Board extensive global payments experience (including with payments technology and retail banking), as well as a deep focus on innovation and information security and extensive experience with sustainability, talent management and culture development. As a member of business advocacy organizations and government-sponsored committees, Mr. Banga provides valuable perspective on engaging and partnering with regulators. His brand marketing experience (including at several global food and beverage companies) adds strong consumer insight.
|
Professor Janow contributes extensive global perspective as a dean and professor of international economic law and international affairs, especially with respect to the Asia Pacific region where she has an extensive background. Her university career, public board service and other initiatives provide significant insight on technology, innovation, digital matters, cybersecurity and sustainability. Professor Janow brings deep experience in dealing with governments and regulatory bodies through both her past government service and her academic career, as well as through her service on not-for-profits and advisory bodies.
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Director since
April 2010
Age at Annual Meeting
61
Additional positions
•
Co-founder and co-chair, Cyber Readiness Institute
•
Chairman, International Chamber of Commerce
•
Member, Council on Foreign Relations
•
Founding Trustee, U.S.-India Strategic Partnership Forum
•
Former member, President’s Advisory Committee for Trade Policy and Negotiations (U.S.)
Current public company boards
•
Exor N.V. (expected May 2021)
|
Additional Mastercard experience
•
President and CEO, Mastercard (2010-2020)
•
President and COO, Mastercard (2009-2010)
Previous experience
•
Several executive positions at Citigroup (1996-2009), including CEO, Asia Pacific region and Chairman and CEO, International Global Consumer Group
•
Previous experience at Nestlé India and PepsiCo totaling 15 years, in roles of increasing responsibility
Past public company boards
•
Dow Inc.
•
DowDuPont Inc. and the Dow Chemical Company (Dow Inc. predecessor boards)
•
Kraft Foods Inc.
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Lead Director since
January 2021
Director since
June 2014
Age at Annual Meeting
63
Board committees
•
NCG (Chair)
•
Audit
Current public company boards
•
Aptiv PLC (expected April 30, 2021)
•
Trimble Inc. (until May 12, 2021)
Additional positions
•
Lead, Columbia University’s SIPA Tech & Policy Initiative
•
Board member and proxy committee member of American Funds (a mutual fund family of the Capital Group) (more than 20 funds)
|
•
Director of Japan Society and National Committee on U.S.-China Relations
•
Member, Council on Foreign Relations
•
Member, Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group, Inc. global advisory board
Previous experience
•
Several leadership positions at Columbia University (since 1994), including chairman, Advisory Committee on Socially Responsible Investing
•
Member, Appellate Body of the World Trade Organization
•
Executive director, the International Competition Policy Advisory Committee of the U.S. Department of Justice
•
Deputy Assistant U.S. Trade Representative, Japan and China
•
Past chairperson, Nasdaq Stock Market, Inc.
|
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||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Public Company
Board Experience
|
Global
Perspective
|
Financial & Risk | C-Suite Experience |
Technology, Digital &
Innovation
|
Regulatory &
Governmental
|
Public Company
Board Experience
|
Global
Perspective
|
Financial & Risk | C-Suite Experience |
Technology, Digital &
Innovation
|
Regulatory &
Governmental
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Consumer |
Information
Security
|
Payments |
Sustainability
|
Audit Committee
Financial Expert
|
Consumer |
Information
Security
|
Payments |
Sustainability
|
Audit Committee
Financial Expert
|
Richard K. Davis
CEO, Make-A-Wish America,
a non-profit corporation dedicated to granting the wishes of critically ill children (since January 2019)
|
Steven J. Freiberg
Former CEO, E*TRADE Financial Corporation,
a financial services firm
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Mr. Davis brings to the Board extensive payments experience and consumer insight as former CEO of a publicly traded financial holding company and former chairman of a banking association and payments company. His experience in highly regulated industries and as a former Federal Reserve representative provide a valuable perspective on engaging and partnering with regulators. Mr. Davis’ extensive experience in financial services and his membership on public company audit and finance committees contribute strong financial understanding.
As a CEO, he brings extensive experience with respect to culture development and talent management.
|
Mr. Freiberg contributes to the Board extensive senior-level payments experience, including leading retail banking and payments businesses. This experience provides global perspective and regulatory insight. His leadership of consumer and global cards businesses also contributes strong consumer and innovation insight. His service as our Audit Committee chair and as a director of consumer finance and foreign exchange companies provides valuable financial understanding.
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Director since
September 2006
Age at Annual Meeting
64
Board committees
•
Audit (Chair)
•
Human Resources & Compensation
Current public company boards
•
Regional Management Corp. (consumer finance) (audit committee and compensation committee chair)
Additional positions
•
SoFi Technologies, Inc. (personal finance company) (pending public company status) (Vice Chairman, audit and compensation committees)
•
Chairman, Fair Square Financial LLC (credit card-focused venture)
•
Chairman, Rewards Network (marketing and loyalty services provider to restaurant industry)
|
•
Senior advisory board member, TowerBrook Capital Partners L.P.
•
Senior advisor, The Boston Consulting Group (global management consulting) and Verisk Analytics, Inc. (data analysis and risk assessment)
•
Director, Purchasing Power, LLC (consumer product purchasing provider)
Previous experience
•
CEO, E*TRADE Financial Corporation (2010-2012)
•
Several executive positions at Citigroup (2005-2010), including Co-Chairman and CEO, global consumer group; Chairman and CEO of Citi Holdings–global consumer; and CEO, global cards
Past public company boards
•
E*TRADE Financial Corporation
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Director since
June 2018
Age at Annual Meeting
63
Board committees
•
Human Resources & Compensation (Chair)
Current public company boards
•
Dow Inc. (audit and corporate governance committees)
Additional positions
•
Director, Mayo Clinic
|
Previous experience
•
Several executive positions at U.S. Bancorp (2004-2018), including Executive Chairman (April 2017-April 2018); Chairman (2007-April 2017); CEO (December 2006-April 2017); and President
(2004-January 2016)
Past public company boards
•
U.S. Bancorp
•
DowDuPont Inc. and The Dow Chemical Company (Dow Inc. predecessor boards)
•
Xcel Energy, Inc.
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Public Company
Board Experience
|
Global
Perspective
|
Financial & Risk | C-Suite Experience |
Technology, Digital &
Innovation
|
Regulatory &
Governmental
|
Public Company
Board Experience
|
Global
Perspective
|
Financial & Risk | C-Suite Experience |
Technology, Digital &
Innovation
|
Regulatory &
Governmental
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Consumer |
Information
Security
|
Payments |
Sustainability
|
Audit Committee
Financial Expert
|
Consumer |
Information
Security
|
Payments | Sustainability |
Audit Committee
Financial Expert
|
2021 MASTERCARD PROXY |
26
|
Julius Genachowski
Managing Director, The Carlyle Group,
a global investment firm (since January 2014)
|
Choon Phong Goh
CEO, Singapore Airlines Limited,
a multinational airline (since January 2011)
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Mr. Genachowski brings to the Board extensive regulatory and government experience, digital, technology and media expertise, information security insight, a global perspective, and engagement with both consumer and enterprise companies through a career as a senior government official, senior business executive, investor and director at or with technology, media and communications companies. Mr. Genachowski also adds valuable financial knowledge through experience in private equity, at a large public operating company and on public audit committees. He provides strong sustainability experience.
|
Mr. Goh brings to the Board strong consumer insight, global perspective and payments experience as the CEO and longtime senior executive of a publicly traded multinational airline. His prior positions in finance and information technology contribute valuable information security experience and financial understanding. As CEO of an airline, Mr. Goh brings extensive experience in talent management, culture development and sustainability, including with respect to climate change.
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Director since
April 2018
Age at Annual Meeting
57
Board committees
•
Nominating & Corporate Governance
Current public company boards
•
Singapore Airlines Limited
Additional positions
•
Chairman, Budget Aviation Holdings Pte Ltd (100% owned by Singapore Airlines Limited)
•
Director, SIA Engineering Company (majority owned by Singapore Airlines Limited)
•
Member, Board of Governors of the International Air Transportation Association
|
Previous experience
•
Several executive and leadership positions at Singapore Airlines Limited (since 1990), including Executive Vice President, Marketing and the Regions; President, Cargo; Senior Vice President, Finance; and Senior Vice President, Information Technology
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Director since
June 2014
Age at Annual Meeting
58
Board committees
•
Human Resources & Compensation
Current public company boards
•
Sonos Inc. (audit committee and nominating and corporate governance committee chair)
Additional positions
•
Former member, President’s Intelligence Advisory Board (U.S.)
|
Previous experience
•
Chairman, U.S. Federal Communications Commission (2009-2013)
•
Several other U.S. government roles, including chief counsel to FCC Chairman; law clerk to U.S. Supreme Court Justice David Souter; and congressional staff member, including for then-Representative Charles Schumer, and for the joint select committee investigating the Iran-Contra affair
•
Senior executive roles with IAC/InterActiveCorp (Internet and media), including chief of business operations and general counsel
Past public company boards
•
AsiaSat
•
Sprint Corporation
|
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||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Public Company
Board Experience
|
Global
Perspective
|
Financial & Risk | C-Suite Experience |
Technology, Digital &
Innovation
|
Regulatory &
Governmental
|
Public Company
Board Experience
|
Global
Perspective
|
Financial & Risk | C-Suite Experience |
Technology, Digital &
Innovation
|
Regulatory &
Governmental
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Consumer |
Information
Security
|
Payments |
Sustainability
|
Audit Committee
Financial Expert
|
Consumer |
Information
Security
|
Payments |
Sustainability
|
Audit Committee
Financial Expert
|
27
|
2021 MASTERCARD PROXY |
Oki Matsumoto
Founder, Chairman and CEO, Monex Group, Inc.,
an online securities brokerage firm (since February 2011)
|
Michael Miebach
President and CEO
(since January 2021)
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Mr. Matsumoto is the founder and CEO of a Japan-based, publicly traded financial services holding company and former director of a stock exchange. Through a career in investment banking, Mr. Matsumoto provides global perspective and extensive financial expertise to the Board. His leadership of a global online securities brokerage firm provides valuable digital and innovation experience. He brings extensive talent management, culture development and sustainability experience.
|
Mr. Miebach contributes to the Board extensive global payments experience. As CEO of the company and a previous region president, he provides valuable perspective on engaging and partnering with regulators as well as experience with talent management, culture development and sustainability. Mr. Miebach’s prior experience as our Chief Product Officer provides strong consumer insights, as well as a deep focus on information security and innovation (including with digital and payments technology).
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Director since
June 2016
Age at Annual Meeting
57
Board committees
•
Human Resources & Compensation
Current public company boards
•
Monex Group, Inc. (nominating and compensation committees)
Additional positions
•
Chairman, Coincheck, Inc., TradeStation Group, Inc. and Monex, Inc., each a subsidiary of Monex Group, Inc.
•
International Board member and Vice Chairman, Human Rights Watch
•
Councilor, International House of Japan
|
•
Former member, Economic Counsel to the Prime Minister of Japan
•
Former director, Tokyo Stock Exchange (2008-2013)
Previous experience
•
Several executive positions at Monex, Inc. (since 1999), including representative director and CEO
•
Several leadership positions at Goldman Sachs entities (1990-1998), including General Partner, Goldman Sachs Group, L.P.
Past public company boards
•
JIN Co., Ltd.
•
Kakaku.com, Inc.
•
UZABASE, Inc.
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Director since
January 2021
Age at Annual Meeting
5
3
Additional Mastercard positions
•
President (February 2020 – December 2020)
•
Chief Product Officer (January 2016-February 2020)
•
President, Middle East and Africa (2010-2015)
Additional positions
•
Director, Accion.org
|
Previous experience
•
Managing Director, Middle East and North Africa, Barclays Bank PLC (2008-2010)
•
Managing Director, Sub-Saharan Africa, Barclays Bank PLC (2007-2008)
•
Several executive positions at Citigroup in Germany, Austria, U.K. and Turkey (1994-2007)
|
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||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Public Company
Board Experience
|
Global
Perspective
|
Financial & Risk | C-Suite Experience |
Technology, Digital &
Innovation
|
Regulatory &
Governmental
|
Public Company
Board Experience
|
Global
Perspective
|
Financial & Risk | C-Suite Experience |
Technology, Digital &
Innovation
|
Regulatory &
Governmental
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Consumer |
Information
Security
|
Payments |
Sustainability
|
Audit Committee
Financial Expert
|
Consumer |
Information
Security
|
Payments |
Sustainability
|
Audit Committee
Financial Expert
|
2021 MASTERCARD PROXY |
28
|
Youngme Moon
Donald K. David Professor of Business Administration, Harvard Business School,
a private university (since July 2014)
|
Rima Qureshi
Executive Vice President and Chief Strategy Officer, Verizon Communications Inc.,
a multinational telecommunications conglomerate
(since November 2017)
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Professor Moon provides to the Board a deep understanding of strategy and innovation as a long-tenured professor at Harvard Business School. She brings strong global perspective and consumer and sustainability experience based on her service as a director at several retail and retail-centric consumer products companies.
|
Ms. Qureshi contributes to the Board global perspective, digital expertise and innovation insight through her extensive senior-level experience at global telecommunications equipment and services providers, including roles in strategy, research and development, sales and services. Her work in the telecommunications and information technology industries and her completion of the NACD/Carnegie Mellon CERT certification in cybersecurity oversight provide the Board with relevant payments and information security expertise. Ms. Qureshi’s experience affords her with a deep background in sustainability.
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Director since
June 2019
Age at Annual Meeting
57
Board committees
•
Human Resources & Compensation
Current public company boards
•
Unilever (Vice Chair and Senior Independent Director) (corporate responsibility committee)
Additional positions
•
Director, Warby Parker
•
Director, Sweetgreen, Inc. (compensation committee)
|
Previous experience
•
Several positions at Harvard Business School (since 1998), including Senior Associate Dean for Strategy and Innovation and Chair of the MBA Program
Past public company boards
•
Avid Technology, Inc.
•
Rakuten, Inc.
•
Zulily, Inc.
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Director since
April 2011
Age at Annual Meeting
56
Board committees
•
Audit
Additional positions
•
Deputy Chair, GSMA Board (telecom industry association board) (audit committee)
•
Director, Verizon Foundation
|
Previous experience
•
Several executive positions at Ericsson (1993-2017), including President, North America (2017); Senior Vice President, chief strategy officer and head of M&A (2014-2016); and Senior Vice President and head of business unit CDMA mobile systems
Past public company boards
•
Great-West
Lifeco
Inc.
•
Wolters Kluwer
|
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||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Public Company
Board Experience
|
Global
Perspective
|
Financial & Risk | C-Suite Experience |
Technology, Digital &
Innovation
|
Regulatory &
Governmental
|
Public Company
Board Experience
|
Global
Perspective
|
Financial & Risk | C-Suite Experience |
Technology, Digital &
Innovation
|
Regulatory &
Governmental
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Consumer |
Information
Security
|
Payments |
Sustainability
|
Audit Committee
Financial Expert
|
Consumer |
Information
Security
|
Payments |
Sustainability
|
Audit Committee
Financial Expert
|
29
|
2021 MASTERCARD PROXY |
José Octavio Reyes Lagunes
Former Vice Chairman, The Coca-Cola Export Corporation, The Coca-Cola Company,
a global beverage company
|
Gabrielle Sulzberger
Strategic Advisor, Two Sigma Impact,
a private equity fund (since August 2020)
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Mr. Reyes contributes global perspective and regulatory experience to the Board as a retired senior executive and Latin America group president of a leading multinational public company. His experience as a beverage industry brand manager in North America and Latin America and as a director of public companies in the beverage industry provides the Board with strong consumer insight and payments experience as well as an extensive background in sustainability.
|
Ms. Sulzberger brings to the Board extensive financial experience and insight as a strategic advisor and former general partner of private equity firms, chief financial officer of several companies, and a U.S. public company audit committee financial expert and former board chair. She contributes strong consumer insight, global perspective and payments experience as well as extensive involvement with sustainability as a former director at several U.S. public company merchants, including her service as chairman of a major merchant in the quality retail food business. Her experience as chief financial officer of an open-source software company also provides valuable digital and innovation experience.
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Director since
January 2008
Age at Annual Meeting
69
Board committees
•
Human Resources & Compensation
Current public company boards
•
Coca-Cola HBC AG (social responsibility committee)
•
Coca-Cola FEMSA S.A.B. de C.V. (KOF)
|
Previous experience
•
Several executive positions at The Coca-Cola Company (1980-2014), including Vice Chairman, The Coca-Cola Export Corporation; President, Latin America Group; President, Coca-Cola de México; manager of strategic planning, Coca-Cola de México; manager, Sprite and Diet Coke brands (corporate headquarters, Atlanta); marketing director for Brazil; and vice president of marketing and operations, Coca-Cola de México
Past public company boards
•
Keurig Green Mountain, Inc.
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Director since
December 2018
Age at Annual Meeting
61
Board committees
•
Audit
•
Nominating & Corporate Governance
Current public company boards
•
Brixmor Property Group Inc. (audit committee financial expert; nominating & corporate governance chair)
•
Cerevel Therapeutics Holdings, Inc. (audit committee chair; nominating & corporate governance)
•
Eli Lilly and Company (audit and ethics committees)
|
Additional positions
•
Director, Acorn Advisors LLC (audit committee)
Previous experience
•
General Partner, Fontis Partners, L.P.
•
CFO, Gluecode Software Inc. (open-source software company)
•
CFO, Crown Services (commercial contractors)
Past public company boards
•
Teva Pharmaceutical Industries Limited
•
The Stage Stores, Inc.
•
Whole Foods Market, Inc.
|
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||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Public Company
Board Experience
|
Global
Perspective
|
Financial & Risk | C-Suite Experience |
Technology, Digital &
Innovation
|
Regulatory &
Governmental
|
Public Company
Board Experience
|
Global
Perspective
|
Financial & Risk | C-Suite Experience |
Technology, Digital &
Innovation
|
Regulatory &
Governmental
|
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Consumer |
Information
Security
|
Payments |
Sustainability
|
Audit Committee
Financial Expert
|
Consumer |
Information
Security
|
Payments |
Sustainability
|
Audit Committee
Financial Expert
|
2021 MASTERCARD PROXY |
30
|
Jackson Tai
Former Vice Chairman and CEO, DBS Group and
DBS Bank Ltd.,
leading financial services entities
|
Lance Uggla
Chairman and CEO, IHS Markit Ltd.,
a global information provider (since January 2018)
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Mr. Tai brings to the Board extensive global executive experience in payments and retail banking, including as former CEO of a Singapore-based bank and as a director of several global financial institutions. Mr. Tai’s experience as a CFO, his extensive experience as a member of numerous public company audit committees and his career in investment banking provide valuable financial understanding. His service as a director of technology-focused retail and telecommunications companies provides valuable consumer and digital and innovation insight.
|
Mr. Uggla brings to the Board global perspective and innovation insight as the CEO of a publicly traded company that provides information, analytics and solutions to customers in business, finance and government. He provides extensive financial experience as the founder and former chairman and CEO of a company that offered daily credit default swap pricing services, as well as through several executive management positions at a global investment dealer. Mr. Uggla’s CEO experience contributes strong experience in talent management, culture development and sustainability.
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Director since
September 2008
Age at Annual Meeting
70
Board committees
•
Audit
•
Nominating & Corporate Governance
Current public company boards
•
Eli Lilly and Company (audit; finance; and directors & corporate governance committees)
•
HSBC Holdings plc (group risk committee chair; group financial system vulnerabilities committee chair; group audit and nominations & corporate governance committees)
Additional positions
•
Former director, Cassis International Pte. Ltd. (payments technology company)
•
Former director, Brookstone Inc.
|
Previous experience
•
Several executive positions at DBS Group (1999-2007), including vice chairman and CEO, DBS Group and DBS Bank Ltd.; President and COO and CFO
•
Several senior management positions at Investment Banking Division, J.P. Morgan & Co. Incorporated (New York, Tokyo and San Francisco) (1974-1999)
Past public company boards
•
Royal Philips N.V.
•
Bank of China, Limited
•
DBS Group and DBS Bank Ltd.
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Director since
June 2019
Age at Annual Meeting
59
Board committees
•
Audit
Current public company boards
•
IHS Markit Ltd.
Additional positions
•
Executive Trustee, Tate Foundation
|
Previous experience
•
Several executive positions at IHS Markit Ltd. (since 2003), including President and COO (July 2016-December 2017); founder and former chairman and CEO, Markit Ltd. (June 2014-July 2016) and its predecessor, Markit Group Holdings Ltd.
•
Executive management positions at Toronto-Dominion Securities (1995-2003), including Vice Chairman and Head of Europe and Asia
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Public Company
Board Experience
|
Global
Perspective
|
Financial & Risk | C-Suite Experience |
Technology, Digital &
Innovation
|
Regulatory &
Governmental
|
Public Company
Board Experience
|
Global
Perspective
|
Financial & Risk | C-Suite Experience |
Technology, Digital &
Innovation
|
Regulatory &
Governmental
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Consumer |
Information
Security
|
Payments | Sustainability |
Audit Committee
Financial Expert
|
Consumer |
Information
Security
|
Payments |
Sustainability
|
Audit Committee
Financial Expert
|
31
|
2021 MASTERCARD PROXY |
Board of Directors
|
||||||||||||||||||||
7
number of meetings in 2020 |
75%+
attendance
Board and committee meetings
|
100%
attendance
2020 annual meeting of stockholders
|
||||||||||||||||||
Ajay Banga
Executive Chairman
|
||||||||||||||||||||
Primary responsibilities of the Board
|
Board leadership structure
|
|||||||||||||||||||
In addition to its general oversight of management, the Board performs a number of specific functions, including:
• Understanding and approving the company’s long-term, key strategies;
• Understanding the issues and risks that are central to the company’s success, including cybersecurity matters;
• Selecting, evaluating and compensating the CEO and overseeing CEO succession planning;
• Overseeing the performance of management;
• Reviewing, approving and monitoring fundamental financial and business strategies and major corporate actions;
• Ensuring processes are in place for maintaining an ethical corporate culture;
• Overseeing the quality and integrity of the company’s financial statements and reports and the company’s compliance with legal and regulatory requirements; and
• With the assistance of the applicable committee, adopting a charter for each of the Audit Committee, the Human Resources and Compensation Committee (HRCC) and the Nominating and Corporate Governance Committee (NCG).
For more information about Board responsibilities and functions, please see our Corporate Governance Guidelines posted on our website at https://investor.mastercard.com/corporate-governance/governance-guidelines/default.aspx.
|
Rick Haythornthwaite, who served as our Board Chair since our initial public offering, retired from our Board on December 31, 2020. On January 1, 2021, Ajay Banga transitioned from his role as CEO to the role of Executive Chairman of the Board, and Merit Janow, an independent director, assumed the role of Lead Director. Also on that date, Michael Miebach became President & CEO and a member of the Board.
The Board adopted this transitional leadership structure to ensure a successful segue in leadership. At an appropriate time, we expect to return to our original structure of having an independent Board Chair.
Mr. Banga’s responsibilities as Executive Chairman include, among other things:
• managing and presiding over Board meetings;
• overseeing the adequacy of information available to directors, including by ensuring the Board oversees key developments and issues critical to the Company;
• facilitating effective communication between the Board and our stockholders, including, by, among other things, presiding over the annual meeting, and any special meetings, of stockholders;
• working with the Lead Director, CEO and Corporate Secretary to set Board meeting agendas;
• providing advice and counsel to the CEO;
• maintaining key relationships with external stakeholders, such as clients and regulators; and
• facilitating a smooth transition from a CEO and Executive Chairman management structure to a CEO and Non-Executive Chairman structure.
|
2021 MASTERCARD PROXY |
32
|
The leadership responsibilities of our Lead Director, who is independent, are clearly defined and included in our Corporate Governance Guidelines available on our website at https://investor.mastercard.com/corporate-governance/governance-guidelines/default.aspx. Her responsibilities include:
•
Providing independent leadership to the Board;
•
Overseeing executive sessions and meetings of the independent directors;
•
Chairing Board meetings in the absence of the Executive Chairman;
•
Providing feedback to the Executive Chairman and the CEO on corporate and Board policies and strategies;
•
In concert with the Executive Chairman and the CEO, providing input on the agenda, schedule and materials for Board meetings based on input from independent directors;
•
Leading the annual Board self-evaluation with the support of the Executive Chairman and responding to evaluation recommendations;
•
Together with the Chair of the HRCC, facilitating the independent directors’ performance and compensation evaluation of the Executive Chairman and the CEO;
•
Carrying out other duties as requested by the independent directors, the Board or any of its Committees from time to time; and
•
Working with the Executive Chairman and the CEO to ensure that the Board is provided with the resources, advisors and consultants necessary to permit it to carry out its responsibilities.
The Board holds regularly scheduled meetings of independent directors in executive session without management present and may meet more frequently upon the request of any independent director. The Lead Director presides at these sessions.
|
Director attendance at meetings
During 2020, each director attended 75% or more of the meetings held by the Board and committees on which the member served during the period the member was on the Board or committee.
We encourage directors to attend our annual meeting. All Board members attended our 2020 annual stockholders’ meeting.
Our Board during the COVID pandemic
Our Board uses its meetings to gain firsthand understanding of the culture in each region, as well as the issues and challenges we face, and to learn how they tie into our strategic goals. This includes meeting periodically with senior managers throughout our global business, local/regional employees and stakeholders, such as policymakers, government and business leaders, and customers that are strategically important to our business. Prior to the COVID pandemic, the Board held these meetings physically at our headquarters, as well as at our various business offices around the world, providing the opportunity to meet with these stakeholders in person.
In light of the pandemic, the Board shifted to mostly virtual meetings during 2020 and to date in 2021. This change in meeting format allowed the Board to continue to meet with senior managers, stakeholders and customers, while enabling our members to meet with individuals throughout the world irrespective of geography. Under this format, the Board had the opportunity to learn more about critical issues impacting our business globally.
|
|||||||||||||
33
|
2021 MASTERCARD PROXY |
Board committees
The Board has a standing Audit Committee, Human Resources & Compensation Committee and Nominating & Corporate Governance Committee, each of which operates under a written charter that is posted on our website. In overseeing their responsibilities in 2020, each of our Board committees considered the impact of COVID-19 on the company, its employees, stockholders and others.
|
||||||||||||||||||||
Audit Committee
Steven J. Freiberg Chair |
Human Resources & Compensation Committee
Richard K. Davis Chair |
|||||||||||||||||||
Number of meetings in 2020
12
Other committee
members:
• Merit Janow*
• Rima Qureshi
• Gabrielle Sulzberger**
• Jackson Tai
• Lance Uggla
Primary responsibilities
The Audit Committee assists our Board in its oversight of:
• The quality and integrity of Mastercard’s financial statements
• Mastercard’s compliance with legal and regulatory requirements
• The qualifications, performance and independence of Mastercard’s independent registered public accounting firm
• Risk assessment and risk management
• The performance of Mastercard’s internal audit function
• The quality of Mastercard’s internal controls
|
For more information about Audit Committee responsibilities and actions, see “Audit Committee Report” on pgs
101
-
103
Independence
Each committee member has been determined by the Board to qualify as independent under the independence criteria established by the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) and the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE). The Board also has determined that each committee member is “financially literate” within the meaning of the NYSE listing standards.
Audit committee financial experts
The Board has identified each of Mr. Freiberg and Mr. Tai as an “Audit Committee financial expert” under the applicable SEC rules based on their experience and qualifications.
* Beginning in June 2020
** Beginning in December 2020
|
Number of meetings in 2020
7
Other committee
members:
• Steven J. Freiberg
• Julius Genachowski
• Oki Matsumoto
• Youngme Moon
• José Octavio Reyes Lagunes
Primary responsibilities
The HRCC is primarily responsible for:
• Ensuring Mastercard’s compensation and benefit programs attract, retain and motivate employees
• Ensuring pay practices are consistent with our compensation strategy, regulatory requirements, and the practices of similar companies
• Determining annual and long-term goals for Mastercard and ensuring compensation of the CEO and key executives is commensurate with levels of performance
• Ensuring thoroughness of the succession planning process
|
• Reviewing key diversity initiatives and people and capabilities policies and practices
• Providing direction to management on strategies with significant people and capabilities implications
Independence
Each committee member has been determined by the Board to qualify as independent under the independence criteria established by the SEC and the NYSE, is a non-employee director for purposes of Rule 16b-3 under the Exchange Act and is an outside director for purposes of Section 162(m) of the Internal Revenue Code.
Director Compensation
To learn more about how Mastercard considers and determines executive and non-employee director compensation, including the role of executive officers and the compensation consultant, see
“
Compensation discussion and analysis” beginning on pg
56
.
|
2021 MASTERCARD PROXY |
34
|
Nominating & Corporate Governance Committee
Merit E. Janow Chair |
||||||||
Number of meetings in 2020
4
Other committee
members:
• Choon Phong Goh
• Gabrielle Sulzberger
• Jackson Tai
Primary responsibilities
The NCG’s responsibilities include:
• Identifying individuals qualified to become directors
• Recommending that the Board select the candidates for directorships to be filled by the Board or by the stockholders
• Developing and recommending to the Board a set of corporate governance principles
• Overseeing the annual process for Board and committee self-evaluations
• Overseeing legal, regulatory and public policy matters significant to Mastercard
|
• Taking a leadership role in shaping corporate governance with a focus on the long-term interests of Mastercard and its stockholders
• Overseeing Mastercard’s policies and programs and monitoring governance trends in the following areas:
• corporate responsibility
• environmental stewardship
• human rights
• inclusion and diversity
• other matters of
significance to the company
and its stockholders
Independence
Each committee member has been determined by the Board to qualify as independent under the independence criteria established by the NYSE. |
1 |
NCG determines evaluation process format, including whether to use a third-party facilitator.
|
||||
2 |
When third-party facilitator is used, NCG interviews and selects provider
|
||||
3 |
If no facilitator, NCG updates questionnaire to elicit information needed in the coming year
|
||||
4 |
Lead Director and Committee chairs review, summarize and share results
|
||||
5 |
Determinations are made as to action items
|
||||
35
|
2021 MASTERCARD PROXY |
Board of Directors
Our Board oversees major risks, including strategic, operational (including cybersecurity), legal and regulatory, financial and CEO succession planning risks.
|
||
Nominating and Corporate
Governance Committee
•
Governance structure and processes
•
Legal and policy matters with potential significant reputational impact
•
Matters of significance to the company and its stockholders, including corporate responsibility, environmental stewardship, human rights, inclusion and diversity
|
Audit Committee
•
Financial statement integrity and reporting
•
Major financial and other business risk exposures
•
Information security, technology, and privacy and data protection
•
Risk management framework
•
Legal, regulatory and compliance risks
•
Internal controls
|
Human Resources and Compensation Committee
•
Employee compensation policies and practices
•
Key diversity initiatives and people and capabilities policies and practices, including those related to organizational engagement and effectiveness and employee development
•
Non-executive director compensation policies and practices
•
Succession planning
|
||||||||||||
Management | ||
The key risk responsibilities of our management team include:
•
Business units’ responsibilities to identify and manage business risk
•
Central functions’ responsibility to design a risk framework, including setting boundaries and managing risk appetite
•
Internal audit’s responsibility to provide independent assurance on design and effectiveness of internal controls and governance processes
|
||
2021 MASTERCARD PROXY |
36
|
Board oversight of information security, including cybersecurity and data privacy
Given the importance of information security and privacy to our stakeholders, our Board receives an annual report from our Chief Security Officer (CSO) to discuss our program for managing information security risks, including cyber and data security risks. The Audit Committee also receives annual briefings on both information security and data privacy from the CSO and Chief Privacy Officer. Both the Board and the Audit Committee receive regular reports on our cyber readiness, adversary assessment and risk profile status. In addition, the Board, Audit Committee and NCG receive information about these topics as part of regular business and regulatory updates, and our directors are apprised of incident simulations and response plans, including for cyber and data breaches.
|
||
Program highlights
ü
We are committed to the responsible handling of personal information, and we balance our product development activities with a commitment to transparency and control, fairness and non-discrimination, as well as accountability.
ü
Our multi-layered information security and data privacy programs and practices are designed to ensure the safety, security and responsible use of the information and data our stakeholders entrust to us.
ü
We work with our customers, governments, policymakers and others to help develop and implement standards for safe and secure transactions, as well as privacy-centric data practices.
ü
Our programs are informed by third-party assessments and advice regarding best practices from consultants, peer companies and advisors.
ü
We continually test our systems to discover and address any potential vulnerabilities.
ü
We maintain a business continuity program and cyber insurance coverage.
|
||
37
|
2021 MASTERCARD PROXY |
Board practices
•
Frequent executive sessions of independent directors
•
Annual Board and committee self evaluations
•
Continuous assessment of Board refreshment
•
Oversight of risk management practices, fostering a risk-aware culture while encouraging thoughtful risk taking
•
Considers issues of cyber readiness, adversary assessment and our risk profile status and is apprised of incident simulations,and response plans, including for cyber and data breaches
•
Active engagement in managing talent and long-term succession planning
|
Board policies
•
Annual election of directors
•
Majority voting for director elections
•
12 of 14 Board nominees are independent
•
Proxy access
•
Stock ownership guidelines for directors
|
We encourage you to visit the “Corporate Governance” area of the “Investor Relations” page of our website where you will find our key documents, policies and additional information about corporate governance at Mastercard.
|
||||||
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||||||||||||
Stockholder Engagement
Management, and where appropriate, directors engage with stockholders in the boardroom, via video conference, telephone, and at conferences on a variety of topics. The exchanges we and our Board have had with stockholders provide us with a valuable understanding of our stockholders’ perspectives and meaningful opportunities to share views with them.
|
Sustainability Engagement
We welcome the views of a broad range of stakeholders who serve as critical partners in identifying our key sustainability areas of impact. We regularly engage with these stakeholders to better understand their views and sustainability concerns and ensure we are prioritizing issues important to both our stakeholders and our long-term business success.
|
Commitment to Transparency
Our website disclosures address critical matters of interest to our stakeholders, including our commitment to social responsibility.
|
||||||||||||
•
Business strategy
•
Compensation practices
•
Data privacy
•
Our response to COVID-19
•
Talent and culture
•
Sustainability
•
Risk oversight
•
Data privacy
•
Board refreshment
|
•
Employees, financial institutions, merchants and customers
•
Stockholders
•
Suppliers
•
Governments and regulators
•
International organizations
•
Community and nongovernmental organizations
|
•
Human Rights Statement
•
Political activity/political spending
•
Our response to COVID-19
•
Sustainability Report
•
Diversity and inclusion
•
Talent and culture
•
Privacy and data protection
|
||||||||||||
Engagement and Transparency |
2021 MASTERCARD PROXY |
38
|
Where to find our Code of Conduct and Supplemental Code of Ethics
|
|||||
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Go to our website at https://investor.mastercard.com/corporate-governance/policies-and-reports/default.aspx | ||||
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Request copies (free of charge) by writing to:
Office of the Corporate Secretary
2000 Purchase Street
Purchase, NY 10577 Attention: Janet McGinness |
39
|
2021 MASTERCARD PROXY |
By email:
|
|||||
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corporate.secretary@mastercard.com | ||||
By mail:
|
|||||
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Mastercard Incorporated
Board of Directors Office of the Corporate Secretary 2000 Purchase Street Purchase, NY 10577 Attention: Janet McGinness |
Whistleblower Policy
|
|||||
Stockholders, employees and others also may report complaints and concerns regarding accounting, internal accounting controls, auditing matters, possible violations of (or non-compliance with) applicable legal and regulatory requirements, possible violations of Mastercard’s Supplemental Code of Ethics or retaliatory acts against employees who make such a complaint or assist in the investigation of such a complaint in accordance with our Whistleblower Policy. Our Chief Compliance Officer is responsible for keeping a docket of all reports received under the Whistleblower Policy and summarizing the nature of the complaint and other relevant information. The Chief Compliance Officer will report any recent developments of items listed on the docket in reasonable detail to the Audit Committee Chair (and, if the Chair so directs, to the committee) at or in advance of each regularly scheduled meeting. You can find our Whistleblower Policy in the “Investor Relations” section of our website at https://investor.mastercard.com/investor-relations/corporate-governance/policies-and-reports/default.aspx.
|
|||||
2021 MASTERCARD PROXY |
40
|
The Board affirmatively determined that each of our current director nominees is independent except for Mr. Banga (our Executive Chairman) and Mr. Miebach (our President and CEO).
|
||||||||||||||
41
|
2021 MASTERCARD PROXY |
Provision
|
Description
|
|||||||
Requirements for service
|
Only 36% of our Board may be Industry Directors, directors who either currently or during the prior 18 months have an affiliation or relationship (including as a director, officer, employee, or agent, or any material business relationship) with any entity (and any of its affiliates) that on or after May 30, 2006 was or becomes a Class A (or principal) or affiliate member of Mastercard International or a licensee of its brands, or with any operator, member or licensee of any general purpose payment card system (or any affiliates of any such entity) that competes with Mastercard.
In addition, no director can:
• either currently or during the prior three years have an affiliation or relationship (including as a trustee, officer, employee or agent, or any material business relationship) with Mastercard Foundation or
• be a director, regional board director, officer, employee, or agent of or represent an entity (or an institution that is represented on any board of such an entity) that owns and/or operates a payment card program that is competitive with any of Mastercard’s comparable card programs.
|
|||||||
Industry Directors and other composition requirements
|
• At least 64% of the Board must be determined by the Board not to be Industry Directors (directors with the types of relationships described above).
• The total number of non-Industry Directors and non-management directors must be at least two greater than the number of Industry Directors and management directors.
• Up to one-third of the members of each of the Audit Committee, the HRCC and the NCG may be Industry Directors.
• No more than one Industry Director may serve on the NCG.
• The Board has deemed Mr. Freiberg and Mr. Tai to be Industry Directors.
|
|||||||
Quorum
|
A majority of the directors in office, provided that a majority of the directors present are neither Industry Directors nor management directors, constitutes a quorum.
|
|||||||
Vacancies
|
Vacancies are to be filled only by a vote of the majority of the directors then in office who are not Industry Directors.
|
|||||||
Nominations
|
Industry Directors cannot participate in nominating or selecting directors.
|
2021 MASTERCARD PROXY |
42
|
Annual compensation for Board service | ||||||||||||||
Role |
Cash
|
Equity
|
||||||||||||
Non-employee directors | $100,000 | $215,000 | ||||||||||||
Chairman of the Board | $180,000 | $295,000 | ||||||||||||
Additional compensation for committee service | ||||||||||||||
Committee |
Chair
|
Member
|
||||||||||||
Audit | $35,000 | $17,500 | ||||||||||||
HRCC | $30,000 | $15,000 | ||||||||||||
NCG | $25,000 | $12,500 |
43
|
2021 MASTERCARD PROXY |
2020 total director compensation
The following table summarizes the total compensation earned in 2020 by each of our current non-employee directors:
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Name |
Fees earned or paid in cash
($) |
Stock
awards
($) 1 |
All other
compensation
($) 2 |
Total
($) |
||||||||||||||||||||||
(a) | (b) | (c) | (d) | (e) | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Richard Haythornthwaite, Former Board Chair
3
|
210,000 | 295,041 | 15,000 | 520,041 | ||||||||||||||||||||||
David R. Carlucci
4
|
65,000 |
—
|
15,000 | 80,000 | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Richard K. Davis | 130,000 | 215,267 |
—
|
345,267 | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Steven J. Freiberg | 150,000 | 215,267 | 5,500 | 370,767 | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Julius Genachowski | 115,000 | 215,267 | 9,700 | 339,967 | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Choon Phong Goh | 112,500 | 215,267 |
—
|
327,767 | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Merit E. Janow
5
|
135,208 | 215,267 | 19,000 | 369,475 | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Oki Matsumoto | 115,000 | 215,267 |
—
|
330,267 | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Youngme Moon | 115,000 | 215,267 |
—
|
330,267 | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Rima Qureshi | 117,500 | 215,267 |
—
|
332,767 | ||||||||||||||||||||||
José Octavio Reyes Lagunes | 115,000 | 215,267 |
—
|
330,267 | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Gabrielle Sulzberger | 112,500 | 215,267 | 20,000 | 347,767 | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Jackson Tai | 130,000 | 215,267 | 20,000 | 365,267 | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Lance Uggla | 117,500 | 215,267 |
—
|
332,767 |
2021 MASTERCARD PROXY |
44
|
The following table further describes the fees paid in cash to each non-employee director for 2020, as shown in column (b) of the above table:
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Name |
Annual retainer
($) |
Audit committee retainer
($) |
HRCC retainer
($) |
NCG committee
retainer
($) |
Fees earned or paid in cash
($) |
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Richard Haythornthwaite, Former Board Chair
1
|
180,000 | 17,500 | — | 12,500 | 210,000 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
David R. Carlucci
2
|
50,000 | 8,750 | — | 6,250 | 65,000 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Richard K. Davis | 100,000 | — | 30,000 | — | 130,000 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Steven J. Freiberg | 100,000 | 35,000 | 15,000 | — | 150,000 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Julius Genachowski | 100,000 | — | 15,000 | — | 115,000 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Choon Phong Goh | 100,000 | — | — | 12,500 | 112,500 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Merit E. Janow
3
|
100,000 | 10,208 | — | 25,000 | 135,208 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Oki Matsumoto | 100,000 | — | 15,000 | — | 115,000 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Youngme Moon | 100,000 | — | 15,000 | — | 115,000 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Rima Qureshi | 100,000 | 17,500 | — | — | 117,500 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
José Octavio Reyes Lagunes | 100,000 | — | 15,000 | — | 115,000 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Gabrielle Sulzberger | 100,000 | — | — | 12,500 | 112,500 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Jackson Tai | 100,000 | 17,500 | — | 12,500 | 130,000 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Lance Uggla | 100,000 | 17,500 | — | — | 117,500 |
45
|
2021 MASTERCARD PROXY |
Sustainability
|
|||||
03
|
We know firsthand that our commitment to environmental and social responsibility — and our core values of operating ethically and responsibly and with decency — is directly connected to our continuing success as a business.
That's why we are applying the full breadth of our technology, insights, partnerships and people to build a more inclusive and sustainable digital economy, where people can reach their potential, growth is inclusive and the planet thrives.
|
2021 MASTERCARD PROXY |
46
|
Board of Directors
Because sustainability is part of our strategic thinking, the full Board oversees certain sustainability matters, including financial
inclusion, privacy and cybersecurity directly as part of both regular market reviews of geographic areas and strategic reviews of the business.
The Board also reviews talent matters annually.
|
||
Nominating and Corporate
Governance Committee
Oversees policies and monitors programs related to sustainability issues such as:
•
Environmental stewardship
•
Human rights
•
Inclusion and diversity
•
Public policy activities
|
Audit Committee
Discusses ethics and compliance and receives regular reporting regarding business risks and opportunities, including the following sustainability issues:
•
Data privacy and data protection
•
Information security, including cybersecurity
•
Tax policies, strategies and exposures
|
Human Resources and Compensation Committee
Discusses our people and culture regularly, including:
•
Talent management
•
Key diversity initiatives
•
Compensation, benefit plans and human resources
•
Executive and director compensation
•
Succession planning
|
||||||||||||
Senior Management
Our senior management works together to advance our global sustainability efforts across the organization.
Our Executive Vice President for Sustainability and the Chief Sustainability Officer are tasked with developing sustainability milestones and working with business units to leverage them as enterprise-wide drivers of growth. The Executive Vice President of Sustainability reports to the President of Strategic Growth, who reports directly to the CEO. The Sustainability function, including the President of Strategic Growth, reports regularly to the Board and the relevant committees on sustainability matters.
|
||
Employees
•
We maintain continuous engagement with our people through a variety of channels, including town halls, digital and face-to-face communications and intranet communications.
•
Feedback is encouraged through the Experience Survey, manager dialogue and our Ethics Helpline.
|
Financial institutions, merchants & consumers
•
We help merchants, financial institutions and other organizations by delivering data-driven insights and other services that help them create and grow simple and secure customer experiences.
•
For consumers, we provide faster, safer and more convenient ways to pay and transfer funds.
|
Suppliers
•
We work closely with our suppliers to ensure that we can source responsibly and conduct business with integrity.
•
Our suppliers are expected to comply with the ethics standards communicated in our Supplier Code of Conduct and promote these standards within their own supply chains.
|
||||||||||||
Community & nongovernmental organizations
•
Mastercard is involved in several partnership efforts with community organizations and NGOs on issues relevant to their organizations and our businesses, including financial inclusion, financial education, philanthropy and academic research.
|
Government & regulators
•
We help national and local governments drive increased financial inclusion, and efficiency, reduce costs, increase transparency to reduce crime and corruption and advance social programs.
|
Stockholders
•
Management, and, where appropriate directors, engaged with our stockholders throughout the year in the boardroom, via video conference, telephone and at conferences at which stockholders were present.
|
||||||||||||
We invite you to visit our website (https://www.mastercard.us/en-us/vision/corp-responsibility.html) to read our Sustainability Report and to learn more about our commitment to being a force for good.
|
2021 MASTERCARD PROXY |
48
|
For more about our
COVID-19 response, see
: https://www.mastercard.com/global/covid-19-info.html
For more about our
Environmental Stewardship see
: https://www.mastercard.us/en-us/vision/corp-responsibility/sustainability.html
For more about our In Solidarity commitments & action see: https://www.mastercard.com/news/perspectives/featured-topics/solidarity-in-action/
|
49
|
2021 MASTERCARD PROXY |
Management Committee
|
|||||
04 |
Our Board of Directors oversees and approves the company’s long-term strategy. Under the Board’s oversight, the Management Committee implements the company’s strategic direction. The Management Committee consists of our executive officers and additional members of management.
|
2021 MASTERCARD PROXY |
50
|
Name | Title | |||||||
James Anderson | Executive Vice President, Commercial Products | |||||||
Ajay Banga | Executive Chairman | |||||||
Mark Barnett | President, Europe | |||||||
Ajay Bhalla | President, Cyber & Intelligence Solutions | |||||||
Ann Cairns | Vice Chairman | |||||||
Gilberto Caldart | President, International | |||||||
Dimitrios Dosis | President, Advisors | |||||||
Carlo Enrico | President, Latin America and Caribbean | |||||||
Jennifer Erickson | Executive Vice President, Communications | |||||||
Michael Fraccaro | Chief People Officer | |||||||
Michael Froman | Vice Chairman and President, Strategic Growth | |||||||
Ron Green | Chief Security Officer | |||||||
Francis Hondal | President, Loyalty & Engagement | |||||||
Linda Kirkpatrick | President, North America | |||||||
Jorn Lambert | Chief Digital Officer | |||||||
Hai Ling | Co-President, Asia Pacific | |||||||
Raghu Malhotra | President, Middle East and Africa |
Name | Title | |||||||
Edward McLaughlin | President, Operations and Technology | |||||||
Sachin Mehra | Chief Financial Officer | |||||||
Carlos Menendez | President, Enterprise Partnerships | |||||||
Michael Miebach | President and CEO | |||||||
Tim Murphy* | Chief Administrative Officer | |||||||
Jennifer Rademaker | Executive Vice President, Customer Delivery | |||||||
Raja Rajamannar | Chief Marketing & Communications Officer and President, Healthcare | |||||||
Blake Rosenthal | Executive Vice President, Segment Solutions | |||||||
Ari Sarker | Co-President, Asia Pacific | |||||||
Kush Saxena | Executive Vice President, U.S. Merchants and Acceptance | |||||||
Andrea Scerch | President, Consumer Products and Processing | |||||||
Raj Seshadri | President, Data & Services | |||||||
Kevin Stanton | Chief Transformation Officer | |||||||
Paul Stoddart | President, New Payments Platforms | |||||||
Greg Ulrich | Executive Vice President, Strategy, Corporate Development and M&A | |||||||
Rich Verma* | General Counsel and Head of Global Public Policy | |||||||
Craig Vosburg | Chief Product Officer |
Executive officers
Information about our executive officers may be found in our 2020 Form 10-K.
|
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
|||||||||||||||||||||
21% | 44% | 38% | |||||||||||||||||||||
7 management committee members are women
|
15 management committee members are racially or ethnically diverse
|
13 management committee members are located in non-U.S. offices
|
|||||||||||||||||||||
![]() |
52 | 10+ | |||||||||||||||||||||
Our management committee members hail from 13 countries across 5 continents
|
Average age of management committee members |
Unique industry work experience, including:
• Retail
• Energy
• Federal government
• Automotive
• Health
|
2021 MASTERCARD PROXY |
52
|
Executive compensation
|
|||||||||||||||||
05 |
This section describes our executive compensation program for 2020 and certain elements of the 2021 compensation program for our named executive officers.
|
||||||||||||||||
CD&A Table of Contents
|
|||||||||||||||||
|
|||||||||||||||||
53
|
2021 MASTERCARD PROXY |
Proposal 2: Advisory approval of Mastercard’s executive compensation
|
The Board unanimously recommends that stockholders vote FOR the advisory approval of our executive compensation as disclosed in this proxy statement
|
![]() |
For an understanding of our executive compensation program and, in particular, the changes we made this year, we strongly encourage you to read:
|
This Compensation Discussion and Analysis (CD&A) describes Mastercard’s executive compensation program for 2020, as well as certain elements of the 2021 program for our NEOs, who are listed below and appear in the Summary Compensation Table on pg
80
.
|
Named executive officers | Role | |||||||
Ajay Banga
1
|
Chief Executive Officer | |||||||
Michael Miebach
1
|
President and CEO-elect | |||||||
Sachin Mehra | Chief Financial Officer | |||||||
Craig Vosburg
2
|
President, North America | |||||||
Tim Murphy
3
|
General Counsel |
|
55
|
2021 MASTERCARD PROXY |
GAAP | |||||||||||||||||||||||
Net revenue | Net income | Diluted EPS | |||||||||||||||||||||
$15.3B | $6.4B | $6.37 | |||||||||||||||||||||
down | 9% | down | 21% | down | 20% | ||||||||||||||||||
NON-GAAP
1
(currency-neutral)
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||
Net revenue | Adjusted net income | Adjusted diluted EPS | |||||||||||||||||||||
$15.3B | $6.5B | $6.43 | |||||||||||||||||||||
down | 8% | down | 17% | down | 16% |
![]() |
Gross dollar volume
YOY (local currency basis) |
![]() |
Cross-border
volume growth (local currency basis) |
![]() |
Switched transactions
|
|||||||||||||||||||||
$6.3T | 90.1B | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
down 29% | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
flat | up 3% |
Capital returned to stockholders in 2020 | Cash flow from operations | |||||||||||||
Total
|
Repurchased shares
|
Dividends
|
2020 | |||||||||||
$6.1B
|
$4.5B |
$1.6B
|
$7.2B | |||||||||||
2021 MASTERCARD PROXY |
56
|
57
|
2021 MASTERCARD PROXY |
![]() |
![]() |
|||||||
Since 2011, over the tenure of our former CEO, Mr. Banga, Mastercard has delivered sustained growth, increasing market capitalization by more than $325 billion and delivering a cumulative TSR of 1,579%.
|
2021 MASTERCARD PROXY |
58
|
Performance dimension | Cultural alignment | Strategic alignment | Financial alignment | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Annual bonus plan | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Corporate financial results | Financial metrics and goals set in relation to business drivers in each strategic pillar – grow core, diversify customers and geographies, and build new areas | Annual top-line and profitability results (Net Revenue and Net Income) | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Corporate ESG modifier
(new for 2021) |
Commitment to environment, gender pay, and financial inclusion | Serving the under-banked impacts prosperity globally and accelerates shift from cash to digital economy | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Corporate strategic performance modifier | Commitment to decency, inside and outside of Mastercard | Operational objectives in each strategic pillar and enablement areas | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Individual performance (IPF) | Performance is evaluated against the Mastercard values | Performance measured against core strategic objectives appropriate to role | Key financial results appropriate for executive’s role | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Long-term incentive plan | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Individual performance | Grant is based on potential to grow and lead in alignment with Mastercard values and to assume increasing levels of responsibilities in connection with strategic/financial priorities | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Corporate financial results (PSUs) | Generally, financial metrics and goals aligned to external multi-year guidance | Balances incentives to drive fundamental financials and stock price appreciation | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Relative TSR modifier (PSUs) | Combination of cultural, strategic and financial priorities drive sustainable, long-term stockholder value | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Absolute stock price appreciation (PSUs, RSUs, and stock options) | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
59
|
2021 MASTERCARD PROXY |
What we do
|
|||||
![]() |
Pay for performance
|
||||
![]() |
Align executive compensation with stockholder returns through long-term incentives
|
||||
![]() |
Maintain significant stock ownership requirements and guidelines as well as a post-vest holding period on performance stock units | ||||
![]() |
Use appropriate peer groups when establishing competitive compensation
|
||||
![]() |
Review management succession and leadership development programs
|
||||
![]() |
Reward individual performance but with limits that cap individual payouts in executive incentive plans | ||||
![]() |
Regularly assess compensation programs to mitigate undue risk taking by executives
|
||||
![]() |
Mandate “double-trigger” provisions for all plans that contemplate a change in control
|
||||
![]() |
Maintain robust clawback and equity award forfeiture policies
|
||||
![]() |
Retain an independent compensation consultant
|
||||
![]() |
Hold an annual say-on-pay advisory vote
|
||||
What we don’t do
|
|||||
![]() |
No hedging or pledging of Mastercard stock
|
||||
![]() |
No excise tax gross-ups for executive officers
|
||||
![]() |
No tax gross-ups, other than under our global mobility programs
|
||||
![]() |
No repricing stock options
|
||||
![]() |
No new evergreen employment agreements
|
||||
![]() |
No dividend equivalents on unvested equity awards
|
||||
![]() |
No guaranteed annual salary increases or bonuses
|
||||
![]() |
No granting of discounted or reload stock options
|
2021 MASTERCARD PROXY |
60
|
Align the long-term interest of our executives with stockholders | Our compensation program strongly aligns the long-term interests of our stockholders with that of our executives through the use of equity compensation, which is largely long term in nature. | |||||||
Pay for performance | The majority of the compensation of our CEO and other NEOs is variable and at-risk and tied to pre-established goals linked to financial, strategic and cultural objectives designed to create long-term stockholder value and drive our objectives to grow, diversify and build our business. | |||||||
Pay competitively | Each year, the HRCC assesses the competitiveness of total compensation levels for executives to enable us to successfully attract, retain and motivate top executive talent. |
61
|
2021 MASTERCARD PROXY |
Base salary | Annual incentive | PSUs | Stock options | RSUs (new for 2020) | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Primary purpose |
![]() |
Attraction and retention |
![]() |
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Reward short-term
performance
|
![]() |
Reward long-term performance |
![]() |
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
![]() |
Align interests with stockholders |
![]() |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Recipients |
![]() |
All NEOs |
![]() |
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Reviewed |
![]() |
Annually |
![]() |
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Payment/grant date | Ongoing | In February for prior year |
![]() |
March 1 |
![]() |
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Cash/equity |
![]() |
Cash |
![]() |
![]() |
Equity |
![]() |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Performance period | Ongoing | 1-year | 3-year |
Until exercised
(up to 10-year life)
|
Unlimited | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Competitive level | Established within a range around the median of market-competitive levels of target compensation for similar positions | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Other considerations | Peer group analysis, individual performance, unique program characteristics, job responsibilities, experience and succession | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Adjusted net revenue
|
Revenue growth, both organic and through acquisitions, is critical to our success
|
|||||||
Adjusted net income/ adjusted earnings per share (EPS)
|
Net income and EPS are our primary measures of profitability and capital deployment
|
|||||||
Total shareholder return (TSR)
|
TSR enhances the link and alignment between stockholders and employees
|
2021 MASTERCARD PROXY |
62
|
Annual incentive awards for our executive officers are granted under our Senior Executive Annual Incentive Compensation Plan (SEAICP). The HRCC uses the SEAICP to provide a cash incentive award to the executive officers, including the NEOs, for the attainment of annual company, business unit and individual performance objectives that are established at the start of the year (as described in the “Annual Compensation Decision-Making Participants and Process” on pg
73
).
|
The determination of the annual incentive, or bonus, for each of our NEOs is based on our corporate score and each NEO’s individual performance factor, as shown below:
|
Corporate score
(0%-200%)
|
×
|
Individual performance
factor (0%-200%) |
=
|
Final bonus
payout (0%-250% as % of target) |
|||||||||||||
Step one: financial score
(0%-200%)
|
|||||||||||||||||
2020 financial performance metrics & weightings: | |||||||||||||||||
Adjusted
net income (2/3 rds ) |
Adjusted
net revenue (1/3 rd ) |
||||||||||||||||
Step two: strategic performance adjustment
Financial score above can be adjusted within a range of up 10 percentage points or down 20 percentage points |
For 2020, our financial performance was significantly impacted by the COVID-19 global pandemic.
|
63
|
2021 MASTERCARD PROXY |
2020 performance goals | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Metrics | Goal weight | 2019 adjusted actual |
Threshold
(50% payout) |
Target
(100% payout) |
Maximum
(200% payout) |
2020 adjusted actual | Score | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Adjusted net income
–
SEAICP ($ millions)
|
67% | $8,044 | $8,488 | $9,049 | $9,602 | $6,556 | 0% | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Adjusted net revenue ($ millions)
|
33% | $16,980 | $18,718 | $19,393 | $20,068 | $15,460 | 0% | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Financial score
|
0% |
Revised 2020 performance goals | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Metrics | Goal weight | 2019 adjusted actual |
Threshold
(50% payout) |
Target
(100% payout) |
Maximum
(200% payout) |
2020 adjusted actual
1
|
Score | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Adjusted net income
–
SEAICP ($ millions)
|
67% | $8,044 | $5,905 | $6,465 | $7,019 | $6,556 | 116% | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Adjusted net revenue ($ millions)
|
33% | $16,980 | $14,837 | $15,512 | $16,187 | $15,460 | 96% | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Revised Financial score
|
110% | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Capped Financial Score | 100% |
2021 MASTERCARD PROXY |
64
|
Grow | our market share across core products, including Credit, Debit, Pre-paid and Commercial, electronic payments acceptance, digital payments and approval rates | |||||||
Diversify | our business and revenue by working with new customers, including merchants, governments and digital businesses, bundling products and services, and broadening financial inclusion for the unbanked and underbanked | |||||||
Build | creative and innovative products and solutions to support new payment flows and provide services across data analytics, consulting, and safety and security |
Component |
Score
|
|||||||
Capped financial score (a) | 100% | |||||||
Strategic performance adjustment (b) | 0% | |||||||
Final corporate score (a+b) | 100% |
65
|
2021 MASTERCARD PROXY |
Name
|
2020 objectives | |||||||
Ajay Banga | Deliver on key financial metrics and innovation, enhance the perception of Mastercard in the marketplace, build and strengthen relationships with key constituents, position Mastercard for growth as the industry undergoes physical and digital convergence, drive a culture of decency that emphasizes doing well by doing good both inside and outside the company, and ensure a successful leadership transition | |||||||
Michael Miebach
1
|
Advance globally all products and services, ensuring we continue to deliver the best experiences with the highest levels of safety and security for our customers and oversee performance of operations, marketing, and sales in each of our markets | |||||||
Sachin Mehra | Deliver on key financial metrics (including efficiencies), strategic development and execution, acquisitions and integration, and risk management | |||||||
Craig Vosburg
2
|
Grow revenue in North America region and improve customer satisfaction | |||||||
Tim Murphy | Drive organizational legal affairs, public policy, franchise development and compliance, including managing litigation risks and responding to data localization challenges |
2021 MASTERCARD PROXY |
66
|
2020
base salary |
2020
target annual incentive |
2020
actual annual incentive |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Name | % of base | $ | % of target | $ | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Ajay Banga | $1,250,000 | 250% | $3,125,000 | 100% | $3,125,000 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Michael Miebach | $750,000 | 150% | $1,125,000 | 100% | $1,125,000 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Sachin Mehra | $650,000 | 115% | $747,500 | 100% | $747,500 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Craig Vosburg | $650,000 | 125% | $812,500 | 100% | $812,500 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Tim Murphy | $625,000 | 115% | $718,750 | 100% | $718,750 |
Long-term incentives
2020 program overview
We use equity grants as the primary means of providing LTI to our employees and aligning the interests of our employees with stockholders. For 2020, each NEO’s annual award generally consisted of 60% PSUs, 20% RSUs and 20% stock options. You can find information about the long-term awards to the NEOs in the Grants of plan-based awards in the 2020 table (see pg
83
).
In making its determination on what types of awards to grant, the HRCC considers the following:
• The effect of having the CEO and other NEOs receive a significant portion of their total direct compensation in equity awards, with multi-year vesting, to motivate and provide an incentive for these officers and to align their interests with those of our stockholders
• Peer group information (see pgs
74
-76 for more information)
• Trends in long-term incentive grants
• The accounting treatment of such awards
|
On March 1, 2020, the HRCC granted the following aggregate dollar amounts of PSUs, RSUs, and stock options under our Amended and Restated 2006 Long Term Incentive Plan (LTIP) to the NEOs:
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Name |
Performance
stock units
1
|
Restricted stock units
1
|
Stock
options
1
|
Total | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Ajay Banga | $10,575,000 | $3,525,000 | $3,525,000 | $17,625,000 | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Michael Miebach | $4,950,000 | $650,000 | $650,000 | $6,250,000 | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Sachin Mehra | $2,160,000 | $720,000 | $720,000 | $3,600,000 | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Craig Vosburg | $3,950,000 | $650,000 | $650,000 | $5,250,000 | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Tim Murphy | $3,920,000 | $640,000 | $640,000 | $5,200,000 |
67
|
2021 MASTERCARD PROXY |
Payout range
0% - 150%
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
EPS
50% of units
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Initial
PSU grant |
![]() |
x |
Relative TSR
vs. S&P 500
(up to +/- 50% modifier)
|
= | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Final PSU payout
0%-200% of granted units
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
+ | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Net revenue
50% of units
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Payout range
0% - 150%
|
2021 MASTERCARD PROXY |
68
|
Measurement |
Threshold
1
|
Target
1
|
Maximum
1
|
Actual | Score | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Three-year adjusted net revenue CAGR
2
|
6.4% | 10.4% | 15.4% | 7.4% | 63% | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Three-year adjusted EPS CAGR
3
|
15.4% | 20.4% | 24.4% | 14.1% | 0% | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Average of net revenue and EPS score (pre-TSR score) | 32% |
69
|
2021 MASTERCARD PROXY |
Measurement | Threshold | Target | Maximum | Actual | Score | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Three-year adjusted net revenue CAGR | 1.5% | 5.5% | 10.5% | 7.4% | 119% | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Three-year adjusted EPS CAGR | 6.0% | 11.0% | 15.0% | 14.1% | 139% | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Average of net revenue and EPS score (pre-TSR score) | 129% |
Measurement |
Threshold
(50% modifier) |
Target
(100% modifier) |
Maximum
(150% modifier) |
Actual
result |
Pre-TSR score
(a) |
Modifier
(b) |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Three-year relative TSR modifier | 25th percentile | 50th percentile | 75th percentile | 94th percentile | 129% | 150% | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
(TSR of -7.32%) | (TSR of (23.58%) | (TSR of 58.00%) | (TSR of 128.66%) | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Payout rate (a x b) | 193% | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Capped payout rate | 100% |
2021 MASTERCARD PROXY |
70
|
71
|
2021 MASTERCARD PROXY |
Role of the Human Resources & Compensation Committee
• Exclusive decision-making responsibility for all executive compensation matters with input from management and their independent consultant
|
||||||||
![]() |
||||||||
Role of compensation consultant
• Attend all HRCC meetings
• Review and advise on all material aspects of executive compensation and plan design
• Report on executive compensation trends and best practices
• Participate in the goal-setting process for incentive compensation plans
• Assist with the development of peer group used for comparison of executive compensation
• Conduct market check of executive officer compensation relative to the peer group
• Test pay versus performance
• Work with HRCC chair to recommend base salary, annual and long-term incentive awards for the CEO and Executive Chair
•
Provide advice with respect to non-employee director compensation
|
Role of executive management
• CEO, Chief People Officer and other members of management, as appropriate, attend HRCC meetings
• Responsible for designing and implementing executive compensation programs
• Recommend base salary, annual and long-term incentive awards for executive officers (excluding the CEO and Executive Chair)
• Recommend incentive plan performance metrics and goals
• Present significant proposals that affect executive compensation
• The CEO is not present for discussions related to, and plays no role in, the setting of his own compensation
|
|||||||
2021 MASTERCARD PROXY |
72
|
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
||||||||
February (current year)
|
April-September
|
December
|
February (following year)
|
||||||||
Establish
|
Evaluate & review
|
Assess & determine
|
Approve
|
||||||||
•
Target pay levels
•
Financial performance metrics and goals
•
Strategic objectives
|
•
Competitive assessment
•
Governance features
•
Pay and performance alignment
•
Stockholder feedback
•
Talent development
|
•
Corporate performance
vs. financial metrics
vs. strategic objectives
•
Executive performance
vs. individual objectives
|
•
Incentive payment amounts
|
73
|
2021 MASTERCARD PROXY |
1 | Consider initial list of companies | 2 | Utilize an objective set of screens to create the list of potential peer companies | 3 | Apply secondary list of screens to select the final peer group that in aggregate satisfies the desired objectives | ||||||||||||||||||
Initial list:
• Companies in similar industries
• Competitors for executive talent
• Companies that consider Mastercard a peer, are peers of our direct competitors or are considered to be our peers by third parties (i.e., analysts and proxy advisors)
|
Size screens:
• Revenue, market cap and market cap to revenue ratio
Performance screens:
• Revenue growth, operating margin
Business screens:
• Industry relevance, global presence
|
Secondary screens:
• Company strategy, technology-focused companies, international and global brands, consulting services companies
|
|||||||||||||||||||||
2021 MASTERCARD PROXY |
74
|
75
|
2021 MASTERCARD PROXY |
Name | PSUs | Options | RSUs | Total | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Ajay Banga | $9,150,000 | $3,050,000 | $3,050,000 | $15,250,000 | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Michael Miebach | $6,900,000 | $2,300,000 | $2,300,000 | $11,500,000 | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Sachin Mehra | $2,760,000 | $920,000 | $920,000 | $4,600,000 | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Craig Vosburg | $2,550,000 | $850,000 | $850,000 | $4,250,000 | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Tim Murphy | $2,100,000 | $700,000 | $700,000 | $3,500,000 |
2021 MASTERCARD PROXY |
76
|
Role
|
Requirement
|
Actual
|
||||||||||||||||||
What counts toward stock ownership requirement
• Mastercard shares owned personally and beneficially
What does not count toward stock ownership requirement
• Stock options
• Unvested RSUs and PSUs
|
||||||||||||||||||||
Ajay Banga
|
6 | 106 | ||||||||||||||||||
Michael Miebach
1
|
4 | 10 | ||||||||||||||||||
Sachin Mehra
|
4 | 4 | ||||||||||||||||||
Craig Vosburg
|
4 | 18 | ||||||||||||||||||
Tim Murphy
|
4 | 17 | ||||||||||||||||||
Other direct reports to the CEO (average)
|
4 | 24 | ||||||||||||||||||
Remaining Management Committee members (average)
|
2 | 6 | ||||||||||||||||||
77
|
2021 MASTERCARD PROXY |
2021 MASTERCARD PROXY |
78
|
Name and principal position | Year |
Salary
($) |
Bonus
($) |
Stock
awards ($) |
Option
awards ($) |
Non-equity
incentive plan compensation ($) |
Change in pension
value and non-qualified deferred compensation earnings ($) |
All other
compensation
($) |
Total
($) |
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
(a) | (b) | (c) | (d) |
(e)
1
|
(f)
2
|
(g)
3
|
(h) |
(i)
4
|
(j) | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Ajay Banga
Chief Executive Officer
|
2020 | 1,250,000 | — | 19,664,098 | 3,525,019 | 3,125,000 | — | 210,331 | 27,774,448 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
2019 | 1,250,000 | — | 8,650,134 | 7,450,079 | 5,664,063 | — | 235,701 | 23,249,977 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
2018 | 1,250,000 | — | 6,750,004 | 6,749,972 | 5,288,090 | — | 341,287 | 20,379,353 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Michael Miebach
President and CEO-elect
|
2020 | 729,167 | 6,619,736 | 650,017 | 1,125,000 | 96,556 | 9,220,476 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
2019 | 583,750 | — | 1,628,912 | 1,399,992 | 1,197,509 | — | 760,032 | 5,570,195 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Sachin Mehra
Chief Financial Officer
|
2020 | 641,667 | — | 2,887,132 | 720,009 | 747,500 | 65,086 | 5,061,394 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
2019 | 562,500 | — | 1,309,549 | 1,250,102 | 844,523 | — | 59,699 | 4,026,373 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Craig Vosburg
Chief Product Officer
|
2020 | 645,833 | — | 5,718,660 | 650,017 | 812,500 | — | 66,052 | 7,893,062 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
2019 | 620,833 | — | 1,750,305 | 1,499,901 | 1,224,844 | — | 66,927 | 5,162,810 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
2018 | 600,000 | — | 1,350,046 | 1,350,027 | 1,361,536 | — | 57,556 | 4,719,165 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Tim Murphy
General Counsel
|
2020 | 625,000 | — | 5,556,026 | 640,002 | 718,750 | — | 63,926 | 7,603,704 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
2019 | 620,833 | — | 1,623,854 | 1,399,992 | 1,164,375 | — | 66,927 | 4,875,981 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
2018 | 600,000 | — | 1,200,016 | 1,200,006 | 1,413,903 | — | 57,556 | 4,471,481 |
79
|
2021 MASTERCARD PROXY |
Name | 2020 RSU & PSU Grant Date Value | Incremental value of 2018 PSU modification |
Total 2020 Stock Award Value (includes 2018 PSU modification)
1
|
Total 2020 Compensation (including PSU modification)
1
|
Total 2020 Compensation (excluding PSU modification) | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Ajay Banga | $14,134,398 | $5,529,700 | $19,664,098 | $27,774,448 | $22,244,748 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Michael Miebach | $5,616,089 | $1,003,647 | $6,619,736 | $9,220,476 | $8,216,829 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Craig Vosburg | $4,612,683 | $1,105,977 | $5,718,660 | $7,893,062 | $6,787,085 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Tim Murphy | $4,572,956 | $983,070 | $5,556,026 | $7,603,704 | $6,620,634 |
2021 MASTERCARD PROXY |
80
|
All other compensation in 2020
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||
The following table sets forth certain information with respect to the “All other compensation” column of the Summary Compensation Table for 2020 for the NEOs: | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Name
|
Perquisites & other
personal benefits ($) |
Company contributions to
defined contribution plans ($) |
Insurance premiums
($) |
Total
($) |
||||||||||||||||||||||
(a)
|
(b)
1
|
(c)
2
|
(d)
3
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||
Ajay Banga
|
$82,539 | $122,542 | $5,250 | $210,331 | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Michael Miebach
|
$21,999 | $72,918 | $1,639 | $96,556 | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Sachin Mehra
|
— | $64,168 | $918 | $65,086 | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Craig Vosburg
|
— | $64,584 | $1,468 | $66,052 | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Tim Murphy | — | $62,501 | $1,425 | $63,926 |
81
|
2021 MASTERCARD PROXY |
Grants of plan-based awards in 2020
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
The following table sets forth certain information with respect to awards granted during the year ended December 31, 2020 to each of our NEOs: | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Name |
Grant
date |
Date of
action 1 |
Estimated possible payouts under
non-equity incentive plan awards 2 |
Estimated future payouts under
equity incentive plan awards 3 |
All other
stock awards: number of shares of stock or units (#) |
All other
option awards: number of securities underlying options (#) |
Exercise
or base price of option awards ($/Sh) |
Grant date
fair value of stock and option awards ($) |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Threshold
($) |
Target
($) |
Maximum
($) |
Threshold
(#) |
Target
(#) |
Maximum
(#) |
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
(a)
|
(b)
|
(c)
|
(d)
|
(e)
|
(f)
|
(g)
|
(h)
|
(i)
4
|
(j)
5
|
(k)
|
(l)
6
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Ajay Banga
|
3/1/2020
|
2/3/2020
|
63,709 | $290.25 | $3,525,019 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
3/1/2020
|
2/3/2020
|
18,218 | 36,435 | 72,870 | $10,609,143 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
3/1/2020
|
2/3/2020
|
12,311 | $3,525,255 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
2/3/2020
|
$1,562,500 | $3,125,000 | $7,812,500 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
3/1/2018 | 12/31/2020 | 14,915 | 29,829 | 59,658 | $5,529,700 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Michael Miebach
|
3/1/2020
|
2/3/2020
|
11,748 | $290.25 | $650,017 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
3/1/2020
|
2/3/2020
|
8,528 | 17,055 | 34,110 | $4,966,075 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
3/1/2020
|
2/3/2020
|
2,270 | $650,015 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
2/10/2020
|
$562,500 | $1,125,000 | $2,812,500 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
3/1/2018 | 12/31/2020 | 2,707 | 5,414 | 10,828 | $1,003,647 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Sachin Mehra
|
3/1/2020
|
2/3/2020
|
13,013 | $290.25 | $720,009 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
3/1/2020
|
2/3/2020
|
3,721 | 7,442 | 14,884 | $2,166,962 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
3/1/2020
|
2/3/2020
|
2,515 | $720,170 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
2/3/2020
|
$373,750 | $747,500 | $1,868,750 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Craig Vosburg
|
3/1/2020
|
2/3/2020
|
11,748 | $290.25 | $650,017 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
3/1/2020
|
2/3/2020
|
6,805 | 13,609 | 27,218 | $3,962,669 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
3/1/2020
|
2/3/2020
|
2,270 | $650,015 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
2/3/2020
|
$406,250 | $812,500 | $2,031,250 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
3/1/2018 | 12/31/2020 | 2,983 | 5,966 | 11,932 | $1,105,977 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Tim Murphy
|
3/1/2020
|
2/3/2020
|
11,567 | $290.25 | $640,002 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
3/1/2020
|
2/3/2020
|
6,753 | 13,506 | 27,012 | $3,932,677 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
3/1/2020
|
2/3/2020
|
2,236 | $640,279 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
2/3/2020
|
$359,500 | $719,000 | $1,797,500 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
3/1/2018 | 12/31/2020 | 2,652 | 5,303 | 10,606 | $983,070 |
2021 MASTERCARD PROXY |
82
|
83
|
2021 MASTERCARD PROXY |
Outstanding equity awards at 2020 fiscal year end
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
The following table sets forth certain information with respect to all outstanding option awards and stock awards held by each of our NEOs on December 31, 2020: | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Option awards | Stock awards | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Name |
Stock
option grant date |
Number of
securities underlying unexercised options (#) exercisable |
Number of
securities underlying unexercised options (#) unexercisable |
Equity incentive
plan awards: number of securities underlying unexercised unearned options (#) |
Option
exercise price ($) |
Option
expiration date |
Number of
shares or units of stock that have not vested (#) |
Market value
of shares or units of stock that have not vested ($) |
Equity incentive plan
awards: number of unearned shares, units or other rights that have not vested (#) |
Equity incentive plan
awards: market or payout value of unearned shares, units or other rights that have not vested |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
(a)
|
(b)
|
(c)
|
(d)
|
(e)
|
(f)
|
(g)
1
|
(h)
2
|
(i)
3
|
(j)
4
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Ajay Banga
|
42,140 | $15,041,452 | 148,118 | $52,869,239 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
3/1/2014
5
|
297,412 | — | — | $77.72 |
3/1/2024
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
3/1/2015
6
|
303,644 | — | — | $90.13 |
3/1/2025
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
3/1/2016
7
|
309,472 | — | — | $90.10 |
3/1/2026
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
3/1/2017
8
|
220,797 | 73,599 | — | $112.31 |
3/1/2027
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
3/1/2018
9
|
82,518 | 82,518 | — | $173.49 |
3/1/2028
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
3/1/2019
10
|
35,122 | 105,366 | — | $227.25 |
3/1/2029
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
3/1/2020
12
|
— | 63,709 | — | $290.25 | 3/1/2030 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Michael Miebach
|
7,684 | $2,742,727 | 48,280 | $17,233,063 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
3/1/2017
8
|
35,328 | 11,776 | — | $112.31 |
3/1/2027
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
3/1/2018
9
|
14,976 | 14,976 | — | $173.49 |
3/1/2028
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
3/1/2019
10
|
6,600 | 19,800 | — | $227.25 |
3/1/2029
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
3/1/2020
12
|
— | 11,748 | — | $290.25 |
3/1/2030
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Sachin Mehra
|
4,127 | $1,473,091 | 25,454 | $9,085,551 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
3/1/2015
6
|
11,568 | — | — | $90.13 |
3/1/2025
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
3/1/2016
7
|
12,108 | — | — | $90.10 |
3/1/2026
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
3/1/2017
8
|
8,832 | 2944 | — | $112.31 |
3/1/2027
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
3/1/2018
9
|
3,362 | 3,362 | — | $173.49 |
3/1/2028
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
3/1/2019
10
|
1,179 | 3,537 | — | $227.25 |
3/1/2029
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
4/1/2019
11
|
4,454 | 13,362 | — | $239.05 |
4/1/2029
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
3/1/2020
12
|
— | 13,013 | — | $290.25 | 3/1/2030 |
2021 MASTERCARD PROXY |
84
|
Outstanding equity awards at 2020 fiscal year end
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
The following table sets forth certain information with respect to all outstanding option awards and stock awards held by each of our NEOs on December 31, 2020: | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Option awards | Stock awards | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Name |
Stock
option grant date |
Number of
securities underlying unexercised options (#) exercisable |
Number of
securities underlying unexercised options (#) unexercisable |
Equity incentive
plan awards: number of securities underlying unexercised unearned options (#) |
Option
exercise price ($) |
Option
expiration date |
Number of
shares or units of stock that have not vested (#) |
Market value
of shares or units of stock that have not vested ($) |
Equity incentive plan
awards: number of unearned shares, units or other rights that have not vested (#) |
Equity incentive plan
awards: market or payout value of unearned shares, units or other rights that have not vested |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
(a)
|
(b)
|
(c)
|
(d)
|
(e)
|
(f)
|
(g)
1
|
(h)
2
|
(i)
3
|
(j)
4
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Craig Vosburg
|
8,236 | $2,939,758 | 42,444 | $15,149,961 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
3/1/2016
7
|
40,368 | — | — | $90.10 |
3/1/2026
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
3/1/2017
8
|
40,626 | 13,542 | — | $112.31 |
3/1/2027
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
3/1/2018
9
|
16,504 | 16,504 | — | $173.49 |
3/1/2028
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
3/1/2019
10
|
7,071 | 21,213 | — | $227.25 |
3/1/2029
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
3/1/2020
12
|
— | 11,748 | — | $290.25 |
3/1/2030
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Tim Murphy
|
7,539 | $2,690,971 | 41,138 | $14,683,798 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
3/1/2017
8
|
35,328 | 11,776 | — | $112.31 |
3/1/2027
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
3/1/2018
9
|
14,670 | 14,670 | — | $173.49 |
3/1/2028
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
3/1/2019
10
|
6,600 | 19,800 | — | $227.25 |
3/1/2029
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
3/1/2020
12
|
— | 11,567 | — | $290.25 |
3/1/2030
|
85
|
2021 MASTERCARD PROXY |
Option awards | Stock awards | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
Name
|
Number of shares
acquired on exercise (#) |
Value realized
on exercise ($) 1 |
Number of shares
acquired on vesting (#) 2 |
Value realized
on vesting ($) 3 |
||||||||||||||||||||||
(a) | (b) | (c) | (d) | (e) | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Ajay Banga
|
244,600 | $62,207,312 | 99,010 | $27,917,850 | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Michael Miebach
|
21,025 | $4,997,643 | 15,842 | $4,466,969 | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Sachin Mehra
|
13,996 | $3,236,428 | 2,278 | $642,328 | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Craig Vosburg
|
8,314 | $1,911,139 | 18,218 | $5,136,929 | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Tim Murphy | 44,404 | $8,711,212 | 15,842 | $4,466,969 |
2021 MASTERCARD PROXY |
86
|
Employment agreements and arrangements
Mastercard is party to an employment agreement with Mr. Banga. Mr. Banga, as well as each of our other NEOs, is eligible to participate in the Mastercard International Executive Severance Plan. Severance benefits for Mr. Banga under the Executive Severance Plan are in lieu of any benefits previously provided under his employment agreement. We have publicly filed with the SEC our employment agreements/arrangements with each of our NEOs.
Descriptions of each of our NEO’s employment arrangements, including potential events of termination and related payments are on the following page. See Potential Payments tables (pgs
92
-
96
) for specific amounts that would have been payable to each of our NEOs had a termination event occurred on December 31, 2020.
|
87
|
2021 MASTERCARD PROXY |
Events of termination of employment and related payments
|
||||||||||||||||||||
The following table sets forth termination events and related payments for each of our NEOs. (excluding any equity award acceleration which is discussed below under “Potential Payments Tables”). Beginning in 2021, Mr. Banga is no longer eligible for an annual incentive bonus.
|
||||||||||||||||||||
Termination event
1
|
Components of termination payment | |||||||||||||||||||
Death
|
![]() |
•
Target annual incentive bonus for year in which termination occurs if not already paid (plus the annual incentive bonus earned for the previous year, if not already paid)
|
||||||||||||||||||
Disability
|
•
For Mr. Banga, annual incentive bonus prorated for year of termination based upon Mastercard’s actual performance during the year in which termination occurs (subject to HRCC discretion) (plus the annual incentive bonus earned for the previous year, if not already paid).
•
For all NEOs other than Mr. Banga, target annual incentive bonus prorated for year of termination (plus the annual incentive bonus earned for the previous year, if not already paid)
|
|||||||||||||||||||
For Cause, Voluntary Resignation or, for Mr. Banga, Non-Renewal by the executive
|
•
No additional payments
|
|||||||||||||||||||
Without Cause or Resignation with Good Reason
|
•
Base salary earned but not paid through date of termination
•
Payment for all accrued but unused vacation time
•
Additional benefits, if any and as applicable, under Mastercard plans or programs
|
•
Annual incentive bonus prorated for year of termination based upon Mastercard’s actual performance during the year in which termination occurs (subject to HRCC discretion) (plus the annual incentive bonus earned for the previous year, if not already paid)
•
Base salary continuation for 18 months (the severance period) following termination (extendable by an additional six months in exchange for extended restrictive covenants at Mastercard’s sole discretion) plus an amount equal to 1.5 times the annual incentive bonus paid to the executive for the year prior to termination, paid ratably over the severance period in accordance with Mastercard’s annual incentive bonus pay practices (or up to an amount equal to two times the bonus for the prior year, payable over 24 months at Mastercard’s discretion)
•
Payment of the monthly COBRA medical coverage premium for the applicable period (or, if shorter, the severance period) or, if the executive is eligible, the full cost of the Mastercard Retiree Health Plan during the severance period with retiree contribution levels applying thereafter
•
Reasonable outplacement services for the shorter of the severance period or the period of unemployment
|
||||||||||||||||||
![]() |
||||||||||||||||||||
Mandatory retirement or Retirement (as defined in the LTIP)
|
•
Annual incentive bonus for year in which termination occurs, prorated other than upon Mr. Banga’s mandatory retirement, (plus the annual incentive bonus earned for the previous year, if not already paid) based upon Mastercard’s actual performance
|
|||||||||||||||||||
2021 MASTERCARD PROXY |
88
|
“Double trigger” change in control payments
If, within the six months preceding or two years following a change in control, an NEO terminates employment with Mastercard or its successor for Good Reason or is terminated without Cause, the NEO will be entitled to the following termination payments:
|
||
“Double-trigger” change in control severance payments
|
||
• Lump sum payments within 30 days following date of termination of (1) all base salary earned but not paid and (2) all accrued but unused vacation time
|
||
• Pro rata portion of the annual incentive bonus payable in year of termination and previous year, if not already paid (in each case, based on actual performance)
|
||
• Base salary continuation for 24 months following termination (the severance period) but not beyond the employee’s mandatory retirement date
|
||
• Additional pay continuation following the date of termination equal to, the average annual bonus received by the executive over the prior two years of employment, payable ratably over the severance period but not beyond the employee’s mandatory retirement date
|
||
• Payment of the monthly COBRA medical coverage premium for the applicable COBRA period (or, if shorter, the severance period) or, if the executive is eligible, the full cost of the Mastercard Retiree Health Plan during the severance period with retiree contribution levels applying thereafter
|
||
• Reasonable outplacement services for the shorter of the severance period or the period of unemployment
|
||
• Such additional benefits, if any, that the executive would be entitled to under applicable Mastercard plans and programs (other than severance payments)
|
89
|
2021 MASTERCARD PROXY |
Executive | Long-term incentive awards | Severance plan payments | Change in control payments | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Mr. Banga
|
• 12-month non-compete
• 24-month non-solicit
• In the event of a violation, repayment of specified gains from stock options exercised and repayment of vested equity awards from the two-year period preceding the violation
|
• Non-compete and non-solicit for longer of 18 months or the length of the severance payments (agreement to be executed within 60 days following termination)
|
• Two-year non-compete and non-solicit
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||
All NEOs other than Mr. Banga
|
• 12-month non-compete
• 18-month non-solicit
• In the event of a violation, repayment of specified gains from stock options exercised and repayment of vested equity awards from the two-year period preceding the violation
|
• Non-compete and non-solicit for longer of 18 months or the length of the severance payments (agreement to be executed within 60 days following termination)
|
• Two-year non-compete and non-solicit
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||
2021 MASTERCARD PROXY |
90
|
91
|
2021 MASTERCARD PROXY |
Ajay Banga | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Benefit | Death | Disability | For Cause |
Voluntary
4
|
Without Cause / with Good Reason |
Termination following Change
in Control
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Cash Severance
1
|
$— | $— | $— | $— | $10,355,050 | $13,425,721 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Annual Incentive Award | $3,125,000 | $3,125,000 | $— | $— | $3,125,000 | $3,125,000 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Unvested Equity
2
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Restricted Stock Units
|
$4,394,288 | $4,394,288 | $— | $4,394,288 | $4,394,288 | $4,394,288 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Unexercisable Options
|
$51,056,120 | $51,056,120 | $— | $51,056,120 | $51,056,120 | $51,056,120 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Performance Stock Units
|
$37,081,783 | $37,081,783 | $— | $37,081,783 | $37,081,783 | $37,081,783 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Total
|
$92,532,191 | $92,532,191 | $— | $92,532,191 | $92,532,191 | $92,532,191 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Other Benefits
3
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Health and Welfare
|
$— | $— | $— | $— | $29,698 | $29,698 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Outplacement
|
$— | $— | $— | $— | $50,000 | $50,000 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Total
|
$— | $— | $— | $— | $79,698 | $79,698 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Total | $95,657,191 | $95,657,191 | $— | $92,532,191 | $106,091,939 | $109,162,610 |
2021 MASTERCARD PROXY |
92
|
Michael Miebach | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Benefit | Death | Disability | For Cause | Voluntary | Without Cause/ with Good Reason | Termination following Change in control | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Cash Severance
1
|
$— | $— | $— | $— | $2,916,744 | $1,960,455 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Annual Incentive Award | $1,125,000 | $1,125,000 | $— | $— | $1,125,000 | $1,125,000 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Unvested Equity
2
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Restricted Stock Units
|
$810,254 | $810,254 | $— | $— | $169,190 | $810,254 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Unexercisable Options
|
$8,979,446 | $8,979,446 | $— | $— | $— | $8,979,446 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Performance Stock Units
|
$10,549,005 | $10,549,005 | $— | $— | $5,066,049 | $10,549,005 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Total
|
$20,338,705 | $20,338,705 | $— | $— | $5,235,239 | $20,338,705 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Other Benefits
3
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Health and Welfare
|
$— | $— | $— | $— | $39,506 | $39,506 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Outplacement
|
$— | $— | $— | $— | $50,000 | $50,000 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Total
|
$— | $— | $— | $— | $89,506 | $89,506 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Total | $21,463,705 | $21,463,705 | $— | $— | $9,366,489 | $23,513,666 |
Sachin Mehra | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Benefit | Death | Disability | For Cause | Voluntary | Without Cause/ with Good Reason | Termination following Change in control | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Cash Severance
1
|
$— | $— | $— | $— | $2,238,316 | $1,849,116 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Annual Incentive Award | $747,500 | $747,500 | $— | $— | $747,500 | $747,500 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Unvested Equity
2
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Restricted Stock Units
|
$1,473,091 | $1,473,091 | $— | $— | $730,656 | $1,473,091 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Unexercisable Options
|
$4,238,746 | $4,238,746 | $— | $— | $— | $4,238,746 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Performance Stock Units
|
$4,542,775 | $4,542,775 | $— | $— | $1,876,077 | $4,542,775 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Total
|
$10,254,612 | $10,254,612 | $— | $— | $2,606,733 | $10,254,612 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Other Benefits
3
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Health and Welfare
|
$— | $— | $— | $— | $38,393 | $38,393 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Outplacement
|
$— | $— | $— | $— | $50,000 | $50,000 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Total
|
$— | $— | $— | $— | $88,393 | $88,393 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Total | $11,002,112 | $11,002,112 | $— | $— | $5,680,942 | $12,939,621 |
93
|
2021 MASTERCARD PROXY |
Craig Vosburg | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Benefit | Death | Disability | For Cause | Voluntary | Without Cause/ with Good Reason | Termination following Change in control | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Cash Severance
1
|
$— | $— | $— | $— | $2,807,915 | $547,165 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Annual Incentive Award | $812,500 | $812,500 | $— | $— | $812,500 | $812,500 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Unvested Equity
2
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Restricted Stock Units
|
$810,254 | $810,254 | $— | $— | $169,190 | $810,254 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Unexercisable Options
|
$9,875,026 | $9,875,026 | $— | $— | $— | $9,875,026 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Performance Stock Units
|
$9,704,485 | $9,704,485 | $— | $— | $5,025,001 | $9,704,485 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Total
|
$20,389,765 | $20,389,765 | $— | $— | $5,194,191 | $20,389,765 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Other Benefits
3
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Health and Welfare
|
$— | $— | $— | $— | $19,535 | $19,535 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Outplacement
|
$— | $— | $— | $— | $50,000 | $50,000 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Total
|
$— | $— | $— | $— | $69,535 | $69,535 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Total | $21,202,265 | $21,202,265 | $— | $— | $8,884,141 | $21,818,965 |
Tim Murphy | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Benefit | Death | Disability | For Cause | Voluntary | Without Cause/ with Good Reason | Termination following Change in control | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Cash Severance
1
|
$— | $— | $— | $— | $2,679,910 | $3,820,756 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Annual Incentive Award | $718,750 | $718,750 | $— | $— | $718,750 | $718,750 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Unvested Equity
2
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Restricted Stock Units
|
$798,118 | $798,118 | $— | $— | $166,691 | $798,118 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Unexercisable Options
|
$8,911,240 | $8,911,240 | $— | $— | $— | $8,911,240 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Performance Stock Units
|
$9,234,752 | $9,234,752 | $— | $— | $4,670,917 | $9,234,752 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Total
|
$18,944,110 | $18,944,110 | $— | $— | $4,837,608 | $18,944,110 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Other Benefits
3
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Health and Welfare
|
$— | $— | $— | $— | $32,689 | $32,689 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Outplacement
|
$— | $— | $— | $— | $50,000 | $50,000 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Total
|
$— | $— | $— | $— | $82,689 | $82,689 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Total | $19,662,860 | $19,662,860 | $— | $— | $8,318,957 | $23,566,305 |
2021 MASTERCARD PROXY |
94
|
95
|
2021 MASTERCARD PROXY |
Plan category |
Number of securities to be issued upon exercise of outstanding options, warrants and rights
1, 2
|
Weighted-average exercise price of outstanding options, warrants and rights
3
|
Number of securities remaining available for future issuance under equity compensation plans (excluding shares reflected in column (a)) | |||||||||||||||||
(a) | (b) | (c) | ||||||||||||||||||
Equity compensation plans approved by stockholders | 8,686,273 | $136.92 | 52,419,036 | |||||||||||||||||
Equity compensation plans not approved by stockholders | — | — | — | |||||||||||||||||
Total | 8,686,273 | 52,419,036 |
2021 MASTERCARD PROXY |
96
|
97
|
2021 MASTERCARD PROXY |
Audit
|
|||||
06 |
This section describes the factors we considered in making our recommendation that stockholders ratify our selection of PricewaterhouseCoopers as our independent registered public accounting firm for 2021.
|
2021 MASTERCARD PROXY |
98
|
Proposal 3: Ratification of the appointment of independent registered public accounting firm for 2021
|
The Board unanimously recommends that stockholders vote FOR ratification of the appointment of PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP as Mastercard’s independent registered public accounting firm for 2021
|
![]() |
Type of fee | Description | 2020 | 2019 | |||||||||||||||||
Audit fees | For the annual integrated audit and the quarterly reviews of the consolidated financial statements. Also includes the statutory audits required for certain businesses, as well as countries or jurisdictions in which we operate | $8,844 | $8,568 | |||||||||||||||||
Audit-related fees | For assurance and audit-related services (but not included in the audit fees set forth above), including the internal controls review of selected information systems | $985 | $884 | |||||||||||||||||
Tax fees | For tax compliance, tax advice and tax planning services | $109 | $158 | |||||||||||||||||
All other fees | For accounting research tools and pre-implementation assessments | $6 | $20 | |||||||||||||||||
Total | $9,944 | $9,630 |
2021 MASTERCARD PROXY |
100
|
101
|
2021 MASTERCARD PROXY |
2021 MASTERCARD PROXY |
102
|
Amendments to
Equity Plans
|
|||||
07
&
08
|
These sections describe the proposed amendments to our Long Term Incentive Plan and our Non-employee Directors Equity Compensation Plan.
|
103
|
2021 MASTERCARD PROXY |
Proposal 4: Approval of the amendment and restatement of the 2006 Long Term Incentive Plan
|
The Board recommends a vote “FOR” Proposal 4, the approval of the amendment and restatement of the 2006 Long Term Incentive Plan
|
![]() |
Stock options outstanding
|
5,722,003
|
|||||||
Weighted average exercise price
|
$136.92
|
|||||||
Weighted average remaining contractual life
|
6 years
|
|||||||
Full value awards outstanding
|
2,964,270
|
|||||||
Shares remaining for grant under the LTIP
1
|
52,072,
414
|
|||||||
Shares remaining for grant under the Director Plan
|
346,622
|
105
|
2021 MASTERCARD PROXY |
2021 MASTERCARD PROXY |
106
|
107
|
2021 MASTERCARD PROXY |
2021 MASTERCARD PROXY |
108
|
109
|
2021 MASTERCARD PROXY |
Revenue | Earnings* | Operating income | ||||||||||||
Net income | Operating or profit margins | Earnings per share | ||||||||||||
Return on assets | Return on equity | Return on invested capital | ||||||||||||
Economic value-added | Stock price | Gross dollar volume | ||||||||||||
Total stockholder return | Market share | Book value | ||||||||||||
Expense management | Cash flow | Customer satisfaction |
2021 MASTERCARD PROXY |
110
|
111
|
2021 MASTERCARD PROXY |
Name and Position |
Number of
Options
|
Number of RSUs and
Performance Units
1
|
||||||||||||
Ajay Banga, Chief Executive Officer | 3,004,517 | 1,333,233 | ||||||||||||
Michael Miebach, President and CEO-elect | 236,596 | 138,346 | ||||||||||||
Sachin Mehra, Chief Financial Officer | 194,037 | 71,756 | ||||||||||||
Craig Vosburg, President, North America | 240,060 | 129,669 | ||||||||||||
Tim Murphy, General Counsel | 410,323 | 345,388 | ||||||||||||
All current executive officers (as a group) | 2,199,172 | 1,609,892 | ||||||||||||
All current non-employee directors (as a group) | 0 | 0 | ||||||||||||
All employees and officers who are not executive officers (as a group) | 21,380,985 | 58,885,031 |
2021 MASTERCARD PROXY |
112
|
113
|
2021 MASTERCARD PROXY |
2021 MASTERCARD PROXY |
114
|
Proposal 5: Approval of the amendment and restatement of the 2006 Non-Employee Director Equity Compensation Plan
|
The Board recommends a vote “FOR” Proposal 5, the approval of the amendment and restatement of the Mastercard Incorporated 2006 Non-Employee Director Equity Compensation Plan. |
![]() |
115
|
2021 MASTERCARD PROXY |
2021 MASTERCARD PROXY |
116
|
117
|
2021 MASTERCARD PROXY |
Name and Position |
Number of Shares
|
|||||||
All current directors who are not executive officers (as a group) | 179,644 | |||||||
Each Nominee for Election as a director:
|
|
|||||||
Richard Davis | 2,528 | |||||||
Steven Freiberg | 53,697 | |||||||
Julius Genachowski | 10,057 | |||||||
Choon Phong Goh | 2,793 | |||||||
Merit Janow | 10,057 | |||||||
Oki Matsumoto | 6,083 | |||||||
Youngme Moon | 1,535 | |||||||
Rima Qureshi | 20,077 | |||||||
Jose Reyes | 35,677 | |||||||
Gabrielle Sulzberger | 2,078 | |||||||
Jackson Tai | 33,527 | |||||||
Lance Uggla | 1,535 |
2021 MASTERCARD PROXY |
118
|
Approval of amendments to the Certificate of Incorporation
Stockholders are asked to approve amendments to our Certificate of Incorporation to remove all stockholder supermajority voting requirements.
|
|||||
09 |
119
|
2021 MASTERCARD PROXY |
Proposal 6: Approval of amendments to the Certificate of Incorporation to remove supermajority voting requirements |
The Board unanimously recommends that stockholders vote FOR the approval of the amendments to the company’s Certificate of Incorporation to remove supermajority voting requirements.
|
![]() |
2021 MASTERCARD PROXY |
121
|
Stock ownership
information |
|||||
10 |
Information about the beneficial ownership of our voting securities by directors, management and certain beneficial owners is provided in the tables in this section.
|
122
|
2021 MASTERCARD PROXY |
Name and address
of beneficial owner |
Shares of Class A
common stock beneficially owned |
Percent of total outstanding Class A
common stock beneficially owned |
||||||||||||
Mastercard Foundation
1
|
||||||||||||||
250 Yonge Street, Suite 2400
|
107,981,847 | 11.0% | ||||||||||||
Toronto, Ontario M5B 2L7
|
||||||||||||||
The Vanguard Group, Inc.
2
|
||||||||||||||
100 Vanguard Blvd.
|
70,492,830 | 7.1% | ||||||||||||
Malvern, PA 19355
|
||||||||||||||
BlackRock, Inc.
3
|
||||||||||||||
55 East 52
nd
Street
|
67,555,798 | 6.8% | ||||||||||||
New York, NY 10055
|
Name
|
Shares of Class A
common stock directly and indirectly owned |
Shares of Class A
common stock obtainable within 60 days |
Total shares of Class A
common stock beneficially owned (shown in columns (a) and (b)) |
|||||||||||||||||
(a)
|
(b)
1
|
(c)
|
||||||||||||||||||
Ajay Banga
|
387,458
2
|
1,414,872 |
1,802,330
2
|
|||||||||||||||||
Richard K. Davis
|
4,210 | 2,528 | 6,738 | |||||||||||||||||
Steven J. Freiberg
|
8,384
3
|
6,083 |
14,467
3
|
|||||||||||||||||
Julius Genachowski
|
1,971
4,5
|
6,083 |
8,054
4,5
|
|||||||||||||||||
Choon Phong Goh
|
—
|
2,793 | 2,793 | |||||||||||||||||
Merit E. Janow
|
6,021 | 4,036 | 10,057 | |||||||||||||||||
Oki Matsumoto
|
1,692 | 4,036 | 5,728 | |||||||||||||||||
Michael Miebach |
23,913
5
|
85,705 |
109,618
5
|
|||||||||||||||||
Youngme Moon
|
—
|
1,535 | 1,535 | |||||||||||||||||
Rima Qureshi
|
12,181 | 6,083 | 18,264 | |||||||||||||||||
José Octavio Reyes Lagunes
|
23,523
6
|
7,226 |
30,749
6
|
|||||||||||||||||
Gabrielle Sulzberger
|
250 | 2,078 | 2,328 | |||||||||||||||||
Jackson Tai
|
29,491 | 4,036 | 33,527 | |||||||||||||||||
Lance Uggla
|
4,863 | 1,535 | 6,398 | |||||||||||||||||
Sachin Mehra
|
8,030
5
|
55,014 |
63,044
5
|
|||||||||||||||||
Tim Murphy |
31,565
5,7
|
38,096 |
69,661
5
|
|||||||||||||||||
Craig Vosburg
|
36,375
5
|
136,371 |
172,746
5
|
|||||||||||||||||
All directors and executive officers as a group (28 persons)
|
927,344
2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9
|
2,363,079 |
3,290,423
1,2,3,4,6,7,8,9
|
2021 MASTERCARD PROXY |
124
|
About the Annual
Meeting and voting |
|||||
11 |
This section, organized in a Q&A format, is designed to provide stockholders with answers to general questions about our Annual Meeting.
|
125
|
2021 MASTERCARD PROXY |
![]() |
Mastercard Incorporated
Office of the Corporate Secretary
2000 Purchase Street
Purchase, NY 10577
|
or
|
Morrow Sodali LLC
470 West Avenue Stamford, CT 06902 Telephone: 203.658.9400 |
||||||||
![]() |
Attention: Janet McGinness
corporate.secretary@mastercard.com
Telephone: 914.249.2000
|
||||||||||
1.
Election of 14 directors
|
||
2.
Advisory approval of Mastercard’s executive compensation
|
||
3.
Ratification of the appointment of PwC as the independent registered public accounting firm for Mastercard for 2021
|
||
4.
Approval of our Amended and Restated Long Term Incentive Plan
|
||
5.
Approval of our Amended and Restated Non-Employee Director Equity Compensation Plan
|
||
6.
Approval of Amendments to our Certificate of Incorporation to remove supermajority voting provisions
|
||
Action on any other business which may properly come before the Annual Meeting or any adjournment or postponement of the Annual Meeting |
On the following non-routine proposals, your broker, bank or other nominee will not be able to vote without instruction from you (resulting in a broker non-vote): | |||||
• Proposal 1
|
Election of directors | ||||
• Proposal 2
|
Advisory approval of our executive compensation | ||||
• Proposal 4
|
Approval of our Amended and Restated Long Term Incentive Plan | ||||
• Proposal 5
|
Approval of our Amended and Restated Non-Employee Director Equity Compensation Plan | ||||
• Proposal 6
|
Approval of amendments to our Certificate of Incorporation to remove supermajority voting provisions | ||||
On the following routine proposal, your broker, bank or other nominee may vote in its discretion without instruction from you: | |||||
• Proposal 3
|
Ratification of the appointment of PwC as our independent registered public accounting firm for 2021 |
127
|
2021 MASTERCARD PROXY |
Proposal | Voting choices |
Board
recommendation |
|||||||||||||||
![]() |
Election of the 14 nominees named in this proxy statement to serve as directors |
With respect to each director nominee:
For Against Abstain |
For election of all 14 director nominees | ||||||||||||||
![]() |
Advisory approval of Mastercard’s executive compensation |
For
Against Abstain |
For | ||||||||||||||
![]() |
Ratification of the appointment of PwC as our independent registered public accounting firm for 2021 |
For
Against Abstain |
For | ||||||||||||||
![]() |
Approval of our Amended and Restated Long Term Incentive Plan |
For
Against Abstain |
For | ||||||||||||||
![]() |
Approval of our Amended and Restated Non-Employee Director Equity Compensation Plan |
For
Against Abstain |
For | ||||||||||||||
![]() |
Approval of amendments to our Certificate of Incorporation to remove supermajority voting provisions |
For
Against Abstain |
For |
2021 MASTERCARD PROXY |
128
|
Proposal
|
Voting requirements
|
Effect of abstentions
|
Effect of broker non-votes
|
|||||||||||||||||
2
Advisory approval of Mastercard’s executive compensation
|
A majority of votes cast by Class A stockholders must be FOR the proposal
|
No effect on outcome
|
No effect on outcome
|
|||||||||||||||||
3
Ratification of the appointment of PwC as our independent registered public accounting firm for 2021
|
A majority of votes cast by Class A stockholders must be FOR the proposal (ratification not required by applicable laws)
|
No effect on outcome
|
Not applicable – brokers are permitted to vote on this matter without specific instruction from the beneficial owner
|
|||||||||||||||||
4
Approval of our Amended and Restated Long Term Incentive Plan
|
A majority of votes cast by Class A stockholders must be FOR the proposal
|
Count as against votes (under NYSE rules)
|
No effect on outcome
|
|||||||||||||||||
5
Approval of our Amended and Restated Non-Employee Director Equity Compensation Plan
|
A majority of votes cast by Class A stockholders must be FOR the proposal
|
Count as against votes (under NYSE rules) |
No effect on outcome
|
|||||||||||||||||
6
Approval of amendments to our Certificate of Incorporation to remove supermajority voting provisions
|
Holders of at least 80% of the outstanding shares of Class A Common Stock must vote FOR the proposal
|
No effect on outcome
|
No effect on outcome
|
129
|
2021 MASTERCARD PROXY |
How do I vote my shares?
You can vote by calling the toll-free telephone number or by using the Internet as described in the instructions included on the Notice. If you receive a paper copy of the proxy materials, you may also vote your shares by completing, signing, dating and returning your proxy card or voting instruction form. Your vote will be cast in accordance with the instructions authorized by telephone or Internet or included on a properly signed and dated proxy card or voting instruction form, as applicable. We must receive your vote, either by telephone, Internet, proxy card or voting instruction form, by 11:59 p.m. (Eastern time) on June 21, 2021 for your vote to be counted. If you are a stockholder, you also can attend the virtual Annual Meeting and vote your shares. Be sure to read
“
What do I need to do if I would like to attend the virtual Annual Meeting?” on pg 133 if you are considering attending the virtual Annual Meeting.
If you do not vote by telephone or Internet, return a signed proxy card or voting instruction form, or attend the virtual Annual Meeting, and vote,
|
no vote will be cast on your behalf. Each of the Notice, proxy card and voting instruction form indicates on its face the number of shares of common stock registered in your name at the close of business on the Record Date, which number corresponds to the number of votes you will be entitled to cast at the meeting on each proposal. You can find further discussion of Class A common stock voting power in
“
Who is entitled to vote at the Annual Meeting?” on pg
127
.
You are urged to follow the instructions on your Notice, proxy card or voting instruction form to indicate how your vote is to be cast. Under Section 212(c) of the Delaware General Corporation Law, stockholders may validly grant proxies over the Internet. Your Internet vote authorizes the proxies designated by Mastercard to vote your shares in the same manner as if you had returned a proxy card or voting instruction form. In order to vote over the Internet, follow the instructions included on your Notice.
|
2021 MASTERCARD PROXY |
130
|
What can I do if I change my mind after I vote my shares?
Any stockholder who authorizes its vote by telephone or by Internet or executes and returns a proxy card or voting instruction form may revoke the proxy by either:
• notifying in writing the Office of the Corporate Secretary of Mastercard Incorporated at 2000 Purchase Street, Purchase, NY 10577, Attention: Janet McGinness, by notice that is received no later than 11:59 p.m. (Eastern time) on June 21, 2021
• executing and returning a subsequent proxy that is received no later than 11:59 p.m. (Eastern time) on June 21, 2021
• subsequently authorizing the individuals designated by Mastercard to vote its interests by calling the toll-free telephone number or by using the Internet as described in the instructions included on its Notice before the close of voting at 11:59 p.m. (Eastern time) on June 21, 2021; or
• attending the virtual Annual Meeting using a valid control number and voting at the virtual Annual Meeting
Attending the virtual Annual Meeting will not revoke a proxy. You can find more information on voting your shares at the virtual Annual Meeting below under the subheading,
“
What do I need to do if I would like to attend the virtual Annual Meeting?” on pg 133.
|
Who bears the cost of soliciting votes for the Annual Meeting?
We will bear the costs of the solicitation of proxies, including the cost of preparing, printing and mailing the Notice, this proxy statement and related proxy materials. In addition to the solicitation of proxies by use of the mail, proxies may be solicited from stockholders by directors, officers, employees or agents of Mastercard in person or by telephone, facsimile or other appropriate means of communication. We have engaged Morrow Sodali LLC to solicit proxies on our behalf. The anticipated cost of Morrow Sodali LLC’s services is estimated to be approximately $20,000 plus reimbursement of reasonable out-of-pocket expenses. No additional compensation, except for reimbursement of reasonable out-of-pocket expenses, will be paid to our directors, officers or employees in connection with the solicitation. Any questions or requests for assistance regarding this proxy statement and related proxy materials may be directed to Mastercard’s Corporate Secretary or Morrow Sodali using the contact information on pg
127
.
|
131
|
2021 MASTERCARD PROXY |
![]() |
By
email
to corporate.secretary@mastercard.com
By
telephone
914.249.2000
By
mail
to Mastercard Incorporated, Office of the Corporate
Secretary, 2000 Purchase Street, Purchase, NY 10577, Attention: Janet McGinness |
||||
2021 MASTERCARD PROXY |
132
|
Submission of 2022 proposals and nominations
|
|||||
12 |
Deadlines for submitting proposals for inclusion in our proxy statement for our 2022 annual meeting of stockholders, director nominations and other proposals to be considered at the 2022 annual meeting are provided in this section.
|
133
|
2021 MASTERCARD PROXY |
Appendices
|
|||||
13
|
135
|
2021 MASTERCARD PROXY |
Year ended December 31, 2020 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Net revenue | Net income | Diluted earnings per share | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Reported – GAAP | $15,301 | $6,411 | $6.37 | |||||||||||||||||||||||
(Gains) losses on equity investments | ** | (15) | (0.01) | |||||||||||||||||||||||
Litigation provisions | ** | 67 | 0.07 | |||||||||||||||||||||||
Non-GAAP | $15,301 | $6,463 | $6.43 |
Year ended December 31, 2019 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Net revenue | Net income | Diluted earnings per share | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Reported – GAAP | $16,883 | $8,118 | $7.94 | |||||||||||||||||||||||
Litigation provisions | ** | (124) | (0.12) | |||||||||||||||||||||||
Tax act | ** | (57) | (0.06) | |||||||||||||||||||||||
Non-GAAP | $16,883 | $7,937 | $7.77 |
Year ended December 31, 2020 as compared to the
year ended December 31, 2019 |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Increase/(Decrease)
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Net revenue | Net income | Diluted earnings per share | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Reported – GAAP | (9)% | (21)% | (20)% | |||||||||||||||||||||||
(Gains) losses on equity investments
1
|
** | 1% | 1% | |||||||||||||||||||||||
Tax act | ** | 1% | 1% | |||||||||||||||||||||||
Litigation provisions | ** | 1% | 1% | |||||||||||||||||||||||
Non-GAAP | (9)% | (19)% | (17)% | |||||||||||||||||||||||
Currency impact
2
|
1% | 1% | 1% | |||||||||||||||||||||||
Non-GAAP – currency-neutral | (8)% | (17)% | (16)% |
137
|
2021 MASTERCARD PROXY |
ARTICLE I ESTABLISHMENT AND PURPOSE | 142 | ||||||||||
1.1 | Establishment | 142 | |||||||||
1.2 | Purposes | 142 | |||||||||
ARTICLE II DEFINITIONS | 142 | ||||||||||
2.1 | “Affiliated Employer” | 142 | |||||||||
2.2 | “Agreement” or “Award Agreement” | 142 | |||||||||
2.3 | “Award” | 142 | |||||||||
2.4 | “Board of Directors” or “Board” | 142 | |||||||||
2.5 | “Cause” | 142 | |||||||||
2.6 | “Change in Control” | 143 | |||||||||
2.7 | “Code” | 143 | |||||||||
2.8 | “Commission” | 143 | |||||||||
2.9 | “Committee” | 143 | |||||||||
2.10 | “Common Shares” | 144 | |||||||||
2.11 | “Company” | 144 | |||||||||
2.12 | “Director” | 144 | |||||||||
2.13 | “Disability” | 144 | |||||||||
2.14 | “Effective Date” | 144 | |||||||||
2.15 | “Exchange Act” | 144 | |||||||||
2.16 | “Exercise Price” | 144 | |||||||||
2.17 | “Fair Market Value” | 144 | |||||||||
2.18 | “Good Reason” | 144 | |||||||||
2.19 | “Grant Date” | 144 | |||||||||
2.20 | “Incentive Stock Option” or “ISO” | 144 | |||||||||
2.21 | “Non-Employee Director” | 144 | |||||||||
2.22 | “Non-Qualified Stock Option” or “NQSO” | 144 | |||||||||
2.24 | “Option” | 145 |
2.25 | “Option Period” | 145 | |||||||||
2.26 | “Other Stock-Based Award” | 145 | |||||||||
2.27 | “Participant” | 145 | |||||||||
2.28 | “Performance Period” | 145 | |||||||||
2.29 | “Performance Unit” | 145 | |||||||||
2.30 | “Plan” | 145 | |||||||||
2.31 | “Restricted Stock” | 145 | |||||||||
2.32 | “Restricted Stock Unit” | 145 | |||||||||
2.33 | “Restriction Period” | 145 | |||||||||
2.34 | “Retirement” | 145 | |||||||||
2.35 | “Securities Act” | 145 | |||||||||
2.36 | “Share Reserve Reduction” | 145 | |||||||||
2.37 | “Stock Appreciation Right” or “SAR” | 145 | |||||||||
2.38 | “Stock Option” | 145 | |||||||||
2.39 | “Termination of Employment” | 145 | |||||||||
ARTICLE III ADMINISTRATION | 145 | ||||||||||
3.1 | Committee Authority | 145 | |||||||||
3.2 | Delegation of Authority | 146 | |||||||||
3.3 | Committee Determinations and Decisions | 146 | |||||||||
ARTICLE IV SHARES SUBJECT TO PLAN | 147 | ||||||||||
4.1 | Number of Shares | 147 | |||||||||
4.2 | Release of Shares | 147 | |||||||||
4.3 | Restrictions on Shares | 147 | |||||||||
4.4 | ISO Restriction | 147 | |||||||||
4.5 | Stockholder Rights | 148 | |||||||||
4.6 | Adjustment Provision | 148 |
2021 MASTERCARD PROXY |
138
|
ARTICLE V ELIGIBILITY AND VESTING | 148 | ||||||||||
5.1 | Eligibility | 148 | |||||||||
5.2 | Vesting | 149 | |||||||||
ARTICLE VI STOCK OPTIONS | 149 | ||||||||||
6.1 | General | 149 | |||||||||
6.2 | Grant | 149 | |||||||||
6.3 | Required Terms and Conditions | 149 | |||||||||
6.4 | Termination | 150 | |||||||||
6.5 | Notice of Disposition of Common Shares Prior to the Expiration of Specified ISO Holding Periods | 150 | |||||||||
ARTICLE VII STOCK APPRECIATION RIGHTS | 151 | ||||||||||
7.1 | General | 151 | |||||||||
7.2 | Grant | 151 | |||||||||
7.3 | Required Terms and Conditions | 151 | |||||||||
7.4 | Termination | 151 | |||||||||
ARTICLE VIII RESTRICTED STOCK | 151 | ||||||||||
8.1 | General | 151 | |||||||||
8.2 | Grant, Awards and Certificates | 152 | |||||||||
8.3 | Required Terms and Conditions | 152 | |||||||||
8.4 | Termination | 152 | |||||||||
8.5 | Price | 152 | |||||||||
8.6 | Section 83(b) Election | 152 | |||||||||
ARTICLE IX RESTRICTED STOCK UNITS | 152 | ||||||||||
9.1 | General | 152 | |||||||||
9.2 | Grant | 153 | |||||||||
9.3 | Required Terms and Conditions | 153 | |||||||||
9.4 | Termination | 153 | |||||||||
ARTICLE X PERFORMANCE UNITS | 153 | ||||||||||
10.1 | General | 153 | |||||||||
10.2 | Earning Performance Unit Awards | 153 | |||||||||
10.3 | Performance Period and Vesting in Performance Unit Award | 154 | |||||||||
10.4 | Termination of Employment | 155 | |||||||||
ARTICLE XI OTHER STOCK-BASED AWARDS | 155 | ||||||||||
11.1 | Other Stock-Based Awards | 155 | |||||||||
ARTICLE XII NON-COMPETITION, NON-SOLICITATION, AND RECOUPMENT | 155 |
12.1 | Non-Competition and Non-Solicitation | 155 | |||||||||
12.2 | Recoupment Provisions | 155 | |||||||||
ARTICLE XIII CHANGE IN CONTROL | 156 | ||||||||||
13.1 | Impact of Event | 156 | |||||||||
13.2 | Additional Discretion | 156 | |||||||||
ARTICLE XIV PROVISIONS APPLICABLE TO SHARES ACQUIRED UNDER THIS PLAN | 157 | ||||||||||
14.1 | No Company Obligation | 157 | |||||||||
ARTICLE XV MISCELLANEOUS | 157 | ||||||||||
15.1 | Amendments and Termination | 157 | |||||||||
15.2 | Form of Awards; Dividends and Dividend Equivalents | 157 | |||||||||
15.3 | No Reload Rights | 158 | |||||||||
15.4 | Unfunded Status of Plan | 158 | |||||||||
15.5 | Individual Award Limitations | 158 | |||||||||
15.6 | Additional Compensation Arrangements | 158 | |||||||||
15.7 | Withholding | 158 | |||||||||
15.8 | Controlling Law | 158 | |||||||||
15.9 | Offset | 158 | |||||||||
15.10 | Nontransferability | 159 | |||||||||
15.11 | No Rights with Respect to Continuance of Employment | 159 | |||||||||
15.12 | Awards in Substitution for Awards Granted by Other Corporations | 159 | |||||||||
15.13 | Delivery of Stock Certificate | 159 | |||||||||
15.14 | Indemnification | 159 | |||||||||
15.15 | No Guarantee of Tax Consequences | 160 | |||||||||
15.16 | Foreign Employees and Foreign Law Consideration | 160 | |||||||||
15.17 | Section 409A Savings Clause | 160 | |||||||||
15.18 | No Fractional Shares | 160 | |||||||||
15.19 | Severability | 161 | |||||||||
15.20 | Successors and Assigns | 161 | |||||||||
15.21 | Entire Agreement | 161 | |||||||||
15.22 | Term | 161 | |||||||||
15.23 | Gender and Number | 161 | |||||||||
15.24 | Outstanding Qualified Performance-Based Awards | 161 | |||||||||
15.25 | Headings | 161 |
139
|
2021 MASTERCARD PROXY |
2021 MASTERCARD PROXY |
140
|
141
|
2021 MASTERCARD PROXY |
2021 MASTERCARD PROXY |
142
|
143
|
2021 MASTERCARD PROXY |
2021 MASTERCARD PROXY |
144
|
145
|
2021 MASTERCARD PROXY |
2021 MASTERCARD PROXY |
146
|
147
|
2021 MASTERCARD PROXY |
2021 MASTERCARD PROXY |
148
|
149
|
2021 MASTERCARD PROXY |
2021 MASTERCARD PROXY |
150
|
151
|
2021 MASTERCARD PROXY |
2021 MASTERCARD PROXY |
152
|
153
|
2021 MASTERCARD PROXY |
2021 MASTERCARD PROXY |
154
|
155
|
2021 MASTERCARD PROXY |
2021 MASTERCARD PROXY |
156
|
157
|
2021 MASTERCARD PROXY |
2021 MASTERCARD PROXY |
158
|
159
|
2021 MASTERCARD PROXY |
2021 MASTERCARD PROXY |
160
|
161
|
2021 MASTERCARD PROXY |
2021 MASTERCARD PROXY |
162
|
163
|
2021 MASTERCARD PROXY |
2021 MASTERCARD PROXY |
164
|
165
|
2021 MASTERCARD PROXY |
2021 MASTERCARD PROXY |
166
|
167
|
2021 MASTERCARD PROXY |
2021 MASTERCARD PROXY |
168
|
169
|
2021 MASTERCARD PROXY |
2021 MASTERCARD PROXY |
170
|
171
|
2021 MASTERCARD PROXY |
2021 MASTERCARD PROXY |
172
|
173
|
2021 MASTERCARD PROXY |
2021 MASTERCARD PROXY |
174
|
175
|
2021 MASTERCARD PROXY |
2021 MASTERCARD PROXY |
176
|
177
|
2021 MASTERCARD PROXY |
2021 MASTERCARD PROXY |
178
|
Mastercard Incorporated | ||||||||
/s/ Janet McGinness | ||||||||
Name: | Janet McGinness | |||||||
Title: | Corporate Secretary |
179
|
2021 MASTERCARD PROXY |
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Bloomberg Gender Equality Index | Corporate Equality Index | Disability Equality Index |
DiversityInc’s
Top 50 List |
World’s Most Ethical Companies | National Organization on Disability | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
2017 - 2021 |
2020 & 2021
Best Places to Work for LGBTQ Equality |
2018 - 2020
Best Place to Work for Disability Inclusion |
2016 - 2020 |
2016 - 2021
World’s Most Ethical Companies |
2020 Leading Disability Employer |
2021 MASTERCARD PROXY |
180
|
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 |
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DIRECTORS | AGE | BIO | OTHER DIRECTOR MEMBERSHIPS |
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No information found
Customers
No Suppliers Found
Price
Yield
Owner | Position | Direct Shares | Indirect Shares |
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