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ITEMS OF BUSINESS:
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| 1 |
Elect ten directors, each for a one-year term, to serve until their successors have been duly elected and qualified;
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| 2 |
Conduct an advisory vote to approve the compensation of our named executive officers;
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| 3 |
Ratify the appointment of PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP as Radian’s independent registered public accounting firm for the year ending December 31, 2022; and
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| 4 |
In addition to the items above, the Company may transact such other business as may properly come before the meeting or any adjournment or postponement of the meeting.
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i
2022 Proxy Statement
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Information About Voting
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2022 Proxy Statement 1
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By Mail:
Complete, sign, date and return the enclosed proxy card by mail.
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Online:
Navigate to www.investorvote.com/RDN and follow the instructions on the screen. It will be necessary to have your proxy card available for reference when you access the web page.
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By Telephone:
Call toll free 1-800-652-VOTE (1-800-652-8683) within the United States and its territories or Canada, and follow the instructions. It will be necessary to have your proxy card available for reference when you call.
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2
2022 Proxy Statement
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Information About Voting | ||||||
| By email |
Forward the email from your broker,
or attach an image of your legal proxy, to legalproxy@computershare.com
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By mail |
Computershare
Radian Group Inc. Legal Proxy P.O. Box 43001 Providence, RI 02940-3001 |
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Information About Voting
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2022 Proxy Statement 3
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Proposal
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Votes Required
for Approval
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Effect of
Abstentions
(1)
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Uninstructed Shares/Effect of Broker Non-votes
(1)
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Signed but
Unmarked
Proxy Cards
(2)
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| Proposal 1 | ||||||||||||||
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Election of directors
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Majority of votes cast with respect to each nominee
(3)
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No effect
(4)
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Not voted/
No effect |
Voted “For”
each nominee |
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| Proposal 2 | ||||||||||||||
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Advisory, non-binding vote to approve named executive officer compensation
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Majority of shares present or represented by proxy
and entitled to vote |
Same effect as
a vote “Against” |
Not voted/
No effect |
Voted “For” | ||||||||||
| Proposal 3 | ||||||||||||||
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Ratification of the appointment of PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP as Radian’s independent registered public accounting firm for the year ending December 31, 2022
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Majority of shares present or represented by proxy
and entitled to vote |
Same effect as
a vote “Against” |
Discretionary vote by the Nominee
(5)
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Voted “For” | ||||||||||
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4
2022 Proxy Statement
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Information About Voting | ||||||
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Information About Voting
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2022 Proxy Statement 5
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6
2022 Proxy Statement
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Proposal 1 – Election of Directors | ||||||
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Proposal 1 – Election of Directors
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2022 Proxy Statement 7
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8
2022 Proxy Statement
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Proposal 1 – Election of Directors | ||||||
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Mortgage & Real Estate Industry
— 7/10 Directors
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Financial
— 6/10 Directors
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CEO or other C-Suite
— 7/10 Directors
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Government and Regulatory
— 2/10 Directors
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Other Public Company Board Experience
— 7/10 Directors
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Risk Management
— 9/10 Directors
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Information Technology
— 5/10 Directors
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Operations
— 6/10 Directors
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Business Development / M&A
— 8/10 Directors
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Proposal 1 – Election of Directors
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2022 Proxy Statement 9
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Howard B. Culang
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Non-executive Chairman of the Board
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Mr. Culang, 75, has been a director of Radian since June 1999, serving as Chair of our Risk Committee for 17 years before assuming the role of Non-executive Chairman of our Board effective December 22, 2021. From November 1985 to December 2005, Mr. Culang worked in various roles for the Prudential Home Mortgage Company, a mortgage lender, including as a Managing Director and member of the Executive Committee and as Vice Chairman of Residential Services Corporation of America, the holding company for Prudential’s mortgage lending, servicing and real estate services companies. Prior to joining Prudential, Mr. Culang held a number of senior management positions with Citibank, N.A., including as a Senior Credit Officer. More recently, Mr. Culang served as President of Laurel Corporation, a financial services firm, from January 1996 through December 2011. Mr. Culang also served as a Managing Member of JH Capital Management LLC, a management company for a private equity fund, from July 1998 to December 2010, and of Cognitive Capital Management LLC, a management company for a fund of hedge funds, from April 2001 to December 2005. Mr. Culang currently serves as a director of Phase Change Software, LLC (formerly ioSemantics, LLC), a privately-owned artificial intelligence (“AI”) software company.
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Skills and Qualifications
Mr. Culang is highly qualified to serve as our Non-executive Chairman based on his deep institutional knowledge of Radian, his professional background and decades of experience in the mortgage and financial services industries. Based on his long tenure with Radian through multiple economic cycles, including his 17 years of leadership as Chair of our Risk Committee, Mr. Culang is uniquely positioned to lead our Board and ensure that the Board remains focused on supporting long-term growth in value for our stockholders. His past management experiences in both mortgage credit and real estate services, in combination with his service on the board of an AI technology company, provide him with important insights regarding the most critical aspects of our businesses, including how best to support the Company in developing and executing our strategic vision.
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10
2022 Proxy Statement
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Proposal 1 – Election of Directors | ||||||
| Brad L. Conner | |||||
Risk Committee (Chair)
Compensation and Human Capital Management Committee
Governance Committee
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Mr. Conner, 60, recently served as Vice Chairman, Head of Consumer Banking for Citizens Financial Group, Inc. (“Citizens”), a publicly-traded financial institution, beginning in January 2014. In this role, Mr. Conner was responsible for Retail Banking, Business Banking, Wealth Management, Home Lending Solutions, Auto Finance and Education Finance, as well as the Consumer Phone Bank and online channels. Mr. Conner retired from this role in January 2020. Before joining Citizens in 2008, Mr. Conner served as President of the Home Equity and Mortgage Home Loan Direct business of J.P. Morgan Chase & Co., a publicly-traded global financial services firm. Prior to this, he oversaw the combined Home Equity business of Chase and Bank One Corporation, a publicly-traded global financial services firm, after the companies merged in 2004, and served as Chief Executive Officer of Chase’s Education Finance businesses. Mr. Conner currently serves as a director of United Services Automobile Association Federal Savings Bank, a diversified financial services group of companies that provides insurance, investing and banking solutions to members of the U.S. military, veterans and military families. He has been a director of Radian since February 2020.
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Skills and Qualifications
Mr. Conner brings recent C-suite level experience in banking and lending solutions in large, publicly-traded financial institutions, which is a skill set that is highly valuable in supporting the Board’s oversight over virtually all aspects of our business. In addition, his deep knowledge of the mortgage industry provides him with valuable insight into the industries in which we operate and complements the Board’s role in overseeing our strategic direction and supporting the execution of our strategic objectives. These experiences are particularly relevant in Mr. Conner’s role as the Chair of the Risk Committee of our Board.
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| Debra Hess | |||||
Audit Committee (Chair)
Finance and Investment Committee
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Ms. Debra Hess, 57, served as Chief Financial Officer of both NorthStar Asset Management Group, a global asset management firm focused on strategically managing real estate and other investment platforms, and NorthStar Realty Finance Corp., a publicly-traded real estate investment company (together with NorthStar Asset Management Group (“Northstar”), from July 2011 until January 2017. Additionally, from 2011 until 2015, Ms. Hess held various other positions, including Chief Financial Officer and Treasurer for NorthStar’s non-publicly traded companies. Prior to joining NorthStar, from August 2008 to June 2011, Ms. Hess served as Chief Financial Officer of H/2 Capital Partners, a privately-owned fund sponsor that invests in real estate related assets. From March 2003 to July 2008, Ms. Hess was a managing director at Fortress Investment Group (“Fortress”), an investment management firm, where she also served as Chief Financial Officer of Newcastle Investment Corp., a Fortress portfolio company and a NYSE-listed real estate investment trust. Prior to joining Fortress, Ms. Hess served in various positions at Goldman, Sachs & Co., including as Vice President in Goldman Sachs’ Principal Finance Group and as a Manager of Financial Reporting in Goldman Sachs’ Finance Division. Ms. Hess currently serves on the board of directors of AG Mortgage Investment Trust, Inc., a publicly-traded mortgage real estate investment trust, where she chairs the audit committee and serves as a member of the compensation committee. She also serves on the board of CenterPoint Properties Trust, a privately owned acquiror, developer and manager of industrial real estate and transportation infrastructure, where she chairs the audit committee and serves as a member of the compensation committee. She has been a director of Radian since March 2019.
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Skills and Qualifications
Ms. Hess’ extensive banking, finance and real estate asset management experience provides her with valuable insight into our businesses, the industries in which we operate and the various factors impacting our strategic direction. In addition, her roles as the Chief Financial Officer of various publicly-traded companies and her executive management experience with companies in the financial services and mortgage and real estate industries provide her with significant financial, accounting and compliance expertise in areas that are valuable to the Board’s oversight responsibilities and in particular to her role as Chair of the Audit Committee of our Board.
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Proposal 1 – Election of Directors
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2022 Proxy Statement 11
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| Lisa W. Hess | |||||
Compensation and Human Capital Management Committee
Governance Committee
Risk Committee
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Ms. Lisa Hess, 66, served as President and Managing Partner of SkyTop Capital Management LLC (“SkyTop”), an investment fund, from October 2010 through July 2020. From October 2002 to December 2008, she was the Chief Investment Officer of Loews Corporation, a diversified holding company, where she was responsible for managing approximately $50 billion in assets. Ms. Hess was a Founding Partner of Zesiger Capital Group, a diversified money manager, and also has held positions at First Boston Corporation, an investment bank, Odyssey Partners, a private equity firm, and Goldman, Sachs & Co. She has served on the U.S. Treasury Debt Advisory Committee and the Federal Reserve Bank of New York Investors Advisory Committee. Since June 2009, Ms. Hess has been a trustee of Teachers Insurance and Annuity Association (“TIAA”), a financial services organization, and since 2015, she has been a director of TIAA Bank (formerly Everbank) which is owned by TIAA.
She has been a director of Radian since February 2011.
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Skills and Qualifications
Ms. Hess’ extensive experience managing financial assets, including her recent leadership role with SkyTop, and previously as Chief Investment Officer of Loews Corporation, and as a member of various investment and advisory committees, gives her a broad range of expertise with respect to finance, investments and the capital markets that is particularly beneficial to the Board in its oversight responsibilities and in supporting our strategic focus. In addition, her board service with TIAA brings an added perspective and insight to the Board’s consideration of corporate governance issues and the concerns of institutional shareholders.
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Brian D. Montgomery
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Audit Committee
Governance Committee
Risk Committee
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Mr. Montgomery, 65, completed his second tenure at the U.S. Department of Housing & Urban Development (“HUD”) in January 2021, most recently serving as the Deputy Secretary of HUD. Prior to his most recent role as Deputy Secretary, Mr. Montgomery served as FHA Commissioner from 2005 to 2009 and from 2018 to 2020. Since May 2021, Mr. Montgomery has been a partner with Gate House Strategies, LLC, an advisory firm he co-founded that is focused on housing finance-related compliance, as well as other housing-related areas such as technology, business strategy, and affordable/public housing. From August 2009 until 2017, Mr. Montgomery served in various executive leadership roles with The Collingwood Group, LLC, a consulting firm, including serving as Vice Chairman. He previously served as a director of the Company from 2012 to 2018, stepping down upon his appointment to rejoin HUD as FHA Commissioner in May 2018. Mr. Montgomery also serves as a director of Reverse Mortgage Investment Trust Inc., a real estate finance company that is focused on acquiring, originating, financing and managing home equity conversion mortgage loans, home equity conversion mortgage-backed securities guaranteed by the Government National Mortgage Association and other real estate-related assets. He rejoined Radian’s Board in June 2021.
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Skills and Qualifications
As the only person to have been confirmed twice by the U.S. Senate to lead the FHA while also serving concurrently for a period of time as HUD Deputy Secretary, Mr. Montgomery possesses a deep working knowledge of the mortgage finance industry, federal housing policies and the federal regulation of housing. This expertise is extremely valuable in supporting the Board’s oversight over the Company’s Mortgage business generally, and specifically over the operations and the credit and risk management aspects of our businesses, as well as helping the Company develop the most effective strategy for navigating the regulatory and legislative landscape in the housing and mortgage finance industries.
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12
2022 Proxy Statement
|
|
Proposal 1 – Election of Directors | ||||||
| Lisa Mumford | |||||
Finance and Investment Committee (Chair)
Audit Committee
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Ms. Mumford, 58, served as the Chief Financial Officer of Ellington Financial LLC (“Ellington Financial”), a publicly-traded asset management company, and as Chief Financial Officer of Ellington Financial Management LLC (Ellington Financial’s external manager), from October 2009 through her retirement in March 2018. Ms. Mumford also served as the Chief Financial Officer of Ellington Residential Mortgage REIT, a publicly-traded real estate investment trust, from April 2013 until her retirement in March 2018. From August 2008 to October 2009, Ms. Mumford served as Chief Financial Officer of ACA Financial Guaranty Corporation, a monoline bond insurance company, and prior to this, from 2003 until August 2008, Ms. Mumford served as the Chief Accounting Officer of ACA Capital Holdings, Inc. (“ACA”), a publicly-traded holding company providing financial guaranty insurance products and asset management services. Prior to joining ACA, and beginning in 1988, Ms. Mumford was with ACE Guaranty Corp., a financial guaranty company, where she held the positions of Chief Financial Officer and Controller. Ms. Mumford currently serves as a member of the board of directors of Ellington Financial. She has been a director of Radian since February 2020.
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Skills and Qualifications
Ms. Mumford brings recent and highly valuable C-suite level experience and insight that benefits the Board in overseeing virtually all aspects of our business. Her past experience as the Chief Financial Officer of insurance company enterprises provides her with extensive risk management experience, which is a core area of focus for Radian. Her public company experience and her ongoing service on another public company board provides additional perspectives on board leadership and governance that complement the Board’s collective strengths. In addition, her deep knowledge and experience in finance and real estate management provides her with valuable knowledge about the industries in which we operate. These experiences are particularly relevant in Ms. Mumford’s role as Chair of the Finance and Investment Committee of our Board.
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Gaetano J. Muzio
|
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Compensation and Human Capital Management Committee (Chair)
Finance and Investment Committee
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Mr. Muzio, 68, is a Principal and co-founder of Ocean Gate Capital Management, LP (“Ocean Gate”), an investment fund. For 27 years prior to founding Ocean Gate, Mr. Muzio worked at Goldman, Sachs & Co. in various positions, including serving as a Managing Director from 1996 until 2004. In 1986, he became the first Global Mortgage and Asset Backed Sales Manager responsible for creating the sales team and strategy for, and was also one of the founding members of, Goldman’s Mortgage and Asset Backed Department. In 1990, he became a general partner and Co-Head of Goldman’s Mortgage Department, with responsibilities for overseeing trading, risk management, sales, research, structured finance and compliance for the department. He has been a director of Radian since May 2012.
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Skills and Qualifications
Mr. Muzio possesses a broad understanding of the mortgage industry. His significant experience in finance, risk management, corporate governance and strategy gives him extensive expertise in several areas that are valuable to the Board’s oversight responsibilities. Additionally, his roles overseeing significant functions at a large financial services institution provide him with strong operational and talent management experience that is particularly useful in his role as Chair of the Compensation and Human Capital Management Committee of our Board.
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|
Proposal 1 – Election of Directors
|
|
2022 Proxy Statement 13
|
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| Gregory V. Serio | |||||
Audit Committee
Finance and Investment Committee
Risk Committee
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Mr. Serio, 60, has served as a partner with Park Strategies, LLC (“Park Strategies”), a management and government relations consulting firm, since January 2005. He currently serves as the head of Park Strategies’ risk and insurance management practice group. He is also a partner in the D’Amato Law Group, a New York-based legal practice. Prior to joining Park Strategies, Mr. Serio served as Superintendent of Insurance for the State of New York from May 2001 to January 2005. From January 1995 until his appointment as Superintendent in 2001, Mr. Serio served as First Deputy Superintendent and General Counsel of the New York Insurance Department. Mr. Serio also has served as the Chairman of the Government Affairs Task Force of the National Association of Insurance Commissioners (“NAIC”) and as a member of and NAIC representative on the Financial Services and Banking Information Infrastructure Committee of the United States Treasury. He was also a commissioner of the International Commission on Holocaust Era Insurance Claims. He currently serves as a trustee of the Senior Health Insurance Plan Trust and director of the Senior Health Insurance Company of Pennsylvania, two positions to which he was appointed by the Commissioner of Insurance of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania. In 2019, he was appointed to the board of the Capital District Physicians Health Plan, a not-for-profit healthcare organization in New York. Mr. Serio also currently serves on the board of PHL Group, a private insurance group. He has been a director of Radian since May 2012.
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Skills and Qualifications
From both his private and public sector roles, Mr. Serio possesses extensive knowledge and experience in the insurance industry and insurance regulatory matters in particular. His in-depth understanding of insurance regulatory matters, including financial and market conduct examinations and other compliance-related matters, combined with his experience in risk management and corporate governance matters, further strengthens the Board’s oversight and perspective in these areas. He is a Board Leadership Fellow of the National Association of Corporate Directors (“NACD”), which provides him with added perspective and insight into the Board’s corporate governance responsibilities.
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| Noel J. Spiegel | |||||
Governance Committee (Chair)
Compensation and Human Capital Management Committee
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Mr. Spiegel, 74, was a partner at Deloitte & Touche, LLP (“Deloitte”) where he practiced from September 1969 until May 2010. In his career at Deloitte, he served in numerous management positions, including as Deputy Managing Partner; a member of Deloitte’s Executive Committee; Managing Partner of Deloitte’s Transaction Assurance practice, Global Offerings and International Financial Reporting Standards practice and Technology, Media and Telecommunications practice (Northeast Region); and as Partner-in-Charge of Audit Operations in Deloitte’s New York Office. Mr. Spiegel currently serves as Lead Independent Director, chairs the audit committee and serves on the nominating and governance committee of American Eagle Outfitters, Inc., a publicly-traded retail company. Mr. Spiegel also currently serves on the board, chairs the audit committee and serves on the corporate governance committee of vTv Therapeutics, Inc., a publicly-traded clinical stage pharmaceutical company. He has been a director of Radian since February 2011.
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Skills and Qualifications
Mr. Spiegel’s public company board experience provides him with a depth of experience in management, corporate governance, risk management and financial reporting. His current experience in serving on the governance committees of other publicly-traded companies provides him with a unique perspective and depth of insight with respect to corporate governance, board leadership and corporate strategy. In October 2020, the NACD named Mr. Spiegel to the 2020 NACD Directorship 100, an annual award that recognizes leading corporate directors, corporate governance experts, policymakers, and influencers who significantly impact boardroom practices and performance. Mr. Spiegel’s experience and recognized expertise are particularly relevant in Mr. Spiegel’s role as Chair of the Governance Committee of our Board.
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14
2022 Proxy Statement
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|
Proposal 1 – Election of Directors | ||||||
| Richard G. Thornberry | |||||
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Mr. Thornberry, 63, has served as Radian’s Chief Executive Officer since March 2017. Before joining Radian, from 2006 until 2017, Mr. Thornberry served as the Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of NexSpring Group, LLC (“NexSpring Group”), a company that he co-founded in 2006. NexSpring Group has provided mortgage industry advisory and technology services to private equity investors, mortgage lenders, financial institutions, mortgage investors and other mortgage industry participants. Mr. Thornberry also has served as the Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of NexSpring Financial, LLC, a fintech company that he co-founded to focus on improving the overall value proposition for all participants in a residential mortgage origination transaction. Prior to founding NexSpring Group, from 1999 until 2005, Mr. Thornberry served as President and Chief Executive Officer of Nexstar Financial Corporation, an end-to-end mortgage business process outsourcing firm, which he co-founded in 1999 and sold to MBNA Home Finance in 2005. Mr. Thornberry has also held executive positions with MBNA Home Finance from 2005 until 2006, Citicorp Mortgage Inc. from 1996 until 1998 and Residential Services Corporation of America/ Prudential Home Mortgage Company from 1987 until 1996. Mr. Thornberry currently serves as an executive council member of the Housing Policy Council and on the board of directors of MBA Open Doors Foundation, which provides mortgage and rental payment assistance to families with a critically ill or injured child. Mr. Thornberry began his career as a certified public accountant at Deloitte where he primarily worked with financial services clients and entrepreneurial businesses. He has been a director of Radian since March 2017.
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Skills and Qualifications
Mr. Thornberry possesses a broad understanding of the mortgage and real estate industries and has significant experience building and leading innovative and values-driven organizations in the mortgage and real estate industries. In addition, his past experiences provide him with financial management, human capital management and risk management expertise that give him a unique perspective and set of skills to lead our Company and contribute to the Board.
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Recommendation
Radian’s Board of Directors recommends a vote
“FOR”
each of the director nominees. Signed proxies will be voted
“FOR”
each of the director nominees unless a stockholder gives other instructions on the proxy card.
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Proposal 1 – Election of Directors
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2022 Proxy Statement 15
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| Director Name |
Audit
Committee
(1)
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Compensation & Human Capital Management Committee
(1)
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Finance & Investment Committee
(1)
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Governance Committee
(1)
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Risk Committee
(1)
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| Brad L. Conner | ü | ü | Chair | |||||||||||||||||||||||
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Debra Hess
(2)
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Chair
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ü | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Lisa W. Hess | ü |
ü
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ü | |||||||||||||||||||||||
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Brian D. Montgomery
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ü | ü | ü | |||||||||||||||||||||||
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Lisa Mumford
(2)
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ü | Chair | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Gaetano J. Muzio
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Chair |
ü
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| Gregory V. Serio | ü | ü | ü | |||||||||||||||||||||||
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Noel J. Spiegel
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ü
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Chair | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
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16
2022 Proxy Statement
|
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Corporate Governance and Board Matters | ||||||
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Corporate Governance and Board Matters
|
|
2022 Proxy Statement 17
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18
2022 Proxy Statement
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Corporate Governance and Board Matters | ||||||
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Corporate Governance and Board Matters
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2022 Proxy Statement 19
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20
2022 Proxy Statement
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Corporate Governance and Board Matters | ||||||
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Corporate Governance and Board Matters
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2022 Proxy Statement 21
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22
2022 Proxy Statement
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Corporate Governance and Board Matters | ||||||
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Corporate Governance and Board Matters
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2022 Proxy Statement 23
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24
2022 Proxy Statement
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Corporate Governance and Board Matters | ||||||
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| Members of the Audit Committee | |||||||||||
| Debra Hess (Chair) | Brian D. Montgomery | Lisa Mumford | Gregory V. Serio | ||||||||
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Corporate Governance and Board Matters
|
|
2022 Proxy Statement 25
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Recommendation
Radian’s Board of Directors recommends a vote
“FOR”
approval of the compensation of the Company’s Named Executive Officers as disclosed in this proxy statement. Signed proxies will be voted
“FOR”
approval unless a stockholder gives other instructions on the proxy card.
|
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26
2022 Proxy Statement
|
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Proposal 2 – Advisory Vote to Approve the Compensation of the Company's NEOs
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||
| Type of Fees | 2021 | 2020 | ||||||
| Audit Fees | $3,064,912 | $4,212,341 | ||||||
| Audit-Related Fees | 730,590 | 530,340 | ||||||
| Tax Fees | 618,146 | 457,404 | ||||||
| All Other Fees | 332,880 | 2,880 | ||||||
| Total | $4,746,528 | $5,202,965 | ||||||
|
Proposal 3 – Ratification of the Appointment of PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP
|
|
2022 Proxy Statement 27
|
||||||
|
|
||
|
Recommendation
Radian’s Board of Directors recommends a vote
“FOR”
ratification of the appointment of PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP as Radian's independent registered public accounting firm for the year ending December 31, 2022. Signed proxies will be voted
“FOR”
ratification unless a stockholder gives other instructions on the proxy card.
|
||||
|
28
2022 Proxy Statement
|
|
Proposal 3 – Ratification of the Appointment of PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP
|
||||||
|
J. Franklin Hall
Senior Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer
Age: 53
|
Mr. Hall joined Radian in December 2014 and became Radian’s Chief Financial Officer on January 1, 2015. Prior to joining Radian, Mr. Hall served in a number of different roles with First Financial Bancorp, a bank holding company based in Cincinnati, Ohio, including serving as Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer from 2005 until 2012, and then as Executive Vice President, Chief Financial Officer and Chief Operating Officer from 2012 until 2013. From December 2006 until April 2010, Mr. Hall was also the President of First Funds, a family of proprietary mutual funds managed by a subsidiary of First Financial Bancorp, and President of First Financial Capital Advisors, a registered investment advisor and subsidiary of First Financial Bancorp. Mr. Hall is currently serving on the Audit, Risk and Compliance Committee of UC Health, a healthcare organization in Cincinnati, Ohio. Mr. Hall began his career at Ernst & Young LLP.
|
||||||
|
Derek V. Brummer
President, Mortgage
Age: 51
|
Mr. Brummer was appointed to his current role in February 2020 and oversees the strategic direction and operations for Radian’s Mortgage businesses, including our mortgage insurance and mortgage risk services businesses. Prior to assuming his current role, Mr. Brummer served as Senior Executive Vice President, Mortgage Insurance and Risk Services, and Executive Vice President, Chief Risk Officer of the Company, and held several positions with Radian Asset Assurance, our former financial guaranty business, which was sold to Assured Guaranty Corp. in April 2015. Prior to joining Radian in 2002, Mr. Brummer was a corporate associate at Allen & Overy LLP, and Cravath, Swaine & Moore LLP, both in New York. Mr. Brummer currently serves as Chairman of the Board of U.S. Mortgage Insurers, a trade group for the private mortgage insurance industry.
|
||||||
|
Edward J. Hoffman
Senior Executive Vice President, General Counsel and Corporate Secretary
Age: 48
|
Mr. Hoffman was appointed General Counsel and Corporate Secretary of Radian in 2008 and Senior Executive Vice President in January 2018. In addition to serving as the Company’s General Counsel and Corporate Secretary, Mr. Hoffman also provides executive oversight for the Company's enterprise risk management and information security functions and has provided executive oversight over other enterprise functions in the past, including our government relations function from 2017 through 2021 and human resources function from 2011 through 2020. Prior to joining Radian in 2005, Mr. Hoffman practiced in the Corporate and Securities Group of Drinker Biddle & Reath LLP in Philadelphia. Mr. Hoffman also currently serves as our Corporate Responsibility Officer.
|
||||||
| Executive Officers |
|
2022 Proxy Statement 29
|
||||||
|
Brien J. McMahon
Senior Executive Vice President, Chief Franchise Officer and Co-Head of homegenius
Age: 62
|
Mr. McMahon was appointed to his current role in January 2020 and is responsible for leading Radian’s enterprise-wide sales and co-leading the Company’s homegenius businesses. Mr. McMahon joined Radian in 2010 as Executive Vice President, Chief Franchise Officer. Before joining Radian, Mr. McMahon served as executive vice president for Realogy Franchise Group (“Realogy”), where he directed sales, training and administration for multiple premier real estate brands including: Better Homes and Gardens Real Estate, Century 21 Real Estate LLC, Coldwell Banker, Coldwell Banker Commercial, ERA, and Sotheby’s International Realty. Prior to Realogy, Mr. McMahon served 14 years with PHH US Mortgage in a variety of roles, including senior vice president of national sales.
|
||||||
|
Eric R. Ray Senior Executive Vice President, Chief Digital Officer and Co-Head of homegenius Age: 60 |
Mr. Ray joined Radian in 2018 and oversees our enterprise-wide information technology function, while co-leading the Company’s homegenius businesses. Prior to joining Radian, Mr. Ray served in various roles with IBM Corporation (“IBM”) in Armonk, New York from 1983 until 2018. Most recently, Mr. Ray served as IBM’s General Manager, Global Technology Services from 2015 until 2018 and was responsible for the IBM North American technology consulting business, project-based services and enterprise-wide technology offerings. Prior to that, he served as IBM’s General Manager, Global Financial Services Sector from 2009 until 2014 and General Manager, Financial Services Sector from 2007 until 2009. Mr. Ray currently serves on the board of directors of the Mortgage Industry Standards Maintenance Organization, a wholly-owned subsidiary of the Mortgage Bankers Association focused on developing standards for exchanging information and conducting business in the U.S. mortgage finance industry.
|
||||||
|
Mary C. Dickerson
Executive Vice President and Chief People Officer
Age: 49
|
Ms. Dickerson joined Radian in January 2021 and is responsible for all
aspects of human resources, facilities and administration at Radian. From 2017 until 2020, Ms. Dickerson served as Executive Vice President, Human Resources at DLL Group, a subsidiary of Rabobank Group, where she worked to build the organization's diverse culture, globally connected workforce and learning and development program, and was responsible for overseeing the company’s global human resources function. Prior to that, she served as Senior Vice President, Human Resources at XL Catlin plc from 2015 until 2017 and Executive Vice President, Human Resources at Accolade Inc. from 2012 through 2015. In her more than two decades of experience leading human resources teams at various organizations, Ms. Dickerson has held various roles for The Hartford, AIG, VisionQuest, Allied Irish Banks, Wawa and Fitzpatrick's Hotel Group.
|
||||||
|
Robert J. Quigley
Executive Vice President, Controller and Chief Accounting Officer
Age: 50
|
Mr. Quigley was appointed to his current role in August 2020, and has served as the Company’s principal accounting officer since November 2018. Mr. Quigley joined Radian in 2009 as Senior Vice President, Assistant Corporate Controller and has also served as Radian’s Senior Vice President, Financial Planning and Analysis during his time with the Company. Prior to joining Radian, Mr. Quigley spent 10 years with Capmark Financial Group, Inc., a global provider of financial services to investors in commercial real estate-related assets, where he held positions of increasing responsibility leading to his appointment as Senior Vice President, Chief Accounting Officer, North America. Mr. Quigley began his career in public accounting and auditing with KPMG US LLP and then Ernst & Young LLP.
|
||||||
|
30 2022 Proxy Statement
|
|
Executive Officers | ||||||
|
|
||
|
Name
(1)
|
Shares
Beneficially
Owned (#)
(2)
|
Percent
of Class |
||||||
| Brad L. Conner | 15,948 | * | ||||||
| Howard B. Culang | 249,834 | * | ||||||
| Debra Hess | 21,716 | * | ||||||
| Lisa W. Hess | 119,528 | * | ||||||
|
Brian D. Montgomery
|
5,507 |
*
|
||||||
| Lisa Mumford | 14,643 | * | ||||||
|
Gaetano J. Muzio
|
95,899 | * | ||||||
| Gregory V. Serio | 114,680 | * | ||||||
| Noel J. Spiegel | 155,526 | * | ||||||
| Richard G. Thornberry | 636,081 | * | ||||||
| Derek V. Brummer | 299,829 | * | ||||||
| J. Franklin Hall | 177,853 | * | ||||||
| Edward J. Hoffman | 216,536 | * | ||||||
|
Brien J. McMahon
|
223,570 | * | ||||||
|
All current directors and executive officers as a group (17 persons)
|
2,490,447 | 1.42 | % | |||||
| Beneficial Ownership of Common Stock |
|
2022 Proxy Statement 31
|
||||||
|
32 2022 Proxy Statement
|
|
Beneficial Ownership of Common Stock | ||||||
|
|
||
| Name and Business Address |
Shares
Beneficially Owned (#) |
Percent
of Class* |
||||||||||||
|
The Vanguard Group
(1)
100 Vanguard Blvd.
Malvern, PA 19355
|
16,913,965 | 9.43 | % | |||||||||||
|
FMR LLC
(2)
245 Summer Street
Boston, MA 02210
|
16,121,580 | 8.99 | % | |||||||||||
|
BlackRock, Inc.
(3)
55 East 52nd Street
New York, NY 10055
|
14,783,537 | 8.20 | % | |||||||||||
|
|
||
| Beneficial Ownership of Common Stock |
|
2022 Proxy Statement 33
|
||||||
|
|
||
| Our Named Executive Officers* | ||||||||||||||
|
Richard G. Thornberry
Chief Executive Officer
(principal executive officer)
|
J. Franklin Hall
Senior EVP,
Chief Financial Officer
(principal financial officer)
|
Derek V. Brummer
President, Mortgage
|
Edward J. Hoffman
Senior EVP,
General Counsel and Corporate Secretary |
Brien J. McMahon
Senior EVP,
Chief Franchise Officer and Co-Head of homegenius |
||||||||||
|
34 2022 Proxy Statement
|
|
Compensation of Executive Officers and Directors | ||||||
| Compensation of Executive Officers and Directors |
|
2022 Proxy Statement 35
|
||||||
|
$600.7 million
Net Income
|
53% increase compared to net income of $393.6 million in 2020. Our 2020 results were negatively impacted by the high level of defaults resulting from borrowers entering COVID-19 related mortgage forbearance programs
|
17.8 million
Shares Repurchased
$104.4 million
Dividends Declared
|
Purchased $399.1 million or 17.8 million shares of our common stock and declared $104.4 million in dividends in 2021 after increasing our dividend 12% to $0.14 per share in May 2021
|
||||||||||||||||||||
|
$3.16
Diluted Net Income
Per Share
|
58% increase compared to diluted net income per share of $2.00 in 2020
|
$91.8 billion
New Insurance
Written (“NIW”)
|
Represents the second highest annual volume of NIW in our 45-year history
|
||||||||||||||||||||
|
$3.15
Adjusted Diluted Net
Operating Income
Per Share
(1)
|
81% increase compared to adjusted diluted net operating income per share of $1.74 in 2020
|
$246.0 billion
Primary Insurance
in Force (“IIF”)
|
Maintained our sizable mortgage insurance portfolio in 2021 (IIF remained flat compared to $246.1 billion as of December 31, 2020) despite heavy turnover in our portfolio due to a high level of mortgage refinance activity
|
||||||||||||||||||||
|
$149.1 million
homegenius Revenue
|
45% increase compared to $102.4 million in 2020
|
$24.28
Book Value per
Share
|
9% increase compared to $22.36 as of December 31, 2020
|
||||||||||||||||||||
|
14.1%
Return on Average Equity
|
50% increase compared to a 9.4% return on average equity in 2020
|
$604.9 million
Available Holding Company Liquidity
|
Continued to maintain a strong level of liquidity following use of $502.4 million in 2021 for share repurchases and dividend payments. Availability holding company liquidity as of December 31, 2021 does not include a $500 million return of capital paid from Radian Guaranty to our holding company in February 2022
|
||||||||||||||||||||
|
14.2%
Projected Return on PMIERs Capital on 2021 NIW
|
Maintained strong projected returns on the NIW we wrote in a highly competitive pricing environment |
$2.1 billion
PMIERs Excess Available Assets
(2)
|
Compared to $1.3 billion as of December 31, 2020
|
||||||||||||||||||||
|
36 2022 Proxy Statement
|
|
Compensation of Executive Officers and Directors | ||||||
|
86%
of Chief Executive Officer's Total Compensation is Non-Fixed, Variable Pay
|
Fixed compensation continues to represent a limited portion of our NEOs’ total compensation. Base salary represented only 14% of Mr. Thornberry’s 2021 total target compensation and, on average, only 23% of the total target compensation for our other NEOs. The remaining target compensation of our NEOs was tied to, and is contingent upon, Company and individual performance
|
100%
Independence
|
All members of the Committee are fully independent and the Committee engages a fully independent compensation consultant to support NEO compensation
|
||||||||||||||||||||
|
100%
Accountability
|
We impose a strong compensation clawback policy in the event of a material restatement of the Company’s financial results and for other reasons
|
||||||||||||||||||||||
|
88%
2021 Average STI Award for NEOs as Compared to Maximum Payout
|
The Committee recognized the exceptionally strong performance by our NEOs in 2021, which drove an 81% increase in adjusted diluted net operating income per share compared to 2020, the second highest level of flow NIW written in our history, a 45% increase in homegenius revenues compared to 2020 and great progress against our strategic objectives as discussed in more detail in “—IV. Primary Components of Compensation—B. SHORT-TERM INCENTIVE PROGRAM—2021 STI ANALYSIS — 2021 STI CORPORATE FUNDING LEVEL—Strategic Objectives”
|
72%
Average 10-year Chief Executive Officer STI Award as Compared to Maximum Payout
|
||||||||||||||||||
|
60%
of 2021 LTI Awards are Performance Based
|
2021 LTI awards provide for a meaningful payout only if we produce strong growth in book value. For 60% of each NEO’s total LTI award, the Company must achieve at least a 30% increase in LTI Book Value per Share (as defined below) over the performance period for the NEO to be eligible to receive an award at target
|
7x
Base Salary
Stock Ownership Requirement for Chief Executive Officer
2.5x Base Salary
Stock Ownership Requirement for Other NEOs
|
We Require:
▪
Rigorous stock ownership requirements
▪
Share retention, including a one-year post-vest hold for performance-based equity awards
▪
A “double-trigger” for payments upon a change of control
|
||||||||||||||||||||
|
25%
Weighting for Human Capital Management under Strategic Objectives
|
For our 2021 STI program, the Committee included Human Capital Management as a new, standalone strategic priority. In doing so, the Committee reinforced our commitment to supporting our employees and ensuring that we continue to make progress in developing as a diverse, equitable and inclusive One Radian community and team |
Zero
Problematic Pay Practices
|
We Do Not:
▪
Provide excessive perquisites
▪
Provide gross-ups for excise taxes
▪
Allow hedging or other speculative transactions in Radian stock
▪
Provide for liberal share recycling under our equity incentive plan
▪
Pay dividends on unvested equity awards (dividends are accrued until awards have vested)
|
||||||||||||||||||||
| Compensation of Executive Officers and Directors |
|
2022 Proxy Statement 37
|
||||||
|
38 2022 Proxy Statement
|
|
Compensation of Executive Officers and Directors | ||||||
| Compensation of Executive Officers and Directors |
|
2022 Proxy Statement 39
|
||||||
|
2021 Peer
|
Mortgage Insurance Competitor |
Real Estate and Other
Competitor |
List Radian
as a Peer |
Business | ||||||||||
| Assured Guaranty Ltd. | X | X | Insurance & Other Real Estate Services | |||||||||||
| Arch Capital Group Ltd. | X | X | Mortgage Insurance | |||||||||||
| Black Knight, Inc. | X | Mortgage & Real Estate Services | ||||||||||||
| CoreLogic, Inc. | X | X | Mortgage & Real Estate Services | |||||||||||
| Essent Group Ltd. | X | X | Mortgage Insurance | |||||||||||
| First American Financial Corporation | X | Title & Other Real Estate Services | ||||||||||||
| Genworth Financial, Inc. | X | X | Mortgage Insurance | |||||||||||
| MGIC Investment Corporation | X | X | Mortgage Insurance | |||||||||||
| Mr. Cooper Group, Inc. | X | X | Mortgage Servicing & Lending | |||||||||||
| NMI Holdings, Inc. | X | X | Mortgage Insurance | |||||||||||
| Old Republic International Corporation | X | Title & Other Real Estate Services | ||||||||||||
| PennyMac Financial Services, Inc. | X | X | Mortgage Servicing & Lending | |||||||||||
| Stewart Information Services Corp. | X | X | Title & Other Real Estate Services | |||||||||||
| (In millions) |
2021 Peer Median
(1)
|
Radian
(1)
|
||||||
| Revenue | $1,762 | $1,527 | ||||||
| Market Cap | $3,364 | $2,823 | ||||||
|
40 2022 Proxy Statement
|
|
Compensation of Executive Officers and Directors | ||||||
| Executive Officer |
Primary Compensation
Peer Group Reference Point |
Financial
Services Reference Point |
General
Industry Reference Point |
|||||||||||
| Mr. Thornberry | Below 50th | Between 50th and 75th | Between 50th and 75th | |||||||||||
| Mr. Hall | Below 50th | Between 50th and 75th | Between 50th and 75th | |||||||||||
| Mr. Brummer | Below 50th | Above 75th | Between 50th and 75th | |||||||||||
| Mr. Hoffman | Between 50th and 75th | Above 75th | Above 75th | |||||||||||
| Mr. McMahon | N/A |
(1)
|
Above 75th | Above 75th | ||||||||||
| Compensation of Executive Officers and Directors |
|
2022 Proxy Statement 41
|
||||||
|
(1) Base Salary
■
Established to provide a competitive level of compensation for day-to-day performance of job responsibilities
(2) Short-Term Incentive
■
100% performance-based, ensuring that a significant portion of annual compensation is at risk
■
Performance metrics designed to incent achievement of short-term corporate and individual performance goals that are critical to our strategic plan
(3) Long-Term Incentive
■
Designed to drive sustained business performance, encourage retention, and align NEOs' interests with stockholders’ long-term interests through time-based and performance-based RSUs
■
Performance-based RSU awards (60% of LTI) are payable in stock and only if performance targets are met, while time-based RSU awards (40% of LTI) vest in equal installments over three years
|
|||||
|
42 2022 Proxy Statement
|
|
Compensation of Executive Officers and Directors | ||||||
| Executive Officer |
2021 Base Salary
|
2022 Base Salary
(1)
|
||||||||||||
| Mr. Thornberry | $1,000,000 | $1,000,000 | ||||||||||||
| Mr. Hall | $475,000 | $500,000 | ||||||||||||
| Mr. Brummer | $525,000 | $575,000 | ||||||||||||
| Mr. Hoffman | $475,000 | $500,000 | ||||||||||||
| Mr. McMahon | $450,000 | $475,000 | ||||||||||||
| Compensation of Executive Officers and Directors |
|
2022 Proxy Statement 43
|
||||||
|
44 2022 Proxy Statement
|
|
Compensation of Executive Officers and Directors | ||||||
| Performance Area and Weighting | Metric |
2021 Performance Level
(1)
|
2021
|
Metric | % of | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Threshold |
Target:
Low End |
Target |
Target:
High End |
Maximum | Result | Weighting |
Target
Achievement |
||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Financial Performance Metrics
(70% Weighting)
|
Adjusted Diluted Net Operating EPS | $1.37 | $1.98 | $2.20 | $2.28 | $2.48 | $3.15 | 45% | 200 | % | |||||||||||||||||||
|
NIW Volume
(2)
|
$55B | $70B | $75B | $80B | $85B | $93B | 40% | 200 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||
|
homegenius revenue
|
$100M | $125M | $150M | $175M | $200M | $149M | 15% | 100 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||
| Achievement Prior to Plan Permitted Discretionary Adjustment | 185 | % | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Plan Permitted Discretionary Adjustment
(3)
:
|
-7.5 | % | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Final Achievement of Financial Performance Metrics: | 178 | % | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Weighted Achievement of Financial Performance Objectives (178% x 70%):
|
124 | % | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Compensation of Executive Officers and Directors |
|
2022 Proxy Statement 45
|
||||||
|
Adjusted Diluted Net Operating EPS (200% Achievement)
|
||
|
Measured as (A) adjusted pretax operating income attributable to common stockholders, net of taxes computed using the Company’s statutory tax rate, divided by (B) the sum of the weighted average number of common shares outstanding and all dilutive potential common shares outstanding.
On a consolidated basis, adjusted pretax operating income and adjusted diluted net operating income per share are non-GAAP financial measures. See pages 79 to 81 of our 2021 Form 10-K for definitions of our non-GAAP financial measures including reconciliations of the most comparable GAAP measures of consolidated pretax income and diluted net income per share to our non-GAAP financial measures of adjusted pretax operating income and adjusted diluted net operating income per share.
|
||
|
2021 Target Setting
|
||
|
The target for 2021 STI ($2.20 per share) represented a 26% increase over our 2020 actual performance of $1.74 per share.
For 2021, while we expected general improvement over our 2020 performance, which was significantly impacted by the large number of mortgage defaults resulting from borrowers entering into COVID-19 related mortgage forbearance programs, our 2021 target was particularly challenging given: (i) the ongoing uncertainty presented by the pandemic, including whether borrowers in mortgage forbearance programs would resume making their mortgage payments; (ii) the anticipated high level of cancellations of our mortgage insurance due to borrowers taking advantage of historically low interest rates by refinancing their loans; and (iii) the ambitious growth targets we established for our homegenius business.
In evaluating our performance under the 2021 STI program, the Committee applied a 7.5% negative adjustment to our financial performance results primarily due to our improving outlook for mortgage defaults from prior periods, particularly those loans in COVID-19 mortgage forbearance programs, which resulted in a reduction in our mortgage insurance reserves in 2021.
|
||
|
Value Achieved on NIW — NIW Volume (200% Achievement)
|
||
|
Measured as new, traditional mortgage insurance written and the NIW equivalent of new insurance written through non-traditional mortgage executions such as our participation in the GSEs credit risk transfer transactions.
|
||
|
2021 Target Setting
|
||
|
NIW targets for any particular year are not directly comparable to actual NIW performance in the immediately prior year given that NIW expectations largely are reset each year based on the projected size and composition of the mortgage market, among other variables.
The NIW target for 2021 STI ($75 billion) represented a 30% decrease compared to our 2020 actual performance of $107 billion, which was the largest annual NIW in our history. Our target for 2021 NIW was established primarily based on: (i) the projected size of the mortgage market (using an average of estimates from the Mortgage Bankers Association, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac), which projected a decrease in total mortgage originations; (ii) our estimate of the private mortgage insurance industry’s share of the mortgage origination market (i.e., the use of private mortgage insurance as compared to FHA or other forms of credit enhancement); and (iii) our projection regarding our market share, taking into consideration competition in the mortgage insurance industry and our strategic focus on writing only NIW that we viewed as generating an acceptable level of economic value.
|
||
|
homegenius Revenue — homegenius revenue (100% Achievement)
|
||
|
Measured as the amount of total revenues for our homegenius reportable segment.
|
||
|
2021 Target Setting
|
||
|
The target for 2021 STI of $150 million represented a 47% increase compared to our 2020 actual performance of $102.0 million. Our 2021 revenue target for homegenius was particularly challenging in light of: (i) the ambitious level of growth we were seeking to achieve while in the process of developing and launching many new innovative, but complex, products and services; and (ii) the ongoing uncertainty created by the COVID-19 pandemic environment that could continue to negatively impact areas of our homegenius business such as our Real Estate Owned (REO) management business.
|
||
|
46 2022 Proxy Statement
|
|
Compensation of Executive Officers and Directors | ||||||
|
Performance Area
and Weighting |
Metric | Metric Weighting | % of Target Achievement | ||||||||||||||
|
Strategic Objectives
(30% Weighting)
|
Strategic Execution
|
25 | % | 125 | % | ||||||||||||
|
Risk Management
|
25 | % | 125 | % | |||||||||||||
|
Capital and Liquidity
|
25 | % | 125 | % | |||||||||||||
| Human Capital Management | 25 | % | 150 | % | |||||||||||||
|
|
|||||||||||||||||
| Achievement of Strategic Objectives: | 131 | % | |||||||||||||||
|
Weighted Achievement of Strategic Objectives (131% x 30%):
|
39 | % | |||||||||||||||
|
Strategic Execution (125% Achievement)
|
||
| Defined as execution of the Company’s strategic plan to grow and diversify the Company’s Mortgage and homegenius businesses through innovative business models that leverage the power of “One Radian” and the exponential value of operating excellence. | ||
|
Performance Rationale: We Successfully Executed our Strategy to Grow, Diversify and Digitally Transform our Businesses
|
|||||
|
We Continued to Grow our Real Estate Market Presence and Capabilities
|
We grew our homegenius revenues by 45% in 2021, with strong momentum in our Title business, including the launch of titlegenius, a direct-to-consumer online title platform, and strong customer growth in our centralized refinance title business where we grew our volume by 73% year over year. As reported during our June homegenius Investor Day, we are positioning homegenius for the future, and made significant progress in 2021 by further developing our various “genius” technology products to be offered through our real estate brokerage, RedBell LLC, including “geneuity,” a smart workflow platform for real estate agents, and “geniusprice,” an innovative property intelligence platform that leverages photo imaging and AI to provide property valuations. To drive awareness of these products and services, in 2021, we developed homegenius.com, a web-portal for our homegenius products and services, and officially launched the site in 2022.
|
||||
|
We Embraced Technology to Enhance the User Experience and Drive Process Efficiencies
|
We continued to prioritize digital transformation across our businesses, and in addition to our homegenius developments discussed above, we implemented robotic process automation within our customer care function, enhanced our mortgage insurance pricing technology to enable more strategic risk-based pricing, and completed the technical architectural design for a mortgage decisioning tool to improve operating efficiencies throughout our Mortgage business. We also increased the capabilities of our employee resource technology to improve our employee performance management processes, encourage training and regularly emphasize our One Radian Corporate Values.
|
||||
| Compensation of Executive Officers and Directors |
|
2022 Proxy Statement 47
|
||||||
|
Risk Management (125% Achievement)
|
||
| Defined as ensuring the Company maintains comprehensive enterprise risk management, including credit, operational, underwriting, and counterparty risk/return discipline based on sound data and analytics, with an emphasis on risk culture, positive economic value, compliance and long-term profitability. | ||
|
Performance Rationale: We Successfully Maintained our Focus on Risk Management
|
|||||
|
We Continued to Drive Economic Value in our Mortgage Insurance Portfolio and Enhance our Risk Analytics
|
In our Mortgage business, we wrote the second highest level of NIW in our history, while using our RADAR Rates pricing platform to quickly respond to the changing economic and competitive environment and to more precisely target loans that we believe present the highest economic value opportunities. For our existing insured portfolio (which represented an area of significant risk heading into 2021 given the large number of defaulted loans that were scheduled to exit mortgage forbearance programs) credit trends improved throughout 2021, with defaulted loans “curing” default status at a rate of 31% in the fourth quarter of 2021 compared to 28% in the fourth quarter of 2020. We believe these favorable credit trends, which positively impacted our financial performance in 2021, were influenced by our increased oversight over loan and loan servicing performance through enhancements to our mortgage risk analytics function, including improvements in our customer and servicer segmentation process and reporting, loss mitigation data sharing and reporting, and our quality control monitoring and reporting.
|
||||
|
We Continued to Drive a Culture of Risk Management
|
At our core, we are a risk management company, and our focus on areas of potential risk extends beyond our insured portfolios. In 2021, we expanded our vendor due diligence function, enhanced our data governance and overall information management processes, improved our information classification policy, evolved how we monitor and test material models used in our businesses and continued to develop and improve our information security practices, policies and tools.
|
||||
|
Capital and Liquidity Management (125% Achievement)
|
||
| Defined as optimizing our capital and liquidity to achieve strategic objectives by ensuring ongoing compliance with PMIERs, increasing our financial flexibility and aligning our credit ratings with our business objectives. | ||
|
Performance Rationale: We Successfully Managed our Capital and Liquidity Positions
|
|||||
|
We Improved our Capital and Liquidity Positions
|
We further enhanced Radian Guaranty’s capital position in 2022 by distributing risk through two mortgage insurance-linked note (“ILN”) transactions providing approximately $982 million of reinsurance coverage, representing our largest risk distribution year ever through ILN execution, and resulting in 73% of our mortgage insurance portfolio being covered by some form of risk distribution as of the end of 2021. Primarily as a result of this risk distribution, we grew Radian Guaranty’s PMIERs excess Available Assets to $2.1 billion as of December 31, 2021, which positioned Radian Guaranty to execute a $500 million return of capital to our holding company in the first quarter of 2022, upon receipt of approval from the Pennsylvania Insurance Department. With respect to liquidity, after returning $103.3 million through dividend payments to stockholders in 2021 (discussed below), we continued to maintain $604.9 million in available liquidity at the end of 2021. In addition, in November 2021, we further bolstered our liquidity position by executing a new $275 million five-year revolving credit facility.
|
||||
|
We Remained Focused on Returning Value to Stockholders
|
We resumed our share repurchase activity in 2021, purchasing 17.8 million shares of our outstanding common stock for $399.1 million including commissions, and in May 2021, we increased our quarterly dividend significantly to $0.14 per share. We maintained our dividend throughout the pandemic, declaring $104.4 million in dividends to stockholders in 2021.
|
||||
|
48 2022 Proxy Statement
|
|
Compensation of Executive Officers and Directors | ||||||
|
Human Capital Management (150% Achievement)
|
||
| Defined as maximizing the power of our One Radian team by enhancing and celebrating our inclusiveness and diversity, developing our talent for future success, fostering a culture based on our values and mission and utilizing data and analytics to adapt for the future. | ||
|
Performance Rationale: We Successfully Enhanced our Employees Well-Being and Development
|
|||||
|
We Kept our Employees Safe and Engaged
|
As the COVID-19 pandemic and government responses to it continued to evolve, we maintained and supported a work-from-home model for our entire workforce except for a small and highly dedicated group of essential, in-person workers. For these essential in-person workers, we enhanced our safety and well-being protocols, including regular COVID-19 testing. We continued to strengthen our employee communications and engagement channels, further revised our benefits programs, and focused on our employees’ mental well-being through frequent surveys, the launch of a new @Radian intranet, town-halls and weekly Chief Executive Officer communications. We introduced an additional “COVID wellness” paid day-off and developed support packages and lines of communication for employees who were impacted by COVID-19.
|
||||
|
We Focused on Talent Recruitment and Development
|
We refined our talent development and recruiting strategies in 2021 to increase our pay transparency and emphasized our focus on enhancing diversity, ultimately hiring 526 positions nationwide, with 68% of our 2021 new hires being women and 41% being people of color. We completed comprehensive talent reviews and development and succession plans for leaders throughout Radian, while also conducting a complete “span and layer” organizational effectiveness assessment to ensure our leaders are well supported and have appropriate paths to further develop. To complement these efforts, we implemented a voluntary employee retirement plan in 2021 to improve our business resiliency and to benefit those individuals who have dedicated their professional careers to Radian and who are ready to explore new life journeys. These employees have been encouraged to join our new Radian Alumni Network that we launched in 2021 to continue to spread our One Radian culture and message beyond our Company “walls.”
|
||||
|
We Increased our Efforts to Ensure that All of our Employees Feel Included and Part of One Radian
|
To be our best, everyone within our Company must feel included and must be treated equally as part of a diverse One Radian team. In 2021, we made further progress in implementing our diversity, equity and inclusion (“DEI”) program and culture. We delivered DEI training to all employees at Radian, launched our third employee resource group – Vibrant Crossroads, hosted allyship discussions and week of understanding inclusion forums, completed a comprehensive pay equity analysis, publicly disclosed our Equal Employment Opportunity Report and instituted a requirement that all employees must include a DEI goal as part of their 2022 objectives.
|
||||
|
2021 STI Corporate Funding Level
(as a percent of target)
|
||||||||||||||
|
Financial Performance Objectives |
+ |
Strategic Performance
Objectives |
= |
STI Corporate
Funding Level |
||||||||||
|
178% x 70% = 124%
|
131% x 30% = 39%
|
164%
|
||||||||||||
| Compensation of Executive Officers and Directors |
|
2022 Proxy Statement 49
|
||||||
| Name |
2021 Maximum
STI Award
|
2021 Target
STI Award
|
2021 Total
Amount Awarded
|
2021 Total
Amount Awarded
(% of Target)*
|
||||||||||
| Mr. Thornberry | $4,000,000 | $2,000,000 | $3,600,000 | 180 | % | |||||||||
| Mr. Hall | $950,000 | $475,000 | $830,000 | 175 | % | |||||||||
| Mr. Brummer | $1,350,000 | $675,000 | $1,215,000 | 180 | % | |||||||||
| Mr. Hoffman | $950,000 | $475,000 | $830,000 | 175 | % | |||||||||
| Mr. McMahon | $900,000 | $450,000 | $765,000 | 170 | % | |||||||||
|
50 2022 Proxy Statement
|
|
Compensation of Executive Officers and Directors | ||||||
|
Mr. Thornberry - Performance Highlights
|
||
|
Mr. Thornberry received an award 10% above the 2021 STI Corporate Funding Level based on his support for our DEI initiatives and leadership in overseeing:
■
The Company’s drive to achieve strong operating results and the successful execution of our strategic priorities to grow and diversify the Company's Mortgage and homegenius businesses through innovative, customer-centric business models;
■
The achievement of $93 billion of NIW at a projected return on capital of 14.2% in a highly competitive mortgage insurance environment, which was accomplished by him driving a disciplined and balanced focus on economic value, pricing analytics and strategy, and customer relationships;
■
The continued development of our One Radian brand value and the effective use of our enterprise sales and marketing model, including digital channel utilization, to expand the distribution of market awareness of our products and services;
■
The growth of our centralized refinance title volume by 73% year-over-year, including his efforts to add “blue chip” customers and expand our share of existing customer relationships through excellent service and competitive pricing;
■
The effective execution across numerous important capital and liquidity activities, including securing reinsurance through ILN transactions in 2021 to enhance Radian Guaranty's PMIERs capital position and to reduce the overall risk profile of our Mortgage business, maintaining a strong holding company liquidity position while returning $502.4 million in capital to stockholders through share repurchases and dividend payments, and establishing a new five-year revolving credit facility;
■
The maintenance of the safety and engagement of our employees during the continuing COVID-19 pandemic environment, including by supporting a predominantly virtual working environment, focusing on leadership presence, strong cross-functional communication and collaboration and business continuity; and
■
Efforts to improve our strong social fabric, including our corporate culture and the engagement of our employees, to maximize organizational performance consistent with our core values. He accomplished this through expanded execution of our DEI and ESG initiatives, transparent and frequent communication and dialogue with employees, enhanced internal transparency of our performance and clear management accountability, improvements to our performance management processes, successful recruiting efforts, enhancements to our benefits, enhancements to our talent and succession planning processes, and support of a rapidly changing and highly competitive compensation environment.
See “—II. Executive Summary—OUR 2021 FINANCIAL PERFORMANCE” and “—IV. Primary Components of Compensation—B. SHORT-TERM INCENTIVE PROGRAM—2021 STI ANALYSIS—2021 STI CORPORATE FUNDING LEVEL” for additional information regarding our performance.
|
||
|
Mr. Hall - Performance Highlights
|
||
|
Mr. Hall received an award 7% above the 2021 STI Corporate Funding Level based on his support for our DEI initiatives and leadership in overseeing:
■
The successful management of our capital and liquidity positions, including obtaining reinsurance through execution of two ILN transactions in 2021 to enhance Radian Guaranty’s PMIERs capital position and to reduce the overall risk profile of our Mortgage business, as well as maintaining a strong holding company liquidity position, including the implementation of a new five-year $275 million revolving credit facility, while returning $502.4 million in capital to stockholders through share repurchases and dividend payments;
■
The initiation of a comprehensive analysis of our Procurement and Vendor Management departments and development of a plan to drive efficiencies and enhanced control over expense management;
■
Our investor relations activities, including hosting a first-ever investor day for our homegenius segment and enhancing the number and effectiveness of investor meetings;
■
Enhancements to the Company's model governance and data management policies; and
■
The further support and development of strong internal controls across the enterprise.
|
||
| Compensation of Executive Officers and Directors |
|
2022 Proxy Statement 51
|
||||||
| Mr. Brummer - Performance Highlights | ||
|
Mr. Brummer received an award 10% above the 2021 STI Corporate Funding Level based on his support for our DEI initiatives and leadership in overseeing:
■
The successful achievement of our 2021 Mortgage business plan, including $93 billion of NIW (24% above plan) at a projected return on capital of 14.2% in a highly competitive mortgage insurance environment, which was accomplished through a strategic transition of our Mortgage business pricing and sales strategies, including enhancements to customer management, automation, technology, and data analytics to drive results;
■
Improved operational efficiency across all areas in our Mortgage business by leveraging data, analytics and technology to drive process improvements and automation, increase productivity, and effectively manage expenses. His efforts in these areas led to the Mortgage business achieving all of its service level targets in 2021, including maintaining underwriting resource capacity utilization at or above 80% throughout the year;
■
Evaluation and execution of risk distribution and risk commutation strategies and transactions, including two successfully structured, marketed and executed ILNs, which produced our largest issuance year to date with respect to this form of risk distribution; and
■
Continued compliance with PMIERs, including all reporting, calculation and forecasting requirements, and ensuring that all policies and procedures were maintained and followed.
|
||
| Mr. Hoffman - Performance Highlights | ||
|
Mr. Hoffman received an award 7% above the 2021 STI Corporate Funding Level based on his support for our DEI initiatives and leadership in overseeing:
■
Legal support for the strategic growth of homegenius. Mr. Hoffman assisted in the development and launch of several “genius” real estate services products that required negotiated technology arrangements and intellectual property considerations, new public disclosures and the navigation of complex contractual and regulatory matters, including compliance with state regulatory requirements for real estate brokerages and contracts with Multiple Listing Services (MLSs) pursuant to which our real estate brokerage receives its data feeds. Mr. Hoffman also contributed to the growth and expansion of our Title business by obtaining new licensing, implementing creative solutions for operationalizing the business in new markets, ensuring new products were sold and marketed appropriately, establishing a new consumer complaint process, and increasing overall client connectivity;
■
Expansion of the Company's enterprise compliance program to match the growing and changing nature of the Company’s business;
■
Our government relations function by coordinating the Company's advocacy efforts with respect to various critical issues potentially impacting our businesses and prospects, such as GSE capital requirements and business practices, continuing COVID relief provisions for impacted borrowers, and access and affordability for low-to-moderate income borrowers; and
■
Various governance-related matters for the Company, including supporting the Company's Board of Directors in implementing a Chair succession process and transition and conducting a successful 2021 Annual Meeting.
|
||
| Mr. McMahon - Performance Highlights | ||
|
Mr. McMahon received an award 4% above the 2021 STI Corporate Funding Level based on his support for our DEI initiatives and leadership in overseeing:
■
Enterprise sales efforts to achieve $93 billion in NIW, the second highest level of volume in our history, and a 45% year-over-year growth in our homegenius revenues to $149 million, including a 73% year-over-year increase in centralized refinance title orders and development of a strong sales pipeline of title customers going into 2022. Mr. McMahon achieved these results while repositioning our Sales teams to be more efficient and targeted given evolving market dynamics, including the competitive pricing environment in our Mortgage business;
■
The launch of titlegenius, a direct-to-consumer online title platform; and
■
The repositioning of homegenius for the future, including development of our various “genius” technology products to be offered through our real estate brokerage, RedBell LLC, including “geneuity,” a smart workflow platform for real estate agents, and “geniusprice,” an innovative property intelligence platform that leverages photo imaging and AI to provide property valuations. To drive awareness of these products and services, in 2021, Mr. McMahon supported the development of homegenius.com, a web-portal for our homegenius products and services, which was officially launched in 2022.
|
||
|
52 2022 Proxy Statement
|
|
Compensation of Executive Officers and Directors | ||||||
| Compensation of Executive Officers and Directors |
|
2022 Proxy Statement 53
|
||||||
|
3-Year LTI Book Value per
Share Growth
(1)
|
BV Performance Level
(1)
(% of BV RSU Target)
|
||||||||||
| ≥40 | % | 200 | % | ||||||||
| 30 | % | 100 | % | ||||||||
| <10 | % |
(2)
|
0 | % | |||||||
|
54 2022 Proxy Statement
|
|
Compensation of Executive Officers and Directors | ||||||
| Compensation of Executive Officers and Directors |
|
2022 Proxy Statement 55
|
||||||
| Termination Event | BV RSUs | Time-Based RSUs | ||||||
| Voluntary Termination |
All unvested BV RSUs are forfeited
|
All unvested Time-Based RSUs are forfeited | ||||||
|
Involuntary Termination*
(No Change of Control) |
■
Except as set forth below, the target number of BV RSUs will be prorated for the number of months served between the grant date and date of termination, with vesting occurring on the original vesting date at the BV Performance Level
■
If terminated within six months of the grant date, the BV RSUs will be forfeited
■
If terminated during the six-months prior to the original vesting date, the target BV RSUs will not be prorated (NEO is eligible for full value of award)
|
■
If terminated on or before the first anniversary of the grant date, 33% of the Time-Based RSUs will automatically vest, and the remaining Time-Based RSUs will be forfeited
■
If terminated after the first anniversary of the grant date, any unvested Time-Based RSUs will automatically vest on the date of termination
|
||||||
|
Involuntary Termination*
(Occurring 90 Days Before or Within One Year After Change of Control) |
Accelerate vesting of BV RSUs as of the termination date (or, if later, on the date of the Change of Control) at the CoC Performance Level | Accelerate vesting of Time-Based RSUs in full on the termination date (or, if later, on the date of the Change of Control) | ||||||
| Death / Disability |
Accelerate vesting of BV RSUs as of the date of death or disability at the BV RSU Target or, if a change of control has occurred, at the CoC Performance Level
|
Accelerate vesting of Time-Based RSUs in full on date of death or disability | ||||||
| Retirement |
BV RSUs are not forfeited and vest on the original vesting date at the BV Performance Level or, if a change of control has occurred, at the CoC Performance Level
|
Accelerate vesting of Time-Based RSUs in full on retirement date | ||||||
|
56 2022 Proxy Statement
|
|
Compensation of Executive Officers and Directors | ||||||
| Compensation of Executive Officers and Directors |
|
2022 Proxy Statement 57
|
||||||
|
58 2022 Proxy Statement
|
|
Compensation of Executive Officers and Directors | ||||||
|
|
||
| Members of the Compensation and Human Capital Management Committee | |||||||||||
| Gaetano J. Muzio (Chair) | Brad L. Conner | Lisa W. Hess | Noel J. Spiegel | ||||||||
| Compensation of Executive Officers and Directors |
|
2022 Proxy Statement 59
|
||||||
|
|
||
|
Prior Compensation
(1)
|
Current Compensation
(1)
|
||||||||||||||||
|
Annual Cash Retainer
(2)
|
|||||||||||||||||
| Non-executive Chairman | $ | 250,000 | $ | 225,000 | |||||||||||||
| Other Non-executive Directors | $ | 110,000 | $ | 125,000 | |||||||||||||
| Committee Chair Annual Additional Retainer | |||||||||||||||||
| Audit | $ | 25,000 | $ | 30,000 | |||||||||||||
| Compensation & Human Capital Management | $ | 25,000 | $ | 25,000 | |||||||||||||
| Risk | $ | 25,000 | $ | 25,000 | |||||||||||||
| Governance | $ | 15,000 | $ | 15,000 | |||||||||||||
| Finance & Investment | $ | 15,000 | $ | 20,000 | |||||||||||||
| Board Meeting Fee | n/a | $ | 5,000 |
(3)
|
|||||||||||||
|
Annual Equity Compensation
(4)
|
|||||||||||||||||
| Non-executive Chairman | $ | 250,000 | $ | 275,000 | |||||||||||||
| Other Non-executive Directors | $ | 130,000 | $ | 150,000 | |||||||||||||
|
60 2022 Proxy Statement
|
|
Compensation of Executive Officers and Directors | ||||||
| Compensation of Executive Officers and Directors |
|
2022 Proxy Statement 61
|
||||||
|
62 2022 Proxy Statement
|
|
Compensation of Executive Officers and Directors | ||||||
| Name |
Fees Earned or Paid in Cash
($) |
Stock
Awards
(1)
($)
|
Change to Nonqualified Deferred Compensation Earnings
(2)
($)
|
All Other
Compensation ($) |
Total
($) |
||||||||||||||||||
|
Herbert Wender
(3)
|
250,000 | 250,000 | — | — | 500,000 | ||||||||||||||||||
| Brad L. Conner | 110,000 | 130,000 | — | — | 240,000 | ||||||||||||||||||
| Howard B. Culang | 135,000 | 130,000 | — | — | 265,000 | ||||||||||||||||||
| Debra Hess | 110,000 | 130,000 | — | — | 240,000 | ||||||||||||||||||
| Lisa W. Hess | 125,000 |
(4)
|
130,000 | — | — | 255,000 | |||||||||||||||||
|
Brian D. Montgomery
(5)
|
34,753 | 130,000 | — | — | 164,753 | ||||||||||||||||||
| Lisa Mumford | 110,000 | 130,000 | — | — | 240,000 | ||||||||||||||||||
|
Gaetano J. Muzio
|
135,000 | 130,000 | — | — | 265,000 | ||||||||||||||||||
| Gregory V. Serio | 125,000 | 130,000 | — | — | 255,000 | ||||||||||||||||||
| Noel J. Spiegel | 135,000 | 130,000 | — | — | 265,000 | ||||||||||||||||||
| Name |
Shares of
Phantom Stock
(#)
|
Restricted
Stock Units (#) |
||||||
| Mr. Wender | — | — | ||||||
| Mr. Conner | — | 5,986 | ||||||
| Mr. Culang | 61,817 | 179,460 | ||||||
| Ms. Debra Hess | — | 11,754 | ||||||
| Ms. Lisa Hess | — | 135,476 | ||||||
|
Mr. Montgomery
|
— | 5,507 | ||||||
| Ms. Mumford | — | 5,986 | ||||||
| Mr. Muzio | — | 114,680 | ||||||
| Mr. Serio | — | 104,718 | ||||||
| Mr. Spiegel | — | 125,514 | ||||||
| Compensation of Executive Officers and Directors |
|
2022 Proxy Statement 63
|
||||||
|
|
||
| Year |
Salary
($) |
Bonus
($)
|
Stock Awards
(1)
($)
|
Option Awards
(1)
($)
|
Non-Equity Incentive Plan Compensation
(2)
($)
|
All Other Compensation
(3)
($)
|
Total
($)
|
|||||||||||||||||||
|
Richard G. Thornberry
Chief Executive Officer (Principal Executive Officer)
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 2021 | 1,000,000 | — | 4,600,186 | — | 3,600,000 | 86,580 | 9,286,766 | |||||||||||||||||||
| 2020 | 931,923 |
(4)
|
— | 5,175,383 | — | 1,745,000 | 91,921 | 7,944,227 | ||||||||||||||||||
| 2019 | 800,000 | — | 4,317,074 | — | 3,000,000 | 80,800 | 8,197,874 | |||||||||||||||||||
|
J. Franklin Hall
Senior Executive V.P., Chief Financial Officer (Principal Financial Officer)
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 2021 | 475,000 | — | 1,180,317 | — | 830,000 | 36,798 | 2,522,115 | |||||||||||||||||||
| 2020 | 466,635 |
(4)
|
— | 1,296,403 | — | 525,000 | 34,998 | 2,323,036 | ||||||||||||||||||
| 2019 | 425,000 | — | 1,048,641 | — | 850,000 | 31,875 | 2,355,516 | |||||||||||||||||||
|
Derek V. Brummer
President, Mortgage
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 2021 | 525,000 | — | 1,675,103 | — | 1,215,000 | 42,704 | 3,457,807 | |||||||||||||||||||
| 2020 | 518,558 |
(4)
|
— | 1,506,474 | — | 760,000 | 45,167 | 2,830,199 | ||||||||||||||||||
| 2019 | 475,000 | — | 1,233,435 | — | 1,050,000 | 43,273 | 2,801,708 | |||||||||||||||||||
|
Edward J. Hoffman
Senior Executive V.P., General Counsel and Corporate Secretary
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 2021 | 475,000 | — | 1,180,317 | — | 830,000 | 38,557 | 2,523,874 | |||||||||||||||||||
| 2020 | 466,635 |
(4)
|
— | 1,296,829 | — | 525,000 | 40,645 | 2,329,109 | ||||||||||||||||||
| 2019 | 425,000 | — | 1,048,641 | — | 850,000 | 39,683 | 2,363,324 | |||||||||||||||||||
|
Brien J. McMahon
Senior Executive V.P., Chief Franchise Officer and Co-Head of homegenius
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 2021 | 450,000 | — | 980,040 | — | 765,000 | 41,212 | 2,236,252 | |||||||||||||||||||
| 2020 | 441,346 |
(4)
|
— | 1,054,214 | — | 495,000 | 42,772 | 2,033,332 | ||||||||||||||||||
| 2019 | 425,000 | — | 925,076 | — | 825,000 | 52,481 | 2,227,557 | |||||||||||||||||||
|
64 2022 Proxy Statement
|
|
Compensation of Executive Officers and Directors | ||||||
|
2021 Stock Awards
|
||||||||
| Name |
Probable
Outcome
($)
|
Highest Level of
Performance
($)
|
||||||
| Richard G. Thornberry | 4,600,186 | 7,360,253 | ||||||
| J. Franklin Hall | 1,180,317 | 1,888,441 | ||||||
| Derek V. Brummer | 1,675,103 | 2,680,145 | ||||||
| Edward J. Hoffman | 1,180,317 | 1,888,441 | ||||||
| Brien J. McMahon | 980,040 | 1,568,034 | ||||||
| Name |
Savings Plan Contributions
($) |
Benefit Restoration Plan Contributions
($) |
Imputed Income for long-term disability insurance
($) |
Imputed income for life insurance
($) |
Other
($) |
Tax
Gross-Ups ($) |
Total
($) |
||||||||||||||||||||||
| Richard G. Thornberry | 17,400 | 57,600 | 4,056 | 7,524 | — | — | 86,580 | ||||||||||||||||||||||
| J. Franklin Hall | 17,400 | 18,225 | — | 1,173 | — | — | 36,798 | ||||||||||||||||||||||
| Derek V. Brummer | 17,400 | 21,975 | 2,018 | 1,311 | — | — | 42,704 | ||||||||||||||||||||||
| Edward J. Hoffman | 17,400 | 18,225 | 2,167 | 765 | — | — | 38,557 | ||||||||||||||||||||||
| Brien J. McMahon | 17,400 | 16,350 | 3,372 | 3,168 | 559 | (a) | 363 | (a) | 41,212 | ||||||||||||||||||||
| Compensation of Executive Officers and Directors |
|
2022 Proxy Statement 65
|
||||||
|
Estimated Future Payouts under Non-Equity Incentive Plan Awards
(1)
|
Estimated Future Payouts under Equity Incentive Plan Awards
(2)
|
All Other Stock Awards: Number of Shares of Stock or Units
(#)
|
Grant Date Fair Value of Stock and Option Awards
(3)
($)
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Name | Grant Date |
Target
($) |
Maximum
($) |
Target
(#) |
Maximum
(#) |
||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Richard G. Thornberry
|
2021 | 2,000,000 | 4,000,000 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 5/12/2021 | 84,720 |
(4)
|
1,840,118 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 5/12/2021 | 141,760 | 283,520 | 2,760,067 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
J. Franklin Hall
|
2021 | 475,000 | 950,000 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 5/12/2021 | 21,740 |
(4)
|
472,193 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 5/12/2021 | 36,370 | 72,740 | 708,124 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Derek V. Brummer
|
2021 | 675,000 | 1,350,000 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 5/12/2021 | 30,850 |
(4)
|
670,062 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 5/12/2021 | 51,620 | 103,240 | 1,005,041 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Edward J. Hoffman
|
2021 | 475,000 | 950,000 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 5/12/2021 | 21,740 |
(4)
|
472,193 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 5/12/2021 | 36,370 | 72,740 | 708,124 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Brien J. McMahon
|
2021 | 450,000 | 900,000 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 5/12/2021 | 18,050 |
(4)
|
392,046 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 5/12/2021 | 30,200 | 60,400 | 587,994 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
66 2022 Proxy Statement
|
|
Compensation of Executive Officers and Directors | ||||||
| Option Awards | Stock Awards | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Name
|
Number of Securities Underlying Unexercised Options
Exercisable
(#)
|
Number of Securities Underlying Unexercised Options
Unexercisable
(#)
|
Option Exercise Price
($)
|
Option Expiration Date
|
Number of Shares or Units of Stock that Have Not Vested
(#)
|
Market Value of Shares or Units of Stock that Have Not Vested
(1)
($)
|
Equity Incentive Plan Awards: Number of Unearned Shares or Units of Stock That Have Not Vested
(1)
(#)
|
Equity Incentive Plan Awards: Market or Payout Value of Unearned Shares or Units of Stock that Have Not Vested
(1)
($)
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Richard G. Thornberry |
17,608 |
(2)
|
372,057 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 227,660 |
(3)
|
4,810,456 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 75,985 |
(4)
|
1,605,563 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 403,280 |
(5)
|
8,521,306 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 84,720 |
(6)
|
1,790,134 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 283,520 |
(7)
|
5,990,778 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
J. Franklin Hall |
7,640 | — | 18.42 | 7/8/2025 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 12,880 | — | 12.16 | 5/10/2026 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 4,278 |
(2)
|
90,394 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 55,300 |
(3)
|
1,168,489 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 19,511 |
(4)
|
412,267 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 103,560 |
(5)
|
2,188,223 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 21,740 |
(6)
|
459,366 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 72,740 |
(7)
|
1,536,996 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Derek V. Brummer |
13,130 | — | 13.99 | 5/13/2023 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 11,790 | — | 15.44 | 6/16/2024 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 8,780 | — | 18.42 | 7/8/2025 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 14,820 | — | 12.16 | 5/10/2026 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 5,032 |
(2)
|
106,326 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 65,040 |
(3)
|
1,374,295 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 22,593 |
(4)
|
477,390 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 119,900 |
(5)
|
2,533,487 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 30,850 |
(6)
|
651,861 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 103,240 |
(7)
|
2,181,461 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Edward J. Hoffman |
9,990 | — | 13.99 | 5/13/2023 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 10,260 | — | 15.44 | 6/16/2024 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 7,640 | — | 18.42 | 7/8/2025 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 12,880 | — | 12.16 | 5/10/2026 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 4,278 |
(2)
|
90,394 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 55,300 |
(3)
|
1,168,489 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 19,511 |
(4)
|
412,267 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 103,560 |
(5)
|
2,188,223 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 21,740 |
(6)
|
459,366 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 72,740 |
(7)
|
1,536,996 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Brien J. McMahon
|
9,140 | — | 13.99 | 5/13/2023 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 8,210 | — | 15.44 | 6/16/2024 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 6,110 | — | 18.42 | 7/8/2025 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 10,310 | — | 12.16 | 5/10/2026 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 3,774 |
(2)
|
79,745 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 48,780 |
(3)
|
1,030,721 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 17,461 |
(4)
|
368,951 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 92,660 |
(5)
|
1,957,906 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 18,050 |
(6)
|
381,397 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 60,400 |
(7)
|
1,276,252 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Compensation of Executive Officers and Directors |
|
2022 Proxy Statement 67
|
||||||
| Option Exercises | 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)
($)
|
||||||||||
| Richard G. Thornberry | — | — | 358,033 | 8,355,090 | ||||||||||
| J. Franklin Hall | — | — | 62,876 | 1,470,114 | ||||||||||
| Derek V. Brummer | — | — | 76,268 | 1,783,914 | ||||||||||
| Edward J. Hoffman | 33,090 | 675,808 | 62,876 | 1,470,114 | ||||||||||
| Brien J. McMahon | 50,920 | 977,338 | 61,378 | 1,436,259 | ||||||||||
| Name |
Dividend Equivalents Paid
($) |
||||
| Richard G. Thornberry | 325,118 | ||||
| J. Franklin Hall | 56,303 | ||||
| Derek V. Brummer | 68,620 | ||||
| Edward J. Hoffman | 56,308 | ||||
| Brien J. McMahon | 55,563 | ||||
|
68 2022 Proxy Statement
|
|
Compensation of Executive Officers and Directors | ||||||
|
|
||
| Compensation of Executive Officers and Directors |
|
2022 Proxy Statement 69
|
||||||
| Name |
Plan Name
(1)
|
Executive Contributions in Last FY
($) |
Registrant Contributions in Last FY
(2)
($)
|
Aggregate Earnings (Losses) in Last FY
($)
|
Aggregate Withdrawals / Distributions
($)
|
Aggregate Balance at Last FYE
($)
|
||||||||||||||
| Richard G. Thornberry | DCP | — | — | — | — | — | ||||||||||||||
| BRP | * | 57,600 | 20,272 | — | 256,148 | |||||||||||||||
| J. Franklin Hall | DCP | — | — | — | — | — | ||||||||||||||
| BRP | * | 18,225 | 28,317 | — | 146,713 | |||||||||||||||
| Derek V. Brummer | DCP | — | — | — | — | — | ||||||||||||||
| BRP | * | 21,975 | 43,675 | — | 400,067 | |||||||||||||||
| Edward J. Hoffman | DCP | — | — | — | — | — | ||||||||||||||
| BRP | * | 18,225 | 35,469 | — | 242,863 | |||||||||||||||
| Brien J. McMahon | DCP | — | — | — | — | — | ||||||||||||||
| BRP | * | 16,350 | 3,626 | — | 141,653 | |||||||||||||||
|
|
||
|
70 2022 Proxy Statement
|
|
Compensation of Executive Officers and Directors | ||||||
| Compensation of Executive Officers and Directors |
|
2022 Proxy Statement 71
|
||||||
|
|
||
|
72 2022 Proxy Statement
|
|
Compensation of Executive Officers and Directors | ||||||
|
Termination without Cause or Resignation for Good Reason (No COC)
($) |
Termination without Cause or Resignation for Good Reason (In Connection with COC)
($) |
Retirement
(1)
($)
|
Death / Disability
($) |
||||||||||||||
| Richard G. Thornberry | |||||||||||||||||
| Cash Severance: |
Base Salary
|
2,000,000 | 2,000,000 | — | — | ||||||||||||
|
Bonus
|
6,000,000 | 6,000,000 | — | — | |||||||||||||
|
STI:
(2)
|
3,600,000 | 3,600,000 | — | 3,600,000 | |||||||||||||
| Acceleration under Equity-Based Performance Plans: |
Performance-based RSUs
(3)
|
— | 13,650,075 | — | 9,661,270 | ||||||||||||
|
Time-based RSUs
(4)
|
3,767,754 | 3,767,754 | — | 3,767,754 | |||||||||||||
|
Plan Benefits
(5)
and Perquisites:
|
Continued Health and Welfare Benefits
(6)
|
19,789 | 19,789 | — | — | ||||||||||||
| 15,387,543 | 29,037,618 | — | 17,029,024 | ||||||||||||||
| Compensation of Executive Officers and Directors |
|
2022 Proxy Statement 73
|
||||||
|
Termination without Cause or Resignation for Good Reason (No COC)
($) |
Termination without Cause or Resignation for Good Reason (In Connection with COC)
($) |
Retirement
(1)
($)
|
Death / Disability
($) |
||||||||||||||
|
J. Franklin Hall
|
|||||||||||||||||
| Cash Severance: |
Base Salary
|
712,500 | 712,500 | — | — | ||||||||||||
|
Bonus
|
1,187,500 | 1,187,500 | — | — | |||||||||||||
|
STI:
(2)
|
830,000 | 830,000 | — | 830,000 | |||||||||||||
| Acceleration under Equity-Based Performance Plans: |
Performance-based RSUs
(3)
|
— | 3,465,795 | — | 2,446,854 | ||||||||||||
|
Time-based RSUs
(4)
|
655,784 | 962,028 | — | 962,028 | |||||||||||||
|
Plan Benefits
(5)
and Perquisites:
|
Continued Health and Welfare Benefits
(6)
|
12,387 | 12,387 | — | — | ||||||||||||
|
Outplacement Services
(6)
|
20,000 | 20,000 | — | — | |||||||||||||
| 3,418,171 | 7,190,210 | — | 4,238,882 | ||||||||||||||
|
Derek V. Brummer
|
|||||||||||||||||
| Cash Severance: |
Base Salary
|
787,500 | 787,500 | — | — | ||||||||||||
|
Bonus
|
1,687,500 | 1,687,500 | — | — | |||||||||||||
|
STI:
(2)
|
1,215,000 | 1,215,000 | — | 1,215,000 | |||||||||||||
| Acceleration under Equity-Based Performance Plans: |
Performance-based RSUs
(3)
|
— | 4,326,431 | — | 3,044,622 | ||||||||||||
|
Time-based RSUs
(4)
|
801,003 | 1,235,577 | — | 1,235,577 | |||||||||||||
|
Plan Benefits
(5)
and Perquisites:
|
Continued Health and Welfare Benefits
(6)
|
12,844 | 12,844 | — | — | ||||||||||||
|
Outplacement Services
(6)
|
20,000 | 20,000 | — | — | |||||||||||||
| 4,523,847 | 9,284,852 | — | 5,495,199 | ||||||||||||||
|
Edward J. Hoffman
|
|||||||||||||||||
| Cash Severance: |
Base Salary
|
712,500 | 712,500 | — | — | ||||||||||||
|
Bonus
|
1,187,500 | 1,187,500 | — | — | |||||||||||||
|
STI:
(2)
|
830,000 | 830,000 | — | 830,000 | |||||||||||||
| Acceleration under Equity-Based Performance Plans: |
Performance-based RSUs
(3)
|
— | 3,465,795 | — | 2,446,854 | ||||||||||||
|
Time-based RSUs
(4)
|
655,784 | 962,028 | — | 962,028 | |||||||||||||
|
Plan Benefits
(5)
and Perquisites:
|
Continued Health and Welfare Benefits
(6)
|
14,537 | 14,537 | — | — | ||||||||||||
|
Outplacement Services
(6)
|
20,000 | 20,000 | — | — | |||||||||||||
| 3,420,321 | 7,192,360 | — | 4,238,882 | ||||||||||||||
|
Brien J. McMahon
|
|||||||||||||||||
| Cash Severance: |
Base Salary
|
675,000 | 675,000 | — | — | ||||||||||||
|
Bonus
|
1,125,000 | 1,125,000 | — | — | |||||||||||||
|
STI:
(2)
|
765,000 | 765,000 | 765,000 | 765,000 | |||||||||||||
| Acceleration under Equity-Based Performance Plans: |
Performance-based RSUs
(3)
|
— | 3,018,283 | — | 2,132,440 | ||||||||||||
|
Time-based RSUs
(4)
|
575,828 | 830,092 | 830,092 | 830,092 | |||||||||||||
|
Plan Benefits
(5)
and Perquisites:
|
Continued Health and Welfare Benefits
(6)
|
15,989 | 15,989 | — | — | ||||||||||||
|
Outplacement Services
(6)
|
20,000 | 20,000 | — | — | |||||||||||||
| 3,176,817 | 6,449,364 | 1,595,092 | 3,727,532 | ||||||||||||||
|
74 2022 Proxy Statement
|
|
Compensation of Executive Officers and Directors | ||||||
| Compensation of Executive Officers and Directors |
|
2022 Proxy Statement 75
|
||||||
|
76 2022 Proxy Statement
|
|
Compensation of Executive Officers and Directors | ||||||
|
|
||
| Compensation of Executive Officers and Directors |
|
2022 Proxy Statement 77
|
||||||
|
|
||
|
78 2022 Proxy Statement
|
|
Other Information | ||||||
|
|
||
|
|
||
| Other Information |
|
2022 Proxy Statement 79
|
||||||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
80 2022 Proxy Statement
|
|
Other Information | ||||||
No information found
* THE VALUE IS THE MARKET VALUE AS OF THE LAST DAY OF THE QUARTER FOR WHICH THE 13F WAS FILED.
| FUND | NUMBER OF SHARES | VALUE ($) | PUT OR CALL |
|---|
| DIRECTORS | AGE | BIO | OTHER DIRECTOR MEMBERSHIPS |
|---|
No information found
No Customers Found
No Suppliers Found
Price
Yield
| Owner | Position | Direct Shares | Indirect Shares |
|---|