Award Banner
Award Banner

Apple defeats lawsuit claiming it overpaid CEO Tim Cook, others

Apple defeats lawsuit claiming it overpaid CEO Tim Cook, others
Apple CEO Tim Cook walks at the Apple Fifth Avenue store as customers queue to buy Apple's Vision Pro headset, in Manhattan in New York City, US, Feb 2, 2024.
PHOTO: Reuters

NEW YORK - A federal judge on Wednesday (Feb 7) dismissed a lawsuit accusing Apple of overpaying Chief Executive Tim Cook and other top executives by tens of millions of dollars by miscalculating the value of performance-based stock awards.

US District Judge Jennifer Rochon in Manhattan said the iPhone maker described its pay methods in detailed compensation tables in its 2023 proxy statement, "precisely" as securities laws and US Securities and Exchange Commission rules require.

Rochon also found no proof that Apple's board of directors acted improperly in awarding pay, and said the plaintiff, a pension fund affiliated with the International Brotherhood of Teamsters, did not give the board enough time to consider its objections before suing.

Lawyers for the pension fund did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

The plaintiff said Apple in 2021 and 2022 awarded a respective US$92.7 million (S$124 million) and US$94 million of performance-based restricted stock units to Cook and four other executives, though its compensation committee intended to award just US$77.5 million each year.

It attributed the alleged error to the committee's improper calculation of the RSUs' fair values at the time of the grants, and said it misled shareholders who would be casting advisory votes on executive compensation, known as "say-on-pay."

Cook's compensation totaled about US$99 million in both 2021 and 2022, including more than US$82 million of stock awards each year, Apple proxy filings show.

His total pay declined to US$63.2 million for 2023. The four other Apple executives were each awarded more than US$26 million in each of the three years.

ALSO READ: Viral videos of Tesla drivers using VR headsets prompt US government alarm

This website is best viewed using the latest versions of web browsers.