The federal budget earlier this year contained a provision requiring prescribed corporations to develop an approach to remuneration with respect to directors and employees who are “members of senior management.” The regulations have not yet defined “senior management," but we are apparently heading toward a “say on pay” vote similar to that which exists in the United States. These votes are advisory only, but if many shareholders express discontent it will be difficult for the board to ignore.

Almost half of TSX-listed companies already include such a vote in their proxy material, though it will be new territory for many small-cap companies and their investors. Institutional investors often subscribe to services where they can delegate this research and decision-making: What about the individual investor with a handful of stocks in a portfolio?

The management proposal will be supported by extensive research by the compensation committee of the board, who may have spent several hundred thousand dollars on compensation consultants. So your default position will be to endorse the proposal and move on. The alternative is to scrutinize the management information circular, which nowadays approaches the length of a paperback novel. Don’t skip the details: This disclosure is your opportunity as a shareholder to decide whether you are receiving value for money or whether management is appropriating too much of the value-added.

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After working through many of these documents, here are my rules of thumb to cut through the verbiage. I won’t name names because this is an anecdotal survey of my portfolio, not a research study, but it is a starting point for your analysis.

For a more rational approach to this decision, calculate the total compensation paid to the entire NEO group and compare it with the company’s pretax income in recent years. A total compensation figure that amounts to more than a couple of percentage points of pretax income requires evidence that management is truly adding value to the company.

The stock-option component of the pay package is calculated as of the date of grant based on a complicated formula and it will be some time before these options vest. As a result, if the stock price craters, the ultimate payout may never reach the level shown in the compensation table. A compensation committee in this situation may respond by shovelling out more options at lower strike prices in subsequent years to make up for the shortfall. If the option-plan strike price is simply following the stock price down and there is a request to replenish the plan, then it may be appropriate to vote against.

Once again, judgment is required here: Hostile-takeover offers that emerge because of sustained underperformance by management create the impression that change of control payments are a reward for incompetence. Also, excessive change-of-control termination fees act as a “poison pill” and discourage a takeover.

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The compensation committee report is a complex document because it attempts to develop workable formulae in an area of inexact science. It deserves close attention on the part of the individual investor so that the board receives prompt feedback when shareholders disagree with the outcome.

Robert Tattersall, CFA, is co-founder of the Saxon family of mutual funds and the retired chief investment officer of Mackenzie Investments.