UNITED STATES
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
WASHINGTON, D.C. 20549
SCHEDULE 14A
PROXY STATEMENT PURSUANT TO SECTION 14(a) OF THE
SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934
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Ensco plc
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Additional Information Concerning the 2012 Annual General Meeting of Shareholders of Ensco plc
to be Held on 22 May 2012
INTRODUCTION
We are writing to ask for your support at the annual general meeting of shareholders by voting FOR our proposal 10 regarding the Non-Binding Advisory Vote to Approve the Compensation of our Named Executive Officers (Say on Pay). Please note that proxy advisory firms Glass Lewis and Egan-Jones have recommended a vote FOR this proposal. Glass Lewis specifically noted in its report that Enscos compensation programs should be evaluated in comparison to peers with revenues and market capitalizations similar to Enscos following Enscos acquisition of Pride International a transaction that nearly doubled our size. Institutional Shareholder Services (ISS), however, has recommended a vote against this proposal, due primarily to its decision to use a peer group with revenues and market capitalizations similar to Enscos prior to its acquisition of Pride International.
| We agree with the Glass Lewis and Egan-Jones recommendations FOR the proposal and strongly disagree with the ISS recommendation. |
The ISS recommendation results from its new Pay for Performance methodology, which led it to select a peer group for Ensco that inexplicably omits four of our key competitors and significantly understates Enscos current business scope and financial size. Specifically, we have the following objection to the methodology employed by ISS in their review:
| The ISS peer group is undersized and inappropriate for comparison to Ensco. |
The Compensation Discussion and Analysis (CD&A) section starting on page 24 of our proxy statement explains in detail our emphasis on pay for performance and shareholder alignment in our executive compensation program, including the following positive aspects (several of which were highlighted by Glass Lewis in their review):
| Performance-based LTI: 50% of target long-term incentive award value for our named executive officers (NEOs) is performance-based. |
| Emphasis on long-term incentive compensation: 70% of target total compensation for our CEO (63% for our other NEOs) was provided in the form of equity incentive compensation in 2011. |
| Clawback policy for NEOs: our NEOs are subject to clawback of incentive compensation (including equity incentive awards) in cases of financial restatements or violations of our Code of Business Conduct. In its report, ISS erroneously indicates that we do not have a clawback policy, even though the policy is summarized in our CD&A on page 34. |
| Share ownership guidelines: our NEOs and our nonemployee directors are subject to share ownership requirements expressed as a multiple of salary or annual retainer. |
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ISSUE SUMMARY
| The ISS evaluation is fundamentally flawed because the peer group is significantly undersized for comparison to Ensco. |
ISSs peer selection methodology does not give full effect to Enscos size following the acquisition of Pride International, which was completed almost a year ago. Against the peer group selected by ISS, Ensco ranks at the:
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TSR | Pay | |||||||||
Pctl | Pctl | |||||||||
Rank | Rank | |||||||||
[A] | [B] | |||||||||
1 year (40%) | 47% | 70% | ||||||||
3 year (60%) | 36% | 66% | ||||||||
Wtd Avg | 40% | 67% | ||||||||
SCORE | -27% | |||||||||
([A] - [B]) | ||||||||||
LEVEL OF | LOW | |||||||||
CONCERN | ||||||||||
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CONCLUSION
The ISS approach provides an inaccurate evaluation of relative pay and performance, not only because of clear flaws in their peer group selection, but because of several other shortcomings, the most important of which are:
| Evaluation of pay opportunities rather than pay outcomes: ISS is evaluating targeted pay levels reflecting opportunities that can only be fully realized if certain levels of financial, operational or shareholder return performance are achieved. |
| Mismatch of performance and pay periods: ISS is evaluating pay decisions made at the beginning of a year in light of performance through the end of that year. In addition, depending upon when peer companies file their proxy statement, the ISS review may include 2011 pay data for some companies and 2010 pay data for others. |
Despite these other shortcomings, for 2012, ISS would have arrived at the correct recommendation for Ensco had they merely taken a more rigorous and careful approach to peer group selection. We speculate that ISSs decision to forego a more thoughtful evaluation for Ensco may have been based on a need to maintain a rigid approach that they could easily replicate for all companies they evaluate. However, in the case of a transaction like Enscos acquisition of Pride International, we would have expected ISS to exercise greater judgment in selecting the appropriate inputs to their model.
In considering your vote, we urge you to review the Glass Lewis and Egan-Jones reports as well as our CD&A beginning on page 24 of our proxy statement. This detailed information clearly demonstrates that our Compensation Committee maintains a compensation program that has aligned executive compensation effectively with shareholder interests and that ISSs inappropriate peer group selection has led them to an incorrect conclusion in assessing the relationship between pay and performance for Ensco.
THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS RECOMMENDS THAT
SHAREHOLDERS VOTE FOR PROPOSAL 10:
NON-BINDING ADVISORY VOTE TO APPROVE THE
COMPENSATION OF OUR NAMED EXECUTIVE OFFICERS
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