United StatesUNITED STATES
Securities and Exchange CommissionSECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
Washington, D.C. 20549
SCHEDULE 14A
(Rule 14a-101)
INFORMATION REQUIRED IN PROXY STATEMENT
SCHEDULE 14A INFORMATION
Proxy Statement Pursuant to Section 14(a) of the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934
(Amendment No. 2))
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Definitive Proxy | ||||
Definitive Additional | ||||
Soliciting Material Pursuant to | ||||
GRAFTECH INTERNATIONAL LTD.
(Name of Registrant as Specified in its Charter)
(Name of Person(s) Filing Proxy Statement, if other than the Registrant)
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This Proxy Statement is dated
[ ], 2015
April 8, 2021
GrafTech International Ltd.
Joel L. Hawthorne
Chief Executive Officer & President
[ ], 2015
Dear Fellow Stockholders:
It is my pleasureWe are pleased to invite you to our annualthe 2021 Annual Meeting of Stockholders. The meeting which will be held on Thursday, May 29, 201513, 2021, at 10:8:00 a.m., eastern daylight time, at [PLACE], located at [ADDRESS].
Eastern time. In light of the following pages, you will findongoing COVID-19 pandemic and in the formal noticeinterest of protecting the health and safety of our annual meetingstockholders and our proxy statement. This year, weemployees, the Board of Directors has determined the Annual Meeting will be usingheld in a universal proxy card to allow stockholders to choose from all identified director candidates, including bothvirtual format via the Company’s nominees and candidates nominated by Nathan Milikowsky. Your vote atInternet again this year’s annual meeting is extremely important as Mr. Milikowsky is seeking control of GrafTech’s Board without paying stockholders a control premium. Control premiums are not commonly associated with exercising a right to nominate directors, but rather are referred to in connection with purchases of a controlling interest inyear.
Details about the capital stock of a company. At the same time, Mr. Milikowsky has outlined a proposed strategy that the Company has evaluated and determined would be value-destructive for GrafTech.
The Board also proposes expanding the Board to nine members, consisting of seven Company nominees and two nomineesbusiness to be selected by stockholders from amongconducted at the candidates nominated by Mr. Milikowsky. Our recommended slate includes four new independent nominees, Robert Conrad, James Egan, James Spencer and Robert Weber, three incumbent nominees, Randy Carson, Thomas Danjczek and me, Joel Hawthorne, as well as allowing stockholders to select two directors from among the candidates nominated by Mr. Milikowsky. We take stockholder views and feedback seriously, and believe the universal card offers GrafTech stockholders the greatest choice when voting.
We believe this slate—which includes incumbent director nominees who provide a deep understanding of the Company’s operations, fresh perspectives from new director nominees and appropriate stockholder representation—is in the best interests of GrafTech and its stockholders. The Board composition proposed on GrafTech’s universal proxy card is intended to offer appropriate stockholder representation while avoiding the potential risk of jeopardizing GrafTech’s future.
The GrafTech Board recommends that stockholders use the WHITE universal proxy card to vote “FOR” the Company’s slate of directors and choose two nominees from Mr. Milikowsky’s slate. After reading this proxy statement, please mark your votes on the accompanying WHITE universal proxy or vote instruction card, sign it and promptly return itAnnual Meeting can be found in the accompanying postage paid envelope.Notice of Annual Meeting of Stockholders and proxy statement. Your vote is important. The Annual Meeting will be held in a virtual format only. Regardless of whether you plan to attend the virtual Annual Meeting, we urge you to vote your shares as soon as possible. You may also vote viausing the Internetenclosed proxy card or voting instruction form by completing, signing and dating it, and then returning it by mail. Also, you may submit your vote by telephone as instructed in thisor through the internet. If telephone or internet voting is available to you, instructions will be included on your proxy statementcard or on the accompanying WHITE universal proxy or votevoting instruction card. IMPORTANTLY, IF YOU MARK MORE THAN NINE “FOR” BOXES FOR THE ELECTION OF DIRECTORS, ALL OF YOUR VOTES FOR THE ELECTION OF DIRECTORS WILL BE DEEMED INVALID. Please vote by whichever method is most convenient for you to ensure thatform. Additional information about voting your shares are represented at the meeting.
We appreciate the continuing interest of our stockholdersis included in our business.
Sincerely,
Joel L. Hawthorne
Chief Executive Officer and
President
YOUR VOTE IS IMPORTANT. PLEASE VOTE YOUR SHARES PROMPTLY. YOU CAN FIND VOTING INSTRUCTIONS ON THE ENCLOSED WHITE PROXY OR VOTING INSTRUCTION CARD.
Important notice regarding the availability of proxy materials for the annual meeting to be held on May 29, 2015—the proxy statement is available at [http://ir.graftech.com/phoenix.zhtml?c=114451&p=proxy]statement.
On behalf of the Board of Directors, thank you for your continued interest and the Annual Report is available at [http://ir.graftech.com/phoenix.zhtml?c=114451&p=irol-reportsannual].
Sincerely,
Denis A. Turcotte | David J. Rintoul | |||
Director and Chairman of the Board | President and Chief Executive Officer |
PRELIMINARY PROXY STATEMENT - SUBJECT TO COMPLETION
NOTICE OF ANNUAL MEETING OF STOCKHOLDERS
Notice of
to be held on May 29, 2015
The annual meeting2021 Annual Meeting of stockholders (the “Annual Meeting”) of GrafTech International Ltd. will be held at 10:00 a.m., eastern daylight time, on May 29, 2015, at the [PLACE], located at [ADDRESS], for the following purposes:Stockholders
Date: | May 13, 2021 | At the Annual Meeting you will be asked to: | ||||||
Time: | 8:00 a.m. Eastern time | Proposal 1 | Elect three directors |
Virtual Meeting:
Website www.meetingcenter.io/ 258657458 Password EAF2021 |
Ratify the |
Record Date:
Proposal 3 | Approve, on |
Transact such other business as may properly come before the |
Only stockholdersThe enclosed proxy is solicited on behalf of recordthe Board of Directors (the “Board”) of GrafTech International Ltd. (“GrafTech” or the “Company”) for use at the close of business on April 20, 2015 will be entitled to notice of and to vote at theCompany’s 2021 Annual Meeting of Stockholders (the “Annual Meeting”) to be held on May 13, 2021, at 8:00 a.m. Eastern time, or at any adjournment or postponement thereof, for the purposes set forth herein. In light of the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic and in the interest of protecting the health and safety of our stockholders and employees, the Board of Directors has determined the Annual Meeting.Meeting will be held in a virtual format via the Internet again this year.
HOW YOU MAY VOTE
You may vote if you were a stockholder of record on March 16, 2021 (the “Record Date”). To ensure that your shares are represented at the Annual Meeting, in the event that you do not attend, please mark your votes on the accompanying WHITE proxy or vote instruction card, sign it, date it and promptly return it in the postage-paid envelope provided or vote via the Internet oras soon as possible by telephone as instructed in the accompanying proxy statement or on the proxy or vote instruction card.
Our Board is pleased to nominate for election as directors the seven nominees named in Proposal 1 in the attached proxy statement and on the enclosed WHITE proxy or voting instruction card. We believe our director nominees have the experience, industry knowledge, integrity, ability to devote time and energy, and commitment to the interests of all GrafTech stockholders necessary to execute our strategic plan and create value for our stockholders. Our Board recommends that you vote “FOR ALL”one of the Board’s seven director nominees named in Proposal 1 in the attached proxy statement and on the WHITE proxy or voting instruction card.
As you may be aware, on March 17, 2015, Milikowsky Group (as defined below) filed a preliminary proxy statement with the Securities and Exchange Commission (the “SEC”) to solicit votes at the Annual Meeting in favor of a slate of seven director nominees and a proposal to repeal certain provisions of our by-laws not in effect as of September 30, 2012. As stated in that proxy statement, Daniel and Nathan Milikowsky, along with their affiliates, NM GTI Investments LLC, a Delaware limited liability company, The Daniel Milikowsky Family Holdings, LLC, a Connecticut limited liability company, The Daniel and Sharon Milikowsky Family Foundation, Inc., a Connecticut corporation, and The Rebecca and Nathan Milikowsky Family Foundation, a Massachusetts charitable trust (collectively, the “Milikowskys” or the “Milikowsky Group”), seek to take control of your Company without paying any control premium to you, the Company’s stockholders. The payment of a control
premium by an opposition stockholder seeking to take control of a board of directors by electing its own slate of directors is not required by law and control premiums are not commonly associated with exercising a right to nominate directors, but rather are referred to in connection with purchases of a controlling interest in the capital stock of a company. Stockholders are not entitled to appraisal or dissenters’ rights if an opposition stockholder takes control of a board of directors through election of its own slate. At the [close of business on ], 2015, the Milikowsky Group filed its definitive proxy statement with the SEC. We believe that voting “FOR ALL” of the Board’s seven director nominees named in Proposal 1 in this proxy statement and on the WHITE proxy card is in the best interests of our stockholders and therefore recommend that you do not vote for the Milikowsky Group’s nominees on the blue proxy card.
In an effort to reach a mutually agreeable resolution that would benefitall GrafTech stockholders and avoid a costly and distracting proxy contest, the Company has put forward multiple settlement offers. See “Additional Background of the Solicitation” beginning on page 8 for more detail. Mr. Milikowsky, on behalf of the Milikowsky Group, has refused all offers.
Our Board is responsive and remains open to a resolution of this proxy contest that is in the best interests ofall stockholders.
You may receive proxy solicitation materials from the Milikowsky Group or its affiliates, including an opposition proxy statement and blue proxy or voting instruction card. OUR BOARD OF DIRECTORS URGES YOU NOT TO SIGN OR RETURN ANY PROXY OR VOTING INSTRUCTION CARD SENT TO YOU BY OR ON BEHALF OF THE MILIKOWSKY GROUP. Even if you have previously signed a proxy or voting instruction card sent by or on behalf of the Milikowsky Group, you have the right to change your vote by using the enclosed WHITE proxy or voting instruction card to vote (by marking your vote thereon, signing it, dating it and returning it in the postage-paid envelope provided), by voting in person at the Annual Meeting, or by telephone or the Internet. Only the latest dated proxy you submit will be counted. We urge you to disregard any proxy or voting instruction card sent to you by or on behalf of the Milikowsky Group or anyone other than the Company.
OUR BOARD OF DIRECTORS RECOMMENDS THAT YOU VOTE (i) “FOR ALL” OF THE BOARD’S SEVEN NOMINEES NAMED IN PROPOSAL 1 IN THE ATTACHED PROXY STATEMENT, (ii) “FOR” PROPOSALS 2, 3, AND 4, AND (iii) “AGAINST” PROPOSALS 5 AND 6.
If you need any assistance with voting with your WHITE proxy or voting instruction card or voting by telephone or the Internet, please contact our proxy solicitor:
105 Madison Avenue
New York, New York 10016
(212) 929-5500 (Call Collect)
or
Call Toll-Free (800) 322-2885
Email: proxy@mackenziepartners.com
Sincerely,
Joel L. Hawthorne
Chief Executive Officer and
President
PROXY STATEMENT
for Annual Meeting of Stockholders for 2015
TABLE OF CONTENTSfollowing methods:
• | By Internet. | • | By Mail. | |||||||
• | By Telephone. | • | Online, during the virtual Annual Meeting. |
For more detailed information on voting, please see “How do I cast a vote?” in the “Questions & Answers” section beginning on page 48 of the accompanying Proxy Statement.
By order of the Board of Directors, |
Gina K. Gunning |
Chief Legal Officer & Corporate Secretary |
Whether or not you expect to attend the virtual Annual Meeting, please vote as soon as possible to ensure representation of your shares at the Annual Meeting. You may vote your shares over the Internet, by telephone or by mail (as applicable) by following the instructions on the proxy card or voting instruction form. More information about registering for and attending the virtual Annual Meeting is included in the Questions and Answers section of the accompanying proxy statement. Except as otherwise noted, the information herein is as of March 30, 2021, the date we commenced printing in order to commence mailing on or about April 8, 2021. Proxy materials are being mailed or made available on or about April 8, 2021.
Important Notice Regarding the Availability of Proxy Materials for the Stockholder Meeting To Be Held on May 13, 2021: The Proxy Statement and the 2020 Annual Report to Stockholders are available at: www.edocumentview.com/EAF.
The following pages provide a summary of important information you will find in this Proxy Statement. As it is only a summary, please review the complete Proxy Statement before submitting your vote.
Proposal |
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FOR each nominee | 19 | |||||||
FOR | 26 | |||||||
Proposal 3 | ||||||||
Approve, on an Advisory Basis, our Named Executive Officer Compensation | ||||||||
FOR | ||||||||
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29 |
ABOUT THE ANNUAL MEETINGBoard and Corporate Governance Highlights
This proxy statement and the accompanying WHITE proxy or voting instruction card relate to the 2015 annual meeting of stockholders, or the Annual Meeting, of GrafTech International Ltd., a Delaware corporation, or GrafTech. Our Board of Directors, oris committed to highly effective corporate governance that is responsive to stockholders and aims to ensure that the Board, has delegated to a Special Committee of the Board, or the Special Committee, full power and authority to actCompany delivers on its behalfstrategic objectives.
On August 15, 2015, we became an indirect wholly owned subsidiary of Brookfield Asset Management Inc. (together with respect to all matters relating to the Annual Meeting. The Special Committee, acting on behalf of the Board, is soliciting proxies from our stockholders in order to provide every stockholder an opportunity to vote on all matters submitted toits affiliates, “Brookfield”) through a vote of stockholders at the Annual Meeting, whether or not he or she attends in person. The proxy authorizes a person other than a stockholder, called the proxyholder, who will be present at the Annual Meeting, to cast the votes that the stockholder would be entitled to cast at the Annual Meeting if the stockholder were present. It is expected that this proxy statement and the accompanying WHITE proxy or voting instruction card will be first mailed or deliveredtender offer to our former stockholders beginning on or about [ ], 2015. When used in this proxy statement, “we,” “us,” “our,” orand subsequent merger transaction. On April 23, 2018, the “Company” refers to GrafTech andCompany completed its subsidiaries collectively or, if the context so requires, GrafTech individually.
Purpose of Annual Meeting
We will hold the Annual Meeting to enable stockholders to vote on the following matters:
If any of the nominees nominated by the Board are not available for election at the time of the meeting, discretionary authority will be exercised by the proxyholders designated in the accompanying WHITE proxy or voting instruction card to vote for substitutes (if a bona fide nominee named in the proxy statement is unable to serve or for good cause will not serve) designated by the Board unless the Board chooses to reduce the size of the Board.
Who May Vote
Only stockholders of record as of the close of business on April 20, 2015 are entitled to notice of the meeting and to vote on the Proposals submitted to a vote of stockholders at the meeting. A list of stockholders entitled to vote at the meeting will be available for examination by stockholders at the meeting and during the ten days prior to the meeting, during ordinary business hours at our corporate headquarters at 6100 Oak Tree Blvd., Independence, Ohio, 44131. Each share of ourinitial public offering (“IPO”). Our common stock par value $.01 per share, is entitled to one vote. On April 20, 2015, there were [ ] shares of our common stock issued and outstanding.
Voting by Participants in the Savings Plan
If you participate in the GrafTech International Savings Plan, or the Savings Plan, your proxy will represent the number of shares (including Company matching contributions made in shares) allocated to your account in the Savings Plan as of April 20, 2015. All shares allocated to your account in the Savings Plan will be voted by the trustee for the Savings Plan in accordance with your directionshas been listed on the voting instruction card that you submit.
What You Need to Attend the Annual Meeting
The Annual Meeting will be held at the [PLACE], located at [ADDRESS], on May 29, 2015, at 10:00 AM, eastern daylight time. Except as otherwise authorized by the Chair of the Annual Meeting, only stockholders, directors, nominees for election as directors, and officers of the Company will be admitted to the Annual Meeting. Prospective attendees must present valid government issued photo identification, such as a driver’s license or passport, for admittance. In addition, if you are a stockholder of record, your name will be verified against the list of stockholders of record prior to admittance to the Annual Meeting. If you are a beneficial owner, you must provide proof of beneficial ownership on the record date, such as your account statement showing that you owned your shares as of April 20, 2015, a copy of the voting instruction form provided by your bank, broker or nominee, or other similar evidence of ownership. If you do not provide valid government-issued photo identification and comply with the other procedures outlined above, you will not be admitted into the Annual Meeting. You do not need to attend the Annual Meeting to vote. Even if you plan to attend the Annual Meeting, we encourage you to submit your vote in advance as instructed in this proxy statement.
Voting Mechanics
The presence at the commencement of the Annual Meeting, in person or represented by proxy, of the holders of a majority of the issued and outstanding shares of common stock entitled to vote at the Annual Meeting will constitute a quorum for the transaction of business at the Annual Meeting. Abstentions will be included in determining the presence of a quorum at the Annual Meeting. Broker non-votes will not be included in determining the presence of quorum. Broker non-votes occur when a person holding shares in street name (meaning in a brokerage account) does not provide instructions as to how to vote his or her shares and the broker is not permitted to, or otherwise does not, exercise voting discretion. Due to the contested nature of the election of directors for our Board, the rules of the New York Stock Exchange do not permit brokers(“NYSE”) under the symbol “EAF” since April 18, 2018. Prior to exercise discretionary authoritythat date, there was no public trading market for our common stock. As of March 16, 2021, Brookfield owned approximately 36.6% of our outstanding common stock. Because Brookfield participated in certain secondary offerings of our common stock in 2020 and 2021 and no longer owns a majority of our outstanding common stock, we are no longer a “controlled company” as that term is set forth in the NYSE listing standards. For more information, see “—Loss of Controlled Company Exemption.”
We believe that regular, transparent stockholder engagement is essential to voteGrafTech’s long-term success. In 2020, we made presentations at virtual financial and industry conferences, met with financial analysts and investment firms, and responded to inquiries from our stockholders. We intend to continue to engage with stockholders to understand their perspectives on any Proposals to be voted on at the Annual Meeting, whether routine or not. Only those votes cast for the election of directors are used in determining the results of a vote on the election of directors. Only those votes cast for or against Proposals 2 through 6 are used in determining the results of a vote on such Proposals. For purposes of Proposals 1 through 4 and 6, abstentionscorporate governance, executive compensation, sustainability and other shares not voted (whether by broker non-vote or otherwise) will not be counted as votes cast and will have no effect on the result of the vote. Given that the voting standard on Proposal 5 is 67% of the outstanding shares of common stock, abstentions on Proposal 5 are effectively the same as votes against Proposal 5.matters.
How to Vote
There are several different ways that you may cast your vote. You may vote by:Key Corporate Governance Best Practices
• Five independent directors • Independent directors regularly meet without management present • Presiding Independent Director presides over regular meetings of independent directors • One vote per share of common stock • Code of Conduct and Ethics • Corporate Governance Guidelines • Stock ownership requirements for directors |
• Insider trading policy, including a prohibition on hedging • Review and approval policy for related party transactions • Orientation program for new directors • Directors are encouraged to attend continuing education programs |
Number of Directors: 9 |
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Average Age: 60 |
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Number of Independent Directors: 5 |
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Internet and telephone voting. The availability of telephone and Internet voting for beneficial owners will depend on the voting processes of your broker, bank or nominee (the holder of record). Therefore, we recommend that you follow the voting instructions in the materials you receive. The telephone and Internet voting procedures are designed to authenticate stockholders’ identities, to allow stockholders to give their voting instructions and to confirm that stockholders’ instructions have been recorded properly. Stockholders voting via the Internet or telephone should understand that there may be costs associated with electronic access, such as usage charges from Internet access providers and telephone companies that must be borne by the stockholder. Votes submitted electronically via the Internet or telephone must be received by 11:59 p.m., eastern daylight time, on May 28, 2015.
Votes Required for Each Proposal
In accordance with our Amended and Restated By-Laws, or our by-laws, andUnder our Amended and Restated Certificate of Incorporation or(the “Amended Certificate of Incorporation”), the number of directors is fixed by our certificateBoard but will not be fewer than three directors. Our Board currently consists of incorporation, the votes required to electnine members and is divided into three classes of directors, with each class containing three directors, and approvewith the other Proposalsdirectors serving three-year terms. Detailed information about each director’s background, skill set and areas of expertise can be found beginning on page 20.
Name | Age | Position | Term Expires | Committee(s) | ||||
Denis A. Turcotte | 59 | Chairman of the Board and Director | 2022 | Governance and Compensation Committee (the “G&C Committee”) (Chair) | ||||
Brian L. Acton | 69 | Director | 2023 | Audit Committee, G&C Committee | ||||
Catherine L. Clegg | 61 | Director | 2021 | G&C Committee | ||||
Michel J. Dumas | 62 | Director | 2022 | Audit Committee (Chair) | ||||
Jeffrey C. Dutton | 58 | Director | 2021 | |||||
David Gregory | 34 | Director | 2023 | |||||
David J. Rintoul | 63 | Director, President and Chief Executive Officer (“CEO”) | 2023 | |||||
Anthony R. Taccone | 60 | Director | 2021 | Audit Committee, G&C Committee | ||||
Leslie D. Dunn | 75 | Director | 2022 |
You are being asked to vote on the re-election of three Directors. Detailed information about each Director’s background, skill set and areas of expertise can be considered at the Annual Meeting are as follows:found beginning on page 20.
| Age | Position |
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Catherine L. Clegg | 61 | Director |
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Jeffrey C. Dutton | ||||||
Director | ||||||
Anthony R. Taccone | ||||||
How Proxyholders Will Vote Shares
When you submit a proxy, regardless of the method by which given, the proxyholders will vote your shares as instructed with respect to the matters specified. If you are a record holder of shares and you submit a signed WHITE proxy card but do not mark your votes, your shares will be voted FOR the election of all seven of the nominees recommended in this proxy statement for election as directors, FOR Proposal 2, FOR Proposal 3, FOR Proposal 4, AGAINST Proposal 5 and AGAINST Proposal 6.
If you hold your shares in street name, your broker is not permitted to vote on your behalf on the election of directors or any other Proposal and you must provide specific instructions by marking, signing and returning the vote instruction card or by voting via telephone or the Internet following the instructions provided to you.
In addition, if other matters are submitted to a vote of stockholders at the Annual Meeting, your proxy on the accompanying WHITE proxy or voting instruction card gives the proxyholders the discretionary authority to vote your shares in accordance with their best judgment on that matter. Unless you specify otherwise, it is expected that your shares will be voted on those matters as recommended by the Special Committee.
How to Revoke a Proxy
If you hold your shares registered in your name, you may revoke your proxy by submitting a revised one at any time before the vote to which the proxy relates. You may also revoke it by submitting a ballot at the Annual Meeting.
If your shares are held in street name, there are special procedures that you must follow to revoke a proxy submitted via the Internet or telephone or by marking, signing and returning a vote instruction card.
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If you receive more than one WHITE proxy or voting instruction card on or about the same time, it generally means you hold shares registered in more than one account. In order to vote all of your shares, please sign and return each WHITE proxy or voting instruction card or, if you vote via the internet or telephone, vote once for each WHITE proxy or voting instruction card you receive.
If the Milikowskys proceed with their previously announced alternative director nominations, we will likely conduct multiple mailings prior to the Annual Meeting date so that stockholders have our latest proxy information and materials to vote. We will send you a new WHITE proxy or voting instruction card with each mailing, regardless of whether you have previously voted.The latest dated proxy you submit will be counted, and, if you wish to vote as recommended by the Board, then you should only submit WHITE proxy or voting instruction cards.Executive Compensation Philosophy
What is a Universal Proxy Card?
A universal proxy card lists on a single card all candidates nominated by the Board and all candidates nominated by a stockholder and allows stockholders to vote for candidates among all candidates nominated, regardless of who nominated them. Universal proxy cards are widely supported by independent proxy advisors, institutional investors and other independent parties because they enhance voting flexibility for stockholders who cannot or do not wish to attend a meeting or who cannot or do not wish to craft their own form of proxy or equivalent document.
In contrast, a traditional proxy card only lists candidates nominated by either the Board or a stockholder. As a practical matter essentially coercing stockholders to choose between two slates of candidates (including a short slate rounded out from the Board’s slate at the discretion of a nominating stockholder).
What Should I Do with the Proxy or Voting Instruction Cards Sent to Me by the Milikowskys
The Milikowskys (as defined below) have nominated seven individuals for election as directors at the Annual Meeting. Nominations made by the Milikowskys have NOT been endorsed by the Board. The Company is not responsible for the accuracy or completeness of any information contained in any proxy solicitation or other materials used by the Milikowskys or on their behalf or of any other statements that they may otherwise make. As stated in that proxy statement, Daniel and Nathan Milikowsky, along with their affiliates, NM GTI Investments LLC, a Delaware limited liability company, The Daniel Milikowsky Family Holdings, LLC, a Connecticut limited liability company, The Daniel and Sharon Milikowsky Family Foundation, Inc., a
Connecticut corporation, and The Rebecca and Nathan Milikowsky Family Foundation, a Massachusetts charitable trust are referred to herein collectively as the “Milikowskys” or the “Milikowsky Group”.
Please do not return any blue proxy or voting instruction card you may receive from the Milikowskys or otherwise authorize any proxy other than pursuant to a WHITE proxy or voting instruction card to vote your shares at the meeting, not even as a protest vote. If you return a blue proxy or voting instruction card to the Milikowskys or otherwise authorize a proxy to vote your shares at the Annual Meeting other than pursuant to a WHITE proxy or voting instruction card, you can change your vote. To revoke your prior proxy and change your vote, simply sign the enclosed WHITE proxy or voting instruction card, date it and return it in the postage-paid envelope provided or follow the instructions located on the WHITE proxy or voting instruction card to vote by telephone or Internet.Only your latest dated proxy will be counted. Any proxy may be revoked at any time prior to its exercise at the Annual Meeting by following the instructions beginning on page 4. If you have any questions or need assistance voting, please contact our proxy solicitor:
105 Madison Avenue
New York, New York 10016
(212) 929-5500 (Call Collect)
or
Call Toll-Free (800) 322-2885
Email: proxy@mackenziepartners.com
What are the possible effects, under the Company’s debt agreements and compensation arrangements, if stockholders elect Milikowsky Group nominees so that they become a majority and assume control of the Board at the Annual Meeting?
Under GrafTech’s outstanding senior notes, GrafTechour pay for performance philosophy, a substantial component of executive compensation is requiredvariable and tied to offerCompany financial and operational performance. The goal is to repurchase its outstanding notes if it experiences such a changereward our executive team for their leadership in control of the Board (that is not approved by the Board consistent with its obligations under the notesmeeting key near-term goals and its fiduciary duties to stockholders) and a ratings event (as defined in the indenture for the notes) within 60 days thereafter. A ratings event (as defined in the indenture for the notes) for this purpose will be deemed to occur only if each of Moody’s Investor Services, Inc. (“Moody’s”) and Standard & Poors (“S&P”) downgrades the notes (if the notes are then rated investment grade by both Moody’s and S&P) or if the notes are rated below investment grade by either Moody’s or S&P, the ratings of the notes by both of Moody’s and S&P are decreased by one or more gradations and the notes are then rated below investment grade by both of Moody’s and S&P. For this purpose, since Mr. Milikowsky was a director on the issue date of the notes, if Mr. Milikowsky is re-relected, then at least 5 other Milikowsky Group nominees would need to be elected to trigger the repurchase offer provisions.
Under GrafTech’s senior secured credit facility, there would be an event of default and, unless the event of default were waived, GrafTech would not be able to incur any additional indebtedness under the facility and the lenders could accelerate all outstanding amounts. GrafTech does not expect to have a material amount outstanding under the senior secured credit facility at the time of the Annual Meeting and would seek a waiver of any such event of default, although there can be no assurance that the lenders would grant such a waiver.
Under GrafTech’s equity compensation programs, outstanding awards will become vested and deemed earned in full. Under the Company’s severance compensation agreements, payouts are conditioned on a “double trigger” scenario in which there must be both such a change in control of the Board and a termination of employment or resignation for good reason. Please refer to the section below captioned “Potential Payments on Termination or Change in Control” for additional information regarding this impact on GrafTech’s named executive officers.
More Information is Available
If you have any questions about the proxy voting process in general, please contact the broker, bank or nominee where you hold your shares. The Securities and Exchange Commission, or the SEC,objectives while also has a website(www.sec.gov/spotlight/proxymatters.shtml) with more information about your rights as a stockholder. Additionally, you may contact our Investor Relations Department at GrafTech International Ltd., 6100 Oak Tree Blvd., Independence, Ohio, 44131, or call us at 216-676-2000, or email us at Investor.Relations@graftech.com.
ELECTION OF NINE DIRECTORS, EACH TO SERVE
UNTIL THE NEXT ANNUAL MEETING OF STOCKHOLDERS AND UNTIL
HIS OR HER SUCCESSOR HAS BEEN DULY ELECTED AND QUALIFIED
Nominees for Election as a Director
The seven nominees described below were nominated by the Board. Each nominee has consented to being named in this proxy statement as a nominee for election as a director and agreed to serve if elected. Each nominee who is elected will serve as a director until our next annual meeting of stockholders and his or her successor has been duly elected and qualified or until his or her earlier removal or resignation. Except as otherwise described below, if any of the nominees named below are not available for election at the time of the Annual Meeting, discretionary authority will be exercised to vote for substitutes (if a bona fide nominee named in the proxy statement is unable to serve or for good cause will not serve) designated by the Board unless the Board chooses to reduce the number of directors. Management is not aware of any circumstances that would render any nominee named below unavailable.
The Milikowsky Group filed a preliminary proxy statement to solicit votes for seven alternative director nominees. Due to the increase in the size of the Board to nine, no less than two of the individuals nominated by the Milikowskys will be elected to the Board. We believe that the nominees proposed by the Board are the most qualified candidates up for election at the Annual Meeting. As described below under “Director Qualifications,” we believe our nominees have the experience, industry knowledge, integrity and commitment necessary to oversee the execution of our strategic plan and create value forall our stockholders.
The Board recommends submitting the enclosed WHITE proxy or voting instruction card, or following the instructions thereon to vote by telephone or the Internet, to vote FOR each of the Board’s seven nominees for director.
The Milikowskys’ nominees have NOT been endorsed by our Board. The Board recommends that you disregard any blue proxy or voting instruction card that may be sent to you by the Milikowskys. Voting against the Milikowskys’ nominees on its blue proxy or voting instruction card is not the same as voting for our Board’s nominees, because a vote against the Milikowskys’ nominees on their blue proxy or voting instruction card will revoke any previous proxy submitted by you. If you have already voted using a blue proxy or voting instruction card sent to you by the Milikowskys, you have every right to change it. We urge you to revoke that proxy by voting in favor of our Board’s nominees by using and submitting the enclosed WHITE proxy or voting instruction card, or following the instructions thereon to vote by telephone or the Internet. Only the latest validly executed proxy that you submit will be counted. If you have any questions or need assistance voting, please call our proxy solicitor:
105 Madison Avenue
New York, New York 10016
(212) 929-5500 (Call Collect)
or
Call Toll-Free (800) 322-2885
Email: proxy@mackenziepartners.com
We are not responsible for the accuracy or completeness of any information provided by or relating to the Milikowskys contained in any proxy solicitation materials filed or used by, or on behalf of, the Milikowskys or in any other statements that the Milikowskys or any person acting on their behalf may otherwise make.
Additional Background of the Solicitation
On November 30, 2010,positioning the Company acquired C/G Electrodes LLC and the portion of Seadrift Coke L.P. not previously owned by GrafTech for cash, senior subordinated promissory notes and shares of GrafTech common stock (the “Acquisitions”) for an enterprise value of approximately $859 million. Nathan Milikowsky received all of the shares of GrafTech common stock now beneficially owned by him as a participating seller in the Acquisitions, except for certain shares Mr. Milikowsky received for his service as a GrafTech director. In connection with the Acquisitions, the Company, Mr. Milikowsky and others entered into a Registration Rights and Stockholders’ Agreement (the “Stockholders Agreement”) pursuant to which the Board appointed Mr. Milikowsky as a Company director in December 2010.
In September 2012, the Board unanimously appointed a committee of independent directors as well as independent investigatory counsel to conduct a thorough investigation into apparent leaks of confidential inside information that were brought to the Board’s attention by several members of the management team (the “Internal Investigation”). In March 2013, investigatory counsel reported findings that such leaks did occur, that there was evidence that Mr. Milikowsky was the source of the leaks, that there was no evidence to support a conclusion that management or any other director was the source of the leaks and that at least some of the leaked information could not have been developed independently.
In March 2013, at the recommendation of the Nominating & Governance Committee, the Board declined to re-nominate Mr. Milikowsky for election as a director after considering the internal-investigation findings and other information that the Nominating & Governance Committee believed indicated one or more breaches by Mr. Milikowsky of the Stockholders Agreement and his fiduciary duties to stockholders for the apparent purpose of gaining operational control of the Company. In April 2013, the Company reported the information then available from the Internal Investigation to the SEC. In May 2013, Mr. Milikowsky was not re-elected and ceased to serve as a director of the Company.
On January 23, 2014, Mr. Milikowsky and a related group of stockholders (the “Milikowsky Group”) indicated its intent to nominate five candidates—a control slate—for election to the Board at the Company’s 2014 annual meeting of stockholders (the “2014 Annual Meeting”). The Milikowsky Group later revised its slate of directors and announced a plan to nominate only three candidates—Mr. Milikowsky, Karen Finerman and David Jardini (the “Milikowsky Group Directors”). During the proxy contest leading up to the 2014 Annual Meeting, Mr. Milikowsky made multiple public statements of his intention to work constructively with Joel Hawthorne and the other directors so that the Company could realize its full potential.
The Company held the 2014 Annual Meeting on May 15, 2014. The final voting results from the 2014 Annual Meeting were certified on May 21, 2014, and the Company filed those results with the SEC on that date. Based on those results, GrafTech stockholders elected the three Milikowsky Group Directors to the seven-member Board. Stockholders also elected Mr. Danjczek and Ms. Morris and re-elected Messrs. Carson and Hawthorne at that time. Messrs. Carson, Danjczek and Hawthorne and Ms. Morris are collectively the “Company Directors” and Mr. Carson, Mr. Danjczek and Ms. Morris are collectively the “Independent Directors.”
Immediately after the 2014 Annual Meeting on May 15, 2014, the current directors (whose election was not certified until May 21, 2014) met at the Company’s headquarters to discuss timing of upcoming meetings. At that meeting, Mr. Carson stated that none of the individuals then serving on the Company’s Audit and Finance Committee had been re-elected and suggested, in anticipation of determining the composition of such committee going forward, that the directors expand the Board by one member and commence a nationwide search for a director with a strong public accounting background or chief financial officer experience. Mr. Jardini questioned this proposal, and Mr. Milikowsky stated that the issue had not been raised in meetings with other stockholders.
Immediately following the May 15, 2014 informal meeting of directors-elect, each of the Milikowsky Group Directors requested a private meeting with a different Company Director. Beginning at these meetings and
continuing over the next several months, the Milikowsky Group Directors lobbied for a commercial strategy to increase the Company’s market share by focusing on the commodity aspects of the graphite-electrode business and pricing practices similar to those of low-cost industry participants (the “Dissident Strategy”). Various Milikowsky Group Directors contacted the Company Directors individually and described the Dissident Strategy as the only strategy that would create value for GrafTech and its stockholders. The Milikowsky Group Directors also claimed during these conversations with individual Company Directors that the Company’s stockholders had given an electoral mandate to the Dissident Strategy by electing the Milikowsky Group Directors. Each Company Director carefully evaluated these claims through several private one-on-one meetings, phone calls and e-mails, in each case insisting that these topics should be discussed in meetings of the full Board and with management. After numerous unsuccessful attempts to convince the Company Directors that the Dissident Strategy is the only viable operating strategy for the Company, the three Milikowsky Group Directors began to undermine and seek to replace management (as discussed below) and to destabilize the Board through changes to the senior management of the Company.
During the period from the 2014 Annual Meeting to the present, the Company Directors acted in support of the Company’s ongoing strategies—reduce costs, maximize operating leverage in anticipation of the cyclical rebound in steel and other end markets and continue profitably building on the strengths of the Engineered Solutions platform and its synergies with the Industrial Materials business. As Board members, the Milikowsky Group Directors did not oppose these actions. To foster a cooperative environment and address concerns raised by the Milikowsky Group Directors, the Company Directors and Company management have worked hard to fully engage with the Milikowsky Group Directors since the 2014 Annual Meeting, including as follows:
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Appointment of at least one Milikowsky Group Director to each NYSE-mandated Board committee, including appointment of both Mr. Milikowsky and Ms. Finerman to the Nominating & Governance Committee (thereby granting control of this three-member Board committee to the Milikowsky Group Directors and facilitating Mr. Milikowsky’s appointment as its Chair)
Formation of two new Advisory Groups in lieu of a proposed operating committee requested by the Milikowsky Group Directors, resulting in 16 additional meetings, teleconferences or reports (details below)
Dozens of meetings and phone calls among various of the Company Directors and the Milikowsky Group Directors to understand the difference in views regarding Company strategy and objectives
As Chief Executive Officer, Mr. Hawthorne met in person with Mr. Milikowsky, met twice in person with Mr. Jardini and had multiple calls with Ms. Finerman in the first two months after the 2014 Annual Meeting to better understand their views and the proposed value of the Dissident Strategy
As Chief Executive Officer, Mr. Hawthorne supplemented the normal Board presentations with more than 40 detailed Board notes throughout the year providing updates on operations, financial projections and competitive activity
Management arranged three plant tours for the Board
Management provided a variety of new reports in response to various director requests
The majority of this additional workflow revolved around the Milikowsky Group Directors’ advocacy of the Dissident Strategy and the unwillingness of Mr. Hawthorne and Company management to implement such a strategy due to concerns that doing so would destroy value for GrafTech stockholders.
On June 10, 2014, the Board held an organizational meeting to establish its committee assignments and receive an update on business conditions from management. During this meeting, Mr. Hawthorne voluntarily stepped down as Chairman of the Board and the Board unanimously elected Mr. Carson to that role. The Board also unanimously appointed Mr. Milikowsky to the Organization, Compensation and Pension Committee and the Nominating & Governance Committee, Ms. Finerman to the Nominating & Governance Committee and Mr. Jardini to the Audit and Finance Committee. As Chair of the Nominating & Governance Committee, Mr. Milikowsky has never taken action regarding the proposal to add accounting experience to the Board. Also during this June 10 organizational meeting, the directors held three discussions among the Company’s non-executive directors without Mr. Hawthorne present. In those non-executive sessions, Mr. Milikowsky communicated his view that the Board needed to replace the Company’s senior management, including Mr. Hawthorne.
The agenda for the next Board meeting called on July 22 and 23, 2014 for presentation and discussion of the Company’s strategy and operations. In an executive session at which Mr. Hawthorne was not present on July 23, 2014 and with the support of Mr. Jardini and Ms. Finerman, Mr. Milikowsky read from a previously prepared written document stating that Mr. Hawthorne and other members of management should be terminated and replaced immediately. Mr. Milikowsky declined to share the written document with the other non-executive directors. During his remarks, Mr. Milikowsky proposed that the Board appoint Mr. Jardini to replace Mr. Hawthorne as President and Chief Executive Officer. To resolve the issue, the directors present agreed that Mr. Carson, Mr. Milikowsky and Mr. Jardini would meet with Mr. Hawthorne to discuss ways to cooperate and develop some common ground.
In that follow-up meeting held on July 24, 2014, Mr. Milikowsky and Mr. Jardini reiterated the claim that the Company’s stockholders had given a mandate to the Milikowsky Group Directors and that the Company should adopt the Dissident Strategy. Messrs. Carson and Hawthorne respectfully expressed their disagreement with both assertions. Messrs. Milikowsky and Jardini also demanded that the Company terminate certain senior executives without cause and that the Board form an operating committee to include only Messrs. Milikowsky and Jardini. In furtherance of the proposed operating committee, Messrs. Milikowsky and Jardini requested that the Company provide the two of them with office space at the Company’s headquarters so that these two non-executive Company directors could attend all business meetings and participate in all decisions regarding strategy, operations, procurement, legal, personnel and other material items related to the Company’s business. Messrs. Carson and Hawthorne respectfully rejected the proposed operating committee and the other demands presented.
On a Board conference call held on July 28, 2014, Mr. Carson proposed forming Advisory Groups consisting of non-executive directors for each segment of the Company’s business—an Industrial Materials Advisory Group comprised of Mr. Danjczek, Mr. Milikowsky and Mr. Jardini and an Engineered Solutions Advisory Group comprised of Mr. Carson, Ms. Morris and Ms. Finerman (the “Advisory Groups”). Because of objections from Messrs. Milikowsky and Jardini, the Board did not formally act to charter the Advisory Groups. The Company Directors nonetheless proceeded to form the Advisory Groups (which are open to all sitting directors), resulting in 16 separate meetings, teleconferences or reports to date. At least one Milikowsky Group Director was present at substantially all of the Advisory Group meetings and the Milikowsky Group Directors had access to all information made available to the Advisory Groups.
On July 29, 2014, GrafTech announced that it had incurred an estimated non-cash impairment charge (the “Impairment Charge”) of approximately $126 million due to recent changes in the competitive environment impacting the Engineered Solutions segment’s advanced graphite materials business. In connection with the review of the second quarter 2014 financial statements, substantial attention was devoted to vetting the appropriateness of the Impairment Charge.
Also on July 29, 2014, Ms. Finerman requested that Mr. Carson convene a meeting of the Company’s non-executive directors to again discuss the level of Board support for Mr. Hawthorne.
On August 2, 2014, as the Advisory Groups were being formed and before the meeting requested by Ms. Finerman, Mr. Jardini and Mr. Hawthorne discussed and agreed upon many general concepts that could be implemented to simplify and decentralize the Company’s organization. But Mr. Jardini and Mr. Hawthorne could not agree on two points. First, Mr. Hawthorne insisted that the Company should continue to pursue its differentiated commercial approach based on quality, service and reliability while Mr. Jardini advocated a commodity-based approach to the market. Second, Mr. Jardini proposed that the Board appoint him as Chief Restructuring Officer reporting directly to the Board, with a commensurate reduction in Mr. Hawthorne’s duties and responsibilities. Mr. Hawthorne stated that the Board would have to approve any such proposal, but indicated support for the creation of an executive role for Mr. Jardini reporting to the Chief Executive Officer. Later the same day, Mr. Jardini delivered a written summary of the conversation and his Chief Restructuring Officer proposal to Mr. Hawthorne by email. Mr. Hawthorne forwarded the proposal to Mr. Carson.
On August 6, 2014, the directors (other than Mr. Hawthorne) informally convened by telephone to discuss their level of support for Mr. Hawthorne, as requested by Ms. Finerman. The discussion ended with the Independent Directors supporting Mr. Hawthorne and the Milikowsky Group Directors opposing him. The Board also discussed Mr. Jardini’s Chief Restructuring Officer proposal, which was never presented for a vote.
On August 8, 2014, the Company concluded and presented to the Audit and Finance Committee that the final Impairment Charge related to its Engineered Solutions segment would be approximately $122.0 million which was appropriately recorded and disclosed in the 2014 second quarter Form 10-Q.
On August 29, 2014, the Board received a request from Mr. Milikowsky’s legal counsel to reimburse Mr. Milikowsky for $500,455.49 allegedly incurred through July 2014 by him and certain persons associated with him in connection with the Internal Investigation and a previously undisclosed subpoena from the SEC. The letter also requested reimbursement of amounts subsequently incurred regarding such matters. With the August 29 request, Mr. Milikowsky submitted redacted documentation of expenses totaling $482,323.08. Mr. Milikowsky agreed to recuse himself from consideration of the request due to his conflict of interest and the request was submitted to the remaining members of the Board. GrafTech management requested additional information, including confirmation that a subpoena had been issued and sufficient billing detail to verify that the claimed expenses were properly reimbursable. Mr. Milikowsky refused to provide the requested information to the Company or the Board. With Mr. Milikowsky’s concurrence, the Board requested that outside legal counsel work directly with Mr. Milikowsky’s counsel to obtain and review the requested documentation. To date, the Board has authorized and the Company has advanced $385,064.51 to Mr. Milikowsky for properly documented expenses described in the August 29 request. Since the August 29 request, Mr. Milikowsky has submitted through counsel additional requests for advancement totaling $70,932.64, of which the Board has authorized and the Company has paid $12,088.54. To date, Mr. Milikowsky has not authorized the release of copies of the subpoena, his responses or any other relevant documentation regarding the status of the SEC investigation to the Board or the Company.
Also on August 29, 2014, the Board received a request from Mr. Milikowsky’s legal counsel to reimburse the Milikowsky Group for $5,946,251.54 in expenses allegedly incurred in connection with the 2014 Annual Meeting. The Board, with the Milikowsky Group Directors recusing themselves, considered this request and on September 18, 2014 communicated to the Milikowsky Group Directors that the Board needed more time to consider the request. On November 17, independent Board counsel sent a letter to Mr. Milikowsky’s counsel indicating that the Company Directors met, consistent with the Milikowsky Group Directors’ prior recusal, and determined that reimbursement of the requested proxy-contest expenses was not in the best interests of the Company’s stockholders. On March 30, 2015, the Special Committee (as defined below) determined to refer the question of reimbursement of these expenses to a stockholder vote at the Annual Meeting with a recommendation that the Company’s stockholders vote against reimbursement (see page 86 for a more detailed discussion of the proposal to reimburse these expenses and the Board’s recommendation that stockholders vote against the proposal).
At a Board meeting on September 18, 2014, Company management reviewed the Company’s capital structure and liquidity requirements with the Board and presented management’sgenerate sustainable long-term strategic plan, recapitalization options and related recommendations. Mr. Milikowsky immediately requested a meeting of the Company’s non-executive directors. In the session that followed without Mr. Hawthorne present, Ms. Finerman proposed that the Board terminate Mr. Hawthorne and appoint Mr. Milikowsky as the Company’s President and Chief Executive Officer. The Independent Directors rejected this proposal, as they felt Mr. Hawthorne was taking appropriate actions and providing solid leadership through the cyclical downturn in the Company’s key end markets.
On September 29, 2014, at the request of the Chair of the Audit and Finance Committee, a third party consultant completed additional procedures regarding the Company’s balance sheet. The Company’s management’s key controls, methodologies and key inputs and assumptions used to develop the Company’s balance sheet reserves were reviewed. The findings were presented to the Audit and Finance Committee.
On October 8, 2014, Ms. Finerman expressed concern to Mr. Carson regarding the viability of the Company and suggested the formation of a special committee comprised of Mr. Milikowsky, Ms. Morris and Ms. Finerman to review the Company’s future direction, explore strategic alternatives or financial restructuring and address the management of the Company. As a result of this request, Mr. Carson asked management to address Ms. Finerman’s viability concerns before the full Board.
On October 24, 2014, the Board held a special meeting to address Ms. Finerman’s concerns. At the meeting, Company management reiterated its September 18, 2014 assessment and related recommendations with the Company’s third-party financial advisors present. These financial advisors also delivered comments to the Board regarding the Company’s capital structure, liquidity and available financing options. During the meeting, Mr. Jardini expressed concern regarding the Company’s financial viability, liquidity, capital structure and ability to repay the $200 million senior subordinated notes due to mature in November 2015 (the “Senior Subordinated Notes”). The Senior Subordinated Notes are and have always been held entirely by Mr. Milikowsky, his associates and other persons connected to Mr. Milikowsky—including $7.3 million in Senior Subordinated Notes held by Mr. Jardini and his associates.
At a Board meeting on November 19, 2014, Mr. Milikowsky requested a meeting of the Company’s non-executive directors. During the session that followed without Mr. Hawthorne present, the Milikowsky Group Directors reiterated Ms. Finerman’s September 18, 2014 proposal to terminate Mr. Hawthorne’s employment with the Company. In light of the continuing conflict over strategic direction and the repeated requests to terminate Mr. Hawthorne, the Independent Directors concluded that a proxy contest regarding the Annual Meeting was a strong possibility. During the meetings on November 19, Ms. Finerman asked Mr. Milikowsky to propose terms on which such a proxy contest could be avoided and present a strategy that would create more value than the strategy being pursued by Company management. Shortly after the November 19 Board meeting, Mr. Carson asked Mr. Hawthorne to have Company management engage the Company’s third-party search firm to identify a qualified director candidate for potential addition to the Board.
On December 16, 2014, Mr. Milikowsky indicated that he would be willing to forego a proxy contest if the Board agreed on that day to immediately appoint Alan Carr and Frederic Brace—whom Mr. Milikowsky indicated were identified by his legal counsel—to an expanded Board and to create an operating committee of the Board with effective control over all Company operational decisions and stakeholder communications. In connection with this proposal, Mr. Milikowsky expressed a willingness to extend the maturity of the Senior Subordinated Notes on undisclosed terms so long as he was satisfied with management. Mr. Milikowsky did not present the requested new strategic proposals in connection with these settlement and refinancing offers. The Company Directors requested more information regarding Mr. Milikowsky’s proposal and the Board agreed to revisit the matter on December 22, 2014.
On December 22, 2014, the Board rejected Mr. Milikowsky’s timetable for his December 16 proposal, but agreed to interview Mr. Milikowsky’s two proposed candidates, Messrs. Carr and Brace. Between December 30, 2014 and January 12, 2015, the Company Directors individually conducted interviews with Mr. Carr and, separately, Mr. Brace. From this meeting and until January 20, 2015, the Company Directors conferred repeatedly with Mr. Milikowsky, including at a special Board meeting on January 12, 2015. The Company Directors’ objective during these discussions was to clarify Mr. Milikowsky’s proposed terms and pursue a compromise that did not involve giving Mr. Milikowsky a majority of the Board—and thus effective control over the Company without payment of a corresponding premium to stockholders.
On December 30, 2014, Mr. Milikowsky’s counsel requested a form of the Company’s non-employee director questionnaire, which the Company promptly provided.
On January 20, 2015, Mr. Carson sent a communication to Mr. Milikowsky offering to add one of the two candidates proposed by Mr. Milikowsky, plus a new independent candidate with a strong operational background at a large international company previously identified by an independent third-party search firm. The communication also invited Mr. Milikowsky to interview the identified third-party candidate. Mr. Milikowsky declined the offer without interviewing the proposed third-party candidate.
On January 23, 2015 Mr. Milikowsky formally notified the Company of his intent to nominate seven director candidates (the “Milikowsky Control Slate”)— including Messrs. Milikowsky and Jardini and Ms. Finerman (along with Frederic Brace, Alan Carr, Michael Christodolou and Fiona Scott Morton)—for election at the Annual Meeting and to present at the meeting a “bylaw moratorium” proposal. The bylaw-moratorium proposal, if adopted, would repeal any change to the Company’s then-current by-laws adopted before the Annual Meeting that adversely affect Mr. Milikowsky or the election of the Milikowsky Control Slate (see page 84 for a more detailed discussion of Mr. Milikowsky’s bylaw-moratorium proposal). Also on January 23, 2015, Mr. Milikowsky filed an open letter to the Board with the SEC, criticizing the Company Directors and Mr. Hawthorne’s performance as President and Chief Executive Officer.
On January 26, 2015, Mr. Carson filed an open letter to Mr. Milikowsky with the SEC. The letter expressed, among other things, disappointment with Mr. Milikowsky’s insistence on a proxy contest despite the efforts of the Company Directors to engage with the Milikowsky Group Directors and develop a mutually agreeable settlement short of a change of control without a premium to GrafTech stockholders.
On February 11, 2015, Mr. Milikowsky filed another open letter to Mr. Carson with the SEC. The letter criticized the Company’s recent performance, called for the immediate replacement of Mr. Hawthorne with Mr. Brace or Mr. Carr and presented for the first time indicative terms on which Mr. Milikowsky might agree to refinance the Senior Subordinated Notes.
On February 26, 2015, a majority of the Nominating & Governance Committee, with Mr. Milikowsky acting as Chair, voted to recommend the Milikowsky Control Slate for election at the Annual Meeting—the same seven nominees that Mr. Milikowsky intends to nominate as a dissident stockholder. During the Nominating & Governance Committee meeting, Mr. Carson suggested that Mr. Milikowsky and Ms. Finerman recuse themselves from a vote on whether the Board should recommend the same control slate that Mr. Milikowsky intends to nominate as a stockholder. Both Mr. Milikowsky and Ms. Finerman are members of the Milikowsky Control Slate. Mr. Milikowsky declined to recuse himself and voted in favor of the recommendation. Ms. Finerman also declined to recuse herself and voted in favor of the recommendation. Mr. Carson voted against the recommendation.
On February 27, 2015, a majority of the Board rejected the Nominating & Governance Committee’s recommendation that the Board endorse the Milikowsky Control Slate for election as the Company’s Board at the Annual Meeting. The Company Directors voted to reject the recommendation. Messrs. Milikowsky and Jardini voted in favor of the recommendation. Ms. Finerman recused herself from the Board vote regarding the recommendation.
Also on February 27, 2015, in an effort to address what the Company Directors perceived to be a conflict of interest for those members of the Nominating & Governance Committee included on the Milikowsky Control Slate, the Board established a special committee of the Board consisting of the Company Directors to oversee the Company’s activities in preparation for and at the Annual Meeting (the “Special Committee”). Messrs. Milikowsky and Jardini voted against the establishment of the Special Committee, but the measure passed with the affirmative vote of all other directors, including Ms. Finerman. Accordingly, the Special Committee has been performing the functions of the Nominating & Governance Committee and the Board with respect to the Annual Meeting since February 27, 2015 and is expected to continue performing those functions until the conclusion of the Annual Meeting.
Between February 27, 2015 and March 30, 2015, the Special Committee held four meetings. During those meetings, the Special Committee considered how best to empower stockholders to choose among the field of director nominees while mitigating against a change in Board control without payment of a corresponding premium to stockholders and any consequent adverse impacts on the Company’s strategy and operations. The Special Committee also considered the concerns raised by Mr. Milikowsky during his advocacy on behalf of the Milikowsky Control Slate. Finally, the Special Committee deliberated regarding the appropriate size of the Board and the diversity of skills and experiences that would best enhance Board effectiveness.
During this period, the Special Committee and Company management, with the help of two third-party search firms, reviewed the qualifications of more than 50 potential new director candidates, selected a short list of approximately 15 candidates and interviewed more than 10 candidates to arrive at the Special Committee’s final nominees. As part of this process, the Special Committee reviewed its members’ notes from the interviews conducted with Messrs. Carr and Brace in late December 2014 and early January 2015. The Special Committee also sought to interview Fiona Scott Morton and Michael Christodolou—the last two candidates on the Milikowsky Control Slate, but Ms. Scott Morton and Mr. Christodolou declined to be interviewed.
On March 2, 2015, the Company and the participating lenders amended the Company’s existing $400 million revolving credit facility to increase funds availability and to establish a new $40 million delayed-draw senior-secured term-loan facility. As a result of the March 2, 2015 amendment, the Company expanded its liquidity to address current debt maturities and enhanced its capital structure, consistent with the plans presented by Company management at the Board meeting on September 18, 2014 and reiterated in subsequent Board meetings and communications. The Company did so despite the Milikowsky Group Directors’ repeated assertions over the preceding nine months that the Company is not financially viable, the nomination by Mr. Milikowsky of restructuring professionals on the Milikowsky Control Slate and the unfounded liquidity concerns expressed by Mr. Milikowsky in his February 11, 2015 letter cited above.
On March 17, 2015, Mr. Milikowsky filed a preliminary proxy statement with the SEC. Among other things, such preliminary proxy statement states that “Save GrafTech will pay all costs of the solicitation of proxies on behalf of Save GrafTech...If all (or some of) the Nominees are elected, Save GrafTech intends to seek reimbursement of those costs from the Company...without seeking further approval by the Company’s Stockholders.”
Recommendation of the Special Committee
The Special Committee believes that Mr. Milikowsky, as the Company’s largest stockholder and the leader of one of the Company’s major creditor groups, is reasonable in his request to be represented on the Board. Accordingly, the Special Committee has implemented a universal proxy card, expanded the Board to nine members, and recommended seven candidates not supported by Mr. Milikowsky for election to the Board at the Annual Meeting. As a result, stockholders are assured of the election of at least two of Mr. Milikowsky’s nominees from among those listed on the Milikowsky Control Slate, including (if stockholders so vote) Mr. Milikowsky himself.
The members of the Special Committee are open to all ideas designed to enhance stockholder value. Mr. Milikowsky has now been a Company director in two different time periods (2010-2013 and 2014-2015). In both periods, the only operating strategy Mr. Milikowsky has presented to the Board is the highly commoditized approach to the Company’s business most recently encapsulated in the Dissident Strategy. The members of the Special Committee, with the assistance of third-party financial and legal advisors, have extensively considered the Dissident Strategy. The Special Committee firmly believes that the Company’s adoption of the Dissident Strategy would destroy value for GrafTech stockholders. In a reprise of his approach during the 2010-2013 period, Mr. Milikowsky has reacted to this failure to convince any unaffiliated Company directors of the validity of his operating strategy with another attempt to terminate the current President and Chief Executive Officer, including by replacing those same unconvinced and unaffiliated directors if necessary.
Despite several requests from the members of the Special Committee, the Milikowsky Group Directors have failed to articulate any actionable proposals to enhance stockholder value other than the Dissident Strategy and the general discussion between Messrs. Hawthorne and Jardini on August 2, 2014. Mr. Milikowsky has instead embarked upon another distracting and costly campaign to obtain control of the Board—which will effectively provide Mr. Milikowsky with operational control of the Company—without payingany premium to current Company stockholders. Please note that control premiums are not commonly associated with exercising a right to nominate directors, but rather are referred to in connection with purchases of a controlling interest in the capital stock of a company.
The Special Committee believes such an uncompensated transfer of control and the likely consequences for the Company’s overarching business strategy, operational continuity and employee morale are contrary to the best interests of the Company and its stockholders. The Special Committee vigorously opposes Mr. Milikowsky’s solicitation.Accordingly, the Board recommends that you NOT sign any blue proxy or instruction card sent to you. Whether or not you have previously executed a blue card, your Board urges you to sign, date and deliver the enclosed WHITE proxy or instruction card as soon as possible.
GrafTech is Successfully Executing on the Right Strategic Plan
The Company has a clear strategic plan in place that continues to drive important actions for change throughout the organization to build sustainable operating leverage and dramatically improve results. The Company has successfully completed three major cost-saving programs representing annual operating savings of more than $120 million and increased positive operating cash flows even as it navigates significant industry challenges. The Independent Directors believe that current Company management is the right team to continue executing against this strategic plan.
The Company Directors believe that electing the Milikowsky Control Slate—with its members’ focus on restructuring and distressed assets—would interrupt the ongoing implementation of the Company’s strategic plan and negatively impact stockholder value. The Company Directors further believe that a change in effective control of the Company without payment of a commensurate premium is not in the best interests of GrafTech stockholders. Please note that control premiums are not commonly associated with exercising a right to nominate directors, but rather are referred to in connection with purchases of a controlling interest in the capital stock of a company. Please take a moment and vote the WHITE card today.
Director Qualifications
In considering whether to recommend any candidate for inclusion in the Board’s slate of recommended director nominees, including candidates recommended by our stockholders or others, the Nominating Committee or our Board applies the criteria set forth in our Governance Guidelines and the Nominating Committee Charter. These criteria include the candidate’s integrity, business acumen, age, independence, experience, commitment, diligence, conflicts of interest and ability to act in the interests of all of our stockholders. The Board does not assign specific weights to particular criteria and no particular criterion is necessarily applicable to all prospective
nominees. We believe that the backgrounds and qualifications of the directors, considered as a group, should provide a significant composite mix of experience, knowledge and abilities that will allow our Board to fulfill its responsibilities and provide value to our stockholders. We believe that the Board, as a whole, should possess the following core competencies:
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We also believe that each director should possess the following skills, qualifications and characteristics:
High personal standards of integrity and honesty, and a desire to make full disclosure of all present and future conflicts of interest;
Ability to make informed business judgments;
Literacy in financial and business matters;
Ability to be an effective team member;
Commitment to active involvement and an ability to give priority to GrafTech;
No affiliations with competitors;
Achievement of high levels of accountability and success in his or her given fields;
No geographic travel restrictions;
Ability and willingness to learn our businesses;
Experience in our businesses or in professional fields (i.e., finance, accounting, law or banking) or other industries or as a manager of international businesses so as to have the ability to bring new insight, experience or contacts and resources to GrafTech;
Willingness to make a substantial personal investment in GrafTech;
No direct affiliations with major customers or vendors; and
Previous public company board experience together with good references.
Diversity
Our Governance Guidelines specify that the Nominating Committee should consider the value of diversity on the Board in the candidate identification and nomination process. The Nominating Committee seeks candidates with a broad diversity of experience and strategic and operational views and philosophies. The Nominating Committee’s evaluation of director candidates also includes consideration of their ability to contribute to the diversity of age, backgrounds, geographic regions, and experience represented on the Board.
Nominees are not discriminated against on the basis of race, color, religion, sex, ancestry, national origin, sexual orientation, disability or any other basis proscribed by law. Under our Governance Guidelines, a director will not be nominated for election or re- election if he or she would be age 74 or older at the time of election.
Background Information with Respect to Nominees
The following is information about each of the director nominees as of the date of this proxy statement, including professional background, director positions held currently or at any time during the last five years, involvement in certain legal or administrative proceedings, if applicable, and the specific qualifications, experience, attributes or skills that caused the Special Committee and our board of directors to determine that the nominee should serve as one of our directors. We believe that all of our director nominees adhere to high standards for integrity, honesty and ethics and that each has demonstrated business acumen and an ability to exercise sound judgment independent of personal interests, as well as a commitment of service to GrafTech and the Board.
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Information about
Our Board is committed to strong corporate governance practices and dedicated to ensuring that GrafTech is managed for the numberlong-term benefit of shares beneficially ownedour stockholders and other stakeholders. To fulfill this role, the Board and its committees meet throughout the year and engage in meaningful discussions with management to ensure that the Board is informed regarding the Company’s activities, operating plans and strategic initiatives.
Because Brookfield participated in certain secondary offerings of our common stock in 2020 and 2021 and no longer owns a majority of our outstanding common stock, we are no longer a “controlled company” as that term is set forth in the NYSE listing standards. For more information, see “—Loss of Controlled Company Exemption.” To promote full and complete compliance with all applicable corporate governance standards and remain aligned with best practices demonstrated by eachother similarly situated public companies, the Board has adopted corporate governance principles and procedures, which it reviews and amends as necessary. We also continuously review guidance and interpretations provided by the Securities and Exchange Commission (“SEC”) and the NYSE.
Stockholders proposing director nominations must comply with the advance notice and specific information requirements in our Amended and Restated By-Laws (“By-Laws”), which include, among other things, the disclosure of hedging, derivative interests and other material interests of the nomineesnominating stockholder and current directors appears below under “Security Ownershipdirector nominee. In addition, each director nominee proposed by a stockholder must deliver a statement whether he or she agrees to, promptly following the stockholder meeting at which such nominee is elected or re-elected, tender an irrevocable advance resignation in accordance with our By-Laws and Corporate Governance Guidelines.
You can access our Audit Committee Charter, Code of ManagementConduct and Certain Beneficial Owners.” BasedEthics, Governance and Compensation Committee Charter and Corporate Governance Guidelines in the “Investors” section of our website, www.graftech.com. Information on, information provided by each nominee, there are no family relationships among anyor accessible through, our website is not part of the directorsthis Proxy Statement. We have included our website only as an inactive textual reference and executive officers of GrafTech (For additional information, see “Related Person Transactions”), none of the nominees named above have been convicted in a criminal proceeding (excluding traffic violations or similar misdemeanors) or involved in other legal proceedings during the past ten years, including insolvency laws that would be requireddo not intend it to be disclosedan active link to our website. You may also request that the above documents be mailed to you by writing to: GrafTech International Ltd., 982 Keynote Circle, Brooklyn Heights, OH 44131, Attention: Investor Relations.
Our business and affairs are managed under SEC rules, and nonethe direction of the nominees named above was selected as a nominee pursuant to any arrangement or understanding between such nominee and any other person.
Director nominees are elected by a plurality of the votes cast by holders of outstanding shares.
THE BOARD RECOMMENDS A VOTEFOR THE ELECTION OF THE SEVEN NOMINEES NAMED ABOVE, EACH TO SERVE UNTIL THE NEXT ANNUAL MEETING OF STOCKHOLDERS AND UNTIL HIS OR HER SUCCESSOR HAS BEEN DULY ELECTED AND QUALIFIED
Structure of the Board
our Board. Under our by-laws, the Board fixes the sizeAmended Certificate of the Board, so long asIncorporation, the number of directors is fixed by our Board, but will not lessbe fewer than three or more than fifteen.directors. The Board currently consists of seven members, eachnine directors.
Our Amended Certificate of whomIncorporation provides that our Board be divided into three classes of directors, with the Board has determinedclasses to be an independent director (withinas nearly equal in number as possible, and with the meaningdirectors serving three-year terms. Only one class of directors will be elected at each annual meeting of our stockholders, with the listing standardsother classes continuing for the remainder of their respective three-year terms. Our directors are divided among the NYSE), except for Mr. Hawthorne, who is a GrafTech employee. Effective upon due electionthree classes as follows:
the Class I directors are Denis A. Turcotte, Michel J. Dumas, and qualificationLeslie D. Dunn, and their terms will expire at the annual meeting of stockholders to be held in 2022;
the Class II directors are Brian L. Acton, David Gregory and David J. Rintoul, and their terms will expire at the annual meeting of stockholders to be held in 2023; and
the Class III directors are Catherine L. Clegg, Jeffrey C. Dutton and Anthony R. Taccone, and their terms will expire at the Annual Meeting,Meeting.
Any increase or decrease in the number of directors constitutingwill be distributed among the three classes so that, as nearly as possible, each class will consist of one-third of the directors. Given that Brookfield no longer owns more than 50% of our Board shall be nine.
The Board has determined that, to be considered independent, an outside director may not have a material relationship withoutstanding common stock, the Company (directly or as a partner, stockholder or officerclassification of an organization that has a relationship with the Company). In determining whether a material relationship exists, the Board considers, amongand the other things, whetherprovisions of the Amended Certificate of Incorporation may be amended only by the affirmative vote of the holders of 662/3% or more of the voting power of our outstanding common stock.
If the total number of shares voted in favor of a director or a membernominee in an uncontested election are less than the total number of shares voted against such director nominee, the director nominee will tender his or her immediate family received in any 12-month period duringresignation immediately after the past three years more than $120,000 in direct compensation fromstockholder meeting and the Company (other than director fees and pension or other deferred compensation for prior service),Board will determine whether to accept the director has in the last three years been a Company employee (or whether a memberresignation within 90 days of the director’s immediate family hasstockholder meeting.
We and Brookfield entered into a stockholder rights agreement (as amended, the “Stockholder Rights Agreement”) in connection with our IPO. Under the last three years been a GrafTech executive officer), whetherStockholder Rights Agreement, for so long as Brookfield owns or controls at least 25% of our outstanding common stock, Brookfield will have the director or a memberright to nominate the higher of 37.5% of the director’s immediate family is or has been affiliated with a current or former auditor of GrafTech, and whether the director is or has been part of an interlocking directorate. The Board consults with GrafTech’s counsel to ensure that the Board’s determinations are consistent with all relevant securities and other laws and regulations regarding the definition of “independent director,” including those set forth in the listing standards of the NYSE.
The Board selects the Chairpersonmembers of the Board followingand three members of the Board (the “Brookfield directors”), and one Brookfield director will be in each class. Brookfield will also have the right to select the Chairman of the Board. In the event Brookfield owns or controls less than 25% of our outstanding common stock, the Brookfield directors will promptly tender their resignations. The Board (excluding the Brookfield directors) will have the option, but not the obligation, to accept the Brookfield directors’ resignations. If the Board (excluding the Brookfield directors) votes to accept these resignations, the Brookfield directors will cease to be members of the Board. If the Board (excluding the Brookfield directors) votes not to accept these resignations, the Brookfield directors will continue to serve as members of the Board until the next annual meeting of stockholders. Subject to election as suchour stockholders, regardless of the time remaining in their respective terms of office. The current Board members that were designated by Brookfield are Denis A. Turcotte, David Gregory and Jeffrey C. Dutton. For more information regarding the Board following the Annual Meeting, Mr. Carson, who is an independent directorStockholder Rights Agreement, see “Certain Relationships and who has been our Chairman since 2014, is expected to become our Chairperson following the Annual Meeting.Related Party Transactions.”
Our Board has established three standing committees,By-Laws provide that the Audit and Finance Committee, or the Audit Committee, the Nominating and Governance Committee, or the Nominating Committee, and the Organization, Compensation and Pension Committee, or the Compensation Committee, and periodically establishes other committees, in each case so that certain important matters can be addressed in greater depth than may be possible inpresence of a meetingmajority of the entire Board. Under our Governance Guidelines andtotal number of directors will be required to constitute a quorum.
Our Amended Certificate of Incorporation provides that the committee charters described below, membersChairman may or may not be an officer of the three standing committees must be independent directors within the meaning of the listing standards of the NYSE. Further, members of the Audit Committee must be independent directors within the meaning of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002, must satisfy the expertise requirements of the listing standards of the NYSE, as required by the committee’s charter, and must include an audit committee financial expert within the meaning of the SEC rules. Our Board has determined that the three standing committees currently consist of members who satisfy such requirements.
Board Leadership Structure and Separation of Chair and CEO Roles
Our Board believes it is in the best interests of the Company and its stockholders that the Board make its own determinations, based on all of the then current facts and circumstances, regarding whether to separate the roles of Chairperson and Chief Executive Officer and whether our Chairperson, if not the Chief Executive Officer, should be an independent director.Company. While separation of those rolesthis matter relates to corporate governance, it also relates to succession planning, and our Board believes it is in the best interests of GrafTech and our stockholdersthe Company for the Board to make a determination with respect to this matter on a case-by-case basis as part of the succession planning.
Subsequent toplanning process. Currently, our Chairman is Denis A. Turcotte and our CEO is David J. Rintoul. The G&C Committee will periodically consider the 2014 Annual Meeting of stockholders, the role of Chairpersonsize and structure of the Board and Chief Executive Officerreport the results of its review and any recommendations for change to the Board. Notwithstanding any such recommendation of the G&C Committee, Brookfield has the right to select the Chairman of the Board under the terms of the Stockholder Rights Agreement as discussed above.
Loss of Controlled Company Exemption
Upon completion of a secondary offering by Brookfield on January 20, 2021, we have ceased to be a “controlled company,” as that term is set forth in the NYSE listing standards. Under the NYSE listing standards, a company that ceases to be a controlled company must comply with the independent board committee requirements as they relate to nominating and corporate governance and compensation committees on the following phase-in schedule: (i) one independent committee member at the time it ceases to be a controlled company; (ii) a majority of independent committee members within 90 days of the date it ceases to be a controlled company; and (iii) all independent committee members within one year of the date it ceases to be a controlled company. Additionally, the NYSE listing standards provide a 12-month phase-in period from the date a company ceases to be a controlled company to comply with the majority independent board requirement and the nominating and corporate governance committee and compensation committee charters requirement.
We currently comply with the NYSE listing standards requiring a majority of independent board members, a fully independent audit committee and a majority of independent directors serve on the G&C Committee. To meet the requirement that we have fully independent nominating and governance and compensation committees within one year of losing controlled company status, we intend to appoint additional directors to the Board and committees and/or appoint current directors who are deemed independent to additional committees. We also intend to establish separate nominating and governance and compensation committees.
Our Board has undertaken a review of the independence of the nine directors on our Board. Based on this review, the Board has determined that five members of the Board, Michel J. Dumas, Brian L. Acton, Catherine L. Clegg, Anthony R. Taccone and Leslie D. Dunn currently qualify as “independent” under the NYSE listing standards.
In making these determinations, our Board considered any current and prior relationships or transactions that each director has with the Company and other information provided by each director concerning his or her background, employment and affiliations, including the beneficial ownership of our capital stock by each director and the transactions involving them described in “—2020 Director Compensation” and “Certain Relationships and Related Party Transactions.” Our Board considered the Company’s purchases in 2019, 2020 and 2021 of access to steel industry research data from a company of which Anthony R. Taccone is a partner, as well as consulting services provided to Brookfield in a matter unrelated to the Company. The amounts involved in each case, as well as in the aggregate, were separated and Mr. Carson became our Chairman.well below $120,000. The Board believesconcluded that these transactions would not interfere with Mr. Taccone’s exercise of independent judgment in carrying out the current leadership structure is appropriate givenresponsibilities of a director and thus did not impair his independence. Our Board also considered Catherine L. Clegg’s director position with Clarios International LP, a Brookfield portfolio company, and determined that the Company’srelationship would not interfere with Ms. Clegg’s exercise of independent judgment in carrying out the responsibilities of a director and thus did not impair her independence.
Committees of the Board’s current needs.
The Board’s Role in Risk OversightBoard of Directors
The Board has established two standing committees to assist it in carrying out its responsibilities: the Audit Committee and the G&C Committee. The Board intends to separate the G&C Committee into a nominating and governance committee and a compensation committee with separate charters. Each of the existing committees operate under its own written charter adopted by the Board and available on our website. The membership and the function of each of the existing committees are actively involved in overseeing the assessment and management of risk for the Company. The Board receives reports from each committee chair regarding the committee’s
considerations and actions. The risk oversight process includes receiving regular reports from members of senior management on areas of material risk, including operational, financial, legal and regulatory, and strategic and reputational risks, and on the Company’s processes regarding enterprise risk management. Our Governance Guidelines and Nominating Committee Charter provide, among other things, that the Board as a whole should possess as one of its competencies the ability to assess business risk.
Under principles articulated by the NYSE, it is the job of the Chief Executive Officer and senior management to assess and manage our Company’s exposure to risk, and our Audit Committee must discuss guidelines and policies to govern the process by which this is handled.
The duties of our Audit Committee include, with respect to financial affairs, the identification, assessment and management of financial risks and uncertainties, such as:Committee:
Reviewingappoints the independent auditor annually; monitors the quality of the work of the independent auditor, monitors their independence and replaces them as necessary in the sole judgment of the committee; pre-approves the audit plan (including services relating to internal controls over financial reporting), any proposed audit-related, tax and other services and pre-approves all related compensation; reviews with the auditor the results of the annual audit; reviews with the auditor any review of the quarterly financial statements that the committee may direct the auditor to perform;
approves the annual corporate audit services plan and budget; reviews with the senior corporate audit services executive the results of the audit work at least annually and more frequently as provided in the policy for reporting financial accounting and auditing concerns, as approved by the committee; at least annually reviews the performance of the corporate audit services team;
reviews and discusses with management and the independent registered public accounting firmauditor the annual audited financial statements and the adequacy of the internal control over financial reporting;
discusses with management and the independent auditor significant financial reporting issues and judgments made in connection with the preparation of our financial reportingstatements, including any significant changes in our selection or application of accounting principles, any significant issues (“material weaknesses” or “significant deficiencies,” as such terms are defined in the Sarbanes-Oxley Act) as to the adequacy of our accounting controls and any remediation used in connection with any such issues;
oversees company policies and practices with respect to financial risk assessment and management policies and practices, including related corporate approval requirements and internal auditing systems, and initiatives to minimize related risks;
Discussing guidelines and policies to govern the process by which risk assessment and management is undertaken;
Reviewing with management our compliance with covenants under debt securities and credit facilities;
Reviewing contingencies that could reasonably be expected to have significant impact on financial performance or condition;management; and
Reviewing withregularly reports its work to the General Counsel all legal mattersBoard.
The members of the Audit Committee are Michel J. Dumas (Chair), Brian L. Acton and Anthony R. Taccone. Our Board has determined that could reasonably be expected to have a significant impact on financial condition or performance.
We maintain an internal audit function, which reports directly(i) Michel J. Dumas, Brian L. Acton and Anthony R. Taccone are independent directors, (ii) each director appointed to the Audit Committee is financially literate and (iii) Michel J. Dumas is our Audit Committee financial expert. During fiscal year 2020, our Audit Committee held eight meetings. Our Audit Committee operates under a written charter that satisfies the applicable rules of the SEC and the NYSE listing standards.
Governance and Compensation Committee
The G&C Committee:
recommends to providethe Board principles of corporate governance applicable to us;
oversees the processes established by management regarding compliance with legal and regulatory requirements and ethical programs and policies as established by management and the Audit Committee with ongoing assessmentsBoard, including without limitation, our Code of Conduct and Ethics, our risk management processescompliance program and systemour regulatory and quality compliance initiatives; and oversees management’s establishment of internal control.
The Audit Committee Charter provides that the duty and responsibility ofa process for reporting these matters to the Audit Committee, other Board committees or the full Board as appropriate;
reviews and each of its members is one of oversight and neither the Audit Committee nor any of its members has any duty or responsibilitymakes recommendations to among other things, guarantee or provide other assurances that there are no financial risks or uncertainties or that such risks or uncertainties have been reduced or eliminated.
Meetings of the Board
Each director is expected to attend Board meetings regarding the size and the meetings of those committees of the Board of which he or she is a member, and to spend the time necessary to properly discharge his or her respective duties and responsibilities. During 2014, the Board met 22 times and each director who was then serving attended at least 75% of the total number of meetingsstructure of the Board and the committees of which he or she was a member. Directors are encouraged, but not required, to attend ourthe Board;
determines the process for the annual meetings of stockholders.
Number of Members | Independence | Number of Meetings during Fiscal Year 2014 | ||||||||||
Full Board of Directors | 7 | 85 | %* | 22 | ||||||||
Audit and Finance Committee | 3 | 100 | % | 7 | ||||||||
Organization, Compensation and Pension Committee | 3 | 100 | % | 9 | ||||||||
Nominating and Governance Committee | 3 | 100 | % | 7 |
Committeesself-assessments of the Board
A description and its committees and oversees the implementation and reporting back of the functionsresults;
reviews and makes recommendations to the Board regarding leadership and membership of each standing committee is set forth below. A listcommittees of the Board;
develops and administers the process and criteria for selecting new directors and nominees for vacancies on the Board and candidates for Board membership;
with advice of outside counsel, (a) establishes a process for overseeing potential conflicts of interest between the company and directors and the company and members of each standing committeemanagement, and (b) considers at March 1, 2015 is also set forth below. All committees haveleast annually the authorityindependence of directors;
regularly reports its activities to retain and pay advisors and conduct investigations without further approvalthe Board;
recommends to the Board remuneration of the Board or management. All such advisors shall reportCEO and be responsible directlydetermines remuneration of our other senior executives;
conducts evaluation of the CEO for submission to the committeeBoard;
grants awards under and otherwise administers our stock incentive plans and approves and administers any other compensation plan in which retains them, includingour executive officers participate;
reviews succession planning for the independent registered public accounting firm, which is required to be retained byCEO and be responsible directlysenior executives, and reports on such matters to the Audit Committee.Board;
Board
retains compensation consultants and obtains advice from internal or external advisors, as necessary;
presents the annual Compensation Committee ChartersReport on executive compensation for our proxy statement; and
reviews its own performance annually.
The Board adopted our Governance Guidelines andG&C Committee operates under a written charter and consists of at least three directors, at least two of whom must qualify as “independent” under the NYSE listing standards; at least one of the remaining members may be appointed by Brookfield. In connection with our transition to a non-controlled company, NYSE listing standards require all members of our corporate governance committee and compensation committee be “independent” by January 20, 2022. The current members of the G&C Committee are Denis A. Turcotte (Chair), Brian L. Acton, Catherine L. Clegg and Anthony R. Taccone. Our Board has determined that Brian L. Acton, Catherine L. Clegg and Anthony R. Taccone are independent directors. During fiscal year 2020, our G&C Committee held eight meetings. The G&C Committee may delegate any of its responsibilities to a subcommittee comprised of one or more of its members, as appropriate. For more information about the roles our executive officers and the compensation consultant to the G&C Committee have in determining or recommending executive compensation, please see the Compensation Discussion and Analysis (“CD&A”) disclosure below. For more information about our director compensation program, please see the 2020 Director Compensation disclosure below.
Compensation Committee Interlocks and Insider Participation
None.
Our Board has adopted a code of conduct and ethics applicable to our employees, directors and officers, in accordance with applicable U.S. federal securities laws and the listing standards of the NYSE. Any waiver or amendment of this code for each committee that, at a minimum, are intended to satisfyexecutive officers or directors (i) may be made only by the Audit Committee, (ii) will be promptly disclosed as required by applicable U.S. federal securities laws and the listing standards of the NYSE and that are reviewed by(iii) will be available in the “Investors” section of our website, www.graftech.com.
During fiscal 2020, our Board held 16 meetings, including regularly scheduled and special meetings. Our Governance Guidelinesdirectors’ average attendance was 94%, and charters cover such matters as purpose and powers, composition, meetings, procedures, required responsibilities and discretionary activities which the Board or the appropriate committee should periodically consider undertaking. Each committee is authorized to exercise all powereach current director attended at least 80% of the Board with respect to matters within the scopeaggregate number of its charter.
Our Governance Guidelines and eachmeetings of the standing committee charters are available on our website athttp://www.graftech.com/CORPORATE-INFO/Corporate-Governance.aspx. The information contained on our website is not part of this proxy statement.
Our Governance GuidelinesBoard and the committee charters are not intended to, andcommittees on which he or she served. We encourage, but do not expand or increaserequire, our directors to attend each annual meeting of stockholders. All of our directors attended the duties, liabilities or responsibilities2020 annual meeting of anystockholders.
Director Skills and Qualifications Criteria
The G&C Committee reviews at least annually the skills, qualifications and characteristics for election of new and continuation of existing directors. The criteria considered in selecting director under any circumstance beyond those that a director would otherwise have undernominees reflect applicable laws, rules and regulations.
Corporate Governance
Our Governance Guidelines provide, among other things, that:
a majority of the directors shall be independent within the meaning oflaw, the listing standards of the NYSE;NYSE, the terms of the Stockholder Rights Agreement as well as a candidate’s integrity, strength of character, judgment, business experience, specific areas of expertise, ability to devote sufficient time to attendance at and preparation for Board meetings, factors relating to the composition of the Board (including its size and structure) and principles of diversity. The G&C Committee implemented a Board of Directors Diversity Policy earlier this year, which illustrates its attention and desire to maintain an environment free from discrimination on the basis of, among other things, race, color, religion, nationality, age and gender.
The G&C Committee recommends to the Board all nominees to be proposed by the Company for election to the Board, as well as actions with respect to individuals nominated by third parties.
Directors whose positions, responsibilities or commitments change materially after they were elected to the Board are required to inform the G&C Committee and volunteer to resign from the Board so that the G&C Committee may have an opportunity to review the appropriateness of continued membership under the circumstances, including with respect to independence, and make recommendations to the Board, which could accept the volunteered resignation but need not do so.
Directors are expected to serve on at most a limited number of other public company boards. Prior to accepting an invitation to serve on another public company board, directors must advise the G&C Committee and must receive written confirmation from the head of the legal department that there are no legal or regulatory impediments to such service.
The G&C Committee leads the effort to identify and recruit candidates to join the Board. In this context, the G&C Committee’s view is that the Board should reflect a balance between the experience that comes with longevity of service on the Board and the need for renewal and fresh perspectives. The G&C Committee does not support a mandatory retirement age, director term limits or other mandatory Board turnover mechanisms because its view is that such policies are overly prescriptive; therefore, the Company does not have term limits or other mechanisms that compel Board turnover. The G&C Committee does believe that periodically adding new voices to the Board can help the Company adapt to a changing business environment and Board renewal continues to be a priority.
Director Orientation and Continuing Education
All new directors participate in an orientation program (the “Orientation Program”) reasonably promptly after they are elected. The Orientation Program includes presentations by senior management and internal and independent auditors to familiarize new directors with strategic plans, significant financial, accounting and risk management issues and compliance programs (including the Company’s Code of Conduct and Ethics and other applicable policies). In addition, the Orientation Program can include visits to headquarters and, to the extent practical, certain of the significant facilities.
All other directors are welcome to attend the Orientation Program. Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, our 2020 Orientation Program was adjusted in the interest of safety and included virtual presentations.
All directors are also encouraged to participate in Continuing Education Programs offered by the NYSE and other organizations, and the Company will reimburse directors for reasonable costs associated therewith.
Our non-employee directors received the following compensation for service on our Board in 2020. As a Company employee, Mr. Rintoul does not receive any additional compensation for his service on the Board. The Board previously determined not to compensate the Brookfield directors individually for their service on the Board and, on November 6, 2019, the Stockholder Rights Agreement was amended as discussed below to reimburse Brookfield for the services of its designated directors.
Name | Fees Earned or Paid in Cash ($)(1) | Stock Awards ($)(2) | All Other Compensation ($)(3) | Total ($) | ||||
Denis A. Turcotte | — | — | 195,000 | 195,000 | ||||
Brian L. Acton(4) | 72,500 | 72,500 | — | 145,000 | ||||
Catherine L. Clegg(4) | 70,000 | 70,000 | — | 140,000 | ||||
Michel J. Dumas(4) | 82,500 | 82,500 | — | 165,000 | ||||
Jeffrey C. Dutton | — | — | 137,500 | 137,500 | ||||
David Gregory | — | — | 137,500 | 137,500 | ||||
Anthony R. Taccone(4) | 72,500 | 72,500 | — | 145,000 | ||||
Leslie D. Dunn(5) | 30,367 | 30,367 | — | 60,734 |
if a member
(1) | Ms. Clegg and Mr. Acton chose to defer all of their cash fees, or $140,000 and $145,000, respectively, into deferred share units (“DSUs”) pursuant to the Director Deferred Fee Plan (described below), receiving 17,065 and 17,665 DSUs, respectively. | |
(2) | Reflects the aggregate grant date fair value pursuant to Financial Accounting Standards Board (“FASB”) Accounting Standards Codification (“ASC”) Topic 718, Compensation – Stock Compensation, of DSUs granted under our Omnibus Equity Incentive Plan (the “Equity Plan”) in accordance with our director stock ownership guidelines. Additional details on accounting for stock-based compensation can be found in Note 3, Stock Based and Other Management Compensation to our Consolidated Financial Statements contained in our Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2020. | |
(3) | Represents amounts paid to Brookfield for services of the Brookfield designated directors under the terms of the Amendment to the Stockholder Rights Agreement entered into on November 6, 2019. | |
(4) | As of December 31, 2020, Ms. Clegg, Ms. Dunn and Messrs. Acton, Dumas and Taccone held a total of 25,261, 3,459, 36,672, 26,829 and 18,336 DSUs, respectively, which includes accrued dividend equivalents credited as additional DSUs. | |
(5) | Ms. Dunn joined the Board on August 5, 2020. |
Following our IPO, the Board determined to compensate its independent directors with an annual cash retainer of $125,000, payable in equal installments at the end of each quarter, with the Audit Committee simultaneously serves onChair receiving an audit committeeadditional retainer of more than three public companies, our Board must determine that such simultaneous service would not impair$15,000. All out-of-pocket business travel and accommodation expenses are reimbursed.
On November 6, 2019, we and Brookfield amended the abilityStockholder Rights Agreement to reimburse Brookfield for the services of such member to effectively serve on the Audit Committee;
no director will be nominatedBrookfield directors for election or re-election if he or she would be age 74 or older at(1) cash compensation consistent with the timecompensation received by other non-management members of election;
the Board shall meet in regular sessions at least six times annually (including telephonic meetings and (2) to the annual retreat described below);
the Board shall have an annual extended retreat with executive officers at which there will beextent a full review of financial statements and financial disclosures, long-term strategies, plans and risks, and current developments in corporate governance; and
non-management directors will meet in executive session at least once annually.
Mr. Hawthorne is the only member of management whoBrookfield director serves as a GrafTech director. All of our non-management directors are independent under NYSE listing standards. Our Independent Directors meet in executive session in connection with our regular Board meetings.
Communications with Non-Management Directors
Our Governance Guidelines require the Board, in consultation with the General Counsel, to establish a means for stockholders and employees to communicate with non-management directors and to disclose the name of director who presides at meetings of non-management directors and who will ultimately receive such communication, and the means for such communication in the annual proxy statement. A majority of the non-management directors choose the Chairman of the Board, any additional compensation as director who presides atmay be approved by the meetingsunaffiliated independent members of non-management directors. Randy W. Carson is currently servingthe Board for such service as Chairman of the Board.
Stockholders, employees and other interested parties (including those who are not stockholders or employees) may make any such communications
Effective as of July 1, 2020, the Board approved revisions to the Chairman ofdirector compensation program as follows:
Description | Annual Fee | |
Non-Employee Director Retainer | $150,000 | |
Presiding Independent Director Retainer | $20,000 | |
Audit Committee Chair Retainer | $20,000 | |
Governance and Compensation Committee Chair Retainer | $15,000 | |
Audit Committee Member Retainer (other than the Chair) | $10,000 | |
Governance and Compensation Committee Member Retainer (other than the Chair) | $5,000 |
In addition, the Board and should direct them to M. Ridgway Barker, Withers Bergman LLP, 157 Church Street, New Haven, Connecticut 06502, (203) 789-1320 (phone), (203) 785-8127 (fax), andmr.barker@withersworldwide.com. Mr. Barker will forward all such communications to the Chairman of the Board if they relate to substantive matters and include suggestions or comments that he considers importantapproved an additional annual retainer for the Chairman of the Board of $100,000.
Director Stock Ownership Guidelines
Independent directors not otherwise appointed by Brookfield will be required, within five years of joining the Board, to know. Generally, communications relatingacquire shares or share equivalents in the Company having an aggregate value equal to corporate governanceat least three times the then-annual retainer (currently $450,000). Prior to achieving this, independent directors will receive fifty percent of their annual retainer in DSUs under the Equity Plan, which DSUs will be fully vested upon grant. Directors may also elect to receive a portion of their annual cash retainers in fully-vested DSUs voluntarily under the Amended and long-term corporate strategy areRestated GrafTech International Ltd. Director Deferred Fee Plan (as amended, the “Director Deferred Fee Plan”). All DSUs will count towards the stock ownership guidelines. After a director first satisfies the stock ownership guidelines, there will not be any further requirement for the director to receive his or her compensation in the form of additional DSUs; however, the stock ownership requirement will be evaluated each year in December and, in the event that an independent director who previously met the requirement no longer does, that director will need to acquire more likelycommon shares or to elect to receive a portion of his or her annual retainer in DSUs for the following year. All DSUs will accrue dividend equivalents that will be forwarded than communications relatingcredited to ordinary business affairs or personal grievances or communications which are repetitive or duplicative.the director as additional DSUs. All DSUs will be settled in shares of our common stock after termination of service on the Board.
Code of Conduct and EthicsRisk Oversight
We have had for many years a Code of Conduct and Ethics. Our Code of Conduct and Ethics applies to all employees, including senior executives and financial officers, as well as to all directors. It is intended, at a minimum, to comply withThe Board oversees the listing standardsmanagement of the NYSE,Company’s risk exposure through the following framework: management regularly provides to the Board updated information concerning strategic, operational and emerging risks to the Company’s primary business goals and initiatives in each geographic area and each functional group, as well as the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002 and the SEC rules adopted thereunder. A copy of our Code of Conduct and Ethics is available on our website athttp://www.graftech.com/CORPORATE-INFO/Corporate-Governance.aspx. The information contained on our website is not part of this proxy statement. Only the Board or the Audit Committee may waive the provisions of our Code of Conduct and Ethics with respectCompany’s efforts to executive officers and directors. Any such waivers will be posted on our website.
Related Person Transactionsmitigate those risks.
The Board recognizesis responsible for understanding the Company’s most significant risks, ensuring that transactionsmanagement responds appropriately, and making risk-informed strategic decisions. The Board monitors risk exposure to ensure that it is in line with the Company’s overall tolerance for, and ability to manage, risk.
Our Audit Committee, which is made up solely of independent directors, who have had extensive experience in providing strategic and advisory services to other companies, assist the Board in evaluating the risks the Company faces as well as our policies for risk management and assessment.
The Audit Committee:
Has primary responsibility for assisting the Board with risk oversight for the Company.
Considers audit, accounting, financial reporting and compliance risk, including material litigation instituted against the Company, cybersecurity issues and the resolution of any ethics issues.
Holds, at each regularly scheduled meeting, separate executive sessions to identify and assess risks and oversee the methodologies that management implements to address those risks. These executive sessions often include representatives from our independent registered public accounting firm, as well as from our risk management and internal audit, finance and legal departments.
The G&C Committee:
Reviews and balances risk in our compensation practices, programs and policies.
Annually assesses the Company’s compensation programs to determine if any elements of these plans create an inappropriate level of risk and to evaluate management’s methods to mitigate any potential risks.
Oversees risks associated with Board and committee composition, including the annual self-assessments of the Board and its committees and oversees the implementation and reporting back of the results.
The Board’s role in risk oversight complements our leadership structure, with senior management responsible for assessing, managing and mitigating our risk exposure and the Board and its committees overseeing those efforts. We believe that this is an effective approach to addressing the risks we participateface and in whichsupports our current Board leadership structure, as it allows our independent directors to evaluate our risks and our risk management and assessment policies, including through the fully independent Audit Committee, with ultimate oversight by the full Board. In particular, the G&C Committee has determined that none of our compensation policies and practices creates any risks that are reasonably likely to have a material adverse effect on the Company.
Communications from Stockholders and Other Interested Parties
The Company values your feedback. Any stockholder or interested party who desires to contact the Company’s Chairman, the Presiding Independent Director, the independent or non-management directors as a group or the other members of the Board may do so by writing to the Corporate Secretary, GrafTech International Ltd., at 982 Keynote Circle, Brooklyn Heights, Ohio 44131, Attention: Corporate Secretary. Any such communication should state the number of shares owned, if applicable. The Corporate Secretary will forward to the Chairman any such communication addressed to the Chairman, the independent or non-employee Directors as a group or to the Board generally, and will forward such communication to other Board members, as appropriate, provided that such communication addresses a legitimate business issue. Any communication relating to accounting, auditing or fraud will be forwarded immediately to the Chair of the Audit Committee.
Certain Relationships and Related Party Transactions
Under SEC rules, a related person (executiveis an officer, director, nominee for director nominee, five percent or greater stockholder,beneficial holder of more than 5% of any class of our voting securities since the beginning of the last fiscal year or an immediate family member of oneany of the foregoing)foregoing. We have a written related party transaction policy,
pursuant to which directors (including director nominees), executive officers and employees are required to report any transactions or circumstances that may create or appear to create a conflict between the personal interests of the individual and our interests, regardless of the amount involved. Our head of legal reports these transactions to the Audit Committee of the Board, which is responsible for evaluating each related party transaction and making a recommendation to the disinterested members of the Board as to whether the transaction at issue is fair, reasonable and within our policy and whether it should be ratified and approved. The Audit Committee, in making its recommendation, considers various factors, including the benefit of the transaction to us, the terms of the transaction and whether they are at arm’s length and in the ordinary course of our business, the direct or indirect nature of the related person’s interest in the transaction, the size and expected term of the transaction, and other facts and circumstances that bear on the materiality of the related party transaction under applicable law and listing standards.
Other than the transactions described below, since January 1, 2020, there has not been, and there is not currently proposed, any transaction or series of similar transactions to which we were or will be a party in which the amount involved exceeded or will exceed $120,000 and in which any related person had or will have a direct or indirect material interest, can present potential or actual conflicts of interest and create the appearance that Company decisions are based on considerations other than the best interests of GrafTech and its stockholders. Accordingly, as a general matter, it is our preference to avoid related person transactions. Nevertheless, we recognize that there are situations where related person transactions may beinterest.
We have engaged in or may not be inconsistent with, the best interests of GrafTech and its stockholders.
Under its Charter, our Audit Committee reviews, evaluates and, as appropriate, approves all transactions with affiliates (other than majority-owned subsidiaries),or related parties directorssince January 1, 2020. These transactions include ongoing obligations under the Registration Rights Agreement (as defined below), Stockholders Rights Agreement and executive officers (other thanTax Receivable Agreement (as defined below), each with respect to compensation of directors or executive officers, which is addressed by the Compensation Committee).Brookfield.
We and Brookfield entered into a registration rights agreement (the “Registration Rights Agreement”) in connection with our IPO. The Board has adopted a Statement of PolicyRegistration Rights Agreement provides Brookfield with certain demand registration rights, including shelf registration rights, in respect to related person transactions that is administered by the Audit Committee. The Policy requires approval or ratification by the Audit Committee of any transaction involving the Company and any related person, other than a transaction between the Company and a related person:
that is available to all employees generally, including compensation and other related benefits resulting from employment with the Company;
involving less than $5,000 when aggregated annually with all similar transactions;
where the rates or charges involved are determined by competitive bids; or
that is otherwise excluded from reporting under Item 404shares of Regulation S-K under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended, or the Exchange Act.
At least annually, the Audit Committee must approve or disapprove related person transactions. The Statement of Policy provides that the factors to be considered by the Audit Committee may include: (i) whether the terms or conditions of the transaction are generally available to third parties under similar terms or conditions; (ii) the level of the interest of or benefit to the related person; (iii) the availability of alternative suppliers or customers; (iv) whether the transaction would impair a director’s independence or limit a director’s ability to serve on any committee of the Board; and (v) the anticipated benefit to the Company.
If advance approval of a transaction is not feasible, the transaction will be considered for ratification by the Audit Committee. If a transaction relates to a member of the Audit Committee, that member will not participate in the Audit Committee’s deliberations. In addition, the Audit Committee chair (provided he or she is not recused) or, if the chair is recused, another member of the Audit Committee, may pre-approve or ratify any related person transactions involving up to $100,000.
We also require each executive officer and director to annually provide us with written disclosure of any transaction to which we are a party and in which the officer or directorour common stock or any of their immediate family members hasour debt securities held by it, subject to certain conditions and limitations. Brookfield is entitled to a directlimited number of demand registrations. In addition, in the event that we register additional shares of common stock or indirect material interest. Our Nominating Committee and Audit Committee review our disclosuredebt securities for sale to the public, we will be required to give notice of related party transactions, both on an as needed basis and on an annual basis in connection with the preparationsuch registration to Brookfield of our annual reportintention to effect such a registration, and, proxy statement.
Nathan Milikowsky served as a directorsubject to certain limitations, include any shares of GrafTech from December 9, 2010 through May 13, 2013common stock or debt securities requested to be included in such registration held by it. We will be required to bear the registration expenses, other than underwriting discounts and from May 21, 2014 (the date that the stockholder vote from the 2014 Annual Meeting was certified by an independent inspector of elections) to the present. Mr. Milikowsky, certain members of his immediate family and certain entities in which he and members of his immediate family have interests were substantial equity owners of Seadrift and C/G prior to the acquisitions of those entities by the Company in November 2010. In connectioncommissions, associated with those acquisitions, Mr. Milikowsky, his immediate family members and those entities received a portion of the aggregate consideration paid to the equity holders of Seadrift and C/G, which was comprisedany registration of shares of common stock cashor debt securities pursuant to the Registration Rights Agreement. The agreement includes customary indemnification provisions in favor of Brookfield, its affiliates, directors and non-interest bearing senior subordinated notes due 2015 (the “Senior Notes”). Because the Senior Notes are non-interest bearing, they areofficers against certain losses and liabilities (including reasonable legal expenses) resulting from any untrue statement or omission of material fact in any registration statement or prospectus pursuant to which Brookfield sells shares of our common stock or our debt securities, unless such liability arose from Brookfield’s misstatement or omission and Brookfield has agreed to indemnify us against losses caused by its misstatements or omissions, subject to imputed interest each year,certain limitations.
In 2020 and 2021, Brookfield exercised its rights under the Registration Rights Agreement. On November 16, 2020, certain Brookfield entities completed the sale of 8,250,000 shares of our common stock directly to an institutional investor at a public offering price of $7.05 per share. The direct offering was made pursuant to an effective Registration Statement on Form S-3 (File No. 333-232190) that we filed with the SEC on June 18, 2019, including a related base prospectus dated June 18, 2019 (the “Registration Statement”), and a prospectus supplement dated November 10, 2020 and filed with the SEC pursuant to Rule 424(b)(7) under the Securities Act of 1933, as amended (the “Securities Act”). Additionally, on December 17, 2020, January 20, 2021, and March 4, 2021, certain Brookfield entities, as selling stockholders, completed the sales of 8,500,000, 20,000,000, and 30,000,000 shares of our
common stock, respectively, in underwritten public secondary offerings at prices to the public of $9.15, $10.90, and $11.88 per share, respectively. The secondary offerings were made pursuant to the Registration Statement and prospectus supplements dated December 14, 2020, January 14, 2021, and March 1, 2021 respectively, and filed with the SEC pursuant to Rule 424(b)(7) under the Securities Act.
We and Brookfield entered into the Stockholder Rights Agreement in connection with our IPO. Under the Stockholder Rights Agreement, for so long as Brookfield owns or interest that is consideredcontrols at least 25% of our outstanding common stock, Brookfield will have the right to nominate the higher of 37.5% of the members of the Board and three members of the Board. Brookfield will also have the right to select the chairman of the Board. In the event Brookfield owns or controls less than 25% of the Company, the Brookfield directors will promptly tender their resignations. The Board (excluding the Brookfield directors) will have the option, but not the obligation, to accept the Brookfield directors’ resignations. If the Board (excluding the Brookfield directors) votes to accept these resignations, the Brookfield directors will cease to be members of the Board. If the Board (excluding the Brookfield directors) votes not to accept these resignations, the directors will continue to serve as members of the Board until the next annual meeting of our stockholders, regardless of the time remaining in their respective terms of office. On November 6, 2019, we and Brookfield amended the Stockholder Rights Agreement to reimburse Brookfield for the services of the Brookfield directors for (a) cash compensation consistent with the compensation received by other non-management members of the Board and (b) to the extent a Brookfield director serves as Chairman of the Board, any additional compensation as may be approved by the IRSunaffiliated independent members of the Board for such service as Chairman of the Board. The current Board members designated by Brookfield are Denis A. Turcotte, David Gregory and Jeffrey C. Dutton.
We and Brookfield entered into a tax receivable agreement (the “Tax Receivable Agreement”) in connection with our IPO. The Tax Receivable Agreement provides the right to have been paid forreceive future payments from us to certain of our pre-IPO stockholders (the “Existing Stockholders”) of 85% of the amount of cash savings, if any, in U.S. federal income tax purposes pursuantand Swiss tax that we and our subsidiaries realize as a result of the utilization of certain tax assets attributable to periods prior to our IPO, including certain federal net operating losses (“NOLs”), previously taxed income under Section 959 of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended or the Code. The Senior Notes held by Mr. Milikowsky, the members of his immediate family and those entities were subjectfrom time to approximately $12.3 million of imputed interest in 2014.
On August 29, 2014, the Board received a request from Mr. Milikowsky’s legal counsel to reimburse Mr. Milikowsky for $500,455.49 allegedly incurred through July 2014 by himtime (the “Code”), foreign tax credits, and certain persons associated with himNOLs in connection withGrafTech Switzerland S.A. (collectively, the Internal Investigation and a previously undisclosed subpoena from“Pre-IPO Tax Assets”). In addition, we will pay interest on the SEC. The letter also requested reimbursement of amounts subsequently incurred regarding such matters. With the August 29 request, Mr. Milikowsky submitted redacted documentation of expenses totaling $482,323.08. Mr. Milikowsky agreed to recuse himself from consideration of the request due to his conflict of interest and the request was submittedpayments we will make to the remaining members of the Board. GrafTech management requested additional information, including confirmation that a subpoena had been issued and sufficient billing detail to verify that the claimed expenses were properly reimbursable. Mr. Milikowsky refused to provide the requested information to the Company or the Board. With Mr. Milikowsky’s concurrence, the Board requested that outside legal counsel work directly with Mr. Milikowsky’s counsel to obtain and review the requested documentation. To date, the Board has authorized and the Company has advanced $385,064.51 to Mr. Milikowsky for properly documented expenses described in the August 29 request. Since the August 29 request, Mr. Milikowsky has submitted through counsel additional requests for advancement totaling $70,932.64, of which the Board has authorized and
the Company has paid $12,088.54. To date, Mr. Milikowsky has not authorized the release of copies of the subpoena, his responses or any other relevant documentation regarding the status of the SEC investigation to the Board or the Company.
On August 29, 2014, the Board received a letter from counsel for Nathan Milikowsky requesting reimbursement of $5,946,251.54 in expenses incurred by Mr. Milikowsky and certain related parties in connection with the proxy contest in support of the election at the 2014 Annual Meeting of stockholders of his slate of nominees for director. That slate included Karen Finerman and David Jardini, as well as Mr. Milikowsky, each of whom is currently a director of the Company. To date, the Company has not reimbursed any of such expenses. Please see Proposal Six, “Reimbursement of Milikowsky Expenses Related to 2014 Proxy Contest” on page .
Compensation Consultant
As described under “Compensation of Executive Officers and Directors—Compensation Discussion and Analysis” below, our Compensation Committee engaged Mercer (US) Inc., or Mercer, as its compensation consultant. The total amount of fees paid to Mercer for 2014 for executive compensation consulting services provided to the Compensation Committee was approximately $195,000. Mercer Limited (United Kingdom) provided non-executive compensation related actuarial services to the trustees of a closed UK pension plan and Mercer provided other non-executive compensation services for surveys, retirement plan calculations and actuarial services in Mexico, France and the United States, and received an aggregate of approximately $375,000 for such services. Our management and, as to the UK pension plan, its trustees made the decision to engage Mercer and its affiliates for these non- executive compensation related services. Both the executive compensation consulting services and the non-executive compensation actuarial and administrative services were approved in accordance with applicable Company policies.
Audit and Finance Committee
The Audit Committee assists the Board in discharging and performing its duties and responsibilitiesExisting Stockholders with respect to the financial affairsamount of this cash savings from the due date (without extensions) of our tax return where we realize this savings to the payment date at a rate equal to LIBOR plus 1.00% per annum.
For purposes of the Company. Without limitingTax Receivable Agreement, cash savings in income tax are computed by reference to the scopereduction in the liability for income taxes resulting from the utilization of the tax benefits subject to the Tax Receivable Agreement. The term of the Tax Receivable Agreement commenced on April 23, 2018 and will continue until there is no potential for any future tax benefit payments.
Our counterparties under the Tax Receivable Agreement will not reimburse us for any payments previously made if such tax benefits are subsequently disallowed (although future payments would be adjusted to the extent possible to reflect the result of such activities,disallowance). As a result, in such circumstances we could make payments under the Audit Committee has authorityTax Receivable Agreement that are greater than our actual cash tax savings.
While the actual amount and responsibility to:timing of any payments under the Tax Receivable Agreement will vary depending upon a number of factors, including the amount and timing of the taxable income we and our subsidiaries generate in the future, and our subsidiaries’ use of Pre-IPO Tax Assets, as of December 31, 2020, we expect that, based on current tax laws (taking into account changes under the Tax Act), payments under the Tax Receivable Agreement relating to the Pre-IPO Tax Assets will total approximately $68.8 million, with a maximum amount of approximately $100 million. This figure does not account for our Pre-IPO Tax Assets attributable to previously taxed income under Section 959 of the Code, the value of which is highly speculative, and certain NOLs in GrafTech Switzerland S.A., which we expected to have nominal value at the time of our IPO. We made our initial payment of $27.9 million related to the Tax Receivable Agreement in February 2020. In 2020, the Tax Receivable Agreement liability was reduced by $21.1 million as a result of revised U.S. income tax estimates affecting future usage of our U.S. tax attributes. As of December 31, 2020, the total Tax Receivable Agreement liability was $40.9 million, of which $21.8 million is classified as a current liability and settled in February 2021.
Any future changes in the utility of the Pre-IPO Tax Assets will impact the amount of the liability that will be paid to our Existing Stockholders. Changes in the utility of these Pre-IPO Tax Assets will be recorded in income tax expense (benefit) and any changes in the obligation under the Tax Receivable Agreement will be recorded in other income (expense). We plan to use cash flow from operations and availability under our credit facilities to fund this obligation.
If we undergo a Change of Control (as defined in the Tax Receivable Agreement), the Tax Receivable Agreement will terminate and we will be required to make a payment equal to the present value of future payments under the Tax Receivable Agreement, which payment would be based on certain assumptions, including those relating to our and our subsidiaries’ future taxable income. Additionally, if we sell or otherwise dispose of any of our subsidiaries in a transaction that is not a Change of Control, we will be required to make a payment equal to the present value of future payments under the Tax Receivable Agreement attributable to the Pre-IPO Tax Assets of such subsidiary that is sold or disposed of, applying the assumptions described above.
The Tax Receivable Agreement provides that in the event that we breach any of our material obligations under it, whether as a result of our failure to make any payment when due (subject to a specified cure period), failure to honor any other material obligation under it or by operation of law as a result of the rejection of it in a case commenced under the United States Bankruptcy Code or otherwise, then all our payment and other obligations under the Tax Receivable Agreement will be accelerated and will become due and payable applying the same assumptions described above. Such payments could be substantial and could exceed our actual cash tax savings under the Tax Receivable Agreement.
Certain transactions by the Company could cause it to recognize taxable income (possibly material amounts of income) without a current receipt of cash. Payments under the Tax Receivable Agreement with respect to such taxable income would cause a net reduction in our available cash. For example, transactions giving rise to cancellation of debt income, the accrual of income from original issue discount or deferred payments, a “triggering event” requiring the recapture of dual consolidated losses, or “Subpart F” income would each produce income with no corresponding increase in cash. In these cases, we may use some of the Pre-IPO Tax Assets to offset income from these transactions and, under the Tax Receivable Agreement, would be required to make a payment to our Existing Stockholders even though we receive no cash from such income.
Because we are a holding company with no operations of our own, our ability to make payments under the Tax Receivable Agreement is dependent on the ability of our subsidiaries to make distributions to
us. To the extent that we are unable to make payments under the Tax Receivable Agreement for specified reasons, such payments will be deferred and will accrue interest at a rate of LIBOR plus 1.00% per annum until paid.
In the event that any determinations must be made under or any dispute arises involving the Tax Receivable Agreement, the Existing Stockholders will be represented by Brookfield Capital Partners IV GP, Ltd. In any such instance, should any representatives of Brookfield Capital Partners IV GP then be serving on our Board, such directors will be excluded from decisions of the Board related to the relevant determination or dispute.
The Company leverages Brookfield’s economy of scale in negotiating business insurance coverage. We reimburse Brookfield for our allocated portion of their insurance premiums. Since January 1, 2020, we paid approximately $198,619 to Brookfield related to insurance coverage. As of January 20, 2021, we are no longer covered under certain Brookfield insurance policies and have obtained such coverage on a stand-alone basis.
Security Ownership of Certain Beneficial Owners and Management
The following table sets forth information as of March 16, 2021 regarding the beneficial ownership of our common stock by:
select, retain, evaluate and, as appropriate, terminate and replace the independent registered public accounting firm;each person or group who beneficially owns more than 5% of our outstanding shares of common stock;
review and, as appropriate, approve, prior to commencement, all audit and non-audit services to be provided by the independent registered public accounting firm;each of our named executive officers;
review regularly with management, the directoreach of internal audit and the independent registered public accounting firm, the audit report and related management letter, any audit problems, questions or difficulties, the disposition of all audit adjustments, and all significant financial reporting issues and judgments and management’s responses thereto;
resolve or direct the resolution of all material disagreements between management and the independent registered public accounting firm regarding accounting and financial reporting;
review with management and the independent registered public accounting firm all reports delivered by the independent registered public accounting firm with respect to critical accounting policies and practices used, alternative treatments of financial information available under generally accepted accounting principles and other written communications between the independent registered public accounting firm and management, together with their ramifications and the preferred treatment by the independent registered public accounting firm;
meet at least once annually with management, the director of the internal audit department, the General Counsel and the independent registered public accounting firm in separate sessions to discuss any matters that any of them believe should be discussed privately;
assess the adequacy of codes of conduct, including codes relating to business integrity, ethics and conflicts of interest, confidentiality, public disclosure and insider trading and, as appropriate, adopt changes thereto, and otherwise discharge its responsibilities with respect to the adoption, improvement and implementation of the code of conduct;
direct the establishment of procedures for the receipt and retention of, and the response to, complaints received regarding accounting, internal control or auditing matters;
direct the establishment of procedures for the confidential and anonymous submission by employees of concerns regarding questionable accounting or auditing matters;our directors; and
reviewall of our executive officers and approvedirectors as a group.
Beneficial ownership for the Company’s decisionspurposes of the following table is determined in accordance with the rules and regulations of the SEC. These rules generally provide that a person is the beneficial owner of securities if such person has or shares the power to enter into swapsvote or direct the voting of securities, or to dispose or direct the disposition of securities or has the right to acquire such powers within 60 days. For purposes of calculating each person’s percentage ownership, common stock issuable pursuant to options exercisable or awards payable within 60 days are included as outstanding and beneficially owned for that person or group, but are not deemed outstanding for the purposes of computing the percentage ownership of any other person. Except as disclosed in the footnotes to this table and subject to applicable community property laws, we believe that each beneficial owner identified in the table possesses sole voting and investment power over all common stock shown as beneficially owned by the beneficial owner.
The percentage of beneficial ownership is based on 267,235,189 shares of common stock issued and outstanding on March 16, 2021. Unless otherwise indicated in the table or footnotes below, the
address for each beneficial owner is c/o GrafTech International Ltd., 982 Keynote Circle, Brooklyn Heights, OH 44131.
As of March 16, 2021 | ||||||||
Name |
Number |
Percentage | ||||||
5% Stockholders and Brookfield | ||||||||
BCP IV GrafTech Holdings LP(1) | 97,742,043 | 36.58% | ||||||
Named Executive Officers and Directors | ||||||||
Denis A. Turcotte | — | — | ||||||
Brian L. Acton(2)(3) | 45,169 | * | ||||||
Catherine L. Clegg(2) | 28,538 | * | ||||||
Michel J. Dumas(2) | 28,848 | * | ||||||
Leslie D. Dunn(2) | 5,037 | * | ||||||
Jeffrey C. Dutton | — | — | ||||||
David Gregory | — | — | ||||||
Anthony R. Taccone(2)(3) | 28,834 | * | ||||||
David J. Rintoul(4) | 328,063 | * | ||||||
Quinn J. Coburn(5) | 4,295 | * | ||||||
Jeremy S. Halford(6) | 48,610 | * | ||||||
Gina K. Gunning(7) | 50,494 | * | ||||||
Iñigo Perez Ortiz(8) | 12,084 | * | ||||||
All Current Executive Officers and | 579,972 | * | ||||||
* Less than 1% |
(1) | BCP IV GrafTech Holdings LP (“BCP IV”) directly holds an aggregate of 97,742,043 shares of common stock. BCP IV Bermuda Investor LP (“BCP Bermuda”) directly holds an aggregate of 527 shares of common stock. Brookfield Asset Management Inc., by virtue of its relationships with these entities, may be deemed to share beneficial ownership of all of these shares. BPE IV (Non-Cdn) GP LP, Brookfield Capital Partners Ltd., BCP GP Limited, Brookfield Private Equity Group Holdings LP, Brookfield Private Equity Inc. and Brookfield Asset Management Inc. (collectively, with BCP IV, the “BCP IV Entities”), by virtue of their relationships with BCP IV, may be deemed to share beneficial ownership in the shares held directly by BCP IV. Brookfield Capital Partners Ltd., BCP GP Limited, Brookfield Private Equity Group Holdings LP, Brookfield Private Equity Inc. and Brookfield Asset Management Inc. (collectively, with BCP Bermuda and the BCP IV Entities, the “Brookfield Entities”), by virtue of their relationships with BCP Bermuda, may be deemed to share beneficial ownership in the shares held directly by BCP Bermuda. Each of the Brookfield Entities disclaims beneficial ownership of all shares of common stock, except to the extent of any indirect pecuniary interest therein. The address of each of the Brookfield Entities is c/o Brookfield Asset Management Inc., 181 Bay Street, Suite 300, Bay Wellington Tower, Toronto, ON M5J 2T3. |
(2) | Brian L. Acton, Catherine L. Clegg, Michel J. Dumas, Leslie D. Dunn, and Anthony R. Taccone beneficially own 40,169, 28,538, 28,848, 5,037 and 20,084 DSUs, including estimated dividend equivalents, respectively. Each DSU represents a contingent right to receive one share of our common stock. Dividend equivalents are estimated based on the $11.90 closing price of our common stock on March 16, 2021 and actual amounts will depend on the closing price on the dividend payment date, March 31, 2021. The DSUs are fully vested and will be settled in shares of common stock as soon as practicable after the director terminates service on the Board. |
(3) | Brian L. Acton and Anthony R. Taccone also beneficially own 5,000 and 8,750 shares of our common stock, respectively. |
(4) | Includes options to purchase 267,002 shares and 21,740 DSUs and 15,539 RSUs, including estimated dividend equivalents. Dividend equivalents are estimated based on the $11.90 closing price of our common stock on March 16, 2021 and actual amounts will depend on the closing price on the dividend payment date, March 31, 2021. |
(5) | Includes options to purchase 2,600 shares. |
(6) | Includes options to purchase 27,200 shares and 10,359 RSUs, including estimated dividend equivalents. |
(7) | Includes options to purchase 40,200 shares and 4,143 RSUs, including estimated dividend equivalents. |
(8) | Includes options to purchase 6,000 shares. |
Policies on Transactions in Company Stock, Including Anti-hedging Provisions
All of our executive officers, directors and other derivatives andemployees are prohibited from engaging in hedging or monetizing transactions and review and discuss with management applicable policies governingrespect to our securities. “Hedging transactions” or “monetizing transactions” can be accomplished through a number of possible mechanisms, including through the use of financial instruments such as prepaid variable forwards, equity swaps, subjectcollars and exchange funds or through other transactions that hedge or offset, or are designed to hedge or offset, any decrease in the end-user exception.
No membermarket value of our securities, often in exchange for all or part of the Audit Committee serves as a member ofpotential for upside appreciation in these securities. Because hedging transactions might permit an auditexecutive officer, director or similar committee of more than three public companies.
Organization, Compensation and Pension Committee
The Compensation Committee assists the Board in discharging and performing its duties and responsibilities with respectother employee to management compensation and succession planning, employee benefits and director compensation. To the extent that the Compensation Committee deems appropriate or desirable, it may appoint one or more subcommittees and delegatecontinue to any such subcommittee the authority to make (including determining the terms and conditions of) grants or awards under, and to otherwise administer, bonus and incentiveown our securities, whether obtained through our equity compensation plans or otherwise, without the full rewards and programs.
Without limiting the scope of such activities, the Compensation Committee has authority and responsibility to:
review and approve annually the goals and objectives relevant to compensation of the Chief Executive Officer, evaluate the Chief Executive Officer’s performance in light of those goals and objectives, and set the Chief Executive Officer’s compensation based on such evaluation;
review and evaluate annually the compensation (including incentive compensation) for otherWe also prohibit our executive officers, and review the compensation of other members of senior managementdirectors and other employees generally and determine compensation for directors;
assess organizational systems and plans, including thosefrom engaging in put, call or other derivative transactions relating to management developmentour securities on an exchange or in any other organized market. A put is an option or right to sell a security at a specific price before a set date, and succession planning, including contingency planning for unanticipated sudden developments;
administer stock-based compensation plans and such other programs as may be designated by the Board;
assess whether compensation programs present unreasonable risks;
be directly responsible for the appointment, compensation and oversight of the work of any compensation consultant , legal counsela call is an option or other advisor (only after taking into consideration all factors relevantright to their independence) retained by the Committee; and
review the Compensation Discussion and Analysis for inclusionbuy a security at a specific price before a set date. Because a transaction in options in our proxy statement.securities would, in effect, be a bet on the short-term movement of our securities and may also focus attention on short-term performance at the expense of our long-term objectives, our executive officers, directors and other employees are prohibited from engaging in such transactions. Additionally, our executive officers, directors and other employees are also prohibited from engaging in short sales of our securities.
For
Proposal 1 Elect Three Directors for a further discussionThree-Year Term or Until Their Successors are Elected and Qualified
Under our By-Laws, the number of the processes and procedures involved, please see “Compensationmembers of Executive Officers and Directors—Compensation Discussion and Analysis.”
Nominating and Governance Committee
The Nominating Committee assists theour Board in discharging and performing its duties and responsibilities with respectis fixed from time to nomination of directors, selection of committee members, assessment of performance oftime by the Board and other corporate governance matters. Without limitingmay be increased or decreased by the scopemajority of such activities, the Nominating Committee has authority and responsibility to:
review candidates for nomination for election as directors submitted by directors, officers, employees, stockholders and others;
review at least annually the current directorsthen in office. Three of our Board to determine whether such individualsnine directors, Catherine L. Clegg, Jeffrey C. Dutton and Anthony R. Taccone, are independent understanding for re-election at the listing standardsAnnual Meeting. All of the NYSE and applicable SEC rules; and
review and reportdirector nominees were recommended for nomination to the Board on a periodic basis with regard to matters of corporate responsibility, diversity and sustainability performance, including trends and impacts to our business of environmental, social and governance issues.
The Nominating Committee annually assesses the composition of our Board and its standing committees to determine whether they comply with requirements under our Governance Guidelines and committee charters, SEC rules, NYSE listing standards and applicable laws, and possess the core competencies, skills, qualifications and characteristics described above (see “Director Qualifications”). In addition, the Nominating Committee undertakes succession and other planning as to the future needs of the Company. The Nominating Committee gathers suggestions as to individuals who may be available to meet those future needs from a variety of sources, such as past and present directors, stockholders, colleagues, retained search firms, and other parties with whom we have business dealings, and undertakes a preliminary review of the individuals suggested. The preliminary review may include preliminary searches of public information available about the individuals. At such times as the Nominating Committee determines that a relatively near term need exists and if, following a preliminary review, the Nominating Committee believes that an individual may strengthen the core competencies and possess the skills, qualifications and characteristics described above, the Nominating Committee will contact the individual to ascertain his or her interest in serving us and obtain further information about and insight as to such
individual. In connection therewith, the Nominating Committee typically reviews detailed resumes and reports, contacts references, conducts in- depth interviews and undertakes in-depth searches of public information. Based thereon and on the Nominating Committee’s evaluation of other potential nominees and the Company’s needs, the Nominating Committee determines whether to recommend nomination of the individual for election as a director.
There are no material differences in the manner in which the Nominating Committee evaluates nominees for election as a director whether recommended by a stockholder or otherwise recommended or known to the Nominating Committee. To submit a nominee for election as a director for consideration by the Nominating Committee, a stockholder must submit a written notice to that effect to our Secretary at our corporate headquarters. Any such notice must comply with the requirements under our by-laws and applicable laws. See “Other Information—When Are Stockholder Proposals for the 2016 Annual Meeting Due” and “What Information is Required for Stockholder Proposals and Nominations.”G&C Committee.
Special Committee
In February 2015, our Nominating Committee, which is Chaired by Mr. Milikowsky, voted 2 to 1 (with Mr. Milikowsky and Ms. Finerman voting in favor and Mr. Carson voting against) to recommend a slate of seven nominees for election to the BoardEach director elected at the Annual Meeting consistingwill hold office for a three-year term until the 2024 Annual Meeting or until his or her successor is elected and qualified, subject to earlier retirement, resignation or removal. Unless otherwise instructed, we will vote all proxies we receive FOR each nominee listed below. If a nominee becomes unavailable to serve, we will vote the shares represented by proxies for the election of such other person as the same seven nomineesBoard may recommend.
Required Vote
Our By-Laws require that Mr. Milikowsky had recommended aseach director receive a stockholder. During the Nominating Committee meeting, Mr. Carson suggested that Ms. Finerman and Mr. Milikowsky recuse themselves from recommending the same slate that Mr. Milikowsky had nominated as a stockholder. Neither Ms. Finerman nor Mr. Milikowsky so recused themselves.
A majority of the Board rejectedvotes properly cast with respect to such director in uncontested elections (i.e., the Nominating Committee’s recommendation (Messrs. Jardini and Milikowskynumber of shares voted in favor“for” a director nominee must exceed the number of votes cast “against” that nominee). As the recommendation; Messrs. Carson, Danjczek, and Hawthorne and Ms. Morris voted againstelection of directors at the recommendation; and Ms. Finerman recused herself from the vote).
AAnnual Meeting is uncontested, it requires a majority of the votes cast by, or on behalf of, the holders of Common Stock at the Annual Meeting. Abstentions and broker non-votes are not considered as votes cast “for” or “against” a director and have no effect on the election results.
If stockholders do not re-elect a nominee who is already a director, Delaware law provides that the director continues to serve on the Board believed there wasas a conflict of interest with respect“holdover director.” Under our By-Laws and Corporate Governance Guidelines, each director must submit an irrevocable advance resignation that will be effective if the stockholders do not re-elect him or her and the Board accepts his or her resignation. In that situation, within 90 days from the date the election results are certified, the G&C Committee will recommend to the members ofBoard whether to accept or reject the Nominating Committee who are also members of the same slate that Mr. Milikowsky has nominated in his capacity as a stockholder. As a result,resignation, with the Board establishedthen taking action and promptly disclosing its decision and underlying rationale in a special committeefiling with the SEC.
THE BOARD UNANIMOUSLY RECOMMENDS THAT YOU VOTE FOR THE ELECTION OF EACH NOMINEE LISTED BELOW TO SERVE A THREE-YEAR TERM OR UNTIL HIS OR HER SUCCESSOR IS DULY ELECTED AND QUALIFIED.
Nominees for Re-Election and Incumbent Directors
Relevant information about each director appears below, including certain information regarding our directors’ individual experience, qualifications, attributes and skills, and brief statements of those aspects of our directors’ backgrounds that led us to conclude that they should serve as directors.
Nominees for Re-Election as CLASS III MEMBERS OF THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS – Current Term Expiring at the Board, consisting of directors that are not members of Mr. Milikowsky’s slate, to run the2021 Annual Meeting process (the “Special Committee”). Messrs. Jardini and Milikowsky voted against adoption
Name (Age) | Business Experience and Other Information | Director Since | ||||||||
Catherine L. Clegg (61) | Ms. Clegg was elected to the Board in March 2019. Ms. Clegg retired in October 2020 from General Motors Company (“GM”). Prior to her retirement she was a senior automotive industry executive with GM and has extensive experience in manufacturing operations, manufacturing engineering, labor relations, public policy and cultural transformation. From 2019 until her retirement, she was the Vice President, Workforce Strategy, Global Human Resources, with responsibility to integrate global workforce development and engagement strategies across the enterprise; primarily among the manufacturing, labor relations, global public policy, legal and human resources functions. She also served as an advisor to senior leadership in support of special GM initiatives related to Manufacturing and Labor Relations, and she was the lead support staff to the CEO for GM’s involvement in the Business Roundtable. Ms. Clegg previously served as Vice President Business Intelligence, Global Public Policy from 2017 to 2019, where she led policy analysis and strategy; developing and aligning business priorities in the context of government policy initiatives in key countries and regions around the world. Ms. Clegg also previously led GM’s manufacturing operations and labor relations in the US, Canada and Mexico as Vice President North America Manufacturing & Labor Relations from 2014 to 2017. She also served as Vice President Global Manufacturing Engineering from 2013 to 2014 and Vice President GMNA Labor Relations from 2010 to 2013. Since August 2020, she has been a director of Clarios International LP, a Brookfield portfolio company that manufactures low voltage automotive batteries. Ms. Clegg received her undergraduate degree from Eastern Michigan University and her MBA from University of Virginia Colgate Darden Graduate School of Business Administration. Ms. Clegg also earned a Master of Arts in Advanced Leadership Studies and completed extensive advanced coursework on Organizational Leadership at Indiana Wesleyan University, as well as executive education at Harvard University and Stanford University. | 2019 |
Name (Age) | Business Experience and Other Information | Director Since | ||||||||||
Jeffrey C. Dutton (58) | Mr. Dutton was elected to the Board in 2017. Previously, Mr. Dutton served as President and CEO of the Company from January 2017 until March 2018 and Vice President & Chief Operating Officer of the Company from September 2015 until January 2017. In these roles, Mr. Dutton oversaw all aspects of both the Industrial Materials and Engineered Solutions businesses. Mr. Dutton has served as a Managing Director, Business Operations – Private Equity Group of Brookfield since 2017 and was previously a Senior Vice President from 2013 to 2017. Brookfield became GrafTech’s indirect parent company in August 2015. Mr. Dutton served as the CEO and President of Twin Rivers Paper Company, from 2010 to 2013. Mr. Dutton served in various executive capacities at Fraser Papers Inc. from 2008 to 2010 and as General Manager of East Papers operations at Fraser Papers Inc. from 2006 to 2008. He served as President of Republic Paperboard Company of Eagle Materials Inc. from 2004 to 2006. Mr. Dutton has served as a director of Ember Resources Inc., an affiliate of Brookfield, since August 2018. Mr. Dutton served as a director of Twin Rivers Paper Company in 2013 and has served as a director of the Hammerstone Corporation since 2014. Mr. Dutton received his Bachelor of Science in Mechanical Engineering Technology from the University of Maine. | 2017 | ||||||||||
Anthony R. Taccone (60) | Mr. Taccone was elected to the Board in April 2018. Mr. Taccone has over thirty years of experience consulting to companies in the global steel industry and companies with interests in the steel industry, including suppliers, customers and investors. Since March 1998, Mr. Taccone has served as a Founding Partner and co-owner of First River LLC, a boutique strategy consulting firm. While at First River, Mr. Taccone has worked with senior management teams, boards of directors, investors and government agencies on challenging and complex issues facing companies in the steel industry, including financial restructurings, capacity rationalizations, mergers and acquisitions, major capital investment decisions, raw material integration strategies, and investments in downstream businesses. Prior to joining First River, Mr. Taccone was a strategy consultant at Beddows & Company from 1988 to 1998. From 1994 until 1998, Mr. Taccone was the North American practice leader and served on Beddows and Company’s Board of Directors. Prior to his career as a steel industry consultant, Mr. Taccone worked as a Country Risk Economist from 1985 to 1987 and an Industry Economist from 1987 to 1988 at Mellon Bank. Mr. Taccone received his undergraduate degree in economics from Washington & Jefferson College and a Master’s degree in economics from Duke University. | 2018 |
CLASS I MEMBERS OF THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS CONTINUING IN OFFICE – Term Expiring at the establishment of the Special Committee. Messrs. Carson, Danjczek, and Hawthorne and Ms. Finerman and Ms. Morris voted for the establishment of the Special Committee.
Accordingly, for purposes of the2022 Annual Meeting the Special Committee performed the functions of the Nominating Committee.
Board Committee Membership Roster as of March 1, 2015
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| Mr. Turcotte was elected to the Board in August 2015 and became Chairman of the Board in March 2018 and became Chair of the G&C Committee in July 2019. Mr. Turcotte is currently a Managing Partner and Chief Operating Officer – Private Equity Group of Brookfield. Prior to joining Brookfield in 2017, Mr. Turcotte was president and chief executive officer of North Channel Management and North Channel Capital Partners, business consulting and private investing firms, from 2008 to 2017. He was also a member of the board of directors of the general partner of Brookfield Business Partners L.P., an affiliate of Brookfield, from 2016 until he joined Brookfield in 2017. From 2002 to 2008, Mr. Turcotte was the president and CEO and a director of Algoma Steel Inc., a publicly listed North American steel company, and from 1992 to 2002 held a number of senior executive positions with companies in the pulp and paper industry, including president of the paper group and executive vice-president of corporate development and strategy of Tembec Inc., a leading integrated forest products company. Since 2018, Mr. Turcotte has been a member of the board of directors for Altera (formerly Teekay Offshore GP L.L.C. (the general partner of Teekay Offshore Partners L.P.)) and he has been a member of the board of directors for Domtar Corporation since 2007. He was previously a member of the board of directors for Coalspur Mines, Ltd. from 2010 to 2015, Algoma Steel Inc. from 2002 to 2008 and Norbord Inc. from 2012 to 2018. | 2015 | ||||||||||||
Michel J. Dumas (62) | Mr. Dumas was elected to the Board in April 2018 and became the Presiding Independent Director in July 2019. Mr. Dumas is the Chair of the Audit Committee of the Company and presides over regularly scheduled executive sessions of the independent directors. Mr. Dumas has over thirty years of experience in the lumber, pulp and paper industries. From 1997 until 2017, Mr. Dumas served as the Executive Vice President, Finance and Chief Financial Officer of Tembec, Inc., based in Quebec. Mr. Dumas also served on the board of directors of Tembec, Inc. from January 2011 to February 2017. Mr. Dumas served as a director of Marathon Pulp Inc. from February 2000 to February 2009 and of Jager Building Systems from August 2001 to September 2008. From 1991 to 1997, Mr. Dumas was Vice President, Finance and Chief Financial Officer at Spruce Falls Inc., a newsprint mill. Prior to joining Spruce Falls Inc., from 1985 to 1991, | 2018 |
Name (Age) | Business Experience and Other Information | Director Since | ||||||||||
Mr. Dumas served as Controller at Tembec, Inc. Mr. Dumas received his undergraduate degree in Commerce from the University of Ottawa. | ||||||||||||
Leslie D. Dunn (75) | Ms. Dunn was elected to the Board in August 2020. Ms. Dunn is an experienced executive, legal and governance professional. Since 2015, Ms. Dunn has been a director of New York Community Bancorp, Inc. (NYSE: NYCB), where she serves on the Audit, Compensation, and Risk Assessment Committees, and as Chair of the Nominating and Corporate Governance Committee. From 2007 to 2020, she served as an independent director of the Federal Home Loan Bank of Cincinnati, chairing its Governance Committee in addition to serving on its Audit and Compensation Committees. From 2012 to 2018, Ms. Dunn was an independent director of E&H Family Group, Inc., a family-owned private company that operates chains of supermarket and hardware stores in Ohio, where she served as Chair of the Compensation Committee and a member of the Finance Committee. Ms. Dunn’s prior board experience also includes over 15 years as a director of Telarc International Corporation, a privately-held, leading classical and jazz recording company. Ms. Dunn previously was the Senior Vice President of Business Development and General Counsel of Cole National Corporation, a NYSE-listed specialty retailer, from 1997 until its sale in 2004. In addition to leading the development and implementation of Cole’s acquisition growth strategy, she was responsible for public disclosures, investor communications and government affairs, and was the principal corporate governance advisor to its board of directors. Prior to joining Cole, Ms. Dunn was a partner in the Business Practice Group of the Cleveland office of Jones Day, a global law firm, and previously was a partner in the corporate practice of Squire Sanders & Dempsey (now Squire Patton Boggs). Ms. Dunn received her law degree from Case Western Reserve University School of Law and received her A.B. degree from Mount Holyoke College. |
CLASS II MEMBERS OF THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS CONTINUING IN OFFICE – Term Expiring at the 2023 Annual Meeting
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Brian L. Acton (69) | Mr. Acton was elected to the Board in April 2018. Mr. Acton has more than 40 years of experience in the mining and bulk materials distribution industry, primarily devoted to mining and marketing of coal, and marketing of petroleum coke and other raw materials. Since August 2013, Mr. Acton has served as President at Pac Basin Resources LLC and Sierra Minerals LLC, which are both mining and metals companies. Since August 2018, Mr. Acton has also served as President of Px Carbon LLC, a carbon marketing company. From July 2010 to June 2013, Mr. Acton served as a consultant to Oxbow Carbon & Minerals Holdings, Inc. From 1996 to 2010, Mr. Acton served as President and Chief Operating Officer of Oxbow Carbon and Minerals Holdings, Inc. Mr. Acton joined Oxbow in 1985 after working with Kaiser Resources/Westar Mining since 1978. Mr. Acton served on the board of directors of Adriana Resources Inc. from March 2012 to February 2017. While on the Board, Mr. Acton served as Chair of the Compensation Committee from 2012 to 2017 and as a member of the Audit Committee from 2014 to 2017. Mr. Acton is a graduate of Queen’s University with a Bachelor of Applied Science (Mining Engineering) degree and a Master’s in Business Administration. | 2018 | ||||||||||
David Gregory (34) | Mr. Gregory was elected to the Board in April 2019. Mr. Gregory is Managing Partner Investments – Private Equity Group of Brookfield, where he is responsible for transaction origination and due diligence. Brookfield is an experienced operator of industrial, natural resource and other tangible asset businesses. Prior to joining Brookfield in 2010, Mr. Gregory was an analyst at Genuity Capital Markets. Mr. Gregory holds an Honors Business Administration degree from the University of Western Ontario. | 2019 | ||||||||||
David J. Rintoul (63) | Mr. Rintoul became President and CEO and was elected to the Board in March 2018. Prior to joining the Company, Mr. Rintoul served as President of U.S. Steel Tubular Products and as a Senior Vice President of United States Steel Corporation (“U.S. Steel”). Before that, Mr. Rintoul has served in various roles at U.S. Steel since 2007, including oversight of U.S. Steel’s Slovak and Serbian operations. Mr. Rintoul’s career in the steel industry spans 38 years with positions at both integrated and mini mill producers in the United States, Europe and Canada, including extensive mini mill operational experience at North Star Bluescope Steel in Delta, Ohio from 2001 to | 2018 |
Name (Age) | Business Experience and Other Information | Director Since | ||||||||||
2005 and from construction through full operations at Acme Steel Company in Riverdale, Illinois from 1995 to 2001. Mr. Rintoul holds an Associate’s degree in Mechanical Engineering Technology from Sault College of Applied Arts and Technology, a Bachelor’s degree in Business Administration from Lake Superior State University and a Master’s degree in Business Administration from the University of Notre Dame. |
CompensationProposal 2 Ratify the Selection of Deloitte & Touche LLP as our Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm for 2021
The Audit Committee Interlockshas selected, and Insider Participationthe Audit Committee and the Board recommend stockholder ratification of, Deloitte & Touche LLP as our independent registered public accounting firm for the year ended December 31, 2021. The Audit Committee is directly responsible for the appointment, compensation, retention and oversight of the independent registered public accounting firm retained to audit our consolidated financial statements.
NoneDeloitte & Touche LLP has served as our independent registered public accounting firm since 2015. In order to ensure continuing auditor independence, the Audit Committee periodically considers whether there should be a regular rotation of Randy W. Carson, Thomas A. Danjczek, or Nathan Milikowsky, the independent registered public accounting firm. The members of the CompensationAudit Committee servedand the Board believe that the continued retention of Deloitte & Touche LLP to serve as an officerour independent registered public accounting firm is in the best interests of the Company and its stockholders.
Although ratification by stockholders is not required by law or employee of GrafTech or anyby our By-Laws, the Audit Committee believes that submission of its subsidiariesselection to stockholders is a matter of good corporate governance. Even if the appointment is ratified, the Audit Committee, in its discretion, may select a different independent registered public accounting firm at any time from 2011 to 2014. During 2014, no executive officer of GrafTech served asif the Audit Committee believes that such a director or memberchange would be in the best interests of the compensation committee (or other committee serving an equivalent function)Company and its stockholders. If our stockholders do not ratify the selection of any other entity, an executive officerDeloitte & Touche LLP as our independent registered public accounting firm, the Audit Committee will reconsider their selection.
Representatives of which served asDeloitte & Touche LLP are expected to be present at the Annual Meeting. They will have the opportunity to make a director or memberstatement if they choose and will also be available to respond to appropriate questions from stockholders.
Required Vote
Approval of this ratification requires the affirmative vote of a majority of the Compensation Committee.
THE AUDIT COMMITTEE AND THE BOARD UNANIMOUSLY RECOMMEND THAT YOU VOTE FOR THE RATIFICATION OF THE SELECTION OF DELOITTE & TOUCHE LLP TO SERVE AS OUR INDEPENDENT REGISTERED PUBLIC ACCOUNTING FIRM FOR THE 2021 FISCAL YEAR.
AUDIT AND FINANCE COMMITTEE REPORTAudit Committee Report
The Audit and Finance Committee reviews GrafTech’sManagement is responsible for the Company’s financial reporting process, on behalfincluding its system of the Board. Management has the primary responsibility for establishing and maintaining adequate internal financial controls, for preparing the financial statements and for the public reporting process. PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP, or PwC, thepreparation of consolidated financial statements in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles. The Company’s independent registered public accounting firm, for 2014, wasDeloitte & Touche LLP, is responsible for expressing opinions onperforming an independent audit of the conformityCompany’s financial statements and internal controls over financial reporting, in accordance with standards of the U.S. Public Company Accounting Oversight Board (PCAOB). The Audit Committee is also responsible for monitoring and reviewing these processes.
The Audit Committee reviewed the Company’s audited financial statements for fiscal year 2020 (ended December 31, 2020) and discussed with generally acceptedthe Company’s management these financial statements, including the acceptability and quality of the accounting principles, the reasonableness of significant judgments, and on the Company’s internal control overclarity of disclosures in the financial reporting.
In this context, thestatements. The Audit and Finance Committee hasalso reviewed and discussed with management and PwCDeloitte & Touche LLP the audited financial statements for the year ended December 31, 2014 and PwC’s evaluation of the Company’s internal control over financial reporting. The Audit and Finance Committee has discussed with PwC the matters that are required to be discussed with PwC, including the matters required to be discussed by Statement onPCAOB Auditing StandardsStandard No. 61, as amended (AICPA, Professional Standards, Vol. 1, AU Section 380), as adopted by the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board in Rule 3200T, including the scope of the auditor’s responsibilities and whether there are any significant accounting adjustments or any disagreements1301 (Communications with management. PwC hasAudit Committees). Deloitte & Touche LLP provided to the Audit Committee with the written disclosures and the letter required by applicable requirements of the Public Company Accounting Oversight BoardPCAOB regarding the independent registered public accounting firm’s communications with an audit committeethe Audit Committee concerning independence, and theindependence. The Audit Committee has discussed with PwC thatDeloitte & Touche LLP its independence and has considered whether the firm’s independence. The Audit and Finance Committee has concluded that PwC’s provision of audit and non-audit related services to the Company is compatible with PwC’smaintaining such auditors’ independence.
Based on theits discussions with, and its review of information provided by, management and discussions referred to above,Deloitte & Touche LLP, the Audit and Finance Committee recommended to the Company’s Board of Directors that the audited financial statements be included in the Company’s Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 20142020.
By the Audit Committee of the Board of Directors of GrafTech International Ltd.
AUDIT COMMITTEE
Michel J. Dumas (Chair)
Brian L. Acton
Anthony R. Taccone
Independent Auditor Fees and Other Matters
The following table presents the aggregate fees billed for services rendered by Deloitte & Touche LLP for the fiscal years ended December 31, 2020 and 2019:
2020 | 2019 | |||||||
Audit Fees | $ | 1,794,121 | $ | 1,718,000 | ||||
Audit-Related Fees | — | — | ||||||
Tax Fees | 201,055 | 302,862 | ||||||
All Other Fees | 2,000 | — | ||||||
|
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Total Fees | $ | 1,997,176 | $ | 2,020,862 |
Audit Fees. These fees relate to professional services rendered in connection with the annual audit of our consolidated financial statements; reviews of the condensed consolidated financial statements performed in connection with each of our Quarterly Reports on Form 10-Q; and consultations regarding the accounting, financial reporting and audits of subsidiaries, including statutory audits required by foreign jurisdictions and audits required by the agreements related to our securitizations. Audit fees reflect increased expenses in connection with secondary offerings in 2019 and 2020.
Audit-Related Fees. None.
Tax Fees. These include fees for consulting services related to potential acquisitions, tax planning, advice and assistance with international and other tax matters.
All Other Fees. This fee relates to an annual subscription to an accounting research tool.
Audit Committee Pre-approval Policy and Procedures. The Audit Committee has adopted policies and procedures relating to the approval of all audit and non-audit services to be includedperformed by our independent registered public accounting firm. This policy requires that we do not engage our independent registered public accounting firm to render audit or non-audit services unless the Audit Committee specifically approves the service in advance or the engagement is entered into pursuant to one of the pre-approval procedures described below.
From time to time, the Audit Committee may pre-approve specified types of services that we expect our independent registered public accounting firm to provide during the next 12 months. The Audit Committee may also authorize any Audit Committee member to approve any audit or non-audit services that our independent registered public accounting firm provides. Any approval of services by an Audit Committee member pursuant to this delegated authority is to be reported at the next meeting of the Audit Committee.
The Audit Committee approved all of the services described above in accordance with its pre-approval policies and procedures.
Proposal 3 Approve, on an Advisory Basis, our Named Executive Officer Compensation
As required under the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act and Section 14A of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended (the “Exchange Act”), we provide our stockholders the opportunity to vote, on a non-binding, advisory basis, to approve the compensation of our named executive officers (“NEOs”) as disclosed in this proxy statement.
We believe that NEO compensation should be focused on promoting Company performance and stockholder value. To achieve these goals, our NEO compensation program emphasizes pay for performance and aligning the interests of our NEOs with those of our stockholders through the use of long-term incentives and the encouragement of equity ownership. In addition, our NEO compensation program is designed to allow us to recruit, retain and motivate employees who play a significant role in our current and future success. Please read the CD&A section below and the related tables and narratives for more information about the compensation of our NEOs.
The vote on this proposal is not intended to address any specific element of compensation; rather, the vote relates to the overall compensation of our NEOs. This vote is advisory only and is not binding. Although the vote is non-binding, our Board and G&C Committee value the opinions of our stockholders, and our Board and G&C Committee expect to consider the outcome of the vote when making future compensation decisions for our NEOs. We are currently conducting this advisory vote, commonly known as a “say-on-pay” vote, every year and expect to hold the next say-on-pay vote in connection with the annual meeting of stockholders to be held in 2022.
Accordingly, we ask our stockholders to vote in favor of the following resolution:
“RESOLVED, that the Company’s stockholders approve, on an advisory basis, the compensation of the named executive officers, as disclosed in the Company’s Proxy Statement for the 2021 Annual Meeting of Stockholders pursuant to the compensation disclosure rules of the Securities and Exchange Commission, including the Compensation Discussion and Analysis and the related tables and accompanying narrative.”
Approval of this resolution requires the affirmative vote of a majority of the voting power of the shares present in person or by proxy at the meeting and entitled to vote thereon. Therefore, abstentions will have the effect of votes against this proposal and broker non-votes will have no effect on the outcome.
THE BOARD UNANIMOUSLY RECOMMENDS A VOTE FOR THE APPROVAL OF THE COMPENSATION OF OUR NAMED EXECUTIVE OFFICERS.
Compensation Discussion and Analysis
The Compensation Discussion and Analysis (“CD&A”) details the objectives and design of our executive compensation program overseen by the G&C Committee. The CD&A describes the compensation provided to our NEOs who are listed below and named in the Summary Compensation Table. For the year ended December 31, 2020, our NEOs were:
David J. Rintoul, President and CEO
Quinn J. Coburn, Chief Financial Officer, Vice President Finance and Treasurer
Jeremy S. Halford, Senior Vice President, Operations and Development
Gina K. Gunning, Chief Legal Officer and Corporate Secretary
Iñigo Perez Ortiz, Senior Vice President, Commercial
For more information about our current executive officers, see our Annual Report on Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended December 31, 2014 (the “Annual Report”)2020.
During 2020, the COVID-19 pandemic had a significant impact on the world, the markets in which we operate our business and on our employees and customers. In response to COVID-19, we proactively managed through the pandemic to support the health and safety of our team and we continuously implemented changes in our business designed to protect the health and well-being of our employees, customers and communities. This included employing a “Safe-Work Playbook”, which is a comprehensive document outlining various protocols to, among other things, foster the health and safety of our constituencies. Despite challenging market conditions in 2020, the Company generated $659 million in Adjusted EBITDA, repaid approximately $400 million in debt, made $31 million in dividend payments and purchased $30 million in shares pursuant to our previously announced open market share repurchase program. (See attached Appendix A for filing with the SEC. This report is provided by the following independent directors, who comprise the Audit and Finance Committee:a reconciliation of Adjusted EBITDA to its most directly comparable GAAP measure.)
AUDIT AND FINANCE COMMITTEE
M. Catherine Morris, Chairwoman
Thomas A. Danjczek
David R. Jardini
COMPENSATION OF EXECUTIVE OFFICERS AND DIRECTORS
Compensation Discussion and Analysis
We have designed aOur executive compensation program for our named executive officers that is driven by our strategic goals with the primary emphasis on paying for performance. This sectionprogram has previously relied primarily upon the two elements of competitive base salary and a performance-based annual cash incentive plan, the Incentive Compensation Plan (the “ICP”), which rewards employees based on the financial and operational performance of the Company.
From early in 2020, our G&C Committee was focused on the pandemic’s impact on the Company’s industry and operations, and the corresponding motivational impact on our compensation programs, including our incentive programs. Early on in 2020, in normal course, we provided each of our continuing NEOs with a 3.0% base salary increase, and we negotiated Mr. Ortiz’ initial base salary rate when he joined our team. However, our G&C Committee had to quickly turn its attention to the COVID-19 pandemic. In May 2020, as further discussed below, the G&C Committee determined to exercise its discretion under the ICP to continue the motivational element of the ICP. As a result of this proxy statement describesaction, the G&C Committee adjusted the Adjusted EBITDA performance target downward and instituted a corresponding 1.0x multiple target “ceiling” on the potential payout. This action was taken not just for our NEOs, but for all salaried employee participants in the ICP to further focus on the resulting business goals for the year. The G&C Committee believes that such performance target adjustment was warranted for all participants in the ICP given the uncertainty and business disruptions
caused by the global pandemic, and the participants’ efforts toward the focus on health and safety while working to achieve sustained operational and financial performance as the participants reacted to the then evolving conditions created by the pandemic.
Longer term incentive compensation has also been part of our NEO compensation program. Following our acquisition by Brookfield in 2015 and until our IPO in 2018, we did not use equity awards for incentivizing long-term performance. Instead, we adopted a long-term cash incentive program at the time of the acquisition, the GrafTech International Ltd. Long-Term Incentive Plan (the “LTIP”), designed to retain senior management of the Company, to incentivize them to make decisions with a long-term view and to motivate and influence behavior on their part that is consistent with maximizing value for the stockholders of the Company in a prudent manner. Since our IPO, we have reviewed the structure of our long-term incentive program and continue to focus on the goal of creating long-term value for our stockholders by including a blend of shorter term cash-based and longer term equity-based incentives.
Since 2019, we have operated an executive leadership team long-term incentive program (the “ELT LTIP”) under our Equity Plan adopted at the time of our IPO. The ELT LTIP is designed to continue to help retain senior management of the Company and to incentivize them to make decisions with a long-term view and to motivate and influence behavior on their part that is consistent with maximizing value for the stockholders of the Company in a prudent manner. In February 2020, we approved grants of service-based stock options and restricted stock units (“RSUs”) for the NEOs as new awards under the ELT LTIP. These awards vest ratably over five years on each anniversary of the date of grant, subject to acceleration in certain circumstances. The exercise price for these options is set at the closing stock price on the day of grant. The RSUs also accrue dividend equivalents with such dividend equivalents vesting on the same schedule as the shares underlying the RSUs.
Our stockholders have been supportive of our NEO compensation practices. In 2020, our G&C Committee and Board submitted to our stockholders an advisory vote to approve our NEO compensation, commonly known as a “say-on-pay” vote. Our say-on-pay vote is submitted to our stockholders annually and the next required say-on-pay vote to determine the frequency for future say-on-pay votes will be no later than 2025. The G&C Committee believes the voting results from the 2020 Annual Meeting demonstrate significant support for our NEO compensation program, and explains the compensation policies and decisions ofG&C Committee chose not to make any substantial changes to the Compensation Committee with respect to our named executive officers. The compensationexisting program for these employees primarily consists of a base salary, cash incentive awards and equity awards.
During 2014, our named2020, in part, in response to the 2020 say-on-pay voting result. The G&C Committee will, however, continue to work with its advisers to monitor changes in executive officers were:
Joel L. Hawthorne, President and Chief Executive Officer, beginning January 17, 2014 (previously President, Engineered Solutions)
Craig S. Shular, Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer, until January 17, 2014, and Executive Chairman, until May 21, 2014
Erick R. Asmussen, Vice President and Chief Financial Officer
Darrell A. Blair, President, Industrial Materials, beginning November 1, 2014
Petrus J. Barnard, Vice President and President, Industrial Materials, until November 1, 2014
Lionel D. Batty, President, Engineered Solutions, beginning January 17, 2014
John D. Moran, Vice President, General Counsel and Secretary
Executive Summary
Leadership Changes
In January 2014, Mr. Hawthorne was promoted from President, Engineered Solutions to Chief Executive Officer when Mr. Shular retired from that position. Mr. Hawthorne joined our financial team as Director of Investor Relations in 1999. During his time in Investor Relations, he was an integral part of the management team that turned around the Company. As part of this team, he played a key role in various equity, bond and bank debt offerings. In 2001, he moved into operations as Director of Electrode Sales & Marketing, United States and Canada. In 2003, he was promoted to Director of Electrode Marketing and Sales for the Americas and, in 2005, he was appointed Director of Worldwide Marketing and Americas Sales. During this period, he was instrumentalcompensation practices in the development of global sales and marketing strategies and execution for the graphite electrodes business and a driving force in more than doubling sales to over $1 billion. In 2009, Mr. Hawthorne was appointed as Vice President, Global Marketing & Sales, Industrial Materials, with responsibility for worldwide sales, strategy and tactical planning. In 2011, Mr. Hawthorne was promoted to President, Engineered Solutions and for three years he led the segment to more than 20% annual sales growth rates through many successful new product introductions.Company’s competitive market.
In January 2014, Mr. Shular retired as Chief Executive Officer and President and became the Company’s executive Chairman, a position that he held until May 21, 2014.
In January 2014, Lionel Batty was promoted to President, Engineered Solutions after over 30 years with the Company, including service as President of the graphite electrode business for the prior two years.
In November 2014, Darrell Blair was promoted from Vice President—Global Sales, for the graphite electrode business, to President, Industrial Materials. Mr. Blair joined the Company in 1980 at its facility in Columbia, Tennessee. His extensive commercial, operations, and customer technical service experience includes international assignments in Puerto Rico, Mexico, Singapore, Hong Kong, and, for the past eleven years, Switzerland. Mr. Blair’s appointment followed the retirement of Dr. Pieter Barnard, the segment’s former President, effective November 1, 2014, after a 42-year career spanning three continents and a multitude of roles.
We provide an executive compensation program that is focused on promoting performance and long-term stockholder value. The design and operation of theour NEO compensation program reflect the following objectives:
Driving long-termour objectives of driving financial and operational performance that will deliver value to our stockholders, including through incentives that drive return based performance,and propel growth, and increase stockholder value.
Attractingwhile attracting and retaining talented executive leadership.
Providing competitive pay opportunities relative to equivalent positions with other global companies of comparable size and complexity as well as within the Company.
Motivating executives to achieve or exceed Company and individual performance goals that are difficult to achieve.
Aligning the interestsThe primary elements of our executives with those of our stockholders by encouraging equity ownership.
Our executiveNEO compensation program emphasizes pay for performance through annual cash incentive and long-term incentive programs, which collectively2020 are the majority of our named executive officers’ targeted annual compensation. The annual cash incentive (bonus) plan and a substantial portion of the long-term incentive (equity incentive) plan only provide value if specific pre-established financial and performance goals are achieved. Achievement of such goals requires diligent management focus and significant effort. In addition, our executives receive base salaries based on competitive market data, individual performance and other factors, as well as retirement and other customary welfare benefits.
Performance Summary
For the past 18 months, we have been driving change throughout the organization to build sustainable operating leverage and dramatically improve resultsshown in the facefollowing table. The amounts of a difficult and demanding environment in our Industrial Materials segment and market headwinds in our Engineered Solutions segment. Specifically, we tookcompensation were determined by the following actions:
Launched and successfully completed an ongoing Company-wide cost savings program, aimed at achieving total annual cost savings of more than $120 million (approximately $100 million of which are cash savings -approximately 10 percent of annual sales) and directly improving EBITDA.
Optimized the graphite electrode manufacturing platform by rationalizing the two highest cost manufacturing sites through, among other things, total company headcount reductions of approximately 20 percent, which will reduce annual capital expenditures by approximately $10 million.
Simplified the operating and management structure to decentralize the organization, accelerate decision-making, and improve responsiveness to changes in customer demand.
Redesigned the Company’s research and development function to accelerate innovation for new product development and commercial introduction and to maximize the efficiency of development costs.
Downsized the Company’s corporate functions, including headcount and other SG&A reductions, by approximately 20 percent.
Rationalized and streamlined under-performing product lines.
Increased borrowing capacity by over $125 million in the past nine months.
Reduced inventory significantly, generating approximately $80 million of cash in 2014.
Continued development of new products, which contributed approximately 30 percent of the revenue in the Engineered Solutions segment in 2014, and will provide long-term value creation for the Company and its stockholders.
Summary Analysis of Competitive Levels of Pay, Dilution, and Stock Ownership Guidelines
In its 2014 review of the compensation levels of our named executive officers and use of equity awards as incentives, the Compensation Committee’s independent compensation consultant (Mercer) concluded that:
In the aggregate, our base salary levels (without regard to temporary salary reductions) and target total cash compensation are competitive to market median levels compared to our Compensation Peer Group, although some variability exists from position to position.
Total direct compensation opportunities for the named executive officers are competitive, with levels at 93% of the market median. We generally consider compensation to be competitive if it falls within a range of 90% to 110% of the market median for base salary and total target cash compensation and 85% to 115% for total direct compensation.
Overall, both actual total cash and actual total direct compensation for our named executive officers were significantly below market levels due to no bonus payout for 2013 performance.
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Our named executive officers are in compliance with our stock ownership guidelines, which are generally aligned with Compensation Peer Group levels.
2014/2015 Compensation Decisions
The following summary highlights the Compensation Committee’s key compensation decisions effective for 2014:
To address the difficult global economic conditions we faced in 2014, management once again recommended, and the Board and the CompensationG&C Committee determined to make, no upward adjustments to our named executive officers’ salaries in 2014 other than in connection with promotions to positions of greater responsibility. This is the third consecutive year that no such upward adjustments were made (other than due to promotions).
In October 2014, we suspended the non-qualified matching allocations and non-qualified retirement contributions for our named executive officers and certain other corporate officers.
We established stretch goals for our 2014 annual cash incentive (bonus) program:
At management’s recommendation, the Compensation Committee approved an annual bonus program for 2014 under which target performance would result in payouts at 25% of an individual’s targeted bonus (instead of 100%) and threshold performance would result in no payout.
This recommendation was based on the challenging economic environment the Company was facing and in recognition that the annual business plan targets were lower than actual 2013 results.
Our 2014 performance resulted in no payouts for our named executive officers.
objectives described below. The following summary highlights the Compensation Committee’s key compensation decisions effective for 2015:
Upon management’s recommendation, the base salaries of our named executive officers were temporarily reduced by 10% for the CEO and 5% for the other named executives and certain other corporate officers effective in 2015.
For our 2015 annual bonus program, we adopted performance measures based 50%G&C Committee did not solely rely on business unit Operating Income and 50%formulas or survey results, but instead it used its judgment based on Company-as-a whole Operating Income. In our 2013 and 2014 annual bonus programs, performance measures were based on EBIT/Operating Income (50%) and Free Cash Flow (50%). The change is intended to support our drive to simplify our operating and management structure, decentralize the organization, accelerate decision-making, and improve responsiveness to changes in customer demand.
In selecting the performance measures for performance share units awarded in 2014 under our long-term incentive plan for the performance period 2015—2017:
The Compensation Committee decided that Total Shareholder Return (TSR) and Free Cash Flow were effective measures to align incentives with Company performance and stockholder value.
The Compensation Committee also believed that those performance measures reflect the full impact of acquisitions and capital allocation decisions.
2014 Stockholder Vote on Executive Compensation
At the 2014 Annual Meeting of stockholders, in connection with a non-binding advisory vote by stockholders, our executive compensation was approved by approximately 93%its assessment of the votes cast.
Reaction to Shareholder Say on Pay Vote
In connection with reviewing our executive compensation programs for 2015, the Compensation Committee considered the favorable results of the advisory votes from prior annual meetings of stockholders, as well as feedback from institutional investors. Taking those considerations into account, the Compensation Committee took the actions described above to further reinforce theCompany’s objectives of our performance based compensation.
We are committed to pay for performance. With respect to our named executive officers, this is demonstrated, with limited exceptions (1) by three consecutive years of base salary freezes, (2) no annual bonus payments, (3) no long-term incentive payouts, (4) temporary salary reductions, and (5) reductions in benefits.
The Compensation Committee will continue to focus on responsible executive compensation practices that attract, motivate and retain high performance executives, that reward those executives for the achievement of short-term and long-term performance, that support our other executive compensation objectives (including long-term career development and retention goals), that drive return based performance and propel growth and increases in stockholder value, and that take into consideration feedback from our stockholders.
Executive Compensation Philosophy and Approach
Our philosophy is to provide market competitive pay for achieving targeted results. We target named executive officer total direct compensation packages that are competitive against the median compensation for equivalent positions with other global corporations of comparable size and complexity that comprise our Compensation Peer Group described below under “Peer Groups—Compensation Peer Group.” We believe that a median target provides a sufficiently competitive compensation opportunity to attract, retain and motivate our executives in a manner that enhances stockholder value. We also emphasize a pay-for-performance approach and structure our compensation program so that a significant proportion of total compensation is variable in the form of annual and long-term performance-based incentive compensation. The majority of the annual total direct compensation opportunity of our named executive officers presently employed is “at risk” as illustrated (based on 2015 base salaries, not taking into account temporary salary reductions, and incentive targets) by the following table:
Total Targeted Direct Compensation
Salary | ICP | EIP | Total | |||||||||||||
Joel L. Hawthorne | 19 | % | 19 | % | 62 | % | 100 | % | ||||||||
Erick R. Asmussen | 32 | % | 21 | % | 47 | % | 100 | % | ||||||||
Lionel D. Batty | 32 | % | 21 | % | 47 | % | 100 | % | ||||||||
Darrell A. Blair | 32 | % | 21 | % | 47 | % | 100 | % | ||||||||
John D. Moran | 35 | % | 20 | % | 45 | % | 100 | % |
Our performance measures are set at target levels that are expected to be achieved, but represent a level of difficulty that requires diligent management focus and attention and does not ensure value if our stretch performance objectives are not attained. Our named executive officers are required to devote significant effort and produce significant results to attain payment for performance at, or above, our goals. Annual incentives include business unit objectives for positions that require the management of business units and corporate objectives for other positions.
We also evaluate individual performance based on pre-established criteria, which we use in establishing base salary levels and for making negative adjustments to annual cash incentive awards. A portion of our long-term incentive opportunities are equity awards that realize value based on performance over a designated period. We believe that these criteria align the interests of our named executive officers with the interests of GrafTech and its stockholders and that achievement of the criteria will enhance stockholder value. Specifically, the Compensation Committee reviews: the competitiveness of the current compensation levels of our named executive officers; our pay and performance relative to those of our peer organizations; typical market practices surrounding short- and long- term incentive programs; dilution and run-rate levels at GrafTech and our peer organizations; and our share ownership guidelines compared to peers.
We encourage retention and long-term value creation by offering long-term incentives that can be earned or vested over several years as well as a competitive package of benefits. In order to align our key executives’ interests with those of our stockholders, we grant equity interests and encourage ongoing stock retention by our named executive officers, all of whom are subject to minimum ownership guidelines.
The Compensation Committee reviews the following compensation elements for each named executive officer: base salary; annual cash and long-term equity incentive compensation levels; retirement; health, life, and disability insurance; and vacation. The Compensation Committee considers each individual named executive officer’s level and complexity of responsibility, experience and skills, and performance in his or her position over time in considering changes to that named executive officer’s total compensation opportunity. Our management provides the Compensation Committee with tally sheets that include an analysislight of the total compensation paid to, and other information with respect to, each named executive officer and information concerning the performance of such named executive officer. The tally sheets are used to benchmark the named executives’ compensation against the Compensation Peer Group. Together with evaluations of the executives’ performance, the tally sheets are also used to develop recommended compensation actions for changes in base salaries and alignment of annual and long-term incentive levels. In determining each named executive officer’s compensation package, the Compensation Committee reviews management’s recommendations, considers how each element of compensationthose objectives, as well as the totaloverarching impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on our operations and financial results. The CEO played no role in determining his own compensation. He did make recommendations, in particular with regard to base salary increases, regarding the compensation package compare with the market median for the named executive officer, the named executive officer’s performance and the Company’s internal pay equities. Chief Executive Officer compensation is determined by the Compensation Committee in consultation with Mercer.
Compensation Consultantof his direct reports.
The CompensationG&C Committee followed a careful selection process before it retained Mercer in 2009 as its third-party consultant on executive compensation matters and has engaged Mercer each year since then. Mercer serves at the sole pleasure of theMeridian Compensation Committee and works with the Compensation Committee and management on the organization, strategy, structure and effectiveness of our executive compensation program.
Mercer also assists the Compensation Committee in its process of reviewing the peer group of companies used to benchmark pay practices and the peer group against which our long-term performance incentives are measured, reviewing the compensation programs of members of the peer groups and making recommendations and providing detailed analysis of, and advicePartners with respect to executive compensation and has assessed their independence. Meridian Compensation Partners does no work
for the Company other than providing executive compensation of our named executive officersadvice to the G&C Committee and the overall effectiveness of our executive compensation program.
In connection withG&C Committee has determined Meridian’s work for the Compensation Committee’s most recent engagement of Mercer for compensation advisory services, and in accordance with the rules issued under the Dodd-Frank Act, each of the following independence factors was considered:
The provision of other services to the Company by Mercer and its affiliates.
The amount of fees received from the Company by Mercer and its affiliates, as a percentage of its and its parent company’s consolidated total revenue.
The policies and procedures adopted by Mercer and its affiliates that are designed to preventG&C Committee raises no conflicts of interest.
Any business or personal relationship of our Mercer consultants with a member of the Compensation Committee.
Mercer and our Mercer consultants’ ownership of Company stock.
Any business or personal relationships between our executive officers and our Mercer consultants, Mercer, and Mercer’s parent company.
The Compensation Committee concluded that there was no conflict of interest associated with its engagement of Mercer and that Mercer was independent with the meaning of NYSE rules.
Peer Groups
When determining an executive’s overall compensation package, the different elements of compensation are considered in light of the compensation packages provided to similarly situated executives at comparable companies, which we refer to as our “Compensation Peer Group”, as well as the role the executive is expected, and should be able, to play in achieving our short- and long-term goals. The Compensation Peer Group, as well as the Performance Peer Group described below, have been constructed to include organizations of comparable size, revenue, assets, employees, market capitalization, complexity, business focus and geographical scope.
Compensation Peer Group
The Compensation Peer Group currently consists of 18 publicly-traded companies in industries similar or related to our own and with revenues comparable to our historical revenue level. Our Compensation Peer Group is adjusted from time to time to reflect the impact of acquisitions, or other significant events to ensure the reference companies continue to meet the established criteria for comparison. There were no changes in the composition of our Compensation Peer Group between 2013 and 2014.
The 2013 median revenue of the Compensation Peer Group was $1.5 billion (based on revenues reported in each company’s annual report on Form 10-K) compared to our 2013 revenue of $1.2 billion. The 2014 Compensation Peer Group consisted of the following companies:
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Performance Peer Group
We adopted an “expanded peer group” against which to measure performance for our long-term incentives for awards granted in 2012 and 2013 and which we refer to as our Performance Peer Group. Our Performance Peer Group is comprised of our Compensation Peer Group plus 11 additional companies that are primarily engaged in the design, manufacture, and supply of electrical equipment.
The identity of the additional companies included in our Performance Peer Group is adjusted from time to time to reflect the impact of acquisitions, divestitures or other significant events to ensure the reference companies continue to meet the established criteria for comparison. In addition to the peers included in our Compensation Peer Group, the Performance Peer Group includes the following 11 companies in the electrical equipment industry with 2013 revenues ranging from approximately $724 million to $3.4 billion:
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Structure of Executive Compensation Program
Components
We believe that our executive compensation program, each element alone and in total, effectively achieves our objectives. The primary elements of our executive compensation program, which are key to the attraction, retention and motivation of our named executive officers, are shown in the following table.
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Equity Plan / LTIP / ELT LTIP | Multi-year awards that incentivize long-term value creation, including stock options that align the interests of our NEOs with those of our stockholders and | |||
Retirement Savings Plan (the “Savings Plan”) |
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Broad-based plan under which we make matching contributions that vary based on the employee’s contribution | |||
Compensation Deferral Plan |
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Non-qualified deferral permitted for up to | ||
Health, Welfare and Other Benefits |
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Generally, benefits are made available to |
Performance measure definitions
For purposes
The G&C Committee reviews base salaries for NEOs annually to reflect the scope of our incentive compensation plans:
“EBIT” means earnings before interesttheir responsibilities, the length of their experience performing those responsibilities and taxes.
“EBITDA” means EBIT before depreciationtheir performance. In 2020, the G&C Committee approved modest increases in base salaries that reflect merit and amortization.
“EPS” means earnings per share.
“Free Cash Flow” means cash flow from operations after capital expenditures.
“Operating Income” means net sales less cost of sales, researchliving increases in order to incentivize and development costs, and selling and administrative costs.
“ROIC” means return on invested capital.
“Total Shareholder Return” or “TSR” means return to shareholders over time based on changes in the pricehelp retain such individuals as a component of a sharean appropriate mix of stock plus, if applicable, dividends and distributions.
The foregoing definitions are subject to and qualified by reference to the calculation methods set forth in the applicable plan, Compensation Committee minutes and related documents. Our calculation methods for these performance measures provide for certain adjustments, including the inclusion or exclusion of certain special items not specifically mentioned above, which may differ from performance period to performance period.
Base Salaries
We provide base salaries to our named executive officers that we believe are competitive to attract and retain key executive talent and to provide a compensation component that is financially stable. Base salaries for our named executive officers are targeted at the market median of the Compensation Peer Group, with individual variations based on job scope, tenure, promotions, retention risks, and performance. Base salaries also form the basis for calculating other compensation opportunities for our named executive officers. For example, an executive’s base salary is used to determine each executive officer’s annual and long-term incentive opportunity levels and is included in the formula for calculating severance benefits in the event of termination of the executive’s employment in connection with a change in control and under severance plans.
Year-to-Year Base Rate Annualized Salary Changes
performance-based compensation. In January 2014,addition, Mr. Hawthorne was promoted from President, Engineered Solutions to Chief Executive Officer when Mr. Shular retired from that position. In connection with Mr. Hawthorne’s appointment as Chief Executive Officer, the Compensation Committee approved certain modifications to his compensation arrangements. In light of his new responsibilities, Mr. Hawthorne’s annualPerez’ base salary was increased to $700,000.
Upon Mr. Shular’s retirement as Chief Executive Officer and President,established through negotiation when he became executive Chairman, a position that he held until May 21, 2014. In connection with Mr. Shular’s transition to executive Chairman,joined the Compensation Committee reduced his annual baseCompany. Base salary to $600,000.
In January 2014, Lionel Batty was promoted to President, Engineered Solutions. Mr. Batty’s base salary was adjusted from $280,000 to $300,000 in connection with his promotion.
In November 2014, Darrell Blair was promoted from Vice President—Global Sales,amounts for the graphite electrode business, to President, Industrial Materials. His base salary for 2014 reflects international variationsNEOs in compensation arrangements2019 and benefits, in addition to cost-of-living differences and currency fluctuations. In November 2014, the Compensation Committee approved changes in Mr. Blair’s compensation arrangement effective upon his relocation to the United States in 2015.2020 are set forth below:
Effective December 2014, after Mr. Barnard’s retirement, the Company and Mr. Barnard entered into a consulting agreement under which Mr. Barnard was engaged to perform services through March 31, 2015 to facilitate the transition of the Industrial Materials business segment to a decentralized structure and additional work as mutually agreed. Mr. Barnard was compensated for services performed at the rate of $1,500 per billable day. Under the consulting agreement, Mr. Barnard was expected to provide services four out of every 20 business days on a rolling basis.
Name | 2019 Salary($) | 2020 Salary($) | ||||
David J. Rintoul | 675,000 | 695,250 | ||||
Quinn J. Coburn | 383,800 | 395,300 | ||||
Jeremy S. Halford(1) | 450,000 | 463,500 | ||||
Gina K. Gunning | 346,700 | 357,100 | ||||
Iñigo Perez Ortiz(2) | — | 425,425 |
In connection with the changes to the named executive officers’ compensation in 2014 due to promotions and changes in responsibilities, the Compensation Committee received reports and recommendations from Mercer, including assessments of market practices, benchmarking analysis and evaluations of overall compensation and alignment of incentives with shareholder values.
(1) | 2019 amount reflects annualized salary; Mr. Halford commenced employment on May 1, 2019. Actual salary received for 2019 is presented in the Summary Compensation Table below. |
(2) | 2020 amount reflects annualized salary; Mr. Perez commenced employment on February 17, 2020. Actual salary received for 2020 is presented in the Summary Compensation Table below. |
In 2014, the Compensation Committee, with assistance from Mercer, assessed the competitiveness of the base salaries of our named executive officers. Mercer provided the Compensation Committee with a detailed analysis of its executive compensation review of our named executive officers. This executive compensation
review and analysis showed that, although several of our named executive officers’ base salaries were below market median, in the aggregate our named executive officers’ base salary levels approximate market median levels (without regard to temporary salary reductions). Mercer generally considers base salary and total cash compensation to be competitive if it falls within a range of 90% to 110% of the market median for base salary.
As noted above, for the third consecutive year, in light of the challenging economic environment and at management’s recommendation, the Compensation Committee decided not to provide any salary increases in 2014 for our named executive officers other than in connection with upward adjustments due to promotions to positions of greater responsibility. As also noted above, the base salaries of our named executive officers were temporarily reduced by 10% for the CEO and 5% for the other named executives and certain other corporate officers effective in 2015.
Short-Term Incentives through the Executive Incentive Compensation Plan2020 ICP
The purpose of the Executive Incentive Compensation Plan, or the ICP or annual ICP, isallows us to provide competitive incentives to executive officers by having a portion of their annual cash compensation dependent upon annual performance and to motivate“at risk.” This motivates and reward executivesrewards executive officers for the achievement of targeted annual financial performance. For 2020, the financial measure was Adjusted EBITDA, a non-GAAP financial measure, which we define as (i) net income or loss plus interest expense, minus interest income, plus income taxes, and depreciation and amortization plus (ii) any pension and other post-employment benefit (“OPEB”) plan expenses, initial and follow-on public offering and related expenses, non-cash gains or losses from foreign currency remeasurement of non-operating liabilities in our foreign subsidiaries where the functional currency is the U.S. dollar, related party Tax Receivable Agreement adjustments, stock-based compensation and non-cash fixed asset write-offs. See attached Appendix A for a reconciliation of Adjusted EBITDA to its most directly comparable GAAP measure. The G&C Committee chose Adjusted EBITDA as the performance measure as it is the primary metric used by our management and our Board to establish budgets and operational goals that create stockholder value.for managing our business and evaluating our performance.
Annual incentive target amounts for the NEOs in 2020 as a percentage of base salary are set forth below.
Name | 2019 Annual Incentive Target (% of Base Salary) | 2020 Annual Incentive Target (% of Base Salary) | ||||
David J. Rintoul | 100 | % | 100% | |||
Quinn J. Coburn | 75 | % | 75% | |||
Jeremy S. Halford | 75 | % | 75% | |||
Gina K. Gunning | 65 | % | 65% | |||
Iñigo Perez Ortiz(1) | — | 75% |
(1) | Mr. Perez commenced employment on February 17, 2020. |
Annual incentive payout opportunities for 2020 and the performance metric and goals for the 2020 ICP were determined by the G&C Committee in February 2020, before the COVID-19 pandemic had fully spread around the world. Under the original formulation, payouts were to be based on the Company’s performance against an Adjusted EBITDA target. Final annual ICP, payments are generally madeincentive payouts were originally designed to provide a payout ranging from a minimum, guaranteed fixed payment of at least 0.3x of target annual incentive, to an aggregate payment of up to 2.0x the target annual incentive for Adjusted EBITDA results in cash (althoughexcess of a certain threshold. Payment multiples were designed to be determined using straight line interpolation between the threshold and target, and target and maximum, respectively.
However, as noted above, this design was adopted before our business and the world were impacted by the global pandemic. Our G&C Committee monitored the situation during early 2020, and within the first few months of the pandemic determined that we would be unlikely to achieve the original Adjusted EBITDA target goal for 2020, despite the significant efforts of our NEOs and other employees to operate our business in the challenging environment. This was because many of our customers were facing challenges due to the then current market conditions, some of whom were seeking force majeure and others were struggling with volume commitments, as well as certain other obligations. Without further action by the G&C Committee, payouts under the ICP permits paymentsfor 2020 would have been in jeopardy, which would have negatively affected the motivational element of the ICP. Nonetheless, our G&C Committee recognized the extraordinary effort that would be required of our NEOs and other employees during the pandemic, including working with valued customers to be madedevelop mutually beneficial solutions to the challenges that they were facing. To help ensure our NEOs remained focused and motivated, the G&C Committee and Board acted in cash or stock orMay 2020 to adjust the design of the ICP for 2020. Rather than waiting for the end of 2020 to make a combination thereof), assuming applicable performance measures are achievednon-formulaic, discretionary payout to participants based on the Committee’s (or management’s) subjective evaluation of both Company and individual criteria satisfied.
performance, the G&C Committee acted to retain the objective, formulaic structure for the ICP, but with a performance goal that was more achievable under the circumstances. The Adjusted EBITDA performance target was lowered by approximately 24% to $650 million, and the G&C Committee imposed a corresponding 1.0x multiple of target “cap” on final ICP payouts. Based on 2014 performance, no bonusesapplication of the payout grid approved by the G&C Committee under this redesigned structure, to final achieved results, each of the NEOs was determined to have earned 1.0x of his or her target annual incentive based on Adjusted EBITDA achievement for 2020 of $659 million.
This mid-year design change allowed the ICP to retain its incentive effect despite 2020’s business challenges, and helped motivate our employees to continue to work hard to position the Company for the business environment emerging after the pandemic recedes, without the risk of our NEOs receiving disproportional payment given the cap. The benefit of this program redesign is that our employee participants in the ICP were paidmotivated to our named executive officers.
Our performance measuresachieve significant results for our annual ICP are set at target levels thatthe business during the challenging year, and those results are expected to be achievable, but representdrive further long-term stockholder value. This action drove a levelgood result in the circumstances for both our employee participants (including the NEOs) and our investors. For more information about the final 2020 ICP payments made to our NEOs, please see the Summary Compensation Table below.
2020 Executive Long-Term Incentive Program and Other Equity Plan Awards
In March 2019, our Board, upon recommendation of difficulty that requires diligent management focus and attention and does not ensure value if our stretch performance objectives are not attained. At management’s recommendation, the CompensationG&C Committee, approved an annual bonus program for 2014 under which payouts upon achievement of targets plans would be at 25% of targeted bonus level insteadthe ELT LTIP. The ELT LTIP is designed to help retain senior management of the 100% as has been historically used (50%Company and to incentivize them to make decisions with a long-term view and to motivate and influence behavior on their part that is consistent with maximizing value for the stockholders of the Company in 2013). Correspondingly, threshold payout was reduced from 25%a prudent manner. The ELT LTIP includes RSUs and stock options that vest ratably over five years on each anniversary of the date of grant, subject to 0%, with achievement of performance goals above threshold but below target resultingacceleration in payouts based on a formula adopted bycertain circumstances. The exercise price for options is set at the Compensation Committee. This recommendation was basedclosing stock price on the challenging economic environmentday of grant. RSUs also accrue dividend equivalents, which vest on the Company was facing
same schedule as the shares underlying the RSUs. The RSUs are designed to help ensure long-term retention of key talent and in recognition that the targets were lower than actual 2013 results. Our named executive officersstock options are requireddesigned to devote significant effort and produce meaningful results to attain payment for performance at, or above,align the interests of our goals. Annual incentives include business unit objectives for positions that requireNEOs with those of our stockholders. In determining the management of business units and corporate objectives for other positions.
ICP Target Opportunities
Annual ICP award targets for our named executive officers are established to drive achievement of stockholder return objectives. The Compensation Committee aims for total cash compensation to be at market median levels. Based on Mercer’s benchmarking analysis against the Compensation Peer Group, the target payout level for 2014 ICP was set at an amount between 55% and 100% of a named executive officer’s actual base salary. Upon his promotion to Chief Executive Officer, Mr. Hawthorne’s target payout level for 2014 ICP was set at 100% of his base salary.
For 2015, the percentages of compensation target levels are the same as in 2014. As a result of changes to the calculations for 2015 under the ICP whereby minimum threshold payouts do not begin for named executive officers until after annual business plan targets have been exceeded, achievementsize of the Compensation Committee’s market median cash compensation objectives will require substantial effortsELT LTIP awards in 2019, the G&C Committee took into account base salary and exceptional performance. Prior to 2014, generally achievement of the annual business plan performance goals would have resulted in bonus payout at targeted level. In 2013, achievement of the annual business plan performance goals would have resulted in bonus payout at 50% of targeted level.
ICP Performance Measures for 2014
The performance measures for 2014 were Operating Income and Free Cash Flow. We identified these performance measures as key elements in our business strategy to drive profitable growth. We believed that, by achieving profitability objectives and maximizing our cash flows, we would deliver enhanced financial performance that would drive shareholder value and be in the best position to capitalize on growth opportunities.
No annual bonuses under our ICP were earned with respect to 2014. The 2014 incentive targets for Messrs. Hawthorne, Asmussen, and Moran were based on our total Company threshold, target and maximum performance measures. The 2014 incentive targets for Messrs. Barnard, Batty, and Blair were based 60% on total Company results and 40% on their respective operating segment results.
ICP Performance Measures for 2015
For 2015, upon consultation with management, Mercer recommended, and the Compensation Committee approved, performance measures that correlate with our continued focus on growth. Accordingly, the ICP performance measures for the 2015 performance period will be based 50% on business unit Operating Income and 50% on Company-as-a whole Operating Income. The 2015 incentive targets for Messrs. Hawthorne, Asmussen, and Moran are based 100% on total Company results. The 2015 incentive targets for Messrs. Batty and Blair are based 60% on total Company results and 40% on their respective operating segment results.
We believe that Operating Income is a generally accepted method of measuring operational profitability. Management uses Operating Income as well as other financial measures in connection with its decision-making activities. We believe that these measures are key elements in our business plan to drive profitable growthoutstanding previous awards in order to create additional shareholder value in coming years.determine an appropriate mix of base salary and short- and long-term performance-based compensation to incentivize and retain the NEOs. Now, ELT LTIP award sizes are generally determined each year based off of a multiple of base salary.
Long-Term Incentives through Management Stock OwnershipOn February 25, 2020, our Board, upon recommendation of the G&C Committee, approved grants for 2020 under the ELT LTIP. Mr. Rintoul received an award of 85,000 RSUs and 85,000 stock options. Mr. Coburn received an award of 13,000 RSUs and 13,000 stock options. Mr. Halford received an award of 36,000 RSUs and 36,000 stock options. Mr. Perez received an award of 30,000 RSUs and 30,000 stock options and Ms. Gunning received an award of 27,000 RSUs and 27,000 stock options.
We believe that compensation in the form of stock-based awards helps create a culture focused on long-term stockholder value.
Awards under our equity incentive plan are designed to:
Provide rewards for the achievement of financial and strategic goals, including through incentives that drive return based performance, propel growth, and increase stockholder value.
Encourage retentionCertain of our top performers.
RewardNEOs also have outstanding equity incentives previously awarded under the Equity Plan prior to implementation of the ELT LTIP. At the time of our top leaders—those who haveIPO, Mr. Rintoul was awarded 416,670 stock options. Upon approval of the abilityELT LTIP, Mr. Rintoul received an award of 75,000 RSUs. The G&C Committee determined that the size of Mr. Rintoul’s 2018 stock option award at the time of our IPO remained sufficient to make a material difference in the Company.
Align management’sappropriately align his long term interests with those of the stockholders, and attributed a portion of that 2018 award to what additional stock options otherwise may have been awarded in 2019 under the ELT LTIP. Ms. Gunning also was awarded 67,000 stock options when she joined the Company in July 2018. In 2019, Ms. Gunning received awards of 20,000 RSUs and 20,000 stock options. In connection with joining the Company in May 2019, Mr. Halford received awards of 50,000 RSUs and 50,000 stock options under the ELT LTIP. As these stock options become exercisable in equal annual installments over five years following grant, they incentivize steady, long-term value creation with a focus on increasing stock price and aligning executive compensation with the interests of the Company’s stockholders.
Following our stockholders by aligning rewardsIPO, in 2018 the Board also granted Mr. Rintoul 19,335 DSUs with growtha fair market value of $290,015, which DSUs accrue dividend equivalents that are credited to Mr. Rintoul as additional DSUs (subject to the same vesting conditions). These DSUs generally vest in stockholder value.full on the third anniversary of the grant date and will settle in shares of common stock upon his termination of employment from the Company. The DSUs provide for retention and further directly align Mr. Rintoul’s interests with the long-term interests of the stockholders.
These awards granted under the ELT LTIP and Equity Plan are discussed further under “—2020 Grants of Plan-Based Awards.” Awards previously granted to our namedunder the Equity Plan are discussed further under “—Outstanding Equity Awards at 2020 Fiscal Year End.”
Mr. Coburn did not receive any awards under the ELT LTIP or Equity Plan in 2018 or 2019. Mr. Coburn, however, participates in the cash LTIP program implemented at the time of Brookfield’s acquisition of the Company in 2015 as discussed further under “—Potential Payments Upon Termination or Change in Control.” Beginning with the ELT LTIP grants in 2020, Mr. Coburn participates in the annual ELT LTIP grants for executive officers, are determined basedwith his first ELT LTIP award in 2020 prorated to balance the impact of the cash LTIP program participation that already provided long term incentives attributable to a portion of overall 2020 compensation.
Policies on their levels of responsibility, abilityTransactions in Company Stock, Including Anti-hedging Provisions
Our Insider Trading Policy imposes limits as to make a positive impact on GrafTech, current or new positions, current base salaries,when and salaries and other compensation offered by other similarly situated companies for individuals in equivalent positions. These awards are consistent withhow Company employees, including our pay-for-performance principles because they are designed to focus the attention of executives on strategic and performance goals spanning more than the current year and to align the interest of executives with our goal of creating long-term stockholder value. The primary difference between awards denominated in units versus awards denominated in shares is that units represent a promise to pay, provide tax efficiencies for international employees, and do not carry the right to vote or receive dividends.
The Compensation Committee has adopted a practice of granting equity incentive awards to our named executive officers and certaindirectors, can engage in transactions in our securities and prohibits short sales,
put, call or other membersderivative transactions, or hedging transactions, in each case, with respect to our common stock. See “Corporate Governance—Policies on Transactions in Company Stock, Including Anti-hedging Provisions” above.
The terms of our global management team atequity-based awards (other than the Compensation Committee’s last meeting of the year, the date of which is generally established in the preceding calendar year. In connection
with improvements to our business model, rationalization activities, and cost reduction initiatives, we have substantially reduced the number of managers who participate in the equity incentive plan. We have adopted a portfolio approach to equity awards, as recommended by Mercer, that is consistent with practices within our Compensation Peer Group. This approach includes a mix of (i) time-based stock options (ii) time-based restricted stock units, and (iii) performance share units.
Since November 2012,granted under the mix of awards to our named executive officers has consisted of stock options (20%), restricted stock units (30%Rintoul Agreement (as defined below)) and performance share units (50%), to put a heavier weight on the performance share unit component to reflect that pay for performance is a key element of our compensation philosophy and to put more pay at risk to motivate the GrafTech team to excel in its performance.
The stock options and restricted stock units vest ratably on each of the first three anniversaries of the grant date. Performance share units are measured and earned on the basis of performance over a three-year period, cliff vest after the end of the performance period, and are payable in shares after completion of the performance period(1) entitle, to the extent earned.
Upon his promotionpermitted or required by applicable law, Company policy and/or the requirements of an exchange on which our shares are listed for trading, the Company to Chief Executive Officer, Mr. Hawthorne received a long-term equity incentive award, consistingrecoup compensation of options to purchase 66,600 shares at $10.31 per share (fair market value on the date of grant), 50,700 shares of restricted stock units and 83,500 performance share units. The actual amount of performance share unit payouts is subject to the attainment of applicable performance targets.
Performance Share Unit Awards—2011—2013
In selecting performance measures for the performance share units, the Compensation Committee determined, in consultation with Mercer, that the awards should provide rewards for successful, profitable growth over a three-year time horizon and, under the circumstances, that the best way to measure GrafTech’s success was through relative performance versus our Performance Peer Group.
For awards made in December 2011, potential payouts, which would have vested on March 31, 2015, were based EBITDA growth (60%) and revenue growth (40%) as measured against the Performance Peer Group. Based on estimated performance, which is subject to certificationwhatever kind paid by the Compensation Committee, we expect that no shares will be earned under the 2011 grant.
The performance measures for the performance share units granted in November 2012 are based on ROIC (60%) and EPS growth (40%) as measured against the Performance Peer Group.
The performance measures for the performance share units granted in November 2013 are based on EPS growth (40%) as measured against the Performance Peer Group and ROIC improvement (60%) over three one-year performance periods. The EPS performance measure is based on the compound annual growth rate (“CAGR”) in our EPS over the performance period, as measured against the Performance Peer Group. Threshold payouts based on EPS growth are earned at 30th percentile performance (35th percentile performance for the December 2011 grant), target at 50th percentile performance, and maximum at or above 75th percentile performance (when compared to the performance of the Performance Peer Group), and amounts are pro-rated between 50% and 200% payouts based on pro-rated performance. Further, with respect to the 2011 grants, if EBITDA growth does not achieve at least 35th percentile performance, no awards will be earned for the EBITDA growth component.
Performance Share Unit Awards—2014
The performance measures for the performance share units granted in November 2014 are based on Total Shareholder Return (50%) and Free Cash Flow (50%).
The TSR performance measure is an absolute metric based on share appreciation. For calculating the share price for measuring the level of attainment of performance targets, the closing share price on the New York Stock Exchange must exceed the target levels for 20 consecutive trading daysCompany at any time duringunder our Equity Plan and (2) provide for reduction, cancellation, forfeiture or recoupment of an award if the three-year performance period.
Threshold (50%), target (100%), and maximum (200%) payouts commence upon achievement of 80%, 100% and 150% percentparticipant engages in Detrimental Conduct. “Detrimental Conduct” means activities which have been, are or would reasonably be expected to be detrimental to the interests of the cumulative three-year Free Cash Flow target, respectively. Payouts for achievement of Free Cash Flow performance between thresholdCompany, as determined in the sole and target, and between target and maximum are interpolated on a straight-line basis. Achievementgood faith judgment of the minimum threshold stock price conditions (75%) will resultG&C Committee. Such activities would include unlawful conduct under securities, antitrust, tax or other laws, improper disclosure or use of confidential or proprietary information or trade secrets, competition with or improper taking of a corporate opportunity of any business of the Company, failure to cooperate in any investigation or legal proceeding, and misappropriation of property.
Savings Plan and Other Benefits
All of our regular, full-time U.S. employees, including eligible NEOs, are eligible to participate in our 401(k) Savings Plan. Mr. Ortiz, in particular, participates in a payout of 50% of the TSR component of the awards at the end of the performance period; achievement of the targeted price conditions will result insimilar Swiss retirement benefit plan. In 2020, we made a payout of 100% of the TSR component, achievement of 125% the targeted price conditions will result in a payout of 150% of the TSR component, and achievement of 150% the targeted price conditions will result in a payout of 200% of the TSR component. No shares are vested or delivered until March 31, 2018, subjectmatching contribution to the provisions of the applicable award agreements.
In selecting the performance measures for these awards, the Compensation Committee reviewed the performance measures utilized in our performance share unit awards. Mercer assisted in identifying various performance metric alternatives. The Compensation Committee determined to include performance measures that it believes reflect the full impact of acquisitions and capital allocation decisions.
Subject to applicable terms of the award agreements, the 2014 awards also have a service vesting component, and do not vest until March 2018. Awards, are forfeited if the executive’s employment terminates before vesting occurs (except in the case of certain terminations and a change in control, in which case all or a portion of the award may continue to vest).
2014 Performance Share Units | Cumulative Three- Year- Cash Flow Performance Measure | Percentages in this Column Apply to 50% of the Target Award* | Total Shareholder Return Performance Measure | Percentages in this Column Apply to 50% of the Target Award* | ||||
Level of Performance Achieved During Performance Period | Cumulative Three- Year- Cash Flow for Performance Period | Resulting Performance Shares Earned | Total Shareholder Return for Performance Period | Resulting Performance Shares Earned | ||||
Threshold | 80% of target | 50% | 75% of target | 50% | ||||
Target | 100% of target | 100% | 100% of target | 100% | ||||
Between target and maximum | — | — | 125% of target | 150% | ||||
Maximum | 150% of target | 200% | 150% of target | 200% |
Retirement and Welfare Plans
Pension Plan
We previously froze our defined benefit plans, including the GrafTech International Holdings Inc. Retirement Plan, or our Retirement Plan, and no additional benefits are accruing under the plans, although benefits previously accrued under the Retirement Plan will still be payable from the Plan when due. See “Pension Benefits at Fiscal Year-End December 31, 2014” below for a description of the Retirement Plan and benefit formulas.
Retirement Savings Plan
We provide retirement savings opportunities through our defined contribution plans. We maintain the Savings Plan which is intended to be qualified under Section 401(a) of the Code. The Savings Plan permits employeesfor each participant who elected to contribute up to 50% of their compensation on a pre-tax or after-tax basis, up to IRS maximums.
We provide a match, in common stock, equal tothe Savings Plan. The 2020 matching contribution was 100% of the first 3%5% of compensation deferred and 50% ofthat a participant contributed. Matching contributions under the next 2% of compensation deferred. We alsoSavings Plan are fully vested. In addition to matching contributions, we make employer contributions to the Savings Plan each year equal to 1%3% of a participant’s eligible cash-based compensation, (upincluding base salary and ICP earnings, up to statutory limits). See “Other Compensation Arrangements” below for additional information regarding the Savings Plan.
Deferred Compensation Plan
We maintain a deferred compensation planapplicable limits under tax rules. A participant becomes vested in these employer contributions to provide savings in a tax-efficient manner for the benefit of eligible management employees who participate in our performance-based compensation programs and employees whose benefits under the Savings Plan are limited by the benefit restrictions of Section 415 of the Code. Participants are able to defer up to 85% of their ICP compensation, up to 50% of their base salary and up to 50% of their compensation in excess of the amounts that may be recognized under the Savings Plan (in 2014, such amount was $260,000). Deferrals on compensation in excess of the Code limit are referred to as participants’ Excess Deferrals. We make quarterly matching allocations in shares equal to 100% of the first 3% and 50% of the next 2% of the participant’s Excess Deferrals. In addition, participants are credited with nonqualified defined contribution retirement plan employer allocations equal to 1% of their compensation in excess of the amount that may be considered under the Savings Plan. Participants are immediately vested in the matching allocation. Generally, participants vest in the other GrafTech allocations when they haveonce he or she has completed three years of service. See “Nonqualified Deferred Compensation at Fiscal Year-End December 31, 2014” below for additional information regarding the compensation deferral plan.
In October 2014, we suspended the non-qualified matching allocations and non-qualified retirement contributions for our named executive officers and certain other corporate officers.
Benefit Security
Retirement and other benefits are paid out of our general assets, except for payments out of the tax-qualified trusts for the Retirement Plan and the Savings Plan and except for payments out of grantor trusts (called “rabbi trusts”) or funded by the purchase of annuities.
Health, Welfare and Other Personal Benefits
In additionWe also made a contribution to the principal compensation componentsretirement benefit plan in which Mr. Ortiz participates, as further described above, our named executive officersbelow.
Our eligible NEOs are entitled to participate in all health, welfare, fringe benefit, relocation assistance and other arrangements generally available to other salaried employees. Generally, benefits are made available to our named executive officers on the same basis as benefits are made available to eligible employees under the terms of applicable plans.
The Compensation Committee also may, as considered reasonable and appropriate on a case by case basis, provide our officers, including our named executive officers, with limited additional perquisites and other personal benefits. In 2014, we did not provide perquisites to our named executive officers.
The Compensation Committee believes that these benefits are reasonable and consistent with the practices of public companies in the United States. The Compensation Committee also believes that these benefits assist us in attracting and retaining key executives.
Severance Programs
In September 2014, we adopted a Selective Severance Program that covers named executive officers and other executives whose employment is terminated (other than for cause or detrimental conduct) by Company action and who meet eligibility criteria outlined in the Program. The Program will continue until December 31, 2016.
Generally, for our named executive officers, the Selective Severance Program provides for severance (based on salary) for up to 24 months, depending on seniority and years of service. In addition, the Program provides for accelerated vesting of outstanding options and restricted stock units scheduled to vest within the 12-month period following termination of employment. The Program does not change the terms of outstanding performance share units or change in control agreements. The Program also provides for continued participation in the group medical and dental plans under the Consolidated Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act (“COBRA”) at active employee rates for up to 12 months, and the option to participate in the employee assistance programsame medical, life and receive outplacement services for up to 6 months, following termination. Benefits underdisability insurance programs and other welfare plans as the Selected Severance Program are coordinated so that there is no duplication of benefits under the change in control agreements described below. The Program requires the employee to sign a release and agree to certain restrictive covenants as a condition to receipt of benefits under the Program.
Change in Control Agreements
We do not have employment agreements with anyrest of our executive officers. The employees, including on substantially similar terms. In addition, we provide Mr. Halford with certain allowances, perquisites and tax reimbursement or equalization payments directly tied to his international assignment in Switzerland, as further described below.
Compensation Committee believes that the absence of employment agreements provides us with more flexibility in adjusting the compensation levels of our executive officers.Report
The Board recognizes, however, that the possibility of a change in control of GrafTech exists, as is the case with many publicly held corporations,Governance and that the uncertainty and questions which it may raise among management may result in the departure or distraction of management personnel to the detriment of GrafTech and its stockholders. The Board has determined that appropriate steps should be taken to reinforce and encourage the continued attention and dedication of members of our management to their assigned duties without distraction in the face of potentially disturbing circumstances arising from a possible change in control. The Board has also determined that it is in the best interests of GrafTech and its stockholders to ensure continued availability of our named executive officers in the event of a potential change in control. Accordingly, the Board has approved change in control severance compensation agreements for certain members of senior management, including our named executive officers. Messrs. Hawthorne, Asmussen, and Batty entered into the agreements with us in 2000. Mr. Moran, in 2011, and, Mr. Blair, in connection with his 2014 appointment to President, Industrial Materials, entered into similar agreements with us, except that their agreements included cut-back adjustments (approved by our Board) to eliminate the possibility of reimbursement for certain excise tax liabilities (and income tax liabilities attributable to the excise tax reimbursement) if the total severance equals or exceeds three times the executive’s “base amount” (accordingly, their agreements do not provide for “gross-up” payments).
These agreements are based on a “double trigger” scenario in which there must be both a change in control and a terminationCompensation Committee of the named executive officer’s employment prior to the expirationCompany’s Board of the change in control agreement in order for severance benefits to be payable.
In the case of our named executive officers, the agreements provide for the payment, in the event of a change in control and the termination of the employment of the executive under certain circumstances, of severance compensation equal to 2.0 times (2.99 for Mr. Asmussen) the sum of the officer’s base salary and ICP targeted bonus opportunity, extended insurance coverage and except as to Mr. Blair and Mr. Moran, reimbursement for certain excise tax liabilities (and income tax liabilities on this reimbursement). The officers are entitled to the compensation if his employment is terminated by us (other than for cause) or if he resigns for good reason within three years after a change in control.
In addition, under the terms of applicable equity agreements, all unvested equity awards become vested (at target in the case of performance share unit awards) upon the occurrence of a change in control. Further, we have the right to cancel substantially all outstanding options in the event of a change in control, in which event we are required to pay option holders an amount equal to the difference between the exercise price of the canceled options and the fair market value of the underlying shares. See “Potential Payments on Termination or Change in Control” below for a description of the agreements and aggregate amounts payable.
We review the change in control agreements periodically, but not necessarily as part of the annual compensation review. This is because we generally consider the change in control agreements as compensation elements separate and apart from the other elements of our compensation arrangements. More specifically, the payments or benefits available under the change in control agreements do not have any significant impact on annual compensation decisions relating to salary and incentive payments. Instead, our Compensation Committee considers that the change in control agreements are in place to cover a specific circumstance, that is, a change in control where the executives lose their jobs. We also believe that change in control agreements may be a desirable component for attracting executive management. Accordingly, payments and benefits available under the change in control agreements are not viewed by the Compensation Committee as amounts that should impact the compensation amounts awarded on a year-to-year basis to the named executive officers for their ongoing management of the Company.
Section 162(m) of the Code
Section 162(m) of the Code generally limits the tax deductibility of compensation paid by a public company to its chief executive officer and certain other highly compensated executive officers to $1 million in the year the compensation becomes taxable to the executive. There is an exception to the limit on deductibility for performance-based compensation that meets certain requirements.
We consider the impact of this rule when developing and implementing our executive compensation program. We also believe that it is important to preserve flexibility in administering compensation programs in a manner designed to promote varying corporate goals. Accordingly, we have not adopted a policy that all compensation must qualify as deductible under Section 162(m); however, consistent with our pay for performance philosophy, our stock options and performance share unit awards are intended to qualify as deductible as are bonuses that are based on measurable, quantifiable criteria. Under Section 162(m), stockholder re-approval of the performance measures is required every five years. We received such re-approval in 2014 for the ICP and are requesting re-approval in 2015 for the 2005 Equity Incentive Plan, which is the plan under which long-term equity incentives are granted.
Amounts paid under certain compensation programs, including salaries and grants of time-vested restricted stock and restricted stock units, may not qualify as performance-based compensation that is exempt from the limitation on deductibility. Our awards under the ICP, performance share unit awards, and stock option awards with exercise prices no less than the fair market value of a share on the date of grant are intended to qualify as deductible under Section 162(m). No other component of compensation for a “covered employee” (within the meaning of Code section 162(m)) is expected to qualify as performance-based compensation under Section 162(m), and compensation may not be deductible to GrafTech to the extent that the applicable executive recognizes more than $1 million in compensation that is not performance-based in any taxable year.
Stock Ownership Guidelines
Our Board has adopted guidelines for ownership of shares of our common stock by directors and members of senior management to promote alignment with stockholders’ interests. The guidelines provide that directors and members of senior management have five years from the date of their election to accumulate the specified amount of shares. We also have a policy discouraging officers and directors from pledging our shares as collateral for loans. Compliance with the guidelines is voluntary in that there is no formal enforcement mechanism, but all persons subject to the guidelines are expected to comply. All of our directors and named executive officers in their current position within the past five years are in compliance with our stock ownership guidelines.
Members of Senior Management
Under these guidelines, certain members of senior management are expected, within five years after appointment as a member of senior management, to own a number of shares equal to two times annual base
salary or, in the case of the Chief Executive Officer, four times annual base salary. Unvested restricted stock (time-vesting) is included in the calculation of shares owned. Unvested performance share units and restricted stock units (performance-based) and unexercised stock options are not included in the calculation. In addition, until these guidelines are achieved, executive officers are expected to hold 50% of the stock previously subject to vested performance share unit or restricted stock unit awards and 50% of the stock previously subject to exercised stock options. Executive officers and other employees are encouraged to hold at least 50% of the stock previously subject to vested performance shares or restricted stock awards for at least one year after vesting. Calculation of the 50% is made after sale of any stock in the minimum amount sufficient to pay withholding taxes and exercise prices.
Hedging and Pledging Policy
Directors and executive officers are prohibited from buying or selling options (including puts, calls and straddles) on our securities, engaging in any short sale of our securities or buying or selling our securities on margin and sales against the box. Further, no hedging is permitted while a trading plan under SEC rule 10b5-1 is in effect. Although we do not explicitly prohibit the pledging of GrafTech securities by executive officers to secure loans, under our policies, directors and executive officers are advised to avoid pledging in order to prevent inadvertent violations of insider trading restrictions resulting from delayed execution or foreclosure (including sell out in response to a margin call).
Recoupment Provisions and Policy
Our incentive plans contain forfeiture and recoupment provisions that take effect in the event of certain misconduct by the recipient. Since 2010, award agreements for long-term equity incentive awards contain recoupment or “clawback” provisions as contemplated under the Dodd-Frank Act. We will review our recoupment policy and plan to take into account provisions included in final SEC rules under the Dodd-Frank Act once they are issued.
The Compensation Committee has reviewed and discussed the Compensation Discussion and Analysis contained in this proxy statementand discussed it with the management of GrafTech in accordance with the SEC’s disclosure requirements for executive compensation and, basedCompany’s management. Based on suchthis review and discussion,its discussions with management, the Compensation Committee recommended to the Company’s Board of Directors that the Compensation Discussion and Analysis be included in this proxy statementProxy Statement for the 2021 Annual Meeting of Stockholders and incorporated inby reference into the Company’s Annual Report.Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2020.
ORGANIZATION, COMPENSATIONBy the Governance and Compensation Committee of the Board of Directors of GrafTech International Ltd.
AND PENSIONCOMPENSATION COMMITTEE
ThomasDenis A. Danjczek, ChairmanTurcotte (Chair)
Randy W. CarsonBrian L. Acton
Nathan Milikowsky
Anthony R. Taccone
Compensation Tables and Related Information
2020 Summary Compensation Table
The following table sets forth certain information concerning the compensation received by our chief executive officer, our former chief executive officer, our chief financial officer,of the three other executive officers who were the most highly compensatedCompany’s NEOs for the yearfiscal years ended December 31, 2014,2020, 2019 and former executive officer that would have been among the three other most highly compensated executive officers if he remained an officer at the fiscal year end, all of whom we refer to2018, as our named executive officers.applicable.
Name | Year | Salary ($) (5) | Stock Awards (6) | Option Awards ($) (6) | Non-Equity Incentive Plan Compensation ($) (5) (7) | Change in Pension Value and Nonqualified Deferred Compensation Earnings ($) (8) | All Other Compensation ($) (9) | Total ($) | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Joel L. Hawthorne (1) | 2014 | 680,512 | 2,926,962 | 791,434 | — | 8,638 | 28,794 | 4,436,340 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
2013 | 300,000 | 379,168 | 99,876 | 22,230 | (5,777 | ) | 17,102 | 812,599 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
2012 | 300,000 | 326,193 | 83,667 | 103,350 | 6,839 | 12,000 | 832,049 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
Craig S. Shular | 2014 | 234,744 | — | — | — | 36,426 | 13,750 | 284,920 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
2013 | 800,000 | 2,184,840 | 578,550 | — | (9,560 | ) | 60,800 | 3,614,630 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
2012 | 800,000 | 1,978,080 | 521,040 | 416,000 | 24,046 | 40,000 | 3,779,166 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
Erick R. Asmussen (2) | 2014 | 375,000 | 381,600 | 95,400 | — | 14,695 | 10,873 | 877,568 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
2013 | 290,080 | 472,804 | 124,845 | — | (7,810 | ) | 15,117 | 895,036 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Darrell A. Blair (3) | 2014 | 414,332 | 366,336 | 91,584 | — | — | 50,882 | 923,134 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Petrus J. Barnard | 2014 | 352,367 | — | — | — | 141,016 | 75,773 | 569,156 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
2013 | 384,400 | 484,364 | 127,281 | — | (132,374 | ) | 15,294 | 878,965 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
2012 | 384,400 | 365,184 | 96,192 | 125,000 | 55,724 | 13,844 | 1,040,344 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
Lionel D. Batty (4) | 2014 | 299,026 | 305,280 | 76,320 | — | — | 10,450 | 691,076 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
John D. Moran | 2014 | 320,000 | 271,360 | 67,840 | — | — | 14,446 | 673,646 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
2013 | 320,000 | 336,396 | 88,305 | — | — | 18,345 | 763,046 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
2012 | 320,000 | 304,320 | 80,160 | 91,520 | — | 15,360 | 811,360 |
Name and Principal Position | Year | Salary ($) | Bonus ($)(1) | Stock Awards ($)(2) | Option Awards ($)(2) | Non-Equity Incentive Plan Compensation ($)(1) | All Other Compensation ($) | Total ($) | ||||||||||||||||||||||
David J. Rintoul | 2020 | 691,875 | 208,575 | 765,850 | 259,307 | 486,675 | 21,243(3) | 2,433,525 | ||||||||||||||||||||||
President and CEO | 2019 | 666,667 | 363,150 | 1,002,000 | — | 244,350 | 84,891 | 2,361,058 | ||||||||||||||||||||||
2018 | 520,833 | 187,500 | 261,023 | 2,395,853 | 765,625 | 326,676 | 4,457,510 | |||||||||||||||||||||||
Quinn J. Coburn | 2020 | 393,383 | 88,943 | 117,130 | 39,659 | 207,532 | 26,301(4) | 872,948 | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Chief Financial Officer, Vice President Finance and Treasurer | 2019 | 381,933 | 154,863 | — | — | 104,202 | 26,146 | 667,144 | ||||||||||||||||||||||
2018 | 371,550 | 72,657 | — | — | 296,683 | 17,692 | 758,582 | |||||||||||||||||||||||
Jeremy S. Halford | 2020 | 461,250 | 104,288 | 324,360 | 109,824 | 243,337 | 503,468(5) | 1,746,527 | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Senior Vice President, Operations and Development | 2019 | 300,000 | 151,313 | 557,000 | 212,191 | 101,812 | 185,078(6) | 1,507,394 | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Gina K. Gunning | 2020 | 355,366 | 69,635 | 243,270 | 82,368 | 162,480 | 24,193(7) | 937,312 | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Chief Legal Officer and Corporate Secretary | 2019 | 344,750 | 121,241 | 267,200 | 107,272 | 81,579 | 26,293 | 948,335 | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Iñigo Perez Ortiz | 2020 | 370,269 | 79,767 | 270,300 | 91,520 | 186,123 | 30,937(9) | 1,028,916 | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Senior Vice President, Commercial(8) |
(1) | For 2020, represents payments under the |
(2) |
(3) | Consists of |
(4) | Consists of $14,250 in matching contributions and an $8,550 Company contribution to the Savings Plan, $551 in disability insurance premiums under the Company’s long term disability insurance plan, $1,180 employee contribution to his Health Savings Account and $1,770 in life insurance premiums under the Company’s group life insurance plan. | |
(5) | Consists of $14,250 in matching contributions and a $8,550 Company contribution to the Savings Plan, $551 in disability insurance premiums under the Company’s long term disability insurance plan, $1,075 employer contribution to his Health Savings Account, $740 in life insurance premiums under the Company’s group life insurance plan, $13,227 for allowances related to his international assignment to Switzerland, $82,752 in reimbursed housing and living costs in Switzerland, $22,760 in tax | |
(6) | Consists of $14,000 in matching contributions and a $5,625 Company contribution to the Savings Plan, $450 in disability insurance premiums under the Company’s long term disability insurance plan, $500 employer contribution to his Health Savings Account, $480 in life insurance premiums under the Company’s group life insurance plan and $13,151 for allowances related to his international assignment to Switzerland. Also includes $57,499 in reimbursed housing and living costs | |
(7) | Consists of $14,250 in matching contributions and a $8,550 Company contribution to the Savings Plan, $551 in disability insurance premiums under the Company’s long term disability insurance plan and $842 in life insurance premiums under the Company’s group life insurance plan. |
(8) | On February 17, 2020, Mr. Perez Ortiz joined the Company as Senior Vice President, Commercial. | |
(9) | Consists of $28,616 in Company contribution to the GrafTech Switzerland retirement benefit plan and $2,321 subsidy for health care. |
Name | Employer Matching Contribution to Savings Plan ($) | Additional Employer Contribution to Savings Plan ($) | Employer Matching Contribution on Excess Deferrals ($) | Additional Employer Contribution to Compensation Deferral Plan ($) | Other ($) | Total ($) | ||||||||||||||||||
Joel L. Hawthorne | 9,443 | 2,600 | 11,876 | 2,969 | 1,906 | 28,794 | ||||||||||||||||||
Craig S. Shular | 9,390 | 2,347 | — | — | 2,013 | 13,750 | ||||||||||||||||||
Erick R. Asmussen | 5,844 | 2,600 | 1,475 | 369 | 585 | 10,873 | ||||||||||||||||||
Darrell A. Blair | — | — | — | — | 50,882 | 50,882 | ||||||||||||||||||
Petrus J. Barnard | 10,251 | 2,600 | — | 443 | 62,476 | 75,773 | ||||||||||||||||||
Lionel D. Batty | 6,150 | 1,944 | — | 828 | 1,528 | 10,450 | ||||||||||||||||||
John D. Moran | 10,200 | 2,600 | — | 51 | 1,395 | 14,446 |
2020 Grants of Plan BasedPlan-Based Awards in Fiscal Year Ended December 31, 2014
The following table provides information about equitysets forth, for each of the NEOs, the grants of awards under our ELT LTIP, Equity Plan and non-equity awards granted to our named executive officers in 2014.ICP during the fiscal year ended December 31, 2020.
Name | Type (1) | Grant Date | Estimated Future Payouts Under Non-Equity Incentive Plan Awards | All Other Stock Awards: Number of Shares of Stock or Units | All Other Option Awards: Number of Securities Underlying Options (#)(3) | Exercise or Base Price of Option Awards ($/Sh) | Grant Date Fair Value of Stock and Option Awards ($)(4) | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Threshold ($) | Target ($) | Maximum ($) | Threshold (#) | Target (#)(3) | Maximum (#) | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Joel L. Hawthorne | ICP | (2) | 350,000 | 700,000 | 1,680,000 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Options | 01/29/2014 | 66,600 | 10.31 | 405,594 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
RSU | 01/29/2014 | 50,700 | 522,717 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
PSU | 01/29/2014 | 41,750 | 83,500 | 167,000 | 860,885 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Options | 11/19/2014 | 182,000 | 4.24 | 385,840 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
RSU | 11/19/2014 | 136,500 | 578,760 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
PSU | 11/19/2014 | 113,750 | 227,500 | 455,000 | 964,600 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Erick R. Asmussen | ICP | (2) | 121,875 | 243,750 | 585,000 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Options | 11/19/2014 | 45,000 | 4.24 | 95,400 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
RSU | 11/19/2014 | 33,750 | 143,100 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
PSU | 11/19/2014 | 28,125 | 56,250 | 112,500 | 238,500 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Darrell A. Blair | ICP | (2) | 103,500 | 207,000 | 496,800 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Options | 11/19/2014 | 45,000 | 4.24 | 91,584 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
RSU | 11/19/2014 | 32,400 | 137,376 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
PSU | 11/19/2014 | 27,000 | 54,000 | 108,000 | 228,960 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Lionel D. Batty | ICP | (2) | 97,500 | 195,000 | 468,000 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Options | 11/19/2014 | 36,000 | 4.24 | 76,320 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
RSU | 11/19/2014 | 27,000 | 114,480 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
PSU | 11/19/2014 | 22,500 | 45,000 | 90,000 | 190,800 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
John D. Moran | ICP | (2) | 88,000 | 176,000 | 422,400 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Options | 11/19/2014 | 32,000 | 4.24 | 67,840 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
RSU | 11/19/2014 | 24,000 | 101,760 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
PSU | 11/19/2014 | 20,000 | 40,000 | 80,000 | 169,600 |
Name | Approval Date | Grant Date | Estimated Possible Payouts Under Non-Equity Incentive Plan Awards(1) | All Other Stock Awards: Number of Shares of Stock or Units (#)(2) | All Other Option Awards: Number of Securities Underlying Options (#)(3) | Exercise or Base Price of Option Awards ($/Sh) | Grant Date Fair Value of Stock and Option Awards ($) | |||||||||||
Threshold ($) | Target ($) | Maximum ($) | ||||||||||||||||
David J. Rintoul | — | 208,575 | 695,250 | 1,390,500 | — | — | — | — | ||||||||||
2/3/2020 | 2/25/2020 | — | — | — | 85,000 | — | — | 765,850 | ||||||||||
2/3/2020 | 2/25/2020 | — | — | — | — | 85,000 | 9.01 | 259,307 | ||||||||||
Quinn J. Coburn | — | 88,943 | 296,475 | 592,950 | — | — | — | — | ||||||||||
2/3/2020 | 2/25/2020 | — | — | — | 13,000 | — | — | 117,130 | ||||||||||
2/3/2020 | 2/25/2020 | — | — | — | — | 13,000 | 9.01 | 39,659 | ||||||||||
Jeremy S. Halford | — | 104,288 | 347,625 | 695,250 | — | — | — | — | ||||||||||
2/3/2020 | 2/25/2020 | — | — | — | 36,000 | — | — | 324,360 | ||||||||||
2/3/2020 | 2/25/2020 | — | — | — | — | 36,000 | 9.01 | 109,824 | ||||||||||
Gina K. Gunning | — | 69,635 | 232,115 | 464,230 | — | — | — | — | ||||||||||
2/3/2020 | 2/25/2020 | — | — | — | 27,000 | — | — | 243,270 | ||||||||||
2/3/2020 | 2/25/2020 | — | — | — | — | 27,000 | 9.01 | 82,368 | ||||||||||
Iñigo Perez Ortiz | — | 79,767 | 265,890 | 531,781 | — | — | — | |||||||||||
2/3/2020 | 2/25/2020 | — | — | — | 30,000 | — | — | 270,300 | ||||||||||
2/3/2020 | 2/25/2020 | — | — | — | — | 30,000 | 9.01 | 91,520 |
(1) | Non-equity incentive plan awards reflect the | 2020 Summary Compensation Table above. |
(2) |
|
|
(3) | Option awards represent 2020 stock option awards under the | CD&A above for more information regarding these awards. |
|
|
Outstanding Equity Awards at 2020 Fiscal Year-End December 31, 2014Year End
The following table shows the number of shares covered by stock options, unvested restricted stock units, and, at target, unvested performance share units as of December 31, 2014.
Options | RSUs | PSUs | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Name | Grant Date (1) | Number of Securities Underlying Unexercised Options (#) Exercisable (4) | Number of Securities Underlying Unexercised Options (#) Unexercisable (4) | Option Exercise Price ($) | Option Expiration Date | Number of Units That Have Not Vested # | Market Value of Units That Have Not Vested ($) (2) | Equity Incentive Plan Awards: Number of Unearned Units That Have Not Vested (#) (3) | Equity Incentive Plan Awards: Market or Payout Value of Unearned Units That Have Not Vested ($) (2) | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Joel L. Hawthorne | 12/10/2009 | 3,500 | — | 16.41 | 12/10/2019 | — | — | — | — | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
12/09/2010 | 4,000 | — | 19.89 | 12/09/2020 | — | — | — | — | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
12/13/2011 | (5) | 15,000 | — | 13.89 | 12/13/2021 | — | — | 10,000 | 50,600 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
11/27/2012 | (6) | 11,133 | 5,567 | 9.51 | 11/27/2022 | 4,333 | 21,925 | 21,300 | 107,778 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
03/01/2013 | — | — | — | — | 26,667 | 134,935 | — | — | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
11/21/2013 | (7) | 5,467 | 10,933 | 11.56 | 11/21/2023 | 8,200 | 41,492 | 20,500 | 103,730 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
01/29/2014 | (7) | 22,200 | 44,400 | 10.31 | 01/29/2024 | 33,800 | 171,028 | 83,500 | 422,510 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
11/19/2014 | (8) | — | 182,000 | 4.24 | 11/19/2024 | 136,500 | 690,690 | 227,500 | 1,151,150 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Craig S. Shular | 12/10/2009 | 56,000 | — | 16.41 | 05/14/2017 | — | — | — | — | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
12/09/2010 | 48,000 | — | 19.89 | 05/14/2017 | — | — | — | — | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
12/13/2011 | (5) | 104,000 | — | 13.89 | 05/14/2017 | — | — | 53,668 | 271,560 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
11/27/2012 | (6) | 69,333 | — | 9.51 | 05/14/2017 | — | — | 57,785 | 292,392 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
11/21/2013 | (7) | 31,667 | — | 11.56 | 05/14/2017 | — | — | 13,111 | 66,342 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Erick R. Asmussen | 12/10/2009 | 4,300 | — | 16.41 | 12/10/2019 | — | — | — | — | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
12/09/2010 | 3,800 | — | 19.89 | 12/09/2020 | — | — | — | — | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
12/13/2011 | (5) | 11,000 | — | 13.89 | 12/13/2021 | — | — | 10,000 | 50,600 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
11/27/2012 | (6) | 6,667 | 3,333 | 9.51 | 11/27/2022 | 3,333 | 16,865 | 15,000 | 75,900 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
11/21/2013 | (7) | 6,833 | 13,667 | 11.56 | 11/21/2023 | 10,200 | 51,612 | 25,600 | 129,536 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
11/19/2014 | (8) | — | 45,000 | 4.24 | 11/19/2024 | 33,750 | 170,775 | 56,250 | 284,625 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Darrell A. Blair | 12/10/2009 | 2,200 | — | 16.41 | 12/10/2019 | — | — | — | — | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
12/09/2010 | 2,000 | — | 19.89 | 12/09/2020 | — | — | — | — | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
12/13/2011 | (5) | 4,800 | — | 13.89 | 12/13/2021 | — | — | 3,200 | 16,192 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
11/27/2012 | (6) | 6,667 | 3,333 | 9.51 | 11/27/2022 | 3,333 | 16,865 | 15,000 | 75,900 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
11/21/2013 | (7) | 1,433 | 2,867 | 11.56 | 11/21/2023 | 2,133 | 10,793 | 5,400 | 27,324 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
11/19/2014 | (8) | — | 43,200 | 4.24 | 11/19/2024 | 32,400 | 163,944 | 54,000 | 273,240 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Petrus J. Barnard | 04/01/2005 | 35,000 | — | 5.46 | 04/01/2015 | — | — | — | — | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
12/10/2009 | 18,000 | — | 16.41 | 11/30/2017 | — | — | — | — | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
12/09/2010 | 16,000 | — | 19.89 | 11/30/2017 | — | — | — | — | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
12/13/2011 | (5) | 19,200 | — | 13.89 | 11/30/2017 | — | — | 12,445 | 62,972 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
11/27/2012 | (6) | 19,200 | — | 9.51 | 11/30/2017 | — | — | 15,334 | 77,590 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
11/21/2013 | (7) | 13,933 | — | 11.56 | 11/30/2017 | — | — | 8,006 | 40,510 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Lionel D. Batty | 12/10/2009 | 3,300 | — | 16.41 | 12/10/2019 | — | — | — | — | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
12/09/2010 | 2,600 | — | 19.89 | 12/09/2020 | — | — | — | — | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
12/13/2011 | (5) | 4,800 | — | 13.89 | 12/13/2021 | — | — | 3,200 | 16,192 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
01/06/2012 | (5) | 9,200 | — | 15.24 | 12/13/2021 | — | — | 6,100 | 30,866 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
11/27/2012 | (6) | 9,000 | 4,500 | 9.51 | 11/27/2022 | 3,400 | 17,204 | 16,900 | 85,514 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
11/21/2013 | (7) | 4,100 | 8,200 | 11.56 | 11/21/2023 | 6,133 | 31,033 | 15,300 | 77,418 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
11/19/2014 | (8) | — | 36,000 | 4.24 | 11/19/2024 | 27,000 | 136,620 | 45,000 | 227,700 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
John D. Moran | 12/10/2009 | 7,700 | — | 16.41 | 12/10/2019 | — | — | — | — | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
12/09/2010 | 6,800 | — | 19.89 | 12/09/2020 | — | — | — | — | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
12/13/2011 | (5) | 16,000 | — | 13.89 | 12/13/2021 | — | — | 10,700 | 54,142 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
11/27/2012 | (6) | 10,667 | 5,333 | 9.51 | 11/27/2022 | 4,000 | 20,240 | 20,000 | 101,200 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
11/21/2013 | (7) | 4,833 | 9,667 | 11.56 | 11/21/2023 | 7,267 | 36,771 | 18,200 | 92,092 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
11/19/2014 | (8) | — | 32,000 | 4.24 | 11/19/2024 | 24,000 | 121,440 | 40,000 | 202,400 |
Name David J. Rintoul Quinn J. Coburn Jeremy S. Halford Gina K. Gunning Iñigo Perez Ortiz Option Awards Stock Awards 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) 166,668 250,002(2) $15.00 4/19/2028 21,722(3) 231,556 — 85,000(7) $9.01 2/25/2030 62,158(4) 662,604 — — — — 86,203(6) 918,923 — — — — — — — 13,000(7) $9.01 2/25/2030 13,184(6) 140,541 10,000 40,000(5) $11.14 5/1/2029 41,438(4) 441,729 — 36,000(7) $9.01 2/25/2030 36,509(6) 389,185 26,800 40,200(2) $20.00 7/30/2028 16,757(4) 178,629 4,000 16,000(5) $13.36 3/21/2029 27,382(6) 291,892 — 27,000(7) $9.01 2/25/2030 — — — 30,000(7) $9.01 2/25/2030 30,424(6) 324,319
(1) | Calculated by multiplying the number of |
(2) | Remaining unexercised options generally vest in three equal annual installments on and after April 19, 2021 (July 30, 2021 for Ms. Gunning). |
(3) | DSUs (including units |
RSUs (including units |
(5) | Options generally vest in four equal annual installments beginning on March 21, 2021 (May 1, 2021 for Mr. Halford). |
(6) | RSUs (including units credited as dividend equivalents) generally vest in five equal annual installments beginning on February 25, 2021. |
(7) | Options generally vest in five equal annual installments beginning on February 25, 2021. |
2020 Option Exercises and Stock Vested at Fiscal Year-End December 31, 2014
The following table shows the number of options exercised and the number of restricted stock units that vested in the fiscal year ending December 31, 2014 and the value realized on the date of exercise and vesting, respectively.
Option Awards | Stock Unit Awards (3) | |||||||||||||||
Name | Number of Shares Acquired on Exercise (#) | Value Realized on Exercise ($) | Number of Units Acquired on Vesting (#) | Value Realized on Vesting ($) | ||||||||||||
Joel L. Hawthorne | 41,167 | 248,503 | ||||||||||||||
Craig S. Shular (1) | 300,000 | 331,710 | 74,036 | 779,030 | ||||||||||||
Erick R. Asmussen | 10,767 | 46,010 | ||||||||||||||
Darrell A. Blair | 5,201 | 22,598 | ||||||||||||||
Petrus J. Barnard (2) | 15,000 | 113,107 | 23,267 | 96,657 | ||||||||||||
Lionel D. Batty | 8,800 | 37,601 | ||||||||||||||
John D. Moran | 12,014 | 62,593 |
Name David J. Rintoul Quinn J. Coburn Jeremy S. Halford Gina K. Gunning Iñigo Perez Ortiz Option Awards Stock Awards Number of Shares
Acquired on
Exercise (#) Value Realized on
Exercise ($) Number of Shares
Acquired on
Vesting (#) Value Realized on
Vesting ($)(1) — — 15,322 94,384 — — — — — — 10,321 82,258 — — 4,085 25,164 — — — —
(1) | Shares acquired on vesting are valued based on our closing stock price |
Pension Benefits at Fiscal Year-End December 31, 20142020 Nonqualified Deferred Compensation
The following table shows the number of years of service credited to the named executive officers under the GrafTech International Holdings Inc. Retirement Plan, which has been frozen, including the number of such years credited for service with Union Carbide and its affiliates, as well as the present value of the executives’ benefits and payments made to the executives in the last fiscal year. The terms of the Retirement Plan are described below the table.
Name | Contributions in 2020 ($) | 2020 ($) | Distributions ($) | Aggregate Balance at 12/31/2020 ($) | |||||||||||||||
| — | — | — | — | — | ||||||||||||||
| — | — | 816(1) | — | 6,189(2) | ||||||||||||||
| — | — | — | — | — | ||||||||||||||
| — | — | — | — | — | ||||||||||||||
| — | — | |||||||||||||||||
| — | ||||||||||||||||||
| — | — |
(1) | None of |
(2) | No portion of |
For further information concerning our pension plan, including assumptions and estimates used in projecting pension costs and projected benefit obligations, see Note 12 of our Consolidated Financial Statements contained in our Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2014, as filed with the SEC and “Compensation Discussion and Analysis” above.
Nonqualified Deferred Compensation at Fiscal Year-End December 31, 2014
The following table shows the executive’s contributions, our contributions, earnings, and year-end account balances for our named executive officers in GrafTech’s Compensation Deferral Plan, which is an unfunded, unsecured deferred compensation plan. The terms of the Compensation Deferral Plan are described below the table.
Name | Executive’s Contributions $ (1) | Company Contributions $ (2) | Earnings $ (3) | Balance 12/31/2014 $ (4)(5) | ||||||||||||
Joel L. Hawthorne | 14,845 | 14,845 | (53,882 | ) | 57,842 | |||||||||||
Craig S. Shular | — | — | (315,721 | ) | 5,310,997 | |||||||||||
Erick R. Asmussen | 1,844 | 1,844 | (23,308 | ) | 74,953 | |||||||||||
Darrell A. Blair | — | — | 2,764 | 23,223 | ||||||||||||
Petrus J. Barnard | — | 443 | 5,807 | 382,778 | ||||||||||||
Lionel D. Batty | 104,659 | 828 | (28,297 | ) | 496,615 | |||||||||||
John D. Moran | 6,400 | 51 | (106,925 | ) | 577,214 |
The named executive officers all participateMr. Coburn participates in our non-qualified Compensation deferred compensation plan (the “Compensation Deferral Plan.Plan”). Under the Compensation Deferral Plan, participants are able to defer up to 85% of their ICP compensation and up to 50% of their base salary, and up to 50% of their compensation in excess of the amounts that may be recognized under the Savings Plan (in 2014, such amount was $260,000) (i.e., their Excess Deferrals). In addition, up until October of 2014, each calendar quarter, we recorded a matching contribution in shares of our common stock equal to 100% of the first 3% and 50% of the next 2% of participants’ Excess Deferrals. Participants were also credited with additional GrafTech allocations equal to 1% of their compensation in excess of the amount that may be considered under the Savings Plan to executives’ bookkeeping accounts. Participants are immediately vested in the matching allocation, but are not vested in the other GrafTech allocation until they have completed three years of service. In October 2014, we suspended the non-qualified matching allocations and non-qualified retirement contributions for our named executive officers.salary.
Deferrals and contributions to our Compensation Deferral Plan are credited with a rate of return based on the performance of various funds selected by the participants from indices which are designated by the Plan Administrator. These funds include a fund that tracks the value of our common stock. An employee may prospectively change the funds for crediting rates of return at any time. The account balances of participants are credited with both their deferrals, and our additions, as well as the rate of return on the funds selected by the participants for those amounts. Frozen Lump Sumslump sums and their earnings are held in notional investment accounts selected by the employee.
Distributions of account balances from the Compensation Deferral Plan are generally made in January following retirement or other termination of employment or, if elected by the participant, upon a future date specified by the participant, except that Frozen Lump Sums and GrafTech allocations may not be distributed prior to age 50.participant. Participants may also elect to have their account balances distributed upon a change in control of GrafTech. For purposes of the Compensation Deferral Plan, a change in control is generally defined in accordance with requirements of the American Jobs Creation Act of 2004 for amounts deferred as noted after December 31, 2004. For amounts accrued and vested as of December 31, 2004, the definition of a change in control is described under “Potential Payments on Termination or Change in Control.” The Compensation Deferral Plan is intended to comply with Section 409A of the Code governing deferred compensation arrangements except that amounts that were contributed to the Compensation Deferral Plan and fully vested by December 31, 2004, including all of the Frozen Lump Sums,frozen lump sums, are not subject to the restrictions of Section 409A. Amounts under the Compensation Deferral Plan are generally payable in a lump sum, although participants may elect to have their accounts payable in annual installments instead.
Benefit Security
Retirement and other benefits are paid out of our general assets, except for payments out of the tax-qualified trusts for the UCAR Carbon Retirement Plan and the Savings Plan and except for payments out of grantor trusts or funded by the purchase of annuities.
Potential Payments onUpon Termination or Change in Control
Double-trigger ChangeWe have set forth below information regarding contractual payments that would be made to our NEOs upon the occurrence of certain termination and/or change in Control Agreements
Each named executive officer entered into a double-trigger Severance Compensation Agreementcontrol events, along with uspost-employment restrictive covenant obligations. The table below sets forth the potential estimated payments to our NEOs, assuming for this purpose that applies only when there is (i)employment had been terminated and/or a change inof control of the Company had occurred in each case on December 31, 2020 and (ii)that the executive’s employment is terminated in connection with or following such change in control. Bothprice for our common stock was $10.66 based on the closing price of a share of our common stock on December 31, 2020.
Triggering Event | Cash-Out Value of Equity-Based Awards that Vest as a Result of a Triggering Event ($) | Value of Severance ($) | Total ($) | |||
David J. Rintoul | ||||||
Voluntary Resignation | — | — | — | |||
Death and Disability | — | 1,390,500(1) | 1,390,500 | |||
Retirement | — | — | — | |||
Termination of Employment | ||||||
With Cause | — | — | — | |||
Without Cause or for Good Reason | — | 1,390,500(1) | 1,390,500 | |||
After a Change In Control without Cause | 1,953,335(2) | 1,390,500(1) | 3,343,835 | |||
Change in Control | 1,953,335(2) | — | 1,953,335 | |||
Quinn J. Coburn | ||||||
Voluntary Resignation | — | — | — | |||
Death and Disability | — | — | — | |||
Retirement | — | — | — | |||
Termination of Employment | ||||||
With Cause | — | — | — | |||
Without Cause or for Good Reason | — | — | — | |||
After a Change In Control without Cause | — | — | — | |||
Change in Control | 161,991 | 16,603,948(3) | 16,765,939 | |||
Jeremy S. Halford | ||||||
Voluntary Resignation | — | — | — | |||
Death and Disability | — | — | — | |||
Retirement | — | — | — | |||
Termination of Employment | ||||||
With Cause | — | — | — | |||
Without Cause or for Good Reason | — | 463,500(4) | 463,500 | |||
After a Change In Control without Cause | 890,315(6) | 463,500(4) | 1,353,815 | |||
Change in Control | 890,315(6) | — | 890,315 | |||
Gina K. Gunning | ||||||
Voluntary Resignation | — | — | — | |||
Death and Disability | — | — | — | |||
Retirement | — | — | — | |||
Termination of Employment | ||||||
With Cause | — | — | — | |||
Without Cause or for Good Reason | — | 357,100(5) | 357,100 | |||
After a Change In Control without Cause | 513,132(6) | 357,100(5) | 870,232 | |||
Change in Control | 513,132(6) | — | 513,132 | |||
Iñigo Perez Ortiz | ||||||
Voluntary Resignation | — | — | — | |||
Death and Disability | — | — | — | |||
Retirement | — | — | — | |||
Termination of Employment | ||||||
With Cause | — | — | — | |||
Without Cause or for Good Reason | — | — | — | |||
After a Change In Control without Cause | — | — | — | |||
Change in Control | 373,820 | — | 373,820 |
(1) | Payable under the Rintoul Agreement. See “—Rintoul Agreement” below. |
(2) | Estimated value of DSUs, RSUs and stock options that would vest in full upon a change in control of the Company. See “—Rintoul Equity Awards” below. |
(3) | Payable in full under the LTIP upon a change in control of the Company based solely upon the excess of the Sales Proceeds received to date by Brookfield Capital IV over the Threshold Value. See “—Coburn LTIP” below. |
(4) | Payable under the terms of Mr. Halford’s employment. See “—Halford Severance Arrangement” below. |
(5) | Payable under the terms of Ms. Gunning’s employment. See “Gunning Severance Arrangement” below. |
(6) | Includes the estimated value of RSUs and stock options that would vest upon a change in control of the Company. See the narrative discussion below for more information. |
Rintoul Agreement
Mr. Rintoul and the Company and corresponding executive termination must occur to trigger payment of the benefits under the Severance Compensation Agreement.
As discussed in “Compensation Discussion and Analysis” above, Messrs. Hawthorne, Asmussen and Batty entered into change in control agreements with us several years ago, before our Board eliminated the potential for “gross-up” payments to be made to executive officers. Their change in control agreements include a modified cut-back adjustment whereby the severance payment will be reduced to an amount less than the limitations under Section 280G of the Code if total amounts payable (that are subject to the limitations under Section 280G) exceed those limitations by an amount not in excess of $50,000. Theemployment agreement signed by Mr. Moran in 2011, and, Mr. Blair, in connection with his 2014 appointment toemployment as President Industrial Materials, includes a cut-back adjustmentand CEO in 2018 (as modified, the “Rintoul Agreement”). The Rintoul Agreement provides that was approved by our Board in 2011 for inclusion prospectively in change in control agreements and eliminates reimbursement for certain excise tax liabilities (and income tax liabilities attributable to excise tax reimbursement) if the total severance equals or exceeds three times the executive’s base amount.
Under the agreements, if a named executive officer’sevent that Mr. Rintoul’s employment is terminated due to a Terminationby Mr. Rintoul for CauseGood Reason (as defined in the Rintoul Agreement) or by the named executive officerCompany for a reason other than with Good Reason for ResignationCause (as such terms are defined in the Severance Compensation Agreements)Rintoul Agreement), or due to death or disability, the executiveCompany will be paidpay Mr. Rintoul his full base salary for one year plus annual incentive, subject to his execution of a release agreement. The Rintoul Agreement also provides that Mr. Rintoul is subject to non-competeand accrued vacation pay throughnon-solicitation covenants during his employment and for a period of two years following termination of his employment, as well as a perpetual non-disparagement covenant.
Rintoul Equity Awards
Mr. Rintoul’s DSU agreement provides that in the event that his employment is terminated by the Company without Cause within the two year period following the consummation of a Change in Control, any then-outstanding unvested DSUs shall immediately vest in full as of the date of termination, plus any benefits or awards which have been earned or become payable but which have not yet been paidsuch termination. For purposes of this agreement, in general, a “Change in Control” shall occur upon (1) Brookfield and all unvested sharesits affiliates ceasing to own stock of restricted stock will be forfeited.
If the named executive officer’s employment is terminated due to Disability or Retirement (as such terms are defined in the Severance Compensation Agreements) or death, the executive’s benefits will be determined in accordance with GrafTech’s retirement, disability and insurance programs then in effect. In addition, unvested shares of restricted stock will be forfeited upon Retirement or death.
Under the terms of applicable agreements, all unvested equity awards will become vested upon the occurrence of a change in control. Further, GrafTech has the right to cancel substantially all outstanding options in the event of a change in control, in which case GrafTech is required to pay optionees an amount equal to the difference between the exercise pricethat constitutes at least 35% of the canceled options and thetotal fair market value or total voting power of the underlying shares.
Payments on Terminations followingstock of GrafTech or (2) any one person, or more than one person acting as a Change in Control
Under eachgroup (as defined under Treasury Regulation § 1.409A) other than GrafTech, Brookfield and its affiliates or any employee benefit plan sponsored by GrafTech acquires ownership of stock of GrafTech that, together with stock held by such person or group, constitutes more than 50% of the agreements, upon terminationtotal fair market value or while disabled following a change in control (as defined below), the named executive officer is entitled to certain benefits. If the named executive officer’s employment is terminated subsequent to a change in control (a) by GrafTech other than for Retirement, Death, Disability or Termination for Cause or (b) by the executive for Good Reason for Resignation then the executive is entitled to the benefits described below:
accrued salary and vacation pay through the date of termination;
accrued ICP compensation at target for the prior year if not previously paid plus a prorated portiontotal voting power of the targeted ICP compensation for the year of termination;
a severance payment equal to 2.0 (2.99 for Mr. Asmussen) multiplied by the sum of the following amounts:
extended health, life and disability insurance coverage;
with respect to our named executive officers, other than Mr. Blair and Mr. Moran, reimbursement for certain excise tax liabilities (and income tax liabilities attributable to the excise tax reimbursement) if the total severance equals or exceeds three times the executive’s “base amount” (as determined pursuant to section 280G of the Code) by more than $50,000; and
accelerated vesting of unvested options and shares of restricted stock.
During any period prior to the date of termination that the named executive officer is disabled, the executive will continue to receive his or her base salary at the rate in effect at the commencement of the disability period, together with all other compensation and benefits that are payable or provided under GrafTech’s benefit plans, including its disability plans. After the date of termination for disability, the executive’s benefits shall be determined in accordance with any retirement plan, insurance and other applicable programsstock of GrafTech. The compensation and benefits, other than salary, payable orIn addition, under this agreement, “Cause” generally means, unless otherwise provided under thein an employment agreement by reason of a disability will be the greater of (x) the amounts computed under any retirement plan, disability benefit plan, insurance and other applicable program in effect immediately prior to such termination: (i) a change in controlfailure of Mr. Rintoul to reasonably and (y)substantially perform his duties to the amounts computed underCompany (other than as a result of physical or mental illness or injury); (ii) his willful misconduct or gross negligence; (iii) his breach of his fiduciary duty or duty of loyalty to the Company; (iv) his commission of any retirement plan, disability benefit plan, insurance andfelony or other applicable program in effect at the time the compensation and benefits are paid.
For purposesserious crime; or (v) his breach of the agreementsterms of any agreement with our named executive officers,the Company or any Company policies.
Upon the consummation of a “changeChange in control” generally occurs on:
Control, any then-outstanding unvested portion of Mr. Rintoul’s options and RSUs shall immediately vest in full as of the date on which any person or group becomesof such Change in Control. Subject to his continued employment through the beneficial owner of 15% or morethird anniversary of the then issuedgrant date, Mr. Rintoul and outstanding commonthe Board may, by mutual agreement, provide that any then-outstanding unvested portion of the options shall vest in full in the event of early retirement, subject to a fully executed succession plan.
Coburn LTIP
Mr. Coburn is the only NEO who participates in the LTIP. Under the LTIP, in 2015, Mr. Coburn was awarded profits units which generally vest in equal increments over a five-year period beginning on the first anniversary of the grant date and subject to continued employment with the Company through each vesting date. Any unvested profit units that have not been previously forfeited will accelerate and become fully vested upon a Change in Control (as defined in the LTIP and described below). Profit
units will generally be settled in a lump sum payment within 30 days following a Change in Control based on the Sales Proceeds (as defined in the LTIP and described below) received by Brookfield Capital Partners IV, L.P. (together with its affiliates, “Brookfield Capital IV”) in connection with the Change in Control. The LTIP defines “Change in Control” in general as any transaction or series of transactions (including, without limitation, the consummation of a combination, share purchases, recapitalization, redemption, issuance of capital stock, consolidation, reorganization or otherwise) pursuant to which (1) a Person not affiliated with Brookfield Capital IV acquires securities representing more than 70% of the combined voting power of the outstanding voting securities of GrafTech (not including securities held by GrafTech employee benefit plansthe Company or related trusts);
the date on which any personentity surviving or group acquires the right to vote on any matter, by proxy or otherwise, with respect to 15% or moreresulting from such transaction, (2) following a public offering of the then issued andCompany’s stock, Brookfield Capital IV has ceased to have a beneficial ownership interest in at least 30% of the Company’s outstanding common stock or voting securities of GrafTech (not including securities held by GrafTech employee benefit plans or related trusts);
(effective on the date, at the end of any two-year period, on which individuals, who at the beginningfirst of such period were directorsdate), or (3) the Company sells all or substantially all of GrafTech, or individuals nominated or elected bythe assets of the Company and its subsidiaries on a voteconsolidated basis. It is intended that the occurrence of two-thirds of such directors or directors previously so elected or nominated, cease toa Change in Control in which Sales Proceeds exceed the Threshold Value would constitute a majority“substantial risk of GrafTech’s Board;
the date on which stockholders of GrafTech approve a complete liquidation or dissolution of GrafTech; or
the date on which GrafTech consummates certain reorganizations, mergers, asset sales or similar transactions.
Amounts deferred under the Compensation Deferral Plan become immediately payable upon a change in control if the participant elected to receive payment of deferred amounts upon a change in control. All other payments under the Compensation Deferral Plan will be distributed in accordance with the elections of the executive, which may include payments of all or some of the deferred amounts upon termination of employment.
Change in control for purposes of amounts deferred or vested under the Compensation Deferral Plan after December 31, 2004 must, in addition to meeting the definition outlined above, also constitute a change in ownership or effective controlforfeiture” within the meaning of Section 409A of the Code.
“Good Reason for Resignation” includes certain changes The LTIP defines “Threshold Value” as of any date of determination, an amount equal to $855,000,000, (which represents the amount of the total invested capital of Brookfield Capital IV as of August 17, 2015), plus the dollar value of any cash or other consideration contributed to or invested in the named executive officer’s statusCompany by Brookfield Capital IV after August 17, 2015. The Threshold Value shall be determined by the Board in its sole discretion. The LTIP defines “Sales Proceeds” as, as of any date of determination, the sum of all proceeds actually received by Brookfield Capital IV, net of all Sales Costs (as defined below), (1) as consideration (whether cash or position, reductionsequity) upon the Change in Control and (2) as distributions, dividends, repurchases, redemptions or otherwise as a holder of such equity interests in the levelCompany. Proceeds that are not paid upon or prior to or in connection with the Change in Control, including earn-outs, escrows and other contingent or deferred consideration shall become “Sale Proceeds” only as and when such proceeds are received by Brookfield Capital IV. “Sales Costs” means any costs or expenses (including legal or other advisor costs), fees (including investment banking fees), commissions or discounts payable directly by Brookfield Capital IV in connection with, arising out of reporting responsibility, diminutionor relating to a Change in Control, as determined by the Board in its sole discretion.
Assuming a Change in Control had occurred for purposes of dutiesthe LTIP on December 31, 2020, Mr. Coburn would have received approximately $16.6 million, based solely upon the excess of the Sales Proceeds received to date by Brookfield Capital IV over the Threshold Value.
Coburn Restrictive Covenants
In 2014, the Company granted Mr. Coburn certain equity awards memorialized by Equity Incentive Plan Award Agreements (the “Award Agreements”) which were cancelled at the time of Brookfield’s acquisition of GrafTech in 2015. Pursuant to the Award Agreements, Mr. Coburn is subject to non-competition and non-solicitation covenants that continue for a period of two years following his voluntary termination of employment with the Company or responsibilities, reductionscertain events of involuntary termination of employment. The non-competition covenant provides that he will not, without the Company’s prior written consent, engage in compensation(1) the business of manufacturing, distributing, selling or benefits, relocation, failureproviding needle coke and/or carbon or graphite products, services, material or equipment of the kind or type which are the same as or similar to those manufactured, distributed, sold or provided by GrafTech as of the date of termination or at any time while he was an employee of GrafTech, or (2) any other business in which GrafTech directly or indirectly engaged as of the date of termination or at any time while he was an employee of GrafTech. The non-competition covenant applies in any state, country, possession, or territory in which GrafTech directly or indirectly has offices, operations, customers or otherwise conducts business or planned to conduct business during his employment.
Halford Severance Arrangement
Under the terms of his employment, in the event that Mr. Halford is terminated by the Company for a reason other than for “Cause” (as defined in his offer letter) or death or disability, the Company will pay Mr. Halford his base salary for one year, subject to his execution of a successorrelease agreement. The terms of employment further provide that Mr. Halford is subject to assumenon-compete and non-solicitation covenants during his employment and for a period of two years following termination of his employment, as well as a perpetual non-disparagement covenant.
Other ELT LTIP Awards
Messrs. Rintoul, Coburn, Halford and Perez and Ms. Gunning hold RSU awards granted under the severance agreement,ELT LTIP. They all also hold stock option awards granted under the ELT LTIP. Both the RSU and failure to pay certain earned compensation.
Assumingstock option awards granted under the ELT LTIP provide that any unvested and outstanding amounts will vest in full as of the date of a change in control, occurredincluding in the event the participant’s employment is terminated on the date of the change in control. For purposes of both the RSU and stock option award agreements under the ELT LTIP, a “Change in Control” in general shall occur upon (1) Brookfield and its affiliates ceasing to own stock of GrafTech that constitutes at least 30% of the total fair market value or total voting power of the stock of GrafTech or (2) any one person, or more than one person acting as a group (as defined under Treasury Regulation § 1.409A) other than GrafTech, Brookfield and its affiliates or any employee benefit plan sponsored by GrafTech acquires ownership of stock of GrafTech that, together with stock held by such person or group, constitutes 100% of the total fair market value or total voting power of the stock of GrafTech.
Gunning Equity Awards and Severance Arrangement
Ms. Gunning holds options granted under the Equity Plan in 2018. Upon the consummation of a Change in Control, any then-outstanding unvested portion of Ms. Gunning’s options shall immediately vest in full as of the date of such Change in Control. For purposes of the stock option award agreements under the Equity Plan, a “Change in Control” in general shall occur upon (1) Brookfield and its affiliates ceasing to own stock of GrafTech that constitutes at least 35% of the total fair market value or total voting power of the stock of GrafTech or (2) any one person, or more than one person acting as a group (as defined under Treasury Regulation § 1.409A) other than GrafTech, Brookfield and its affiliates or any employee benefit plan sponsored by GrafTech acquires ownership of stock of GrafTech that, together with stock held by such person or group, constitutes more than 50% of the total fair market value or total voting power of the stock of GrafTech. Under the terms of her employment, in the event that Ms. Gunning is terminated by the Company for a reason other than for “Cause” (as defined in her offer letter) or death or disability, the Company will pay Ms. Gunning her base salary for one year, subject to her execution of a release agreement. The terms of employment further provide that Ms. Gunning is subject to non-compete and non-solicitation covenants during her employment and for a period of two years following termination of her employment, as well as a perpetual non-disparagement covenant.
For 2020, the ratio of the annual total compensation of Mr. Rintoul, our President and CEO (“CEO Compensation”), to the annual total compensation of our Median Employee (as defined below) was 68 to 1. We note that, due to our permitted use of reasonable estimates and assumptions in preparing this pay ratio disclosure, the disclosure may involve a degree of imprecision, and this pay ratio is a reasonable estimate calculated in a manner consistent with Item 402(u) of Regulation S-K using the data and assumptions described below.
For purposes of this disclosure, the date used to identify the Median Employee was December 31, 20142019 (the “Determination Date”). In accordance with SEC disclosure rules, in calculating our CEO pay ratio for 2020, we used the same Median Employee as was used to calculate the CEO pay ratio for 2019, because we do not believe there has been any change in our employee population or employee compensation arrangements since 2019 that would significantly impact our pay ratio disclosure.
For purposes of this pay ratio disclosure, CEO Compensation was $2,433,525 as set forth in the Summary Compensation Table above and the total annual compensation of our Median Employee was $35,981, which was calculated by totaling, for our Median Employee, all applicable elements of compensation for the 2020 fiscal year in accordance with Item 402(c)(2)(x) of Regulation S-K.
To identify the employee with annual total compensation at the median of all of our employees for 2019 (the “Median Employee”), we measured the gross taxable income in each applicable jurisdiction for the 12-month period ended December 31, 2019 for 1,346 employees, representing all full-time, part-time, seasonal and temporary employees as of the Determination Date (other than our CEO). This number does not include any independent contractors, or leased workers, as permitted by the applicable SEC rules. This number includes non-U.S. employees. A portion of our employee workforce (full-time and part-time) identified above worked for less than the full fiscal year due to commencing employment after January 1, 2019. In determining the Median Employee, we annualized the gross taxable income for such individuals based on reasonable assumptions and estimates relating to our employee compensation program, including incentive compensation programs.
Q. | Why did I receive these proxy materials? |
A. | You received these materials because you were a stockholder as of March 16, 2021, the Record Date fixed by the Board, and are therefore entitled to receive notice of the Annual Meeting and to vote on matters presented at the Annual Meeting, which will be held on May 13, 2021. |
Q. | When and where is the Annual Meeting being held? |
A. | The Annual Meeting will be held on May 13, 2021 at 8:00 a.m. Eastern time. Our 2021 Annual Meeting will be a completely virtual meeting of stockholders, which will be conducted exclusively by audio webcast. |
Q. | How do I register to attend the virtual Annual Meeting? |
A. | You are entitled to participate in the Annual Meeting only if you were a stockholder of the Company as of the close of business on the Record Date, or if you hold a valid proxy for the Annual Meeting. No physical in-person meeting will be held. |
The online meeting will begin promptly at 8:00 a.m. Eastern time. We encourage you to access the meeting prior to the start time leaving ample time for the check in. You will be able to attend the Annual Meeting online, vote and submit your questions during the meeting by visiting www.meetingcenter.io/258657458. The password for the meeting is EAF2021.
Please follow the registration instructions as outlined below.
If your shares are registered in your name (i.e., you hold your shares registered in your name through the Company’s transfer agent, Computershare), you do not need to register to attend the Annual Meeting virtually on the Internet. Please follow the instructions on the proxy card that you received with this proxy statement to attend the Annual Meeting.
If your shares are held in the name of your broker or bank, you must register in advance to attend the Annual Meeting virtually on the Internet. To register in advance to attend the Annual Meeting virtually on the Internet, you must submit a legal proxy that reflects proof of your proxy power. The legal proxy will show your GrafTech International Ltd. holdings with your name. Please forward a copy of the legal proxy along with your email address to Computershare. Requests for registration should be directed to Computershare by forwarding the email from your broker, or attaching an image of your legal proxy, to legalproxy@computershare.com. Requests for registration must be labeled as “Legal Proxy” and be received no later than 5:00 p.m. Eastern time on May 10, 2021. You will receive a confirmation of your registration by email after Computershare receives your registration materials.
Q. | Who is entitled to vote at the Annual Meeting? |
A. | Holders of GrafTech’s Common Stock at the close of business on March 16, 2021, the Record Date fixed by the Board, may vote at the Annual Meeting. |
Q. | How many votes may I cast? |
A: | Each share of Common Stock is entitled to one vote with respect to each of the matters submitted for vote. On March 16, 2021, there were 267,235,189 shares of Common Stock outstanding and entitled to vote. |
QUESTIONS & ANSWERS
Q. | What constitutes a quorum for the Annual Meeting? |
A. | The presence, in person or by proxy, at the commencement of the Annual Meeting, of the holders of a majority of the shares of Common Stock issued and outstanding on March 16, 2021 constitutes a quorum for the transaction of business at the meeting. We will count abstentions and shares held by brokers or nominees who have not received instructions from the beneficial owner (“broker non-votes”) as present for purposes of determining the presence or absence of a quorum. Virtual attendance at our Annual Meeting constitutes presence in person for purposes of the vote required under our Bylaws. |
Q. | What items will be voted on at the Annual Meeting, and what is the required vote to approve each item? |
A. | All stockholders are entitled to vote on the following proposals: |
Proposal 1—To elect three directors for a three-year term or until their successors are elected and qualified;
Proposal 2—To ratify the selection of Deloitte & Touche LLP as our independent registered public accounting firm for 2021;
Proposal 3—To approve, on an advisory basis, our named executive officers had either terminated dueofficer compensation; and
To transact such other business as may properly come before the meeting or any adjournments or postponements thereof.
To be elected, a director must receive an affirmative majority of votes cast—i.e., the number of “for” votes must exceed the number of “against” votes (abstentions and broker non-votes are not considered as votes cast “for” or “against” a director and have no effect on the election results). Each of Proposals 2 and 3 requires an affirmative majority of the voting power of the shares present in person or by proxy at the meeting and entitled to vote thereon—i.e., the number of “for” votes must exceed the combined total of “against” votes and abstentions (broker non-votes will have no effect on the outcome of Proposal 3 and broker non-votes are not expected for Proposal 2 since NYSE rules permit brokers to vote uninstructed shares at their discretion on Proposal 2).
Although the advisory vote on named executive officer compensation is non-binding, our G&C Committee expects to consider and take into account the voting results when making future determinations.
Q. | Are there other items to be voted on at the Annual Meeting? |
A. | We do not know of any other matters that may come before the Annual Meeting. If any other matters are properly presented at the Annual Meeting, your proxy authorizes the individuals named as proxies to vote, or otherwise act, in accordance with their best judgment. |
Q. | How will proxies be voted at the Annual Meeting? |
A. | If you hold shares through a broker or nominee and do not provide the broker or nominee with specific voting instructions, under the rules that govern brokers or nominees in such circumstances, your broker or nominee will have the discretion to vote such shares on routine matters, but not on non-routine matters. As a result: |
• | Your broker or nominee will not have the authority to vote such shares with respect to Proposals 1 and 3 because the NYSE rules treat these matters as non-routine. Accordingly, such broker non-votes will have no effect on the outcome of the vote on these proposals. |
QUESTIONS & ANSWERS
• | Your broker or nominee will have the authority to vote such shares with respect to Proposal 2, because that matter is treated as routine under the NYSE rules. |
Broker non-votes will be counted as present for purposes of determining the presence of a quorum.
If you are a registered stockholder and no instructions are indicated on a properly executed proxy card submitted by you, the shares represented by the proxy will be voted FOR each nominee in Proposal 1, and FOR Proposal 2 and Proposal 3, and in accordance with the proxy holder’s judgment for any other matter that may be properly brought before the Annual Meeting, or any adjournments or postponements thereof.
Q. | How do I cast a vote? |
A. | You may vote by any one of the following means: |
• | By Internet. If you received a paper copy of a proxy card or voting instruction form by mail, you may submit your proxy over the Internet by following the instructions on the proxy card or voting instruction form. |
• | By Telephone. You may submit your vote by telephone by following the instructions on the proxy card or voting instruction form if you received such materials by mail. |
• | By Mail. You may submit your proxy by completing, signing and dating your proxy card or voting instruction form and mailing it in the accompanying self-addressed envelope. No postage is necessary if mailed in the United States. |
• | Online, during the virtual Annual Meeting. If you hold shares in your name as the stockholder of record, you may vote online during the virtual Annual Meeting by following the instructions on the proxy card that you received. If you are a beneficial owner but not the stockholder of record, you may vote in person at the Annual Meeting only with a legal proxy obtained from your broker, trustee or nominee, as applicable. Beneficial owners should refer to “How do I register to attend the virtual Annual Meeting?” above for information on how to register to attend the Annual Meeting in order to vote your shares at the Annual Meeting. |
Properly completed and submitted proxy cards and voting instruction forms, as well as proxies properly completed and submitted over the Internet, will be voted at the Annual Meeting in accordance with the instructions provided as long as they are received in time for voting and not revoked.
Q. | Can I change my mind after I vote? |
A. | Yes, you can change your vote by voting online during the virtual Annual Meeting or revoking your proxy prior to the Annual Meeting. To revoke your proxy, you must: |
file an instrument of revocation with our Corporate Secretary, at our principal executive offices: 982 Keynote Circle, Brooklyn Heights, OH 44131;
mail a new proxy card dated after the date of the proxy you wish to revoke to our Corporate Secretary at our principal executive offices;
submit a later-dated proxy over the Internet in accordance with the instructions on the Internet voting website; or
if you are a stockholder of record or you obtain a legal proxy from your broker, trustee or nominee, as applicable, you may attend the virtual Annual Meeting and vote online during the virtual Annual Meeting.
If your proxy is not revoked, we will vote it at the Annual Meeting in accordance with your instructions indicated on the proxy card or voting instruction form or, if submitted over the Internet, as indicated on the submission.
Q. | Where can I find the voting results after the Annual Meeting? |
A. | We will announce the preliminary voting results at the Annual Meeting and will report the final voting results in a Current Report on Form 8-K, which we will file with the SEC within four business days after the meeting. |
Q. | Who bears the cost of this proxy solicitation? |
A. | GrafTech bears all proxy solicitation costs. In addition to solicitations by mail, our Board, officers and regular employees, without additional remuneration, may solicit proxies by telephone, fax, electronic transmission and personal interviews. We will request brokers, banks, custodians and other fiduciaries to forward proxy-soliciting materials to the beneficial owners of Common Stock and will reimburse them for their reasonable out-of-pocket expenses incurred in connection with distributing proxy materials. |
Q. | What do I need to do now? |
A. | You should carefully read and consider the information contained in this Proxy Statement. It contains important information about GrafTech that you should consider before voting. |
Pursuant to Rule 14a-8 of the Exchange Act, we must receive any stockholder proposal intended to be presented at our 2022 Annual Meeting of Stockholders (the “2022 Annual Meeting”) by no later than December 9, 2021 if it is to be included in the proxy statement and form of proxy relating to the named executive officer’s having “Good Reasonmeeting. Any such proposal must also comply with the other requirements of Rule 14a-8.
Under the advance notice provisions in our By-Laws, if you want to submit a proposal for Resignation”the 2022 Annual Meeting for presentation at the meeting pursuant to Delaware corporate law (as opposed to inclusion in the proxy statement under Rule 14a-8) or hadintend to nominate a person as a candidate for election to the Board directly, the Corporate Secretary must receive the proposal or nomination between January 13, 2022 and the close of business on February 12, 2022, which are 120 days and 90 days, respectively, before the one-year anniversary of the 2021 Annual Meeting.
If the date of the 2022 Annual Meeting has been terminatedchanged more than 30 days from the date of the 2021 Annual Meeting, the Corporate Secretary must receive any such proposal or nomination no earlier than the 120th day before the 2022 Annual Meeting and by the later of the close of business of (1) the 90th day before the 2022 Annual Meeting; or (2) the tenth day following the day on which the date of the 2022 Annual Meeting is first disclosed publicly by the Company. In addition, any proposals must comply with the other requirements of our By-Laws.
If you want to present a proposal before the 2022 Annual Meeting but do not wish to have it included in the proxy statement and proxy card, you must also give us written notice in accordance with the procedures and deadlines set forth in our By-Laws. Please address such correspondence to: GrafTech or its successorInternational Ltd., 982 Keynote Circle, Brooklyn Heights, OH 44131, Attention: Corporate Secretary.
If you would like to receive, free of charge, a copy of our Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2014,2020—as filed with the SEC, excluding exhibits—please write to us at the following address: GrafTech International Ltd., 982 Keynote Circle, Brooklyn Heights, OH 44131, Attention: Investor Relations. You can also view the Form 10-K by visiting the “Investors” section of our website, www.graftech.com. Information on, or accessible through, our website is not part of this Proxy Statement. We have included our website only as an inactive textual reference and do not intend it to be an active link to our website.
Appendix A: Non-GAAP Financial Measures
We have provided certain financial measures that are not in accordance with GAAP. EBITDA and adjusted EBITDA are non-GAAP financial measures. We define EBITDA, a non-GAAP financial measure, as net income or loss plus interest expense, minus interest income, plus income taxes, and depreciation and amortization. We define adjusted EBITDA as EBITDA plus any pension and OPEB plan expenses, initial and follow-on public offering and related expenses, non-cash gains or losses from foreign currency remeasurement of non-operating liabilities in our foreign subsidiaries where the functional currency is the U.S. dollar, related party Tax Receivable Agreement adjustments, stock-based compensation and non-cash fixed asset write-offs. Adjusted EBITDA is the primary metric used by our management and our Board to establish budgets and operational goals for managing our business and evaluating our performance.
We monitor adjusted EBITDA as a supplement to our GAAP measures, and believe it is useful to present to investors, because we believe that it facilitates evaluation of our period-to-period operating performance by eliminating items that are not operational in nature, allowing comparison of our recurring core business operating results over multiple periods unaffected by differences in capital structure, capital investment cycles and fixed asset base. In addition, we believe adjusted EBITDA and similar measures are widely used by investors, securities analysts, ratings agencies, and other thanparties in evaluating companies in our industry as a measure of financial performance and debt-service capabilities. We also monitor the ratio of total debt to adjusted EBITDA, because we believe it is a useful and widely used way to assess our leverage.
Our use of adjusted EBITDA has limitations as an analytical tool, and you should not consider it in isolation or as a substitute for Retirement, Death, Disabilityanalysis of our results as reported under GAAP. Some of these limitations are:
adjusted EBITDA does not reflect changes in, or cash requirements for, our working capital needs;
adjusted EBITDA does not reflect our cash expenditures for capital equipment or other contractual commitments, including any capital expenditure requirements to augment or replace our capital assets;
adjusted EBITDA does not reflect the interest expense or the cash requirements necessary to service interest or principal payments on our indebtedness;
adjusted EBITDA does not reflect tax payments that may represent a Termination for Cause, they would have been entitledreduction in cash available to us;
adjusted EBITDA does not reflect expenses relating to our pension and OPEB plans;
adjusted EBITDA does not reflect the non-cash gains or losses from foreign currency remeasurement of non-operating liabilities in our foreign subsidiaries where the functional currency is the U.S. dollar;
adjusted EBITDA does not reflect initial and follow-on public offering and related expenses;
adjusted EBITDA does not reflect related party Tax Receivable Agreement adjustments;
adjusted EBITDA does not reflect stock-based compensation or the non-cash write-off of fixed assets; and
other companies, including companies in our industry, may calculate EBITDA and adjusted EBITDA differently, which reduces its usefulness as a comparative measure.
In evaluating EBITDA and adjusted EBITDA, you should be aware that in the future, we will incur expenses similar to the payments and benefits listedadjustments in the reconciliation presented below. Our presentations of EBITDA and adjusted EBITDA should not be construed as suggesting that our future results will be unaffected by these expenses or any unusual or non-recurring items. When evaluating our performance, you should consider
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EBITDA and adjusted EBITDA alongside other financial performance measures, including our net income (loss) and other GAAP measures.
The following table below. Although the calculations are intended to provide reasonable estimates of the potential benefits, they are based on numerous assumptions and are roundedreconciles our non-GAAP key financial measures to the nearest thousand and may not represent the actual amount an executive would receive if an eligible termination event were to occur.most directly comparable GAAP measures:
Name | Severance Payment Based on Salary ($) | Severance Payment Based on Incentive Compensation ($) | Payment on Stock Option Cancellation ($) (1) | Restricted Stock Vesting ($) (1) | Performance Share Unit Vesting ($) (1) | Value of Health, Life and Disability Insurance Benefits ($) (2) | Estimated Tax Gross Up ($) (3) | Payout of Non-qualified Deferred Compensation (4) | Total ($) | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Joel L. Hawthorne | 1,400,000 | 1,400,000 | 149,000 | 1,060,000 | 1,836,000 | 61,000 | 2,779,000 | 58,000 | 8,743,000 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Erick R. Asmussen | 1,121,000 | 729,000 | 37,000 | 239,000 | 541,000 | 58,000 | 1,191,000 | 75,000 | 3,991,000 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Darrell A. Blair | 720,000 | 468,000 | 35,000 | 192,000 | 393,000 | 58,000 | n/a | 23,000 | 1,889,000 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Lionel D. Batty | 600,000 | 390,000 | 30,000 | 185,000 | 438,000 | 58,000 | 711,000 | 497,000 | 2,909,000 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
John D. Moran | 640,000 | 352,000 | 26,000 | 178,000 | 450,000 | 57,000 | n/a | 577,000 | 2,280,000 |
For the year ended December 31, | ||||
(in thousands) | 2020 | |||
Net income | $ | 434,374 | ||
Add: | ||||
Depreciation and amortization | 62,963 | |||
Interest expense | 98,074 | |||
Interest income | (1,750) | |||
Income taxes | 75,671 | |||
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EBITDA | 669,332 | |||
Adjustments: | ||||
Pension and OPEB plan expenses(1) | 6,096 | |||
Initial and follow-on public offering and related expenses(2) | 264 | |||
Non-cash loss on foreign currency remeasurement(3) | 1,297 | |||
Stock-based compensation(4) | 2,669 | |||
Non-cash fixed asset write-off(5) | 378 | |||
Related party Tax Receivable Agreement expense(6) | (21,090) | |||
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Adjusted EBITDA | $ | 658,946 | ||
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(1) | Service and interest cost of our OPEB plans. Also includes a mark to market loss (gain) for plan assets as of December of each year. |
(2) | Legal, accounting, printing and registration fees associated with the initial and follow-on public offering and related expenses. |
(3) | Non-cash loss from foreign currency remeasurement of non-operating liabilities of our non-U.S. subsidiaries where the functional currency is the U.S. dollar. |
(4) | Non-cash expense for stock-based compensation grants. |
(5) | Non-cash fixed asset write-off recorded for obsolete assets. |
(6) | Non-cash expense for future payment to our sole pre-IPO stockholder for tax assets that are expected to be utilized. |
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q IF VOTING BY MAIL, SIGN, DETACH AND RETURN THE BOTTOM PORTION IN THE ENCLOSED ENVELOPE. q
A | Proposals – | The |
1. Elect three directors for a |
For | Withhold | For | Withhold | For | Withhold | |||||||||||||||||
01 - Catherine L. Clegg | ☐ | ☐ | 02 - Jeffrey C. Dutton | ☐ | ☐ | 03 - Anthony R. Taccone | ☐ | ☐ | ||||||||||||||
For | Against | Abstain | For | Against | Abstain | |||||||||||||||||||||||
2. Ratify the selection of | ☐ | ☐ | ☐ | 3. Approve, on an advisory basis, our named executive officer compensation | ☐ | ☐ | ☐ |
B | Authorized Signatures – This section must be completed for your vote to count. Please date and sign below. |
Please sign exactly as name(s) appears hereon. Joint owners should each sign. When signing as attorney, executor, administrator, corporate officer, trustee, guardian, or custodian, please give full title. |
Date (mm/dd/yyyy) – Please print date below. | Signature 1 – Please keep signature within the | Signature 2 – Please keep signature within the | ||||||||
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the sum of base salary rate in effect on December 31, 2014 and target incentive compensation multiplied by 2.0 (2.99 for Mr. Asmussen);
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medical and dental insurance assuming family coverage (without reduction to present value);GrafTech International Ltd.
2021 Annual Meeting of Stockholders
May 13, 2021, 8:00 am ET
The 2021 Annual Meeting of Stockholders of GrafTech International Ltd. will be held
virtually via the Internet at www.meetingcenter.io/258657458 on Thursday, May 13, 2021 at 8:00 am Eastern time.
To access the virtual meeting, you must have the information that is printed in the
shaded bar located on the reverse side of this form.
The password for this meeting is – EAF2021.
other insurance coverage such as life, accident and disability coverage assuming certain insurance rates described in footnote (2) above (without reduction to present value);
Important notice regarding the valueInternet availability of proxy materials for the accelerated vestingAnnual Meeting of the options and the restricted stock (which value may be lower than the actual value of the options and the restricted stock listed in the table);
for purposes of testing whether a theoretical tax gross up would have been payable as contemplated in the agreements for Messrs. Hawthorne, Asmussen and Batty we assumed a 62% tax rate; andThe material is available at: www.envisionreports.com/EAF
Applicable Federal Rate (“AFR”) interest rates for purposes of calculating present value rates for accelerated payments.
Small steps make an impact. Help the environment by consenting to delivery, sign up at www.envisionreports.com/EAF |
Payments on Termination Prior to a Change in Controlq
The Severance Compensation Agreements do not give our named executive officers any specific rights following a termination prior to a change in control (a) by GrafTech other than for Retirement, Death, Disability or Termination for Cause or (b) by the executive for Good Reason for Resignation. Each named executive officer is, however, entitled to receive his or her accrued base salary and vacation pay through the date of termination, plus any benefits or awards which have been earned or become payable but which have not yet been paid if his or her employment is terminated prior to a change in control. All unvested shares of restricted stock will be forfeited upon a termination of employment by GrafTech or the executive for any reason.
IF VOTING BY MAIL, SIGN, DETACH AND RETURN THE BOTTOM PORTION IN THE ENCLOSED ENVELOPE. Other Compensation Arrangementsq
Savings Plan
All of our regular, full-time U.S. employees, including eligible named executive officers, are eligible to participate in our Savings Plan. Assets in the Savings Plan are held in five types of accounts: an after-tax account to which participants may make contributions on an after-tax basis; a before-tax account to which participants may make contributions on a pre-tax basis; a Company contribution account to which matching contributions are allocated; an employer contribution account to which certain additional Company contributions are allocated; and a Roth 401(k) after-tax account to which participants may make contributions on an after-tax basis. The maximum employee contribution (pre-tax and after-tax combined) for any year for any participant is 50.0% of such participant’s compensation (subject to statutory limits).
We make a matching contribution to the Savings Plan, in the form of shares of our common stock, for each participant who elects to contribute to the Savings Plan. The matching contribution is 100% of the first 3% of compensation and 50% of the next 2% of compensation that a participant contributes. Matching contributions under the Savings Plan are fully vested at all times. In addition to matching contributions, we make employer contributions to the Savings Plan each year equal to 1% of a participant’s eligible compensation. A participant becomes vested in these employer contributions to the Savings Plan once he or she has completed three years of service.
Contributions to the Savings Plan are invested, as the employee directs, in various funds offered under the Savings Plan from time to time, including a fund that invests entirely in our common stock. Amounts invested under the Savings Plan, including amounts in our common stock fund, may be switched into another investment option at any time subject to applicable insider trading policies. The account balances of participants reflect both their contributions and our contributions as well as the investment performance of the investments in which those amounts are invested. Distributions of account balances from the Savings Plan are generally made upon retirement or other termination of employment, unless deferred by the participant.
Compensation Plan Risk
We regularly assess the risks related to our compensation programs and policies, including our executive compensation programs, and analyze the checks and balances associated with such plans. We have implemented control to manage those risks that include:
balanced and competitive mix
GrafTech International Ltd. |
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Notice of salaries, benefits, and annual and long-term incentives aligned with our operational and strategic goals;
our Compensation Committee’s and its outside consultant’s guidance in developing our compensation arrangements, plans, programs and policies;
approvalProxy Solicited by our Board and the Compensation Committee of significant compensation plans and programs;
oversight by the Compensation Committee of compensation plans and programs for management employees, including approval of incentive plan goals, review of actual performance against goals, and approval of award payouts;
our short and long term incentive awards contain forfeiture and recoupment provisions in the event of misconduct of the individual, including recoupment or “clawback” provisions as contemplated under the Dodd-Frank Act under our Equity Incentive Plan awards;
as further described in “Hedging Policy” under “Compensation Discussion and Analysis”, our named executive officers are prohibited from buying or selling options on our securities, engaging in any short sale of our securities or buying or selling our securities on margin and sales against the box. Under our policies, pledging GrafTech securities is discouraged; and
as further described in “Stock Ownership Guidelines” under “Compensation Discussion and Analysis”, our named executive officers are subject to minimum ownership guidelines and are expected, within five years after appointment as a member of senior management, to own a number of shares of our common stock (including unvested restricted stock) equal to two times annual base salary or in the case of the chief executive officer, four times annual base salary.
We have concluded that our compensation plans do not create risks that are reasonably likely to have a material adverse effect on the Company.
Director Compensation for 2014
In May 2014, upon consultation with Mercer, its independent compensation consultant, the Compensation Committee recommended, and the Board of Directors approved changesfor Annual Meeting of Stockholders on May 13, 2021
The undersigned appoints David J. Rintoul, Quinn J. Coburn and Gina K. Gunning, or any of them, as proxies, each with the full power of substitution, and authorizes them to represent and vote the compensation structure for Directors. Prior to the changes, overall compensation levels for service as a director forcommon shares of GrafTech was between the 25th percentile and the medianInternational Ltd. of the peer group analyzed. Mercer recommended that GrafTech consider movingundersigned, with all the powers which the undersigned would possess if present at the 2021 Annual Meeting of Stockholders to an “all-in” retainer approach where Boardbe held on May 13, 2021, or at any postponement or adjournment thereof.
When properly executed, shares represented by this proxy will be voted as directed by the stockholder. If no such directions are indicated, the above named proxies will vote FOR all the nominees listed in Proposal 1 and committee meeting fees would no longerFOR Proposal 2 and Proposal 3.
In their discretion, the above named proxies are authorized to vote upon such other business as may properly come before the meeting.
(Items to be paid except to the extent that an unusually large number of Board and committee meetings were held during the year.
Directors Compensation January 2014 to May 2014:
Annual Fees
For the period through May 2014, each director who was not an employee of GrafTech is compensated for services as a director by:voted appear on reverse side)
an annual retainer of $45,000;
a meeting fee of $1,500 for each Board meeting attended; and
C | Non-Voting Items |
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The following table summarizes the annual cash and equity compensation payable to GrafTech’s directors (other than employee directors) for the period January- 2014 through May, 2014. Employee directors do not receive compensation for rendering services as directors.
q IF VOTING BY MAIL, SIGN, DETACH AND RETURN THE BOTTOM PORTION IN THE ENCLOSED ENVELOPE. q
Name | Fees Earned or Paid in Cash ($) | Stock Awards ($) (1) | Total ($) | |||||||||
Randy W. Carson (3) | 48,500 | 30,908 | 58,408 | |||||||||
Mary B. Cranston (3) | 75,500 | 30,908 | 106,408 | |||||||||
Harold E. Layman (4) | 44,500 | 80,000 | 124,500 | |||||||||
Ferrell P. McClean (3) | — | 78,408 | 78,408 | |||||||||
Steven R. Shawley (3) | 16,500 | 80,408 | 96,908 |
A | Proposals – The |
1. Elect three directors for a three-year term or until their successors are elected and | + | |||||||||||||||||||||||
FOR | Withhold | FOR | Withhold | FOR | Withhold | |||||||||||||||||||
01 - Catherine L. Clegg | ☐ | ☐ | 02 - Jeffrey C. Dutton | ☐ | ☐ | 03 - Anthony R. | ☐ | ☐ |
For | Against | Abstain | For | Against | Abstain | |||||||||||||
2. Ratify the selection of Deloitte & Touche LLP as our independent registered public accounting firm for 2021 | ☐ | ☐ | ☐ | 3. Approve, on | ☐ | ☐ | ☐ |
B | Authorized Signatures – This section must be completed for your vote to count. Please date and sign below. |
Directors’ Compensation May 2014 to December 2014:
For the period after May 2014, each director who is not an employee of GrafTech is compensated for services as a director by:
an annual retainer of $62,000;
There are no fees paid for meetings attended unless the total number of meetings in a Director Year exceeds 15. If the total number of Board and Committee meetings exceeds 15 meetings, then the fees for each meeting in excess of 15 are:
$1,500 for each excess Board meeting attended, including by telephone; and
$1,000 for each excess Committee meeting attended, including by telephone.
In addition, the Chairpersons (other than employees of GrafTech) of the Board and its committees and lead or presiding director are compensated for their services by an additional annual retainer as outlined below.
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The following table summarizes the annual cash and equity compensation payable to GrafTech’s directors (other than employee directors) for the period May- 2014 through December, 2014. Employee directors do not receive compensation for rendering services as directors.
Name | Fees Earned or Paid in Cash ($) | Stock Awards ($) (1) | Total ($) | |||||||||
Randy W. Carson | 74,625 | 90,000 | 164,625 | |||||||||
Thomas A. Danjczek | 65,250 | 90,000 | 155,250 | |||||||||
Karen Finerman | 50,250 | 90,000 | 140,250 | |||||||||
David Jardini | 54,000 | 90,000 | 144,000 | |||||||||
Nathan Milikowsky | 59,625 | 90,000 | 149,625 | |||||||||
M. Catherine Morris | 61,500 | 90,000 | 151,500 |
On December 31, 2014, outstanding stock awards, comprised of unvested restricted stock and deferred stock units, and option awards, were:
Name | Outstanding Stock Awards (# of shares) | Outstanding Option Awards (# of shares) | ||||||
Randy W. Carson | 37,333 | 5,000 | ||||||
Mary B. Cranston * | 0 | 0 | ||||||
Thomas A. Danjczek | 2,127 | 10,000 | ||||||
Karen Finerman | 2,127 | 10,000 | ||||||
David Jardini | 2,127 | 10,000 | ||||||
Harold E. Layman * | 0 | 0 | ||||||
Ferrell P. McClean * | 0 | 0 | ||||||
Nathan Milikowsky | 2,127 | 15,000 | ||||||
M. Catherine Morris | 2,127 | 10,000 | ||||||
Steven R. Shawley * | 0 | 5,000 |
The philosophy of the Board is to compensate non-employee directors in a manner and an amount that enables us to:
attract and retain qualified and experienced individuals;
motivate them to devote time and effort to GrafTech; and
align the interests of the Board members with the interests of stockholders.
The Board seeks to implement this philosophy through a combination of cash payments and stock-based incentives that achieves an appropriate total compensation level. Competition for and retention of qualified and experienced directors is particularly intense in the current corporate governance environment. The Compensation Committee periodically reviews and benchmarks the Board’s compensation levels and stock ownership guidelines.
Equity Grants
The Compensation Committee has adopted a policy of granting to current non-employee directors, awards with respect to a specified number of shares of our common stock determined annually by the Committee, referred to as the Annual Grant. The Annual Grant is that number of restricted shares with a market value of $80,000 ($80,000 for the period prior to May 2014; $90,000 for the period after May 2014) measured by the closing price of our common stock on the NYSE on the last trading day before the date of such grant. All of the restricted shares and options granted prior to May 2014 to non-employee directors generally vest one year after the date of grant, so long as the director is then serving as a director. Restricted shares granted in May 2014 vest 25% upon grant and 25% in each of the ensuring quarters. The exercise price per share of any options granted has been the fair market value on the date of grant (as defined under the relevant stock-based incentive plan). Vested options granted to a non-employee director expire upon the earlier of ten years after the date of grant or four years after the date the director ceases to be a director. Other terms relating to these options are generally the same as those relating to options granted to management employees.
Effective May 2014, options to purchase 10,000 shares of GTI Common Stock are granted to new directors when they become Board members. These options become fully vested and exercisable generally after one year of service (or on date of death, if sooner), so long as the director is then serving as a Board member. These options expire upon the earlier of ten years after date of grant or four years after the director ceases to be a Board member.
Non-employee directors may elect to receive deferred stock units in lieu of some or all of their retainers, accrued meeting fees for services, and annual restricted stock grants. Each deferred stock unit represents a share of our common stock, which has been awarded to a recipient for delivery at a later date, and which, once vested, is not subject to forfeiture. It is intended that the value (based on fair market values described above) and vesting of the deferred stock awarded approximate the amount and timing of retainers and fees that would otherwise be paid. Vesting accelerates upon the occurrence of a change in control (as defined in “Potential Payments on Termination or Change in Control”), upon death or at the election of the Board or the Compensation Committee. Delivery of our common stock represented by the deferred stock units will be made on the earliest of a date specified by the recipient (that is in a year after the year during which the election is made), the date on which a change in control (as defined in the Compensation Deferral Plan) occurs, the recipient’s death, or the fifth anniversary of the date on which the recipient ceases to be a director. The value for 2014 of the deferred stock units granted to directors in 2014 was reported in the “Stock Awards” column of the “Director Compensation for 2014” tables above.
Other Compensation
In addition to the amounts described above, all directors are entitled to reimbursement for expenses (including for first class travel) incurred in rendering services as directors. The Board has in the past awarded, and the Compensation Committee may in the future award, additional cash- or stock-based compensation to one or more directors for special services rendered to GrafTech. No additional compensation was awarded in the year ending December 31, 2014.
Currently, the Board has adopted guidelines for ownership of common stock by its non-employee directors and established a targeted time frame for achieving such ownership. Compliance with the guidelines is voluntary. Under the guidelines, each non- employee director should, within five years after election as a director, own shares of our common stock with a market value equal to at least four times his or her annual retainer.
Equity Compensation Plan Information
The following table sets forth certain information relating to the shares of common stock that may be issued under our stock- based incentive plans at December 31, 2014.
Plan Category | A | B | C | |||||||||
Number of Securities to Be Issued Upon Exercise of Outstanding Options, Warrants and Rights | Weighted-Average Exercise Price of Outstanding Options, Warrants and Rights ($) | Number of Securities Remaining Available for Future Issuance Under Equity Compensation Plans (Excluding Securities Reflected in column A) | ||||||||||
Equity compensation plans approved by stockholders | 4,609,991 | 10.92 | 295,593 | |||||||||
Equity compensation plans not approved by stockholders | 0 | — | — | |||||||||
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Total | 4,609,991 | 10.92 | 295,593 |
SECURITY OWNERSHIP OF MANAGEMENT AND CERTAIN BENEFICIAL OWNERS
The following table sets forth, at [ ], 2015, the number and percentage of issued and outstanding shares of our common stock owned, both actually and beneficially as determined pursuant to the rules promulgated by the SEC, by:
each stockholder known by us to own more than 5% of the issued and outstanding shares of our common stock;
each director and director nominee;
each of our named executive officers; and
all of the directors and executive officers as a group.
The number of shares of our common stock issued and outstanding as of [ ], 2015 was [ ] shares. The business address for matters related to GrafTech for each of our directors and director nominees and named executive officers is 6100 Oak Tree Blvd., Independence, Ohio 44131.
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Total of such Options | Such Options that are NOT in the money | |||||||
Joel L. Hawthorne | 61,300 | 61,300 | ||||||
Erick R. Asmussen | 32,600 | 32,600 | ||||||
Darrell A. Blair | 11,100 | 11,100 | ||||||
Lionel D. Batty | 33,000 | 33,000 | ||||||
John D. Moran | 46,000 | 46,000 | ||||||
Randy W. Carson | 5,000 | 5,000 | ||||||
Thomas A. Danjczek | 10,000 | 10,000 | ||||||
Karen Finerman | 10,000 | 10,000 | ||||||
David R. Jardini | 10,000 | 10,000 | ||||||
Nathan Milikowsky | 15,000 | 15,000 | ||||||
M. Catherine Morris | 10,000 | 10,000 | ||||||
Total Officers and Directors | 244,000 | 244,000 |
The only known purchases or salesImportant notice regarding the Internet availability of sharesproxy materials for the Annual Meeting of our common stock within the past two years by a “participant” (as defined in Instruction 3 to Item 4 of Schedule 14A) in this solicitation are purchases by Mr. Carson of 10,000 shares for $11.15 per share on April 25, 2014 and 13,480 shares for $11.72 per share on April 28, 2014 and sales by Mr. Hawthorne of 3,000 shares for $10.94 per share on November 5, 2013 and 3,000 shares for $11.28 per share on November 6, 2013 and purchases by Mr. Hawthorne of [] shares during such period through regular contributions pursuant to elections in his 401k plan.
NON-BINDING ADVISORY VOTE ON EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION
Section 14A of the Exchange Act requires that at least once every three years our stockholders vote to approve, on a non-binding advisory basis, the compensation of our named executive officers as disclosed in this proxy statement. Our stockholders presently vote annually, on a non-binding advisory basis, on the compensation of our named executive officers, unless the Company elects to modify the frequency of such votes based on the next stockholder vote on the frequency of such non-binding advisory votes on the compensation of our named executive officers, which is expected to occur in 2017.
As described in detail under “Executive Compensation—Compensation Discussion and Analysis,” we believe that executive compensation should be focused on promoting Company performance and stockholder value. To achieve these goals, our executive compensation program emphasizes pay for performance and aligning the interests of our executives with those of our stockholders through the use of long-term incentives and the encouragement of equity ownership. In addition, our executive compensation program is designed to allow us to recruit, retain and motivate employees who play a significant role in our current and future success. Please read the “Compensation Discussion and Analysis,” the “2014 Summary Compensation Table” and the other related tables and accompanying narrative for a detailed description of the 2014 compensation of our named executive officers. We believe that the 2014 compensation of each of our named executive officers was reasonable, appropriate and aligned with the Company’s 2014 results and the achievement of the objectives of our executive compensation program.Stockholders.
The vote on this resolutionmaterial is not intended to address any specific element of compensation; rather, the vote relates to the overall compensation of our named executive officers. This vote is advisory only and is not binding on the Company, the Board or the Compensation Committee. Although the vote is non-binding, our Board and Compensation Committee value the opinions of our stockholders and our Board and Compensation Committee will consider the outcome of the vote when making future compensation decisions for our named executive officers.
As further described under “Executive Compensation—Compensation Discussion and Analysis,” in connection with equity awards made in 2014, our Board and Compensation Committee, with the assistance of the Compensation Committee’s independent compensation consultant, reviewed current incentive pay practices, analyzed survey data and took into consideration feedback from institutional investors. In summary:available at: www.edocumentview.com/EAF
In the aggregate, our base salary levels (without regard to temporary salary reductions) and target total cash compensation are competitive to market median levels compared to our Compensation Peer Group, although some variability exists from position to position.q IF VOTING BY MAIL, SIGN, DETACH AND RETURN THE BOTTOM PORTION IN THE ENCLOSED ENVELOPE. q
Total direct compensation opportunities for the named executive officers are competitive, with levels at 93%
Notice of the market median. We generally consider compensation to be competitive if it falls within a range2021 Annual Meeting of 90% to 110%Stockholders
Proxy Solicited by Board of the market medianDirectors for base salary and total target cash compensation and 85% to 115% for total direct compensation.
Overall, both actual total cash and actual total direct compensation for our named executive officers were significantly below market levels due to no bonus payout for 2013 performance.
To address the difficult global economic conditions we faced in 2014, management once again recommended, and the Board and the Compensation Committee determined to make, no upward adjustments to our named executive officers’ salaries in 2014 other than in connection with promotions to positions of greater responsibility. This is the third consecutive year that no such upward adjustments were made (other than due to promotions).
We established stretch goals for our annual cash incentive (bonus) programs. For our 2015 annual bonus program, we adopted performance measures based 50% on business unit Operating Income and 50% based on Company-as-a-whole Operating Income.
Upon management’s recommendation, the base salaries of our named executive officers were temporarily reduced by 10% for the CEO and 5% for the other named executives and certain other corporate officers effective in 2015.
In selecting the performance measures for performance share units awarded in 2014 under our long-term incentive plan for the performance period 2015 – 2017, the Compensation Committee decided that Total Shareholder Return (TSR) and Free Cash Flow were effective measures to align incentives with Company performance and stockholder value.
Accordingly, we ask our stockholders to vote in favor of the following resolution:
“RESOLVED, that the Company’s stockholders approve, on an advisory basis, the compensation of the named executive officers, as disclosed in the Company’s Proxy Statement for the 2015 Annual Meeting of Stockholders pursuant to the compensation disclosure rules of the Securities and Exchange Commission, including the Compensation Discussion and Analysis, the 2014 Summary Compensation Table and the other related tables and accompanying narrative.”on May 13, 2021
The affirmative vote of a majority of the votes cast by holders of outstanding shares is required to approve this Proposal.
THE BOARD RECOMMENDS A VOTEFOR THE APPROVAL OF THE
COMPENSATION OF OUR NAMED EXECUTIVE OFFICERS.
APPROVAL OF AMENDMENTS TO THE 2005 EQUITY INCENTIVE PLAN AND THE MATERIAL TERMS OF THE PERFORMANCE GOALS THEREUNDER
The Board has adopted an amendment to the 2005 Plan, the effectiveness of which is subject to approval of the amendment by stockholders, that provides for:
the extension of the term for authority to grant new awards under the 2005 Plan for an additional ten years, until May 25, 2025;
the increase in the number of shares available for award under the 2005 Plan by 4,000,000 shares;
the decrease in the maximum number of shares (or the cash equivalent thereof) that may be granted in respect of awards to any one individual in any one calendar year to 1,000,000 shares;undersigned appoints David J. Rintoul, Quinn J. Coburn and
an amendment to the categories of performance measures under the 2005 Plan.
A copy of the amendment is attached as Appendix A. The Board is submitting this Proposal for stockholders to approve the provisions of the amendment described above and to approve the material terms of the performance goals (within the meaning of Section 162(m) of the Code.
If approved by stockholders, the provisions of the amendment would become effective immediately. The 2005 Plan will expire on May 24, 2015, and no additional awards may be granted thereunder after May 24, 2015, unless the provisions of the amendment described above are approved by stockholders. To become effective, the provisions of the amendment described above must be approved by the affirmative vote of a majority of the votes cast on the Proposal so long as such votes cast constitute a majority of outstanding shares.
If the provisions are approved, the number of shares available for awards during the extended term of the Plan will be increased by 4,000,000. On December 31, 2014, only 295,593 shares were available for awards under the 2005 Plan. If the provisions are approved, the performance measures under the 2005 Plan will be amended and restated to include certain additional measures consistent with those available under the Executive Incentive Compensation Plan that was approved by the stockholders last year. Under Section 162(m) of the Code, the performance goals must be re-approved every five years for awards thereunder to be deductible for income tax purposes. Approval of the provisions pursuant to this Proposal will also constitute re-approval for purposes of Section 162(m).
History of the 2005 Plan
The 2005 Plan was adopted by the Board and, on May 25, 2005, the Company’s stockholders approved the Plan adopted by the Board in March 2005. The 2005 Plan was subsequently amended with stockholder approval to increase the number of shares available for awards thereunder and to make changes that were not material within the meaning of NYSE listing standards or Section 162(m) to, among other things, cause the 2005 Plan to comply with Section 409A of the Code. The material terms of the performance goals (within the meaning of Section 162(m)) of the 2005 Plan were last approved by stockholders on May 20, 2010. The term for making awards under the 2005 Plan expires on May 24, 2015. As of December 31, 2014, there were only 295,593 shares available for future awards under the 2005 Plan.
Purpose of the 2005 Plan: Sole Equity Compensation Program
The purpose of the 2005 Plan is to promote the interests of GrafTech and our stockholders by strengthening our ability to attract, motivate and retain personnel upon whose judgment, initiative and efforts the financial
success and growth of our business largely depend, to offer such personnel additional incentives to put forth maximum efforts for the success of our business and to afford them an opportunity to acquire a proprietary interest in GrafTech through stock ownership and other rights. The 2005 Plan is our sole plan for providing equity incentive compensation to eligible employees, consultants and non-employee directors. The 2005 Plan is also an important component of the total compensation package offered to employees and directors, reflecting the importance that GrafTech places on motivating and rewarding superior results with long-term, performance-based incentives and allowing them to share in the wealth they create for our stockholders. As of December 31, 2014, approximately 90 employees (including executive officers) were eligible to participate in the 2005 Plan. All non-employee directors are eligible to participate in the 2005 Plan. Extending the term during which awards may be granted under the 2005 Plan and increasing the number of shares available for awards under the 2005 Plan ensures that we have an adequate period of time and an adequate reserve of shares available for issuance in order to attract, motivate and retain personnel and to provide compensation opportunities to reward exemplary performance. If we are unable to grant equity compensation beyond May 25, 2015, we may need to consider other compensation alternatives, such as increasing cash compensation, and lose the important benefits of aligning the long-term interest of employees with those of stockholders.
Extension of the 2005 Plan
The 2005 Plan generally provides us with the flexibility to grant the types of awards that our Compensation Committee determines to be desirable for motivating and rewarding our employees. The Board believes that extension of the terms of the 2005 Plan, in lieu of adopting an entirely new equity plan, is the most efficient and practical means for maintaining the essential compensation of our executive compensation programs.
Increase in Authorized Shares under the 2005 Plan
Currently, the shares remaining available for future awards under the 2005 Plan are insufficient to meet our long-term incentive needs. Our stockholders last approved an increase to the number of shares under the 2005 Plan in 2009. We are committed to effectively managing our equity compensation share reserve and minimizing stockholder dilution. Based on our current stock price and our current programs, we estimate that the additional 4,000,000 shares (which represents approximately 3.0% of our total shares currently outstanding) for which approval is now sought, when combined with the shares remaining available under the 2005 Plan, will be sufficient to make awards under the 2005 Plan for up to three years. Actual needs could vary depending on circumstances.
Each year, the Compensation Committee reviews our overall compensation strategy and determines allocations of cash and equity compensation in light of our pay-for-performance philosophy. In determining the annual equity compensation, the Compensation Committee reviews, among other things, the average annual gross burn rate for the past three years, the shareholder value transfer percentage, historical share utilization and expectations regarding our future headcount and hiring needs. “Gross burn rate” means the total number of equity awards granted during each fiscal year divided by the weighted-average number of shares outstanding for such fiscal year. The Company’s three-year-average annual gross burn rate is approximately 1.15%. “Shareholder value transfer percentage” means the value of all outstanding equity awards shares available for grant under the 2005 Plan divided by the Company’s market capitalization. As a general matter, we strive to achieve a three-year-average annual gross burn rate and a shareholder value transfer percentage at or near the median average rates for our peer group companies identified in “Compensation Discussion and Analysis” and within the limits recommended by independent shareholder advisory groups, such as Institutional Shareholder Services (“ISS”). The Compensation Committee has determined that the Company’s equity awards are reasonable and generally competitive based on, among other things, consideration of the those measures and taking into account the extensive experience of the Compensation Committee, including its understanding of the benefits and limitations of such measures and its experience in making compensation decisions and evaluating the Company’s performance, business objectives and strategic goals.
In reaching its decision regarding the appropriate number of additional shares to make available for awards under the 2005 Plan, the Compensation Committee considered these same factors and determined a number that it believes will provide the Company with a sufficient number to cover the awards that we anticipate granting to eligible participants for approximately five years, although the actual number of shares utilized will depend on a variety of factors, including our headcount growth rate, employee turnover, the level of equity compensation offered by other companies with whom we are competing for talent, our stock price and the mix of awards granted.
Decrease in Maximum Shares subject to Award(s) Granted to any Person in any Year
The Compensation Committee also considered the same factors as those considered for increasing the authorized shares under the 2005 Plan in reaching its decision to decrease the number of shares available for awards under the 2005 Plan on a per-person, per-year basis as described below. The reduction of the maximum from 8,800,000 shares to no more than 1,000,000 shares reflects an amount the Compensation Committee sees as the maximum amount that could reasonably be considered necessary to continue to attract, motivate and retain personnel and to provide compensation opportunities to reward exemplary performance, while demonstrating the commitment to minimize dilution to stockholders. The Compensation Committee has never granted any equity-compensation award covering more than 1,000,000 shares in any one year to any one individual.
Changes to Performance Measures and Section 162(m) of the Code
We seek to administer the 2005 Plan in a manner that will allow certain awards, such as our performance-based restricted stock units (“PSUs”), to constitute “performance-based” compensation within the meaning of Section 162(m). Section 162(m) generally prohibits a publicly traded company from deducting certain executive compensation in excess of $1,000,000 per year unless, among other things, the compensation is paid under a stockholder-approved plan containing objective performance goals. Currently, Section 162(m) and related regulations require that stockholders approve the material terms of the performance goals no less frequently than every five years in order to continue to qualify for the exemption from that limitation if the compensation committee has the authority to change the goals under the performance measures after stockholder approval (as is the case with the Compensation Committee, other than in the case of option awards). For purposes of Section 162(m), the material terms include (i) the individuals eligible to receive compensation, (ii) a description of the business criteria on which the performance goal is based, and (iii) the maximum amount of compensation that can be paid to an individual under the performance goal. Stockholder approval of the provisions of the amendment to the 2005 Plan described above is intended to constitute approval of the material terms of the performance goals under the 2005 Plan for purposes of Section 162(m) and permit qualification of incentive awards for full tax deductibility for a period of five years under Section 162(m). Notwithstanding such approval, there can be no guarantee that awards granted under the Plan will be treated as qualified performance-based compensation under Section 162(m).
As the business environment has changed over time and pay-for-performance has become an ever more important element in compensation arrangements, the Compensation Committee has, with the advice of its consultants, adjusted the manner in which it evaluates performance and metrics. The Compensation Committee believes the changes made to the term “Performance Measures” in the 2005 Plan to include the criteria outlined in the summary description below under “Performance Measures” will provide us with appropriate choices for measuring performance to allow the Compensation Committee to adapt over the remaining term of the 2005 Plan while continuing to both provide competitive compensation opportunities and deliver value to stockholders upon performance by our employees.
Summary Description of the Material Terms of the 2005 Equity Incentive Plan, as Proposed to be Amended, Including Its Performance Goals
The following is a summary of the principal features of the 2005 Plan, as proposed to be amended, including the material terms of the performance goals to be approved and their operation. This summary is qualified by
reference to the full text of the 2005 Plan, as amended, a copy of which is available to any stockholder upon request and the full text of the amendment, which is attached hereto as Appendix A.
Administration. The 2005 Plan is administered by the Compensation Committee. The Compensation Committee must be composed of at least two directors. All Compensation Committee members must qualify as “outside directors” under Section 162(m) of the Code or as “non-employee directors” under Rule 16b-3 promulgated under the Exchange Act. Subject to the terms of the 2005 Plan, the Compensation Committee has the power to select the executive officers (including “covered employees” as defined in Section 162(m)) who are eligible to receive awards under the 2005 Plan, the type and amount of awards to be granted, and the terms and conditions of such awards and to otherwise approve the total amount of awards that may be granted to different levels of employees. The Compensation Committee may delegate its authority under the 2005 Plan described in the preceding sentence to officers or other employees of the Company, but may not delegate authority to an officer or employee to determine his or her own awards or take any action in contravention of Rule 16b-3 promulgated under the Exchange Act, the performance-based compensation exception under Section 162(m), or the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002. The Compensation Committee also has the authority to interpret the 2005 Plan and establish, amend or waive rules necessary or appropriate for the administration of the 2005 Plan.
Eligibility. Any employee of GrafTech or a subsidiary of GrafTech and, in the case of awards other than incentive stock option awards, any independent contractor, consultant or advisor providing services to GrafTech Gina K. Gunning, or any of its subsidiaries who is specifically identified by the Compensation Committee, and any non-employee director of GrafTech or a subsidiary of GrafTech is eligible to receive awards under the 2005 Plan. While all of our employees, non-employee directors, independent contractors, advisors and consultants would be eligible to participate in the 2005 Plan, it is expected that most awards under the 2005 Plan would be made to our senior officers, managers, and technical and professional personnel.
Shares Subject to the 2005 Plan. After approval of the amendment by stockholders, the maximum number of shares of GrafTech’s common stock, par value $0.01 per share, that may be granted in the futurethem, as awards under the 2005 Plan is 4,295,593 shares, plus any shares of common stock that are represented by awards currently outstanding under the 2005 Plan that are subsequently forfeited or terminated, expire unexercised, lapse or are otherwise canceled in a manner such that the shares covered by such awards would have been available for future awards thereunder. The maximum number of shares deliverable pursuant to awards granted under the 2005 Plan is subject to adjustment by the Compensation Committee upon certain dilutive events. After approval of the amendment by stockholders, in no event may the number of shares (including the cash equivalent of the same) subject to awards granted to any one participant during any one calendar year exceed 1,000,000 shares (or the cash equivalent of the same).
Amendment of the 2005 Plan. The Board has the power and authority to terminate or amend the 2005 Plan at any time; provided, however, that, to the extent that the Board determines that the listing requirements of any national securities exchange or quotation system on which GrafTech’s common stock is then listed or quoted, or the Code or regulations promulgated thereunder, require stockholder approval in order to maintain compliance with such listing requirements or to maintain any favorable tax advantages or qualifications, then the 2005 Plan shall not be amended without approval of stockholders. No amendment to the 2005 Plan may adversely affect any rights of a holder of an outstanding award under the 2005 Plan without the holder’s consent.
Transferability. Rights under any award granted under the 2005 Plan may be transferred only as may be approved by the Compensation Committee. However, incentive stock options will in all events be nontransferable otherwise than by will or the laws of descent and distribution.
Change in Control.Existing award agreements generally provide, and we expect future awards to provide, that in the event of a change in control of GrafTech, as defined therein, all outstanding awards will become 100% vested, free of all restrictions, immediately and fully exercisable, and deemed earned in full and, if the change in
control constitutes a change in ownership or effective control under Code Section 409A, payable as of the day immediately preceding such change in control. The definition of change in control is described in the Compensation Discussion & Analysis Section above on page 64.
Award Agreements and Term. All awards under the 2005 Plan will be authorized by the Compensation Committee and evidenced by an award agreement setting forth the terms and conditions of such award. An award agreement may, but need not be, executed or acknowledged by us or the recipient of the award.
Clawbacks. The 2005 Plan includes a provision reserving to GrafTech the right to clawback certain awards or benefits thereunder in the event of detrimental conduct on the part of the recipient of the award.
Stock Options. A grant of a stock option entitles a participant to purchase from us a specified number of shares at a specified price per share. In the discretion of the Compensation Committee, stock options may be granted as nonqualified stock options or incentive stock options, but incentive stock options may only be granted to employees of GrafTech or a subsidiary of GrafTech. No participant may receive incentive stock options in respect of more than 1,000,000 shares in any one calendar year. No stock options may be exercisable more than ten years from the date of grant.
The Compensation Committee may fix any price as the purchase price per share at which shares may be purchased under a stock option. However, the purchase price per share must be at least equal to the fair market value of GrafTech’s common stock on the date of grant. The exercise price must be paid in cash or, if approved by the Compensation Committee, by (i) delivery of shares of GrafTech’s common stock that have been held by the optionee for at least six months with a fair market value equal to the exercise price, (ii) the withholding of shares that would otherwise be issuable upon exercise, (iii) participation in a broker-assisted “cashless exercise” arrangement or (iv) payment of any other form of consideration acceptable to the Compensation Committee.
Stock Appreciation Rights (SARs).The grant of an SAR provides the holderproxies, each with the rightfull power of substitution, and authorizes them to receive a payment in shares of GrafTech’s common stock equal to the excess of the fair market value of a specified number of shares on the date the SAR is exercised over a SAR price specified in the applicable award agreement. The SAR price specified in an award agreement must be equal to or greater than the fair market value of GrafTech’s common stock on the date of the grant. No SAR may be exercisable more than ten years from the date of grant.
Restricted Stock. A grant of restricted stock is an award of shares subject to restrictions set forth in the 2005 Planrepresent and in the related award agreement. The award agreement for restricted stock will specify the time or times within which such award may be subject to forfeiture and any performance goals or conditions that must be met in order to remove the restrictions. Except for limitations on transfer and other limitations set forth in the applicable award agreement, holders of restricted stock shall have all of the rights of a stockholder, including the right to vote the shares and, if provided in the applicable award agreement, the right to receive any dividends thereon.
Performance Shares. Performance shares are performance-based awards representing the unfunded and unsecured right to receive shares contingent upon the achievement of one or more performance measures, subject to restrictions or limitations set forth in the 2005 Plan and in the related award agreement. The award of performance shares will be based on the achievement, over a specified period, of performance measures (as defined in the 2005 Plan) as prescribed by the Compensation Committee in its sole discretion. Performance share awards may be paid in shares, cash or a combination thereof as prescribed by the Compensation Committee in its sole discretion.
Other Awards. The Compensation Committee may grant to any participant other forms of awards payable in shares or cash, including phantom stock and deferred stock awards. The terms and conditions of such other form of award shall be specified by the applicable award agreement. Such other awards may be granted for no cash consideration, other than services already rendered, or for such other consideration as may be specified by the applicable award agreement.
Performance Measures. Awards may be granted under the 2005 Plan that are subject to the attainment of pre-established performance goals over a specified performance period. Performance-based awards may be payable in stock or cash. The award agreement for a performance-based award will specify the performance period, the performance goals to be achieved during the performance period, and the maximum or minimum settlement values. As modified by the amendment, performance measures set by the Compensation Committee may be applied with respect to an individual participant, the company as a whole or any subsidiary, division, line of business or functional or business unit and may be measured on an absolute, gross, total, net, per share (including basic, diluted or fully diluted), average, adjusted or relative basis (or measured based on changes therein) consisting of any type or kind of: costs or expenses; earnings, income or profit; stockholder return; return on sales, assets, capital, investment or equity; sales or revenue; cash flow (which includes throughput); EBIT or EBITDA; debt; gross, operating, debt or other margin or profit; working capital or any element thereof; market share; stockholder equity or net worth; unit volumes; inventory turnover; stock price; productivity or production; product quality; corporate value measures; capital expenditures; credit rating; cost of debt, equity or capital; completion of significant projects or implementation of significant new processes; achievement of strategic milestones; and any combination of the foregoing.
Termination of Employment, Death, Disability and Retirement. The Compensation Committee shall specify in each award agreement the terms and conditions for becoming vested in, and exercising (where applicable), awards upon the termination of a participant’s employment, death, disability and retirement.
Current Awards under the 2005 Plan. Consistent with our pay-for-performance policies, since the 2005 Plan was approved by stockholders, the only awards made under our 2005 Plan have consisted of awards of restricted stock, performance share units, and options. Some of these awards have become fully vested, non-forfeitable and freely transferable and some of them have been cancelled, forfeited or exercised. The balance of these awards remains outstanding.
Federal Income Tax Consequences
The following is a general summary as of the date of this proxy statement of the United States federal income tax consequences associated with the grant of stock options under the 2005 Plan. The federal tax laws may change and the federal, state and local tax consequences for any participant will depend upon his or her individual circumstances. Also, this information may not be applicable to employees of foreign subsidiaries or to participants who are not residents of the United States. Participants have been and are encouraged to seek the advice of a qualified tax advisor regarding the tax consequences of participation in the 2005 Plan.
Nonqualified Stock Options. A participant receiving a nonqualified stock option will not recognize income and GrafTech will not be allowed a deduction at the time the option is granted. When a participant exercises a nonqualified stock option, the participant will have ordinary income equal to the excess, if any, of the fair market value of the shares on the date of exercise over the option price. GrafTech will be entitled to a deduction for federal income tax purposes in an equal amount. When a participant disposes of shares acquired upon the exercise of the option, any amount received in excess of the fair market value of the shares on the date of exercise will be treated as short-term or long-term capital gain, depending upon the participant’s holding period following the exercise of the option. If the amount received is less than the fair market value of the shares on the date of exercise, the loss will be treated as short-term or long-term capital loss, depending upon such holding period.
Incentive Stock Options. Incentive stock options granted under the 2005 Plan are intended to meet the requirements of Code Section 422 to qualify as “incentive stock options.” A participant receiving a grant of incentive stock options will not recognize income, and GrafTech will not be allowed a deduction, at the time such an option is granted. When a participant exercises an incentive stock option while employed by the Company or within the three-month (one year for disability) period after termination of employment, no ordinary income will be recognized by the participant at that time (and no deduction will be allowed to GrafTech) but the excess of the fair market value of the shares acquired by such exercise over the option price will be taken into account in determining the participant’s alternative minimum taxable income for purposes of the federal alternative minimum tax. If the shares acquired upon exercise are not disposed of until more than two years after the date of grant and one year after the date of transfer of the shares to the participant (statutory holding periods), the excess of the sale proceeds over the aggregate option price of such shares will be taxable as long-term capital gain, and GrafTech will not be entitled to any federal income tax deduction. Except in the event of death, if the shares are disposed of prior to the expiration of the statutory holding periods (a “Disqualifying Disposition”), the excess of the fair market value of such shares at the time of exercise over the aggregate option price (but not more than the gain on the disposition if the disposition is a transaction on which a loss, if sustained, would be recognized) will be ordinary income at the time of such Disqualifying Disposition (and GrafTech will be entitled to a federal tax deduction in a like amount), and the balance of the gain, if any, will be capital gain (short-term or long-term depending upon the participant’s holding period). To the extent that the aggregate fair market value of shares (determined on the date of grant) with respect to which incentive options become exercisable for the first time during any calendar year exceeds $100,000, such excess options will be treated as nonqualified options.
Payment Using Shares. If a participant pays the exercise price of a nonqualified or incentive stock option with previously-owned shares of GrafTech’s common stock and the transaction is not a Disqualifying Disposition, the shares received equal to the number of shares surrendered are treated as having been received in a tax-free exchange. The shares received in excess of the number surrendered will not be taxable if an incentive stock option is being exercised, but will be taxable as ordinary income to the extent of their fair market value if a nonqualified stock option is being exercised. The participant does not recognize income and GrafTech receives no deduction as a result of the tax-free portion of the exchange transaction. If the use of previously acquired incentive stock option shares to pay the exercise price of another incentive stock option constitutes a Disqualifying Disposition, the tax results are as described in the preceding paragraph. The income treatment will apply to the shares disposed of, but will not affect the favorable tax treatment of the shares received.
Future 2005 Plan Benefits. Future awards under the 2005 Plan are subject to the discretion of our Compensation Committee. As a result, it is not possible to determine awards that will be received by executive officers, directors and employees under the 2005 Plan in the future. There are no pending awards under the 2005 Plan that are contingent upon the approval of this Proposal by our stockholders and our stockholders are not being asked to approve any specific awards. As described in the Compensation Discussion and Analysis, annual equity grants to our executives currently are composed of three types of awards: options (20%), restricted stock units (30%) and PSUs (50%). The Compensation Committee may, in its discretion change the type and mix of awards in the future.
Outstanding awards to our named executive officers are described under “Grants of Plan Based Awards in Fiscal Year Ended December 31, 2014” and under “Outstanding Equity Awards in Fiscal Year Ended December 31, 2014” and Equity Compensation Plan Information, elsewhere in this proxy statement. Total stock-based compensation to all employees, including all current officers who are not executive officers, under the 2005 Plan during 2014 had a fair value of approximately $4 million. Consistent with our pay-for-performance philosophy, vesting of our performance shares granted in 2014 is conditioned on the attainment of free cash flow, total shareholder return, or other performance targets. The target awards are subject to upward or downward adjustment based on the degree to which the established performance criteria are achieved. Subject to applicable terms of the award agreements, the November 2014 performance shares do not vest until March 2018. Further, the awards also have a service vesting component, as the awards are forfeitable if the individual’s employment terminates before vesting occurs. Restricted stock units and performance shares granted to all employees,
including all current officers who are not executive officers, under the 2005 Plan during 2014 covered 690,624 shares. Restricted stock units generally vest over the three year period following the date of grant based on continued employment with the Company. In addition, stock options (which are also performance based compensation under Section 162(m)) granted to all employees, including all current officers who are not executive officers, were granted under the 2005 Plan during 2014 to purchase an aggregate of 189,905 shares with a weighted-average exercise price of $4.28 per share. The stock options are subject to vesting over a three year period following the date of grant based on continued employment with the Company.
Additional Equity Plan Information
The following table provides certain additional information regarding all of our equity incentive plans:
As of 12/31/14 | ||||
Total Stock Options Outstanding | 2,042,074 | |||
Total Restricted Stock and Performance Shares Outstanding | 1,814,130 | |||
Total Common Stock Outstanding | 136,898,282 | |||
Weighted-Average Exercise Price of Stock Options Outstanding | $ | 10.93 | ||
Weighted-Average Remaining Duration of Stock Options Outstanding | 7.8 years | |||
Total Shares Available for Grant under the 2005 Plan | 295,593 |
Information for Burn Rate Calculations
The following table provides detailed information regarding activity under our 2005 Equity Plan in fiscal 2014.
2014 | 2013 | 2012 | ||||||||||
Stock Options Granted | 671,939 | 348,106 | 441,700 | |||||||||
Restricted Stock & PSUs Granted | 1,466,919 | 803,542 | 964,906 | |||||||||
Total | 2,140,872 | 1,153,661 | 1,408,618 | |||||||||
3 Year Average Grants | 1,567,717 | |||||||||||
Weighted-Average Common Shares Outstanding (basic) | 136,155,000 | 135,067,000 | 138,552,000 | |||||||||
Annual Gross Burn Rate | 1.57% | 0.85% | 1.02% | |||||||||
3 year Average Annual Gross Burn Rate | 1.15% |
The affirmative vote of a majority of the votes cast by holders of outstanding shares is required to approve this Proposal.
THE BOARD RECOMMENDS A VOTEFOR APPROVAL OF AN EXTENSION OF THE TERM OF THE 2005 EQUITY INCENTIVE PLAN FOR AN ADDITIONAL TEN YEARS, AN INCREASE IN THE NUMBER OF SHARES AUTHORIZED FOR AWARDS THEREUNDER BY 4,000,000 SHARES AND THE DECREASE IN THE MAXIMUM NUMBER OF SHARES (OR THE CASH EQUIVALENT THEREOF) THAT MAY BE GRANTED IN RESPECT OF AWARDS TO ANY ONE INDIVIDUAL IN ANY ONE CALENDAR YEAR TO 1,000,000 SHARES AND THE MATERIAL TERMS OF THE PERFORMANCE GOALS THEREUNDER.
RATIFY THE APPOINTMENT OF PRICEWATERHOUSECOOPERS LLP AS OUR INDEPENDENT REGISTERED PUBLIC ACCOUNTING FIRM FOR THE CURRENT FISCAL YEAR ENDING DECEMBER 31, 2015
PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP served as our independent registered public accounting firm in 2014 and is expected to be retained to do so in 2015. The Board has elected to ask our stockholders to ratify the appointment of the independent registered public accounting firm at the Annual Meeting as a matter of good corporate practice.
Stockholder ratification of the appointment of PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP as our independent registered public accounting firm is not required by our by-laws or otherwise. If the stockholders do not ratify the appointment, the Audit Committee will reconsider whether to retain the firm. In such event, the Audit Committee may retain PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP, notwithstanding the fact that the stockholders did not ratify the appointment, or select another nationally recognized accounting firm without re- submitting the matter to the stockholders. Even if the appointment is ratified, the Audit Committee reserves the right in its discretion to select a different nationally recognized accounting firm at any time if it determines that such a change would be in the best interests of GrafTech and its stockholders.
The affirmative vote of a majority of the votes cast by holders of outstanding shares is required to approve this Proposal.
THE BOARD RECOMMENDS A VOTEFOR THE RATIFICATION OF THE APPOINTMENT OF PRICEWATERHOUSECOOPERS LLP AS THE COMPANY’S INDEPENDENT REGISTERED PUBLIC ACCOUNTING FIRM FOR THE CURRENT FISCAL YEAR ENDING DECEMBER 31, 2015.
BY-LAW REPEAL PROPOSAL
On January 23, 2015, Mr. Milikowsky delivered to the Company a notice of intent to present at the Annual Meeting a proposal to repeal any new by-law or any amendment to the by-laws in effect as of the date of the Annual Meeting and adopted after September 30, 2012.
Proposal No. 5 provides for the adoption of the resolution in the following form:
“RESOLVED, that any provision of the Bylaws of GrafTech International Ltd. (the “Company”) as of the date of effectiveness of this resolution that was not included inundersigned, with all the Bylaws as amended effective September 30, 2012 (as publicly filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission on October 4, 2012), be and hereby is repealed.”
The Board has not adopted new by-laws or any amendment to the by-laws since the by-laws were last amended on September 30, 2012. In addition, the Board does not currently intend to adopt any new by-laws or any amendment to the by-laws prior to the Annual Meeting. Accordingly, the Board believes that this Proposal No. 5, if presented, would be unnecessary.
A majority of the members of the Board believes that this Proposal No. 5 delivered by Mr. Milikowsky is overbroad and intended to further a personal agenda of Mr. Milikowsky and other members of the Milikowsky Group without regard to the impact on other stockholders. In particular, this Proposal seeks repeal of any by-law or by-law amendment regardless of whether it benefits stockholders generally or has been adopted to respond to feedback from other stockholders not part of the Milikowsky Group. Moreover, it is not limited by its terms to the election of directors or other matters of corporate governance, but is so broad as to cover personal grievances and affronts regardless of the merits.
The Board’s fiduciary duties require that it retain the flexibility to adopt, at any time, any new by-law or amendment to the by-laws that it believes is proper and in the best interest of all of the stockholders. The automatic repeal of any duly adopted by-law or by-law amendment, irrespective of its content, could have the unfortunate effect of repealing one or more properly adopted by-law or by-law amendment that is in the best interests of GrafTech and its stockholders, including in response to unforeseeable events occurring between now and the Annual Meeting.
The Board is properly empowered by GrafTech’s corporate documents and applicable law to amend, repeal or add to the by-laws in accordance with its fiduciary duties. A majority of the members of the Board believes this Proposal has no purpose other than to frustrate Board action in furtherance of its duties to all stockholders.
The affirmative vote of the holders of not less than 67% of the outstanding shares is required to adopt this Proposal, if it is presented by Mr. Milikowsky or his duly qualified representative at the Annual Meeting.
THE BOARD RECOMMENDS A VOTEAGAINST THE BY-LAW REPEAL PROPOSAL, IF IT IS PRESENTED AT THE ANNUAL MEETING.
REIMBURSEMENT OF MILIKOWSKY EXPENSES RELATED TO 2014 PROXY CONTEST
On August 29, 2014, the Board received a letter from counsel for Nathan Milikowsky requesting reimbursement of $5,946,251.54 in expenses (the “Reimbursement Request”) incurred by Mr. Milikowsky and certain related parties in connection with the proxy contest in support of the election at the 2014 Annual Meeting of stockholders of his slate of nominees for director (the “2014 Contest”). That slate included Karen Finerman and David Jardini, as well as Mr. Milikowsky, each of whom is currently a director of the Company. Ms. Finerman and Messrs. Jardini and Milikowsky each agreed to recuse themselves from consideration of the Reimbursement Request due to their conflict of interest. Accordingly, the Reimbursement Request has been considered by the remaining members of the Board—Cathy Morris, Tom Danjczek, Randy Carson and Joel Hawthorne (collectively, for purposes of this Proposal, the “Disinterested Directors”). In connection with their consideration of the Reimbursement Request, the Disinterested Directors obtained the advice of qualified independent counsel (“Independent Counsel”). Mr. Milikowsky was advised of, and did not object to, the engagement of Independent Counsel by the Board.
At the request of the Disinterested Directors, Independent Counsel requested additional information from Mr. Milikowsky’s counsel to substantiate the amount, nature and purpose of the expenses described in the Reimbursement Request. Mr. Milikowsky’s counsel provided certain of the additional information requested and ultimately indicated that no further substantiation would be forthcoming.
Delaware law generally provides that the board of directors of a Delaware corporation may reimburse successful contestants for actual, reasonable and bona fide proxy-contest expenses incurred in connection with a proxy contest waged over policy issues (as opposed to personal grievances or agendas) where payment is either (i) part of a settlement in which there is consideration to the corporation for such payment or (ii) approved by stockholders. Delaware law was recently amended so that a corporation’s bylaws may permit the corporation to reimburse expenses incurred by a stockholder in soliciting proxies in connection with an election of directors on terms and conditions set forth in the bylaws, but no such bylaw can apply retroactively to any election with a record date that precedes the adoption of the bylaw.
After multiple meetings and upon consultation with Independent Counsel, in November 2014, the Disinterested Directors had unanimously determined not to approve payment of the Reimbursement Request without stockholder approval. On November 17, 2014, Independent Counsel informed Mr. Milikowsky’s counsel that the Disinterested Directors unanimously concluded that it would not be in the best interests of all stockholders to pay the Reimbursement Request. In making their determination, the Disinterested Directors considered the aggregate amount of the expenses, the extent topowers which the expenses were substantiated and the purpose, nature and amount of the various categories of expenses (to the extent substantiated).
The Disinterested Directors observed that the aggregate amount of the Reimbursement Request is more than double the aggregate expenses incurred by the Company in connection with the 2014 Contest. The Disinterested Directors also found that the Reimbursement Request substantially exceeds the amount reimbursed in virtually all but one of the other proxy contests referenced in the letter from Mr. Milikowsky’s counsel setting forth the Reimbursement Request. For these reasons, the Disinterested Directors concluded that the aggregate amount of the Reimbursement Request appears to be unreasonable.
In addition, the Disinterested Directors noted Mr. Milikowsky’s unwillingness to provide all of the requested documentation in support of the Reimbursement Request. In connection with the substantiated expenses, the Disinterested Directors did not identify any consideration that the Companyundersigned would receive in exchange for payment of the Reimbursement Request. The Disinterested Directors also failed to identify any demonstrable benefits that payment of the Reimbursement Request might confer upon other GrafTech stockholders. Accordingly, the Disinterested Directors concluded that approval of such payment might be deemed wasteful of the Company’s resources.
Finally, the Disinterested Directors noted that some of the most significant issues in the 2014 Contest focused on Mr. Milikowsky’s personal conduct, his qualifications to serve as a director and Mr. Milikowsky’s apparent grievance at being excluded from nomination for election as a director at the Company’s 2013 annual meeting of stockholders. The Disinterested Directors also considered Mr. Milikowsky’s unwillingness during the 2014 Contest to consider any settlement proposal that did not include him personally serving on the Board. Accordingly, the Disinterested Directors concluded that the 2014 Contest could not necessarily be characterized as solely or primarily related to a policy-based contest as contemplated by Delaware law.
Since September 2014, Mr. Milikowsky has reiterated the Reimbursement Request several times, most recently in connection with discussions relating to a settlement of the current 2015 proxy contest. Mr. Milikowsky has stated that he may seek reimbursement of the expenses incurred and to be incurred in connection with the 2015 proxy contest. In light of the Mr. Milikowsky’s nomination of a control slate in connection with the 2015 proxy contest and because Mr. Milikowsky has not irrevocably and unconditionally withdrawn the Reimbursement Request, the Disinterested Directors have concluded that submitting the approval of the Reimbursement Request to the Company’s stockholders is in the best interests of GrafTech stockholders. [The Disinterested Directors have not made any decision to pay, or not to pay, amounts covered by the Reimbursement Request based on the outcome of the stockholder vote on this Proposal. Any decision as to whether to make, or not make, such payment would be made by the Board as constituted following the Annual Meeting. Assuming that Messrs. Milikowsky and Jardini and Ms. Finerman continue to recuse themselves from the decision and deliberations thereon, it is the expectation of the Company that any such decision on behalf of the Board would be made by the then members of the Board who are disinterested or some duly authorized committee of them. It is the expectation of the Company that, in making any such decision, those members of the Board would take into account all relevant facts and circumstances, including the outcome of the stockholder vote on Proposal 6 as well as the factors considered by the Disinterested Directors in making the decision to submit this Proposal to a stockholder vote.]
The affirmative vote of a majority of the total number of votes cast by shares then outstanding and entitled to vote on this Proposal is required to approve the Reimbursement Request. Therefore, for purposes of this Proposal, abstentions and other shares not voted (whether by broker non-vote or otherwise) will not be counted as votes cast and will have no effect on the result of the vote, although abstentions will count toward the presence of a quorum. Broker non-votes will not be included in determining the presence of a quorum.
THE BOARD ACTING AT THE UNANIMOUS VOTE OF THE DISINTERESTED DIRECTORS RECOMMENDS THAT STOCKHOLDERS VOTE “AGAINST” APPROVAL OF THE REIMBURSEMENT REQUEST.
Section 16(a) Beneficial Ownership Reporting Compliance
Section 16(a) of the Exchange Act requires GrafTech’s directors and officers and beneficial owners of more than 10% of the outstanding shares of our common stock to file with the SEC initial reports of ownership, and reports of changes in ownership, of our common stock and other equity securities. We believe that, during 2014, all of our directors and officers and beneficial owners of more than 10% of the outstanding shares complied with all reporting requirements under Section 16(a).
Limitations on Soliciting Material, Liabilities and Incorporation by Reference
In accordance with the rules and regulations of the SEC, the following information set forth in this proxy statement shall not be deemed to be soliciting material within the meaning of Regulations 14A and 14C under the Exchange Act, filed with the SEC under the Exchange Act or otherwise subject to Regulations 14A or 14C or liabilities under Section 18 of the Exchange Act and shall not be deemed to be incorporated by reference into any filing under the Securities Act of 1933 or the Exchange Act, notwithstanding any general incorporation by reference of this proxy statement into any other document filed with the SEC:
information under the caption “The Board of Directors” regarding the independence or expertise of any particular director; and
information under the captions “Audit and Finance Committee Report” and “Compensation Committee Report.”
This proxy statement and any related proxy solicitation materials furnished by or on behalf of the Company contain “forward-looking statements” about such matters as: our outlook for 2015; future or targeted operational and financial performance; growth prospects and rates; the markets we serve; future or targeted profitability, cash flow, liquidity sales, costs and expenses, tax rates, cost management, working capital, inventory management, debt levels, capital expenditures, EBITDA, and business opportunities and positioning; strategic plans; stock repurchase plans; supply chain management; rationalization and related initiatives and activities; the impact of rationalization, cost competitiveness and liquidity initiatives; expected or targeted changes in production capacity or levels, operating rates or efficiency in our operations or our competitors’ or customers’ operations; future prices and demand for our products and changes therein; product quality; diversification, new products, and product improvements and their impact on our business; the integration or impact of acquired businesses; investments and acquisitions that we may make in the future; possible financing (including factoring and supply chain financing) activities; our customers’ operations and demand for their products; our position in markets we serve; regional and global economic and industry market conditions and changes therein, including our expectations concerning their impact on us and our customers and suppliers; conditions and changes in the global financial and credit markets; tax rates and the effects of jurisdictional mix; the impact of accounting changes; and currency exchange and interest rates and changes therein.
We have no duty to update these statements. Our expectations and targets are not predictions of actual performance and historically our performance has deviated, often significantly, from our expectations and targets. Actual future events, circumstances, performance and trends could differ materially, positively or negatively, due to various factors, including: failure to achieve EBITDA or other estimates; actual outcome of uncertainties associated with assumptions and estimates used when applying critical accounting policies and preparing financial statements; failure to successfully develop and commercialize new or improved products; adverse changes in inventory or supply chain management; limitations or delays on capital expenditures; business interruptions including those caused by weather, natural disaster, or other causes; delays or changes in, or non-consummation of proposed investments or acquisitions; failure to successfully integrate or achieve expected synergies, performance or returns expected from any completed investments or acquisitions; inability to
protect our intellectual property rights or infringement of intellectual property rights of others; changes in market prices of our securities; changes in our ability to obtain financing on acceptable terms; adverse changes in labor relations; adverse developments in legal proceedings or investigations; non-realization of anticipated benefits from, or variances in the cost or timing of, organizational changes, rationalizations and restructurings; loss of market share or sales due to rationalization or pricing activities; negative developments relating to health, safety or environmental compliance or remediation or liabilities; downturns, production reductions or suspensions, or other changes in steel, electronics and other markets we or our customers serve; customer or supplier bankruptcy or insolvency events; political unrest which adversely impacts us or our customers’ businesses; declines in demand; intensified competition and price or margin decreases; graphite electrode and needle coke manufacturing capacity increases; fluctuating market prices for our products, including adverse differences between actual graphite electrode prices and spot or announced prices; consolidation of steel producers; mismatches between manufacturing capacity and demand; significant changes in our provision for income taxes and effective income tax rate; changes in the availability or cost of key inputs, including petroleum-based coke or energy; changes in interest or currency exchange rates; inflation or deflation; failure to satisfy conditions to government grants; continuing uncertainty over U.S. fiscal policy or condition; continuation of the European debt crisis; changes in government fiscal and monetary policy; a protracted regional or global financial or economic crisis; and other risks and uncertainties, including those detailed in our SEC filings, as well as future decisions by us.
A copy of our Annual Report on Form 10-K accompanies this proxy statement. Such annual report is not a part of our proxy solicitation materials. Upon receipt of a written request, we will furnish to any stockholder, without charge, an additional copy of our Annual Report on Form 10-K (without exhibits) for the year ended December 31, 2014 required to be filed under the Exchange Act. Upon such written request and the payment of $0.10 (ten cents) per page, copies of any exhibit to our Annual Report on Form 10-K will also be provided. Any such written request should be directed to our Investor Relations Department at GrafTech International Ltd., 6100 Oak Tree Blvd., Independence, Ohio, 44131, or call us at 216-676-2000.
Our solicitation of proxies is being made by GrafTech and we will bear the cost of the solicitation. We have retained MacKenzie Partners, Inc. to aid in our solicitation of proxies at an anticipated cost up to $300,000. Up to twenty employees of MacKenzie Partners, Inc. will solicit stockholders. We estimate that our aggregate incremental costs in connection with the proxy contest described herein (including printing, delivery, transportation, mailing costs, fees and expenses of counsel, solicitors, public relations and financial advisors) will be approximately $3 million to $4 million. As of March 31, 2015, expenditures in connection with the solicitation were $[ ]. We will request banks, brokers and other nominees, including custodians and fiduciaries, to forward soliciting material to beneficial owners of our common stock and will pay such persons for forwarding such material. In addition to the solicitation of proxies generally by means of this proxy statement, officers or other employees, without extra remuneration, may solicit proxies by telephone or other means of personal contact.
Auditor Attendance at 2015 Annual Meeting
Representatives of PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP have stated that they intend to bepossess if present at the Annual Meeting and be available to respond to appropriate questions. They may make a statement if they desire to do.
Pre-Approval Policies and Procedures
The Audit Committee Charter requires that the Audit Committee review and approve in advance the retention of our registered independent public accounting firm for all types of audit and non-audit services to be performed for us by our registered independent public accounting firm and approve the fees for such services,
other thande minimus non-audit services allowed by relevant law. The Audit Committee periodically may pre-approve the retention of our registered independent public accounting firm for any additional permitted non-audit services. All of the services provided to us by PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP for Audit Fees, Audit-Related Fees, Tax Fees, and All Other Fees, as shown in the table below, were approved by the Audit Committee in accordance with this pre-approval policy and procedure.
Registered Independent Public Accounting Firm’s Fees
A summary of the fees that we paid to PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP for professional services performed for 2014 and 2013, respectively, is set forth below.
Summary of Audit, Audit-Related, Tax and Other Fees
2014 | 2013 | |||||||
(Dollars in millions) | ||||||||
Audit Fees (a) | $ | 2.3 | $ | 1.8 | ||||
Audit-Related Fees (b) | 0.0 | 0.2 | ||||||
Tax Fees (c) | 0.1 | 0.4 | ||||||
All Other Fees (d) | 0.0 | 0.1 | ||||||
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Total | $ | 2.4 | $ | 2.5 | ||||
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audits of our annual consolidated financial statements and internal controls over financial reporting;
reviews of our quarterly financial statements;
statutory and regulatory audits of subsidiaries; and
consents and other services related to SEC matters in 2013.
financial accounting and reporting consultations; and
attestation services not required by statute or regulation.
When are Stockholder Proposals for the 2016 Annual Meeting Due
Any proposal (including any nomination for election to our Board) that a stockholder wishes to have considered for inclusion in our proxy statement for the annual meeting of stockholders for 2016 must be given to our Secretary at our principal executive office on or before the 120th day preceding the anniversary of the date that this proxy statement is mailed and must otherwise comply with our by-laws and the rules and regulations of the SEC.
Our by-laws provide, among other things, that written notice of any proposal (including any such nomination in connection with an annual meeting of stockholders) by a stockholder must be given to our Secretary not later than 105 days and not earlier than 135 days prior to (i) the first anniversary of the preceding year’s annual meeting of stockholders or (ii) if the date of such annual meeting is more than 30 days before or
after such anniversary and (A) either public disclosure of such date has been given or made or such stockholder has been informed or learned of such date more than 115 days before such date, not earlier than the open of business on the 135th day and not later than the close of business on the 105th day prior to such meeting or (B) both public disclosure of such date have not been given or made and such stockholder has not been informed or learned of such date more than 115 days before such date, not earlier than the open of business on the 135th day prior to such anniversary and not later than the close of business on the 10th day following the date on which public disclosure of such date is given or made or such stockholder is informed or learns of such date.
Our by-laws provide that written notice by a stockholder of any such nomination in connection with any other meeting of stockholders must be delivered or mailed to, and received at, our principal executive office (i) not earlier than the 135th day and not later than the 105th day prior to the date of such meeting, if either public disclosure of such date has been given or made or such stockholder has been informed or learned of such date on or more than 135 days before such date, or (ii) not later the 10th day following the date on which public disclosure of the date of such meeting is given or made or such stockholder is informed or learns of such date, if both public disclosure of such date has not been given or made and such stockholder has not been informed or learned of such date more than 135 days before the date of such meeting.
The chairperson of the meeting shall determine whether any such proposal (or nomination) shall have been properly brought. If such proposal (or nomination) is not properly brought, then the chairperson shall not allow a vote on the proposal (or nomination).
Our proxy card for the Annual Meeting will give discretionary authority with respect to all stockholder proposals properly brought before the Annual Meeting that are not included in this proxy statement.
What Information is Required for Stockholder Proposals and Nominations
Our by-laws provide, among other things:
that a stockholder submitting a proposal or nomination must be a stockholder of record and must be a stockholder as of the record date for the meeting as well as the dates currently specified in the bylaws;
provide that a proposal must be a proper matter for stockholder action;
require that a proponent correct inaccurate or incomplete information within three business days after the information becomes inaccurate or incomplete, and in any event not less than five business days prior to the meeting;
require a proponent to provide additional information and representations about itself, any nominee for election as a director and related parties and others for or with whom they are acting, including additional information regarding (a) direct, indirect, beneficial, derivative and other ownership, voting, short, dispositive or pecuniary interests in our capital stock, (b) interests adverse to us or our principal business or businesses (including interests in any of our principal competitors), (c) any other stockholder or other person supporting or expected to support such proposal or nomination, (d) whether any of such parties intends to deliver a proxy statement or solicit proxies in respect of such business or nomination and (e) the proponent’s intent to appear in person or by proxy at the meeting to propose such business or nomination;
require a proponent to provide, as to a nominee for director, a questionnaire and additional information and representations with respect to such nominee, including additional information (a) which the nominee would be required to provide if the nominee was the proponent, (b) to enable evaluation of compensation committee interlocks, interlocking directorates under the Clayton Act, and eligibility to meet independence and other director qualifications set forth in our corporate governance documents, in applicable listing rules and otherwise and (c) regarding whether the nominee (i) would be acting on his or her own behalf or on behalf of another party, (ii) is a party to any arrangement or has given any
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provide that, if a proponent does not appear in person or by proxy at a meeting, the business or nomination proposed by such proponent need not be submitted at the meeting.
For a complete description of our voting procedures, please review our complete by-laws as amended, which we recommend that you read in order to comply with the requirements for bringing a proposal or making a nomination. Our bylaws were filed as Exhibit 3.2.0 to our Annual Report on Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended December 31, 2014, and are incorporated herein by reference. You may contact our Secretary at our principal executive offices for a copy of our complete bylaws as amended, including the relevant provisions regarding the requirements for making stockholder proposals and nominating director candidates, or you may refer to the copy of our bylaws and amendment filed with the SEC as described above, available athttp://www.sec.gov.
Proxyholders named in the proxy or vote instruction card for the Annual Meeting will have discretionary authority to vote on any proposal submitted at the Annual Meeting, other than a proposal that is included in this proxy statement.
Stockholders Sharing an Address
If you share an address with another stockholder, you may receive only one set of proxy materials (including this proxy statement and the annual report to stockholders) unless you have provided contrary instructions. If you wish to receive a separate set of proxy materials now or in the future, you may contact our Investor Relations Department at GrafTech International Ltd., 6100 Oak Tree Blvd., Independence, Ohio 44131, or call us at 216-676-2000.
Similarly, if you share an address with another stockholder and have received multiple copies of our proxy materials, you may contact us at the above address to request delivery of a single copy of these materials.
APPENDIX A
AMENDMENT NO. 2 TO THE
AMENDED AND RESTATED (AS OF FEBRUARY 2012)
GRAFTECH INTERNATIONAL LTD.
2005 EQUITY INCENTIVE PLAN
WHEREAS, the Amended and Restated 2005 Equity Incentive Plan of GrafTech International Ltd. (the “Company”) was adopted, effective May 25, 2005, and subsequently amended and restated (as amended and restated through the date hereof, the “Plan”);
WHEREAS, the Company wishes to amend the Plan as permitted therein; and
WHEREAS, unless otherwise defined herein, defined terms used herein shall have the meanings set forth in the Plan;
NOW, THEREFORE, the Plan is hereby amended as follows:
1. The first sentence of the definition of “Performance Measures” in Section 2(hh) of the Plan is hereby amended, effective upon the approval of this amendment by the stockholders of the Company, to read in its entirety as follows:
““Performance Measures” means one or more performance criteria, which may be applied with respect to an individual Participant, the Corporation, any Subsidiary, the Company or any division, line of business or functional or business unit and which may be measured on an absolute, gross, total, net, per share (including basic, diluted or fully diluted), average, adjusted or relative basis (or measured based on changes therein), consisting of any type or kind of: costs or expenses; earnings, income or profit; stockholder return; return on sales, assets, capital, investment or equity; sales or revenue; cash flow (which includes throughput); EBIT or EBITDA; debt; gross, operating, debt or other margin or profit; working capital or any element thereof; market share; stockholder equity or net worth; unit volumes; inventory turnover; stock price; productivity or production; product quality; corporate value measures; capital expenditures; credit rating; cost of debt, equity or capital; completion of significant projects or implementation of significant new processes; achievement of strategic milestones; and any combination of the foregoing.”
2. The first sentence of Section 3.1 of the Plan is hereby amended, effective upon the approval of this amendment by the stockholders of the Company, to increase the aggregate number of Shares that may be delivered under the Plan referenced therein by 4,000,000 Shares.
3. The last sentence of each of Sections 4.4 and 5 of the Plan is hereby amended, effective upon the approval of this amendment by the stockholders of the Company, to decrease the maximum number of Shares, together with the cash value of any Award represented by the value of Shares, alone or in combination with any other Award that may be settled in Shares, in respect of which an Award may be granted to any one Participant in any one calendar year to 1,000,000 Shares.
4. The first sentence of Section 17.2 of the Plan is hereby amended, effective upon the approval of this amendment by the stockholders of the Company, to extend the authority to grant new Awards under the Plan until May 24, 2025.
IN WITNESS WHEREOF, this Amendment has been duly executed by the Company, effective as set forth above.
WHITE UNIVERSAL PROXY CARD
PRELIMINARY PROXY - SUBJECT TO COMPLETION
GRAFTECH INTERNATIONAL LTD.
2021 Annual Meeting of Stockholders to be held on May 29, 2015, 10:00 a.m., Eastern Daylight Time13, 2021, or at any postponement or adjournment thereof.
VOTE BY INTERNET – WWW.CESVOTE.COM
Use the Internet to transmit your voting instructions up until 11:59 p.m., Eastern Daylight Time, on the day prior to the Annual Meeting date. Have your WHITE Universal Proxy Card in hand when you access the website and then follow the instructions.
OR
VOTE BY TELEPHONE – 1-888-693-8683
Use any touch-tone telephone to transmit your voting instructions up until 11:59 p.m., Eastern Daylight Time, on the day prior to the Annual Meeting date. Have your WHITE Universal Proxy Card in hand when you call and then follow the instructions.
OR
VOTE BY MAIL
Mark, sign and date your WHITE Universal Proxy Card and return it in the postage-paid envelope we have provided. Please mail early to ensure your vote is received prior to the Annual Meeting.
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The Board recommends that you vote FOR the seven (7) GrafTech Nominees, FOR Proposals 2, 3 and 4 and AGAINST Proposals 5 and 6.
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You may vote FOR any combination ofnot more than 9 nominees named below. The Board recommends that you vote FOR the 7 GrafTech nominees.
GrafTech Nominees
FOR
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(01) | Randy W. Carson | q | q | (02) | Robert J. Conrad | q | q | |||||||||||
(03) | Thomas A. Danjczek | q | q | (04) | James O. Egan | q | q | |||||||||||
(05) | Joel L. Hawthorne | q | q | (06) | James A. Spencer | q | q | |||||||||||
(07) | Robert F. Weber, Jr. | q | q |
Nathan Milikowsky Nominees
FOR
| WITHHOLD
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(08) | Frederic Brace | q | q | (09) | Alan Carr | q | q | |||||||||||
(10) | Michael Christodolou | q | q | (11) | Karen Finerman | q | q | |||||||||||
(12) | David R. Jardini | q | q | (13) | Nathan Milikowsky | q | q | |||||||||||
(14) | Fiona Scott Morton | q | q |
IMPORTANT: You mayonly vote FOR 9 nominees in total. If you vote FOR more than 9 nominees,none of your votes for any nominees will be counted or tabulated. SharesWhen properly executed, shares represented by yourthis proxy will, however, be counted as present for purposes of a quorum and will be voted as directed on all matters other thanby the election of directors.
IMPORTANT: Please be sure to countstockholder. If no such directions are indicated, the total number of FOR votes above. If more than 9, please correct your vote. WITHHOLD does not count as a vote for this purpose.
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Please date this proxy card and sign exactly as your name appears on this card. Joint owners should each sign personally. Authorized officers, executors, administrators, trustees, etc. should sign for their corporations, estates, trusts, etc. and give their full titles.
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YOUR VOTE IS IMPORTANT. PLEASE VOTE TODAY.
We encourage you to take advantage of Internet or telephone voting.
If you vote by Internet or telephone, you do NOT need to mail back your WHITE Universal Proxy Card
Your Internet or telephone vote authorizes theabove named proxies will vote FOR all the nominees listed in Proposal 1 and FOR Proposal 2 and Proposal 3.
In their discretion, the above named proxies are authorized to vote your shares in the same mannerupon such other business as if you marked, signed and returned your WHITE Universal Proxy Card
Important Notice Regarding the Availability of Proxy Materials for the Annual Meeting:
The Notice and Proxy Statement and the Annual Report on Form 10-K are available at:
www.graftech.com in the Investor Relations section.
IMPORTANT: Please use only the WHITE Universal Proxy Card to vote your shares, as it provides you with the most options for electing a full slate of nine directors. Please discard any blue proxy card you receive.
Even if you have previously signed and returned a blue proxy card, please use the enclosed WHITE Universal Proxy Card to vote FOR the seven (7) GrafTech Nominees and up to two (2) Nathan Milikowsky Nominees of your choice.
Please do not send back the blue proxy card, even to vote against Nathan Milikowsky and his slate, as doing so will override any previous vote you submitted on the WHITE Universal Proxy Card. Only the latest dated proxy card you submit will be counted.
GRAFTECHINTERNATIONALLTD.
Annual Meeting of Stockholders
May 29, 2015 10:00 a.m. Eastern Daylight Time
THIS PROXY IS SOLICITED ON BEHALF OF THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS AT THE DIRECTION OF THE SPECIAL COMMITTEE (the “Board”). The undersigned stockholder of GrafTech International Ltd. (“GrafTech”) appoints Joel L. Hawthorne and John D. Moran, or either of them, as proxies for the undersigned, with full power of substitution in each of them, to attend the 2015 Annual Meeting of Stockholders of GrafTech (the “Annual Meeting”) to be held at [—] at 10:00 a.m., Eastern Daylight Time, on May 29, 2015, and any adjournment or postponement thereof, to cast on behalf of the undersigned all votes that the undersigned is entitled to cast at the Annual Meeting and otherwise to represent the undersigned at the Annual Meeting with all the powers possessed by the undersigned if personally present at the Annual Meeting. The undersigned acknowledges receipt of the Notice of the Annual Meeting and the accompanying Proxy Statement, the terms of each of which are incorporated by reference, and revokes any proxy heretofore given with respect to the Annual Meeting.
The votes entitled to be cast by the undersigned will be cast as instructed on the reverse. If this WHITE Universal Proxy is executed but no instruction is given as to one or more matters, the votes entitled to be cast by the undersigned will be cast on the uninstructed matters as follows: FOR the election of all 7 of the GrafTech nominees as directors, FOR Proposals Two, Three and Four and AGAINST Proposals Five and Six. Additionally, the votes entitled to be cast by the undersigned will be cast in the discretion of the proxy holder on any other matter that may properly come before the Annual Meeting or any adjournment or postponement thereof.meeting.
CONTINUED AND TO BE SIGNED ON THE OTHER SIDE(Items to be voted appear on reverse side)