Google
said it would pay its new Chief Financial Officer, Ruth Porat, more
than $70 million in the next two years through a combination of
restricted stock units and a biennial grant.
The
company hired Morgan Stanley CFO Porat as its finance chief earlier
this week, a sign it is aiming to rein in costs as it invests in new
businesses such as self-driving cars and Internet-connected eyeglasses.
Porat’s
compensation package includes a grant of $25 million through restricted
stock units, a $40 million biennial grant in 2016 and a special
one-time $5 million sign-on bonus, Google said in a regulatory filing on
Thursday.
Porat,
who will join Google on May 26, will also get an annual base salary of
$650,000. She earned a base salary of $1 million at Morgan Stanley for
2013, according to the bank’s proxy filing. Her pay last year will be
disclosed once the bank files its latest proxy.
Porat
is the latest among a string of Wall Street executives to leave an
industry that is increasingly regulated to move into the more
free-wheeling technology sector, where fortunes can be built fast but
businesses can also become irrelevant overnight.
Google
paid its outgoing CFO Patrick Pichette, who announced his retirement
earlier this month, $62.2 million for the three years through 2013, more
than twice the $29.6 million Porat earned at Morgan Stanley, according
to regulatory filings.
Mountain
View, California-based Google said it would stop annual cash bonuses
for senior vice presidents from next year and shift to a system that
includes annual base salary and biennial equity grants.
Posted by : Gizmeon
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