Estimated reading time: 1 minute, 13 seconds

ELOP CLEANS UP AGAIN Featured

Steve Elop, Nokia/MicrosoftThe controversy over the payout to Nokia's recent former CEO Steve Elop rings a bell. It seems Elop has as much success leaving a company as he does running one. This time, the debate is over the reported roughly $25 million payout Elop gets with Microsoft's buying Nokia's mobile phone group under a change of control clause (and a substantial decline in market value of Nokia stock until the Microsoft bid came in).

But let's go back three years to Elop's move from his position as president of the Microsoft Business Division to Nokia.  After two years in that job he got $12 million in total compensation (although the poor soul had to return $667,000 of his signing bonus because he didn't stay three years). But he also cleaned up with an agreement that Microsoft would buy his house for the difference between its purchase price and appraised value at a time when real estate values had plummeted. He had also received $4.15 million in relocation expenses in 2009 with a required tax gross up of $1.4 million. After that fiasco, Microsoft changed its policy. This time, Nokia reportedly amended his contract without disclosing why in the proxy for an extraordinary shareholder meeting, but apparently Microsoft wants to keep Elop, seen as a potential successor to Steve Ballmer. Microsoft agreed to cover 70 percent of Elop's payout. Microsoft had also been among vendors named in a non-compete clause, according to reports in the business press that has been following this.

Read 1504 times
Rate this item
(0 votes)

Visit other PMG Sites:

PMG360 is committed to protecting the privacy of the personal data we collect from our subscribers/agents/customers/exhibitors and sponsors. On May 25th, the European's GDPR policy will be enforced. Nothing is changing about your current settings or how your information is processed, however, we have made a few changes. We have updated our Privacy Policy and Cookie Policy to make it easier for you to understand what information we collect, how and why we collect it.