1. | Elect as directors the 14 nominees named in the attached proxy statement; |
2. | Approve the 2009 Stock Compensation Plan; |
3. | Ratify the appointment of KPMG LLP as General Mills independent registered public accounting firm for our fiscal year ending May 30, 2010; |
4. | Act on one stockholder proposal, if properly presented at the meeting; and |
5. | Transact any other business that properly comes before the meeting. |
| If you received a Notice of Internet Availability of Proxy Materials in the mail, you may use the 12-digit control number on the Notice to access the proxy materials and vote via the Internet at www.proxyvote.com; or | |
| If you have a printed copy of the proxy materials, you may use the 12-digit control number on your proxy card to vote by telephone or via the Internet at www.proxyvote.com, or you may sign and return the proxy card. |
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B-1 |
i
Bradbury H.
Anderson Director since 2007 Bradbury H. Anderson, age 60, has served as Vice Chairman of the Board of Best Buy Co., Inc., an electronics retailer, since 2002. He was also Chief Executive Officer of Best Buy from 2002 until his retirement in June 2009. Mr. Anderson joined Best Buy in 1973. Prior to becoming Chief Executive Officer, he served as Executive Vice President from 1986 to 1991 and President and Chief Operating Officer from 1991 to 2002. |
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R. Kerry
Clark Director since May 2009 R. Kerry Clark, age 57, is Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of Cardinal Health, Inc., a provider of health care products and services. Mr. Clark joined Cardinal Health in April 2006 as President and Chief Executive Officer and became Chairman in November 2007. Prior to that, he had held various positions at The Procter & Gamble Company, a consumer products company, since 1974, including President of P&G Asia; President, Global Market Development and Business Operations; and from 2004 to 2007, Vice Chairman of the Board. He is a director of Textron, Inc. and Hauser Capital Partners, LLC. |
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Paul
Danos Director since 2004 Paul Danos, age 67, has been Dean and Laurence F. Whittemore Professor of Business Administration at Tuck School of Business at Dartmouth College since 1995. Prior to that, Mr. Danos held academic positions at the University of Michigan from 1974 to 1995, the University of Texas from 1971 to 1974 and the University of New Orleans from 1970 to 1971. He is a director of B.J.s Wholesale Club, Inc. |
1
William T.
Esrey Director since 1989 William T. Esrey, age 69, is Chairman of the Board of Spectra Energy Corp., a provider of natural gas infrastructure, and Chairman Emeritus of Sprint Corporation, a telecommunications company. Mr. Esrey served as Chairman of the Board for Sprint from 1990 to 2003 and Chief Executive Officer from 1985 to 2003. |
||
Raymond V.
Gilmartin Director since 1997 Raymond V. Gilmartin, age 68, has been a Professor of Management Practice at the Harvard Business School since July 2006. He is the former Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer of Merck & Company, Inc., a pharmaceutical company, and served in that capacity from 1994 to 2005. He served as Special Advisor to the Executive Committee of the Board of Merck from 2005 to 2006. He previously served as Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer of Becton Dickinson and Company, a medical technology company. Mr. Gilmartin is a director of Microsoft Corporation. |
||
Judith Richards
Hope Director since 1989 Judith Richards Hope, age 68, has been Distinguished Visitor from Practice and Professor of Law since March 2005 and was an Adjunct Professor from 2002 to 2004 at Georgetown University Law Center. Ms. Hope was a partner at the law firm of Paul, Hastings, Janofsky & Walker from 1981 until 2003 and a Senior Advisor to the Paul, Hastings firm from 2004 to 2005. Ms. Hope is a director of Union Pacific Corporation. |
||
Heidi G.
Miller Director since 1999 Heidi G. Miller, age 56, has served as Executive Vice President, ceo, Treasury & Security Services, of J.P. Morgan Chase & Co., a financial services firm, since July 2004. From 2002 to 2004, Ms. Miller served as Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer of Bank One Corporation. |
||
Hilda
Ochoa-Brillembourg Director
since 2002 Hilda Ochoa-Brillembourg, age 65, is the founder and has been since 1987 the President and Chief Executive Officer of Strategic Investment Group and Director of Emerging Markets Investment Corporation, both investment advisory firms. From 1976 to 1987, she served in various capacities within the Pension Investment Division of the World Bank, including as its Chief Investment Officer from 1981 to 1987. Prior to joining the World Bank, she served as an independent consultant in the fields of economics and finance, a lecturer at the Universidad Catolica Andres Bello in Venezuela and as treasurer of the C.A. Luz Electricia de Venezuela in Caracas. Ms. Ochoa-Brillembourg is a director of McGraw-Hill Companies. |
2
Steve
Odland Director since 2004 Steve Odland, age 50, has been Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of Office Depot, Inc., an office merchandise retailer, since March 2005. From January 2001 to March 2005, he was Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of AutoZone, Inc., an auto parts retailer. Mr. Odland was an executive with Ahold USA, an international food retailer, from 1998 to 2000 and was President of the Foodservice Division of Sara Lee Bakery from 1997 to 1998. He was employed by The Quaker Oats Company from 1981 to 1996. |
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Kendall J.
Powell Director since 2006 Kendall J. Powell, age 55, was elected Chief Executive Officer of General Mills in September 2007 and Chairman in May 2008. Mr. Powell joined General Mills in 1979 and progressed through a variety of positions in the company before becoming a Vice President in 1990. He became President of Yoplait USA in 1996, President of the Big G cereal division in 1997 and a Senior Vice President in 1998. From 1999 to 2004, he served as Chief Executive Officer of Cereal Partners Worldwide in Switzerland. He returned to the United States in 2004 and was elected an Executive Vice President. In 2006, Mr. Powell was elected President and Chief Operating Officer of General Mills with overall global operating responsibility for the company. He is a director of Medtronic, Inc. |
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Lois E.
Quam Director
since December 2007 Lois E. Quam, age 48, is the founder and Chief Executive Officer of Tysvar, LLC, a company she founded in March 2009 to develop businesses in the health care and clean energy sectors. From August 2007 to March 2009, she was Managing Director of Alternative Investments at Piper Jaffray, an investment bank and international securities firm. Prior to that, Ms. Quam had served in various capacities at UnitedHealth Group since 1989, including as Executive Vice President, President of the Public and Senior Markets Group from 2006 to 2007 and as Chief Executive Officer of the Ovations division from 2002 to 2006. |
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Michael D.
Rose Director
from 1985 to 2000 and since 2004 Michael D. Rose, age 67, has been Chairman of the Board of First Horizon National Corporation, a banking and financial services company, and its subsidiary, First Tennessee Bank National Association, since January 2007. He served as Chairman of the Board of Gaylord Entertainment Company from 2001 to 2005. Since 1998, Mr. Rose has been a private investor and Chairman of Midaro Investments, Inc., a privately held investment firm. Mr. Rose is also a director of Darden Restaurants, Inc. and Gaylord Entertainment Company. |
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Robert L.
Ryan Director since 2005 Robert L. Ryan, age 66, served as Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer of Medtronic, Inc., a medical technology company, from 1993 until his retirement in April 2005. Mr. Ryan was Vice President, Finance, and Chief Financial Officer of Union Texas Petroleum Corp. from 1984 to 1993, Controller from 1983 to 1984 and Treasurer from 1982 to 1983. Prior to 1982, Mr. Ryan was Vice President at Citibank and was a management consultant for McKinsey & Company. Mr. Ryan is a director of The Black & Decker Corporation, Citigroup Inc. and Hewlett-Packard Company. |
3
Dorothy A.
Terrell Director since 1994 Dorothy A. Terrell, age 64, has been a limited partner of First Light Capital, a venture capital firm, since April 2003. Ms. Terrell served as President and Chief Executive Officer of the Initiative for a Competitive Inner City, a non-profit organization focused on inner city business development, from 2005 until 2007, and as Senior Vice President, Worldwide Sales, and President, Platform & Services Group, of NMS Communications, a producer of hardware and software component products for telecommunications applications, from 1998 until 2002. She served in various executive management capacities at Sun Microsystems, Inc. from 1991 to 1997 and Digital Equipment Corporation from 1976 to 1991. Ms. Terrell is a director of Herman Miller, Inc. |
4
| The board believes that meaningful stockholder participation is critical to the election of directors. Generally, our directors are elected annually by a majority of votes cast. If an incumbent director is not re-elected, the director must promptly offer his or her resignation to the board. The corporate governance committee will recommend to the board whether to accept or reject the resignation, and the board will disclose its decision and the rationale behind it within 90 days from the certification of the election results. If ever there are more director nominees than the number of directors to be elected, the directors will be elected by a plurality of the votes cast. | |
| Overall board composition guidelines require expertise in fields relevant to the business of the company; a breadth of experience from a variety of industries and from professional disciplines such as finance, academia, law and government; a diversity of gender, ethnicity, age and geographic location; and a range of tenures on the board to ensure both continuity and fresh perspective. Final approval of director nominees is determined by the full board, based on the recommendation of the corporate governance committee. | |
| Well-defined selection criteria for individual directors require independence, integrity, experience and sound judgment in areas relevant to our businesses, a proven record of accomplishment, willingness to speak ones mind and commit sufficient time to the board, appreciation for the long-term interests of stockholders, the ability to challenge and stimulate management and the ability to work well with fellow directors. The corporate governance committee uses a variety of sources, including executive search firms and stockholder recommendations, to identify director candidates. The corporate governance committee retains any search firms and approves payment of their fees. | |
| Board members are expected to devote sufficient time and attention to carrying out their director duties and responsibilities and ensure that their other responsibilities, including service on other boards, do not materially interfere with their responsibilities as directors of the company. Directors must inform the chair of the corporate governance committee in advance of becoming a director and/or member of the audit committee of any other public company. The board will take into account the nature and extent of the directors other commitments when determining whether it is appropriate to nominate that individual for re-election. | |
| The board believes that a substantial majority of its members should be independent, non-employee directors. The board has established guidelines consistent with the current listing standards of the New York Stock Exchange for determining director independence. You can find these guidelines in Appendix A of this proxy statement. |
5
| Director affiliations and transactions are regularly reviewed to ensure there are no conflicts or relationships that might impair a directors independence from the company, senior management and our independent registered public accounting firm. | |
| The board has reviewed transactions between the company and each of our non-employee directors, their immediate family members and affiliated entities within the last three fiscal years, including transactions by which the company has obtained electronics and technical support services from Best Buy, where Mr. Anderson serves as Vice Chairman; educational services from universities where Mr. Danos, Mr. Gilmartin and Mr. Spence serve on the faculties; investment banking and financial services from J.P. Morgan Chase, where Ms. Miller serves as an executive officer; office supplies from Office Depot, where Mr. Odland serves as Chief Executive Officer; and asset management services from a firm in which Ms. Ochoa-Brillembourg has an ownership interest, as described under Certain Relationships and Related Transactions. The board determined that each of these transactions was conducted in the ordinary course of our business and did not create a material relationship between the company and any of the directors involved, according to our independence guidelines. | |
| Based on this review, the board has affirmatively determined that the following non-employee directors are independent under our guidelines and as defined by New York Stock Exchange listing standards: Bradbury H. Anderson, R. Kerry Clark, Paul Danos, William T. Esrey, Raymond V. Gilmartin, Judith Richards Hope, Heidi G. Miller, Hilda Ochoa-Brillembourg, Steve Odland, Lois E. Quam, Michael D. Rose, Robert L. Ryan and Dorothy A. Terrell. The board made the same annual determination for A. Michael Spence prior to his retirement on September 22, 2008. The board has also determined that all board committees are composed entirely of independent, non-employee directors. |
| Our board of directors has adopted a written policy for reviewing and approving transactions between the company and its related persons, including directors, director nominees, executive officers, 5% stockholders and their immediate family members or affiliates. The policy applies to: |
| all financial transactions, arrangements or relationships involving over $100,000; | |
| in which the company, or one of its affiliates, is a participant; and | |
| in which a related person could have a direct or indirect interest. |
| The policy does not apply to certain compensation payments which have been approved by the compensation committee or disclosed in the proxy statement; transactions that are available to all other stockholders or employees on the same terms; or transactions with an entity where the related persons interest is only as a director or a less than 10% owner. | |
| The board has delegated to our corporate governance committee the authority to review potential or existing transactions. The corporate governance committee will only approve or ratify those transactions that are determined to be consistent with the best interests of the company and its stockholders, and that comply with applicable policies, codes of conduct and legal restrictions. | |
| The corporate governance committee reviewed and ratified a number of commercial and charitable transactions in fiscal 2009, including the following: Hilda Ochoa-Brillembourg, a General Mills director, is a director and minority owner of Emerging Markets Investment Corporation (EMI), and as a result, has an indirect interest in its affiliate, Emerging Market Managers LLC (EMM). Approximately $91.6 million of General Mills retirement plan assets are invested in the Emerging Markets Investors Fund, and EMM received management fees of approximately $759,912 attributable to these investments during fiscal 2009. Based on her ownership interest, Ms. Ochoa-Brillembourg had a financial interest of approximately $83,590 in the management fees. In determining that these |
6
relationships are consistent with the best interests of the company and its stockholders, and do not impair her independence, the committee considered the following factors: |
| Ms. Ochoa-Brillembourg is not an employee or officer of EMI or EMM and is not otherwise involved in the day-to-day operation of either firm. | |
| Our relationship with EMI and EMM pre-dates Ms. Ochoa-Brillembourgs election to our board of directors. | |
| She was not involved in establishing the relationship. | |
| She has never had any direct involvement in providing services to our benefit plans. | |
| The compensation paid to EMM was determined through arms-length negotiations and is customary in amount. | |
| The board has determined that her financial interest in the transaction would not impact her willingness or ability to act independently from management. |
7
| The Chairman leads the board and oversees board meetings and the delivery of information necessary for the boards informed decision-making. The Chairman also serves as the principal liaison between the board and our management. | |
| The board determines whether the role of the Chairman and the Chief Executive Officer should be separated or combined based on its judgment as to the structure that best serves the interests of the company. Currently, the board believes that the positions of Chairman and Chief Executive Officer should be held by the same person as this combination has served and is serving the company well by providing unified leadership and direction. | |
| When the Chairman and Chief Executive Officer roles are combined, the chair of the corporate governance committee: |
| acts as the presiding director and presides at all board meetings at which the Chairman is not present, including executive sessions of the non-employee directors; | |
| serves as a liaison between the Chairman and the non-employee directors; | |
| approves board meeting agendas and consults with the Chairman on information provided to the board; | |
| approves meeting schedules to assure that there is sufficient time for discussions; | |
| calls meetings of the non-employee directors and sets agendas for executive sessions; and | |
| serves as board representative for consultation and direct communication with major stockholders on issues that the board determines may not be addressed by the Chairman or other board designees and as otherwise deemed appropriate by the board. |
8
Functions: |
Oversees integrity, adequacy and effectiveness
of internal controls, audits, financial reporting processes and
the compliance program, including the Employee Code of Conduct;
|
|
Assesses and ensures the independence,
qualifications and performance of our independent registered
public accounting firm, selects the independent registered
public accounting firm for the annual audit and approves the
independent registered public accounting firms services
and fees;
|
||
Meets with the independent registered public accounting firm, without management present, to consult with it and review the scope of its audit; | ||
Reviews our annual risk assessment process and
policy compliance;
|
||
Reviews and approves our annual audited
financial statements before issuance, subject to the board of
directors approval; and
|
||
Reviews the performance of the internal audit
function.
|
||
Financial Experts: | The board of directors has unanimously determined that (i) all audit committee members are financially literate under the New York Stock Exchange listing standards and (ii) Mr. Danos, Mr. Esrey and Mr. Ryan qualify as audit committee financial experts within the meaning of Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) regulations and have accounting or related financial management expertise as required by the New York Stock Exchange listing standards. Each member also meets the independence standards for audit committee membership under the rules of the SEC. |
9
Functions: |
Reviews compensation policies for executive
officers and employees to ensure they provide appropriate
motivation for corporate performance and increased stockholder
value;
|
|
Conducts performance reviews of the Chief
Executive Officer;
|
||
Recommends compensation and equity awards for
the Chief Executive Officer and approves them for other senior
executives;
|
||
Recommends the compensation and equity awards
for the non-employee directors; and
|
||
Reviews and discusses with management the
Compensation Discussion and Analysis and recommends its
inclusion in the proxy statement.
|
Functions: |
Monitors and recommends changes in the
organization and procedures of the board, including committee
appointments and corporate governance policies;
|
|
Develops policy on composition, participation
and size of the board as well as tenure and retirement of
directors;
|
||
Recommends candidates for election to the
board and evaluates continuing service of incumbent directors;
|
||
Oversees the board self-evaluation process; and
|
||
Reviews and approves transactions between
General Mills and related persons.
|
Functions: |
Reviews financial policies and performance
objectives, including dividend policy;
|
|
Reviews changes in our capital structure,
including debt issuances, common stock sales, repurchases and
stock splits; and
|
||
Reviews the annual business plan and related
financing implications.
|
Functions: |
Reviews public policy and social trends
affecting General Mills;
|
|
Monitors our corporate citizenship activities;
|
||
Evaluates our policies to ensure they meet
ethical obligations to employees, consumers and society; and
|
||
Reviews our policies governing political
contributions and our record of contributions.
|
10
11
12
13
Fees |
||||||||||||||||||||
Earned or |
||||||||||||||||||||
Paid |
Stock |
Option |
All Other |
|||||||||||||||||
in
Cash(3) |
Awards(4) |
Awards(5) |
Compensation(6) |
Total |
||||||||||||||||
Name | ($) | ($) | ($) | ($) | ($) | |||||||||||||||
Bradbury H. Anderson
|
75,000 | 94,599 | 83,319 | | 252,918 | |||||||||||||||
R. Kerry
Clark(1)
|
18,750 | 17,125 | 8,852 | | 44,727 | |||||||||||||||
Paul Danos
|
80,000 | 80,351 | 76,608 | 91,084 | 328,043 | |||||||||||||||
William T. Esrey
|
90,000 | 80,351 | 76,608 | 54,850 | 301,809 | |||||||||||||||
Raymond V. Gilmartin
|
85,000 | 80,351 | 76,608 | 35,482 | 277,441 | |||||||||||||||
Judith Richards Hope
|
90,000 | 80,351 | 76,608 | 24,106 | 271,065 | |||||||||||||||
Heidi G. Miller
|
75,000 | 80,351 | 76,608 | 27,508 | 259,467 | |||||||||||||||
Hilda Ochoa-Brillembourg
|
75,000 | 80,351 | 76,608 | 50,220 | 282,179 | |||||||||||||||
Steve Odland
|
75,000 | 80,351 | 76,608 | 60,349 | 292,308 | |||||||||||||||
Lois E. Quam
|
75,000 | 86,358 | 84,163 | 25,711 | 271,232 | |||||||||||||||
Michael D. Rose
|
85,000 | 80,351 | 76,608 | 49,408 | 291,367 | |||||||||||||||
Robert L. Ryan
|
80,000 | 80,351 | 76,608 | 101,354 | 338,313 | |||||||||||||||
A. Michael
Spence(2)
|
18,750 | 20,428 | 31,448 | 23,745 | 94,371 | |||||||||||||||
Dorothy A. Terrell
|
90,000 | 80,351 | 76,608 | 21,467 | 268,426 |
(1) | Mr. Clark attended his first board meeting on May 4, 2009. |
(2) | Mr. Spence retired from the board on September 22, 2008. |
(3) | Includes the annual retainer and additional fees for directors who chair a board committee or who serve on the audit committee. Mr. Gilmartin received $10,625 of his fees in common stock (158 shares valued at the closing price of our common stock on the New York Stock Exchange on the retainer payment dates). Mr. Anderson received $75,000 of his fees in common stock (1,284 shares valued at the closing price of our common stock on the New York Stock Exchange on the retainer payment dates). |
(4) | Includes the compensation cost that we recognized in fiscal 2009 for the restricted stock units granted in fiscal 2009 and in prior fiscal years, calculated in accordance with Statement of Financial Accounting Standards (SFAS) 123R on the same basis used for financial reporting purposes and disregarding estimated forfeitures. Assumptions used to calculate these amounts are factored into Note 11, Stock Plans, of the audited financial statements included in our annual report on Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended May 31, 2009. |
14
(5) | Includes the compensation cost that we recognized in fiscal 2009 for stock options granted in fiscal 2009 and in prior fiscal years, calculated in accordance with SFAS 123R on the same basis used for financial reporting purposes and disregarding estimated forfeitures. Assumptions used to calculate these amounts are factored into Note 11, Stock Plans, of the audited financial statements included in our annual report on Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended May 31, 2009. |
The grant date fair value of options granted to each director in fiscal 2009 is $66,152 ($46,075 for Mr. Clark), which consists of 6,602 stock options granted to each director upon their re-election, and 8,580 stock options granted to Mr. Clark at his first board meeting. The grant date fair value is based on the Black-Scholes model valuation of $10.02 per share ($5.37 per share for Mr. Clark). The following assumptions were used in the calculation: option term of 9.5 years; dividend yield of 2.60% annually (3.62% for Mr. Clark); a risk-free interest rate of 4.21% (3.67% for Mr. Clark); and expected price volatility of 16.17% (18.84% for Mr. Clark). We have made no adjustments to reflect that these options are subject to forfeiture. | |
At fiscal year end, the total number of stock options held by each non-employee director was as follows: Mr. Anderson (16,602); Mr. Clark (8,580); Mr. Danos (46,602); Mr. Esrey (96,602); Mr. Gilmartin (96,602); Ms. Hope (96,602); Ms. Miller (86,602); Ms. Ochoa-Brillembourg (66,602); Mr. Odland (46,602); Ms. Quam (16,602); Mr. Rose (66,602); Mr. Ryan (36,602); Mr. Spence (30,000); and Ms. Terrell (76,602). | |
(6) | All Other Compensation includes: |
Planned |
Charitable |
|||||||||||||||
Gift |
Matching |
|||||||||||||||
Program(7) |
Gifts |
Other |
Total |
|||||||||||||
Name | ($) | ($) | ($) | ($) | ||||||||||||
B. H. Anderson
|
| | | | ||||||||||||
R. K. Clark
|
| | | | ||||||||||||
P. Danos
|
87,584 | 3,500 | | 91,084 | ||||||||||||
W.T. Esrey
|
26,584 | 27,875 | 391 | 54,850 | ||||||||||||
R.V. Gilmartin
|
25,482 | 10,000 | | 35,482 | ||||||||||||
J.R. Hope
|
23,771 | | 335 | 24,106 | ||||||||||||
H.G. Miller
|
12,508 | 15,000 | | 27,508 | ||||||||||||
H. Ochoa-Brillembourg
|
19,885 | 30,000 | 335 | 50,220 | ||||||||||||
S. Odland
|
44,038 | 16,311 | | 60,349 | ||||||||||||
L. E. Quam
|
| 25,500 | 211 | 25,711 | ||||||||||||
M.D. Rose
|
24,408 | 25,000 | | 49,408 | ||||||||||||
R.L. Ryan
|
86,143 | 15,000 | 211 | 101,354 | ||||||||||||
A. M. Spence
|
23,353 | | 392 | 23,745 | ||||||||||||
D.A. Terrell
|
18,967 | 2,500 | | 21,467 |
(7) | Includes interest cost, and with respect to directors with less than five years of service, service cost, recognized in fiscal 2009 in connection with the Planned Gift Program. Calculations assume 6.90% discount rate at the end of fiscal 2009; benefit payment immediately upon death; and mortality rates based on RP2000 Combined Healthy Mortality Table, projected to 2009. |
15
Amount and Nature |
||||||||||||
of Beneficial Ownership | ||||||||||||
Exercisable |
Percent |
|||||||||||
Name of Beneficial Owner | Shares(1) | Options(2) | of Class | |||||||||
B. H. Anderson
|
5,651 | (3) | 16,602 | * | ||||||||
R. K. Clark
|
1,716 | 8,580 | * | |||||||||
P. Danos
|
5,707 | 46,602 | * | |||||||||
R. G. Darcy
|
83,743 | 397,763 | * | |||||||||
W. T. Esrey
|
29,745 | 96,602 | * | |||||||||
I. R. Friendly
|
69,034 | (4) | 398,038 | * | ||||||||
R. V. Gilmartin
|
29,856 | 96,602 | * | |||||||||
J. R. Hope
|
28,503 | 96,602 | * | |||||||||
H. G. Miller
|
11,593 | 86,602 | * | |||||||||
D. L. Mulligan
|
16,567 | (5) | 77,713 | * | ||||||||
H. Ochoa-Brillembourg
|
8,065 | 66,602 | * | |||||||||
S. Odland
|
5,713 | 46,602 | * | |||||||||
C. D. OLeary
|
21,600 | 404,180 | * | |||||||||
K. J. Powell
|
70,627 | 453,755 | * | |||||||||
L. E. Quam
|
2,321 | 16,602 | * | |||||||||
M. D. Rose
|
22,816 | (6) | 66,602 | * | ||||||||
J. J. Rotsch
|
147,173 | (7) | 511,580 | * | ||||||||
R. L. Ryan
|
4,596 | 36,602 | * | |||||||||
D. A. Terrell
|
20,177 | 76,602 | * | |||||||||
All directors, nominees and executive officers as a group
(25 persons)
|
688,480 | (8) | 3,872,229 | 1.4 | ||||||||
Barclays Investment Group
|
22,740,851 | (9) | | 6.9 | ||||||||
State Street Bank and Trust Company
|
21,099,689 | (10) | | 6.4 |
* | Indicates ownership of less than 1% of the total outstanding shares. | |
(1) | Includes: |
| Shares of our common stock directly owned; | |
| Shares of our common stock allocated to participant accounts under our 401(k) Plan; | |
| Restricted stock units that vest within 60 days of July 23, 2009, as to which the beneficial owner currently has no voting or investment power: 1,321 restricted stock units for each non-employee director, except for Mr. Danos, Ms. Hope, Ms. Miller, Ms. Ochoa-Brillembourg, Mr. Odland and Mr. Rose, who each reinvested their dividends and held 1,350 restricted stock units, and Mr. Clark, who holds 1,716 restricted stock units vesting within 60 days; 17,742 restricted stock units for all directors, nominees and executive officers as a group; and |
16
| Stock units that have vested and been deferred, as to which the beneficial owner currently has no voting or investment power: 4,357 units for Mr. Danos; 25,937 units for Mr. Darcy; 18,065 units for Mr. Esrey; 37,656 units for Mr. Friendly; 9,454 units for Mr. Gilmartin; 23,853 units for Ms. Hope; 4,510 units for Ms. Miller; 6,715 units for Ms. Ochoa-Brillembourg; 4,363 units for Mr. Odland; 2,233 units for Mr. Powell; 6,185 units for Mr. Rose; 2,750 units for Mr. Ryan; 72,012 units for Mr. Rotsch; 13,366 units for Ms. Terrell; and 261,894 units for all directors, nominees and executive officers as a group. |
(2) | Includes options that were exercisable on July 23, 2009 and options that become exercisable within 60 days of July 23, 2009. |
(3) | Includes 1,400 shares held in individual trusts by either Mr. Anderson or his spouse, for which they serve as trustees. |
(4) | Includes 1,128 shares held in custodial accounts for Mr. Friendlys minor children and 7,008 shares held in a trust for the benefit of Mr. Friendlys spouse and minor children. Mr. Friendlys spouse serves as trustee of the trust. |
(5) | Includes 14,933 shares owned jointly by Mr. Mulligan and his spouse. |
(6) | Includes 5,281 shares held in a margin account and deemed to be pledged and 10,000 shares held by Midaro 2000, an investment fund controlled by Mr. Rose. |
(7) | Includes 57,181 shares pledged to Wells Fargo as collateral on personal loans. |
(8) | Includes 25,024 shares held solely by, jointly by, or in trust for the benefit of family members. Also includes 10,000 shares held by Midaro 2000, an investment fund controlled by Mr. Rose. |
(9) | Based on information contained in a Schedule 13G that Barclays Global Investors NA and its affiliates, at Murray House, 1 Royal Mint Court, LONDON, EC3N 4HH, filed with the SEC on February 5, 2009. The filing indicated sole investment power as of December 31, 2008 as follows: Barclays Global Investors, NA, (15,477,824 shares, 12,471,713 to which it holds sole voting power), Barclays Global Fund Advisors (3,626,132 shares, 3,605,217 to which it holds sole voting power), Barclays Global Investors, Ltd. (2,018,594 shares, 1,707,286 to which it holds sole voting power), Barclays Global Investors Japan Limited (1,173,627 shares to which it holds sole voting power), Barclays Global Investors Canada Limited (420,407 shares to which it holds sole voting power) and Barclays Global Investors Australia Limited (24,267 shares to which it holds sole voting power). These entities report their ownership as a group and are, collectively, the beneficial owners of 22,740,851 shares of common stock, 19,402,517 to which they hold sole voting power. |
(10) | Based on information contained in a Schedule 13G that State Street Bank and Trust Company, at State Street Financial Center, One Lincoln Street, Boston, Massachusetts 02111, filed with the SEC on February 17, 2009. The filing indicated that as of December 31, 2008, State Street, acting in various fiduciary capacities including as fiduciary for our 401(k) Plan, had shared investment power for 21,099,689 shares, with sole voting power for 12,970,767 of these shares and shared voting power for 8,128,922 of these shares. |
17
| Rewards superior individual and company performance; | |
| Attracts and retains management talent capable of achieving consistently superior business results; and | |
| Aligns the interests of company managers with those of stockholders by linking a portion of their compensation directly to increases in stockholder value. |
| The 2009 Plan provides for performance awards. In addition to the other types of awards available under the 2007 Plan, the compensation committee may issue performance awards that vest upon the accomplishment of performance goals over one year or multiple years. Applicable performance goals and performance periods will be established by the committee. Performance awards may be denominated in shares of the companys common stock or notionally represented by a monetary value. |
18
| Overall terms of the 2009 Plan are otherwise nearly identical to the 2005 and 2007 Plans, which were approved by stockholders by wide vote margins (78% and 79%, respectively, of the votes cast). The 2009 Plan has a two-year term. It limits the issuance of performance awards, restricted stock and restricted stock units to 30% of authorized shares. Any full value award settled in stock above that limit decreases the number of authorized shares by five shares for each share granted. | |
| The 2009 Plan will maintain low rates of annual share usage. The 2009 Plan requests the authorization of 12 million shares over its two-year term (or approximately 3.7% of outstanding shares) versus the 10 million shares over a two-year term in the 2007 Plan and the 15 million shares over a two-year term in the 2005 Stock Compensation Plan (the 2005 Plan). The number of shares requested reflects the companys intent to maintain moderate stock compensation share usage during the term of the 2009 Plan. | |
| Upon approval of the 2009 Plan, no further grants will be made from the 2007 Plan. Approximately 1.27 million ungranted shares remaining in the 2007 Plan will no longer be available for grant. All new stock grants will be made from the 2009 Plan. | |
| The 2009 Plan will not result in additional share dilution. General Mills intends to continue its long standing practice of opportunistically repurchasing shares of its common stock in excess of new shares issued under the companys stock compensation plans. General Mills has repurchased more than 8% of its outstanding shares (in excess of 27 million shares) over the term of the expiring 2007 Plan. With planned future repurchases, we do not expect there to be dilution of company shares as a result of the adoption of the 2009 Plan. | |
| The 2009 Plan incorporates a broad range of other compensation and governance best practices, such as a limit on restricted stock and restricted stock unit awards; no discounted options or stock appreciation rights; prohibition on repricing; no reload options or loans to pay for awards; dividends on restricted stock and restricted stock units payable only at vesting; no dividend rights on performance awards, options or stock appreciation rights; no transfer of shares for consideration to third parties; and restrictive share counting provisions that prohibit counting of shares on a net basis for issuance of options and stock appreciation rights. | |
| Awards issued under the 2009 Plan are subject to the companys clawback policy. If the company must restate its financial results, and an officers actions or omissions are a significant contributing factor to the cause of the restatement, then the compensation committee may use its discretion to adjust the officers future compensation, cancel outstanding awards or require repayment of gains realized during a period when inaccurate financial results were publicly reported without correction. | |
| The 2009 Plan incorporates other practices that are in stockholders interests, including a four-year cliff vesting schedule for awards, a double-trigger requirement for change of control vesting and a prohibition on reusing shares that are cancelled under prior plans. |
19
Plan Term:
|
September 21, 2009 through December 31, 2011 | |
Eligible Participants: | Employees selected by the compensation committee (typically managers and above) | |
Shares Authorized: | 12 million shares of General Mills common stock | |
Shares Authorized as a Percentage of Outstanding Common Stock: | Approximately 3.7% at July 23, 2009 | |
Recent Market Value per Share: | $59.16 closing sales price on the New York Stock Exchange at July 23, 2009 | |
Award Types: | (1) Non-qualified stock options, (2) restricted stock, (3) unrestricted stock, (4) restricted stock units, (5) stock appreciation rights and (6) performance awards. Other than options, which are always settled in shares of company stock, awards may be paid in cash or stock as determined by the compensation committee. | |
Award Limits: | Performance awards, restricted stock and restricted stock units settled in shares of common stock are limited to 30% of the total number of shares available, subject to the share counting provisions below. | |
Awards in excess of 1 million shares or units in the aggregate may not be issued to any single participant per fiscal year. | ||
The total value of performance awards payable to any single participant for a fiscal year may not exceed $20 million. | ||
In no event will the total value of a performance award granted to any participant for any one performance period exceed 0.5% of the companys net earnings for that period. | ||
Up to 10,000 total unrestricted shares may be issued each calendar year to selected employees as a bonus or reward. No single employee may receive over 100 shares as recognition awards over the 2009 Plans term. These employees typically would not participate in the 2009 Plan otherwise. | ||
Share Counting: | Shares subject to stock options and stock appreciation rights will reduce the shares available for awards by one share for every one share granted. | |
Performance awards, restricted stock and restricted stock units settled in shares of common stock reduce the shares available for awards by one share for every one share awarded, up to 30% of the total number of shares available; beyond that, they reduce the number of shares available for awards by five shares for every one share awarded. | ||
Awards settled in cash do not count against the pool of available shares. | ||
Shares tendered or withheld to pay taxes or an options exercise price are not available for re-issuance and count against the pool of available shares. | ||
Forfeited awards are not counted against the maximum. | ||
Cancelled, terminated, forfeited or expired shares under prior plans cannot be reissued under the 2009 Plan. |
20
Vesting: | Determined by compensation committee, but not less than four years for stock options, stock appreciation rights, restricted stock and restricted stock units. | |
In the event of a change of control, subject to double-trigger vesting, stock options and stock appreciation rights become fully exercisable for one year and performance awards, restricted stock and restricted stock units become fully vested. Double-trigger vesting requires that: (1) the change of control must be consummated and (2) the participant must be involuntarily terminated other than for cause, death or disability, or must voluntarily terminate with good reason within two years after a change of control. However, if the companys stock will cease to exist as a result of the change of control, and there is not an adequate replacement security, the equity awards will vest immediately prior to the consummation of the change of control, or the compensation committee may settle the awards for cash. | ||
Deposits: | The compensation committee may require deposits of General Mills common stock owned by the participant as a condition to restricted stock and restricted stock unit awards. | |
Not Permitted Without Stockholder Approval: | (1) Increases in the number of shares authorized; (2) Grants of stock options or stock appreciation rights having an exercise price below fair market value; (3) Repricing of stock options or stock appreciation rights; or (4) Changes to individual limits on awards. |
21
(1) | Increase the number of shares that may be issued; |
(2) | Permit granting of stock options or stock appreciation rights having an exercise price less than fair market value; | |
(3) | Permit the repricing of outstanding stock options or stock appreciation rights; or |
(4) | Amend individual limits on awards. |
22
23
Number of |
||||||||||||
Securities |
||||||||||||
Remaining |
||||||||||||
Available for |
||||||||||||
Number of |
Future Issuance |
|||||||||||
Securities to |
Under Equity |
|||||||||||
be Issued upon |
Weighted-Average |
Compensation |
||||||||||
Exercise of |
Exercise Price of |
Plans (Excluding |
||||||||||
Outstanding Options, |
Outstanding Options, |
Securities Reflected |
||||||||||
Warrants and Rights |
Warrants and Rights |
in Column (a)) |
||||||||||
Plan Category | (a) | (b)(1) | (c) | |||||||||
Equity compensation plans approved by security holders
|
40,488,921 | (2) | $ | 49.20 | 5,963,996 | (4)(5) | ||||||
Equity compensation plans not approved by security holders
|
12,217,354 | (3) | $ | 43.24 | | |||||||
Total
|
52,706,275 | $ | 47.69 | 5,963,996 |
(1) | Weighted-average exercise prices identified in column (b) do not take into account restricted stock awards or units. Weighted-average term of outstanding options is 4.41 years. |
(2) | Includes 35,270,065 stock options, 4,549,857 restricted stock units, and 668,999 restricted stock units that have vested and been deferred. We granted these awards under the following active stockholder-approved plans: 2007 Stock Compensation Plan, 2006 Compensation Plan for Non-Employee Directors, and Executive Incentive Plan; and the following stockholder-approved plans which have been discontinued: Stock Option and Long-Term Incentive Plan of 1993, 1995 Salary Replacement Stock Option Plan, 1996 Compensation Plan for Non-Employee Directors, 1998 Senior Management Stock Plan, 2001 Compensation Plan for Non-Employee Directors, 2003 Stock Compensation Plan, and 2005 Stock Compensation Plan. No future awards may be granted under any of the discontinued plans. |
(3) | Includes 12,033,470 stock options and 183,884 restricted stock units that have vested and been deferred. These awards include stock options granted to a broad group of employees in fiscal 2000 and 2002, and grants in lieu of salary increases and certain other compensation and benefits. We granted these awards under our 1998 Employee Stock Plan, which provided for the issuance of stock options, restricted stock and restricted stock units to attract and retain employees, and to align their interests with those of stockholders. We discontinued the 1998 Employee Stock Plan in September 2003, and no future awards may be granted under that plan. |
(4) | Includes stock options, restricted stock, restricted stock units, and stock appreciation rights that we may award under our 2007 Stock Compensation Plan, which had 5,633,368 shares available for grant at fiscal year end. Also includes stock options and restricted stock units that we may award under our 2006 Compensation Plan for Non-Employee Directors, which had 330,628 shares available for grant at fiscal year end. Excludes shares that would be available under the Executive Incentive Plan, based on company and individual performance subject to certain limits. |
(5) | The table above shows our outstanding equity awards as of fiscal year end. After fiscal year end, the company issued equity awards to its employees based on fiscal 2009 performance. A total of 3,292,173 options and 1,070,702 restricted stock units were issued under the 2007 Stock Compensation Plan to approximately 2,500 employees. Both the options and the restricted stock units had a four-year cliff vesting schedule. The awards reduced the number of shares currently available under the 2007 Stock Compensation Plan. As of July 23, 2009, our outstanding equity awards and shares currently available were as follows: |
| 23,624,193 options have been outstanding for longer than six years, with a weighted average price of $43.03 and a weighted average remaining term of 2.10 years; of this total, 3,117,796 options will expire shortly after the annual meeting; |
24
| 25,770,879 options have been outstanding for less than six years with a weighted average price of $53.35 and a weighted average remaining term of 7.16 years; | |
| 5,494,254 unvested restricted stock units are outstanding, of which 72,058 units will vest shortly after the annual meeting; and | |
| 1,269,834 shares remain available for issuance under the 2007 Stock Compensation Plan. |
25
26
| Pay is Performance Based: Executive compensation at General Mills is tightly linked to company performance. As executives assume greater responsibility, a larger portion of their total compensation becomes dependent on company, business unit, and individual performance. Base salaries are targeted to the median of salaries paid by the compensation peer group described below. Salaries are coupled with annual and long-term incentive programs that enable total compensation to rise above that of the compensation peer group median in years when company performance is superior to that of a similar group of performance comparison companies. | |
| Stock Ownership is Emphasized: A long-held belief at General Mills is that broad and deep employee stock ownership aligns the interests of employees with those of stockholders. Programs have been created to encourage employees to build and maintain an ownership interest in the company. We have established specific stock ownership guidelines for employees in key management positions throughout the company. | |
| Compensation Opportunities must be Competitive: Competition for management talent in the food and consumer products industry is consistently intense. To ensure that executive compensation at |
27
General Mills remains competitive, the compensation committee, with the assistance of management and the independent compensation consultant, monitors the compensation practices of peer food and consumer products companies, as well as those of a broader group of leading industrial companies. In performing this analysis, peer group proxy data and two major survey sources are utilized: |
| Consumer Products Peer Group Proxy Analysis: The independent compensation consultant compares our pay practices for named executive officers with those disclosed in the annual proxy statements of a peer group of 13 major U.S. consumer products companies. | |
| Consumer Products Peer Group Survey: Hewitt Associates conducts this survey annually and provides specifics on the pay practices of consumer products companies with which we compare our financial performance and often compete for executive talent. | |
| Major Industry Group Survey: For those positions in which the competition for talent is not limited to the consumer products industry (e.g., many corporate staff positions), the compensation committee compares our pay practices against a comprehensive 783 company management compensation survey provided by Towers Perrin. For greater precision, a subset of this survey is utilized that provides compensation information for 95 companies from diverse industries with annual revenues between $10 billion and $20 billion. Data from this survey provides a secondary view of executive compensation and general industry context to the peer group data described below. |
| Branded consumer products companies; | |
| Food industry competitors; | |
| Large-cap companies, typically with annual revenues in excess of $5 billion; | |
| Companies with similar business dynamics and challenges; and | |
| Direct competitors for industry talent. |
28
Performance Peer Group Companies
|
||||||
Campbell Soup Co.
|
H. J. Heinz Co. | |||||
Clorox Co.
|
The Hershey Co. | PepsiCo, Inc. | ||||
The
Coca-Cola
Co.
|
Kellogg Co. | The Procter & Gamble Co. | ||||
Colgate-Palmolive Co.
|
Kimberly-Clark Corp. | Sara Lee Corp. | ||||
ConAgra Foods, Inc.
|
Kraft Foods Inc. | Unilever NV* | ||||
Danone Inc.*
|
Nestlé SA* | . | ||||
Performance Peer Group Companies
Sales, Market Capitalization and Total Assets |
|||||||||
In Millions
|
Sales* | Market Capitalization** | Total Assets** | ||||||
75th Percentile
|
$42,464 | $70,294 | $43,015 | ||||||
Median
|
17,372 | 23,751 | 15,886 | ||||||
25th Percentile
|
11,222 | 9,426 | 10,419 | ||||||
General Mills
|
$14,691 | $16,837 | $17,875 | ||||||
| Why General Mills chooses to pay each element; | |
| What each element is designed to reward; and | |
| How we determine the amount for each element. |
29
Element
|
Objectives & Basis
|
Market Positioning | ||||
Base Salary
|
To provide fixed income based on:
Size, scope and complexity of the individuals role
Individuals current and historical performance
Relative position compared to market pay information
|
Compensation Peer Group Median | ||||
Annual Incentive
|
To provide focus and rewards for achievement of annual
performance targets in two areas:
Corporate Performance Measures (25% each) Net sales growth Segment operating profit growth Earnings per share growth Return on average total capital improvement Individual Performance Measures Specific business goals Strategic projects or initiatives Organizational/diversity goals Leadership behaviors and impact Officers below the named executive officer level who are in key divisional roles also have unit performance measures incorporated into their annual incentive. Awards are made in cash and restricted stock unit grants that require deposit of a matching number of personally-owned shares. |
Performance Based:
Awards range from below to above median for the compensation peer group based on individual and corporate performance
Awards are well above median of the compensation peer group when corporate performance ranks in the top quartile of our performance peer group
|
||||
Long-term Incentive
|
To provide incentive for delivering stockholder value over a number of years and to retain executives.
Awards are made in restricted stock unit grants and stock option grants. Awards can increase or decrease by 30% based on corporate performance. |
Performance Based:
Awards range from below to above median for the compensation peer group based on corporate performance
Grants are well above median of the compensation peer group when corporate performance ranks in the top quartile of our performance peer group
|
||||
30
Element
|
Objectives & Basis
|
Market Positioning | ||||
Retirement &
Health Benefits |
To provide competitive retirement security and health benefits.
General Mills named executive officers participate in most of the same benefit plans made available to the companys U.S.-based employees. They include:
Disability and life insurance
Pension Plan and Supplemental Retirement Plan
401(k) Plan and Supplemental Savings Plan with a company match that varies based on corporate performance
Named executive officers and their dependents are covered under an executive insurance plan that provides health and dental benefits.
The Supplemental Retirement Plan and Supplemental Savings Plan include non-qualified benefits that are identical to the broad-based plans but cover employees whose income is above the allowable level of the qualified plans. For more information on our retirement benefits, see Pension Benefits and Other Retirement Savings Plans.
|
Compensation Peer Group Median | ||||
Perquisites
|
To provide competitive executive perquisites.
All of our named executive officers receive the following perquisites:
Company provided automobile
Reimbursement for a limited amount of financial counseling
For reasons of security and efficient time management, the compensation committee encourages the Chief Executive Officer to utilize corporate aircraft for personal use. During fiscal 2009, Mr. Powell was required to reimburse the company for the cost of any personal use of corporate aircraft in excess of $100,000. |
Compensation Peer Group Median or Below | ||||
31
32
Annual Incentive Cash Portion
|
||||||||||||||||||
Annual
Incentive Cash |
= | Salary | × |
Base Incentive Rate |
× |
Corporate Performance Rating |
× |
Individual Performance Rating |
||||||||||
Annual Incentive Restricted Stock Unit Portion
|
||||||||||||||||||
Annual
Incentive RSU |
= |
Annual Incentive Cash |
× | 30% | × |
Corporate Performance Rating Adjustment |
¸ |
Stock Price on Grant Date |
||||||||||
33
34
Element |
Compensation Philosophy
Target Positioning |
Fiscal 2009 CEO Compensation Market Positioning |
||||
Base Salary
|
Compensation Peer Group Median
|
Base Salary below 25th Percentile of Compensation Peer Group | ||||
Annual Incentive
|
Performance Based:
Awards range from below to above peer group median for performance
Awards are in top quartile of when corporate performance ranks in the top quartile.
|
Annual Incentive Award at Median of Compensation Peer Group Fiscal 2009 Performance in Top Quartile of Performance Peer Group |
||||
Long-term Incentive
|
Performance Based:
Awards range from below to above peer group median for performance
Awards are in top quartile of when corporate performance ranks in the top quartile.
|
Long-Term Incentive Award between 25th Percentile and
Median of Compensation Peer Group Fiscal 2009 Performance in Top Quartile of Performance Peer Group |
||||
35
36
Named Executive |
Shares(1 |
) |
Exercisable Options(1 |
) |
Base Salary Multiple(2 |
) | |||||||||
Kendall J. Powell
|
70,627 | 453,755 | 8.0 | ||||||||||||
Chairman and CEO
|
|||||||||||||||
Donal L. Mulligan | 16,567 | 77,713 | 3.1 | ||||||||||||
EVP, CFO
|
|||||||||||||||
Jeffrey J. Rotsch
|
147,173 | 511,580 | 23.2 | ||||||||||||
EVP, Worldwide Sales & Channel Development
|
|||||||||||||||
Ian R. Friendly
|
69,034 | 398,038 | 13.8 | ||||||||||||
EVP, COO, U.S. Retail
|
|||||||||||||||
Christopher D. OLeary
|
21,600 | 404,180 | 9.0 | ||||||||||||
EVP, COO, International
|
|||||||||||||||
(1) | Amounts match beneficial ownership shown under Ownership of General Mills Common Stock by Directors, Officers and Certain Beneficial Owners. | |
(2) | Assumes (i) shares valued at the closing price of the common stock on the New York Stock Exchange on July 23, 2009 ($59.16 per share), plus exercisable option gains net of withholding taxes assuming a price of $59.16 per share, (ii) divided by fiscal 2009 base salary. |
37
Change in |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Pension |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Value and |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Non- |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Non-Equity |
Qualified |
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Incentive |
Deferred |
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Plan |
Compen- |
All Other |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Stock |
Option |
Compen- |
sation |
Compen- |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Name and |
Salary |
Bonus(3) |
Awards(4) |
Awards(4) |
sation(5) |
Earnings(6) |
sation(7) |
Total |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Principal Position | Year | ($) | ($) | ($) | ($) | ($) | ($) | ($) | ($) | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Kendall J.
Powell(1)
|
2009 | 959,583 | | 4,884,351 | 3,910,852 | 1,910,770 | 1,359,154 | 353,893 | 13,378,603 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Chairman and CEO
|
2008 | 843,333 | | 1,062,533 | 1,664,093 | 1,674,900 | 981,360 | 288,828 | 6,515,047 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
2007 | 700,000 | | 544,970 | 941,597 | 1,346,929 | 940,128 | 197,821 | 4,671,445 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Donal L. Mulligan
|
2009 | 468,233 | | 456,592 | 306,747 | 683,738 | 75,854 | 135,304 | 2,126,468 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
EVP, CFO | 2008 | 420,500 | | 319,320 | 202,282 | 584,628 | 47,756 | 89,167 | 1,663,653 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Jeffrey J. Rotsch
|
2009 | 549,259 | | 1,475,750 | 681,508 | 729,142 | 582,873 | 162,965 | 4,181,497 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
EVP, Worldwide Sales &
|
2008 | 525,208 | | 1,153,956 | 1,243,007 | 709,031 | 536,176 | 129,350 | 4,296,728 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Channel Development
|
2007 | 500,000 | | 1,124,226 | 1,362,938 | 666,000 | 780,641 | 158,524 | 4,592,329 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Ian R. Friendly
|
2009 | 514,377 | | 662,960 | 737,983 | 682,836 | 184,080 | 256,283 | 3,038,519 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
EVP, COO, U.S. Retail
|
2008 | 492,417 | | 538,885 | 638,516 | 748,163 | 245,624 | 1,288,745 | 3,952,350 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Christopher D. OLeary
|
2009 | 494,334 | | 679,530 | 731,256 | 651,853 | 116,273 | 145,039 | 2,818,285 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
EVP, COO, International
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Randy G.
Darcy(2)
|
2009 | 489,895 | | 1,595,982 | 681,508 | 164,802 | 422,328 | 122,461 | 3,476,976 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
EVP, Worldwide
|
2008 | 525,208 | | 1,162,836 | 1,243,007 | 709,031 | 471,056 | 135,225 | 4,246,363 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Technology & Operations
|
2007 | 500,000 | | 1,141,789 | 1,362,938 | 675,000 | 623,359 | 146,872 | 4,449,958 |
Total compensation shown in the Summary Compensation Table reflects the accounting value of stock and option awards expensed for financial reporting purposes. When making compensation decisions, the compensation committee evaluated the grant date fair value of stock and option awards based on fiscal |
38
year performance but granted after fiscal year end, shown below but not included in the Summary Compensation Table: |
Less FAS 123R Expense |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Reported in Summary |
Plus Grant Date Fair Value of |
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Total Compensation |
Compensation Table | Awards |
Total |
|||||||||||||||||||||||||
Per Summary |
Stock |
Option |
Stock |
Option |
Compensation |
|||||||||||||||||||||||
Compensation Table |
Awards |
Awards |
Awards |
Awards |
Earned |
|||||||||||||||||||||||
Name | ($) | ($) | ($) | ($) | ($) | ($) | ||||||||||||||||||||||
K. J. Powell
|
2009 | 13,378,603 | 4,884,351 | 3,910,852 | 3,724,528 | 1,706,426 | 10,014,354 | |||||||||||||||||||||
2008 | 6,515,047 | 1,062,533 | 1,664,093 | 3,720,566 | 2,276,223 | 9,785,210 | ||||||||||||||||||||||
D. L. Mulligan
|
2009 | 2,126,468 | 456,592 | 306,747 | 934,762 | 383,896 | 2,681,787 | |||||||||||||||||||||
2008 | 1,663,653 | 319,320 | 202,282 | 918,159 | 512,092 | 2,572,302 | ||||||||||||||||||||||
J. J. Rotsch
|
2009 | 4,181,497 | 1,475,750 | 681,508 | 1,064,310 | 447,871 | 3,536,420 | |||||||||||||||||||||
2008 | 4,296,728 | 1,153,956 | 1,243,007 | 1,081,604 | 597,422 | 3,578,791 | ||||||||||||||||||||||
I. R. Friendly
|
2009 | 3,038,519 | 662,960 | 737,983 | 1,046,665 | 447,871 | 3,132,112 | |||||||||||||||||||||
2008 | 3,952,350 | 538,885 | 638,516 | 1,064,359 | 597,422 | 4,436,730 | ||||||||||||||||||||||
C. D. OLeary
|
2009 | 2,818,285 | 679,530 | 731,256 | 1,034,827 | 447,871 | 2,890,197 | |||||||||||||||||||||
R. G. Darcy
|
2009 | 3,476,976 | 1,595,982 | 681,508 | | | 1,199,486 | |||||||||||||||||||||
2008 | 4,246,363 | 1,162,836 | 1,243,007 | 1,081,604 | 597,422 | 3,519,546 |
The grant date fair value of the fiscal 2009 stock awards and option awards quantified above reflect a 27% increase from guideline levels due to the fiscal 2009 Corporate Performance Rating of 1.77. | ||
The grant date fair value of each restricted stock unit based on fiscal 2009 performance equals the closing price of our common stock on the New York Stock Exchange on the grant date June 29, 2009 ($55.84). The values shown have not been adjusted to reflect that these units are subject to forfeiture. | ||
The grant date fair value of option awards based on fiscal 2009 performance equals $6.36 per share based on the Black-Scholes option-pricing model. The following assumptions were used in the calculation: option term of 8.5 years; dividend yield of 3.37% annually; a risk-free interest rate of 3.87%; and expected price volatility of 18.89%. The values shown have not been adjusted to reflect that these options are subject to forfeiture. | ||
The following table shows the number of stock and option awards based on fiscal 2009 performance but granted after fiscal year end in June 2009: |
Long-Term |
||||||||||||||||
Annual Incentive |
Incentive |
Long-Term |
||||||||||||||
Restricted Stock |
Restricted Stock |
Incentive Stock |
Grant Date Fair |
|||||||||||||
Unit Award |
Unit Award |
Option Award |
Value |
|||||||||||||
Name | (#) | (#) | (#) | ($) | ||||||||||||
K. J. Powell
|
13,038 | 53,662 | 268,306 | 5,430,954 | ||||||||||||
D. L. Mulligan
|
4,666 | 12,074 | 60,361 | 1,318,658 | ||||||||||||
J. J. Rotsch
|
4,976 | 14,084 | 70,420 | 1,512,181 | ||||||||||||
I. R. Friendly
|
4,660 | 14,084 | 70,420 | 1,494,536 | ||||||||||||
C. D. OLeary
|
4,448 | 14,084 | 70,420 | 1,482,698 | ||||||||||||
R. G. Darcy
|
| | | |
(1) | In fiscal 2009, the accounting expense listed for Mr. Powells Stock Awards and Option Awards and his Total Compensation increased substantially from prior years, because he became eligible for early retirement during fiscal 2009, and to a lesser extent because of year-to-year increases in salary and awards due to promotion and performance. In accordance with SFAS 123R, the entire value of awards to retirement-eligible individuals that would vest on retirement is expensed at grant rather than over the vesting period of the awards. Mr. Powells Change in Pension Value was driven primarily by a year-to-year increase in salary, along with an additional year of age and service. |
39
(2) | Mr. Darcy retired August 1, 2008. | |
Mr. Darcys salary includes $400,000 received for one year of post-retirement consulting services involving project work, on-call advisory support and coaching and mentoring of his successors. | ||
The cash portion of Mr. Darcys annual incentive award in fiscal 2009 was prorated to reflect his retirement during the fiscal year. Mr. Darcy received an additional $45,467, equal to 30% of his prorated cash award adjusted upwards by 27% for corporate performance, in place of the restricted stock units that he would have otherwise received as part of his annual incentive awards. These amounts are shown as non-equity incentive plan compensation. | ||
(3) | We awarded bonuses based on our achievement of certain performance targets established at the beginning of each fiscal year. Accordingly, bonuses are disclosed under the Non-Equity Incentive Plan Compensation column of this table. | |
(4) | Includes the compensation cost recognized for the stock portion of the annual incentive award and for the long-term incentive awards. The compensation cost for each fiscal year is based on awards granted then and in prior fiscal years, calculated in accordance with SFAS 123R on the same basis used for financial reporting purposes and disregarding estimated forfeitures. Assumptions used to calculate these amounts are included in the Note Stock Plans, to the audited financial statements included in our annual reports on Form 10-K for the 2006-2009 fiscal years. Excludes awards based on fiscal 2009 performance but granted after fiscal year end in June 2009. | |
The compensation cost recognized for Mr. Rotschs and Mr. Darcys option awards in fiscal 2009 decreased from prior years, because they received 50% of the total value of their long-term incentive awards in options and 50% in restricted stock units, whereas previously, they had received 75% of the total value in options and 25% in restricted stock units. Because they are retirement eligible, the entire value is expensed at grant rather than over the vesting period of the awards. | ||
(5) | Includes the cash portion of the annual incentive award paid to our named executive officers under the Executive Incentive Plan. The annual incentive award was paid partially in cash and partially in restricted stock units, and was based on the achievement of certain individual and corporate performance targets for each fiscal year, including net sales growth, segment operating profit growth, earnings per share growth and improvement on return on capital. For more information on how the annual incentive award is calculated and the restricted stock units awarded for fiscal 2009 performance, see the Compensation Discussion and Analysis. | |
(6) | Includes the annual increase in the actuarial present value of accumulated benefits under our Pension Plan and Supplemental Retirement Plan. The increases for each named executive officer relate to additional service, aging and increases in Final Average Earnings, as defined in the Pension Benefits section, as partially offset by an increase in the interest rate assumption used to calculate the accumulated benefit. The named executive officers had no above-market or preferential earnings on deferred compensation. | |
(7) | All Other Compensation for fiscal 2009 includes the following amounts: |
Matching |
||||||||||||||||||||
Matching |
Contributions |
Perquisites |
||||||||||||||||||
Contributions |
on |
and |
||||||||||||||||||
on |
Savings |
Tax |
Other |
|||||||||||||||||
Deferred |
Plan |
Reimburse- |
Personal |
|||||||||||||||||
Compensation(8) |
Contributions(9) |
Ments(10) |
Benefits(11) |
Total |
||||||||||||||||
Name | ($) | ($) | ($) | ($) | ($) | |||||||||||||||
K. J. Powell
|
7,838 | 152,348 | 15,821 | 177,886 | 353,893 | |||||||||||||||
D. L. Mulligan
|
| 65,082 | 5,730 | 64,492 | 135,304 | |||||||||||||||
J. J. Rotsch
|
45,772 | 33,924 | 12,478 | 70,791 | 162,965 | |||||||||||||||
I. R. Friendly
|
17,836 | 57,406 | 105,491 | 75,550 | 256,283 | |||||||||||||||
C. D. OLeary
|
| 70,838 | 8,267 | 65,934 | 145,039 | |||||||||||||||
R. G. Darcy
|
| 53,180 | 1,673 | 67,608 | 122,461 |
40
(8) | Includes the companys fixed and variable matching contributions to the Deferred Compensation Plan for fiscal 2009, which are made as if the named executive officer contributed to the 401(k) Plan. For more information on the terms of the matching contributions, see Other Retirement Savings Plans. | |
(9) | Includes the companys fixed and variable matching contributions to the 401(k) Plan and the Supplemental Savings Plan for fiscal 2009. For more information on the terms of the matching contributions, see Other Retirement Savings Plans. | |
(10) | Includes reimbursements for tax liabilities accrued as a result of spousal travel to business-related functions and the receipt of welcome gifts at business-related functions. | |
For Mr. Friendly, also includes $96,170 of payments and reimbursements for incremental taxes resulting from Mr. Friendlys assignment to Cereal Partners Worldwide in Switzerland. Mr. Friendlys fiscal 2009 Total Compensation decreased from the prior year, substantially because of reductions in these payments and reimbursements. The payments were made pursuant to a policy that applies to all employees on international assignment. Factors such as time lags in tax determination, differences in taxable periods between jurisdictions and the availability of foreign tax credits or refunds result in significant differences in incremental tax payments from year to year. For converting payments made in Swiss francs to U.S. dollars, the company uses the previous days closing exchange rate as quoted on Bloombergs market data service. | ||
(11) | Includes the following perquisites and other personal benefits for fiscal 2009: |
Executive |
||||||||||||||||||||||||
Personal |
Personal Use of |
Financial |
Insurance |
|||||||||||||||||||||
Travel(12) |
Executive
Car(13) |
Counseling |
Plans(14) |
Other(15) |
Total |
|||||||||||||||||||
Name | ($) | ($) | ($) | ($) | ($) | ($) | ||||||||||||||||||
K. J. Powell
|
118,980 | 10,987 | 15,000 | 32,748 | 171 | 177,886 | ||||||||||||||||||
D. L. Mulligan
|
14,488 | 11,506 | 5,750 | 32,748 | | 64,492 | ||||||||||||||||||
J. J. Rotsch
|
24,414 | 9,516 | 2,718 | 32,849 | 1,294 | 70,791 | ||||||||||||||||||
I. R. Friendly
|
21,668 | 12,656 | 8,000 | 33,026 | 200 | 75,550 | ||||||||||||||||||
C. D. OLeary
|
19,637 | 12,864 | 685 | 32,748 | | 65,934 | ||||||||||||||||||
R. G. Darcy
|
4,545 | 7,560 | 2,675 | 32,748 | 20,080 | 67,608 |
(12) | Includes commercial airfare and incremental cost of food and activities related to spousal attendance at business functions. | |
Also includes the aggregate incremental cost of personal use of corporate aircraft. We valued the incremental cost using a method that takes into account aircraft fuel expenses per flight hour and engine maintenance expenses per flight hour attributable to personal use; and to the extent attributable to personal use, any landing and parking fees; flight planning expenses; crew travel expenses; supplies and catering; excise taxes; and customs, foreign permit and similar fees. | ||
We have an Aircraft Time Sharing Agreement with Mr. Powell that enables him to reimburse us for personal use of corporate aircraft to the extent that the cost of his personal use exceeded $100,000 in any fiscal year. | ||
(13) | Includes the annual taxable value of the vehicle according to IRS regulations plus the applicable IRS rate per mile to cover fuel and maintenance charges. | |
(14) | Includes premiums paid for executive medical coverage that exceed the cost of medical coverage made available to most full-time employees based in the United States. | |
(15) | For Mr. Darcy, Mr. Friendly, Mr. Powell and Mr. Rotsch, includes the nominal cost of welcome gifts received at business-related functions. | |
For Mr. Darcy, includes the discount ($19,870) on his purchase of his company automobile, which was a percentage of wholesale value based on years of service. |
41
All Other |
All Other |
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Stock |
Option |
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Awards: |
Awards: |
Grant Date |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Estimated Possible Payouts |
Number of |
Number of |
Exercise or |
Fair Value |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Under Non-Equity |
Shares of |
Securities |
Base Price |
of Stock |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Incentive Plan Awards |
Stock or |
Underlying |
of Option |
and Option |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Target |
Maximum |
Units |
Options |
Awards |
Awards(5)(6) |
|||||||||||||||||||||||||
Name | Grant Date | Award Type | ($) | ($) | (#) | (#) | ($/Sh) | ($) | ||||||||||||||||||||||
K. J. Powell
|
6/23/2008 | (1) | Cash | 1,511,344 | 1,943,156 | | | | | |||||||||||||||||||||
6/23/2008 | (2) | RSU | | | 10,304 | | | 653,274 | ||||||||||||||||||||||
6/23/2008 | (3) | RSU | | | 48,380 | | | 3,067,292 | ||||||||||||||||||||||
6/23/2008 | (4) | Options | | | | 241,894 | 63.40 | 2,276,223 | ||||||||||||||||||||||
D. L. Mulligan
|
6/23/2008 | (1) | Cash | 540,810 | 695,327 | | | | | |||||||||||||||||||||
6/23/2008 | (2) | RSU | | | 3,598 | | | 228,113 | ||||||||||||||||||||||
6/23/2008 | (3) | RSU | | | 10,884 | | | 690,046 | ||||||||||||||||||||||
6/23/2008 | (4) | Options | | | | 54,420 | 63.40 | 512,092 | ||||||||||||||||||||||
J. J. Rotsch
|
6/23/2008 | (1) | Cash | 576,722 | 741,500 | | | | | |||||||||||||||||||||
6/23/2008 | (2) | RSU | | | 4,362 | | | 276,551 | ||||||||||||||||||||||
6/23/2008 | (3) | RSU | | | 12,698 | | | 805,053 | ||||||||||||||||||||||
6/23/2008 | (4) | Options | | | | 63,488 | 63.40 | 597,422 | ||||||||||||||||||||||
I. R. Friendly
|
6/23/2008 | (1) | Cash | 540,096 | 694,410 | | | | | |||||||||||||||||||||
6/23/2008 | (2) | RSU | | | 4,090 | | | 259,306 | ||||||||||||||||||||||
6/23/2008 | (3) | RSU | | | 12,698 | | | 805,053 | ||||||||||||||||||||||
6/23/2008 | (4) | Options | | | | 63,488 | 63.40 | 597,422 | ||||||||||||||||||||||
C. D. OLeary
|
6/23/2008 | (1) | Cash | 519,050 | 667,350 | | | | | |||||||||||||||||||||
6/23/2008 | (2) | RSU | | | 3,926 | | | 248,908 | ||||||||||||||||||||||
6/23/2008 | (3) | RSU | | | 12,698 | | | 805,053 | ||||||||||||||||||||||
6/23/2008 | (4) | Options | | | | 63,488 | 63.40 | 597,422 | ||||||||||||||||||||||
R. G. Darcy
|
6/23/2008 | (1) | Cash | 94,390 | 121,358 | | | | | |||||||||||||||||||||
6/23/2008 | (2) | RSU | | | 4,362 | | | 276,551 | ||||||||||||||||||||||
6/23/2008 | (3) | RSU | | | 12,698 | | | 805,053 | ||||||||||||||||||||||
6/23/2008 | (4) | Options | | | | 63,488 | 63.40 | 597,422 |
(1) | Range of Annual Incentive Cash Awards for Fiscal 2009 Performance. Includes targets established on June 23, 2008 for annual incentive cash awards under the Executive Incentive Plan based on fiscal 2009 performance. Actual payouts are described in the Summary Compensation Table. | |
Target payout assumes median performance in relation to the companys performance peer group, which translates to a Corporate Performance Rating of 1.50 and an Individual Performance Rating of 1.40. Maximum payout assumes superior performance, which translates to a Corporate Performance Rating of 1.80 and an Individual Performance Rating of 1.50. There is no minimum payout. For more information on how incentive awards are calculated based on performance ratings, see the Compensation Discussion and Analysis. | ||
(2) | Annual Incentive Stock Awards for Fiscal 2008 Performance. Includes restricted stock units earned in fiscal 2008 but granted in fiscal 2009 under the Executive Incentive Plan. | |
(3) | Long-Term Incentive Restricted Stock Unit Awards for Fiscal 2008 Performance. Includes restricted stock units earned in fiscal 2008 but granted in fiscal 2009 under the 2007 Stock Compensation Plan. | |
(4) | Long-Term Incentive Option Awards for Fiscal 2008 Performance. Includes options earned in fiscal 2008 but granted in fiscal 2009 under the 2007 Stock Compensation Plan. |
42
(5) | The grant date fair value of each RSU granted in fiscal 2009 equals the closing price of our common stock on the New York Stock Exchange on the grant date ($63.40). The values shown have not been adjusted to reflect that these units are subject to forfeiture. | |
(6) | The grant date fair value of options granted in fiscal 2009 equals $9.41 per share based on the Black-Scholes option-pricing model. The following assumptions were used in the calculation: options term of 8.5 years; dividend yield of 2.73% annually; a risk-free interest rate of 4.37%; and expected price volatility of 16.10%. The values shown have not been adjusted to reflect that these options are subject to forfeiture. |
Option Awards(2) | Stock Awards(2) | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Number of |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Shares or |
Market Value |
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Number of Securities |
Units of |
of Shares or |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Underlying Unexercised |
Option |
Stock Held |
Units of Stock |
|||||||||||||||||||||||||
Options |
Exercise |
Option |
That Have |
That Have |
||||||||||||||||||||||||
(#) |
Price |
Expiration |
Not Vested |
Not
Vested(3) |
||||||||||||||||||||||||
Name | Vesting Date(1) | Exercisable | Unexercisable | ($) | Date | (#) | ($) | |||||||||||||||||||||
K. J. Powell
|
6/01/2009 | | | | | 3,317 | 169,764 | |||||||||||||||||||||
6/26/2010 | | | | | 12,500 | 639,750 | ||||||||||||||||||||||
6/26/2010 | | | | | 5,293 | 270,896 | ||||||||||||||||||||||
6/25/2011 | | | | | 8,776 | 449,156 | ||||||||||||||||||||||
6/25/2011 | | | | | 13,000 | 665,340 | ||||||||||||||||||||||
6/23/2012 | | | | | 10,304 | 527,359 | ||||||||||||||||||||||
6/23/2012 | | | | | 48,380 | 2,476,088 | ||||||||||||||||||||||
12/13/2003 | 54,000 | | 34.56 | 1/13/2010 | | | ||||||||||||||||||||||
6/26/2004 | 3,636 | | 38.19 | 7/26/2010 | | | ||||||||||||||||||||||
8/01/2004 | 16,250 | | 34.72 | 9/01/2010 | | | ||||||||||||||||||||||
12/18/2004 | 77,000 | | 40.47 | 1/18/2011 | | | ||||||||||||||||||||||
8/01/2005 | 7,600 | | 43.79 | 9/01/2011 | | | ||||||||||||||||||||||
12/17/2005 | 76,250 | | 49.61 | 1/17/2012 | | | ||||||||||||||||||||||
12/16/2006 | 60,300 | | 43.86 | 1/16/2013 | | | ||||||||||||||||||||||
12/15/2007 | 55,594 | | 46.11 | 1/15/2014 | | | ||||||||||||||||||||||
12/13/2008 | 103,125 | | 46.97 | 1/13/2015 | | | ||||||||||||||||||||||
6/26/2010 | | 156,250 | 51.26 | 7/26/2016 | | | ||||||||||||||||||||||
6/25/2011 | | 162,500 | 58.79 | 7/25/2017 | | | ||||||||||||||||||||||
6/23/2012 | | 241,894 | 63.40 | 7/23/2018 | | | ||||||||||||||||||||||
D. L. Mulligan
|
6/01/2009 | | | | | 990 | 50,668 | |||||||||||||||||||||
6/26/2010 | | | | | 1,771 | 90,640 | ||||||||||||||||||||||
6/26/2010 | | | | | 2,500 | 127,950 | ||||||||||||||||||||||
6/25/2011 | | | | | 1,944 | 99,494 | ||||||||||||||||||||||
6/25/2011 | | | | | 2,600 | 133,068 | ||||||||||||||||||||||
7/17/2011 | * | | | | | 15,000 | 767,700 | |||||||||||||||||||||
6/23/2012 | | | | | 10,884 | 557,043 | ||||||||||||||||||||||
6/23/2012 | | | | | 3,598 | 184,146 | ||||||||||||||||||||||
12/17/2005 | 20,000 | | 49.61 | 1/17/2012 | | | ||||||||||||||||||||||
12/16/2006 | 17,700 | | 43.86 | 1/16/2013 | | | ||||||||||||||||||||||
12/16/2006 | 3,300 | | 43.86 | 1/16/2013 | | | ||||||||||||||||||||||
12/15/2007 | 18,188 | | 46.11 | 1/15/2014 | | |
43
Option Awards(2) | Stock Awards(2) | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Number of |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Shares or |
Market Value |
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Number of Securities |
Units of |
of Shares or |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Underlying Unexercised |
Option |
Stock Held |
Units of Stock |
|||||||||||||||||||||||||
Options |
Exercise |
Option |
That Have |
That Have |
||||||||||||||||||||||||
(#) |
Price |
Expiration |
Not Vested |
Not
Vested(3) |
||||||||||||||||||||||||
Name | Vesting Date(1) | Exercisable | Unexercisable | ($) | Date | (#) | ($) | |||||||||||||||||||||
12/15/2007 | 1,200 | | 46.11 | 1/15/2014 | | | ||||||||||||||||||||||
12/13/2008 | 17,325 | | 46.97 | 1/13/2015 | | | ||||||||||||||||||||||
6/26/2010 | | 30,000 | 51.26 | 7/26/2016 | | | ||||||||||||||||||||||
6/25/2011 | | 31,200 | 58.79 | 7/25/2017 | | | ||||||||||||||||||||||
6/23/2012 | | 54,420 | 63.40 | 7/23/2018 | | | ||||||||||||||||||||||
J.J. Rotsch
|
6/01/2009 | | | | | 1,818 | 93,045 | |||||||||||||||||||||
6/26/2010 | | | | | 7,500 | 383,850 | ||||||||||||||||||||||
6/26/2010 | | | | | 3,885 | 198,834 | ||||||||||||||||||||||
6/01/2011 | * | | | | | 20,000 | 1,023,600 | |||||||||||||||||||||
6/25/2011 | | | | | 7,800 | 399,204 | ||||||||||||||||||||||
6/25/2011 | | | | | 4,418 | 226,113 | ||||||||||||||||||||||
6/23/2012 | | | | | 12,698 | 649,884 | ||||||||||||||||||||||
6/23/2012 | | | | | 4,362 | 223,247 | ||||||||||||||||||||||
6/28/2003 | 5,736 | | 40.11 | 7/28/2009 | | | ||||||||||||||||||||||
8/2/2003 | 23,750 | | 41.50 | 9/01/2009 | | | ||||||||||||||||||||||
12/13/2003 | 75,000 | | 34.56 | 1/13/2010 | | | ||||||||||||||||||||||
6/26/2004 | 6,442 | | 38.19 | 7/26/2010 | | | ||||||||||||||||||||||
8/01/2004 | 17,250 | | 34.72 | 9/01/2010 | | | ||||||||||||||||||||||
12/18/2004 | 80,000 | | 40.47 | 1/18/2011 | | | ||||||||||||||||||||||
8/01/2005 | 8,200 | | 43.79 | 9/01/2011 | | | ||||||||||||||||||||||
12/17/2005 | 93,750 | | 49.61 | 1/17/2012 | | | ||||||||||||||||||||||
12/16/2006 | 75,000 | | 43.86 | 1/16/2013 | | | ||||||||||||||||||||||
12/15/2007 | 70,313 | | 46.11 | 1/15/2014 | | | ||||||||||||||||||||||
12/13/2008 | 61,875 | | 46.97 | 1/13/2015 | | | ||||||||||||||||||||||
6/26/2010 | | 93,750 | 51.26 | 7/26/2016 | | | ||||||||||||||||||||||
6/25/2011 | | 97,500 | 58.79 | 7/25/2017 | | | ||||||||||||||||||||||
6/23/2012 | | 63,488 | 63.40 | 7/23/2018 | | | ||||||||||||||||||||||
I. R. Friendly
|
6/01/2009 | | | | | 1,469 | 75,183 | |||||||||||||||||||||
6/26/2010 | | | | | 3,356 | 171,760 | ||||||||||||||||||||||
6/26/2010 | | | | | 7,500 | 383,850 | ||||||||||||||||||||||
6/25/2011 | | | | | 5,520 | 282,514 | ||||||||||||||||||||||
6/25/2011 | | | | | 7,800 | 399,204 | ||||||||||||||||||||||
6/23/2012 | | | | | 12,698 | 649,884 | ||||||||||||||||||||||
6/23/2012 | | | | | 4,090 | 209,326 | ||||||||||||||||||||||
6/28/2003 | 4,188 | | 40.11 | 7/28/2009 | | | ||||||||||||||||||||||
8/02/2003 | 20,000 | | 41.50 | 9/01/2009 | | | ||||||||||||||||||||||
12/13/2003 | 50,000 | | 34.56 | 1/13/2010 | | | ||||||||||||||||||||||
6/26/2004 | 4,588 | | 38.19 | 7/26/2010 | | | ||||||||||||||||||||||
8/01/2004 | 16,500 | | 34.72 | 9/01/2010 | | | ||||||||||||||||||||||
12/18/2004 | 80,000 | | 40.47 | 1/18/2011 | | | ||||||||||||||||||||||
8/01/2005 | 5,200 | | 43.79 | 9/01/2011 | | | ||||||||||||||||||||||
12/17/2005 | 80,000 | | 49.61 | 1/17/2012 | | | ||||||||||||||||||||||
12/16/2006 | 64,000 | | 43.86 | 1/16/2013 | | | ||||||||||||||||||||||
12/15/2007 | 60,000 | | 46.11 | 1/15/2014 | | | ||||||||||||||||||||||
12/13/2008 | 57,750 | | 46.97 | 1/13/2015 | | | ||||||||||||||||||||||
6/26/2010 | | 93,750 | 51.26 | 7/26/2016 | | | ||||||||||||||||||||||
6/25/2011 | | 97,500 | 58.79 | 7/25/2017 | | | ||||||||||||||||||||||
6/23/2012 | | 63,488 | 63.40 | 7/23/2018 | | |
44
Option Awards(2) | Stock Awards(2) | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Number of |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Shares or |
Market Value |
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Number of Securities |
Units of |
of Shares or |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Underlying Unexercised |
Option |
Stock Held |
Units of Stock |
|||||||||||||||||||||||||
Options |
Exercise |
Option |
That Have |
That Have |
||||||||||||||||||||||||
(#) |
Price |
Expiration |
Not Vested |
Not
Vested(3) |
||||||||||||||||||||||||
Name | Vesting Date(1) | Exercisable | Unexercisable | ($) | Date | (#) | ($) | |||||||||||||||||||||
C. D. OLeary
|
6/01/2009 | | | | | 1,627 | 83,270 | |||||||||||||||||||||
5/02/2010 | * | | | | | 15,000 | 767,700 | |||||||||||||||||||||
6/26/2010 | | | | | 2,645 | 135,371 | ||||||||||||||||||||||
6/26/2010 | | | | | 7,500 | 383,850 | ||||||||||||||||||||||
6/25/2011 | | | | | 7,800 | 399,204 | ||||||||||||||||||||||
6/25/2011 | | | | | 3,976 | 203,492 | ||||||||||||||||||||||
6/23/2012 | | | | | 12,698 | 649,884 | ||||||||||||||||||||||
6/23/2012 | | | | | 3,926 | 200,933 | ||||||||||||||||||||||
6/28/2003 | 3,792 | | 40.11 | 7/28/2009 | | | ||||||||||||||||||||||
12/13/2003 | 62,500 | | 34.56 | 1/13/2010 | | | ||||||||||||||||||||||
6/26/2004 | 4,230 | | 38.19 | 7/26/2010 | | | ||||||||||||||||||||||
8/01/2004 | 7,250 | | 34.72 | 9/01/2010 | | | ||||||||||||||||||||||
12/18/2004 | 66,500 | | 40.47 | 1/18/2011 | | | ||||||||||||||||||||||
8/01/2005 | 6,900 | | 43.79 | 9/01/2011 | | | ||||||||||||||||||||||
12/17/2005 | 80,000 | | 49.61 | 1/17/2012 | | | ||||||||||||||||||||||
12/16/2006 | 64,000 | | 43.86 | 1/16/2013 | | | ||||||||||||||||||||||
12/15/2007 | 60,000 | | 46.11 | 1/15/2014 | | | ||||||||||||||||||||||
12/13/2008 | 52,800 | | 46.97 | 1/13/2015 | | | ||||||||||||||||||||||
6/26/2010 | | 93,750 | 51.26 | 7/26/2016 | | | ||||||||||||||||||||||
6/25/2011 | | 97,500 | 58.79 | 7/25/2017 | | | ||||||||||||||||||||||
6/23/2012 | | 63,488 | 63.40 | 7/23/2018 | | | ||||||||||||||||||||||
R. G. Darcy
|
6/26/2004 | 6,542 | | 38.19 | 7/26/2010 | | | |||||||||||||||||||||
8/1/2004 | 18,625 | | 34.72 | 9/01/2010 | | | ||||||||||||||||||||||
12/18/2004 | 80,000 | | 40.47 | 1/18/2011 | | | ||||||||||||||||||||||
8/01/2005 | 7,200 | | 43.79 | 9/01/2011 | | | ||||||||||||||||||||||
12/17/2005 | 93,750 | | 49.61 | 1/17/2012 | | | ||||||||||||||||||||||
12/16/2006 | 75,000 | | 43.86 | 1/16/2013 | | | ||||||||||||||||||||||
12/15/2007 | 70,313 | | 46.11 | 1/15/2014 | | | ||||||||||||||||||||||
12/13/2008 | 61,875 | | 46.97 | 1/13/2015 | | | ||||||||||||||||||||||
6/26/2010 | | 93,750 | 51.26 | 7/26/2016 | | | ||||||||||||||||||||||
6/25/2011 | | 97,500 | 58.79 | 7/25/2017 | | | ||||||||||||||||||||||
6/23/2012 | | 63,488 | 63.40 | 7/23/2018 | | |
(1) | Options, restricted stock and restricted stock units vest in their entirety four years after the grant date, except that the asterisked awards vest in their entirety five years after the grant date. | |
(2) | Excludes incentive awards earned in fiscal 2009 but granted in fiscal 2010. | |
(3) | Market value of unvested restricted stock and restricted stock units equals the closing price of our common stock on the New York Stock Exchange at fiscal year end ($51.18) multiplied by the number of shares or units. |
45
Option Awards | Stock Awards | |||||||||||||||
Number of |
Number of |
|||||||||||||||
Shares |
Value |
Shares |
Value |
|||||||||||||
Acquired on |
Realized on |
Acquired on |
Realized on |
|||||||||||||
Exercise |
Exercise(1) |
Vesting(2) |
Vesting(3) |
|||||||||||||
Name | (#) | ($) | (#) | ($) | ||||||||||||
K. J. Powell
|
135,660 | 3,256,606 | 10,622 | 653,607 | ||||||||||||
D. L. Mulligan
|
| | 2,625 | 162,925 | ||||||||||||
J. J. Rotsch
|
60,000 | 1,714,800 | 7,029 | 433,609 | ||||||||||||
I. R. Friendly
|
40,000 | 1,112,000 | 21,710 | 1,379,407 | ||||||||||||
C. D. OLeary
|
40,000 | 1,180,000 | 5,814 | 358,381 | ||||||||||||
R. G. Darcy
|
104,782 | 3,365,868 | 70,252 | 4,504,242 |
(1) | Value realized equals the closing price of our common stock on the New York Stock Exchange on the exercise date, less the exercise price, multiplied by the number of shares exercised. | |
(2) | Mr. Rotsch and Mr. Friendly deferred all shares acquired on vesting of their stock awards. For more information on the terms of deferral, see Nonqualified Deferred Compensation. | |
For Mr. Darcy, includes 62,974 shares acquired ($4,054,896 realized) on vesting of restricted stock units upon retirement. | ||
(3) | Value realized equals the closing price of our common stock on the New York Stock Exchange on the vesting date multiplied by the number of restricted shares or units vested. |
| The General Mills Pension Plan (Pension Plan) is a tax-qualified plan available generally to non-union employees in the United States that provides benefits based on a formula that yields an annual amount payable over the participants life. | |
| The Supplemental Retirement Plan of General Mills, Inc. (Supplemental Retirement Plan) provides benefits based on the Pension Plan formula in excess of the Internal Revenue Code limits placed on annual benefit amounts and annual compensation under the Pension Plan. The Supplemental Retirement Plan also provides benefits based on the Pension Plan formula that is attributable to deferred compensation. |
46
Present Value of |
Payments |
|||||||||||||
Number of Years |
Accumulated |
During Last |
||||||||||||
Credited
Service(1) |
Benefit(2) |
Fiscal
Year(3) |
||||||||||||
Name | Plan Name | (#) | ($) | ($) | ||||||||||
K. J.
Powell (4)
|
Pension Plan | 29.7823 | 694,775 | | ||||||||||
Supplemental Retirement Plan | 29.7823 | 4,497,162 | | |||||||||||
D. L. Mulligan (5)
|
Pension Plan | 10.7500 | 148,867 | | ||||||||||
Supplemental Retirement Plan | 10.7500 | 290,598 | | |||||||||||
J. J.
Rotsch (4)
|
Pension Plan | 35.0000 | 916,669 | | ||||||||||
Supplemental Retirement Plan | 35.0000 | 3,468,798 | | |||||||||||
I. R.
Friendly (6)
|
Pension Plan | 25.9861 | 378,560 | | ||||||||||
Supplemental Retirement Plan | 25.9861 | 1,404,156 | | |||||||||||
C. D.
OLeary (5)
|
Pension Plan | 11.5000 | 180,566 | | ||||||||||
Supplemental Retirement Plan | 11.5000 | 539,828 | | |||||||||||
R. G.
Darcy (7)
|
Pension Plan | 20.9166 | 587,171 | 57,300 | ||||||||||
Supplemental Retirement Plan | 20.9166 | 2,573,866 | 228,858 |
(1) | Number of years of credited service equals number of years of actual service. | |
(2) | Actuarial present value is based on assumptions and methods used to calculate the benefit obligation under standards established by the Financial Accounting Standards Board, including: |
| Discount rate equals 7.50% as of the end of fiscal 2009; | |
| Mortality rates based on the RP2000 Combined Healthy Mortality Table, projected to 2009 with Scale AA (post-retirement decrement only); | |
| Single life annuity payments; | |
| Age 62 retirement age (unreduced benefit retirement age), discounted to current age; and | |
| No pre-retirement decrements or future increases in pay, service or legislated limits. |
(3) | In accordance with Section 409A of the Internal Revenue Code, key employees, including the named executive officers, must wait six months from their termination date to begin payment of any Supplemental Retirement Plan benefit accrued after December 31, 2004 and to receive a distribution of their Supplemental Savings Plan account. | |
(4) | Named executive officer is eligible for early retirement in both the Pension Plan and the Supplemental Retirement Plan. | |
(5) | Named executive officer is not eligible for early retirement. | |
(6) | Named executive officer is not eligible for early retirement but currently qualifies for enhanced early retirement reductions under the Rule of 70, as described below, in both the Pension Plan and the Supplemental Retirement Plan at retirement. | |
(7) | Named executive officer retired prior to fiscal year-end. |
47
48
Executive |
Registrant |
Aggregate |
Aggregate |
Aggregate |
||||||||||||||||
Contributions |
Contributions |
Earnings |
Withdrawals/ |
Balance at |
||||||||||||||||
in Last
FY(1) |
in Last FY |
in Last FY |
Distributions(2) |
Last FYE |
||||||||||||||||
Name | ($) | ($) | ($) | ($) | ($) | |||||||||||||||
K. J. Powell
|
137,500 | 4,995 | (23,462 | ) | 147,214 | 283,419 | ||||||||||||||
D. L. Mulligan
|
| | (398,408 | ) | | 748,380 | ||||||||||||||
J. J. Rotsch
|
1,113,832 | 49,228 | (1,011,352 | ) | 3,744 | 6,628,485 | ||||||||||||||
I. R. Friendly
|
1,545,096 | 21,173 | (560,151 | ) | 64,396 | 2,558,697 | ||||||||||||||
C. D. OLeary
|
| | | | | |||||||||||||||
R. G. Darcy
|
| | (379,199 | ) | 2,036,124 | 3,593,225 |
(1) | $137,500 of Mr. Powells contributions has been disclosed as base salary for fiscal 2009 in the Summary Compensation Table. | |
(2) | Includes dividends distributed on deferred stock units, in addition to any other withdrawals and distributions. |
49
Restricted Stock |
||||
Awards and |
||||
Restricted Stock |
||||
Nature of Termination | Units | Stock Options and Stock Appreciation Rights | ||
Voluntary
|
Forfeit | Forfeit | ||
Involuntary for Cause
|
Forfeit | Forfeit | ||
Involuntary without Cause where Age + Years of Service < 70 Years | Fully vest | Fully vest for shorter of remainder of option term or one year, then forfeited | ||
Involuntary without Cause where Age + Years of Service ³ 70 Years | Fully vest |
Normal vesting continues |
||
Retirement Normal and Early
|
Fully vest | Normal vesting continues | ||
Death
|
Fully vest |
Pre-June 2002 pro-rata vest Post-June 2002 fully vest |
||
Change of Control
|
Pre-June 2008 Fully vest | Pre-June 2008 Fully vest for one year, then revert to normal vesting; then if terminated within two years of change of control, fully vest for six months, then forfeited | ||
Post-June 2008 Double- trigger vesting |
Post-June 2008 Fully vest for one year, subject to double-trigger vesting |
50
| Certain acquisitions of 20% or more of the voting power of securities entitled to vote in the election of directors; | |
| Changes in a majority of the incumbent directors (incumbent directors include directors approved by a majority of the incumbents); | |
| Certain reorganizations, mergers, asset sales or other transactions that result in existing stockholders owning less than 60% of the companys outstanding voting securities; or | |
| A complete liquidation of the company. |
| Material diminishment of the executives position, authority, duties or responsibilities; |
51
| Decrease in base salary, annual bonus and/or long-term incentive opportunity; | |
| Certain required relocations; or | |
| Failure to bind successors to the Severance Plan. |
Involuntary |
Change of |
|||||||
Not For Cause |
Control under |
|||||||
Benefit or Payment | Retirement | Termination | Death | Severance Plan | ||||
Earned Benefits:
|
||||||||
Prorated Bonus
|
Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | ||||
Accrued Vacation Pay
|
Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | ||||
Deferred Compensation Plan Contributions and Earnings
|
Yes | Yes | Yes |
Yes |
||||
Vested Benefits in the Pension Plan and Supplemental Retirement
Plan
|
Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | ||||
Additional Benefits:
|
||||||||
Vesting of Unvested Restricted Stock
Units(1)
|
Immediate | Immediate | Immediate |
Double Trigger for Post-June 2008 Grants |
||||
Vesting of Unvested Stock
Options(2)
|
Continued | Rule of 70 | Immediate |
Double Trigger for Post-June 2008 Grants |
||||
Medical
Benefits(3)
|
Continued | Continued | No | Continued | ||||
Spouse/Dependent Medical
Benefits(3)
|
Continued | Continued | Continued | Continued | ||||
Pay Continuance
|
No |
2 Years Salary & Bonus |
No |
2 Years Salary & Bonus |
||||
Additional Pension
Benefit(4)
|
No | Rule of 75 | No | No | ||||
Outplacement Assistance
|
No | Yes | No | Yes | ||||
Financial
Counseling(5)
|
Yes | Rule of 70 | Yes | No | ||||
Company Car Purchase Option
|
Yes | Yes | No | No | ||||
Executive Survivor Income
Plan(6)
|
No | No | Yes | No | ||||
Office Space and Administrative Assistant
|
CEO Only | No | No |
No |
||||
Excise Tax &
Gross-Up
|
No | No | No | Conditional |
(1) | For vesting of unvested restricted stock units, the values included in the table below are based on the number of restricted stock units that would have vested on the last business day of fiscal 2009, multiplied by the closing price of our common stock on the New York Stock Exchange as of that date ($51.18). |
52
(2) | For vesting of unvested stock options, the values that would have been included in the table below are based on the number of options that would have vested on the last business day of fiscal 2009, multiplied by the difference between the exercise price and the closing price of our common stock on the New York Stock Exchange as of that date ($51.18). Since all applicable options have exercise prices higher than $51.18, we did not include any values in the table below. | |
Under the Rule of 70, if the sum of a named executive officers age and years of service is equal to or exceeds 70 and the officer is involuntarily terminated, stock options continue to vest normally and remain exercisable for the full remaining term. If a named executive officer does not meet the Rule of 70, all stock options fully vest and remain exercisable for one year. Mr. Mulligan and Mr. OLeary did not qualify under the Rule of 70 as of the last business day of fiscal 2009. | ||
(3) | The values included in the table below assume that a retirement eligible officer, spouse and dependents will rely on retiree medical benefits if the officer is involuntarily terminated or terminated in connection with a change of control, and that the officers spouse and dependents will continue to rely on these benefits upon the officers death. Non-retirement eligible executives receive up to two years continued coverage if they are involuntarily terminated or terminated in connection with a change of control. | |
(4) | Under the Rule of 75, if the sum of a named executive officers age and years of service is equal to or exceeds 75 and the officer is involuntarily terminated before age 55, he or she receives a supplemental retirement benefit equal to the difference between the officers vested deferred pension benefit and a benefit determined under the early retirement provisions of the Pension Plan assuming he or she was 55. No named executive officers were eligible for this benefit as of the last business day of fiscal 2009. | |
(5) | In cases of involuntary termination, one year of financial counseling is only available if the named executive officer is also retirement eligible, or if the named executive officers age plus years of service is equal to or exceeds 70. Mr. Mulligan and Mr. OLeary did not qualify under the rule of 70 as of the last business day of fiscal 2009. It is also available to a named executive officers spouse upon the officers death. | |
(6) | No new participants have been accepted into the Executive Survivor Income Plan since September 1, 2000. Mr. Mulligan is not a participant. |
Involuntary |
||||||||||||||||
Not For Cause |
Change of |
|||||||||||||||
Retirement |
Termination |
Death |
Control |
|||||||||||||
Name | ($) | ($) | ($) | ($) | ||||||||||||
K. J. Powell
|
6,667,103 | 9,639,440 | 5,557,365 | 10,493,153 | ||||||||||||
D. L. Mulligan
|
| 3,806,648 | 2,018,709 | 5,309,825 | ||||||||||||
J. J. Rotsch
|
3,821,211 | 5,594,031 | 3,531,726 | 5,733,316 | ||||||||||||
I. R. Friendly
|
| 4,623,771 | 3,885,764 | 4,641,543 | ||||||||||||
C. D. OLeary
|
| 4,989,826 | 5,304,742 | 5,200,025 |
53
54
55
Fiscal Year |
||||||||
(In thousands) | ||||||||
2009 | 2008 | |||||||
Audit Fees
|
$ | 5,219 | $ | 4,967 | ||||
Audit-Related
Fees (1)
|
1,216 | 674 | ||||||
Tax
Fees (2)
|
100 | 188 | ||||||
All Other Fees
|
| | ||||||
Total Fees
|
$ | 6,535 | $ | 5,829 | ||||
(1) | Includes audit services for benefit plans and the General Mills Foundation, audit services related to certain divestitures and due diligence services. | |
(2) | Includes expatriate tax services, tax return preparation, planning and compliance filings. |
56
57
58
Q. | How do I receive a printed copy of proxy materials? | |
A. | To request a printed copy of the proxy materials, please call 800-579-1639, e-mail sendmaterial@proxyvote.com or visit www.proxyvote.com. You will need your 12-digit control number to make your request. | |
Q. | Who is entitled to vote? | |
A. | Record holders of General Mills common stock at the close of business on July 23, 2009 may vote at the Annual Meeting. On July 23, 2009, approximately 325,530,671 shares of common stock were outstanding and eligible to vote. The shares of common stock in our treasury on that date will not be voted. | |
Q. | How do I vote? | |
A. | If you are a stockholder of record or hold stock through the General Mills 401(k) Savings Plan, you may vote using any of the following methods: |
| Via the Internet, by going to the website www.proxyvote.com and following the instructions for Internet voting on the proxy card or Notice of Internet Availability of Proxy Materials that you received in the mail. You will need the 12-digit control number printed on your proxy card or Notice of Internet Availability of Proxy Materials. You may also access instructions for telephone voting on the website; | |
| If you received a printed copy of the proxy materials, and reside in the United States or Canada, by dialing 800-690-6903 and following the instructions for telephone voting on the proxy card that you received in the mail. You will need the 12-digit control number printed on your proxy card; | |
| If you received a printed copy of the proxy materials, by completing and mailing your proxy card; or | |
| By casting your vote in person at the Annual Meeting. |
Telephone and Internet voting facilities for stockholders of record will close at noon Eastern Daylight Time on Sunday, September 20, 2009. The telephone and Internet voting instruction deadline for 401(k) shares is 10 am Eastern Daylight Time on Thursday, September 17, 2009. | ||
If you return your signed proxy card or use Internet or telephone voting before the Annual Meeting, we will vote your shares as you direct. You have three choices on each director nominee and other matters to be voted upon. You may vote (or abstain) by choosing FOR, AGAINST or ABSTAIN. | ||
If you are a stockholder of record and do not specify on your returned proxy card or through Internet or telephone prompts how you want to vote your shares, we will vote them FOR the election of the 14 director nominees set forth in this proxy statement, FOR approval of the 2009 Stock Compensation Plan, FOR the ratification of KPMG LLP as our independent registered public accounting firm and AGAINST the stockholder proposal. | ||
If your shares are held in a brokerage account in your brokers name (street name), you should follow the voting directions provided by your broker or nominee. You may complete and mail a voting instruction card to your broker or nominee or, if your broker allows, submit voting instructions by telephone or the Internet. If you provide specific voting instructions by mail, telephone or the Internet, your broker or nominee will vote your shares as you have directed. | ||
Ballots will be passed out during the Annual Meeting to anyone who wants to vote in person at the Annual Meeting. If you hold your shares in street name, you must request a legal proxy from your broker or nominee to vote in person at the Annual Meeting. | ||
Q. | What if I change my mind after I vote my shares? | |
A. | You can revoke your proxy at any time before it is voted at the Annual Meeting by: |
| Sending written notice of revocation to the Corporate Secretary, General Mills, Inc., P.O. Box 1113, Minneapolis, Minnesota 55440; |
59
| Submitting a properly signed proxy with a later date; | |
| Voting by telephone or the Internet at a time following your prior telephone or Internet vote; or | |
| Voting in person at the Annual Meeting. |
You also may be represented by another person at the Annual Meeting by executing a proper proxy designating that person. | ||
Q. | How will my General Mills 401(k) Savings Plan shares be voted? | |
A. | If you hold shares of common stock through the General Mills 401(k) Savings Plan, you may direct State Street Bank and Trust, as the plan fiduciary, how to vote your shares. For shares which are not allocated to participant accounts or for shares for which no direction has been received, State Street will vote those shares in the same proportion as directed shares are voted. State Street may, in exercising its fiduciary responsibility, disregard the direction on behalf of the unallocated shares and shares for which no direction was received and vote in its discretion, if following such direction would be inconsistent with the Employee Retirement Income Security Act. For instructions received by phone or Internet, the deadline is 10 am Eastern Daylight Time on Thursday, September 17, 2009. Any instruction received by State Street regarding your vote shall be confidential. | |
Q. | What does it mean if I receive more than one proxy card or Notice of Internet Availability of Proxy Materials? | |
A. | It means you have multiple accounts at the transfer agent and/or with banks or stockbrokers. Please vote all of your accounts. If you would like to consolidate multiple accounts at our transfer agent, please contact Wells Fargo Shareowner Services at 800-670-4763. | |
Q. | What will happen if I do not vote my shares? | |
A. | If you do not vote according to the instructions described on your proxy card or Notice of Internet Availability of Proxy Materials, your shares will not be voted. If your shares are held in street name, your brokerage firm may vote your shares on those proposals where it has discretion to vote. | |
Q. | How many shares must be present to hold the Annual Meeting? | |
A. | At least one-half of General Mills outstanding common shares as of the record date must be present at the Annual Meeting in order to hold the Annual Meeting and conduct business. This is called a quorum. We will count your shares as present at the Annual Meeting if you: |
| Are present and vote in person at the Annual Meeting; or | |
| Have properly submitted a proxy card or voted by telephone or the Internet on a timely basis. |
Q. | How many votes are needed to approve each item? | |
A. | The election of each director, ratification of the appointment of our independent registered public accounting firm and approval of any properly presented stockholder proposal require the affirmative vote of a majority of votes cast (excluding abstentions) by stockholders entitled to vote and represented at the Annual Meeting in person or by proxy. Adoption of the 2009 Stock Compensation Plan requires the affirmative vote of a majority of votes cast (excluding abstentions) by stockholders entitled to vote and represented at the meeting in person or by proxy, provided that the total number of shares that vote on the proposal represents a majority of the shares entitled to vote on the proposal. | |
If an incumbent director is not re-elected, the director must promptly offer his or her resignation to the board. The corporate governance committee will recommend to the board whether to accept or reject the resignation, and the board will disclose its decision and the rationale behind it within 90 days from the certification of the election results. |
60
Q. | How will voting on any other business be conducted? | |
A. | We do not know of any business to be considered at the 2009 Annual Meeting of Stockholders other than the proposals described in this proxy statement. If any other business is presented at the Annual Meeting, your signed proxy card gives authority to Kendall J. Powell and Roderick A. Palmore to vote on such matters in their discretion. | |
Q. | How are the votes counted? | |
A. | You are entitled to cast one vote for each share of common stock you own, and there is no cumulative voting. Although abstentions are counted as present at the Annual Meeting for purposes of determining whether there is a quorum under our By-laws, they are not treated as votes cast on a specific proposal. | |
If you hold your shares in street name and do not provide voting instructions to your broker, your broker will not vote your shares on any proposal on which your broker does not have discretionary authority to vote, including Proposal Number 2 and Proposal Number 4 at the Annual Meeting. In this situation, a broker non-vote occurs. Shares that constitute broker non-votes will be counted as present at the Annual Meeting for the purpose of determining a quorum but will not be considered entitled to vote on the proposal in question. Broker non-votes effectively reduce the number of votes needed to approve the proposal. New York Stock Exchange rules permit brokers discretionary authority to vote on Proposal Number 1 and Proposal Number 3 at the Annual Meeting, if they do not receive instructions from the street name holder of the shares. As a result, if you do not vote shares that are held for you in street name, your broker has authority to vote on your behalf with regard to Proposal Number 1 and Proposal Number 3. | ||
We have a policy of confidential voting that applies to all stockholders, including our employee-stockholders; Broadridge Investor Communications Solutions will tabulate the votes received. | ||
Q. | Where do I find the voting results of the meeting? | |
A. | We will publish the voting results in our Form 10-Q for the second quarter of fiscal 2010, which is due to be filed with the SEC in January 2010. You can also go to our website at www.generalmills.com. | |
Q. | How do I submit a stockholder proposal? | |
A. | If you wish to submit a proposal for inclusion in our next proxy statement, we must receive the proposal on or before April 12, 2010. Please address your proposal to: Corporate Secretary, General Mills, Inc., P.O. Box 1113, Minneapolis, Minnesota 55440. | |
Under our By-laws, if you wish to nominate a director or bring other business before the stockholders at our 2010 Annual Meeting without including your proposal in our proxy statement: |
| You must notify the Corporate Secretary of General Mills in writing between May 24, 2010 and June 23, 2010; and | |
| Your notice must contain the specific information required in our By-laws. |
If you would like a copy of our By-laws, we will send you one without charge. Please write to the Corporate Secretary of General Mills at the address shown above. |
61
62
| A director will not be considered independent if, within the preceding three years, |
| the director was an employee of, or an immediate family member of the director was an executive officer of, General Mills; | |
| the director or an immediate family member of the director has received during any 12-month period more than $120,000 in direct compensation from us (other than director fees and pension or other deferred compensation for prior service to us); | |
| an executive officer of General Mills was on the compensation committee of a company which, at the same time, employed the director or an immediate family member of the director as an executive officer; or | |
| the director is a current executive officer or employee of, or an immediate family member of the director is a current executive officer of, another company that does business with us and the annual payments derived from that business by either company accounts for at least (i) $1,000,000 or (ii) two percent, whichever is greater, of the consolidated gross revenues of such company. |
| A director will not be considered independent if: |
| the director or an immediate family member of the director is a current partner of our independent registered public accounting firm; | |
| the director is a current employee of our independent registered public accounting firm; | |
| an immediate family member of the director is a current employee of our independent registered public accounting firm and personally works on our audit; or | |
| the director or an immediate family member of the director was, within the preceding three years, a partner or employee of our independent registered public accounting firm and personally worked on our audit within that time. |
| The following commercial or charitable relationships are immaterial and will not, by themselves, impair a directors independence: |
| a director or an immediate family member of the director is an executive officer of another company which is indebted to us, or to which we are indebted, and the total amount of either companys indebtedness to the other is less than two percent of the total consolidated assets of the company he or she serves as an executive officer; | |
| a director or an immediate family member of the director serves as an officer, director or trustee of a tax exempt organization and our contributions to such organization are less than the greater of (i) $120,000 or (ii) two percent of the organizations consolidated gross revenues; | |
| a director or an immediate family member of the director is an executive officer or director of another company that does business with us and the annual payments derived from that business by either company accounts for less than (i) $1,000,000 or (ii) two percent, whichever is greater, of the consolidated gross revenues of such company and the individual is not directly responsible for or involved in the relationship; or | |
| a director or an immediate family member holds a less than 10 percent interest in any entity that has a relationship with us. |
| For relationships not covered by these guidelines, the determination of whether the relationship is material or not, and therefore whether the director would be independent or not, shall be made by the directors who satisfy the independence guidelines set forth above. We will explain in our proxy statement the basis for any determination by the board that a relationship is not material if the relationship does not satisfy one of the specific categories of immaterial relationships identified above. | |
| Audit Committee members may not accept, directly or indirectly, any consulting, advisory or other compensatory fee from us (other than director fees and pension or other deferred compensation for prior service to us). |
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1. | PURPOSE OF THE PLAN |
2. | EFFECTIVE DATE AND DURATION OF PLAN |
3. | ELIGIBLE PERSONS |
4. | AWARD TYPES |
(a) | Stock Option Awards. The Committee may award Participants options (Stock Options) to purchase a fixed number of shares of common stock ($.10 par value) of the Company (Common Stock). The grant of a Stock Option entitles the Participant to purchase shares of Common Stock at an Exercise Price established by the Committee which shall not be less than 100% of the Fair Market Value of the Common Stock on the date of grant, and may exceed the Fair Market Value on the grant date, at the Committees discretion. Fair Market Value shall equal the closing price on the New York Stock Exchange of the Companys Common Stock on the applicable date. | |
(b) | Stock Appreciation Rights. The Committee may also award Participants Stock Appreciation Rights. A Stock Appreciation Right is a right to receive, upon exercise of that right, an amount, which may be paid in cash, shares of Common Stock, or a combination thereof in the complete discretion of the Committee, equal to the difference between the Fair Market Value of one share of Common Stock as of the date of exercise and the Fair Market Value of one share of Common Stock on the date of grant. | |
(c) | Restricted Stock Awards. The Committee may grant Participants, subject to certain restrictions, shares of Common Stock (Restricted Stock) or the right to receive shares of Common Stock or cash (Restricted Stock Units). | |
(d) | Performance Awards. Performance Awards may be made by the Committee granting a right to either the value of a number of shares of Common Stock (Performance Share Units) or a monetary amount, which could be settled in such shares or in cash or a combination thereof (Performance Units), determined based on the extent to which applicable performance goals are achieved. |
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5. | COMMON STOCK SUBJECT TO THE PLAN |
(a) | Maximum Shares Available for Delivery. Subject to Section 5(c), the maximum number of shares of Common Stock available for Awards to Participants under the Plan shall be 12,000,000. Stock Options and Stock Appreciation Rights awarded shall reduce the number of shares available for Awards by one share for every one share granted; provided that Stock Appreciation Rights that may be settled only in cash shall not reduce the number of shares available for Awards. Awards of Restricted Stock, Restricted Stock Units and Performance Awards settled in shares of Common Stock shall reduce the number of shares available for Awards by one share for every one share awarded, up to 30 percent of the total number of shares available; beyond that, Restricted Stock, Restricted Stock Units and Performance Awards settled in shares of Common Stock shall reduce the number of shares available for Awards by five shares for every one share awarded. Restricted Stock Units and Performance Awards that may be settled only in cash shall not reduce the number of shares available for Awards. |
(b) | Individual Limits. The number of shares of Common Stock subject to Stock Options and Stock Appreciation Rights or shares of Common Stock available for Restricted Stock, Restricted Stock Units and Performance Awards granted under the Plan to any single Participant shall not exceed, in the aggregate, 1,000,000 shares and/or units per fiscal year. The maximum dollar value of Performance Awards payable to any single Participant shall be $20,000,000 per fiscal year. These per-Participant limits shall be construed and applied consistently with Code section 162(m) and the regulations thereunder. | |
(c) | Adjustments for Corporate Transactions. If a corporate transaction has occurred affecting the Common Stock such that an adjustment to outstanding Awards is required to preserve (or prevent enlargement of) the benefits or potential benefits intended at the time of grant, then in such manner as the Committee deems equitable, an appropriate adjustment shall be made to (i) the number and kind of shares which may be awarded under the Plan; (ii) the number and kind of shares subject to outstanding Awards; (iii) the number of shares credited to an account; (iv) the individual limits imposed under the Plan; and if applicable; (v) the Exercise Price of outstanding Options and Stock Appreciation Rights provided that the number of shares of Common Stock subject to any Stock |
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Option or Stock Appreciation Right denominated in Common Stock shall always be a whole number. For this purpose a corporate transaction includes, but is not limited to, any dividend or other distribution (whether in the form of cash, Common Stock, securities of a subsidiary of the Company, other securities or other property), recapitalization, stock split, reverse stock split, combination of shares, reorganization, merger, consolidation, split-up, spin-off, combination, repurchase or exchange of Common Stock or other securities of the Company, issuance of warrants or other rights to purchase Common Stock or other securities of the Company, or other similar corporate transaction. Notwithstanding anything in this paragraph to the contrary, an adjustment to a Stock Option or Stock Appreciation Right under this paragraph shall be made in a manner that will not result in the grant of a new Stock Option or Stock Appreciation Right under Section 409A. |
(d) | Limits on Distribution. Distribution of shares of Common Stock or other amounts under the Plan shall be subject to the following: |
(i) | Notwithstanding any other provision of the Plan, the Company shall have no liability to deliver any shares of Common Stock under the Plan or make any other distribution of benefits under the Plan unless such delivery or distribution would comply with all applicable laws (including, without limitation, the requirements of the Securities Act of 1933), and the applicable requirements of any securities exchange or similar entity. | |
(ii) | To the extent that the Plan provides for issuance of stock certificates to reflect the issuance of shares of Common Stock or Restricted Stock, the issuance may be effected on a non-certificated basis, to the extent not prohibited by applicable law or the applicable rules of any stock exchange. |
(e) | Stock Deposit Requirements and other Restrictions. The Committee, in its discretion, may require as a condition to the grant of Awards, the deposit of Common Stock owned by the Participant receiving such grant, and the forfeiture of such grant, if such deposit is not made or maintained during the required holding period. Such shares of deposited Common Stock may not be otherwise sold or disposed of during the applicable holding period or restricted period. The Committee may also determine whether any shares issued upon exercise of a Stock Option or Stock Appreciation Right, or attainment of any performance goal, shall be restricted in any manner. |
6. | STOCK OPTIONS AND STOCK APPRECIATION RIGHTS TERMS AND TYPE |
(a) | General. Stock Options granted under the Plan shall be Non-Qualified Stock Options governed by Section 83 of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended (the Code). The term of any Stock Option and Stock Appreciation Right granted under the Plan shall be determined by the Committee, provided that said term shall not exceed 10 years and one month. | |
(b) | No Reload Rights. Neither Stock Options nor Stock Appreciation Rights granted under this Plan shall contain any provision entitling the optionee or right-holder to the automatic grant of additional options or rights in connection with any exercise of the original option or right. | |
(c) | No Repricing. Subject to Section 5(c), outstanding Stock Options and Stock Appreciation Rights granted under this Plan shall under no circumstances be repriced. |
7. | GRANT, EXERCISE AND VESTING OF STOCK OPTIONS AND STOCK APPRECIATION RIGHTS |
(a) | Grant. Subject to the limits otherwise imposed by the terms of this Plan, the Committee has discretionary authority to determine the size of a Stock Option or Stock Appreciation Right Award, which may be tied to meeting performance-based requirements. | |
(b) | Exercise. Except as provided in Sections 11 and 12 (Change of Control and Termination of Employment), each Stock Option or Stock Appreciation Right may be exercised only in accordance with the terms and conditions of the Stock Option grant or Stock Appreciation Right and during the periods as may be established by the Committee. A Participant exercising a Stock Option or Stock Appreciation Right shall give notice to the Company of such exercise and of |
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the number of shares elected to be purchased prior to 4:30 P.M. CST/CDT on the day of exercise, which must be a business day at the executive offices of the Company. |
(c) | Vesting. Stock Options and Stock Appreciation Rights shall not be exercisable unless vested. Subject to Sections 11 and 12 Stock Options and Stock Appreciation Rights shall be fully vested only after four years of the Participants continued employment with the Company following the date of the grant. | |
(d) | Payment of Exercise Price. The Exercise Price for Stock Options shall be paid to the Company at the time of such exercise, subject to any applicable rule or regulation adopted by the Committee: |
(i) | in cash (including check, draft, money order or wire transfer made payable to the order of the Company); | |
(ii) | through the tender of shares of Common Stock owned by the Participant (by either actual delivery or attestation); | |
(iii) | by a combination of (i) and (ii) above; or | |
(iv) | by authorizing a third party broker to sell a sufficient number of shares of Common Stock acquired upon exercise of the Stock Option and remit to the Company such sales proceeds to pay the entire Exercise Price and any tax withholding resulting from the exercise. |
8. | RESTRICTED STOCK AND RESTRICTED STOCK UNITS |
(a) | Discretionary. With respect to discretionary Awards of Restricted Stock and Restricted Stock Units, the Committee shall: |
(i) | Select Participants to whom Awards will be made; | |
(ii) | Subject to the otherwise applicable Plan limits, determine the number of shares of Restricted Stock or the number of Restricted Stock Units to be awarded to a Participant; | |
(iii) | Determine the length of the restricted period, which shall be no less than four years; | |
(iv) | Determine the purchase price, if any, to be paid by the Participant for Restricted Stock or Restricted Stock Units; | |
(v) | Determine whether Restricted Stock Unit Awards will be settled in shares of Common Stock, cash or a combination thereof; and | |
(vi) | Determine any restrictions other than those set forth in this Section. |
(b) | Performance-Based. With respect to Awards of performance-based Restricted Stock and Restricted Stock Units, the intent is to grant such Awards so as to satisfy the requirements for qualified performance-based compensation under Code Section 162(m). Performance-based Awards are subject to the following: |
(i) | The Committee has exclusive authority to determine which Participants may be awarded performance-based Restricted Stock and Restricted Stock Units and whether any Restricted Stock Unit Awards will be settled in shares of Common Stock, cash, or a combination thereof. | |
(ii) | In order for any Participant to be awarded Restricted Stock or Restricted Stock Units for a Performance Period (defined below), the net earnings from continuing operations excluding items identified and disclosed by the Company as non-recurring or special costs and after |
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taxes (Net Earnings) of the Company for such Performance Period must be greater than zero. |
(iii) | At the end of the Performance Period, if the Committee determines that the requirement of Section 8(b)(ii) has been met, each Participant eligible for a performance-based Award shall be deemed to have earned an Award equal in value to the Maximum Amount, or such lesser amount as the Committee shall determine in its discretion to be appropriate. The Committee may base this determination on performance-based criteria and in no case shall this have the effect of increasing an Award payable to any other Participant. For purposes of computing the value of Awards, each Restricted Stock or Restricted Stock Unit shall be deemed to have a value equivalent to the Fair Market Value of one share of Common Stock on the date the Award is granted. | |
(iv) | In addition to the limitation on the number of shares of Common Stock available for Awards under section 5(b) hereof, in no event shall the total value of the performance-based Restricted Stock or Restricted Stock Unit Award granted to any Participant for any one Performance Period exceed 0.5 percent of the Companys Net Earnings for that Performance Period (such amount is the Maximum Amount). | |
(v) | The Committee shall determine the length of the restricted period which, subject to Sections 11 and 12, shall be no less than four years. | |
(vi) | Performance Period means a fiscal year of the Company, or such other period as the Committee may from time to time establish. |
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9. | PERFORMANCE AWARDS |
(a) | Grant. The Committee may grant Performance Awards which may be denominated in shares of Common Stock (Performance Share Units) or notionally represented by a monetary value, and which may be settled in shares of Common Stock, paid in cash, or a combination thereof (Performance Units). | |
(b) | Performance Goal. In order for any Participant to be granted a Performance Award for a Performance Period (defined below), the net earnings from continuing operations excluding items identified and disclosed by the Company as non-recurring or special costs and after taxes (Net Earnings) of the Company for such Performance Period must be greater than zero. | |
(c) | Grant Size. At the end of the Performance Period, if the Committee determines that the requirement of Section 9(b) has been met, each Participant eligible for a Performance Award shall be deemed to be granted an Award equal in value to the Maximum Amount, or such lesser amount as the Committee determines in its discretion to be appropriate. The Committee may base this determination on additional performance-based criteria and in no case shall this have the effect of increasing an Award payable to any other Participant. For purposes of computing the grant value of Awards, each Performance Award denominated in shares of Common Stock (whether or not share settled) shall be deemed to have a value equivalent to the Fair Market Value of one share of Common Stock on the date the Award is granted. | |
(d) | Additional Performance Conditions and Vesting. Awards granted under this Section 9 shall be subject to such other terms and conditions as the Committee, in its discretion, imposes in the relevant Award Agreement. These conditions may include service and/or performance requirements and goals over periods of one or more years that could result in the future forfeiture of all or part of the Performance Award granted hereunder in the event of the Participants termination of employment with the Company prior to the expiration of any service conditions, and/or said performance criteria or other conditions are not met in whole or in part within the designated period of time. This designated period of time shall be referred to as the Additional Performance Period. Except as provided in Sections 11(b), (c) and 12(c), Performance Awards shall not be paid other than on the date specified in the relevant Award Agreement after the end of the Additional Performance Period. | |
(e) | Maximum Amount. In addition to the limitation on the dollar value of Performance Awards and the number of shares of Common Stock available for Awards under Section 5(b), in no event shall the total value of a Performance Award granted to any Participant for any one Performance Period exceed 0.5 percent of the Companys Net Earnings for that Performance Period (such amount is the Maximum Amount). | |
(f) | Performance Period. Performance Period means the period as the Committee may from time to time establish. | |
(g) | Dividend Equivalents and Voting. At the discretion of the Committee, Performance Share Units may be credited with amounts equal to the sum of all dividends and other distributions paid by the Company during the prior quarter on that equivalent number of shares of Common Stock. Notwithstanding the previous sentence, any dividend equivalents or other distributions so credited shall be distributed (in either cash or shares of Common Stock, with or without interest or other earnings, as provided in the Award Agreement at the discretion of the Committee) to the Participant only if, when, and to the extent the conditions imposed on the attendant Performance Share Units are satisfied, and in an amount equal to the sum of all quarterly dividends and other distributions paid by the Company during the relevant Performance Period |
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and/or Additional Performance Period on the equivalent number of shares of Common Stock which become payable. Such dividend equivalents or other distributions shall be payable at the same time as the attendant Performance Share Units to which they relate, as provided under the applicable terms of the Plan and Award Agreement. Dividend equivalents and other distributions that are not so vested shall be forfeited. Dividend equivalents shall not be credited in respect to Performance Units. Participants who receive either Performance Share Units or Performance Units shall have no rights as stockholders and in particular shall have no voting rights. |
10. | TAXES |
11. | CHANGE OF CONTROL |
(a) | Each of the following (i) through (iv) constitutes a Change of Control: |
(i) | The acquisition by any individual, entity or group (within the meaning of Section 13(d)(3) or 14(d)(2) of the 1934 Act), (a Person) of beneficial ownership (within the meaning of Rule 13d-3 promulgated under the 1934 Act) of voting securities of the Company where such acquisition causes such Person to own 20% or more of the combined voting power of the then outstanding voting securities of the Company entitled to vote generally in the election of directors (the Outstanding Voting Securities); provided, however, that for purposes of this subsection (i), the following acquisitions shall not be deemed to result in a Change of Control: (A) any acquisition directly from the Company, (B) any acquisition by the Company, (C) any acquisition by any employee benefit plan (or related trust) sponsored or maintained by the Company or any corporation controlled by the Company or (D) any acquisition by any corporation pursuant to a transaction that complies with clauses (A), (B) and (C) of subsection (iii) below; and provided, further, that if any Persons beneficial ownership of the Outstanding Voting Securities reaches or exceeds 20% as a result of a transaction described in clause (A) or (B) above, and such Person subsequently acquires beneficial ownership of additional voting securities of the Company, such subsequent acquisition shall be treated as an acquisition that causes such Person to own 20% or more of the Outstanding Voting Securities; or | |
(ii) | Individuals who, as of the date hereof, constitute the Board of Directors (the Incumbent Board) cease for any reason to constitute at least a majority of the Board; provided, however, that any individual becoming a director subsequent to the date hereof whose election, or nomination for election by the Companys shareholders, was approved by a vote of at least a majority of the directors then comprising the Incumbent Board shall be considered as though such individual were a member of the Incumbent Board, but excluding, for this purpose, any such individual whose initial assumption of office occurs as a result of an actual or threatened election contest with respect to the election or removal of directors or other actual or threatened solicitation of proxies or consents by or on behalf of a Person other than the Board; or |
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(iii) | Consummation of a reorganization, merger, statutory share exchange or consolidation or similar transaction involving the Company or any of its subsidiaries, a sale or other disposition of all or substantially all of the assets of the Company, or the acquisition of assets or stock of another entity by the Company or any of its subsidiaries (each, a Business Combination); excluding however, such a Business Combination pursuant to which (A) all or substantially all of the individuals and entities who were the beneficial owners of the Outstanding Voting Securities immediately prior to such Business Combination beneficially own, directly or indirectly, more than 60% of, respectively, the then outstanding shares of common stock and the combined voting power of the then outstanding voting securities entitled to vote generally in the election of directors, as the case may be, of the corporation resulting from such Business Combination (including, without limitation, a corporation which as a result of such transaction owns the Company or all or substantially all of the Companys assets either directly or through one or more subsidiaries) in substantially the same proportions as their ownership, immediately prior to such Business Combination of the Outstanding Company Securities, (B) no Person (excluding any corporation resulting from such Business Combination or any employee benefit plan (or related trust) of the Company or such corporation resulting from such Business Combination) beneficially owns, directly or indirectly, 20% or more of, respectively, the then outstanding shares of common stock of the corporation resulting from such Business Combination or the combined voting power of the then outstanding voting securities of such corporation except to the extent that such ownership existed prior to the Business Combination and (C) at least a majority of the members of the board of directors of the corporation resulting from such Business Combination were members of the Incumbent Board at the time of the execution of the initial agreement, or of the action of the Board, providing for such Business Combination; or | |
(iv) | Approval by the stockholders of the Company of a complete liquidation or dissolution of the Company. |
(b) | If, within two years after a Change of Control a Participant experiences an involuntary separation from service initiated by the Company for reasons other than cause (for this purpose cause shall have the same meaning as that term has in Section 4.2(b)(ii) of Plan B of the General Mills Separation Pay and Benefits Program for Officers), or a separation from service for good reason actually entitling the employee to certain separation benefits under Section 4.2(a)(ii) of Plan B of the General Mills Separation Pay and Benefits Program for Officers, the following applies: |
(i) | All of his or her outstanding Stock Options and Stock Appreciation Rights shall fully vest immediately and remain exercisable for the one-year period beginning on the date of his or her separation from service. | |
(ii) | All shares of Restricted Stock and Restricted Stock Units shall fully vest and be settled immediately (subject to a proper deferral election made with respect to the Award). | |
(iii) | All Performance Awards shall fully vest immediately and shall be considered to be earned in full at target as if the applicable performance goals established for the Additional Performance Period have been achieved, and paid immediately (subject to a proper deferral election made with respect to the Award). | |
(iv) | If Awards are replaced pursuant to subsection (d) below, the protections and rights granted under this subsection (b) shall transfer and apply to such replacement awards. |
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(c) | If, in the event of a Change of Control, and to the extent outstanding Awards are not assumed by a successor corporation (or affiliate thereto) or other successor entity or person, or replaced with an award or grant that, solely in the discretionary judgment of the Committee preserves the existing value of outstanding Awards at the time of the Change of Control, then, by action of the Committee, the following shall occur: |
(i) | Subject to the other provisions of this subsection (c), All Stock Options and Stock Appreciation Rights shall vest and become exercisable immediately upon the Change of Control event. | |
(ii) | The restrictions on all shares of Restricted Stock shall lapse and Restricted Stock Units shall vest immediately. | |
(iii) | All Performance Awards shall fully vest immediately and shall be considered to be earned in full at target as if the applicable performance goals established for the Additional Performance Period have been achieved. | |
(iv) | If the Change of Control constitutes a change in control event as described in IRS regulations or other guidance under Code section 409A(a)(2)(A)(v), Participants Restricted Stock Units and Performance Awards shall be settled and paid upon the Change of Control. | |
(v) | If the Change of Control does not constitute a change in control event as described in IRS regulations or other guidance under Code section 409A(a)(2)(A)(v), Restricted Stock Units and Performance Awards that are not Section 409A Restricted Stock Units and/or not otherwise subject to Section 409A, and on which a deferral election was not made, shall be settled and paid upon the Change of Control. However, the Section 409A Restricted Stock Units, Performance Awards otherwise subject to Section 409A, or such Awards for which a proper deferral election was made, shall be settled in cash equal to either the Awards Fair Market Value at the time of the Change of Control, or its monetary value provided for above in (iii), as applicable, plus interest at a rate of Prime plus 1% from the Change of Control to the date of payment, which shall be the time the original restriction period would have closed, the Performance Award would have been originally payable, or the date elected pursuant to the proper deferral election, as applicable. |
(d) | If in the event of a Change of Control and to the extent outstanding Awards are assumed by any successor corporation, affiliate thereof, person or other entity, or are replaced with awards that, solely in the discretionary judgment of the Committee preserve the existing value of outstanding Awards at the time of the Change of Control and provide for vesting payout terms, and performance goals, as applicable, that are at least as favorable to Participants as vesting, payout terms and Performance Goals applicable to Awards, then all such Awards or such substitutes thereof shall remain outstanding and be governed by their respective terms. |
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(e) | With respect to any outstanding Awards as of the date of any Change of Control which require the deposit of owned Common Stock as a condition to obtaining rights, the deposit requirement shall be terminated as of the date of the Change of Control. |
12. | TERMINATION OF EMPLOYMENT |
(a) | Resignation or Termination for Cause. If the Participants employment by the Company is terminated by either |
(i) | the voluntary resignation of the Participant, or | |
(ii) | a Company discharge due to Participants illegal activities, poor work performance, misconduct or violation of the Companys Code of Conduct, policies or practices, |
(b) | Other Termination. If the Participants employment by the Company terminates involuntarily at the initiation of the Company for any reason other than specified in Sections 11, 12 (a), (d) or (e), the following rules shall apply: |
(i) | In the event that, at the time of such involuntary termination, the sum of the Participants age and years of service with the Company equals or exceeds 70, (A) the Participants outstanding Stock Options and Stock Appreciation Rights shall continue to become exercisable according to the schedule established at the time of grant unless otherwise provided in the applicable Award Agreement; (B) the restriction on all shares of Restricted Stock shall lapse and Restricted Stock Units shall vest and be paid (or deferred, as appropriate) immediately; and (C) any Performance Awards remaining outstanding during the Additional Performance Period shall fully vest and be payable according to the original terms of the Award with a value, if any, that otherwise would be earned under the applicable performance goals originally established under the Award Agreement based on actual performance (subject to a proper deferral election). Stock Options and Stock Appreciation Rights shall remain exercisable for the remaining full term of such Awards. | |
(ii) | In the event that, at the time of such involuntary termination, the sum of the Participants age and years of service with the Company is less than 70, (A) the Participants outstanding unexercisable Stock Options and Stock Appreciation Rights, and unvested Restricted Stock and Restricted Stock Units, shall become exercisable or vest and paid or deferred immediately, as the case may be, as of the date of termination, in a pro-rata amount based on the full months of employment completed during the full vesting period from the date of grant to the date of termination with such newly-vested Stock Options and Stock Appreciation Rights, and Stock Options and Stock Appreciation Rights exercisable on the date of termination, remaining exercisable for the lesser of one year from the date of termination and the original full term of the Stock Option and/or Stock Appreciation Right; and (B) the Participants Performance Awards remaining outstanding during the Additional Performance Period shall be payable according to the original terms of the Award with a value, if any, that otherwise would be earned under the applicable performance goals originally established under the Award Agreement based on actual performance, and shall vest at the end of the relevant Additional Performance Period in a pro-rata amount based on the full months of employment completed during the relevant Additional Performance Period originally established in the Award Agreement through the date of termination. All other Stock Options, Stock Appreciation Rights, shares of Restricted Stock, Restricted Stock Units and |
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Performance Awards shall be forfeited as of the date of termination. Provided, however, that if the Participant is a Company Senior Vice President or above, the Participants outstanding Stock Options and Stock Appreciation Rights which, as of the date of termination are not yet exercisable, shall become exercisable effective as of the date of such termination and, with all outstanding Stock Options and Stock Appreciation Rights already exercisable on the date of termination, shall remain exercisable for the lesser of one year following the date of termination and the original full term of the Stock Option or Stock Appreciation Right; all shares of Restricted Stock and Restricted Stock Units shall fully vest as of the date of termination and be paid or deferred immediately; and any outstanding Performance Awards shall fully vest and be payable according to the original terms of the Award with a value, if any, that otherwise would be earned under the applicable performance goals originally established in the Award Agreement (subject to a proper deferral election). |
(c) | Death. If a Participant dies while employed by the Company, any Stock Option or Stock Appreciation Right previously granted under this Plan shall fully vest and become exercisable upon death and may be exercised by the person designated as such Participants beneficiary or beneficiaries or, in the absence of such designation, by the Participants estate. Stock Options and Stock Appreciation Rights shall remain exercisable for the remaining full term of such Awards. A Participant who dies while employed by the Company during any applicable restricted period shall fully vest in such shares of Restricted Stock or Restricted Stock Units, effective as of the date of death, and such shares or cash shall be paid as of the first day of the month following death to the designated beneficiary or beneficiaries. If a Participant dies while employed by the Company during an Additional Performance Period, all Performance Awards shall fully vest and shall be considered to be earned in full at target as if the applicable performance goals have been achieved, and paid on the first day of the month following death to the designated beneficiary or beneficiaries. | |
(d) | Retirement. The Committee shall determine, at the time of grant, the treatment of Awards upon the retirement of the Participant. Unless other terms are specified in the original Award Agreement, if the termination of employment is due to a Participants retirement on or after age 55 and completion of five years of eligibility service under the General Mills Pension Plan, the Participant may, effective as of the date of employment termination as a retiree, exercise a Stock Option or Stock Appreciation Right pursuant to the original terms and conditions of such Awards; shall fully vest in, and be paid or have deferred, all shares of Restricted Stock or shares or cash attributable to Restricted Stock Units; and all Performance Awards shall fully vest and be payable according to the original terms of the Award with a value, if any, that otherwise would be earned under the applicable performance goals originally established in the Award Agreement based on actual performance (subject to a proper deferral election made with respect to the Award). However, the Restricted Stock Units without a proper deferral election that vest under this Section 12(d) shall be payable on the Participants separation from service (within the meaning of Section 409A) or in the case of a Participant who is a specified employee (within the meaning of Section 409A) shall be paid on the first day of the seventh month following the month of separation from service. |
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(e) | Spin-offs and Other Divestitures. If the termination of employment is due to the divestiture, cessation, transfer, or spin-off of a line of business or other activity of the Company, the Committee, in its sole discretion, shall determine the conversion, vesting, or other treatment of all outstanding Awards under the Plan. Such treatment shall be consistent with Section 409A, and in particular will take into account whether a separation from service has occurred within the meaning of Section 409A. |
13. | ADMINISTRATION OF THE PLAN |
(a) | Administration. The authority to control and manage the operations and administration of the Plan shall be vested in the Committee in accordance with this Section. |
(b) | Selection of Committee. The Committee shall be selected by the Board, and shall consist of two or more outside, disinterested members of the Board who, in the judgment of the Board, are qualified to administer the Plan as contemplated by Rule 16b-3 of the Securities and Exchange Act of 1934 (or any successor rule), Code section 162(m) and the regulations thereunder (or any successors thereto), and any rules and regulations of a stock exchange on which Common Stock is traded. |
(c) | Powers of Committee. The authority to manage and control the operations and administration of the Plan shall be vested in the Committee, subject to the following: |
(i) | Subject to the provisions of the Plan, the Committee will have the authority and discretion to select from among the eligible Company employees those persons who shall receive Awards, to determine the time or times of receipt, to determine the types of Awards and the number of shares or amounts covered by the Awards, to establish the terms, conditions, performance criteria, performance period, restrictions, and other provisions of such Awards, to specify that the Participants rights, payments, and benefits with respect to Awards shall be subject to adjustment, reduction, cancellation, forfeiture, or recoupment under certain circumstances, and (subject to the restrictions imposed by Section 14) to cancel or suspend Awards. In making such determinations, the Committee may take into account the nature of services rendered by the individual, the individuals present and potential contribution to the Companys success and such other factors as the Committee deems relevant. Such terms and conditions may be evidenced by an agreement (Award Agreement), which need not require execution by the Participant, in which case acceptance of the Award shall constitute agreement by the Participant with all its terms, conditions, limitations and forfeiture provisions. | |
(ii) | The Committee will have the authority and discretion to establish terms and conditions of Awards as the Committee determines to be necessary or appropriate to conform to applicable requirements or practices of jurisdictions outside of the United States. | |
(iii) | The Committee will have the authority and discretion to interpret the Plan and Award Agreements, to establish, modify, and rescind any rules relating to the Plan, to determine the terms and provisions of any Award Agreements made pursuant to the Plan, to correct any technical defect(s) or omission(s) in connection with the Plan or Award Agreement, reconcile any technical inconsistencies in connection with the Plan or Award Agreement, and to make all other determinations that may be necessary or advisable for the administration of the Plan. | |
(iv) | Any interpretation of the Plan or Award Agreements by the Committee and any decision made by it under the Plan or Award Agreements is final and binding. | |
(v) | The Committee will have exclusive authority and discretion to decide how outstanding Awards will be treated, and is empowered to make all elections among possible options, consistent with Sections 11(c) and (d). |
(d) | Delegation by Committee. Except to the extent prohibited by applicable law or the applicable rules of a stock exchange, the Committee may allocate all or any portion of its responsibilities and powers |
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to any one or more of its members and may delegate all or any part of its responsibilities and powers to any person or persons selected by it. Any such allocation or delegation may be revoked by the Committee at any time. |
(e) | Designation of Beneficiary. Each Participant to whom an Award has been made under the Plan may designate a beneficiary or beneficiaries to exercise any Award or to receive any payment which under the terms of the Plan and the relevant Award Agreement may become exercisable or payable on or after the Participants death. At any time, and from time to time, any such designation may be changed or cancelled by the Participant without the consent of any such beneficiary. Any such designation, change or cancellation must be on a form provided for that purpose by the Committee and shall not be effective until received by the Committee. Such form may establish other rules as the Committee deems appropriate. If no beneficiary has been designated by a deceased Participant, or if all the designated beneficiaries have predeceased the Participant, the beneficiary shall be the Participants estate. If the Participant designates more than one beneficiary, any payments under the Plan to such beneficiaries shall be made in equal shares unless the Participant has expressly designated otherwise, in which case the payments shall be made in the shares designated by the Participant. |
14. | AMENDMENTS OF THE PLAN |
(a) | except as provided in Section 5(c), materially increase the number of shares which may be issued under the Plan; | |
(b) | permit granting of Stock Options or Stock Appreciation Rights at less than Fair Market Value; | |
(c) | except as provided in Section 5(c), permit the repricing of outstanding Stock Options or Stock Appreciation Rights; or | |
(d) | amend the individual limits on awards set forth in Section 5(b) which may be granted to any single Participant. |
15. | FOREIGN JURISDICTIONS |
16. | TRANSFERABILITY OF AWARDS |
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17. | NON-ALIENATION OF RIGHTS AND BENEFITS. |
18. | LIMITATION OF LIABILITY OR OBLIGATION OF THE COMPANY. |
(a) | to give any employee of the Company any right to be granted any Award other than at the sole discretion of the Committee; | |
(b) | to give any Participant any rights whatsoever with respect to shares of Common Stock except as specifically provided in the Plan; | |
(c) | to limit in any way the right of the Company or any Subsidiary to terminate, change or modify, with or without cause, the employment of any Participant at any time; or | |
(d) | to be evidence of any agreement or understanding, express or implied, that the Company or any Subsidiary will employ any Participant in any particular position at any particular rate of compensation or for any particular period of time. |
19. | NO LOANS |
20. | NOTICES |
21. | RECOGNITION AWARDS |
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TO VOTE, MARK BLOCKS BELOW IN BLUE OR BLACK INK AS FOLLOWS:
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M15846-P82382 | KEEP THIS PORTION FOR YOUR RECORDS | ||
DETACH AND RETURN THIS PORTION ONLY |
GENERAL MILLS, INC. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS RECOMMENDS A VOTE FOR PROPOSALS 1, 2 AND 3 AND AGAINST PROPOSAL 4. |
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Vote on Directors | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
1. | Election of Directors | For | Against | Abstain | For | Against | Abstain | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
Nominees: | o |
o |
o |
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1a) | Bradbury H. Anderson | o |
o |
o |
1i) Steve Odland | o |
o |
o |
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1b) | R. Kerry Clark | o |
o |
o |
1j) Kendall J. Powell | o |
o |
o |
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1c) | Paul Danos | o |
o |
o |
1k) Lois E. Quam | o |
o |
o |
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1d) | William T. Esrey | o |
o |
o |
1l) Michael D. Rose | o |
o |
o |
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1e) | Raymond V. Gilmartin | o |
o |
o |
1m) Robert L. Ryan | o |
o |
o |
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1f) | Judith Richards Hope | o |
o |
o |
1n) Dorothy A. Terrell | o |
o |
o |
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1g) | Heidi G. Miller | o |
o |
o |
Vote on Proposal | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
1h) | Hilda Ochoa-Brillembourg | o |
o |
o |
2. | Adopt the 2009 Stock Compensation Plan. | o |
o |
o |
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For address changes and/or
comments, please check this box and write them on the back where indicated. |
o |
3. | Ratify the appointment of KPMG LLP as General Mills independent registered public accounting firm. |
o |
o |
o |
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Please indicate if you plan to attend this meeting. | o |
o |
4. | Stockholder Proposal on Advisory Vote on Executive Compensation. |
o |
o |
o |
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Yes | No | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Signature [PLEASE SIGN WITHIN BOX] | Date | Signature (Joint Owners) | Date |
PROXY 2009 |
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GENERAL MILLS, INC. |
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THIS PROXY IS SOLICITED ON BEHALF OF THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS |
Address Changes/Comments: |
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