Apple CEO Tim Cook's total compensation rose 18% to $74.6 million last year

midian182

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In brief: Tim Cook's base salary of $3 million didn't increase last year, but don't feel too bad for the softly spoken Apple boss: his total compensation actually increased by 18% to $74.6 million. While Cook oversees the world's largest company by market cap, he's far from the world's highest-paid CEO.

In a proxy statement released on Friday, Apple said Cook's $3 million base salary remained unchanged for the third consecutive year in 2024. However, he earned $58.1 million in stock awards, $12 million in non-equity incentive plan compensation, and $1.5 million in other compensation, bringing the total to $74.6 million.

Apple wrote that the value of Cook's equity award was increased from $40 million to $50 million because his 2023 pay would have been near the lower end compared with benchmark data for peer CEOs' pay.

Cook received $63.2 million in overall pay in fiscal 2023 and $99.4 million in fiscal 2022. He took a 40% pay cut last year partly as a result of his own recommendation for his compensation to be reduced.

Apple is the most valuable company in the world with a market cap of $3.58 trillion, but Cook needs to more than double his compensation to become the highest-paid CEO. Jon Winkelried, CEO of alternative asset manager TPG, was paid $198.7 million, while Hock E. Tan, president and CEO of Broadcom, received a reported compensation of $161 million.

Rank Name Company Total Compensation (in million USD)
1 Jon Winkelried TPG 198.7
2 Hock E. Tan Broadcom 161.0
3 David Zaslav Warner Bros. Discovery 146.6
4 Andrew Witty UnitedHealth Group 142.0
5 Tim Cook Apple 74.6
6 Lisa Su AMD 55.8
7 Satya Nadella Microsoft 54.9
8 Safra Catz Oracle 53.3
9 Bob Chapek Disney 47.5
10 Jamie Dimon JPMorgan Chase 45.0
11 Elon Musk Tesla 44.8
12 Brian Chesky Airbnb 40.9
13 Shantanu Narayen Adobe 39.1
14 Marissa Mayer Yahoo 37.4
15 Reed Hastings Netflix 36.8

Apple's annual revenue in fiscal year 2024 was up 2% to $391 billion, though its net income of $93.7 billion was down 3%. Services revenue was a particularly bright spot, reaching an all-time high of $96.1 billion, up from $85.2 billion in fiscal 2023, while iPhone sales were up 2% to $201.18 billion.

Apple's SEC filing also revealed that former CFO Luca Maestri received an overall pay package of $27.1 million for fiscal 2024, the same amount as General Counsel Kate Adams and Deirdre O'Brien, Apple's Senior Vice President of Retail & People. COO Jeff Williams, meanwhile, saw his 2024 pay package rise slightly to $27.1 million in total, up from $26.9 million a year earlier.

Cook became a billionaire in 2020 and is now estimated to be worth around $2.3 billion. Most of this value comes from his holdings in Apple, where he owns over 3 million shares, constituting less than a 1% stake in the company. Apple's market cap was $348 billion when he took over in 2011.

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Say what you will about Tim Cook.
He took a pay cut when needed to avoid laying off any staff, besides a handful of ceos, and yes even our hated Intel boy Pat took one, there aren't many that take a pay cut to save jobs. Unfortunately, Pat Gelsingers cut didnt save jobs like he thought.
 
I might be reading this wrong, but CEO of Bet365 (Denise Coates) got paid £221 Million ($268 Million) last year. I would have thought the CEO's of the top tech companies were paid more to be honest.
You can pay CEOs in stock options that (as they are optional to exercise) don't become income until exercised but grow in value in the meantime. For example, give Tim $10M in options compensation and he doesn't have to pay taxes on it until years later when he sells it. In the meantime, it grows to be worth $50M and he can take a loan out against that value to buy houses, yachts, cars, etc. And only sell enough stock for walking around money and interest on his loan.

(Compare to normal people who can buy Apple stock after the government takes 30-50% and you see how CEOs can be far richer than their compensation would make them appear.)
 
Well, despite not inventing anything useful since he took over (thanks Zucker), he's still managed to make the company about 10 times wealthier... Of all the overpaid CEOs out there, he's probably one of the few who should, if anything, be paid more.

not here to dispute his pay, just your statement sounds so reasonable at face value.
But I think if I was the CEO of Apple and all I did was rant on TS all day I would have made Apple at least 8 times wealthier :)

It's not like he turned Apple around
These things are just impossible to objectively quantify
You need to go into details of individual decisions
Even then an investment than didn't pan out in hindsight may still have been a great decision due to high risk factor if it did well

Plus now these companies have so much wealth they can buy, kill, suppress the market, bribe (lobby) , tech etc
 
I might be reading this wrong, but CEO of Bet365 (Denise Coates) got paid £221 Million ($268 Million) last year. I would have thought the CEO's of the top tech companies were paid more to be honest.
But that only shows the corrupt nature of gambling. It makes billions.
Sometimes I ask myself whether it is an inherent feature of a human nature to be addicted to something.
 
But that only shows the corrupt nature of gambling. It makes billions.
Sometimes I ask myself whether it is an inherent feature of a human nature to be addicted to something.

Activities are not addictive. It's just a euphemism when applied like that. Otherwise you're basically saying that doing anything fun is bad.
 
Gambling is addictive. If it was not, people would not go broke spending everything they have.
Many people spend everything they have every day on all sorts of rubbish. Just because you can't manage your money doesn't make it a medical condition.

If it's more like a desperation move then there could be depression involved.
 
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