DEF 14A
Table of Contents

 

 

UNITED STATES

SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION

Washington, D.C. 20549

SCHEDULE 14A

INFORMATION REQUIRED IN PROXY STATEMENT

SCHEDULE 14A INFORMATION

Proxy Statement Pursuant to Section 14(a)

of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934

(Amendment No.   )

Filed by the Registrant   x                              Filed by a Party other than the Registrant   ¨

Check the appropriate box:

 

¨   Preliminary Proxy Statement
¨   Confidential, for Use of the Commission Only (as permitted by Rule 14a-6(e)(2))
x   Definitive Proxy Statement
¨   Definitive Additional Materials
¨   Soliciting Material Pursuant to §240.14a-12

Mattel, Inc.
(Name of Registrant as Specified In Its Charter)
(Name of Person(s) Filing Proxy Statement, if Other Than the Registrant)
Payment of Filing Fee (Check the appropriate box):
x   No fee required.
¨   Fee computed on table below per Exchange Act Rules 14a-6(i)(1) and 0-11.
  (1)  

Title of each class of securities to which transaction applies:

 

   

 

  (2)  

Aggregate number of securities to which transaction applies:

 

   

 

  (3)  

Per unit price or other underlying value of transaction computed pursuant to Exchange Act Rule 0-11 (set forth the amount on which the filing fee is calculated and state how it was determined):

 

   

 

  (4)  

Proposed maximum aggregate value of transaction:

 

   

 

  (5)   Total fee paid:
   
   

 

¨   Fee paid previously with preliminary materials.
¨   Check box if any part of the fee is offset as provided by Exchange Act Rule 0-11(a)(2) and identify the filing for which the offsetting fee was paid previously. Identify the previous filing by registration statement number, or the Form or Schedule and the date of its filing.
  (1)  

Amount Previously Paid:

 

   

 

  (2)  

Form, Schedule or Registration Statement No.:

 

   

 

  (3)  

Filing Party:

 

   

 

  (4)  

Date Filed:

 

   

 

 

 

 


Table of Contents

 

 

LOGO

2016 Proxy Statement

and Notice of Annual Meeting

of Stockholders to be Held on May 19, 2016


Table of Contents
          NOTICE OF 2016 ANNUAL MEETING OF STOCKHOLDERS  

 

Mattel, Inc.

Notice of 2016 Annual Meeting of Stockholders

The 2016 Annual Meeting of Stockholders of Mattel, Inc. (“Mattel” or the “Company”) will be held on May 19, 2016 at 9:00 a.m. (Los Angeles time) at the Westin Los Angeles Airport, 5400 West Century Boulevard, Los Angeles, California 90045 (“Annual Meeting”).

We will consider and act on the following matters of business at the Annual Meeting:

 

      Matter    Our Board’s Recommendations

Proposal 1

   Election of the 10 director nominees named in the Proxy Statement: Michael J. Dolan, Trevor A. Edwards, Dr. Frances D. Fergusson, Ann Lewnes, Dominic Ng, Vasant M. Prabhu, Dean A. Scarborough, Christopher A. Sinclair, Dirk Van de Put and Kathy White Loyd    FOR each Director Nominee

Proposal 2

   Advisory vote to approve named executive officer compensation (“Say-on-Pay”)    FOR

Proposal 3

   Ratification of the selection of PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP as Mattel’s independent registered public accounting firm for the year ending December 31, 2016    FOR

Proposal 4

   Stockholder proposal regarding an independent Board Chairman, if properly presented    AGAINST
     Such other business as may properly come before the Annual Meeting     

If you were a holder of record of Mattel common stock at the close of business on March 24, 2016, you are entitled to notice of, and to vote at, the Annual Meeting.

The Westin Los Angeles Airport is accessible to those who require special assistance. If you require special assistance, please call the hotel at (310) 216-5858. Whether or not you expect to attend the Annual Meeting, please submit a proxy to vote as soon as possible so that your shares will be represented and voted at the Annual Meeting.

By Order of the Board of Directors

 

LOGO

Robert Normile

Secretary

El Segundo, California

April 5, 2016


Table of Contents
          TABLE OF CONTENTS  

 

Table of Contents

 

         Page  
PROXY SUMMARY      1   
PRINCIPAL STOCKHOLDERS      8   
SECURITY OWNERSHIP OF MANAGEMENT AND THE BOARD      9   
PROPOSAL 1 – ELECTION OF DIRECTORS      11   
THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS AND CORPORATE GOVERNANCE      22   
  BOARD INDEPENDENCE AND ACCOUNTABILITY      22   
  BOARD RESPONSIBILITIES      25   
  BOARD GENERAL INFORMATION      27   
DIRECTOR COMPENSATION      33   
AUDIT MATTERS      37   
  REPORT OF THE AUDIT COMMITTEE      37   
  FEES INCURRED FOR SERVICES BY PRICEWATERHOUSECOOPERS LLP      39   
EXECUTIVE OFFICERS      41   
EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION      43   
  COMPENSATION DISCUSSION AND ANALYSIS      43   
 

Executive Summary

     43   
 

Elements of Compensation

     50   
 

Important Policies and Guidelines

     71   
 

Executive Compensation Process and Governance

     73   


Table of Contents
  TABLE OF CONTENTS          

 

         Page  
EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION TABLES      78   
 

Summary Compensation Table

     78   
 

Grants of Plan-Based Awards in 2015

     84   
 

Outstanding Equity Awards at 2015 Year-End

     86   
 

Option Exercises and Stock Vested in 2015

     89   
 

2015 Pension Benefits

     89   
 

2015 Nonqualified Deferred Compensation

     91   
 

Potential Payments Upon Termination or Change of Control

     94   
 

Estimated Potential Payments

     99   
COMPENSATION RISK REVIEW      104   
REPORT OF THE COMPENSATION COMMITTEE      105   
EQUITY COMPENSATION PLAN INFORMATION      106   
CERTAIN TRANSACTIONS WITH RELATED PERSONS      107   
PROPOSAL 2 – ADVISORY VOTE TO APPROVE NAMED EXECUTIVE OFFICER COMPENSATION (“SAY-ON-PAY”)      108   
PROPOSAL 3 – RATIFICATION OF SELECTION OF INDEPENDENT REGISTERED PUBLIC ACCOUNTING FIRM      111   
PROPOSAL 4 – STOCKHOLDER PROPOSAL REGARDING INDEPENDENT BOARD CHAIRMAN      112   
SECTION 16(A) BENEFICIAL OWNERSHIP REPORTING COMPLIANCE      116   
ANNUAL MEETING AND VOTING INFORMATION      117   
DEADLINE FOR FUTURE PROPOSALS, NOMINATIONS AND RECOMMENDATIONS BY STOCKHOLDERS      123   
OTHER MATTERS THAT MAY COME BEFORE THE ANNUAL MEETING      125   
SOLICITATION OF PROXIES      126   


Table of Contents
          PROXY SUMMARY  

 

PROXY SUMMARY

This summary highlights information contained elsewhere in this Proxy Statement. This summary does not contain all of the information that you should consider and you should read the entire Proxy Statement carefully before voting. For more complete information regarding our 2015 financial performance, please review our Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2015 filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission (“SEC”).

Meeting Information and Mailing of Proxy Materials

 

 

Date:    May 19, 2016
Time:    9:00 a.m. (Los Angeles time)
Location:    Westin Los Angeles Airport, 5400 W. Century Boulevard, Los Angeles, California 90045
Record Date:    March 24, 2016
Mailing Date:    On or around April 5, 2016, we will mail a Notice of Internet Availability of Proxy Materials to most stockholders and printed copies of our proxy materials to our other stockholders.

Voting Items and Board Recommendations

 

 

      Matter    Our Board’s Recommendations

Proposal 1

   Election of Director Nominees (page 11)    FOR each Director Nominee

Proposal 2

   Advisory Vote on the Compensation of Our Named Executive Officers (“Say-on-Pay”) (page 108)    FOR

Proposal 3

   Ratification of PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP as Our Independent Accounting Firm for 2016 (page 111)    FOR

Proposal 4

   Stockholder Proposal Regarding Independent Board Chairman, if properly presented (page 112)    AGAINST

 

  LOGO   Mattel, Inc.    2016 Proxy Statement               1


Table of Contents
  PROXY SUMMARY          

 

Board Nominees

 

 

Name    Independent    

Principal Occupation/

Key Experience

   Director 
Since
  Mattel Committee Memberships

Michael J. Dolan†

  ü   Chief Executive Officer of Bacardi Limited   2004   Compensation (Chair), Executive (Chair) and Governance and Social Responsibility

Trevor A. Edwards

  ü   President, NIKE Brands of NIKE, Inc.   2012   Compensation and Governance and Social Responsibility

Dr. Frances D. Fergusson

  ü   Former President of Vassar College; Director at Pfizer Inc.   2006   Executive, Finance and Governance and Social Responsibility (Chair)

Ann Lewnes

  ü   Senior Vice President and Chief Marketing Officer of Adobe Systems Incorporated   2015   Governance and Social Responsibility

Dominic Ng*

  ü   Chairman of the Board and Chief Executive Officer of East West Bancorp, Inc. and East West Bank   2006   Audit and Finance

Vasant M. Prabhu*

  ü   Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer of Visa Inc.   2007   Audit (Chair), Executive and Finance

Dean A. Scarborough

  ü   Chairman of the Board and Chief Executive Officer of Avery Dennison Corporation   2007   Compensation, Executive and Finance (Chair)

Christopher A. Sinclair

      Chairman of the Board and Chief Executive Officer of Mattel, Inc.   1996   Equity Grant Allocation

Dirk Van de Put*

  ü   President and Chief Executive Officer of McCain Foods Limited   2011   Audit and Governance and Social Responsibility

Kathy White Loyd

  ü   Executive in Residence and Faculty Member at the Bryan School of Business & Economics at the University of North Carolina –Greensboro   2001   Audit and Compensation

† Independent Lead Director

* Audit Committee Financial
Expert

                   

We believe the collective backgrounds and diverse experiences of our 10 director nominees complement each other and position the Board to provide Mattel with the knowledge, expertise and guidance necessary to oversee management in the execution of our turnaround.

 

2                LOGO   Mattel, Inc.    2016 Proxy Statement    


Table of Contents
          PROXY SUMMARY  

 

Stockholder Engagement and Corporate Governance Highlights

 

In 2015, an independent member of our Board together with our management team engaged in outreach activities and discussions with stockholders representing more than 40%, in total, of Mattel’s outstanding shares.

We have established strong corporate governance practices to provide stockholders with meaningful rights. We have enhanced our engagement efforts over the past year to gather important feedback from our stockholders to take back to our Board on topics including our turnaround strategy, board leadership structure, corporate governance practices and executive compensation programs. These engagement efforts informed certain changes the Compensation Committee made to our executive compensation programs in 2016. We will continue to reach out to stockholders going forward to help inform boardroom discussions on critical Board, governance and compensation matters.

We maintain industry-leading corporate governance and Board practices that ensure accountability and enhance effectiveness in the boardroom.

 

Corporate Governance Practices   Board Practices

ü    Annual Board elections

 

ü    Routine review of Board leadership structure

ü    Majority voting

 

ü    Annual Board and Committee evaluations

ü    Robust Independent Lead Director role with significant responsibilities

 

ü    Annual review and evaluation of the CEO’s performance by independent directors

ü    Stockholder right to call special meetings

 

ü    Quarterly executive sessions held without management present

ü    Stockholder ability to act by written consent

 

ü    Robust director succession and search process

ü    Comprehensive risk management with Board and Committee oversight

 

ü    Ability to remove directors with or without cause

2015 Financial and Business Highlights

 

Our 2015 results reflect progress against our 2015 strategic priorities and our turnaround efforts.

We continue to focus on embracing brand building, creativity and innovation, and we have instituted a cultural transformation that puts a premium on speed to market and accountability. Our management’s priority is putting Mattel back on track for growth and improved profitability. In 2015, we organized around the following six strategic priorities:

 

2015 Strategic Priorities

  Exploiting the franchise strength of our core
brands

 

  Achieving distinctiveness and excellence in our commercial organization

  Re-establishing toy leadership

 

  Rapidly expanding into emerging markets

  Strengthening our global supply chain

 

  Continuously driving cost improvement

 

  LOGO   Mattel, Inc.    2016 Proxy Statement               3


Table of Contents
  PROXY SUMMARY          

 

In 2015, we made significant progress against the six strategic priorities and our cultural transformation. The business was stabilized as gross sales increased over the prior year in constant currency, and our critical core brands were revitalized, with positive trends in both consumer takeaway and shipping.

 

Turnaround Progress
Encouraging Trends in Underlying Business Despite Currency Headwinds

ü    Revitalized core brands (Barbie and Fisher-Price) and maintained strong momentum in other core brands (Hot Wheels and Thomas)

ü    Investments in emerging markets like China and Russia delivered strong improvement and growth, generating momentum for 2016

ü    Gross sales in 2015 were up 1% in constant currency,* and down 6% as reported, compared to 2014

ü    Net sales in 2015 were up 2% in constant currency,* and down 5% as reported, compared to 2014

ü    Achieved 2015 financial outlook

P&L Results Reflect Ongoing Financial Discipline to Improve Top-Line Momentum

ü    Elevated spending in advertising and retail promotions to support core brands

ü    Exceeded first year cost savings program target with approximately $153 million of gross savings in 2015

Maintained Disciplined Capital Deployment Strategy and Strong Balance Sheet

ü    Invested in turnaround efforts and growth initiatives

ü    Ended 2015 with $893 million of cash

ü    Maintained quarterly dividend of $0.38 per share

* For a reconciliation of the non-GAAP measures discussed above, please see pages 42 to 44 of our Annual Report on Form 10-K filed with the SEC on February 25, 2016.

The following shows our Total Stockholder Return (“TSR”)(1) performance over the years as compared to the median of our peers:

 

Period   Mattel   Peer Group
1 year   -7%   8%
3 year   -5%   15%
5 year   6%   14%

(1) TSR represents the annualized rate of return reflecting changes in the stock price plus reinvestment and the compounding effect of dividends over such period.

To support the execution of our turnaround strategy, the Board, together with management, implemented a number of changes in Company leadership in 2015, including to several of our named executive officer (“NEOs”) positions, to strengthen Mattel and revitalize the business going forward.

 

4                LOGO   Mattel, Inc.    2016 Proxy Statement    


Table of Contents
          PROXY SUMMARY  

 

 

CEO Succession

  On January 25, 2015, Mr. Sinclair, one of our independent directors, was appointed as Chairman of the Board and Interim CEO, succeeding Bryan G. Stockton.

  On April 2, 2015, as a result of Mr. Sinclair’s demonstrated actions and comprehensive plan to improve Mattel’s performance, the Board appointed Mr. Sinclair as CEO.

Enhanced Senior Management Team to Drive Growth and Profitability

  On January 13, 2015, Richard Dickson, previously our Chief Brands Officer, was promoted to President, Chief Brands Officer and effective April 2, 2015, was further promoted to President and Chief Operating Officer (“COO”). With the appointment of Mr. Dickson as COO, we believe the brand and commercial organizations were better aligned and reorganized to improve top-line performance and reduce redundant costs.

  On June 8, 2015, Geoffrey Walker, previously our Executive Vice President (“EVP”), Global Brands Team – Fisher-Price, was transitioned to the role of EVP, Commercial – North America to leverage his brand and commercial leadership.

  We also hired a number of outside experts and leaders to join our senior executive team, particularly in crucial areas like brand management, content creation and distribution, e-commerce, finance and human resources.

Overall, more than 50% of our senior leadership team was changed or re-assigned.

Executive Compensation Highlights

 

Our executive compensation programs are designed to be performance-based and link our executives’ pay opportunity to the execution of Company strategies and to the interests of our stockholders.

2015 Compensation Changes and Pay-For-Performance Results

For 2015, the Compensation Committee made the following changes to our annual cash incentive plan, the Mattel Incentive Plan (“MIP”):

 

  The adjusted net sales multiplier component was increased from 20% to 75%, while the gross margin multiplier was reduced from 80% to 25%, to increase the emphasis and focus on sales growth.

 

  The earnout percentage under the MIP for our NEOs could not exceed 100% of target unless Mattel’s TSR was positive.

Highlights of our pay-for-performance link based on our challenging 2015 financial performance include:

 

  Base Salary – No merit-based salary increases were approved for our NEOs in 2015 and 2016 (other than in the case of promotions).

 

  Annual Incentive – Below target MIP payouts (ranging from 44.7% and 68.3% of target) were earned by our NEOs for 2015, which reflect Company and business group financial results.

 

 

Long-Term Incentive Program – Below target amount (41%) was achieved for the 2015 performance-related component allocated to one-third of the performance-based restricted stock units (“Performance Units”) granted under our 2014-2016 Long-Term Incentive Program (“LTIP”). As 2015 was only the second year of the three-year performance cycle, no Performance Units were earned. The number of Performance Units earned will depend on our performance relative to the performance-related component in 2016 (in addition to 2014 and 2015) and our relative TSR for the full three-year performance cycle. If the TSR modifier that will

 

  LOGO   Mattel, Inc.    2016 Proxy Statement               5


Table of Contents
  PROXY SUMMARY          

 

 

be applied at the end of the three-year performance cycle were to have been applied at the end of 2015, this would have resulted in a zero earnout of the Performance Units.

2016 Compensation Changes

To further promote our turnaround, reinforce our strategic priorities and reflect the support and feedback from our stockholder outreach, the Compensation Committee made the following changes to our MIP and LTIP in 2016:

 

Compensation Element   Actions Taken By Compensation Committee

Annual Incentive (MIP)

 

  Financial Performance Measures – Simplified and streamlined the financial focus of the MIP by emphasizing net sales and adjusted operating profit (eliminated gross margin and free cash flow) to drive profitable growth, with higher weighting than prior year on net sales, for greater alignment with our business objectives and turnaround strategy

   

  Alignment with Strategic Priorities – Modified the payout formula for our NEOs (and other EVPs) to be based 75% on achievement of financial goals (previously 100%) and 25% to be based on achievement of established strategic priorities related to each executive’s job responsibilities, to provide a stronger line of sight to operational performance over which the executive has responsibility and to drive a culture of accountability (such strategic priorities component paid out only if the adjusted operating profit threshold is achieved so that executives are appropriately held accountable for financial performance)

   

  Overall Plan Structure – To allow maximum flexibility for the Compensation Committee while preserving tax deductibility, established the MIP under an umbrella plan structure in which the MIP will be funded at maximum for our NEOs (and other EVPs) if a specified threshold level percentage of our target operating profit is achieved, subject to the Compensation Committee’s discretion to pay lesser amounts

Long-Term Incentive Program (LTIP)  

  Performance Cycles Approach Changed the prior three-year end-to-end cycle approach to overlapping three-year cycles that provide for annual grants and established a new 2016-2018 performance cycle, to align with market practice, permit greater responsiveness to changing circumstances and market movements, strengthen retention and facilitate year-to-year compensation analysis

   

  Financial Performance Measures Changed the financial performance measure from net operating profit after tax less capital charge (NOPAT-CC) and net sales (with performance goals set annually) to earnings per share (EPS) (with performance goals set at the commencement of the three-year performance cycle), while maintaining the relative three-year TSR modifier component, to focus management on strategic long-term objectives and long-term stockholder value creation, support our turnaround strategy and provide long-term differentiated goals as compared to the MIP

 

6                LOGO   Mattel, Inc.    2016 Proxy Statement    


Table of Contents
          PROXY SUMMARY  

 

Compensation Governance Best Practices

Our Compensation Committee maintains several compensation governance best practices highlighted below that establish strong safeguards for our stockholders and further enhance the alignment of interests between our NEOs and stockholders.

 

Compensation Governance Practices

ü    Compensation Recovery Policy (“Clawback Policy”) applicable to all executive officers

ü    Double-trigger accelerated vesting in equity plans and executive severance plans in the event of a change of control

ü    Annual compensation risk assessment

ü    Robust stock ownership guidelines: 6x base salary for CEO, 4x for COO and CFO, 3x or 2x for other NEOs

ü    No excise tax gross-ups

ü    No hedging or pledging permitted

ü    Annual comparator peer group review

ü    Independent compensation consultant

ü    No poor pay tax gross-up practices on perquisites and benefits

Corporate Information

 

 

 Corporate Headquarters:

333 Continental Boulevard, El Segundo, California 90245-5012

 

 Corporate Website:

www.corporate.mattel.com

 

 Investor Relations Website:

http://investor.shareholder.com/mattel/

 

 State of Incorporation:

Delaware

 

 Stock Symbol:

Nasdaq: MAT

 

  LOGO   Mattel, Inc.    2016 Proxy Statement               7


Table of Contents
  PRINCIPAL STOCKHOLDERS          

 

PRINCIPAL STOCKHOLDERS

As of March 24, 2016, the only persons known by Mattel to own beneficially, or to be deemed to own beneficially, 5% or more of Mattel’s common stock were as follows:

 

Name and Address of Beneficial Owner   Amount and
Nature of
  Beneficial Ownership  
  Percent
  Owned(1)  

T. Rowe Price Associates, Inc.
100 East Pratt Street
Baltimore, Maryland 21202

      50,222,983 (2)       14.76 %

BlackRock, Inc.
40 East 52nd Street
New York, New York 10022

      36,200,199 (3)       10.64 %

The Vanguard Group
100 Vanguard Blvd.
Malvern, Pennsylvania 19355

      28,567,000 (4)       8.39 %

(1) The percentages shown are based on 340,325,257 shares of Mattel common stock outstanding as of March 24, 2016 and may differ from the percentages reflected in the filings referenced below.

(2) As reported in a Schedule 13G/A filed with the SEC on February 10, 2016 by T. Rowe Price Associates, Inc. The Schedule 13G/A states that T. Rowe Price Associates, Inc. has sole voting power as to 16,851,292 shares and sole dispositive power as to 50,150,883 shares.

(3) As reported in a Schedule 13G/A filed with the SEC on January 8, 2016 by BlackRock, Inc. The Schedule 13G/A states that BlackRock, Inc. has sole voting power as to 32,341,010 shares, shared dispositive power as to 18,863 shares and sole dispositive power as to 36,181,336 shares.

(4) As reported in a Schedule 13G/A filed with the SEC on February 10, 2016 by The Vanguard Group. The Schedule 13G/A states that The Vanguard Group has sole voting power as to 632,423 shares, shared voting power as to 33,100 shares, sole dispositive power as to 27,897,113 shares and shared dispositive power as to 669,887 shares.

 

8                LOGO   Mattel, Inc.    2016 Proxy Statement    


Table of Contents
          SECURITY OWNERSHIP OF MANAGEMENT AND THE BOARD  

 

SECURITY OWNERSHIP OF MANAGEMENT AND THE BOARD

The following table sets forth information regarding the beneficial ownership of Mattel common stock as of March 24, 2016, the record date, by (i) each director and nominee for director, (ii) our NEOs, as described under the section “Executive Compensation – Compensation Discussion and Analysis” and (iii) all current directors and executive officers of Mattel as a group.

 

Name of Beneficial Owner   Current Position with Mattel  

Amount and

Nature of

Beneficial

Ownership(1)(2) 

Named Executive Officers

             

Christopher A. Sinclair

  Chairman of the Board and Chief Executive Officer       866,012  

Richard Dickson

  President and Chief Operating Officer       321,993  

Kevin M. Farr

  Chief Financial Officer       902,550  

Peter D. Gibbons

  Executive Vice President and Chief Supply Chain Officer       51,600  

Geoffrey H. Walker

  Executive Vice President and Chief Strategic Technology Officer       115,554  

Bryan G. Stockton

  Former Chairman of the Board and Chief Executive Officer       1,422,767  

Directors

             

Michael J. Dolan

  Director       101,602  

Trevor A. Edwards

  Director       7,059  

Dr. Frances D. Fergusson

  Director       27,984  

Ann Lewnes

  Director        

Dominic Ng

  Director       18,500  

Vasant M. Prabhu

  Director       25,984  

Dean A. Scarborough

  Director       23,967  

Dirk Van de Put

  Director       9,792  

Kathy White Loyd

  Director       10,760  
All current Directors and Executive Officers, as a group (17 persons)(3)         3,003,875  

(1) Each director and executive officer named above beneficially owns or controls less than 1.0% of Mattel common stock. Except as otherwise noted, the directors and executive officers named above have sole voting power and investment power with respect to all shares of common stock shown as beneficially owned by them, subject to community property laws where applicable. There were 340,325,257 shares of Mattel common stock outstanding as of March 24, 2016.

(2) Includes (i) shares which the individuals shown have the right to acquire upon vesting of restricted stock units (“RSUs”), or upon exercise of vested stock options, as of March 24, 2016 or within 60 days thereafter, and (ii) shares held through the Mattel stock fund of the Mattel, Inc. Personal Investment Plan, a 401(k) tax-qualified savings plan, as set forth in the table below.

(3) The amount stated represents approximately 0.88% of the outstanding shares of Mattel common stock as of March 24, 2016.

 

  LOGO   Mattel, Inc.    2016 Proxy Statement               9


Table of Contents
  SECURITY OWNERSHIP OF MANAGEMENT AND THE BOARD          

 

 

Name of Beneficial Owner            Stock Options                            RSUs                    

401(k)

            Shares             

Named Executive Officers

              

Christopher A. Sinclair

   780,028    2,610   

Richard Dickson

   279,846    35,814    668

Kevin M. Farr

   653,835       15,997

Peter D. Gibbons

   43,514    2,312   

Geoffrey H. Walker

   86,026    2,445    4,637

Bryan G. Stockton

   1,418,009      

Directors

              

Michael J. Dolan

   15,000    2,610   

Trevor A. Edwards

      2,610   

Dr. Frances D. Fergusson

      2,610   

Ann Lewnes

        

Dominic Ng

   9,000      

Vasant M. Prabhu

      2,610   

Dean A. Scarborough

   12,000      

Dirk Van de Put

      2,610   

Kathy White Loyd

        

All current Directors and

Executive Officers, as a

group (17 persons)

   2,287,462    56,527    35,398

 

10                LOGO   Mattel, Inc.    2016 Proxy Statement    


Table of Contents
          PROPOSAL 1 – ELECTION OF DIRECTORS  

 

PROPOSAL 1 – ELECTION OF DIRECTORS

The Board recommends that stockholders vote FOR each of the nominees named herein for election as directors.

Identifying and Evaluating Nominees for Director

 

The Board, acting through the Governance and Social Responsibility Committee, is responsible for identifying and evaluating candidates for membership on the Board. Mattel’s Corporate Governance Guidelines (“Guidelines”) set forth the process for selecting candidates for director positions and the role of the Governance and Social Responsibility Committee in identifying potential candidates and screening them, with input from the Chairman of the Board.

Under the Guidelines, the Governance and Social Responsibility Committee is responsible for reviewing with the Board annually the skills and characteristics required of Board members given the current make-up of the Board and the perceived needs of the Board at that time. This review includes an assessment of the talents, skills, areas of expertise, experience, diversity and independence of the Board and its members. Any changes that may have occurred in any director’s responsibilities, as well as such other factors as may be determined by the committee to be appropriate for review, are also considered. In addition, under the Guidelines, upon attaining age 73, a director shall not stand for re-election to the Board at the subsequent annual meeting of the stockholders.

The charter of the Governance and Social Responsibility Committee also sets forth the process by which the committee actively seeks individuals qualified to become Board members for recommendation to the Board. The committee, with input from the Chairman of the Board, screens candidates to fill vacancies on the Board, solicits recommendations from Board members as to such candidates, and considers recommendations for Board membership submitted by stockholders as described further below. The Governance and Social Responsibility Committee has retained a third-party, independent search firm to locate candidates who may meet the needs of the Board. The firm typically provides information on a select number of candidates for review and discussion by the Governance and Social Responsibility Committee. Candidates whom the committee expresses interest in pursuing meet in person with at least two members of the Governance and Social Responsibility Committee before they are selected. The committee recommends to the Board the director nominees for each annual meeting of stockholders.

The Governance and Social Responsibility Committee also has adopted a Director Nominations Policy that describes the methodology for selecting the candidates who are included in the slate of director nominees recommended to the Board and the procedures for stockholders to follow in submitting nominations and recommendations of possible candidates for Board membership. This policy also identifies the following minimum qualifications that each nominee should possess:

 

  An outstanding record of professional accomplishment in his or her field of endeavor;

 

  A high degree of professional integrity, consistent with Mattel’s values;

 

  Willingness and ability to represent the general best interests of all of Mattel’s stockholders and not just one particular stockholder or constituency, including a commitment to enhancing stockholder value; and

 

  LOGO   Mattel, Inc.    2016 Proxy Statement               11


Table of Contents
  PROPOSAL 1 – ELECTION OF DIRECTORS          

 

 

  Willingness and ability to participate fully in Board activities, including active membership on at least one Board committee and attendance at, and active participation in, meetings of the Board and the committee(s) of which he or she is a member, and no commitments that would, in the Governance and Social Responsibility Committee’s judgment, interfere with or limit his or her ability to do so.

The Director Nominations Policy also lists the following additional skills, experiences and qualities that are desirable in nominees:

 

  Skills and experiences relevant to Mattel’s business, operations or strategy. These skills and experiences might include, among other things, experience in senior management of a large, consumer products or multinational company, and/or senior level experience in one or more of the following areas: finance, accounting, law, strategy and business development, operations, sales, marketing, international business, information technology and/or public relations;

 

  Qualities that help the Board achieve a balance of a variety of knowledge, experience and capability on the Board and an ability to contribute positively to the collegial and collaborative culture among Board members; and

 

  Qualities that contribute to the Board’s overall diversity – diversity being broadly construed to mean a variety of opinions, perspectives, professional and personal experiences and backgrounds, as well as other differentiating characteristics.

Lastly, a nominee’s ability to qualify as an independent director of Mattel is considered in terms of both the overall independence of Mattel’s Board as well as the independence of its committees.

In performing its role in the annual nomination process, the Governance and Social Responsibility Committee reviews the composition of the Board in light of the committee’s assessment of the needs of the Board for additional or replacement Board members, Mattel’s current business structure, operations and financial condition, challenges facing Mattel, the Board’s performance and inputs from stockholders and other key constituencies, and evaluates director nominees against the criteria for nominees set forth in the Director Nominations Policy. The committee intends to review the Director Nominations Policy periodically, and anticipates that modifications may be necessary or advisable from time to time as Mattel’s needs and circumstances evolve, and as applicable legal or listing standards change. Accordingly, the Governance and Social Responsibility Committee may amend the Director Nominations Policy from time to time, in which case the most current version will be available in the “Corporate Governance” section of Mattel’s corporate website.

Stockholder Nominations

 

The Governance and Social Responsibility Committee will consider stockholder nominations of possible candidates for Board membership that are properly submitted pursuant to the advance notice provisions of Mattel’s Bylaws and applicable law, as well as recommendations made by stockholders, as described below. In evaluating such nominations and recommendations, the Governance and Social Responsibility Committee applies the same criteria as are used for evaluating candidates generally, as described above.

Any stockholder of Mattel may nominate one or more persons for election as a director of Mattel at an annual meeting of stockholders if the stockholder complies with the timing and other requirements for such nomination contained in the advance notice provisions of Mattel’s Bylaws and applicable law. The notice should be sent to: Secretary, Mail Stop M1-1516, Mattel, Inc., 333 Continental Boulevard, El Segundo, CA 90245-5012.

 

12                LOGO   Mattel, Inc.    2016 Proxy Statement    


Table of Contents
          PROPOSAL 1 – ELECTION OF DIRECTORS  

 

Any stockholder of Mattel may also recommend one or more persons for nomination by the Board for election as a director by sending to the Governance and Social Responsibility Committee the name of such recommended nominee, as well as a detailed statement explaining why such stockholder is making such recommendation. Any such recommendation must include all information required by Mattel’s Bylaws and applicable law. Such recommendation should be sent to: Governance and Social Responsibility Committee, c/o Secretary, Mail Stop M1-1516, Mattel, Inc., 333 Continental Boulevard, El Segundo, CA 90245-5012. See the “Deadline for Future Proposals, Nominations and Recommendations by Stockholders – Recommendations of Director Candidates” section of this Proxy Statement for a description of the procedures that are required to be followed. Mattel’s Bylaws and the Director Nominations Policy are available on Mattel’s corporate website at http://corporate.mattel.com/about-us/relatedlinks.aspx.

Director Nominees for Election

 

The authorized number of directors is currently set at 10 and the Board currently consists of 10 members. Based upon the recommendations of the Governance and Social Responsibility Committee, the Board has nominated the following 10 members for re-election to the Board at the Annual Meeting to serve until the next annual meeting of stockholders and until their respective successors have been duly elected and qualified, or until their earlier resignation or removal:

 

Michael J. Dolan    Dominic Ng    Dirk Van de Put
Trevor A. Edwards    Vasant M. Prabhu    Kathy White Loyd
Dr. Frances D. Fergusson    Dean A. Scarborough   
Ann Lewnes    Christopher A. Sinclair   

All of the nominees are currently directors and each nominee has consented to being named in this Proxy Statement as a nominee for election as a director and agreed to serve as a director, if elected.

If you properly submit your proxy, unless you give instructions to the contrary, the proxy holders will cast your votes “for” the election of the nominees listed above. If, before the Annual Meeting, any nominee becomes unavailable to serve, the Board may identify a substitute for such nominee and treat votes “for” the unavailable nominee as votes “for” the substitute. We presently believe that each of the nominees named above will be available to serve.

No nominee has any current arrangement or understanding with Mattel or, to Mattel’s knowledge, any other person or persons, pursuant to which any nominee was or is to be selected as a director or nominee. None of the nominees has any familial relationship to any other nominee or to any executive officer of Mattel.

The Board, upon recommendations of the Governance and Social Responsibility Committee, selected nominees whose experiences, qualifications, attributes and skills in, among other things, leadership of large corporations, consumer products, international business, marketing and advertising, financial management and operations, information technology, commercial banking, investment banking, including mergers and acquisitions and business development, accounting, community outreach, corporate governance and public policy, led the Board to conclude that these persons should serve as our directors at this time. The Board also selected nominees with experience gained from past service with Mattel and situations confronting other companies that are comparable to those situations confronting Mattel.

 

  LOGO   Mattel, Inc.    2016 Proxy Statement               13


Table of Contents
  PROPOSAL 1 – ELECTION OF DIRECTORS          

 

For each nominee who is standing for election, set forth below is his or her name, age, tenure as a director of Mattel, and a description of his or her principal occupation, other business experience, public company and other directorships held during the past five years and educational degrees. The specific experiences, qualifications, attributes and skills that led the Board to conclude that each nominee should serve as a director at this time are described below.

 

 

MICHAEL J. DOLAN

 

  

Mr. Dolan has served as Chief Executive Officer of Bacardi Limited, the largest privately held spirits company in the world, since November 2014. From May 2014 to November 2014, he served as Interim Chief Executive Officer of Bacardi. From November 2011 to May 2014, he served as Chairman of the Board and Chief Executive Officer of IMG Worldwide, a global leader in sports, fashion and media entertainment. Prior to that, Mr. Dolan served at IMG as President and Chief Operating Officer, from April 2011 to November 2011, and before that as Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer, from April 2010 to April 2011. He served as Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer of Viacom, Inc., a leading global entertainment content company, from May 2004 to December 2006. Mr. Dolan served as Senior Advisor to Kohlberg Kravis Roberts & Co., a leading private equity firm with substantial investments in many large consumer retail companies, from October 2004 to May 2005. Prior to that, he served in the following positions with Young & Rubicam, Inc., a marketing and communications company: Chairman of the Board and Chief Executive Officer (2001 to 2003), Vice Chairman and Chief Operating Officer (2000 to 2001) and Vice Chairman and Chief Financial Officer (1996 to 2000). Mr. Dolan holds bachelor’s and master’s degrees from Fordham University, an MBA from Columbia University, and a Ph.D. from Cornell University.

 

Other Directorships/Advisory Affiliations

Mr. Dolan has served on the Board of Directors of Bacardi Limited (since 2009), where he served on the Audit Committee until 2014, the Board of Directors of the March of Dimes (since 2013) and the Board of Directors of Northside Center for Child Development (since 2003). Mr. Dolan has served as Chairman of the Board of America’s Choice, Inc., a developer of research-based school improvement solutions (2004 to 2010).

 

Key Experience/Director Qualifications

As a currently-serving Chief Executive Officer of a large global company, Mr. Dolan brings to Mattel’s Board leadership, finance, global retail and branding, strategic marketing and operations experience. Mr. Dolan also brings to Mattel’s Board a valuable perspective on the entertainment industry through his experience as the former Chief Executive Officer of IMG, which is important to Mattel since many of its most popular toys are derived from licensed entertainment properties. Also, Mr. Dolan’s long tenure with Young & Rubicam enables him to provide unique insights to Mattel, which is a large purchaser of advertising, in the areas of advertising and brand building. Mr. Dolan has gained valuable experience as the former Chief Financial Officer of IMG, Viacom and Young & Rubicam, where he dealt with complex accounting principles and judgments, internal controls, financial reporting rules and regulations, and evaluated the financial results and financial reporting processes of large companies. Mr. Dolan’s extensive business experience across a variety of industries and service on multiple boards make him well suited to be Mattel’s Independent Lead Director and to chair each of Mattel’s Compensation Committee and Executive Committee, and make him an important contributor to Mattel’s Governance and Social Responsibility Committee, on which he serves as a member.

 

LOGO

 

  

 

Age: 69

Director Since: 2004

 

  

 

Mattel Committee Memberships:

   Compensation Committee (Chair)

   Executive Committee (Chair)

   Governance and Social Responsibility Committee

 

  
  

 

14                LOGO   Mattel, Inc.    2016 Proxy Statement    


Table of Contents
          PROPOSAL 1 – ELECTION OF DIRECTORS  

 

 

 

TREVOR A. EDWARDS

 

  

Mr. Edwards has served as President, NIKE Brands of NIKE, Inc., the world’s leading designer, marketer and distributor of authentic athletic footwear, apparel, equipment and accessories for a wide variety of sports and fitness activities, since July 2013. From August 2006 through June 2013, Mr. Edwards served as Vice President, Global Brand & Category Management of NIKE. Mr. Edwards served as Vice President, Global Brand Management of NIKE from September 2002 to August 2006, and before that, as Vice President, U.S. Brand Marketing from 2000 to 2002, and as Vice President, EMEA Marketing from 1999 to 2000. He was NIKE’s Director of Marketing for Europe from 1997 to 1999 and the Director of Marketing for the Americas from 1995 to 1997. During his career at NIKE, Mr. Edwards has led some of the brand’s most significant break-through innovations, including spearheading the creation of NIKE+. In addition, he helped transform the digital landscape and position NIKE as a leader in the use of social media to connect with consumers globally. Mr. Edwards began his career at The Goldman Sachs Group, Inc. and has also held management positions at Colgate-Palmolive Company. Mr. Edwards holds a bachelor’s degree in business and an MBA from Baruch College, City University of New York.

 

Other Directorships/Advisory Affiliations

Mr. Edwards has served on the boards of the following non-profit entities: NIKE Foundation (since 2005) and Management Leadership for Tomorrow (since 2008).

 

Key Experience/Director Qualifications

Mr. Edwards brings to Mattel’s Board, the Governance and Social Responsibility Committee and the Compensation Committee on which he serves as a member, two decades of marketing and global brand management experience from a large, public company. His leadership, strategy and management skills in overseeing category business units globally and all brand management functions, including digital and advertising, sports marketing, brand design, public relations and retail marketing, provide a unique perspective on Mattel’s key goals and strategies for growth.

 

 

LOGO

  

 

Age: 53

Director Since: 2012

 

  

 

Mattel Committee Memberships:

   Compensation Committee

   Governance and Social Responsibility Committee

  
  
  
  

 

 

DR. FRANCES D. FERGUSSON

 

  

Dr. Fergusson served as President of Vassar College from 1986 to 2006. From 1982 to 1986, Dr. Fergusson was Provost and Vice President for academic affairs at Bucknell University. In 2011, Dr. Fergusson received the Harvard Medal for her outstanding service to the University. In 1999, she also received the Centennial Medal from Harvard’s Graduate School of Arts and Sciences. Dr. Fergusson holds a bachelor’s degree from Wellesley College and master’s and Ph.D. degrees from Harvard University.

 

Other Directorships/Advisory Affiliations

Dr. Fergusson has served on the Board of Directors of Pfizer Inc. (since 2009), where she is Chair of the Regulatory and Compliance Committee and serves on the Governance and Science & Technology Committees, the Ringling Foundation (since 2014), where she serves on the Executive Committee, The Getty Trust (since 2007), where she is Chair of the Compensation Committee and serves on the Finance Committee, and Second Stage Theatre (since 2006), where she serves on the Executive Committee. She has served on the Board of Directors of Wyeth Pharmaceuticals (2005-2009), where she served as Chair of the Nominating and Governance Committee and served on the Corporate Issues and Science & Technology Committees. She served as a director of HSBC Bank USA (1990-2008) and served on the Executive Committee and served as Chair of the Human Resources and Compensation Committee. Dr. Fergusson also has served on the boards of the following non-profit entities: The Mayo Clinic (1988-2002, Chair 1998-2002), Harvard University Board of Overseers (2002-2008, President 2007-2008), Vassar College

 

 

LOGO

  

 

Age: 71

Director Since: 2006

 

  

 

Mattel Committee Memberships:

   Executive Committee

   Finance Committee

   Governance and Social Responsibility Committee (Chair)

  

 

  LOGO   Mattel, Inc.    2016 Proxy Statement               15


Table of Contents
  PROPOSAL 1 – ELECTION OF DIRECTORS          

 

 

  

(President and Chair of the Executive Committee, 1986-2006), National Humanities Center (2006-2012), Foundation for Contemporary Arts (2006-2012), The Noguchi Foundation (1997-2007) and The School of American Ballet (2007-2015), where she chaired the Strategic Planning Committee.

 

Key Experience/Director Qualifications

As the former President of a major educational institution, Dr. Fergusson brings to Mattel’s Board her extensive general and financial management, leadership and strategic planning experience. Dr. Fergusson also brings to Mattel’s Governance and Social Responsibility Committee, on which she serves as Chair, as well as the Executive Committee and the Finance Committee, on which she serves as a member, her broad experience serving on the Boards of many large, highly-regarded for-profit and non-profit entities.

 

 

 ANN LEWNES

 

  

Ms. Lewnes has served as Senior Vice President and Chief Marketing Officer of Adobe Systems Incorporated, a diversified software company that provides digital marketing and digital media solutions, since November 2006. Prior to Adobe, Ms. Lewnes was employed for more than 20 years with Intel Corporation, a leading semiconductor manufacturing company that designs, manufactures and sells integrated digital technology platforms worldwide, serving most recently as Vice President, Sales & Marketing, from January 2000 to November 2006. In 2010, she was honored with a Changing The Game Award by the Advertising Women of New York. In 2000, she was elected to the American Advertising Federation’s Hall of Achievement. Ms. Lewnes holds a bachelor’s degree from Lehigh University.

 

Other Directorships/Advisory Affiliations

Ms. Lewnes has served on the Board of Directors of the Advertising Council (since 2009), where she served on the Executive Committee, and the Board of Directors of the Adobe Foundation since 2009, where she serves as Secretary.

 

Key Experience/Director Qualifications

As a global media and marketing leader in the technology industry, Ms. Lewnes brings to Mattel’s Board her strong leadership in branding, advertising, technology and financial management marketing. She also brings to Mattel’s Board and the Governance and Social Responsibility Committee experience in driving strategic growth and global demand at two public technology companies, as well as her experience serving on the boards of nonprofit entities. At Adobe, Ms. Lewnes is responsible for Adobe’s corporate brand, corporate communications and integrated marketing efforts worldwide and has spearheaded the transformation of the company’s global marketing efforts to be digital-first and data-driven. At Intel, Ms. Lewnes played a key role globally positioning the business and products to consumers, business professionals and key computer channels.

 

LOGO

 

  

 

Age: 54

Director Since: 2015

 

  

 

Mattel Committee Memberships:

   Governance and Social Responsibility Committee

  
  

 

16                LOGO   Mattel, Inc.    2016 Proxy Statement    


Table of Contents
          PROPOSAL 1 – ELECTION OF DIRECTORS  

 

 

 

 DOMINIC NG

 

  

Mr. Ng has served as Chairman of the Board and Chief Executive Officer of East West Bancorp, Inc. and East West Bank, one of the largest banks based in California, since 1992, and served as President from 1992 to 2009. Prior to that, Mr. Ng served as President of Seyen Investment, Inc., from 1990 to 1992, and before that Mr. Ng spent a decade practicing as a certified public accountant with Deloitte & Touche LLP. From 2005 to 2011, Mr. Ng served as a director of the Los Angeles Branch of the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco. Mr. Ng transformed East West Bank from a small savings and loan association based in Los Angeles into a full service commercial bank with over 130 locations worldwide. Ranked in the top 10 of the 100 Best Banks in America by Forbes for four consecutive years (2010-2013) and rated among the 25 largest U.S. banks by market capitalization, East West Bank is a leading commercial bank that is widely known as the financial bridge between the United States and Greater China. Mr. Ng holds a bachelor’s degree from the University of Houston, an honorary doctor of law degree from Occidental College and an honorary fellowship from Lingnan University in Hong Kong.

 

Other Directorships/Advisory Affiliations

Mr. Ng has served on the Board of Trustees of the University of Southern California (since 2014) and was a Member of the Keck School of Medicine Board of Overseers (since 2016). He also served on the Board of Directors of the Committee of 100, an international, non-profit, non-partisan, membership organization that promotes constructive relations between the people of the United States and Greater China (since 2011) and was Chairman of the Committee of 100 (2011-2014). Mr. Ng also has served on the boards of the following non-profit entities and government organizations: the United Way of Greater Los Angeles (2006-2014), The Bowers Museum (2004-2014), Pacific Council on International Policy (2010-2013), California Bankers Association (2002-2011), Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco – Los Angeles Branch (2005-2010), Los Angeles’ Mayor’s Trade Advisory Council as Co-Chair(2009-2011), and Southern California Committee for 2016 Olympic Games (2006-2010).

 

Key Experience/Director Qualifications

As a certified public accountant, Mr. Ng has gained valuable experience dealing with complex accounting principles and judgments, internal controls, financial reporting rules and regulations, and evaluating financial results and financial reporting processes of large companies. Mr. Ng brings all of this experience to Mattel’s Audit Committee where he serves, along with Messrs. Prabhu and Van de Put, as one of the Committee’s three Audit Committee Financial Experts, and to the Finance Committee, on which he also serves as a member. Mr. Ng’s extensive experience conducting business in China is extremely valuable to Mattel because of Mattel’s large manufacturing presence in China. Mr. Ng also brings to Mattel’s Board extensive business and governmental connections in the State of California and the City of Los Angeles, where Mattel is headquartered.

 

LOGO

 

  

 

Age: 57

Director Since: 2006

 

  

 

Mattel Committee Memberships:

    Audit Committee

    Finance Committee

  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  

 

  LOGO   Mattel, Inc.    2016 Proxy Statement               17


Table of Contents
  PROPOSAL 1 – ELECTION OF DIRECTORS          

 

 

 

 VASANT M. PRABHU

 

  

Mr. Prabhu has served as Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer of Visa Inc., the world’s largest consumer payments technology company, since February 2015. From May 2014 to February 2015, he served as Chief Financial Officer of NBCUniversal, one of the world’s leading media and entertainment companies. From March 2010 to May 2014, he served as Vice Chairman and Chief Financial Officer of Starwood Hotels and Resorts Worldwide, Inc., one of the world’s largest hotel and leisure companies. From 2004 to March 2010, he served as Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer of Starwood. From 2000 to 2003, Mr. Prabhu served as Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer of Safeway, Inc. From 1998 to 2000, Mr. Prabhu served as President of the Information and Media Group of McGraw-Hill. Mr. Prabhu served as Senior Vice President Finance & Chief Financial Officer of Pepsi International from 1992 to 1998. Mr. Prabhu holds a bachelor’s degree in Engineering from the Indian Institute of Technology, Mumbai, India, and an MBA in Marketing and Finance from the University of Chicago.

 

Other Directorships/Advisory Affiliations

Mr. Prabhu has served on the Board of Directors of the U.S. India Business Counsel (2013-2014). Mr. Prabhu has served as a director and member of the Audit and Compensation Committees of the Board of Directors of Knight Ridder (2003-2006).

 

Key Experience/Director Qualifications

As Chief Financial Officer of a number of large public companies, Mr. Prabhu brings to Mattel’s Board extensive experience dealing with complex accounting principles and judgments, internal controls, financial reporting rules and regulations, and evaluating financial results and financial reporting processes of large companies. Mr. Prabhu brings this experience to Mattel’s Audit Committee, where he serves both as Chair, and along with Messrs. Ng and Van de Put, as one of the Committee’s three Audit Committee Financial Experts. He also brings this experience to the Finance Committee and Executive Committee, on which he serves as a member. As Senior Vice President Finance & Chief Financial Officer of Pepsi International, Mr. Prabhu was responsible for the company’s franchise and had oversight of operations in more than 100 countries. His global management and finance experience are also important to Mattel, given Mattel’s significant international operations.

 

 

LOGO

  

 

Age: 56

Director Since: 2007

 

  

 

Mattel Committee Memberships:

   Audit Committee (Chair)

   Executive Committee

   Finance Committee

  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  

 

 

 DEAN A. SCARBOROUGH

 

  

Mr. Scarborough has served as Chief Executive Officer of Avery Dennison Corporation, an industry leader that develops innovative identification and decorative solutions for businesses and consumers worldwide, since May 2005, and has served as Chairman of the Board of Avery since April 2010. In addition, he served as President of Avery from May 2000 through October 2014. From 2000 to May 2005, Mr. Scarborough served as President and Chief Operating Officer of Avery. He also has served on Avery’s Board of Directors since May 2000. Mr. Scarborough holds a bachelor’s degree from Hiram College and an MBA from the University of Chicago.

 

Other Directorships/Advisory Affiliations

As discussed above, Mr. Scarborough has served as Chairman of the Board of Avery since 2010 and a director of Avery since 2000.

 

Key Experience/Director Qualifications

As a currently-serving Chief Executive Officer of a large public company, Mr. Scarborough brings to Mattel’s Board deep management, brand building, leadership, finance, global retail and operations experience that makes him an important contributor to the Board, the Compensation Committee and the Executive Committee, on which he serves as a member, and the Finance Committee, on which he serves as Chair. He has extensive experience in retail and distribution channels, enabling Mr. Scarborough to provide valuable perspective and insights in these areas. He also brings to Mattel’s Board his experience serving on the Board of Directors of another large public company. Mr. Scarborough is a prominent member of the Los Angeles business community, where Mattel is headquartered.

 

 

LOGO

  

 

Age: 60

Director Since: 2007

 

  

 

Mattel Committee Memberships:

   Compensation Committee

   Executive Committee

   Finance Committee (Chair)

  
  

 

18                LOGO   Mattel, Inc.    2016 Proxy Statement    


Table of Contents
          PROPOSAL 1 – ELECTION OF DIRECTORS  

 

 

 

 CHRISTOPHER A. SINCLAIR

 

  

Mr. Sinclair has served as Chief Executive Officer of Mattel, Inc. since April 2015, and has served as Chairman of the Board of Mattel since January 2015. He also served as Interim Chief Executive Officer of Mattel from January 2015 to April 2015. Prior to assuming the role of Chairman of the Board and Interim Chief Executive Officer, Mr. Sinclair served as the Independent Lead Director, Chairman of the Audit Committee and Chairman of the Executive Committee since 2011. From May 2002 until his retirement in July 2008, he served as Executive Chairman of Scandent Holdings, an information technology investment company. From August 2005 to January 2009, he also served as Executive Chairman of Cambridge Solutions Corporation, Ltd., a leader in providing information technology and business process outsourcing services. He served as a Managing Director of Manticore Partners, LLC, a venture capital advisory firm, from June 2000 to June 2005, as an Operating Partner of Pegasus Capital Advisors, LP, a private equity firm, from February 2000 to August 2002, and as Chairman of the Board and Chief Executive Officer of Caribiner International, Inc. from December 1998 to May 2000. Prior to that, he served as President and Chief Executive Officer of Quality Food, Inc., Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of Pepsi-Cola Company and President and Chief Executive Officer of PepsiCo Foods & Beverages International and Pepsi-Cola International for more than five years. Mr. Sinclair holds a bachelor’s degree in Business Administration from the University of Kansas and an MBA from the Tuck School of Business at Dartmouth College.

 

Other Directorships/Advisory Affiliations

In addition to the directorships listed above, Mr. Sinclair has served on the Board of Directors of Reckitt Benckiser Group plc (since 2015), where he served on the Nominating and Audit Committees, and has previously served on the Board of Directors of Foot Locker, Inc. (1995-2008), where he served on the Finance and Compensation Committees, and Perdue Farms (1992-2000). While serving on the Board of Directors of Cambridge Solutions Corporation, Ltd. (2005-2009), he served on the Compensation and Audit Committees.

 

Key Experience/Director Qualifications

Mr. Sinclair brings to Mattel’s Board invaluable management, leadership and strategic experience across a variety of industries, and during his tenure as a director of Mattel he has gained a deep understanding of Mattel’s business and the toy industry and its cycles. He was responsible for building Pepsi-Cola’s international business, and as a result, he also brings substantial global business experience to Mattel’s Board. As a former Chief Executive Officer of a large, multinational, multibrand consumer products company like Pepsi-Cola, Mr. Sinclair also gained front-line exposure to many of the issues facing a public company like Mattel, particularly on the operational, financial and corporate governance fronts, making Mr. Sinclair an important contributor to the Board. As noted above, Mr. Sinclair has extensive board experience, having served on the boards of numerous companies, including a number of emerging market growth ventures such as The Water Initiative (since 2008) and Biovittoria, Ltd. (2009-2014).

 

LOGO

 

  

 

Age: 65

Director Since: 1996

 

  

 

Mattel Committee Memberships:

   Equity Grant Allocation Committee

  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  

 

  LOGO   Mattel, Inc.    2016 Proxy Statement               19


Table of Contents
  PROPOSAL 1 – ELECTION OF DIRECTORS          

 

 

 

 DIRK VAN DE PUT

 

  

Mr. Van de Put has served as President and Chief Executive Officer of McCain Foods Limited, an international leader in the frozen food industry, since July 2011. From May 2010 to July 2011, he served as Chief Operating Officer of McCain Foods, and he has served on the Board of Directors of McCain Foods since May 2010. From September 2009 to May 2010, he served as President of the Global Over-the-Counter, Consumer Health division of Novartis AG, a world leader in innovative healthcare products. From 2007 to 2009, he served as President of the Americas division at Groupe Danone, a leader in the food industry in packaged water, dairy and baby food products. Mr. Van de Put served as President of the Latin America division at Groupe Danone from 1998 to 2007. In 1998, Mr. Van de Put served as President of the Caribbean division of The Coca-Cola Company and served as Vice President of the Value Chain Management, Brazil division of The Coca-Cola Company from 1997 to 1998. Mr. Van de Put holds a doctorate in veterinary medicine from the University of Ghent and an MBA from the University of Antwerp.

 

Other Directorships/Advisory Affiliations

Mr. Van de Put serves on the Board of Directors of the Consumer Goods Forum, a worldwide organization that represents hundreds of consumer product good companies and grocery retailers (since 2013).

 

Key Experience/Director Qualifications

As a currently-serving President, Chief Executive Officer and member of the Board of Directors of a large, multinational corporation, Mr. Van de Put brings to Mattel’s Board invaluable management, finance, leadership, international, global retail and operations expertise. Mr. Van de Put contributes to Mattel’s Board extensive and diversified management experience in large public and private companies in the global retail and consumer packaged goods industries. Mr. Van de Put also brings all of this experience to Mattel’s Audit Committee where he serves, along with Messrs. Prabhu and Ng, as one of the Committee’s three Audit Committee Financial Experts, and to the Governance and Social Responsibility Committee, where he also serves as a member.

 

LOGO

 

  

 

Age: 55

Director Since: 2011

 

  

 

Mattel Committee Memberships:

   Audit Committee

   Governance and Social Responsibility Committee

  
  
  
  

 

 

 KATHY WHITE LOYD

 

  

Ms. White Loyd has served as Executive in Residence and Faculty Member at the Bryan School of Business & Economics at the University of North Carolina – Greensboro since August 2013. She founded both the Horizon Institute of Technology (in 2002) and Rural Sourcing, Inc. (in 2003) to support information technology education and outreach. Ms. White Loyd served as Executive Vice President, e-business and Chief Information Officer of Cardinal Health, Inc. from 1999 to 2003, where she was responsible for directing the company’s strategic use of information systems and the e-business organization. From 1996 to 1999, Ms. White Loyd was Senior Vice President and Chief Information Officer for Allegiance Corporation, which merged with Cardinal Health, Inc. in 1999. From 1981 to 1991, she was a tenured professor of information technology at the Bryan School of Business at the University of North Carolina. Ms. White Loyd holds a bachelor’s degree in Business Education and an MBA from Arkansas State University, and an Ed.D. in Business Education from the University of Memphis.

 

Other Directorships/Advisory Affiliations

Ms. White Loyd has served on the Board of Directors of Novell, Inc. (2003-2010), where she was a member of the Compensation and Corporate Governance Committees. She also served on the Board of the University of North Carolina Educational Foundation (2005-2009).

 

 

LOGO

 

  

 

Age: 66

Director Since: 2001

 

  

 

Mattel Committee Memberships:

   Audit Committee

   Compensation Committee

  

 

20                LOGO   Mattel, Inc.    2016 Proxy Statement    


Table of Contents
          PROPOSAL 1 – ELECTION OF DIRECTORS  

 

  

Key Experience/Director Qualifications

As a former Chief Information Officer and an information management leader, Ms. White Loyd brings to Mattel’s Board unique insights into the strategic use of information technology as a competitive advantage. Such experience as well as her public company experience make Ms. White Loyd an important contributor to the Board and the Audit Committee and Compensation Committee, on which she serves as a member.

Recommendation

THE BOARD RECOMMENDS A VOTE FOR EACH OF THE NOMINEES NAMED HEREIN FOR ELECTION AS DIRECTORS.

 

  LOGO   Mattel, Inc.    2016 Proxy Statement               21


Table of Contents
  THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS AND CORPORATE GOVERNANCE          

 

THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS AND CORPORATE GOVERNANCE

BOARD INDEPENDENCE AND ACCOUNTABILITY

Board Independence Determination

 

Mattel’s Board has adopted Corporate Governance Guidelines consistent with Nasdaq listing standards that include qualifications for determining director independence. These provisions incorporate Nasdaq’s categories of relationships between a director and a listed company that would make a director ineligible to be independent.

The Board has affirmatively determined that each of the current directors of Mattel, except Christopher A. Sinclair, our CEO, is independent within the meaning of both Mattel’s and Nasdaq’s director independence standards, as currently in effect, and has no relationship that would interfere with the exercise of independent judgment in carrying out the responsibilities of a director. Furthermore, the Board has determined that each of the members of our Audit Committee, Compensation Committee and Governance and Social Responsibility Committee is independent within the meaning of Nasdaq director independence standards applicable to members of such committees, as currently in effect. The Audit Committee members also meet the specific membership criteria for members of audit committees under the applicable Nasdaq listing standards and SEC rules. The Compensation Committee members also qualify as “non-employee directors” and “outside directors” within the meaning of Section 16 of the Securities and Exchange Act of 1934, as amended (“Exchange Act”) and Section 162(m) of the Internal Revenue Code, respectively.

In making these determinations, the Board considered, among other things, ordinary course commercial relationships with companies at which Board members then served as executive officers (including Adobe Systems Incorporated and Avery Dennison Corporation). The aggregate annual amounts involved in these commercial transactions were less than the greater of $200,000 or 5% of the annual consolidated gross revenues of these companies, and our Board members were not deemed to have a direct or indirect material interest in those transactions. The Board has determined that none of these relationships are material and that none of these relationships impair the independence of any non-employee director.

Board Evaluations

 

The Board conducts an annual self-evaluation process to assess effectiveness at both the Board and Committee levels. The three key areas of focus for the evaluation are Board operations, Board accountability and Board Committee performance. The Chair of the Governance and Social Responsibility Committee is responsible for leading the annual review and makes herself available for private sessions with Board members during the evaluation process. Comments are aggregated, summarized and reviewed with the full Governance and Social Responsibility Committee. The results of the evaluation are then reviewed with each Committee and the full Board.

 

22                LOGO   Mattel, Inc.    2016 Proxy Statement    


Table of Contents
          THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS AND CORPORATE GOVERNANCE  

 

This annual evaluation process has resulted in several improvements in Board effectiveness, including enhanced agenda item selection, better discussion formats and greater interaction with Mattel’s CEO and management team. In addition, the Governance and Social Responsibility Committee conducts an annual review of our Board’s composition and skillsets and makes recommendations to the Board accordingly. This review includes an assessment of the talent base, skills, areas of expertise and experience, diversity and independence of the Board and its members, and consideration of any recent changes in a director’s outside employment and responsibilities.

Director Succession and Search Process

 

The Board has a robust director succession and search process. The Board retains a third-party, independent search firm to assist with the search for new effective directors. The Board has worked diligently to ensure the right balance between long-term, institutional knowledge and fresh perspectives on the Board. While three of the directors have been on the Board for over 10 years, the Board has also added three new independent directors in the past five years. The Board continues to be very thoughtful and proactive about this process.

Board Leadership Structure

 

The Board believes that one of its most important responsibilities is to evaluate and determine the most appropriate Board leadership structure for Mattel so that it can provide effective, independent oversight of management and facilitate its engagement in, and understanding of, Mattel’s business. To carry out this responsibility, Mattel’s corporate governance documents empower the Board to evaluate and determine the optimal leadership structure for the Company in relation to Mattel’s specific characteristics or circumstances at any given time. As part of its evaluation, the Board assesses which structure is in the best interests of Mattel and its stockholders, and retains the authority to determine the most effective leadership structure for the Company, including separating the positions of Chairman and CEO, when they believe it is appropriate. This governance structure provides the Board maximum flexibility to determine the leadership structure best suited to support the business.

The Board most recently conducted its evaluation of Board leadership structure following our Chairman and CEO transition in January 2015. At that time, Mr. Sinclair, formerly the Board’s Independent Lead Director, was appointed as Chairman and Interim CEO. In April 2015, Mr. Sinclair was appointed Chairman and CEO by the independent directors of the Board. Following a thoughtful evaluation of the appropriate leadership structure and in consideration of feedback received through stockholder engagement, the Board determined that having combined Chairman and CEO positions, counterbalanced by a strong, independent Board led by an Independent Lead Director, best serves Mattel and its stockholders at this time.

Mr. Sinclair served as an independent director on the Board since 1996, and as Independent Lead Director and Chair of the Audit Committee and Executive Committee since 2011. Through his experience as a director and long history of overseeing the Company’s management team, Mr. Sinclair has developed in-depth knowledge of Mattel’s operations as well as the markets in which Mattel competes. In addition, Mr. Sinclair’s substantial experience leading global, multi-brand, consumer-focused companies makes him particularly well suited to lead the Company in the Chairman and CEO roles.

 

  LOGO   Mattel, Inc.    2016 Proxy Statement               23


Table of Contents
  THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS AND CORPORATE GOVERNANCE          

 

The Board continues to believe that it is best for Mattel and its stockholders to have the same individual serve as Chairman and CEO. This promotes decisive, unified leadership as well as clarity with respect to responsibility and accountability. Furthermore, a combined Chairman and CEO acts as an effective bridge between management and the Board, encouraging, along with the Independent Lead Director, strong information flows so that both groups act with a common purpose. This structure also facilitates short-term crisis management and long-term strategic planning. The CEO has an in-depth knowledge of Mattel’s operations, as well as the industries and markets in which Mattel competes. As such, the Board believes that the CEO, rather than an outside director, will be in the best position to bring valuable insights, business issues, market opportunities and risks to the Board’s attention for review and deliberation. Most importantly, combining the roles of Chairman and CEO builds a cohesive corporate culture, allowing Mattel to speak with a single voice both inside and outside the Company.

To counterbalance Mr. Sinclair’s leadership role as Chairman and CEO, the independent members of the Board elected an Independent Lead Director with specifically enumerated powers and responsibilities to provide consistent oversight of management during the turnaround (see below for additional details). This structure strikes the optimal balance between unified leadership and effective independent oversight for Mattel at this time. Going forward, our Board will continue to evaluate its leadership structure in order to ensure it aligns with and supports the evolving needs and circumstances of the Company and its stockholders.

Independent Lead Director Responsibilities

 

The Board recognizes the importance of strong independent Board leadership. As such, the independent directors of the Board elect an Independent Lead Director when the Chairman is not independent. The Board believes that the Independent Lead Director provides the same independent leadership, oversight and benefits for the Company and Board that would be provided by an independent Chairman.

 

The Independent Lead Director’s duties include the following significant responsibilities:

ü    Presides at all meetings of the Board at which the Chairman is not present, including executive sessions of the independent directors;

ü    Serves as liaison between the Chairman and the independent directors;

ü    Approves information sent to the Board;

ü    Approves meeting agendas for the Board;

ü    Approves schedules of meetings to assure that there is sufficient time for discussion of all agenda items;

ü    Has the authority to call meetings of the independent directors; and

ü    If requested by major stockholders, ensures that he is available for consultation and direct communication.

The independent directors of the Board have appointed Mr. Dolan to serve as the Board’s Independent Lead Director. Mr. Dolan has significant experience on the Board, serving as an independent director on the Board since 2004 and as Chair of the Compensation Committee and the Executive Committee, and as a member of the Governance and Social Responsibility Committee. The Board believes that Mr. Dolan’s extensive business experience across a variety of industries, unique insights in the areas of advertising and brand building, and service on multiple boards of directors make him well qualified to serve as Independent Lead Director of Mattel. The Board believes that the appointment of Mr. Sinclair as Chairman and CEO and Mr. Dolan as Independent Lead Director best serves Mattel and its stockholders at this time, as the Company executes on its turnaround to drive growth and improved profitability.

 

24                LOGO   Mattel, Inc.    2016 Proxy Statement    


Table of Contents
          THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS AND CORPORATE GOVERNANCE  

 

BOARD RESPONSIBILITIES

Robust Stockholder Engagement

 

In 2015, we enhanced our stockholder engagement efforts to gain a better understanding of stockholder perspectives on a range of board, governance and compensation matters of particular importance to Mattel. An independent member of our Board together with our management met with stockholders representing more than 40%, in total, of Mattel’s outstanding shares. We gathered important feedback from our stockholders on topics including our turnaround strategy, board leadership structure, corporate governance practices and our executive compensation program. These engagement efforts informed certain changes made by the Compensation Committee to our executive compensation programs in 2016. We will continue to reach out to our stockholders going forward to help inform boardroom discussions on critical Board, governance and compensation matters.

Risk Oversight

 

Role of Full Board in Risk Oversight

The full Board is responsible for overseeing Mattel’s ongoing assessment and management of material risks impacting Mattel’s business. The Board relies on Mattel’s management to identify and report on material risks, and relies on each of the Board’s committees to oversee management of specific risks related to each committee’s function. The Board engages in risk oversight throughout the year and specifically focuses on risks facing Mattel each year at a regularly scheduled Board meeting.

Role of Management in Risk Oversight

Consistent with their role as active managers of Mattel’s business, our senior executive officers play the most active role in risk management, and the Board looks to such officers to keep the Board apprised on an ongoing basis about risks impacting Mattel’s business and how such risks are being managed. Each year as part of Mattel’s risk evaluation process performed by its internal audit team, Mattel’s most senior executive officers, including the Chief Legal Officer, provide input regarding material risks facing the business group or function that each manages. These risks are reviewed with the Audit Committee and also are presented to the full Board along with a discussion of Mattel’s strategy for managing these risks. Since much of the Board’s risk oversight occurs at the committee level, Mattel believes that this process is important to ensure that all directors are aware of Mattel’s most material risks.

Role of Board Committees in Risk Oversight

The Board’s committees assist the full Board in overseeing many of the risks impacting Mattel’s business.

The Audit Committee oversees the Company’s assessment and management of Mattel’s material financial reporting and accounting risks, including the steps management has taken to monitor and control such risks. The Audit Committee is also responsible for overseeing Mattel’s compliance risk, which includes risk relating to Mattel’s compliance with laws and regulations.

The Compensation Committee oversees and assesses material risks associated with Mattel’s compensation structure, policies and programs generally, including those that may relate to pay mix, selection of

 

  LOGO   Mattel, Inc.    2016 Proxy Statement               25


Table of Contents
  THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS AND CORPORATE GOVERNANCE          

 

performance measures, the goal setting process, and the checks and balances on the payment of compensation. See “Compensation Risk Review” for a more detailed description of the Compensation Committee’s review of potential pay risk.

The Finance Committee oversees and reviews with management risks relating to capital allocation and deployment, including Mattel’s credit facilities and debt securities, capital expenditures, dividend policy, and mergers and acquisitions. The Finance Committee also oversees third-party financial risks, which includes risks arising from customers, suppliers, subcontractors, creditors, debtors, counterparties in hedging transactions and others.

The Governance and Social Responsibility Committee oversees and reviews with management risks relating to governance and social responsibility matters, including succession planning, environmental and health and safety compliance, sustainability, corporate citizenship, community involvement, global manufacturing principles, diversity and equal opportunity, philanthropy and charitable contributions, and public policy and governmental relations.

Exclusive Forum Provision

 

On August 26, 2015, the Board amended Mattel’s Amended and Restated Bylaws (the “Bylaws”) to include an exclusive forum provision that specifies the courts of the State of Delaware as the exclusive forum for stockholders to file derivative and other corporate law claims. This amendment was adopted in accordance with recent changes to the Delaware General Corporation Law, effective August 1, 2015, which explicitly authorized Delaware corporations to adopt exclusive forum selection provisions such as the provisions in the amendment to our Bylaws.

The Board determined that adoption of this provision is in the best interests of Mattel and its stockholders for a number of reasons, including, among others, the importance of preventing unnecessary diversion of corporate resources to address costly, wasteful and duplicative multi-forum litigation, facilitating increased consistency and predictability in litigation outcomes for the benefit of Mattel and its stockholders and recent statutory developments in Delaware and case law developments in other jurisdictions upholding the Board’s authority to adopt such bylaws and their validity. In making its determination, the Board considered the fact that Mattel had directly experienced the burdens and high costs of such duplicative, multi-forum litigation in connection with actions filed in 2006 and 2007. Had the Bylaws included an exclusive forum provision at that time, Mattel would have been able to limit plaintiffs’ ability to pick, choose and strategically switch forums, thereby reducing Mattel’s costs as well the risk of inconsistent decisions by different courts. The Board also determined that the amendment preserves the ability of the Company to consent to an alternative forum and, importantly, preserves the ability of stockholders to bring, subject to applicable law, the kinds of litigation addressed by the amendment.

 

26                LOGO   Mattel, Inc.    2016 Proxy Statement    


Table of Contents
          THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS AND CORPORATE GOVERNANCE  

 

BOARD GENERAL INFORMATION

Board Meetings

 

During 2015, the Board held eight meetings. No director attended less than 75% of the aggregate of all Board meetings and all meetings held by any committee of the Board on which he or she served.

Policy Regarding Attendance of Directors at the Annual Meeting of Stockholders

 

Each member of Mattel’s Board is expected, but not required, to attend Mattel’s annual meeting of stockholders. There were 10 directors at the time of the 2015 Annual Meeting of Stockholders and nine directors attended the meeting.

Board Committees

 

Our Board has established six principal committees: the Audit Committee, the Governance and Social Responsibility Committee, the Compensation Committee, the Executive Committee, the Finance Committee and the Equity Grant Allocation Committee. Each of the Audit Committee, the Governance and Social Responsibility Committee and the Compensation Committee has a written charter that is reviewed annually and revised as appropriate. A copy of each of these committees’ current charter is available on our website at http://corporate.mattel.com/about-us/bios.aspx.

The current chairs and members of the committees are identified in the following table:

 

Director   Audit
Committee
  Governance
and Social
Responsibility
Committee
  Compensation
Committee
  Executive
Committee
  Finance
Committee
  Equity
Grant
Allocation
Committee

Non-Employee Directors

           

Michael J. Dolan*

      M   C   C        

Trevor A. Edwards

      M   M            

Dr. Frances D. Fergusson

      C       M   M    

Ann Lewnes

      M                

Dominic Ng

  M               M    

Vasant M. Prabhu

  C           M   M    

Dean A. Scarborough

          M   M   C    

Dirk Van de Put

  M   M                

Kathy White Loyd

  M       M            

Employee Director

           

Christopher A. Sinclair

                      M

“C” Chair

“M” Member

* Independent Lead Director

 

  LOGO   Mattel, Inc.    2016 Proxy Statement               27


Table of Contents
  THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS AND CORPORATE GOVERNANCE          

 

Audit Committee

The Board has determined that each member of the Audit Committee meets the SEC and Nasdaq independence requirements for members of audit committees. The Board has further determined that each member of the Audit Committee satisfies the “financial sophistication” requirements of the Nasdaq listing standards, and that Mr. Prabhu, the Chair of the Audit Committee, and Messrs. Ng and Van de Put are all “Audit Committee Financial Experts,” as such term is defined under SEC rules.

During 2015, the Audit Committee held 12 meetings.

The purpose of the Audit Committee is to provide assistance to the Board in fulfilling the Board’s oversight responsibilities regarding:

 

  The quality and integrity of Mattel’s financial reports;

 

  The independence, qualifications and performance of Mattel’s independent registered public accounting firm;

 

  The performance of Mattel’s internal audit function; and

 

  Mattel’s compliance with legal and regulatory requirements.

The Audit Committee has the sole authority to appoint or replace the independent registered public accounting firm. The committee is directly responsible for the compensation and oversight of the work of the independent registered public accounting firm for the purpose of preparing or issuing an audit report or related work. The independent registered public accounting firm reports directly to the committee.

Additional duties and responsibilities of the Audit Committee are outlined in the committee’s charter and include the following:

 

  To meet with the independent registered public accounting firm and management in connection with each annual audit to discuss the scope of the audit and the procedures to be followed;

 

  To review and discuss Mattel’s quarterly and annual financial statements with management, the independent registered public accounting firm and the internal audit group;

 

  To discuss with management and the independent registered public accounting firm Mattel’s practices with respect to risk assessment, risk management and critical accounting policies;

 

  To review periodically with the Chief Legal Officer the implementation and effectiveness of Mattel’s compliance and ethics programs;

 

  To discuss periodically with the independent registered public accounting firm and the senior internal auditing officer the adequacy and effectiveness of Mattel’s accounting and financial controls, and consider any recommendations for improvement of such internal control procedures; and

 

  To pre-approve audit services, internal-control-related services and permitted non-audit services to be performed for Mattel by its independent registered public accounting firm.

Governance and Social Responsibility Committee

All of the members of the Governance and Social Responsibility Committee are independent directors.

During 2015, the Governance and Social Responsibility Committee held four meetings.

 

28                LOGO   Mattel, Inc.    2016 Proxy Statement    


Table of Contents
          THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS AND CORPORATE GOVERNANCE  

 

The primary purposes of the Governance and Social Responsibility Committee are:

 

  To assist the Board by identifying individuals qualified to become Board members, consistent with the criteria approved by the Board, and to select, or to recommend that the Board select, the director nominees for the next annual meeting of stockholders;

 

  To assist the Board in evaluating potential executive candidates in succession planning;

 

  To develop and recommend to the Board the Corporate Governance Guidelines applicable to Mattel;

 

  To lead the evaluation of the Board’s performance;

 

  To evaluate, and make recommendations to the Board regarding, the independence of the Board members;

 

  To recommend director nominees for each committee of the Board;

 

  To assist the Board with oversight and review of social responsibility matters such as sustainability, corporate citizenship, community involvement, diversity and equal opportunity matters, global manufacturing principles, public policy matters and environmental, health and safety issues; and

 

  To provide oversight with regard to philanthropic activities.

The committee also works closely with the CEO and other members of Mattel’s management to ensure that Mattel is governed effectively and efficiently.

Compensation Committee

All of the members of the Compensation Committee are independent directors. We intend that the members also qualify as “outside directors” within the meaning of Section 162(m) of the Internal Revenue Code and as “non-employee directors” within the meaning of the Rule 16b-3 of the Exchange Act.

During 2015, the Compensation Committee held seven meetings.

The purpose of the Compensation Committee is to develop, evaluate and, in certain instances, approve or determine the compensation structure, plans, programs and practices of Mattel. The committee has the authority to undertake and may exercise all of the powers of the Board with respect to the specific responsibilities listed in the committee’s charter, including:

 

  Approving all forms of compensation to be provided to the CEO and all other executives who are subject to Section 16 of the Exchange Act;

 

  Annually reviewing and approving corporate goals and objectives relevant to the CEO, and reviewing and evaluating the CEO’s performance;

 

  Administering Mattel’s short- and long-term incentive programs and equity compensation plans;

 

  Reviewing the form and amount of non-employee directors’ compensation; and

 

  Assessing material risks associated with our compensation structure, policies and programs generally.

In performing its duties, the Compensation Committee reports and, as appropriate, makes recommendations to the Board regarding executive compensation programs and practices. The Compensation Committee also informs the non-management directors of the Board of its decisions regarding compensation for the CEO and other senior executives.

 

  LOGO   Mattel, Inc.    2016 Proxy Statement               29


Table of Contents
  THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS AND CORPORATE GOVERNANCE          

 

The Compensation Committee has access to, and in its discretion may meet with, any officer or other employee of Mattel or its subsidiaries. The committee meets at least once each calendar year without the CEO present and often has executive sessions where no Mattel officer or employee is present. The committee has the authority to retain independent legal or other advisors, to the extent it deems necessary or appropriate.

The Compensation Committee has retained Frederic W. Cook & Co., Inc. (“Cook & Co.”) as its independent compensation consultant since August 2007 to provide the committee with advice and guidance on the design of our executive compensation programs and the evaluation of our executive compensation. Cook & Co. has not performed and does not currently provide any services to management or Mattel. Each year the Compensation Committee reviews the independence of the compensation consultants and other advisors who provide advice to the Compensation Committee, employing the independence factors specified in the Nasdaq listing standards. The Compensation Committee has determined that Cook & Co. is independent within the meaning of the committee’s charter and Nasdaq listing standards, and the work of Cook & Co. for the committee does not raise any conflicts of interest. Cook & Co. attends Compensation Committee meetings when invited and meets with the Compensation Committee without management. Cook & Co. provides the Compensation Committee with third-party data and analysis as well as advice and expertise on competitive compensation practices and trends, executive compensation plan and program design, and proposed executive and director compensation. Cook & Co. reports directly to the Compensation Committee and, as directed by the Compensation Committee, works with management and the Chairman of the Compensation Committee. In 2015, Cook & Co. assisted the Compensation Committee on the following matters:

 

  Analyzing and advising on:

 

    The base salaries, target and actual annual incentives, bonus leverage, long-term incentives, target and actual total direct compensation (“TDC”) and all other compensation for our CEO, his direct reports and other EVPs as compared to the compensation of their counterparts at our comparator peer companies;

 

    Our MIP design, provisions and practices; and

 

    Our LTI design, provisions and practices;

 

  Reviewing and advising regarding our comparator peer companies;

 

  Assessing if our compensation structure, plans, programs and practices present any risk;

 

  Reviewing and advising on our 2015 Proxy Statement;

 

  Reviewing and advising on our Amended and Restated 2010 Equity and Long-Term Compensation Plan;

 

  Providing executive compensation regulatory and legislative updates; and

 

  Advising regarding institutional advisers’ voting policies and market trends.

The Compensation Committee retains its authority over, and is responsible for, all compensation decisions.

Other Board Committees

All of the members of the Executive Committee are independent directors. During 2015, the Executive Committee held two meetings. The Executive Committee may exercise all the powers of the Board, subject to limitations of applicable law, between meetings of the Board.

 

30                LOGO   Mattel, Inc.    2016 Proxy Statement    


Table of Contents
          THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS AND CORPORATE GOVERNANCE  

 

All of the members of the Finance Committee are independent directors. During 2015, the Finance Committee held five meetings. The committee’s primary functions are to advise and make recommendations to the Board with regard to Mattel’s use of available capital, including but not limited to dividends to stockholders, mergers and acquisitions and stock repurchase programs.

Mattel also has an Equity Grant Allocation Committee with Mr. Sinclair as the current sole member since January 2015. The Equity Grant Allocation Committee’s primary function is to exercise the limited authority delegated to the committee by the Board and the Compensation Committee with regard to making annual and off-cycle equity compensation grants to employees below the executive leadership job level.

Code of Conduct

 

Our Board has adopted a Code of Conduct, which is a general statement of Mattel’s standards of ethical business conduct. The Code of Conduct applies to all of our employees, including our CEO and our Chief Financial Officer. Certain provisions of the Code of Conduct also apply to members of the Board in their capacity as Mattel’s directors. The Code of Conduct covers topics including, but not limited to, conflicts of interest, confidentiality of information and compliance with laws and regulations. We intend to disclose any future amendments to certain provisions of our Code of Conduct in accordance with the SEC rules, and any waivers of provisions of the Code of Conduct required to be disclosed under the SEC rules or Nasdaq listing standards, on our website at http://corporate.mattel.com/about-us/ethics.aspx.

Communications with the Board

 

The independent directors of Mattel have unanimously approved a process by which stockholders of Mattel and other interested persons may send communications to any of the following: (i) the Board, (ii) any committee of the Board, (iii) the independent lead director or (iv) the independent directors. Such communications should be submitted in writing by mailing them to the relevant addressee at the following address:

[Addressee]

c/o Secretary, Mail Stop M1-1516

Mattel, Inc.

333 Continental Boulevard

El Segundo, CA 90245-5012

Any such communications will be relayed to the Board members who appear as addressees, except that the following categories of communications will not be so relayed, but will be available to Board members upon request:

 

  Communications concerning company products and services;

 

  Solicitations;

 

  Matters that are entirely personal grievances; and

 

  Communications about litigation matters.

 

  LOGO   Mattel, Inc.    2016 Proxy Statement               31


Table of Contents
  THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS AND CORPORATE GOVERNANCE          

 

Corporate Governance Documentation and How to Obtain Copies

 

Current copies of the following materials related to Mattel’s corporate governance standards and practices are available publicly on Mattel’s corporate website at http://corporate.mattel.com/about-us/corporate-governance.aspx:

 

  Board of Directors Amended and Restated Guidelines on Corporate Governance;

 

  Information on Board and Committee membership and biographies of Board members;

 

  Audit Committee Charter;

 

  Compensation Committee Charter;

 

  Governance and Social Responsibility Committee Charter;

 

  Code of Conduct;

 

  Restated Certificate of Incorporation;

 

  Amended and Restated Bylaws;

 

  Director Nominations Policy;

 

  Audit Committee Complaint Procedure;

 

  Policy on Adoption of a Shareholder Rights Plan; and

 

  Golden Parachute Policy.

A copy of any or all of these documents may also be obtained, free of charge, by mailing a request in writing to:

Secretary, Mail Stop M1-1516

Mattel, Inc.

333 Continental Boulevard

El Segundo, CA 90245-5012

 

32                LOGO   Mattel, Inc.    2016 Proxy Statement    


Table of Contents
          DIRECTOR COMPENSATION  

 

DIRECTOR COMPENSATION

The following table shows the compensation of the non-employee members of our Board for 2015.

 

Name(1)    Fees
Earned or
Paid
in Cash(2)
   Stock
Awards(3)
   All Other  
Compensation(4)  
   Total

Michael J. Dolan

     $ 170,000        $ 129,999        $ 25,000        $ 324,999  

Trevor A. Edwards

     $ 100,000        $ 129,999        $ 24,000        $ 253,999  

Dr. Frances D. Fergusson

     $ 110,000        $ 129,999        $ 17,950        $ 257,949  

Ann Lewnes(5)

     $ 133,333        $ 173,335        $ 15,000        $ 321,668  

Dominic Ng

     $ 110,000        $ 129,999        $ 30,000        $ 269,999  

Vasant M. Prabhu

     $ 150,000        $ 129,999        $ 30,000        $ 309,999  

Dean A. Scarborough

     $ 110,000        $ 129,999        $ 15,000        $ 254,999  

Dirk Van de Put

     $ 110,000        $ 129,999        $ 15,000        $ 254,999  

Kathy White Loyd

     $ 110,000        $ 129,999        $ 15,000        $ 254,999  

(1) During 2015, Mr. Sinclair, as CEO and a member of the Board, did not receive any additional compensation for serving as a director other than the amounts attributed to him for his recommended grants and our matching charitable contributions under the Board of Directors Recommended Grants Program and the Gift Matching Program described below. All of his compensation for his services to Mattel as CEO is shown in the “Summary Compensation Table.”

(2) For Ms. Fergusson and Messrs. Edwards, Ng, Scarborough and Van de Put, some or all amounts shown were deferred under the Mattel, Inc. Deferred Compensation Plan for Non-Employee Directors. Mr. Edwards deferred some amounts into the phantom stock account and Mr. Scarborough deferred all amounts into the phantom stock account. See the narrative disclosure below for details.

(3) In May 2015, each of our non-employee directors received an annual equity grant of 4,977 RSUs. Ms. Lewnes also received an initial equity grant of 1,611 RSUs upon joining the Board in February 2015. Amounts shown represent the grant date fair value of such shares, computed in accordance with FASB ASC Topic 718, based on our closing stock price of $26.12 on the grant date of May 21, 2015 for all non-employee directors’ annual grants and $26.90 on the grant date of February 1, 2015 (using January 30, 2015 closing stock price as February 1, 2015 was a Sunday) for Ms. Lewnes’ initial grant. The actual value that a director may realize from an award is contingent upon the satisfaction of the conditions to vesting in that award. Thus, there is no assurance that the value eventually realized by the director will correspond to the amount shown.

 

  LOGO   Mattel, Inc.    2016 Proxy Statement               33


Table of Contents
  DIRECTOR COMPENSATION          

 

The table below shows the aggregate number of stock awards and option awards outstanding for each non-employee director as of December 31, 2015. Stock awards consist of unvested RSUs and vested but deferred RSUs. Directors may elect to further defer payment until a later date under the Director DCP, which would result in a deferral of taxable income to the director. All outstanding Option Awards are fully exercisable.

 

Name     Aggregate Stock Awards  
Outstanding as of
December 31, 2015
      Aggregate Option Awards    
Outstanding as of
December 31, 2015

Michael J. Dolan

      10,928         15,000  

Trevor A. Edwards

      10,928          

Dr. Frances D. Fergusson

      10,928          

Ann Lewnes

      6,588          

Dominic Ng

      29,802         9,000  

Vasant M. Prabhu

      10,928          

Dean A. Scarborough

      22,335         12,000  

Dirk Van de Put

      10,928          

Kathy White Loyd

      26,101          

(4) The “All Other Compensation” column shows the amount of gifts made by the Mattel Children’s Foundation pursuant to the Board of Directors Recommended Grants Program and the Gift Matching Program for the applicable director. Subject to certain limitations, each director may recommend that the Mattel Children’s Foundation make gifts of up to a total of $15,000 per year (and up to an additional $10,000 if the director matches the Mattel Children’s Foundation contribution dollar-for-dollar up to such additional amount) to one or more non-profit public charities that help fulfill the Foundation’s mission of serving children in need. The Mattel Children’s Foundation also will match up to $5,000 for any gifts that the director makes on his or her own, subject to certain limitations. The programs may not be used to satisfy any pre-existing commitments of the director or any member of the director’s family.

(5) The fees paid to Ms. Lewnes for 2015 include a prorated amount of her retainer of $33,333 when she first joined the Board in February 2015 and her full annual retainer paid in May 2015.

Narrative Disclosure to Director Compensation Table

Retainers. Non-employee directors received an annual retainer of $100,000, and each non-employee committee chair received an additional annual retainer, the amount of which differed depending upon the committee, as follows: Audit Committee, $20,000; Compensation Committee, $20,000; and all other committees, $10,000. The independent lead director received an additional annual retainer of $30,000. Further, each member of the Audit Committee received an additional annual retainer of $10,000. Directors had the option to receive either all or a portion of their annual retainer in the form of shares of Mattel common stock or to defer receipt under the Mattel, Inc. Deferred Compensation Plan for Non-Employee Directors (“Director DCP”).

Equity Compensation. During 2015, non-employee directors also received annual grants of deferred RSUs, with an intended fixed grant value of $130,000. Each RSU represents a contingent right to receive one share of Mattel common stock. These RSUs vest in equal installments over the first four quarters following the grant date but the non-employee director generally will receive actual shares of Mattel common stock in settlement of the vested RSUs on the earlier of the third anniversary of the grant date or the date his or

 

34                LOGO   Mattel, Inc.    2016 Proxy Statement    


Table of Contents
          DIRECTOR COMPENSATION  

 

her directorship terminates. We reserve the right to settle the RSUs in cash equal to the fair market value of the stock, but do not anticipate doing so. The RSUs have dividend equivalent rights, meaning that for the period before the RSUs are settled in shares or forfeited, we will pay the grantee cash equal to the cash dividends that he or she would have received if the units had been an equivalent number of actual shares of Mattel common stock. The directors may also elect to further defer the receipt of the shares under the Director DCP and if they do so, dividend equivalents are also deferred under the Director DCP in the form of shares. At its May 2015 meeting, the Compensation Committee determined that director RSUs granted July 31, 2015 and after would not provide for dividend equivalents, consistent with employee grants.

If a non-employee director leaves our Board, the consequences for the RSUs depend on the circumstances of such departure:

 

  If the departure occurs as a result of death, disability or retirement at age 55 or greater with five or more years of service, the RSUs vest in full;

 

  If the departure is for cause, all of the RSUs will be forfeited; and

 

  In all other circumstances, the unvested RSUs will be forfeited.

Under the general terms of the Amended and Restated 2010 Equity and Long-Term Compensation Plan, and its predecessor plan (collectively, the “Amended 2010 Plan”), upon a change of control, any RSUs granted thereunder that are not assumed or substituted therefor by the acquirer in a change of control would vest in full upon the change of control. In May 2015, our stockholders approved the Amended 2010 Plan, which added a maximum value of $500,000 of equity grants to any one non-employee director in a calendar year.

Director DCP. The Director DCP allows directors to defer common stock underlying their annual RSU grants and amounts deferred are maintained in account balances that are deemed invested in one or more of a number of externally managed institutional funds. Prior to 2009, directors had the option of choosing between deemed investments in (i) a common stock equivalent or “phantom stock” account or (ii) an interest-bearing account with the same crediting rate as that available under the Mattel, Inc. Deferred Compensation and PIP Excess Plan (the “DCP”). Similar to the DCP, the directors’ accounts do not have any “above-market” earnings or preferential earnings as defined in applicable SEC rules and regulations since the crediting rate investment option will always be set annually lower than the 120% of the applicable federal long-term rate, with compounding, and the rate of return for the externally managed institutional funds and the “phantom stock” accounts track the actual rate of return on the externally managed funds and investments in Mattel common stock.

Distribution of amounts deferred under the Director DCP may be paid in a lump sum or in 10 annual installments, with payment made or commencing upon a director’s termination of service with the Board or upon the director achieving a specified age not to exceed 72. As of December 31, 2015, the following directors had the following aggregate balances of phantom stock units in the Stock Equivalent Account of the Director DCP, including deferred vested and unvested RSUs: Mr. Edwards, 2,585; Mr. Ng, 53,506; Mr. Scarborough, 46,433; and Ms. White Loyd, 29,497.

Reimbursement Policy. Mattel reimburses directors for their expenses incurred while traveling on Board business and permits directors to use Company-selected aircraft when traveling on Board business, as well as commercial aircraft, charter flights and non-Mattel private aircraft. These expenses are not considered perquisites, as they are limited to business use. In the case of travel by a non-Mattel private aircraft, the

 

  LOGO   Mattel, Inc.    2016 Proxy Statement               35


Table of Contents
  DIRECTOR COMPENSATION          

 

amount reimbursed is generally limited to variable costs or direct operating costs relating to travel on Mattel Board business and generally does not include fixed costs such as a portion of the flight crew’s salaries, monthly management fee, capital costs or depreciation.

Independent Consultant Review. In May 2015, Cook & Co. conducted an independent review of our non-employee director compensation program and concluded that our total annual compensation for non-employee directors on average approximated the 57th percentile of our peer group, and reflects a similar mix of cash and equity at the median. Cook & Co. further found that our non-employee director compensation program has a stable structure and exhibits many best practices, including retainer-only cash compensation (i.e., no meeting fees), annual grants delivered as full value awards based on a fixed-value formula, short equity vesting that avoids entrenchment, and no major perquisites other than charitable gift matching.

Non-Employee Director Stock Ownership

 

The Board has adopted guidelines regarding non-employee director stock ownership. These robust guidelines currently state that, within five years after joining the Board, non-employee members of the Board should attain a target minimum level of stock ownership of five times the annual cash retainer paid to each member. The annual cash retainer is currently $100,000. For this purpose, stock holdings are valued at the greater of actual cost or current market value. Directors who have deferred any of their cash compensation into investments in Mattel stock equivalent accounts in the Director DCP receive credit for such amounts, valued at the current market value. Each of our Board members (other than the newest members of our Board, Messrs. Van de Put and Edwards and Ms. Lewnes) has met the target minimum stock ownership level. Mr. Van de Put has until December 1, 2016, Mr. Edwards has until March 14, 2017, and Ms. Lewnes has until February 1, 2020, to meet the target minimum level of stock ownership.

 

36                LOGO   Mattel, Inc.    2016 Proxy Statement    


Table of Contents
          REPORT OF THE AUDIT COMMITTEE  

 

AUDIT MATTERS

REPORT OF THE AUDIT COMMITTEE

The following Report of the Audit Committee shall not be deemed to be “soliciting material” or to be “filed” with the Securities and Exchange Commission (“SEC”) or subject to Regulations 14A or 14C of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended (“Exchange Act”), or the liabilities of Section 18 of the Exchange Act. The Report of the Audit Committee shall not be deemed incorporated by reference into any filing under the Securities Act of 1933, as amended, or the Exchange Act, except to the extent Mattel specifically incorporates it by reference.

The Audit Committee’s responsibility is to assist the Board in its oversight of:

 

  The quality and integrity of Mattel’s financial reports;

 

  The independence, qualifications and performance of PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP (“PwC”), Mattel’s independent registered public accounting firm;

 

  The performance of Mattel’s internal audit function; and

 

  The compliance by Mattel with legal and regulatory requirements.

Management of Mattel is responsible for Mattel’s consolidated financial statements as well as Mattel’s financial reporting process, disclosure controls and procedures, and internal control over financial reporting.

PwC is responsible for performing an integrated audit of Mattel’s annual consolidated financial statements and of its internal control over financial reporting.

In this context, the Audit Committee has reviewed and discussed with management, the senior internal auditing officer of Mattel and PwC, the audited financial statements of Mattel as of and for the year ended December 31, 2015 and Management’s Report on Internal Control Over Financial Reporting. Management has confirmed to the Audit Committee that, as required by Section 404 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act, management has evaluated the effectiveness of Mattel’s internal control over financial reporting using the framework in Internal Control – Integrated Framework (2013) issued by the Committee of Sponsoring Organizations (“COSO”) of the Treadway Commission. Based on this evaluation, management concluded that Mattel’s internal control over financial reporting was effective as of December 31, 2015.

PwC has expressed its opinion that:

 

  Mattel’s consolidated financial statements present fairly, in all material respects, its financial position as of December 31, 2015 and 2014, and its results of operations and cash flows for each of the three years in the period ended December 31, 2015 in conformity with accounting principles generally accepted in the United States of America; and

 

  Mattel has maintained, in all material respects, effective internal control over financial reporting as of December 31, 2015, based on criteria established in Internal Control – Integrated Framework issued by COSO.

 

  LOGO   Mattel, Inc.    2016 Proxy Statement               37


Table of Contents
  REPORT OF THE AUDIT COMMITTEE          

 

In addition, Mattel’s Chief Executive Officer and Chief Financial Officer reviewed with the Audit Committee, prior to filing with the SEC, the certifications that were filed pursuant to the requirements of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act and the disclosure controls and procedures management has adopted to support the certifications. The Audit Committee periodically meets in separate executive sessions with management, the Chief Legal Officer, the senior internal auditing officer and PwC. Each of the Chief Financial Officer, the Chief Legal Officer, the senior internal auditing officer and PwC has unrestricted access to the Audit Committee.

The Audit Committee has discussed with PwC the matters required to be discussed by Auditing Standard No. 16, “Communications with Audit Committees”, as adopted by the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board (the “PCAOB”). In addition, the Audit Committee has received the written disclosures and the letter from PwC required by the PCAOB regarding the firm’s independence from Mattel, and the Audit Committee has also discussed with PwC the firm’s independence from Mattel.

The Audit Committee has also considered whether PwC’s provision of non-audit services to Mattel is compatible with maintaining the firm’s independence from Mattel.

The members of the Audit Committee are not engaged in the accounting or auditing profession and, consequently, are not experts in matters involving accounting or auditing, including the subject of auditor independence. As such, it is not the duty of the Audit Committee to plan or conduct audits or to determine that Mattel’s consolidated financial statements fairly present Mattel’s financial position, results of operations and cash flows and are in conformity with accounting principles generally accepted in the United States of America and applicable laws and regulations. Each member of the Audit Committee is entitled to rely on:

 

  The integrity of those persons within Mattel and of the professionals and experts (such as PwC) from which the Audit Committee receives information;

 

  The accuracy of the financial and other information provided to the Audit Committee by such persons, professionals or experts absent actual knowledge to the contrary; and

 

  Representations made by management or PwC as to any information technology services of the type described in Rule 2-01(c)(4)(ii) of Regulation S-X and other non-audit services provided by PwC to Mattel.

Based on the reports and discussions described above, the Audit Committee recommended to the Board that the audited financial statements be included in Mattel’s Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2015, for filing with the SEC.

AUDIT COMMITTEE

Vasant M. Prabhu (Chair)

Dominic Ng

Dirk Van de Put

Kathy White Loyd

March 21, 2016

 

38                LOGO   Mattel, Inc.    2016 Proxy Statement    


Table of Contents
          FEES INCURRED FOR SERVICES BY PRICEWATERHOUSECOOPERS LLP  

 

FEES INCURRED FOR SERVICES BY PRICEWATERHOUSECOOPERS LLP

The following table summarizes the fees accrued by Mattel for audit and non-audit services provided by PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP for fiscal years 2015 and 2014:

 

Fees      2015      2014

Audit fees(1)

       $ 6,590,000           $ 7,991,000   

Audit-related fees(2)

       $ 137,000           $ 137,000   

Tax fees (3)

       $ 1,159,000           $ 2,255,000   

All other fees

         —             —   

Total

       $   7,886,000           $ 10,383,000   

(1) Audit fees consisted of fees for professional services provided in connection with the integrated audit of Mattel’s annual consolidated financial statements and the audit of internal control over financial reporting, the performance of interim reviews of Mattel’s quarterly unaudited financial information, comfort letters, consents and statutory audits required internationally.

(2) Audit-related fees consisted primarily of the audits of employee benefit plans for 2015 and 2014.

(3) Tax fees principally included (i) tax compliance and preparation fees (including fees for preparation of original and amended tax returns, claims for refunds and tax payment-planning services) of $577,000 for 2015 and $690,000 for 2014, and (ii) other tax advice, tax consultation and tax planning services of $582,000 for 2015 and $1,565,000 for 2014.

The Audit Committee charter provides that the Audit Committee pre-approves all audit services and permitted non-audit services to be performed for Mattel by its independent registered public accounting firm, subject to the de minimis exceptions for non-audit services described in Section 10A(i)(1)(B) of the Exchange Act.

In addition, consistent with SEC rules regarding auditor independence, the Audit Committee has adopted a Pre-Approval Policy, which provides that the Audit Committee is required to pre-approve the audit and non-audit services performed by our independent registered public accounting firm. The Pre-Approval Policy sets forth procedures to be used for pre-approval requests relating to audit services, audit-related services, tax services and all other services and provides that:

 

  The term of the pre-approval is 12 months from the date of pre-approval, unless the Audit Committee specifically provides for a different period or the services are specifically associated with a period in time;

 

  The Audit Committee may consider the amount of estimated or budgeted fees as a factor in connection with the determination of whether a proposed service would impair the independence of the registered public accounting firm;

 

  Requests or applications to provide services that require separate approval by the Audit Committee are submitted to the Audit Committee by both the independent registered public accounting firm and the Chief Financial Officer or Corporate Controller, and must include a joint statement as to whether, in their view, the request or application is consistent with the rules of the SEC on auditor independence;

 

  LOGO   Mattel, Inc.    2016 Proxy Statement               39


Table of Contents
  FEES INCURRED FOR SERVICES BY PRICEWATERHOUSECOOPERS LLP          

 

 

  The Audit Committee may delegate pre-approval authority to one or more of its members, and if the Audit Committee does so, the member or members to whom such authority is delegated shall report any pre-approval decisions to the Audit Committee at its next scheduled meeting; and

 

  The Audit Committee does not delegate to management its responsibilities to pre-approve services performed by the independent registered public accounting firm.

All services provided by our independent registered public accounting firm in 2015 were pre-approved in accordance with the Audit Committee’s Pre-Approval Policy.

 

40                LOGO   Mattel, Inc.    2016 Proxy Statement    


Table of Contents
          EXECUTIVE OFFICERS  

 

EXECUTIVE OFFICERS

The current executive officers of Mattel are as follows:

 

Name    Age         Position   

Executive    

Officer    

Since    

Christopher A. Sinclair(1)

   65        Chairman of the Board and Chief Executive Officer    2015  

Richard Dickson

   48        President and Chief Operating Officer    2014  

Kevin M. Farr

   58        Chief Financial Officer    1996  

Peter D. Gibbons

   55        Executive Vice President and Chief Supply Chain Officer    2013  

Richard R. Gros

   61        Executive Vice President and Chief Human Resources Officer    2015  

Robert Normile

   56        Executive Vice President, Chief Legal Officer and Secretary    1999  

Geoffrey H. Walker

   50        Executive Vice President and Chief Strategic Technology Officer    2013  

(1) Information regarding Mr. Sinclair is provided in the “Proposal 1 – Election of Directors” section of this Proxy Statement.

Mr. Dickson has been President and Chief Operating Officer since April 2015. From January 2015 to April 2015, he served as President, Chief Brands Officer. He served as Chief Brands Officer from May 2014 to January 2015. From February 2010 to May 2014, he served as President and CEO of Branded Businesses at The Jones Group, Inc. From August 2008 to February 2010, he served as General Manager and Senior Vice President of the Barbie Brand at Mattel. From 2000 to 2008, he was Senior Vice President at Mattel overseeing Consumer Products, Marketing, Media, Entertainment and Packaging. Prior to Mattel, he served as Vice President of Brand Management and Merchandising at Estee Lauder Companies, Inc. and was Principal with Gloss.com, an e-commerce beauty website he helped develop and manage until its acquisition by Estee Lauder. Mr. Dickson started his career and spent nearly a decade with Bloomingdale’s, a leading U.S. fashion retailer.

Mr. Farr has been Chief Financial Officer since February 2000. From September 1996 to February 2000, he was Senior Vice President and Corporate Controller. From June 1993 to September 1996, he served as Vice President, Tax. Prior to that, he served as Senior Director, Tax from August 1992 to June 1993.

Mr. Gibbons has been Executive Vice President and Chief Supply Chain Officer since February 2015. From November 2013 to February 2015, he served as Executive Vice President, Global Supply Chain, and from April 2013 to November 2013, he served as Executive Vice President, Global Operations. From July 2008 to November 2012, he served as Executive Vice President, Global Supply Chain Operations, at Starbucks Corporation. From February 2007 to July 2008 he served as Senior Vice President, Global Manufacturing Operations, at Starbucks Corporation. From March 1999 to February 2007, he was Executive Vice President, Supply Chain, for the Glidden Company, a subsidiary of ICI Americas, Inc., a global chemical company. Prior to that, he held various roles in operations, finance and engineering with ICI plc in Europe and Latin America and the Scottish Development Agency.

 

  LOGO   Mattel, Inc.    2016 Proxy Statement               41


Table of Contents
  EXECUTIVE OFFICERS          

 

Mr. Gros has been Executive Vice President and Chief Human Resources Officer since September 2015. Prior to joining Mattel, Mr. Gros served as President of Richard Gros & Associates, a strategic human capital consulting firm, from March 2013 to September 2015. From October 2011 to March 2013, Mr. Gros served as Senior Vice President of International Business Development with Sedgwick Claims Management Services, Inc., a leading global provider of claims and productivity management services. From April 2009 to September 2011, Mr. Gros served as Executive Vice President of Human Resources at Xchanging, Inc., a provider of business processing, technology and procurement services. He served as Executive Vice President and Chief Human Resources Officer at Cambridge Solutions Corporation Ltd., a leader in providing information technology and business process outsourcing services from November 2004 to March 2009. Prior to that, he served as Executive Vice President and Chief Human Resources Officer of Caribiner International, Inc. from January 1999 to May 2000. He has also held the positions of Senior Vice President and Chief Human Resources Officer for Frito-Lay International and Vice President of Human Resources for PepsiCo Food & Beverages International and Pepsi-Cola International.

Mr. Normile has been Executive Vice President, Chief Legal Officer and Secretary since February 2011, and from March 1999 to February 2011 he was Senior Vice President, General Counsel and Secretary. He served as Vice President, Associate General Counsel and Assistant Secretary from August 1994 to March 1999. From June 1992 to August 1994, he served as Assistant General Counsel. Prior to that, he was associated with the law firms of Latham & Watkins LLP and Sullivan & Cromwell LLP.

Mr. Walker has been Executive Vice President and Chief Strategic Technology Officer since February 2016. From June 2015 to February 2016, he served as Executive Vice President, Commercial – North America. From April 2013 to June 2015, he served as Executive Vice President, Global Brands Team -Fisher-Price. From November 2012 to April 2013, he served as Senior Vice President and General manager for Core Europe, and from January 2011 to November 2012, he served as Senior Vice President and General Manager of Mattel’s Northern European business. From October 2010 through December 2010, he served as Senior Vice President Global Core Brands Marketing Strategy, and from August 2008 to October 2010, he served as Senior Vice President Marketing. Mr. Walker held a variety of roles within the Mattel marketing organization from December 2000 to August 2008. Starting with Mattel in July 1995, Mr. Walker has held a variety of brand management positions within the Wheels, Entertainment and Games divisions.

 

42                LOGO   Mattel, Inc.    2016 Proxy Statement    


Table of Contents
          COMPENSATION DISCUSSION AND ANALYSIS  

 

EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION

COMPENSATION DISCUSSION AND ANALYSIS

EXECUTIVE SUMMARY

Our fiscal year 2015 NEOs were:

 

Name   Position (as of December 31, 2015)

Christopher A. Sinclair

  Chairman of the Board and Chief Executive Officer

Richard Dickson

  President and Chief Operating Officer

Kevin M. Farr

  Chief Financial Officer

Peter D. Gibbons

  Executive Vice President and Chief Supply Chain Officer

Geoffrey H. Walker

  Executive Vice President, Commercial – North America (on February 1, 2016, Mr. Walker was transitioned to the role of Executive Vice President and Chief Strategic Technology Officer)

Bryan G. Stockton

  Former Chairman of the Board and Chief Executive Officer

2015 Financial and Business Performance

 

Management looked to stabilize the business in 2015, and we are encouraged by the progress made on our turnaround.

We continue to focus on embracing brand building, creativity, and innovation, and we have instituted a cultural transformation that puts a premium on speed to market and accountability. Our management is focused on putting Mattel back on track for growth and improved profitability, by building momentum in our core brands, improving retail execution, reducing costs and building scale in key emerging markets.

In 2015, we organized around the following six strategic priorities, and our 2015 results reflect significant progress against our 2015 strategic priorities.

 

2015 Strategic Priorities

  Exploiting the franchise strength of our core brands

 

  Achieving distinctiveness and excellence in our commercial organization

  Re-establishing toy leadership

 

  Rapidly expanding into emerging markets

  Strengthening our global supply chain

 

  Continuously driving cost improvement

 

  LOGO   Mattel, Inc.    2016 Proxy Statement               43


Table of Contents
  COMPENSATION DISCUSSION AND ANALYSIS          

 

Highlights of our 2015 financial and business performance include the following:

 

Turnaround Progress

  Encouraging Trends in Underlying Business Despite Currency Headwinds

ü    Revitalized core brands (Barbie and Fisher-Price) and maintained strong momentum in other core brands (Hot Wheels and Thomas)

ü    Investments in emerging markets like China and Russia delivered strong improvement and growth, generating momentum for 2016

ü    Gross sales in 2015 were up 1% in constant currency,* and down 6% as reported, compared to 2014

ü    Net sales in 2015 were up 2% in constant currency,* and down 5% as reported, compared to 2014

ü    Achieved 2015 financial outlook

  P&L Results Reflect Ongoing Financial Discipline to Improve Top-Line Momentum

ü    Elevated spending in advertising and retail promotions to support core brands

ü    Exceeded first year cost savings program target with approximately $153 million of gross savings in 2015

  Maintained Disciplined Capital Deployment Strategy and Strong Balance Sheet

ü    Invested in turnaround efforts and growth initiatives

ü    Ended 2015 with $893 million of cash

ü    Maintained quarterly dividend of $0.38 per share

* For a reconciliation of the non-GAAP measures discussed above, please see pages 42 to 44 of the Company’s Annual Report on Form 10-K filed with the SEC on February 25, 2016.

Impact of Turnaround Year on Compensation Decisions

 

Following our disappointing 2014 financial performance, our focus for 2015 was to begin executing on a turnaround plan to put Mattel back on track for growth and improved profitability.

Building a Focused and Streamlined Management Structure

To support the execution of our turnaround strategy, the Board, together with management, implemented a number of changes in Company leadership in 2015, including to several of our NEOs’ positions, to strengthen Mattel and revitalize the business going forward. Key compensation decisions made during 2015 were aimed at building and retaining a focused and streamlined management team.

 

 

On January 25, 2015, Mr. Sinclair, one of our then independent directors, was appointed as Chairman of the Board and Interim CEO, succeeding Mr. Stockton. At that time, given Mr. Sinclair’s experience and familiarity with Mattel and the additional responsibilities he would be assuming at a crucial and challenging time, the Compensation Committee approved for Mr. Sinclair a monthly base salary of $200,000 and a grant of RSUs valued at $1,500,000, and determined he would not be eligible to participate in the MIP, LTIP, DCP, the annual equity program or any severance program, plan or arrangement. Further, Mr. Sinclair would not be compensated for his position as Chairman of the Board. The Compensation Committee also approved a special allowance of $60,000 per month, in lieu of relocation program benefits or any one-time special relocation payment, and periodic personal use of a private aircraft up to a maximum of 25 flight hours per year, to facilitate time management and focus on Mattel. In providing this benefit to Mr. Sinclair, the Compensation Committee determined that Mr. Sinclair’s use of a private aircraft for personal use also

 

44                LOGO   Mattel, Inc.    2016 Proxy Statement    


Table of Contents
          COMPENSATION DISCUSSION AND ANALYSIS  

 

 

benefits Mattel as it allows him to be available quickly and efficiently for our business needs, especially in light of Mr. Sinclair maintaining his primary residence in Florida while working in California.

 

  On April 2, 2015, as a result of Mr. Sinclair’s demonstrated actions and comprehensive plan to improve Mattel’s performance, the Board appointed Mr. Sinclair as CEO. The Compensation Committee set Mr. Sinclair’s annual base salary at $1,500,000 and granted him stock options valued at $5,000,000, which, combined with his initial grant of RSUs, equated to the annual target LTI value granted to our former CEO for 2014. The Compensation Committee also approved Mr. Sinclair’s participation in the MIP, pro-rated for his time served as CEO in 2015, with a target opportunity of 150% of his base salary, which was set at the same level as our former CEO for 2014 and continued the special allowance and periodic personal use of a private aircraft. Mr. Sinclair’s targeted TDC (including taking into account his special allowance) was market competitive and at the median of our comparator peer group.

 

  On January 13, 2015, Mr. Dickson, previously our Chief Brands Officer, was promoted to President, Chief Brands Officer and assumed responsibility for the Brands Division and additional responsibility over the Global Enterprise Division. At this time, the Compensation Committee approved increasing his base salary to $800,000 and his target MIP opportunity to 80% and a grant of RSUs valued at $750,000.

 

  On April 2, 2015, in connection with the appointment of Mr. Sinclair as CEO and related reorganization of management, Mr. Dickson was promoted to President and Chief Operating Officer (“COO”), allowing Mattel to better align brand and commercial execution. To reflect his increased responsibilities, the Compensation Committee approved increasing his base salary to $900,000 and his target MIP opportunity to 100% of his base salary, and approved a grant of RSUs valued at $1,300,000 and a grant of a stock option valued at $1,300,000.

 

  More than 50% of our senior leadership team was changed or re-assigned during 2015, including the transfer of Mr. Walker, previously our EVP, Global Brands Team – Fisher-Price, to the role of EVP, Commercial – North America on June 8, 2015, to leverage his brand and commercial leadership. There were no changes to Mr. Walker’s compensation in connection with this change in his role.

Promoting a Successful Turnaround

The Compensation Committee took several significant actions in 2015 and 2016 to further promote our turnaround, reinforce our strategic priorities and reflect the support and feedback from our stockholder outreach.

2015 MIP

 

  Increased adjusted net sales multiplier to 75% in 2015 from 20% in 2014, while reducing the gross margin multiplier to 25% in 2015 from 80% in 2014, to increase the emphasis and focus on sales growth; and

 

  Disallowed earnout percentages for our NEOs (and other executives at the executive leadership job level and above) over 100% of target unless Mattel’s TSR was positive.

2016 MIP

 

  Simplified and streamlined the financial focus of the MIP by emphasizing net sales and adjusted operating profit (eliminated gross margin and free cash flow) to drive profitable growth, with higher weighting on net sales, for greater alignment with our business objectives and turnaround strategy;

 

  LOGO   Mattel, Inc.    2016 Proxy Statement               45


Table of Contents
  COMPENSATION DISCUSSION AND ANALYSIS          

 

 

  Modified the payout formula for our NEOs (and other EVPs) to be based 75% on achievement of financial goals (previously 100%) and 25% to be based on achievement of established strategic priorities related to each executive’s job responsibilities, to provide a stronger line of sight to operational performance over which the executive has responsibility and to drive a culture of accountability (such strategic priorities component paid out only if the adjusted operating profit threshold is achieved so that executives are appropriately held accountable for financial performance); and

 

  To allow maximum flexibility for the Compensation Committee while preserving tax deductibility, established an umbrella plan structure in which the MIP will be funded at maximum for our NEOs (and other EVPs) if a specified threshold level percentage of our target operating profit is achieved, subject to the Compensation Committee’s discretion to pay lesser amounts.

2016 LTIP

 

  Changed the prior three-year end-to-end performance cycle approach to overlapping three-year performance cycles that provide for annual grants and established a new 2016-2018 performance cycle, to align with market practice, permit greater responsiveness to changing circumstances and market movements, strengthen retention and facilitate year-to-year compensation analysis; and

 

  Changed the financial performance measure from net operating profit after tax less capital charge (“NOPAT-CC”) and net sales (with performance goals set annually) to earnings per share (“EPS”) (with performance goals set at the commencement of the three-year performance cycle), while maintaining the relative three-year TSR modifier, to focus management on strategic long-term objectives and long-term stockholder value creation, support our turnaround strategy and provide long-term differentiated goals as compared to the MIP.

Other

 

  Cash dividend equivalent payments were discontinued on RSUs granted on or after July 31, 2015.

Executive Compensation Programs Emphasize Pay for Performance

 

Our executive compensation programs are designed to be performance-based and link our executives’ pay opportunity to the execution of Company strategies and to the interests of our stockholders.

Highlights of our pay-for-performance link based on our challenging 2015 financial performance include:

No Merit Salary Increases

 

  No merit-based salary increases were approved for our NEOs in 2015 and 2016 (other than in the case of promotions).

 

46                LOGO   Mattel, Inc.    2016 Proxy Statement    


Table of Contents
          COMPENSATION DISCUSSION AND ANALYSIS  

 

Below Target 2015 MIP Earnout

Our MIP is designed to closely align to our short term annual performance and does not pay when performance is not met. The following summarizes the 2015 MIP earnout:

 

  MIP awards are earned based on our adjusted operating profit (weighted 75%) and adjusted free cash flow (weighted 25%) performance against pre-established objective criteria. The amount earned is then adjusted by two modifiers – adjusted net sales modifier and gross margin modifier – each of which operates to increase or reduce the award earned based on our performance under the modifier measures.

 

  For 2015, we achieved the adjusted operating profit objective at slightly above threshold level and the adjusted free cash flow objective at slightly above target level.

 

  However, adjusted net sales multiplier performed below threshold level and the gross margin multiplier performed just slightly above threshold level, and each had a negative effect on the amount earned, resulting in a total Company performance earnout at 44.7% of target (the payouts for Messrs. Dickson and Walker included business unit performance components and were achieved at 46.6% and 68.3% of target, respectively).

Below Target 2015 LTIP Achievement

We have granted Performance Units under our LTIP every three years that were earned based on annual performance measures of NOPAT-CC, weighted 75%, and net sales, weighted 25%. The average of the results of the annual performance measures over the three-year performance cycle would then be modified up or down 50% based on our TSR for the three-year period relative to the average TSR of companies in the S&P 500.

Our current, outstanding Performance Units were granted in 2014 for the performance period of January 1, 2014 through December 31, 2016. Based on our performance, the 2014 performance-related component allocated to one-third of the Performance Units was not achieved, and the 2015 performance-related component allocated to one-third of the Performance Units was achieved at 41% of target. As 2015 was only the second year of the three-year performance cycle, no Performance Units were earned. The number of Performance Units earned will depend on our performance relative to the performance-related component in 2016 (in addition to 2014 and 2015) and our relative TSR for the full three-year performance cycle. If the TSR modifier that will be applied at the end of the three-year performance cycle were to have been applied at the end of 2015, this would have resulted in a zero earnout of the Performance Units.

Performance of Other Equity Awards

Our target LTI equity mix is made up of approximately one-third Performance Units, one-third stock options and one-third time-vesting RSUs. The Compensation Committee believes this mix is important, particularly in a turnaround year, as the value of the delivered compensation is directly tied to our stock price performance and the vesting of the awards facilitates retention. Based on the closing price of our stock on December 31, 2015 of $27.17, the stock options granted in 2012, 2013 and 2014 are underwater as the exercise price exceeds the stock price, while the annual stock options granted in 2015 are in the money with an exercise price of $23.21 due to our stock price increase in the last five months of the year.

 

  LOGO   Mattel, Inc.    2016 Proxy Statement               47


Table of Contents
  COMPENSATION DISCUSSION AND ANALYSIS          

 

Strong Say-On-Pay Support and Stockholder Engagement

 

In 2015, our stockholders approved the compensation of our NEOs with approximately 92% approval. In addition, we enhanced our stockholder engagement efforts in order to gather feedback on our executive compensation programs.

At our 2015 Annual Meeting of Stockholders, we received approximately 92% support on our say-on-pay stockholder advisory vote; over the past three years, we received more than 95% support on average. Further, during 2015, an independent member of our Board together with our management team engaged in outreach activities and discussions with stockholders representing more than 40%, in total, of our outstanding shares. Generally, we had discussions around, and received support for, the changes being considered for our MIP and LTIP and their impact on pay for performance. We also received confirmation from many of our stockholders that they viewed stock options as performance-based.

These engagement efforts informed our Compensation Committee as they determined to make changes to our MIP and LTIP as discussed above under “Impact of Turnaround Year on Compensation Decisions – Promoting a Successful Turnaround.” We value stockholder input and will continue to reach out to stockholders going forward to help inform boardroom discussions on critical Board, governance and compensation matters.

 

48                LOGO   Mattel, Inc.    2016 Proxy Statement    


Table of Contents
          COMPENSATION DISCUSSION AND ANALYSIS  

 

Strong Governance and Best Practices

 

We maintain strong governance standards with respect to our executive compensation programs and are mindful of the concerns of our stockholders.

 

What We Do

ü Clawback Policy – Our Clawback Policy that is applicable to all executive officers and other direct reports to the CEO permits our Compensation Committee to require forfeiture or reimbursement of certain cash and equity that was paid, granted or vested based upon the achievement of financial results that, when recalculated to include the impact of a material financial restatement, were not achieved, whether or not fraud or misconduct was involved.

ü Best Practices in Severance Arrangements – We maintain executive severance arrangements that reflect current compensation best practices, which include:

   Double-trigger equity acceleration upon a change of control for all assumed equity awards (i.e., requires both a change of control and a qualifying termination of employment); and

   Severance benefits set at competitive levels

ü Meaningful Stock Ownership Guidelines – Our guidelines align the long-term interests of our NEOs with those of our stockholders and discourage excessive risk-taking. Our guidelines require stock ownership levels as a value of Mattel shares equal to a multiple of base salary (CEO at 6x, COO and CFO at 4x and other NEOs at 3x or 2x), consistent with market practices, and include holding requirements if the target level ownerships are not met within the compliance deadline.

ü Independent Compensation Consultant – Our Compensation Committee engages its own independent compensation consultant, Cook & Co. to advise on executive and director compensation matters.

ü Annual Risk Assessment – Based on our detailed annual risk assessment performed with assistance of our compensation consultant, our Compensation Committee has concluded that compensation programs do not present any risk that is reasonably likely to have a material adverse effect on the Company.

ü Annual Comparator Peer Group Review – Our Compensation Committee, in conjunction with Cook & Co., reviews the makeup of our comparator peer group annually and makes adjustments to the composition of the group as it deems appropriate.

ü Annual Tally Sheet Review – Our Compensation Committee annually reviews comprehensive tally sheets, illustrating the total compensation for the most recent two years of our CEO, his direct reports and other potential NEOs.

What We Do Not Do

×  No Excise Tax Gross-Ups – We do not provide any gross-ups of excise taxes on severance or other payments in connection with a change of control.

×  No Poor Pay Tax Gross-Up Practices on Perquisites and Benefits – We do not provide tax gross-up payments other than in limited circumstances for business-related relocations (and related international tax compliance) that are generally available to other employees.

×  No Hedging or Pledging Permitted We generally do not permit our Board members, officers and employees to engage in hedging transactions or to pledge or use Mattel shares as collateral for loans.

 

  LOGO   Mattel, Inc.    2016 Proxy Statement               49


Table of Contents
  COMPENSATION DISCUSSION AND ANALYSIS          

 

ELEMENTS OF COMPENSATION

Guiding Principles, Philosophy and Objectives

 

Our executive compensation programs are designed to be highly performance-based and link our executives’ pay opportunities to the execution of Company strategies and to the interests of our stockholders.

The guiding principles of our executive compensation programs include:

 

  Pay for performance;

 

  Financial interests of NEOs aligned with the financial interests of our stockholders; and

 

  Governance best practices aligned with concerns of our stockholders.

We are a global consumer goods company and as such we compete for executive talent with, and our comparator peer group is made up of, a large range of companies that are category leaders in the consumer products, apparel and fashion, food and beverage, entertainment and leisure, and retail industries. Our comparator peer companies are similar to us in their orientation, business model, size (as measured by revenue, net income growth, employees and market capitalization) and global scale and reach. Mattel’s revenues, total employees and market cap value are in the median range of our peer group.

The table below lists the key elements of our NEOs’ TDC and how they relate to our compensation philosophy and objectives. Each element is designed to be competitive within the comparator industries listed above in order to attract and retain high caliber executive leadership as well as to provide responsible and balanced incentives.

 

Compensation Element   Philosophy and Objective
 

Base Salary

 

Provide fixed income for financial certainty and stability

Reward individual performance

 

Annual Incentive

 

Directly link pay opportunity to Company performance through achievement of financial performance goals

Incentivize and motivate executives to achieve our short-term strategic and financial objectives that we believe will drive long-term value creation

Promote team orientation by encouraging participants in all areas of the Company to work together to achieve common Company goals

 

Long-Term Incentives

Performance Units

Stock Options

RSUs

 

Directly link pay opportunity to Company and stock price performance through achievement of financial performance goals and TSR (relative to the S&P 500), as well as stock price appreciation

Incentivize and motivate executives to achieve key long-term strategic and financial objectives

Align executives’ interests with stockholders’ interests

Foster a long-term focus on increasing stockholder value

Encourage executive stock ownership

 

50                LOGO   Mattel, Inc.    2016 Proxy Statement    


Table of Contents
          COMPENSATION DISCUSSION AND ANALYSIS  

 

Our Compensation Committee has designed our executive compensation programs so that a significant percentage of annual compensation is performance-based and at risk, with a significant percentage delivered in the form of equity, rather than cash, which promotes alignment with stockholders’ interests and creates incentives for long-term performance. For our current executives, the chart below shows the 2015 targeted TDC mix for Mr. Sinclair as our CEO and the average 2015 targeted TDC mix for the other NEOs:

 

LOGO

* For purposes of the chart above, the Targeted Total Direct Compensation is the sum of annual base salary, annual incentive plan target and annual long-term incentives targeted value (i.e., annualized 2014-2016 LTIP grant value, plus annual grant value of stock options and time-vesting RSUs, including one-time special RSU grants).

Base Salary

 

Our Compensation Committee reviews the base salaries of our CEO, his direct reports and other EVPs at its first meeting of each year.

Our CEO typically provides our Compensation Committee with his recommendation regarding merit increases to the base salary for each of these executives other than himself. Merit increases to base salaries are driven primarily by our CEO’s evaluation of individual performance, market competitive factors and our corporate merit budget. Our CEO’s base salary is determined by our Compensation Committee in an executive session with input from Cook & Co., without the presence of our CEO.

Given our emphasis on performance-based compensation, our CEO recommended, and our Compensation Committee determined, that none of our NEOs, other CEO direct reports and other EVPs would receive a merit increase in base salary for 2015. The only base salary increases approved during 2015 were in connection with the changes in responsibilities and promotions associated with reorganizations due to our turnaround efforts.

 

  LOGO   Mattel, Inc.    2016 Proxy Statement               51


Table of Contents
  COMPENSATION DISCUSSION AND ANALYSIS          

 

While serving as our Interim CEO, the Compensation Committee approved for Mr. Sinclair a monthly base salary of $200,000, in light of his expertise and familiarity with Mattel, and to compensate him for the increased responsibilities at a crucial and challenging time for the Company. In connection with his appointment as CEO, the Compensation Committee set Mr. Sinclair’s annual base salary at $1,500,000, effective as of April 13, 2015, based on his individual experience and qualifications and our need to have a highly-qualified and effective leader with extensive knowledge of Mattel during our turnaround.

Effective January 13, 2015, in connection with Mr. Dickson’s promotion to President, Chief Brands Officer and assumption of responsibility for the Brands Division and additional responsibility for the Global Enterprise Division, his base salary was increased 9% to $800,000. When Mr. Dickson was further promoted to President and COO, our Compensation Committee determined to increase Mr. Dickson’s annual base salary from $800,000 to $900,000, effective April 13, 2015, as a result of his assuming the increased duties and responsibilities of the larger role and his individual experience and qualifications.

In light of our performance in 2015 as well as market data, our CEO recommended, and the Compensation Committee determined, that none of our NEOs (and other EVPs) would receive a merit-based salary increase for 2016.

Annual Incentive

 

The MIP, our annual cash incentive plan, provides our NEOs and approximately 11,000 other global employees with the opportunity to earn annual cash incentive compensation based on achievement of our short-term strategic and financial objectives that are intended to drive long-term value creation. The objectives of the MIP include:

 

  Link pay opportunity to financial performance and put a meaningful portion of compensation at risk based on Company and business group financial success;

 

  Incentivize and motivate executives to achieve our short-term strategic and financial objectives that we believe will drive long-term value creation;

 

  Provide a competitive level of targeted annual compensation to attract and retain key talent;

 

  Promote team orientation by encouraging all areas of Mattel to work together to achieve common Company goals; and

 

  Provide appropriate reward leverage and risk for threshold to maximum performance.

 

52                LOGO   Mattel, Inc.    2016 Proxy Statement    


Table of Contents
          COMPENSATION DISCUSSION AND ANALYSIS  

 

2015 Target MIP Opportunity

The following table shows the target MIP opportunities for 2015, expressed as a percentage of base salary, for each of our NEOs and the actual payouts earned by each of our NEOs for 2015.

 

Name  

2015 Target MIP Opportunity

as a % of Base Salary

  % of 2015 Target Earned   2015 MIP Payout

Christopher A. Sinclair

  150.0%   44.7%   $754,983

Richard Dickson

    94.7%   46.6%   $397,130

Kevin M. Farr

    70.0%   44.7%   $234,675

Peter D. Gibbons

    65.0%   44.7%   $174,330

Geoffrey H. Walker

    70.0%   68.3%   $253,417

Bryan G. Stockton

  150.0%   44.7%   $  52,813

For purposes of the table above, Messrs. Sinclair’s and Stockton’s 2015 MIP Payout reflect amounts prorated for their time served as CEO. Mr. Dickson’s 2015 target MIP opportunity was prorated based on the time served in each applicable role described below and the corresponding target MIP opportunities. Apart from the following promotional adjustments to target MIP opportunities, no other increases were made to the NEOs’ target MIP opportunities for 2015.

 

  Effective April 2015, in connection with his appointment as our CEO, Mr. Sinclair became eligible to participate in the MIP with a target MIP opportunity of 150% of his base salary, which was at the market median and set at the same level as our former CEO for 2014.

 

  Mr. Dickson’s target MIP opportunity was increased from 70% to 80% in January 2015 in connection with his promotion to President, Chief Brands Officer and again in April 2015 from 80% to 100%, which was at the market median, in connection with his promotion to President and COO. These adjustments to his target MIP opportunities were determined appropriate by the Compensation Committee in light of his increased responsibilities, individual experience and market competitiveness.

Our Compensation Committee believes that it is important to have our corporate executives’ annual incentives tied to overall Company results and have business group leaders’ annual incentives additionally tied to the performance of the business groups that they manage and for which they are accountable. For Messrs. Dickson and Walker, who changed to different roles during 2015, their performance measures were based on the divisions over which they had responsibility and the applicable time period during which they held that responsibility.

 

  LOGO   Mattel, Inc.    2016 Proxy Statement               53


Table of Contents
  COMPENSATION DISCUSSION AND ANALYSIS          

 

As a result, the annual incentive opportunity in 2015 for each of our NEOs was based on the performance of the Company overall and/or the performance of the business groups as follows:

 

Name   2015 Performance Measures   Applicable Time Period

Christopher A. Sinclair

  100% Company   4/2/2015 to 12/31/2015

Richard Dickson

 

50% Global Brands Team

50% Company

100% Company

 

1/1/2015 to 4/1/2015 – 25%

4/2/2015 to 12/31/2015 – 75%

Kevin M. Farr

  100% Company   2015

Peter D. Gibbons

  100% Company   2015

Geoffrey H. Walker

 

50% Global Brands Team

50% Company

50% Commercial – North America

25% Company

25% Organization

 

1/1/2015 to 6/7/2015 – 43.29%

6/8/2015 to 12/31/2015 – 56.71%

Bryan G. Stockton

  100% Company   1/1/2015 to 1/25/2015

2015 Company Performance Measures and Results

At its March 2015 meeting, our Compensation Committee set the 2015 annual performance measures under the MIP, which measures were based on objective criteria. The Compensation Committee employed four Company-wide performance measures under the MIP that emphasize profitability in absolute terms and as a percentage of revenue, revenue growth and cash and working capital management. The four financial measures under the 2015 MIP, and their associated weightings and modifier effects, are set forth in the following table.

 

Measure

(weighting/modifier effect)

 

 

Definition

 

 

Purpose

Adjusted Operating Profit

(75% weighting)

 

Adjusted operating income,

plus/minus non-operating

income/expense

 

Plan and measure the core operating performance of our business and its profitability in absolute terms

 

Ensure stockholders are participating in our earnings

Adjusted Free Cash Flow

(25% weighting)

  Adjusted cash flows from operating activities, less capital expenditures, such as purchases of tools, dies, molds, and other property, plant and equipment  

Evaluate the effectiveness of our operations at generating cash that is available to finance our operations

 

Enhance stockholder returns through quarterly dividends and share repurchases

Adjusted Net Sales

(modifies – from 80.28% to 117.95% of percentage earned)

  Net sales, adjusted to remove the impact of certain adjustments to reported GAAP amounts and adjustments associated with a merger and acquisition  

Emphasize the business focus on revenue growth, with the appropriate linkage to gross margin

Gross Profit as a Percentage of Net Sales

(modifies – from 93.43% to 105.98% of percentage earned)

  Gross profit dollars as a percentage of net sales  

Measure the strength of our brands in the market place and the underlying strength of our operating performance

 

Measure our overall ability to price for innovation and input costs

 

54                LOGO   Mattel, Inc.    2016 Proxy Statement    


Table of Contents
          COMPENSATION DISCUSSION AND ANALYSIS  

 

The payouts under the MIP are based on the aggregate weighted performance percentage earned under the adjusted operating profit and adjusted free cash flow goals, which payout percentage is increased or decreased based on the two separate modifiers of adjusted net sales and gross profit as a percentage of net sales. The adjusted net sales multiplier was increased to 75% in 2015 from 20% in 2014 while the gross profit multiplier was reduced to 25% in 2015 from 80% in 2014. Presuming threshold achievement of adjusted operating profit goals, actual annual incentives payable to our NEOs may be between 22.5% and 200% of the executive’s target MIP opportunity, based on our attainment of the pre-established financial performance goals. If threshold adjusted operating profit goals are not met, then no amounts may be earned under the MIP. In addition, under our 2015 MIP, for NEOs (and executives in the executive leadership job level and above), the total incentive earnout percent for each bonus group’s calculation could not exceed 100% unless our 2015 TSR was positive.

The following table sets forth the operation of the MIP based on threshold, target and maximum performance under the objective performance measures. Linear interpolation between the threshold and target level and between the target and maximum level are applied for each measure.

 

Company Measure   Threshold   Target   Maximum

Adjusted Operating Profit (75%)

  30%   75%   120%

Adjusted Free Cash Flow (25%)

  10%   25%   40%

Combined Total % Earned Before

Multipliers

  40%   100%   160%

Adjusted Net Sales

(Multiplier)

  80.28% of % Earned (for threshold or less)   100% of % Earned   117.95% of % Earned

Gross Profit as a % of Net Sales

(Multiplier)

  93.43% of % Earned (for threshold or less)   100% of % Earned   105.98% of % Earned

Total % Earned

  22.5%   100%   200%

Presuming the adjusted operating profit threshold goal is achieved, performance under the MIP can result in percentages earned ranging from 22.5% at threshold (adjusted operating profit is at threshold performance and actual adjusted free cash flow is below threshold) to 200% at maximum, determined as follows:

 

  Threshold percentage: threshold adjusted operating profit percentage earned of 40% x 75% weighting = 30% earned x (lowest adjusted net sales multiplier of 80.28%) x (lowest gross profit as a percentage of net sales multiplier of 93.43%) = 22.5% threshold earnout.

 

  Maximum percentage: maximum adjusted operating profit percentage and adjusted free cash flow percentage earned of 120% + 40% = 160% earned x (maximum adjusted net sales multiplier of 117.95%) x (maximum gross profit as a percentage of net sales multiplier of 105.98%) = 200% maximum earnout.

In setting the target MIP financial performance goals for 2015, the Compensation Committee considered the economic environment and challenges we would be facing in the upcoming year, including currency headwinds, and sought to establish goals that would be difficult but not unrealistic, so as to motivate and reward the NEOs for the delivery of positive growth in business results without encouraging excessive risk taking. Target goals were lowered in comparison to 2014 in recognition of the difficult economic conditions anticipated for 2015. In particular, the adjusted net sales, adjusted operating profit and adjusted free cash flow threshold goals were set below 2014 actual results. For 2015, we achieved below threshold level for

 

  LOGO   Mattel, Inc.    2016 Proxy Statement               55


Table of Contents
  COMPENSATION DISCUSSION AND ANALYSIS          

 

the adjusted net sales goals, just slightly above the threshold level for the adjusted operating profit goals and just slightly above the target level for the adjusted free cash flow goals.

The table below shows the actual levels achieved in 2015 under our MIP.

 

Company Measure  

Threshold

(millions)

 

Target

(millions)

 

Maximum

(millions)

 

2015

Actual

(millions)

 

Weighted

Performance

Earnout %

Adjusted Operating Profit

(75% weighting)

    $ 550        $ 601        $ 652        $ 553      32%  

Adjusted Free Cash Flow

(25% weighting)

    $ 397        $ 497        $ 597        $ 505      26%  

Combined % Earned (before Multipliers)

      40%          100%          160%          58%      58%  

Adjusted Net Sales (Multiplier)

    $ 5,751        $ 5,899        $ 6,038        $ 5,703      Multiplier by 80.28%  

Gross Profit as a % of Net Sales (Multiplier)

      49.0%          49.8%          50.6%          49.2%      Multiplier by 95%  

Total Company Performance Earnout

                                          44.7%  

The table above reflects the goals and actual amounts as adjusted from GAAP consistent with the plan parameters and Compensation Committee approvals. As in past years, in order to improve alignment with stockholders’ interests and ensure that events outside the control of management do not unduly influence the achievement of the performance measures, actual results are adjusted for the impact of the adoption of new accounting pronouncements, impact of specified strategic initiatives, expenses and unusual items.

In 2015, actual results for these measures were adjusted for litigation costs, severance payments, acquisition and integration-related expenses and adjustments, factoring of receivables and cash tax payments. Without such adjustments, the actual results for the operating profit would have been $542 million and the actual results for the free cash flow would have been $481 million.

2015 Business Group Performance Measures and Results

As described above, additional business group financial performance measures applied to Messrs. Dickson and Walker.

 

  Global Brands Team (Dickson and Walker) – Global Brands Team (“GBT”) operating profit less inventory charge, times a multiplier based on GBT adjusted net sales, times a multiplier based on GBT gross profit as a percentage of net sales.

 

  Commercial – North America (Walker) – Commercial – North America operating profit less the sum of U.S. receivables charge and Canada working capital charge, times a multiplier based on Commercial – North America adjusted net sales, times a multiplier based on Commercial – North America gross profit as a percentage of net sales.

 

  Organization Component (Walker) – The MIP provides for an Organization performance component for employees not covered by Section 162(m) of the Code, which is funded separately from financial performance. The CEO determines the earnout under this component to be funded to senior executives, based on his assessment of financial and non-financial factors that impacted the Company for the year. At the time Mr. Walker transitioned into the role of EVP, Commercial – North America and his performance measures were established, it was not known that he would be covered by Section 162(m). Thus, the Organization component applied to Mr. Walker, and a portion of his MIP payment will be subject to Section 162(m) deduction limitations.

 

56                LOGO   Mattel, Inc.    2016 Proxy Statement    


Table of Contents
          COMPENSATION DISCUSSION AND ANALYSIS  

 

Threshold performance under each of the financial measures earns 40%, target performance earns 100% and maximum performance earns 160%, with the resulting percentage adjusted approximately 80% to 118% of such percentage earned based on the adjusted net sales multiplier, and further adjusted approximately 93% to 106% of the resulting percentage earned based on the gross profit as a percentage of net sales multiplier for the applicable business group. The following table sets forth the target and actual results, after permitted adjustments, for each group’s applicable operating profit, adjusted net sales, and gross profit as a percentage of net sales, which is then subject to the weightings above.

 

Business Group   Target
Operating
Profit
(millions)
  Actual
Operating
Profit
(millions)
  % Earned
from
Operating
Profit
  Target
Adjusted
Net Sales
(millions)
  Actual
Adjusted
Net Sales
(millions)
  Multiplier
Adjusted
Net Sales
 

Target

Gross
Profit %
of Net
Sales

  Actual
Gross
Profit %
of Net
Sales
  Multiplier
Gross
Profit %
of Net
Sales
  Earned %

Global Brands Team

    $ 746       $ 714         75 %     $ 4,910       $ 4,822         86 %       47.7 %       46.8 %       93 %       59.9 %

Commercial – North America

    $ 392       $ 390         97 %     $ 2,856       $ 2,918         117 %       42.2 %       41.4 %       93 %       105.7 %

Organization

                                                                              66.0 %

Mr. Dickson’s MIP Earnout

 

  For his time served as President, Chief Brands Officer, based on 50% weighting for GBT performance at 59.9% of target and 50% weighting of Company performance at 44.7% of target, Mr. Dickson earned 52.3% of his target annual incentive opportunity.

 

  For the remainder of the year (75% of the year), Mr. Dickson served in the role of President and COO, and his earnout percentage for this latter period of 2015 was the Company performance percentage of 44.7%.

 

  Accordingly, Mr. Dickson’s total earnout percentage for 2015 was the time weighted average of these two percentages, which equaled 46.6% of his target annual incentive opportunity.

Mr. Walker’s MIP Earnout

 

  For his time served as EVP, Global Brands Team – Fisher Price, based on 50% weighting for GBT performance at 59.9% of target and 50% weighting of Company performance at 44.7% of target, Mr. Walker earned 52.3% of his target annual incentive opportunity.

 

  For the remainder of the year (56.71% of the year), Mr. Walker’s earnout was based (i) 50% on Commercial – North America performance (105.7% of target), (ii) 25% on Organization performance (66% of target), and (iii) 25% on Company performance (44.7% of target). His earnout percentage for this portion of the year was 80.5% of his target annual incentive opportunity.

 

  Accordingly, Mr. Walker’s total earnout percentage for 2015 was the time weighted average of these two percentages, which equaled 68.3% of his target annual incentive opportunity.

2016 MIP

At its November 2015 and February 2016 meetings, our Compensation Committee approved changes to the annual incentive design under the MIP for 2016 to simplify the program and to drive profitable growth. The following summarizes the changes applicable to our NEOs’ (and other EVPs’) participation in the MIP for 2016:

 

 

Simplified financial performance measures – We simplified and streamlined the financial focus of the MIP by emphasizing net sales and adjusted operating profit (eliminating gross margin and free cash flow)

 

  LOGO   Mattel, Inc.    2016 Proxy Statement               57


Table of Contents
  COMPENSATION DISCUSSION AND ANALYSIS          

 

 

to drive profitable growth and placed a higher weighting on net sales, for greater alignment with our business objectives and turnaround strategy.

 

  Alignment with strategic priorities – The payout formula will be based 75% on achievement of financial goals (previously 100%) and 25% based on achievement of established strategic priorities related to the executive’s job responsibilities, to provide a stronger line of sight to operational performance over which the executive has responsibility and to drive a culture of accountability (such strategic priorities component paid out only if the adjusted operating profit threshold is achieved so that executives are appropriately held accountable for financial performance).

 

  Umbrella plan structure established – To allow maximum flexibility for the Compensation Committee while preserving tax deductibility, established an umbrella plan structure in which the MIP will be funded at maximum if a specified threshold level percentage of our target operating profit is achieved, subject to the Compensation Committee’s discretion to pay lesser amounts (e.g., to recognize varying contributions during challenging times for the Company).

 

  Threshold payout increase – Threshold levels will be slightly increased from 22.5% to 25% to more closely align with competitive practice.

Long-Term Incentives

 

Our LTIs are equity-based and aimed at focusing our executives on achieving our key long-term financial goals and strategic objectives, while rewarding growth in stockholder value that is sustained over several years. We believe our equity-based long-term incentives align our executives’ interests with those of our stockholders and provide important retention value.

Our current portfolio approach to LTIs is comprised of the following three equity components:

 

  Performance Units – Under our LTIP, as in place through 2015, Performance Units were granted every three years with end-to-end performance cycles and annual performance goals for each year and a three-year relative TSR market-related component; beginning 2016, Performance Units are granted every year, with overlapping three-year performance cycles, performance goals set at the commencement of the three-year performance cycle and a three-year relative TSR market-related component;

 

  Stock Options – Annual grants that have value only with stock price appreciation and continued service over time; and

 

  Time-vesting RSUs – Annual grants that put significant value at risk and are effective as an ownership and retention tool.

2015 LTI Annual Target Value Approach

Our 2014-2016 LTIP as in effect for 2015 consisted of the Performance Units attributable to the second year in the three-year cycle that commenced in 2014:

 

  The Compensation Committee allocates one-third of the grant date value of the Performance Units against the targeted annual equity value to be granted to each NEO in each of the three years of the LTIP performance period, as if that one-third amount was actually granted in each such year.

 

58                LOGO   Mattel, Inc.    2016 Proxy Statement    


Table of Contents
          COMPENSATION DISCUSSION AND ANALYSIS  

 

 

  This one-third allocation of granted Performance Units per year of the three-year performance cycle is generally consistent with required accounting treatment (which also requires that the value of the TSR modifier component of the Performance Units be allocated to the first year only) and SEC disclosure rules.

 

  Given that one-third of the total value of the Performance Units granted for the three-year performance cycle is allocated to the total LTI annual target value for each year of the three-year LTIP performance cycle, the remaining LTI annual target value for each year is divided equally into stock options and time-vesting RSUs. This approach provides consistent and predictable levels of value delivered and expense incurred.

2015 LTI Grant Values

In May 2015, with input from Cook & Co., the Compensation Committee considered Cook & Co.’s 2014 executive compensation competitiveness review as well as the history, terms and proposed total LTI annual target values to be effective as of July 31, 2015, and approved the total LTI annual target value range for each job level with a set target and maximum amount. In the context of these ranges, the Compensation Committee approved the specific 2015 total LTI annual target and actual annual grant value for each NEO.

The following table shows our NEOs’ 2015 annual grant values (which, with respect to 2015 Performance Units, reflects one-third of the value of the Performance Units granted under the 2014-2016 LTIP that was allocated to 2015), excluding Mr. Stockton who did not receive any awards in 2015.

 

Name  

2015

Stock Options

 

2015 Time-

Vesting

RSUs

 

2015 Performance

Units

 

2015 Total

LTI

Annual

Grant Value

Christopher A. Sinclair

    $ 5,000,000       $       $       $ 5,000,000  

Richard Dickson

    $ 1,300,000       $ 1,300,000       $ 400,000       $ 3,000,000  

Kevin M. Farr

    $ 625,000       $ 625,000       $ 583,333       $ 1,833,333  

Peter D. Gibbons

    $ 375,000       $ 375,000       $ 333,333       $ 1,083,333  

Geoffrey H. Walker

    $ 350,000       $ 350,000       $ 333,333       $ 1,033,333  

The LTI annual grant values noted in the table above for Messrs. Sinclair and Dickson include the grants made on April 13, 2015 in connection with their appointments to CEO, and President and COO, respectively. Each such award vests as to 33%, 33% and 34%, respectively, on each of the first three anniversaries of the grant date, subject to continued service. Our Compensation Committee intended that these awards represent the entire value of their annual LTI grants and, therefore, Messrs. Sinclair and Dickson did not receive any additional annual grants in July 2015.

Because almost half of the 2014-2016 performance cycle had completed at the time Mr. Sinclair was appointed as CEO, he did not receive any Performance Units in 2015 and thus does not participate in the current LTIP.

In addition to the LTI annual grant values noted in the table above, our Compensation Committee made the following special off-cycle grants to certain NEOs on January 29, 2015:

 

 

Grant of RSUs valued at $1,500,000 to Mr. Sinclair in connection with his appointment to Interim Chief Executive Officer, which vested in full on the first anniversary of the date of grant and which grant was

 

  LOGO   Mattel, Inc.    2016 Proxy Statement               59


Table of Contents
  COMPENSATION DISCUSSION AND ANALYSIS          

 

 

made to induce him to serve as our Interim CEO, and to compensate him for the increased responsibilities at a crucial and challenging time for the Company;

 

  Grant of RSUs valued at $750,000 to Mr. Dickson in connection with his promotion from Chief Brands Officer to President, Chief Brands Officer, which vests as to 33%, 33% and 34%, respectively, on each of the first three anniversaries of the grant date, subject to his continued service, to compensate him for the increased responsibilities; and

 

  Retention grants of RSUs valued at $500,000 to each of Messrs. Farr and Gibbons given the importance of their roles and contributions during the crucial turnaround period and in light of the very competitive talent market, which awards vest as to 66% on the second anniversary of the grant date and 34% on the third anniversary of the grant date, subject to their continued service, to encourage long-term value creation.

LTI Components

The following describes the three components of our equity-based LTIs: Performance Units under the LTIP, stock options and RSUs.

Performance Units – 2014-2016 LTIP

The measures under the 2014-2016 LTIP are designed to achieve the following objectives:

 

  Foster a long-term focus to improve operating profits while effectively deploying capital and ultimately creating value for stockholders;

 

  Encourage and reward executives for market share and top-line growth and drive performance; and

 

  Align executives’ interests with stockholders’ interests.

The Performance Units are earned over a three-year performance cycle, based on our performance against annual financial performance goals averaged over the three-year performance cycle. The resulting earned percentage is then increased or decreased based on our relative three-year TSR. In March 2015, our Compensation Committee established the annual NOPAT-CC and net sales goals for 2015. If earned, the Performance Units will be paid in shares of common stock, after certification of our performance results by the Compensation Committee at the end of the three-year performance cycle.

 

60                LOGO   Mattel, Inc.    2016 Proxy Statement    


Table of Contents
          COMPENSATION DISCUSSION AND ANALYSIS  

 

The measures under the 2014-2016 LTIP are as set forth in the following table.

 

Measure

 

Definition

 

Results

 

Purpose

Performance-Related Component   NOPAT-CC (75% weighting)  

Annual Net Operating Profit After Tax, Less a Capital Charge (“NOPAT-CC”).

Adjusted for the impact of:

 the adoption of new accounting pronouncements and

 certain strategic initiatives and unusual items

 

 Measures financial performance annually, then earnouts are averaged over the three-year performance cycle

 

 Focus executives on improving operating profits while effectively deploying capital and ultimately creating value for stockholders

  Net Sales (25% weighting)  

GAAP top-line item

(No adjustment)

 

 Measures financial performance annually, then earnouts are averaged over the three-year performance cycle

 

 Encourage and reward executives for market share and top-line growth and drives performance

Market-Related Component  

TSR

(Adjustment)

 

Ranking of Company’s relative TSR relative to companies in the

S&P 500

 

 Measures over the three-year performance cycle

 

 Results in decrease or increase of performance percentage earned (of up to 50 percentage points up or down) under the performance-related component

 

 Provide an additional link between incentive pay and stockholders’ interests, encourages long-term growth and measures our ability to outperform other companies

The financial performance goals for the Performance Units are set annually (and then the results are averaged over the three-year cycle). Under FASB ASC Topic 718, the grant date fair value of the financial performance measures under the 2014-2016 LTIP are determined annually based on the probable outcome of the financial performance goals established for that year under the LTIP, and this valuation is allocated to one-third of the granted Performance Units. This separate annual grant date fair value is reflected in the “Summary Compensation Table” for each separate year in the three-year performance cycle. The full grant date fair value of the three-year TSR adjustment, as a market-related component under the accounting rules, was shown in the “Summary Compensation Table” only in the first year of the performance cycle because FASB ASC Topic 718 requires that the grant date fair value of the TSR adjustment be shown only in the year of grant (2014 for the outstanding Performance Units). In accordance with the accounting rules, the grant date fair value of the TSR adjustment was determined in accordance with a Monte Carlo valuation.

 

  LOGO   Mattel, Inc.    2016 Proxy Statement               61


Table of Contents
  COMPENSATION DISCUSSION AND ANALYSIS          

 

Threshold level of NOPAT-CC performance must be achieved as a condition to any earnout for the applicable year. Presuming NOPAT-CC threshold performance is achieved, the formula for determining the annual earnout under the 2014-2016 LTIP is as follows:

 

                                 NOPAT – CC                             +                                Net Sales                              =  

Total % Earned Before

TSR Adjustment

% Earned After 75% Weighting

  % Earned After 25% Weighting    

Threshold – 37.5%

  Threshold – 12.5%   50%

Target – 75.0%

  Target – 25.0%   100%

Maximum – 112.5%

  Maximum – 37.5%   150%

 

  Linear interpolation applies to performance between threshold, target and maximum, with no earnout for performance below threshold.

 

  At the end of the three-year performance cycle, the performance earnout percentages for each of the three years are averaged together.

 

  The three-year average performance earnout percentage (“Earnout Percentage”) under the financial performance-related component is then adjusted based on our achievement of TSR relative to the TSR performance of companies in the S&P 500 for the three-year performance cycle, as follows:

 

    If our TSR is at or below the 25th percentile of the S&P 500, the Earnout Percentage is adjusted down 50 percentage points;

 

    If our TSR is at the 50th percentile, there is no change to the Earnout Percentage;

 

    If our TSR is at or above the 75th percentile, the Earnout Percentage is increased by 50 percentage points; and

 

    The adjustments for TSR levels achieved between the 25th, 50th and 75th percentiles are linearly interpolated. These TSR targets and point adjustments were established at the commencement of the 2014-2016 LTIP performance cycle.

 

  At maximum performance of the performance-related component and maximum performance of TSR, the total earnout would equal 200% of the target Performance Units granted. Given the effects of the TSR adjustment, threshold performance on both of the financial measures could result in zero Performance Units earned, as the TSR adjustment could result in the 50 percentage points earned being deducted.

 

  The Performance Units under the 2014-2016 LTIP have dividend equivalent rights that are converted to shares of Mattel common stock only when and to the extent the underlying Performance Units are earned and paid. Dividend equivalents are assumed to be reinvested in shares as of the closing price on the ex-dividend date, and participate in future dividend distributions, for all dividends during the three-year performance cycle.

The following table shows the goals for annual NOPAT-CC (weighted 75%) and net sales (weighted 25%) set by our Compensation Committee for the 2014-2016 performance cycle, and our actual results for these measures. The threshold goals for each of these measures were set at below actual results for 2014 in light of the challenges faced by our new management in this turnaround period.

 

62                LOGO   Mattel, Inc.    2016 Proxy Statement    


Table of Contents
          COMPENSATION DISCUSSION AND ANALYSIS  

 

 

Year   Measure  

Threshold 

(millions) 

 

Target 

(millions) 

 

Maximum 

(millions) 

 

Actual 

(millions) 

 

Weighted 

Performance 

Achieved 

2014  

 

NOPAT-CC

(75% weighting)

    $ 248       $ 305       $ 362       $ (116 )(1)       0 %
   

Net Sales

(25% weighting)

    $ 6,605       $ 6,775       $ 6,934       $ 6,024         0 %
    2014 Earnout                    0 %

2015

 

NOPAT-CC

(75% weighting)

    $ (200 )     $ (160 )     $ (120 )     $ (196 )(1)       41 %
   

Net Sales

(25% weighting)

    $ 5,751       $ 5,899       $ 6,038       $ 5,703         0 %
    2015 Earnout                    41 %

2016

  Approved annually by the Compensation Committee   

(1) In 2014 and 2015, actual results for the NOPAT-CC measure were adjusted for litigation costs and resolutions of legal disputes, severance payments, acquisition and integration-related expenses and adjustments, factoring of receivable, anticipation of receivables and cash tax payments. For 2015, without such adjustments, the actual for NOPAT-CC would have been $(190) million.

If the performance period for the Performance Units had ended on December 31, 2015, the effect of the TSR multiplier based on our current relative TSR would be to subtract 50% from the Earnout Percentage, which would have resulted in a zero earnout of the Performance Units.

For our NEOs, the following table shows the target number of Performance Units awarded for the 2014-2016 performance cycle, as well as the maximum share opportunity as of the initial March 2014 grant date and the maximum number of shares than can be earned after giving effect to the performance results for the first and second years (2014 and 2015) of the three-year performance cycle, and assuming maximum performance for 2016 under the performance measures and maximum performance under the TSR multiplier. The table below does not take into account the extremely low probability that the maximum shares will be earned, as it would require financial performance at the maximum level in 2016 and a three-year TSR at the 75th percentile relative to the S&P 500 (as of December 31, 2015, our relative TSR was at the 8th percentile).

2014-2016 LTIP Performance Cycle Payout Range

 

Name  

Target Performance

Units
Awarded

  Maximum
Share Opportunity
at Grant(1)
 

Maximum Share
Opportunity

At January 1, 2016(1)

Christopher A. Sinclair

                       

Richard Dickson

      33,717         67,434         38,336  

Kevin M. Farr

      49,171         98,342         55,907  

Peter D. Gibbons

      28,098         56,196         31,947  

Geoffrey H. Walker

      28,098         56,196         31,947  

Bryan G. Stockton

      154,538         309,076         58,570 (2)

(1) These amounts do not factor in the dividend equivalent rights, as the amounts of the dividends paid on Mattel’s common stock during the three-year performance cycle are unknown at this time.

(2) The maximum share opportunity for Mr. Stockton reflects the proration of 12 months (through January 25, 2015) of the 36 month cycle pursuant to the terms of his Performance Unit Grant Agreement.

 

  LOGO   Mattel, Inc.    2016 Proxy Statement               63


Table of Contents
  COMPENSATION DISCUSSION AND ANALYSIS          

 

Performance Units – 2016-2018 LTIP

At their November 2015 meeting, our Compensation Committee determined that moving to grants every year, instead of grants every three years, better aligns with market practice (100% of Mattel’s comparator peer companies with performance units have adopted this approach). Annual LTIP grants would provide us the flexibility to respond to management and organization changes, especially during our turnaround. The Committee thus approved a new 2016-2018 LTIP cycle, while still maintaining the current 2014-2016 LTIP cycle. With the new 2016-2018 LTIP cycle, the Committee eliminated the NOPAT-CC and net sales annual performance measures and approved the performance measure of EPS, while still maintaining the three- year TSR modifier component. The EPS goals have been set at the commencement of the three-year performance cycle, and between 50% to 150% of target opportunity can be earned based on EPS. The TSR modifier will continue to be a relative measure of our performance as compared to companies in the S&P 500 and can result in an increase or decrease of the earnout by up to 50% using the same formula in effect for our outstanding Performance Units. The Compensation Committee believes that the EPS performance measure and setting the goals for the three-year performance cycle at the commencement of the three-year period simplify and focus the communication to executives of the LTIP objectives, support our turnaround strategy, tie the pay opportunity more directly to the interests of our stockholders with long-term value creation and provide long-term differentiated goals as compared to the MIP.

For our current executives, the following table shows the target number of Performance Units awarded to each of our NEOs under the 2016-2018 LTIP on March 21, 2016 and the maximum number of shares that can be earned.

2016-2018 LTIP Performance Cycle Payout Range

 

Name  

Target Performance

Units
Awarded

  Maximum
Share Opportunity
At Grant(1)

Christopher A. Sinclair

      61,892         123,784  

Richard Dickson

      26,525         53,050  

Kevin M. Farr

      15,517         31,034  

Peter D. Gibbons

      9,284         18,568  

Geoffrey H. Walker

      9,284         18,568  

(1) These amounts do not factor in the dividend equivalent rights, as the amounts of the dividends paid on Mattel’s common stock during the three-year performance cycle are unknown at this time.

Stock Options and RSUs – Annual Grants

Included in our portfolio approach to equity-based LTIs, our Compensation Committee annually approves awards of:

 

 

Stock Options – vest in approximately three equal annual installments on the first through third anniversaries of the grant date (33%, 33% and 34%, respectively), and have a 10-year term. Stock options align the executives’ interests with stockholders’ interests by providing the opportunity for executives to realize value only when our stock price increases. Furthermore, if the stock price increases, the three-year vesting period helps to retain executives. However, if our stock price does not increase, then the stock options provide no value to executives. Based on the closing price of our stock on December 31, 2015 of $27.17, the stock options granted in 2012, 2013 and 2014 are underwater, with

 

64                LOGO   Mattel, Inc.    2016 Proxy Statement    


Table of Contents
          COMPENSATION DISCUSSION AND ANALYSIS  

 

 

exercise prices exceeding such closing price. The annual stock options granted in 2015 are in the money with an exercise price of $23.21 due to our stock price increase in the last five months of the year; and

 

  RSUs – vest in approximately three equal annual installments on the first through third anniversaries of the grant date (33%, 33% and 34%, respectively). In contrast to stock options, time-vesting RSUs have some value regardless of whether our stock price increases or decreases. Time-vesting RSUs help to secure and retain executives and instill an ownership mentality over the three-year vesting period. As part of our cash cost savings initiative, the Compensation Committee determined to eliminate cash dividend equivalents for unvested RSUs granted on or after July 31, 2015, which included time-vesting RSUs granted under our 2015 annual equity program.

In sum, while all three equity components of our LTIs link our executives’ pay to stockholder value, Performance Units and stock options put significant compensation value at risk in relation to increases in stockholder value, while time-vesting RSUs are particularly effective as a retention and stock ownership tool.

CEO 2015 Targeted TDC

 

The Compensation Committee annually evaluates the overall competitiveness of our CEO’s (as well as other NEOs’) targeted TDC. In November 2015, the Compensation Committee reviewed our CEO’s compensation relative to the Company’s new comparator peer group, described below under “Executive Compensation Process and Governance – Reviews and Process – Comparator Peer Group.” The review showed that for 2015, Mr. Sinclair’s targeted TDC was at the median of our comparator peer group.

The table below shows that Mr. Sinclair’s realizable compensation at the end of 2015 was 108% of his 2015 targeted TDC. A primary mandate by our Board for Mr. Sinclair when he was appointed Interim CEO and then later became CEO was to begin taking the necessary steps to turnaround the business in order to re-establish confidence in our stock. Mr. Sinclair’s 2015 targeted LTI (RSUs and stock options) reflect this mandate and was intended to emphasize and reward stock price growth.

 

  Because our stock price had grown approximately 12% since the stock options were granted, which was shortly after Mr. Sinclair’s appointment as CEO in April, the stock options are now worth more than they were at the grant date and his RSU grant also increased in value by approximately $15,100 at year end.

Given our turnaround goals, the Board believes that this was the right level and mix of LTI for Mr. Sinclair in this year of transition.

 

  LOGO   Mattel, Inc.    2016 Proxy Statement               65


Table of Contents
  COMPENSATION DISCUSSION AND ANALYSIS          

 

 

LOGO

 

2015 Targeted TDC

2015 Targeted Annual Cash

   $3,189,000

Base Salary

   $1,500,000

Target Annual Incentive (MIP)(1)

   $1,689,000

2015 LTI Grant Date Values(1)(2)

   $6,499,999

Stock Options

   $5,000,001

Stock Awards

   $1,499,998

Total 2015 Targeted Compensation

   $9,688,999
2015 Realizable TDC

2015 Actual Annual Cash

   $  2,254,983

Base Salary

   $  1,500,000

Actual Annual Incentive (MIP) Paid(3)

   $     754,983

2015 LTI Realizable Values(4)

   $  8,197,298

Stock Options

   $  6,682,244

Stock Awards(5)

   $  1,515,054

Total 2015 Realizable Compensation

   $10,452,281

% of Targeted Compensation

   108%
 

 

(1) Reflects amounts disclosed in the “Grants of Plan-Based Awards in 2015” table on page 84. The 2015 target bonus opportunity of 150% of base salary was prorated for 2015 based on the period Mr. Sinclair served as CEO (April 12, 2015 through December 31, 2015).

(2) Reflects amounts disclosed in the “Grants of Plan-Based Awards in 2015” table on page 84.

(3) Reflects amounts disclosed in the “Summary Compensation Table” for 2015 on page 78.

(4) The value shown for the 2015 stock options reflects the intrinsic value of such options as of fiscal year end based on the difference between the $27.17 stock price and the option exercise price of $24.31. If instead the Black Scholes value of the stock options was taken into account at year end, then such options would be valued at $6.9 million, resulting in Total 2015 Realizable Compensation of $10.7 million or 111% of Targeted Compensation.

(5)The value shown for 2015 RSUs reflects our stock price as of fiscal year end of $27.17.

 

66                LOGO   Mattel, Inc.    2016 Proxy Statement    


Table of Contents
          COMPENSATION DISCUSSION AND ANALYSIS  

 

Other Forms of Compensation

 

Perquisites and other Personal Benefits

We offer the following perquisites to our NEOs to attract and retain key executive talent:

 

  Car Allowance – We provide our executives with a monthly car allowance, which is intended to cover expenses related to the lease, purchase, insurance and maintenance of their vehicle and to allow our executives to fulfill their job responsibilities that involve extensive regional travel to the offices of clients and business partners. We provide this allowance in lieu of tracking and providing mileage reimbursement to executives who use their vehicles more frequently for business. The monthly amount of the allowance is based on the executive’s job level. In 2015, our Compensation Committee approved Mr. Sinclair’s use of a company car, in lieu of a car allowance, in connection with his appointment to Interim CEO and then CEO. The cost of the company car to us is expected to approximate the cost of the monthly allowance provided to our other NEOs.

 

  Financial Counseling Services – We provide financial counseling and tax return preparation service through a third-party financial service to assist with regulatory compliance and to provide guidance in managing complex investment, tax and legal matters. We believe that providing this service gives our executives a better understanding of their compensation and benefits and their value, allowing the executives to concentrate on Mattel’s future success.

 

  Executive Physicals – We provide executive physical examination and diagnostic service costs. We believe that the executive physicals help ensure the health of our executives and provide a retention tool at a reasonable cost to Mattel.

 

  Relocation Assistance – We provide relocation assistance to newly hired and current executives who would have to relocate to accept our job offer or a new role within Mattel. Such relocation assistance can be pursuant to Mattel’s relocation program, which is designed to cover the costs directly resulting from the Company-requested relocation, which includes travel, shipping household goods, temporary housing and participation in a home sale program (which covers certain costs (but not loss) on the sale of the executive’s home), and/or can be a one-time special relocation payment. The executives are required to repay such relocation program benefits or payments if they resign or their employment is terminated for cause within one year or two years of the transfer date, as applicable. Our relocation program and one-time special relocation payments benefit Mattel, are business-related and are primarily to eliminate or lessen the expenses that the executive incurs as a direct result of the Company’s request. They are important tools for us to recruit and retain key management talent and allocate our talent as best fits our Company objectives.

In connection with Mr. Sinclair’s appointment to Interim CEO and then as CEO, our Compensation Committee approved a special allowance in the amount of $60,000 per month, which was in lieu of participation in Mattel’s relocation program or any one-time special relocation payment. This was intended to assist him with his living and commuting expenses while working in California and maintaining his primary residence in Florida.

Mr. Walker was provided relocation assistance in 2015, as his leadership at our headquarters office was deemed critical in his new role. In connection with his relocation from New York to California, he received our relocation program benefits, a special relocation payment of $200,000 and reimbursement of $125,000 to cover the loss he incurred on the sale of his home in New York. While we generally have a practice against reimbursing for the loss on the sale of a home, we made an exception for Mr. Walker.

 

  LOGO   Mattel, Inc.    2016 Proxy Statement               67


Table of Contents
  COMPENSATION DISCUSSION AND ANALYSIS          

 

As part of our turnaround and at the Company’s request, Mr. Walker was relocated in a short time frame from New York to Mattel’s headquarters in California to lead our Commercial – North America division, and the payment reflected the actual loss incurred by Mr. Walker upon the sale of his home. Mr. Walker is required to repay the $125,000 home loss payment if he resigns or his employment is terminated with cause within two years of the date he received the payment, and he is also required to repay the $200,000 relocation payment if he resigns or his employment is terminated with cause within two years of his transfer date. In addition, he is required to repay other relocation services or expenses in full if he resigns or his employment is terminated with cause within one year of his transfer date.

 

  Limited Aircraft Use – Mr. Sinclair is eligible for periodic personal use of a private aircraft up to a maximum of 25 flight hours per year to facilitate time management and focus on Mattel. In providing this benefit to Mr. Sinclair, the Compensation Committee determined that Mr. Sinclair’s use of a private aircraft for personal use also benefits Mattel as it allows him to be available quickly and efficiently for our business needs, especially in light of Mr. Sinclair having his primary residence in Florida while working in California.

Retirement Plans

Our NEOs participate in the same broadly-based benefit plans as our other U.S. employees. In addition, we provide NEOs certain executive benefits, which are not provided to other employees generally, to promote tax efficiency or to replace benefit opportunities that are not available to executives because of regulatory limits. These include:

 

  The 2005 Supplemental Executive Retirement Plan (“SERP”), our supplemental, non-qualified pension plan provides supplemental retirement income to a selected few senior executives. No new participants have been added to the SERP since 2001, and as a result, Mr. Farr is the only NEO earning benefits under the SERP. (Mr. Stockton also earned benefits during his employment with Mattel.)

 

  The Mattel, Inc. Deferred Compensation and PIP Excess Plan (“DCP”), our non-qualified deferred compensation plan, generally provides our U.S.-based executives with a mechanism to defer compensation in excess of the amounts that are permitted to be deferred under our tax-qualified, 401(k) savings plan (“401(k) Plan”). Together, the 401(k) Plan and the DCP allow participants to set aside amounts as tax-deferred savings for their retirement. Similar to the 401(k) Plan, the DCP provides for Company automatic contributions and matching contributions, both of which are at the same levels as the Company contributions in the 401(k) Plan, which is available to our general employee population. Our Compensation Committee believes the opportunity to defer compensation is a competitive benefit that enhances our ability to attract and retain talented executives while building plan participants’ long-term commitment to Mattel. The return on the deferred amounts is linked to the performance of market-based investment choices made available in the plan. The terms of Mr. Sinclair’s letter agreement provide that he is not eligible to participate in the DCP.

No Poor Pay Tax Gross-Up Practices on Perquisites and Benefits

Mattel generally does not provide tax gross-up payments to our executives in connection with perquisites and benefits. In certain limited cases, Mattel does provide tax gross-up payments for relocation expenses and related international tax compliance and tax equalization costs and payments because we believe such expenses benefit Mattel, are business-related and are expenses that the executive incurs as a direct result of Mattel’s request, and this is generally available to other employees.

 

68                LOGO   Mattel, Inc.    2016 Proxy Statement    


Table of Contents
          COMPENSATION DISCUSSION AND ANALYSIS  

 

Severance, Change-of-Control Benefits and Related Matters

 

We have three executive severance arrangements: the Mattel, Inc. Executive Severance Plan (the “Severance Plan”), the Mattel, Inc. Executive Severance Plan B (the “Severance Plan B,” and together with the Severance Plan, the “Executive Severance Plans”) and an executive severance practice. As of the end of fiscal year 2015, Mr. Farr participated in the Severance Plan and Mr. Dickson participated in the Severance Plan B. Messrs. Gibbons and Walker are eligible for benefits under our current executive severance practice. Mr. Sinclair is not eligible to participate in any severance plan, arrangement or program, including our executive severance practice; however, pursuant to the terms of his letter agreement, in the event of his termination of employment, Mr. Sinclair would be eligible to receive a current-year, prorated MIP payout based on actual performance and paid at the time bonuses are generally paid to employees.

At the time of adopting each of the Executive Severance Plans, our Compensation Committee reviewed competitive data of severance benefits prepared by Cook & Co. Our Compensation Committee believes that the benefits provided by the Executive Severance Plans are reflective of current compensation market practices and trends. Under the Executive Severance Plans, benefits are only provided if an executive’s employment is terminated by Mattel without cause or, solely under the Severance Plan, by the executive for good reason. No benefits are provided under the Executive Severance Plans if there is only a change of control without a qualifying termination of employment. The Severance Plan provides a severance benefit multiple of two times the sum of base salary plus annual incentive and the Severance Plan B provides a severance benefit multiple of one times base salary plus annual incentive, with an opportunity for an additional 0.5 times the sum of base salary plus annual incentive in the event the executive has not found employment by the first anniversary of the termination of the employment date. The Executive Severance Plans do not provide for excise tax gross-ups.

Under our current executive severance practice that is applicable to Senior Vice Presidents and above who are not participants in the Executive Severance Plans, if the executive’s employment is terminated without cause, they would receive severance payments totaling the greater of (i) up to an amount calculated based on their years of service, salary and age and (ii) up to their annual base salary. The first half of the severance amounts will be paid in installments, and the remaining half will be paid (in installments as well) only to the extent the executive has not found employment by the time the first half of the severance payments have been paid. Amounts under our executive severance practice would not exceed the amounts under the Executive Severance Plans. Under our current executive severance practice, Mr. Gibbons would be eligible for severance payments up to his base salary, and Mr. Walker would be eligible for severance payments up to the amount calculated based on his years of service, salary and age, which at December 31, 2015 equated to approximately 1.16x his base salary. We also provide continued benefits coverage for up to three months, payments equivalent to COBRA premiums for up to an additional three months and outplacement services. Our executive severance practice is subject to change from time to time.

Our Compensation Committee believes that our executive severance arrangements are key to our ability to recruit, retain and develop key, high-quality management talent in a competitive market because such arrangements provide reasonable protection to the executive in the event he or she is not retained under specific circumstances. In addition, our tiered approach to severance arrangements allows us to tailor our arrangements as appropriate to each job level based on market practice.

Mr. Stockton’s employment terminated on January 25, 2015, and he was provided severance benefits under the Severance Plan. See “Estimated Potential Payments” for details of Mr. Stockton’s severance benefits.

 

  LOGO   Mattel, Inc.    2016 Proxy Statement               69


Table of Contents
  COMPENSATION DISCUSSION AND ANALYSIS          

 

Mattel entered into a 12-month agreement with Mr. Stockton to obtain the benefit of his experience and knowledge and to facilitate an effective and efficient transition (the “Stockton Consulting Agreement”). Under the consulting agreement, from March 1, 2015 through February 29, 2016, Mr. Stockton agreed to provide transition and advisory services to Mattel, including: (i) consult with and advise Mattel with respect to its on-going operations, (ii) supply and verify factual and historical information in connection with various Mattel matters that require him to remain reasonably available, as needed by Mattel (iii) fully cooperate with Mattel with respect to any proceedings that relate to or arise from any matter with which he was involved during his employment or that concerns any matter of which he has information or knowledge, (iv) provide services related to Mattel’s charitable undertakings, and (v) provide such other services as may be reasonably requested by the Chairman of the Board or his designee. During the term of the consulting agreement, Mr. Stockton was subject to a number of covenants in favor of Mattel, including non-competition, non-solicitation, confidentiality and cooperation in proceedings. Mr. Stockton received $125,000 per month during the term of the consulting agreement, which was conditioned upon his continued services through each payment date, his compliance with the terms and conditions of the consulting agreement and his execution and non-revocation of a general release of claims against the Company on or following the end of the consulting period, which was executed.

 

70                LOGO   Mattel, Inc.    2016 Proxy Statement    


Table of Contents
          COMPENSATION DISCUSSION AND ANALYSIS  

 

IMPORTANT POLICIES AND GUIDELINES

Stock Ownership Guidelines

 

We have had stock ownership guidelines for our NEOs and certain other senior executives since 2001. Under our current stock ownership guidelines, effective January 1, 2014, the targeted stock ownership is established as Mattel shares with a value equal to a multiple of base salary, as set forth below.

 

Name  

Salary Multiple

as of 12/2015

Christopher A. Sinclair

      6x  

Kevin M. Farr

      4x  

Richard Dickson

      4x  

Peter D. Gibbons

      3x  

Geoffrey H. Walker

      2x  

Generally, executive officers have five years from the later of the date the new target levels were established or the date of promotion or hiring to meet the guidelines. Thus, each NEO, other than Messrs. Sinclair and Dickson, has until December 31, 2018 to meet these guidelines. Due to Mr. Sinclair’s appointment to CEO on April 2, 2015, he has until March 31, 2020 to meet these guidelines. Due to Mr. Dickson’s increased targeted stock ownership requirements on January 13, 2015 in connection with his promotion to President, Chief Brands Officer, he has until December 31, 2019 to meet these guidelines.

All the NEOs have either met their target levels or are on track to be in compliance by their deadlines. However, if the target level ownerships are not met within the compliance deadline, the executive officers are required to retain 100% of after-tax shares acquired from equity awards until the guidelines are met. Our Compensation Committee believes that our guidelines align with best practices.

Shares counted toward ownership guidelines include: shares of Mattel stock directly owned, shares of Mattel stock beneficially owned, shares of Mattel stock held in the Mattel Stock Fund of Mattel’s 401k retirement plan and phantom shares of Mattel stock held in the Mattel Stock Equivalent Fund of our DCP.

Insider Trading Policy

 

Mattel’s insider trading policy, as implemented, generally prohibits Board members, officers and employees from engaging in short-term or speculative transactions in Mattel’s shares, including short sales, transactions in publicly-traded options and other derivative securities, hedging transactions, holding Mattel shares in a margin account and pledging or using Mattel shares owned as collateral for loans.

Recoupment of Compensation

 

Our Clawback Policy requires, at the discretion of our Compensation Committee, forfeiture or reimbursement of certain cash and equity incentive compensation that was paid, granted or vested based on financial results that, when recalculated to include the impact of a material financial restatement, were not achieved. The Clawback Policy applies to incentive compensation paid, granted or vested, within three

 

  LOGO   Mattel, Inc.    2016 Proxy Statement               71


Table of Contents
  COMPENSATION DISCUSSION AND ANALYSIS          

 

years preceding the material financial restatement, to all Section 16 officers and any other direct reports to the CEO. If the covered employee did not engage in misconduct in connection with the material financial restatement, our Compensation Committee may recover the excess incentive compensation determined based on the restated financials. If the covered employee engaged in misconduct in connection with the material financial restatement, our Compensation Committee may recover the full amount of incentive compensation paid, granted or vested based on financial results that were impacted by the restatement. Our Compensation Committee believes this policy encourages outstanding leadership, accountability and responsible management that benefits the growth of Mattel, and is aligned with good governance practices.

In order to better align executives’ long-term interests with those of Mattel and its subsidiaries and affiliates, our Amended 2010 Plan, 2010 Plan and our 2005 Equity Compensation Plan (“2005 Plan”) provide that, subject to certain limitations, Mattel may terminate outstanding grants, rescind exercises, payments or deliveries of shares pursuant to grants, and/or recapture proceeds of a participant’s sale of shares of Mattel common stock delivered pursuant to grants if the participant violates specified confidentiality and intellectual property requirements or engages in certain activities against the interest of Mattel or any of its subsidiaries and affiliates. These provisions apply only to grants made to employees for services as such, and they do not apply to participants following any severance that occurs within 24 months after a change of control.

Our SERP provides that we can recoup benefits from an executive who commences service for one of our competitors or otherwise engages in behavior that is damaging to Mattel. The purpose of this provision is to impose appropriate limitations on the compensation that executives receive if they choose to join a competitor, and to align the executives’ compensation with the value they deliver to Mattel, not to prevent executives from leaving Mattel to join a competitor, nor to punish executives who choose to do so.

 

72                LOGO   Mattel, Inc.    2016 Proxy Statement    


Table of Contents
          COMPENSATION DISCUSSION AND ANALYSIS  

 

EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION PROCESS AND GOVERNANCE

Roles and Expert Independent Advice

 

Independent Compensation Committee

Our executive compensation programs are designed and administered under the direction and control of our Compensation Committee. Our Compensation Committee is comprised solely of independent directors, who review and approve our overall executive compensation programs and practices and set the compensation of our senior executives.

Independent Compensation Consultant

Cook & Co. is our Compensation Committee’s independent compensation consultant. Our Compensation Committee has determined that Cook & Co. is independent and does not have any conflicts of interests with the Company. Cook & Co. provides a number of services to our Compensation Committee throughout the year. Typically, Cook & Co. provides a comprehensive market analysis of our compensation programs each year. In 2015, this review occurred in November (instead of May as in prior years) in order to take into account the compensation decisions made during the first half of the year relating to our reorganization and the updated comparative data that is then available from SEC filings. See “The Board of Directors and Corporate Governance – Board General Information – Board Committees – Compensation Committee” section of this Proxy Statement for detailed discussion of the services provided by Cook & Co. in 2015.

CEO and the Human Resources Department

While our Compensation Committee has overall responsibility for establishing the elements, level and administration of our executive compensation programs, our CEO and members of our Human Resources Department routinely participate in this process. Our CEO generally conducts the performance reviews of each of his direct reports and makes recommendations to our Compensation Committee regarding adjustments to base salary, target and actual annual incentives and LTI target and grant values. Our CEO’s recommendations are one of the factors considered by our Compensation Committee in making its determinations. When appropriate, our Compensation Committee meets in an executive session without management, including when our CEO’s compensation is being approved. The Compensation Committee also makes recommendations to our Board regarding the executive compensation programs and practices and informs the non-management directors of our Board of its decisions regarding compensation for our CEO, his direct reports and other senior executives.

 

  LOGO   Mattel, Inc.    2016 Proxy Statement               73


Table of Contents
  COMPENSATION DISCUSSION AND ANALYSIS          

 

Reviews and Process

 

Market Competitiveness Review

We evaluate the overall competitiveness of our executives’ TDC annually. Certain components of our executives’ actual compensation are determined primarily by operational and business group financial performance, reflecting our pay-for-performance philosophy. For 2015 compensation decisions until November 2015, Cook & Co. used an 18-company comparator peer group based on their analysis in May 2014.

In November 2015, Cook & Co. reviewed our comparator peer group and three new companies were added. Cook & Co. evaluated our executives TDC for 2015 as compared to the executive TDC of our 21-company comparator peer group (discussed below), based on information from their most recent SEC filings and a custom selection of an Aon Hewitt survey that included 64 branded, consumer-goods companies, in which 11 of our peer group companies participated. Cook & Co.’s report included the base salaries, target and actual annual incentives, bonus leverage, target and actual LTIs, target and actual TDC and all other compensation for our NEOs as compared to the compensation of their counterparts at our comparator peer companies and in the custom survey. The report also provided an analysis of our annual incentive plan design, and found that our annual incentive plan structure is similar to those at our comparator companies with respect to performance measurement and plan leverage. The report further provided that similar to our equity-based LTIs, most of our comparator peer companies also have “balanced” long-term incentive programs, with two or more grant types. Finally, the report showed that our CEO’s targeted TDC (including taking into account the special allowance) was at the median of our comparator peer group.

Comparator Peer Group

As a global consumer goods company, we compete for executive talent with, and our comparator peer group is made up of, a large range of companies that are category leaders in the consumer products, apparel and fashion, food and beverage, retail, and entertainment and leisure industries. We consider Mattel to be a branded consumer-goods company with franchise brands, and we recognize the value and importance of other global category leaders in capturing a diverse representation of the various markets and areas in which we compete for executive talent. Our Compensation Committee determined that it was appropriate to have a more diverse comparator peer group beyond toy companies, as there are not enough publicly-reporting toy companies, and those that are publicly-reporting companies are generally not comparable to us in size. Our comparator peer companies are comprised of companies within the consumer products manufacturing industries with recognized brands, which are comparable to us in their orientation, business model, size (as measured by revenue, net income growth, employees and market capitalization) and global scale and reach. Compensation paid by this comparator peer group generally is representative of the compensation we believe is required to attract, retain and motivate our executive talent. Our Compensation Committee, in conjunction with Cook & Co., reviews the makeup of this group annually and makes adjustments to the composition of the group as it deems appropriate.

The 18-comparator peer group used in Cook & Co.’s May 2014 report was used for most of the compensation decisions in 2015. The 2015 comparator peer group approved in November 2015 was designed to continue to fall between about one-third to three times our size, measured by revenue and market capitalization, and to position Mattel closer to the median under these measures. In addition, our Compensation Committee also considered whether the comparator peer companies had similar pay

 

74                LOGO   Mattel, Inc.    2016 Proxy Statement    


Table of Contents
          COMPENSATION DISCUSSION AND ANALYSIS  

 

models and reasonable compensation practices, as well as whether the companies were listed as peers of our other peer group companies and whether they were used by two proxy advisory firms, ISS and Glass Lewis, in their review of last year’s proxy statement.

Pursuant to Cook & Co.’s review of our comparator peer group in November 2015, three new peer group companies were added: Church & Dwight Co., Inc., Hanesbrands Inc. and Spectrum Brands, Inc. The updated 2015 comparator peer group was comprised of the following 21 companies with the three new added companies:

 

Mattel’s Comparator Peer Group for Executive Compensation as of November 2015

Avon Products, Inc.

   Gap, Inc.    L Brands, Inc. (formerly Limited

Brands, Inc.)

Campbell Soup Company

   General Mills, Inc.    Newell Rubbermaid, Inc.

Church & Dwight Co., Inc.*

   Hanesbrands Inc.*    PVH Corp.

The Clorox Company

   Hasbro, Inc.    Ralph Lauren Corporation

Coach, Inc.

   The Hershey Company    Spectrum Brands, Inc.*

Energizer Holdings, Inc.

   The J.M. Smucker Company    Tiffany & Co.

Estee Lauder Companies, Inc.

   Kellogg Company    V.F. Corporation

* New companies added.

Tally Sheets

As part of our Compensation Committee’s annual compensation review process, our Human Resources Department prepares, and reviews with Cook & Co. and our Compensation Committee, comprehensive tally sheets illustrating the total compensation for the most recent two years of our CEO, his direct reports and other potential NEOs. Although tally sheets do not drive individual executive compensation decisions, the tally sheets are created and reviewed so that our Compensation Committee is aware of the total compensation of these executives. Total compensation includes the executives’ base salary, target and actual annual cash incentives, equity-based LTI (including Performance Units, stock options and time-vesting RSUs), perquisites, retirement benefits and other compensation. The tally sheets also include each executive’s holdings of Mattel common stock, actual and estimated dividend equivalent payments, and accumulated value and unrealized gains under prior equity grants at various stock prices (realized and realizable pay). In conjunction with the review of tally sheets, our Compensation Committee reviews ten-year compensation histories of current and potential NEOs, and the potential severance and change-of-control benefits that would be payable to executives under the Executive Severance Plans.

Equity Grant Procedures

Our Compensation Committee approves all equity grants to all executives who are in the executive leadership job level and above in Mattel’s compensation structure. For grants to employees below the executive leadership job level, our Board has delegated the authority to an Equity Grant Allocation Committee, subject to certain limitations, to approve annual and off-cycle equity compensation grants (such as grants to employees who are newly hired or promoted). Mr. Sinclair was the sole member of the committee in 2015, following his appointment as Interim CEO.

 

  LOGO   Mattel, Inc.    2016 Proxy Statement               75


Table of Contents
  COMPENSATION DISCUSSION AND ANALYSIS          

 

Like other public companies, we seek to implement equity compensation grant procedures that are intended to comply with evolving best practices, taking into account accounting, tax and regulatory requirements, and have adopted the following procedures:

 

  Annual Grants – In May, our Compensation Committee reviews and approves the annual equity grant approach. Our Human Resources Department reviews with our Compensation Committee the equity compensation program’s objectives, background, grant approach, grant process, and the proposed total pool of shares and value to be granted. Specific recommendations regarding the aggregate equity pool to be allocated to employees, the size and value of awards to be granted to employees per job level, and the recommended grants to be made to the executives at the executive leadership job level and above are presented to our Compensation Committee and reviewed by Cook & Co. At this May meeting, the Compensation Committee determines the total LTI annual target and grant values for our CEO, his direct reports and other EVPs.

Since 2005, the annual equity grant for employees (including our NEOs) has occurred on or about August 1st, with stock options having an exercise price equal to the closing price of Mattel common stock on such date. The 2015 annual equity grant timing was consistent with this practice, with the grants occurring on July 31st (the business day prior to August 1, since that date was a Saturday). At the end of July of each year, our Compensation Committee meets to confirm the methodology for converting the grant values to units or shares and to approve the annual equity target grant values by job level for employees below the executive leadership job level.

In May, our Compensation Committee also sets, subject to approval by our Board, the key parameters of the delegation of authority to the Equity Grant Allocation Committee for the annual grants and off-cycle grants to employees below the executive leadership job level.

 

  Other Grants – If there are proposed new hire or other off-cycle equity grants for consideration for executives in the executive leadership job level and above, our Compensation Committee will review proposed grants at its next scheduled meeting. If the equity grants are approved, the grant date is the last trading day of the month of the later of the action date (e.g., hire or promotion date) or the Compensation Committee approval date.

For annual, new hire and other off-cycle grants to employees below the executive leadership job level, our Equity Grant Allocation Committee receives a report detailing proposed equity grants. The report lists the proposed grant values by employee name and position and whether the grant is within the equity grant parameters set by our Compensation Committee. Our Equity Grant Allocation Committee reviews the pre-circulated list of proposed grants presented to it and considers and acts upon the proposals by unanimous written consent. If the equity grants are approved, the grant date is the last trading day of the month following the month of hire or as indicated in the approval (and in all cases, is a date following the date of the unanimous written consent).

 

  Our practice is to grant all of our stock options at an exercise price at least equal to the closing price of Mattel common stock on the grant date.

Tax and Accounting Considerations

 

Section 162(m) of the Internal Revenue Code generally disallows a tax deduction for compensation in excess of $1 million paid to our CEO and our three other most highly compensated NEOs employed at the end of the year (other than our Chief Financial Officer). Certain compensation is specifically exempt from the deduction limit to the extent that it does not exceed $1 million during any fiscal year or is

 

76                LOGO   Mattel, Inc.    2016 Proxy Statement    


Table of Contents
          COMPENSATION DISCUSSION AND ANALYSIS  

 

“performance-based” as defined in Section 162(m) of the Internal Revenue Code. Although we have plans that are intended to permit the award of deductible compensation under Section 162(m) of the Internal Revenue Code, our Compensation Committee does not necessarily limit executive compensation to the amount deductible under that provision. Rather, it considers the available alternatives and may exercise discretion to pay nondeductible compensation if our Compensation Committee believes other important considerations outweigh the tax considerations.

Mattel accounts for stock-based compensation in accordance with FASB ASC Topic 718, which requires us to recognize compensation expense for share-based payments (including stock options and other forms of equity compensation). The impact of FASB ASC Topic 718 has been taken into account by our Compensation Committee in determining to use a portfolio approach to equity grants, including Performance Units, stock options and RSUs.

 

  LOGO   Mattel, Inc.    2016 Proxy Statement               77


Table of Contents
  EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION TABLES          

 

EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION TABLES

Summary Compensation Table

 

The following table sets forth information concerning total compensation earned or paid to our NEOs for service in 2015, 2014 and 2013 (to the extent the executive was an NEO in the relevant year).

 

Name,

Principal

Position in 2015

and Year

     

Salary

($)

     

Bonus

($)

     

Stock

Awards(1)

($)

     

Option

Awards(1)  ($)

     

Non-Equity

Incentive

Plan

Compensation(2)

($)

     

Change

in Pension

Value and

Nonqualified

Deferred

Compensation

Earnings(3)

($)

     

All

Other

Compensation(4)

($)

     

Total

($)

Christopher A. Sinclair

Chief Executive Officer

  

  

2015         $ 1,593,699                       $ 1,499,998           $ 5,000,001           $ 754,983                       $ 895,648           $ 9,744,329  

Richard Dickson

President & Chief Operating Officer

  

  

2015         $ 869,918                       $ 2,309,678           $ 1,300,001           $ 397,130                       $ 119,661           $ 4,996,388  
2014       $ 455,096         $ 300,000         $ 2,112,674         $ 1,061,974                             $ 269,374         $ 4,199,118  

Kevin M. Farr

Chief Financial Officer

  

  

2015         $ 750,000                       $ 1,503,680           $ 625,000           $ 234,675                       $ 132,662           $ 3,246,017  
2014         $ 750,000                       $ 1,166,287           $ 693,750                       $ 1,218,393           $ 145,017           $ 3,973,447  
2013       $ 750,000                   $ 1,360,584         $ 675,770         $ 378,000                   $ 141,211         $ 3,305,565  

Peter D. Gibbons

Executive Vice President & Chief Supply Chain Officer

  

  

2015       $ 600,000                   $ 1,091,395         $ 375,001         $ 174,330                   $ 96,778         $ 2,337,504  

Geoffrey H. Walker

Executive Vice President, Commercial – North America (currently EVP & Chief Strategic Technology Officer)

  

  

2015       $ 530,000                   $ 566,408         $ 350,000         $ 253,417         $         $ 599,704         $ 2,299,529  

Bryan G. Stockton (5)

Former Chief Executive Officer

  

  

2015         $ 78,767                                               $ 52,813                       $ 4,017,618           $ 4,149,198  
2014         $ 1,150,000                       $ 3,798,887           $ 2,312,499                       $ 2,379,422           $ 217,783           $ 9,858,591  
2013       $ 1,150,000                   $ 4,975,422         $ 1,835,416         $ 1,242,000         $ 6,141,705         $ 193,558         $ 15,538,101  

(1) Stock Awards and Option Awards

Amounts shown represent the grant date fair value of RSUs and options granted in the year indicated as computed in accordance with FASB ASC Topic 718. The actual value, if any, that an executive may realize from an award is contingent upon the satisfaction of the conditions to vesting in that award, and for options, upon the excess of the stock price over the exercise price, if any, on the date the award is exercised. Thus, there is no assurance that the value, if any, eventually realized by the executive will correspond to the amount shown.

For a discussion of the assumptions made in the valuation of options granted in 2015, see Note 7 to Mattel’s Consolidated Financial Statements for 2015 contained in the Form 10-K filed with the SEC on February 25, 2016. Amounts shown under the “Stock Awards” column for 2015 include the grant date fair value for time-vesting RSUs granted on July 31, 2015 and for the Performance Units under the 2014-2016 LTIP for which the annual performance goals were set on March 25, 2015. RSUs are valued based on the closing price of our common stock on the date of grant.

 

78                LOGO   Mattel, Inc.    2016 Proxy Statement    


Table of Contents
          EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION TABLES  

 

The Performance Units under the 2014-2016 LTIP have a three-year performance cycle from January 1, 2014 through December 31, 2016. The number of Performance Units earned is based on the financial measures of NOPAT-CC and net sales (collectively, the performance-related component), each measured against annual goals for each year in the three-year performance cycle, which results in a performance earnout for each year that is then averaged over the three-year period. This average is then adjusted up or down based on our TSR relative to the TSR performance of companies in the S&P 500 over the full three-year performance cycle (the market-related component) to determine the number of Performance Units earned. Based on our performance, the 2014 performance-related component allocated to one-third of the Performance Units was not achieved, and the 2015 performance-related component allocated to one-third of the Performance Units was achieved at 41% of target.

Because the performance-related component is based on separate measurements of our performance for each year in the three-year performance cycle, FASB ASC Topic 718 requires the grant date value to be calculated with respect to one-third of the total Performance Units in each year of the three-year performance cycle. The full grant date value of the market-related component is included in the valuation of the Performance Units only in 2014, the year of grant, and is determined using a Monte Carlo valuation model on the grant date. The grant date value of the market-related component on March 26, 2014 was -$3.57 per Performance Unit, resulting in a reduction to the total grant date fair value of the Performance Units. For 2015, the grant date value of the Performance Units, as measured in accordance with FASB ASC Topic 718, is based upon the closing price on the deemed grant date of March 25, 2015 (the date the performance goals for the Performance Units were set by the Compensation Committee) and the probable outcome of the annual performance-related component for 2015. Because the Performance Units were not granted in 2015, they are not reported in the Grants of Plan-Based Awards Table that follows, even though a portion of their grant date valuation is required to be reported in the Summary Compensation Table for 2015.

 

  LOGO   Mattel, Inc.    2016 Proxy Statement               79


Table of Contents
  EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION TABLES          

 

The table below sets forth the grant date fair value determined in accordance with FASB ASC Topic 718 principles established each year for the performance-related component of these awards (i) based upon the probable outcome of the performance-related component as of the grant date, and (ii) based upon achieving the maximum level of performance under the performance-related component for that year. Also set forth below is the grant date value for the market-related component, or the TSR adjustment, determined upon grant in 2014, and which is not subject to probable or maximum outcome assumptions. See “Compensation Discussion and Analysis – Elements of Compensation – Long-Term Incentives” for a more complete description of the LTIP.

2014-2016 LTIP Grant Date Fair Value

 

Name and

Year

 

  Probable (Target) Outcome of  

Performance-Related

Component Grant Date

Value(a)

 

Maximum Outcome of

Performance-Related

  Component Grant Date  

Value(a)

 

Market-Related

  Component Grant Date  

Value

Christopher A. Sinclair

       

                        2015

                  –                   –                       –    

Richard Dickson

       

                        2015

  $   259,677   $   389,516     $                 –    

                        2014

  $   433,039   $   649,558     $    (120,370)   

Kevin M. Farr

       

                        2015

  $   378,691   $   568,037     $                –    

                        2014

  $   641,832   $   962,748     $    (175,540)   

Peter D. Gibbons

       

                        2015

  $   216,401   $   324,602     $                –    

Geoffrey H. Walker

       

                        2015

  $   216,401   $   324,602     $                –    

Bryan G. Stockton

       

                        2015

                  –                   –                      –    

                        2014

  $2,017,249   $3,025,873     $ (551,701)   

(a) Reflects the grant date value of one-third of the target Performance Units awarded (and allocated to 2014 and 2015 performance, as applicable).

(2) Non-Equity Incentive Plan Compensation

Amounts shown under Non-Equity Incentive Plan Compensation represent the performance-based annual cash compensation earned under the MIP, our annual cash incentive plan. See “Compensation Discussion and Analysis – Elements of Compensation – Annual Incentive” for a more complete description of the MIP.

(3) Change in Pension Value and Nonqualified Deferred Compensation on Earnings

Amounts shown represent the increase, if any, in the pension benefits that our NEOs have accrued under the SERP during the applicable year. For example, the amounts shown for 2015 are determined by subtracting (i) the present value of each executive’s accrued benefits as of December 31, 2014 from (ii) the present value of the executive’s accrued benefits as of December 31, 2015, which are shown in the “2015 Pension Benefits” table below, and are computed as explained in the narrative disclosure to the “2015 Pension Benefits” table. For Mr. Farr, the change in Pension Value under the SERP was zero because the actual value was a decrease of $144,485.

No amount is included with respect to nonqualified deferred compensation earnings because there were no above-market earnings on nonqualified deferred compensation.

 

80                LOGO   Mattel, Inc.    2016 Proxy Statement    


Table of Contents
          EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION TABLES  

 

(4) All Other Compensation

The dollar amounts for each perquisite and each other item of compensation shown in the “All Other Compensation” column and in this footnote represent Mattel’s incremental cost of providing the perquisite or other benefit to our NEOs. See “Compensation Discussion and Analysis – Elements of Compensation – Other Forms of Compensation” for additional discussions on these benefits. Amounts include the following perquisites and other items of compensation provided to our NEOs in 2015.

All Other Compensation

 

All Other Compensation  

  Christopher  

  A. Sinclair  

 

  Richard  

  Dickson  

 

  Kevin M.  

  Farr  

 

  Peter D.  

  Gibbons  

 

    Geoffrey H.    

  Walker  

 

    Bryan G.    

    Stockton    

Personal use of private aircraft(a)

    $ 187,519                                          

Car allowance/Company car(b)

    $ 10,675       $ 24,000       $ 24,000       $ 24,000       $ 24,000       $ 2,000  

Transition Allowance/Relocation(c)

    $ 660,004                               $ 495,858          

Other perquisites(d)

    $ 16,250       $ 17,445       $ 25,585       $ 12,316       $ 17,079       $ 4,086  

Total Perquisites

    $ 874,448       $ 41,445       $ 49,585       $ 36,316       $ 536,937       $ 6,086  

Contributions to 401(k) Plan

    $ 21,200       $ 19,554       $ 30,286       $ 27,762       $ 26,500       $ 13,269  

Contributions to DCP