Thread regarding Halliburton Co. layoffs

Here’s how much Houston’s top executives got paid last year

Top compensated executives in Houston 2018:

  1. Ryan Lance, ConocoPhillips; $23.4 million

  2. Jack Fusco, Cheniere Energy; $21.3 million

  3. Greg Garland, Phillips 66; $19.3 million

  4. Bhavesh Patel, LyondellBasell Industries N.V.; $18.2 million

  5. Jeffrey Allen Miller, Halliburton; $17 million

  6. Steven Kean, Kinder Morgan; $16.9 million

  7. Paal Kibsgaard, Schlumberger; $16.2 million

  8. Lorenzo Simonelli, Baker Hughes, a GE Company 16 million

  9. Robert Walker, Anadarko Petroleum Corp.; 15.5 million

  10. John Christmann, Apache Corp.; $15.2 million

  11. Anthony Petrello, Nabors Industries Ltd.; $14.7 million

  12. Norman Miller, Conn’s Inc.; $14.4 million

  13. Vicki Hollub, Occidental Petroleum Corp.; $14.1 million

  14. Clay Williams, National Oilwell Varco, Inc.; $13.8

  15. Ronald Mittelstaedt, Waste Connections, Inc.; $13.7 million

  16. Joe Perkins, Targa Resources Corp.; $13.5 million

  17. Peter Huntsman, Huntsman Corp.; $13.3 million

  18. Thomas Ryan, Service Corporation International; $13.3 million

  19. Dan Dinges, Cabot Oil $13 million

  20. Peter Hoang, Marker Therapeutics, Inc.; $13 million

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| 1601 views | | 3 replies (last July 1, 2019) | Reply
Post ID: @OP+ZIhNcah

3 replies (most recent on top)

THREE POINT FIVE BILLION DOLLARS! dam that’s a lot of money to throw about loosely, but yet that action was condoned. Foolish pride.

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Post ID: @7eam+ZIhNcah

If the 10 Houston executives who made the most in 2018 were punching a time clock, they each would’ve made about $8,600 an hour.

Overall, Houston-area executives’ compensation ranged from a few hundred thousand dollars, such as Westlake Chemical Partners CEO Albert Chao’s total compensation of $110,000, to ConocoPhillips CEO Ryan Lance’s reported $23.4 million in 2018.

S&P Global and the Houston Chronicle compiled and analyzed compensation data on more than 150 Houston-area companies and found that the median pay raise for their top executives totaled 5.4 percent in 2018, equivalent to nearly $147,500.

In fact, most of Houston’s wealthiest executives got a raise working in industries ranging from oil production to biotechnology.

Those who topped the list saw compensation balloon tens of millions of dollars last year. Some executives, however, saw the value of their compensation diminish from 2017 amid a still-recovering energy sector and end-of-year stock market turmoil.

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Post ID: @kkr+ZIhNcah

miller is overpaid- baker and slb is kickin’ halibutt - sorry jeff, but well , we’re gonna have to let you go.

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Post ID: @vcm+ZIhNcah

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