Google CEO Sundar Pichai awarded record $199M bonus in stock grant
Google Inc.’s Sundar Pichai is poised to become one of the highest-paid executives of a publicly traded company this year after parent Alphabet Inc. awarded him restricted stock worth about $199 million (U.S.).
Pichai, who is Google’s chief executive officer, received 273,328 Class C shares on Feb. 3 that will vest in quarterly increments through 2019 if he remains on the job, according to a filing Friday from the Mountain View, Calif.-based company.
Pichai, the former deputy of Google co-founder Larry Page, was named to run the search engine unit following the reorganization into holding company Alphabet last year. The award is the biggest ever given to a Google executive officer whose equity grants have to be reported in filings, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. It is Pichai’s first award since taking over the company’s highest-grossing unit.
Alphabet also awarded $42.8 million in restricted stock to Diane Greene, a co-founder and former CEO of software maker VMware Inc., who’s led Google’s cloud business since November. Greene received equity worth $148 million last year after Google acquired tech company Bebop Technologies Inc., which she founded.
Chief financial officer Ruth Porat, who joined from Morgan Stanley last year, received equity worth $38.3 million that will vest under the same conditions as Pichai’s award, a filing shows.
An Alphabet spokesman didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment.
Google typically grants equity awards to executives once every two years, a strategy it has said “encourages executives to take a long-term view of the business.”
By: Anders Melin Caleb Melby Bloomberg, Published on Mon Feb 08 2016
Heaven
If Mike is right, then Federal auihirttoes could not close an alternative currency down. Which is great, because it must be obvious to those who control this system that community currencies, if they catch on, could release us all from their clutches. But does anyone know: What happened to the 100+ community currencies that were supposed to have flourihed during the Great Depression? Were they shut down by the Feds?