- David Calhoun, CEO of Boeing, was awarded compensation of $21 million last year, even as the company reported a $12 billion net loss.
- The company also announced it would lay off about 30,000 employees.
- A regulatory filing for Boeing says the CEO's total compensation last year is estimated to be 158 times that of the company's median employee.
Boeing CEO David Calhoun received more than $21 million in compensation last year while announcing plans to lay off about 30,000
The company reported a $12 billion loss in 2020, following an abysmal year due to a drop in demand for travel because of the
Over the past year, Boeing, the world's largest
In a letter to employees, Calhoun said recent events have left the company in 'uncharted waters' and that cutting staff now will help the planemaker adjust to the smaller aerospace market likely to exist after the pandemic.
Calhoun, who became CEO in January 2020, declined a salary and performance bonus for the majority of 2021, but he still received stock benefits worth some $20 million, according to a regulatory filing. Calhoun declined about $3.6 million in salary but collected $269,231 in salary for the first three months of the year and about $290,000 in other compensation.
Calhoun's total compensation last year with the estimated stock awards -- some that still need to vest -- is estimated to be 158 times that of the company's median employee, a filing showed.
Boeing's stock price has fallen more than 70% in the past year.
The company did not immediately respond to Insider's request for comment.
But a company spokesperson told the New York Times that "Dave obviously gave up a lot."
Boeing's cash woes are linked to a steep drop in net aircraft sales. In 2020 alone, Boeing delivered 157 planes. It was the lowest number of planes delivered since 1984. Boeing received more than 650 cancellation orders last year and removed more than 1,000 planes from the market.
US regulators in December lifted a 22-month grounding order for the company's embattled 737 Max that was instituted after two crashes that resulted in hundreds dead. Then, earlier this month, Boeing announced that some of the Max planes were facing "a potential electrical issue" and recommended that 16 airlines immediately ground those jets so the issue could be resolved. At the time, few other details were released.
Calhoun is one of numerous CEOs who's received millions of dollars in compensation in 2020. The median pay across more than 300 of the country's top public companies was around $13.7 million last year, Insider's Anna Cooban reported.
Insider's Graham Rapier contributed to this report.