DEF 14A
UNITED STATES
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
Washington, D.C. 20549
SCHEDULE 14A
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:
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Preliminary Proxy Statement
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Confidential, for Use of the
Commission Only (as permitted by
Rule 14a-6(e)(2)) |
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[X] |
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Definitive Proxy Statement |
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Definitive Additional Materials |
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Soliciting Material Pursuant to
Section 240.14a-12 |
PRAXAIR, INC.
(Name of Registrant as Specified In Its
Charter)
(Name of Person(s) Filing Proxy Statement, if
other than Registrant)
Payment of Filing Fee (Check the appropriate box):
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Fee computed on table below per Exchange Act
Rules 14a-6(i)(1) and 0-11. |
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(1) |
Title of each class of securities to which transaction applies: |
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(2) |
Aggregate number of securities to which transaction applies: |
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(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): |
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(4) |
Proposed maximum aggregate value of transaction: |
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Fee paid previously with preliminary materials. |
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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. |
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(1) |
Amount Previously Paid: |
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(2) |
Form, Schedule or Registration Statement No.: |
39 Old Ridgebury Road
Danbury, Connecticut
06810-5113
NOTICE OF ANNUAL MEETING OF
SHAREHOLDERS
TO BE HELD APRIL 24,
2007
Dear Praxair Shareholder:
The Annual Meeting of Shareholders of Praxair, Inc. will be held
at 9:30 a.m. on Tuesday, April 24, 2007 in the
Grand Ballroom of the Sheraton Danbury, 18 Old Ridgebury Road,
Danbury, Connecticut, for the following purposes:
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1.
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To elect four directors to the Board of Directors.
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2.
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To consider and vote upon a shareholder proposal regarding the
director election process.
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3.
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To consider and vote upon a shareholder proposal regarding the
Companys shareholder-approved Stockholder Protection
Rights Agreement.
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4.
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To ratify the appointment of the independent auditor.
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5.
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To conduct such other business as may properly come before the
meeting.
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Only holders of Common Stock of Praxair, Inc. of record at the
close of business on March 1, 2007 will be entitled to
notice of, and to vote at, the meeting or any adjournment or
postponement thereof.
It is important that your shares be represented and voted at the
meeting. You may vote your shares by means of a proxy form using
one of the following methods:
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1.
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Electronically on the Internet (if instructions for this
method are included in this package), OR
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2.
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By telephone (if instructions for this method are
included in this package), OR
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3.
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By signing and dating the proxy/voting instruction card
enclosed in this package and returning it in the
postage-paid envelope that is provided.
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The giving of such proxy does not affect your right to vote in
person if you attend the meeting.
We encourage you to complete and submit your proxy
electronically or by telephone (if those options are available
to you) as a means of reducing the Companys expenses
related to the meeting.
BY ORDER OF THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS
JAMES T. BREEDLOVE,
Senior Vice President, General Counsel and Secretary
March 15, 2007
WHETHER OR NOT YOU EXPECT TO ATTEND THE ANNUAL MEETING IN
PERSON, PLEASE PROMPTLY COMPLETE AND SUBMIT A PROXY, EITHER BY
INTERNET, BY TELEPHONE OR BY MAIL.
PROXY
STATEMENT
TABLE OF CONTENTS
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1-1
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2-1
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39 Old Ridgebury Road
Danbury, Connecticut
06810-5113
PROXY
STATEMENT
Annual Meeting of
Shareholders
Tuesday, April 24,
2007
This Proxy Statement is furnished to shareholders of Praxair,
Inc. (Praxair or the Company) in
connection with the solicitation of proxies for the Annual
Meeting of Shareholders to be held at the Sheraton Danbury, 18
Old Ridgebury Road, Danbury, Connecticut on April 24, 2007,
at 9:30 a.m. or any adjournment or postponement thereof
(the Annual Meeting). This Proxy Statement and the
enclosed form of proxy are first being sent to shareholders on
or about March 15, 2007. The enclosed proxy is solicited on
behalf of the Board of Directors of Praxair.
Matters
to be Considered at the Annual Meeting
Item 1:
Election of Directors
Four directors will be elected to serve for a one-year term
until the 2008 annual meeting of shareholders, and until their
successors are elected and qualify. The remaining seven
directors terms expire in 2008, or 2009, as noted below.
They were elected for three-year terms under Praxairs
previous staggered or classified board
structure that is being phased-out through 2009. Beginning with
this 2007 Annual Meeting, each director whose term expires at an
annual meeting may be re-elected to a one-year term and until
his or her successor is elected and qualifies.
The terms of the following four present directors, who were
elected for three-year terms in 2004, expire this year and each
of them has been nominated for re-election for a one-year term:
José P. Alves, Ronald L. Kuehn, Jr., H. Mitchell
Watson, Jr., and Robert L. Wood. In order to continue to
draw on his advice and counsel for an additional year during the
current period of transition in the Chairman and Chief Executive
Officer positions, your Board has provided a one-time waiver of
the Boards director retirement policy in the case of
Ronald L. Kuehn, Jr.
Your Board recommends that José P. Alves, Ronald L.
Kuehn, Jr., H. Mitchell Watson, Jr., and Robert L.
Wood, each be elected to serve for a one-year term until the
2008 annual meeting of shareholders, and until their successors
are elected and qualify. Each nominee has agreed to be named in
this Proxy Statement and to serve if elected. Biographical data
on these nominees and the other members of the Board of
Directors is presented beginning at page 19 of this Proxy
Statement under the caption The Board of Directors.
If one or more of the nominees becomes unavailable for election
or service as a director, the proxy holders will vote your
shares for one or more substitutes designated by the Board of
Directors, or the size of the Board of Directors will be reduced.
To be elected, a nominee must receive a plurality of the votes
cast at the Annual Meeting in person or by proxy. See the vote
counting rules on
pages 3-4
of this Proxy Statement.
1
Item 2:
Shareholder
Proposal-Director
Election Process
A shareholder has announced its intention to present a proposal
recommending that director nominees be elected by the
affirmative vote of a majority of votes cast. If this proposal
were implemented in 2008, when new New York Stock Exchange
(NYSE) broker voting rules will be in effect,
substantially less than a majority of the shares outstanding
could determine the outcome of a director election. Because of
this and other reasons, your Board recommends that you
defer approval of this proposal until practical experience is
gained under the new NYSE rules and that you vote against
this proposal. The proponents statement in favor
of this proposal and your Boards statement in opposition
are located on pages 50 and 51, respectively, of this Proxy
Statement under the caption Shareholder
Proposal-Director
Election Process.
In order for this proposal to be adopted by the shareholders, at
least a majority of the votes cast at the Annual Meeting in
person or by proxy by the shareholders entitled to vote on the
matter must be voted in its favor. See the vote counting rules
on
pages 3-4
of this Proxy Statement.
Item 3:
Shareholder Proposal-Rights Plan Vote
A shareholder has announced his intention to present a proposal
recommending that the Companys shareholder-approved
Stockholder Protection Rights Agreement (Rights
Plan) be subject to an annual vote of the shareholders.
The Rights Plan has already been approved by the shareholders
and, by its terms, expires on May 1, 2009 unless
shareholders approve its extension. For this and other reasons,
your Board believes that this proposal is unnecessary and
misguided and recommends that you vote against this
proposal. The proponents statement in favor of this
proposal and your Boards statement in opposition are
located on pages 53 and 54, respectively, of this Proxy
Statement under the caption Shareholder Proposal-Rights
Plan Vote.
In order for this proposal to be adopted by the shareholders, at
least a majority of the votes cast at the Annual Meeting in
person or by proxy by the shareholders entitled to vote on the
matter must be voted in its favor. See the vote counting rules
on
pages 3-4
of this Proxy Statement.
Item 4:
Proposal to Ratify the Appointment of the Independent
Auditor
By NYSE and Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC)
rules, selection of the Companys independent auditor is
the direct responsibility of the Audit Committee. Your Board has
determined, however, to seek shareholder ratification of that
selection as a good practice to provide shareholders an avenue
to express their views on this important matter. If shareholders
fail to ratify the selection, the Audit Committee will seek to
understand the reasons for such failure and will take those
views into account in this and future appointments. Even if the
current selection is ratified by shareholders, the Audit
Committee reserves to itself the right to appoint a different
independent auditor at any time during the year if the Audit
Committee determines that such change would be in the best
interests of the Company and its shareholders.
Information concerning the independent auditor may be found
beginning at page 15 of this Proxy Statement under the
caption The Independent Auditor.
Your
Board recommends that you vote FOR this item 4, the
proposal to ratify the Audit Committees selection of the
independent auditor.
In order for this proposal to be adopted by the shareholders, at
least a majority of the votes cast at the Annual Meeting in
person or by proxy by the shareholders entitled to vote on the
matter must be voted in its favor. See the vote counting rules
on
pages 3-4
of this Proxy Statement.
Item 5:
Other Business
Praxair knows of no other business that will be considered for
action at the Annual Meeting. If any other business calling for
a vote of shareholders is properly presented at the meeting, the
proxy holders will have the discretion to vote your shares in
accordance with their best judgment.
2
Proxy
and Voting Procedures
Who
are the Shareholders Entitled to Vote at this
Meeting?
Common Stock shareholders of record at the close of business on
March 1, 2007 will be entitled to vote at the Annual
Meeting. As of that date, a total of 320,677,626 shares of
Praxairs Common Stock were outstanding and entitled to
vote. Each share of Common Stock is entitled to one vote.
How do
I Submit My Vote by Means of a Proxy?
Your vote is important. Because many shareholders cannot attend
the Annual Meeting in person, it is necessary that a large
number be represented by proxy. Most shareholders have a choice
of voting over the Internet, by using a toll-free telephone
number or by completing a proxy card and mailing it in the
postage-paid envelope provided. Check your proxy card or the
information forwarded by your bank, broker or other holder of
record to see which options are available to you. Please be
aware that, if you vote over the Internet, you may incur costs
such as telecommunication and Internet access charges for which
you will be responsible.
The Internet and telephone voting procedures are designed to
authenticate shareholders and to allow shareholders to confirm
that their instructions have been properly recorded.
How
are the Proxies Voted?
All shares entitled to vote and represented by a properly
completed proxy (either by Internet, telephone or mail) will be
voted at the Annual Meeting as indicated on the proxy unless
earlier revoked by you. If no instructions are indicated for a
matter on an otherwise properly completed proxy from a
shareholder of record, the shares represented by that proxy will
be voted on that matter as recommended by the Board of
Directors. See also the vote counting rules on
pages 3-4
of this Proxy Statement. Execution of the proxy also confers
discretionary authority on the proxy holders to vote your shares
on other matters that may properly come before the Annual
Meeting.
How
Can I Revoke my Proxy?
You may revoke your proxy at any time before it is voted by
filing with Praxairs Secretary a written revocation, by
timely delivery of a properly completed, later-dated proxy
(including by Internet or telephone), or by voting in person at
the Annual Meeting.
May I
Still Vote at the Annual Meeting Even if I Have Submitted a
Proxy?
The method by which you vote will in no way limit your right to
vote at the Annual Meeting if you later decide to attend in
person. If your shares are held in the name of a bank, broker or
other holder of record, you must obtain a proxy, executed in
your favor, from the holder of record, to be able to vote at the
Annual Meeting.
What
is the Necessary Quorum to Transact Business at the Annual
Meeting?
The presence, in person or by proxy, of the holders of a
majority of the shares entitled to vote shall constitute a
quorum. The shares represented by withhold votes, abstentions
and broker
non-votes on
filed proxies and ballots will be considered present for quorum
purposes (for an explanation of broker non-votes,
see the vote counting information below).
How are
the Votes Counted for Each Item of Business?
If you are a shareholder of record and submit a proxy (whether
by Internet, telephone or mail) without specifying a choice on
any given matter to be considered at this Annual Meeting, the
proxy holders will vote your shares according to the
Boards recommendation on that matter.
3
If you hold your shares in a brokerage account, then, under NYSE
rules and Delaware corporation law:
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1.
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With respect to Item #1 (Election of Directors), your
broker is entitled to vote your shares on this matter if no
instructions are received from you. Abstentions may not be
specified as to the election of directors.
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2.
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With respect to Items #2 and #3 (the shareholder
proposals), your failure to give voting instructions to your
broker will result in a so-called broker non-vote
(since your broker is not entitled to vote your shares on these
matters unless it receives instructions from you). Broker
non-votes and abstentions are not considered votes cast and,
therefore, will be counted neither for nor against these matters.
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3.
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With respect to Item #4 (Ratification of the Appointment of
the Independent Auditor), your broker is entitled to vote your
shares on this matter if no instructions are received from you.
Abstentions are not considered votes cast and, therefore, will
be counted neither for nor against this matter.
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If you hold your shares in the Praxair, Inc., Praxair
Distribution, Inc., Praxair Healthcare Services, Inc., Praxair
Puerto Rico, Inc., or the Dow Chemical Company Employees
savings plan, and if the plan trustee receives no voting
instructions from you, then, under the applicable plan trust
agreement, the plan trustee must vote your shares in the same
proportion on each matter as it votes the shares for it has
received instructions.
How
to Receive Your Annual Report and
Proxy Statement On-Line
You can save Praxair future postage and printing expense
by consenting to receive future annual reports, meeting
notices, and proxy statements on-line on the Internet. Most
shareholders can elect to view future proxy statements and
annual reports over the Internet instead of receiving paper
copies in the mail. Those shareholders will be given the
opportunity to consent to future Internet delivery when they
vote their proxy. For some shareholders, this option is only
available if you vote by Internet. If you are not given an
opportunity to consent to Internet delivery when you vote your
proxy, contact the bank, broker or other holder of record
through which you hold your shares and inquire about the
availability of such an option for you.
If you consent, your account will be so noted and, when
Praxairs 2007 Annual Report, meeting notice, and the proxy
statement for the 2008 annual meeting of shareholders become
available, you will be notified on how to access them on the
Internet. Any prior consent you have given will remain in effect
until specifically revoked by you in the manner specified by the
bank or broker that manages your account. If you do elect to
receive your Praxair materials via the Internet, you can still
request paper copies by contacting the Investor Relations
Department at Praxair, Inc., 39 Old Ridgebury Road, M-2,
Danbury, CT
06810-5113.
Recent changes to SEC and NYSE rules will allow Praxair,
beginning in 2008, to provide shareholders the proxy statement
and annual report by posting them on an Internet site without
the above-described consent from you. However, Praxair would
notify shareholders by mail of this Internet availability, and
you would still be able to request a paper copy. At this time,
Praxair has not decided whether, or to what extent, it may
suspend mail deliveries of the proxy statement and annual report
for 2008 as permitted under the new rules.
Shareholders
Sharing An Address
If you share an address with another shareholder, you may
receive only one set of proxy materials (including this Proxy
Statement and the annual report to shareholders) unless you have
provided contrary instructions. If you wish to receive a
separate set of proxy materials now or in the future, you may
contact us at the address cited above.
Similarly, if you share an address with another shareholder and
have received multiple copies of our proxy materials, you may
contact us at the above address to request delivery of a single
copy of these materials.
4
Share
Ownership
Principal
Holders
The only person known by Praxair to be a beneficial owner of
more than five percent of Praxairs Common Stock is the
following:
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Name and Address of
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Number of Shares
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Percent of Shares
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Beneficial Owner
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Beneficially Owned
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Outstanding (a)
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FMR Corp.
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21,169,363(b
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6.6
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82 Devonshire Street, Boston, MA
02109
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(a) Based on 320,677,626
total shares outstanding on March 1, 2007 excluding shares
held for the account of Praxair.
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(b) Holdings as of
December 31, 2006 as reported in SEC Schedule 13G by
FMR Corp. According to this report, FMR Corp. had sole voting
power as to 1,881,971 shares and sole investment power as
to 21,169,363 shares.
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Directors
and Executive Officers
The table below sets forth the beneficial ownership of
Praxairs common stock as of March 1, 2007 by each
Director and certain Executive Officers. No Director or
Executive Officer of Praxair beneficially owned more than 1% of
Praxairs common stock, and Directors and Executive
Officers of Praxair as a group (20 persons) beneficially owned
approximately 1.4% of the outstanding shares as of that date.
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SHARES BENEFICIALLY OWNED AND OTHER EQUITY INTERESTS
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Common
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Deferred
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Stock
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Name
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Position
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Stock(1)
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Stock(2)
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Total
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Options(3)
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Dennis H. Reilley
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Chairman
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105,371
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78,346
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183,717
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1,601,066
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Stephen F. Angel
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President & Chief
Executive Officer
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44,830
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58,164
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102,994
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818,933
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James S. Sawyer
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Executive Vice
President & Chief Financial Officer
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20,033
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10,434
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30,467
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245,033
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Ricardo S. Malfitano
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Executive Vice President
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26,150
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9,990
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36,140
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385,499
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James J. Fuchs
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Senior Vice President
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16,576
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814
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17,390
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125,799
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José P. Alves
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Director
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266
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2,158
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2,424
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2,540
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Claire W. Gargalli
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Director
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3,459
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8,847
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12,306
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42,631
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Ira D. Hall
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Director
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1,500
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360
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1,860
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7,631
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Ronald L. Kuehn, Jr.
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Director
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16,602
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36,009
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52,611
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42,631
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Raymond W. LeBoeuf
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Director
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2,000
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33,771
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35,771
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37,631
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G. Jackson
Ratcliffe, Jr.
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Director
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3,859
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51,935
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55,794
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27,631
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Wayne T. Smith
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Director
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10,000
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14,799
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24,799
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22,631
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H. Mitchell Watson, Jr.
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Director
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1,688
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28,663
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30,351
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12,631
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Robert L. Wood
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Director
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1,200
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360
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1,560
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7,631
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Total
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253,534
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334,650
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588,184
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3,379,918
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Directors and Executive Officers
as a group
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(20 persons)
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301,157
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346,261
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647,418
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3,857,547
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(1) Amounts reported as Common Stock include 20,928
unvested restricted shares for which Mr. Reilley has sole
voting power. As Mr. Reilley will retire from the Company
effective April 30, 2007, he will forfeit these restricted
shares. Reported shares also include 32,529 unvested restricted
shares for which Mr. Angel has sole voting power and 10,000
of which will vest on April 23, 2007, with the remaining
shares vesting on April 23, 2011.
(2) Deferred Stock represents stock price-based
units into which deferred compensation has been invested
pursuant to the deferred compensation plans for management and
for non-employee directors. Holders have no voting rights with
respect to Deferred Stock. The value of Deferred Stock units
varies with the price of Praxairs common stock and, at the
end of the deferral period, the units are payable in stock.
(3) Stock Options represent shares that may be
acquired upon exercise of options exercisable within
60 days of March 1, 2007.
5
Corporate
Governance and Board Practices
Praxairs
Governance Principles.
Praxair operates under Corporate Governance Guidelines which are
set forth in Appendix 1 to this Proxy Statement and are
posted at Praxairs public website, www.praxair.com.
Consistent with those guidelines, your Board has adopted the
following policies and practices, among others:
Business Integrity and Ethics. One of
your Boards first acts upon Praxairs launch as a
public company was to adopt policies and standards regarding
Compliance with Laws and Business Integrity and Ethics. The
current version of the Boards policy in these areas is
posted at Praxairs website, www.praxair.com and is
available in print to any shareholder who requests it. This Code
of Ethics applies to Praxairs directors and to all
employees, including Praxairs Chief Executive Officer,
Chief Financial Officer, and Controller.
Director Independence. Your Board has
adopted independence standards for service on Praxairs
Board of Directors which are set forth in Appendix 2 to
this Proxy Statement and are posted at Praxairs public
website, www.praxair.com. Your Board has applied these standards
to all of the incumbent non-management directors and has
determined that all of them are independent. Your Board is not
otherwise aware of any relationship with the Company or its
management that could potentially impair a directors
exercise of independent judgment. See also related information
which is presented in this Proxy Statement under the caption
Certain Relationships and Transactions.
Board Leadership. In September 2005, the
independent directors elected Raymond W. LeBoeuf as Executive
Session Presiding Director. Mr. LeBoeuf presides over
private meetings of the non-management directors and performs
other duties, including conducting a performance review of the
Chief Executive Officer.
Mandatory Director Retirement. Your
Boards policy is that no director who has attained the age
of 72 may serve on the Praxair Board. As noted above, your Board
has provided a one-time waiver of this policy in the case of
Ronald L. Kuehn so that, if re-elected, Mr. Kuehn will
serve for an additional one-year term. Your Board also has a
policy against service on the Board by an officer of the Company
after
his/her
retirement, resignation or removal as an officer.
Limits to Service on Other Boards. Your
Boards policy is that no non-management director may serve
on more than five additional public company boards and no member
of the Audit Committee may serve on more than two additional
public company audit committees. Also, the Chief Executive
Officer may not serve on more than two other public company
boards.
Director Nomination Process. For a
description of your Boards policy regarding nominees for
election as directors, see The Governance &
Nominating Committee on page 17 of this Proxy
Statement.
Communications with the Board. Your Board
believes that the most efficient means for shareholders and
other interested parties to raise issues and questions and to
get a response is to direct such communications to the Company
through its Investor Relations Department or other methods as
described in the Contact Us section of the Companys public
website, www.praxair.com.
6
If, notwithstanding these methods, a shareholder or other
interested party wishes to direct a communication specifically
to the Companys Board of Directors, then the following
means are available. To ensure that the communication is
properly directed in a timely manner, it should be clearly
identified as intended for the Board:
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(1)
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Telephone (Voice Mail):
1-800-719-0719
within the U.S.A., or
+1(203) 837-2960 for outside the U.S.A.
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(2)
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Mail:
Praxair, Inc.
Attn: Board of Directors
P.O. Box 2478
Danbury, CT, U.S.A.
06813-2478
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(3)
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E-mail:
praxair_integrity@praxair.com
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The above addresses are supervised by the Companys
Security Department which will promptly forward to the Corporate
Secretarys Office any communication intended for the Board.
The Corporate Secretarys Office will collect and organize
all such communications, deleting any that are sales or other
solicitations and any which contain offensive material. A
summary of communications received will be periodically provided
to the Executive Session Presiding Director who will make the
final determination regarding the disposition of any such
communication.
Your Board believes that the Company should speak with one voice
and has empowered management to speak on the Companys
behalf subject to the Boards oversight and guidance on
specific issues. Therefore, in most circumstances, the Board
will not respond directly to inquiries received in this manner
but may take into consideration ideas, concerns and positions
that are presented in a concise, clear, supported and
constructive manner.
Director Attendance at the Annual Shareholders
Meeting. Absent extenuating circumstances, each
member of the Board is expected to attend the Annual Meeting of
Shareholders. All of the then incumbent directors attended the
2006 annual meeting.
Policy Statement on Rights
Agreements. Your Board will adopt or materially
amend a Stockholder Protection Rights Agreement only if, in the
exercise of its fiduciary responsibilities under Delaware law,
and acting by a majority of its independent directors, it
determines that such action is in the best interests of
Praxairs shareholders. If the Board adopts or materially
amends a Stockholder Protection Rights Agreement, it will submit
such action to a non-binding shareholder vote as a separate
ballot item at the first annual meeting of shareholders
occurring at least six months after such action.
Director Stock Ownership Guidelines. Your
Boards policy is that non-management directors must
acquire and hold during their service as a Praxair Board member
shares of the Companys stock equal in value to at least 5
times the base cash retainer for non-management directors.
Directors have five years from their initial election to meet
this guideline (or, for incumbent directors as of October 2002,
until October 2007). As shown in the stock ownership table
presented at page 5 of this Proxy Statement under the
caption Share Ownership, all non-management
directors have met this guideline or are within the transition
period; and most substantially exceed the guideline. In
addition, any new non-management director elected after October
2002 must, no later than the date of
his/her
election, acquire, using
his/her own
personal resources, shares of the Companys stock equal in
value to the base cash retainer then in effect.
Executive Stock Ownership
Guidelines. Your Board believes that it is
important for Executive Officers to acquire a substantial
ownership position in Praxair. In this way, their interests will
be more closely aligned with those of shareholders. Significant
stock ownership focuses the executives attention on
managing Praxair as equity owners.
7
Accordingly, stock ownership guidelines have been established
for the Companys officers as follows. Twenty-three
executives are currently covered under this stock ownership
policy. Individuals are expected to meet the applicable
guideline no more than five years after first becoming subject
to it.
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Shares To Be Owned
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Chief Executive Officer
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100,000
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Chief Operating Officer
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35,000
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Executive Vice Presidents
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30,000
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Chief Financial Officer
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25,000
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Senior Vice Presidents
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20,000
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Other Executive Officers
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10,000-15,000
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Other Officers
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5,000
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As of the date of this Proxy Statement, all covered individuals
have met or exceeded their guidelines, where permitted by law,
or are within their compliance periods. Stock ownership of the
five most highly compensated Executive Officers in 2006 can be
found in the table presented at page 5 of this Proxy
Statement under the caption Share Ownership.
Succession Planning and Personnel
Development. Under the leadership of the
Compensation & Management Development Committee, it is
your Boards practice to annually conduct a formal
Succession Planning and Personnel Development session in which
evaluations of senior executives are reviewed with respect to
their potential for promotion into senior leadership positions,
including that of the CEO. In addition, a wide variety of senior
executives are purposely exposed to your Board by way of Board
and Committee presentations and directors have unrestricted
access to management for management assessment and development
as well as for information gathering.
CEO Performance Evaluation. Your Board
has in place a process whereby the Executive Session Presiding
Director conducts a performance review at least annually of the
Chief Executive Officer taking into account the views of all of
the other independent directors. This is in addition to the
evaluation inherent in the Compensation & Management
Development Committees determination of performance-based
variable compensation each year.
Strategy Review and Oversight. It is
your Boards practice to conduct a
full-day
session at least annually to review the strategies of the
Company overall and of its key business components; and to
provide advice and counsel to management regarding the strategic
issues facing the Company. Throughout the year, management
reports to your Board on the status of significant strategic
initiatives and issues.
Board Effectiveness Assessment. As set
forth in the Corporate Governance Guidelines, and under the
leadership of the Governance & Nominating Committee,
your Board assesses its effectiveness at least annually.
Typically, this assessment includes evaluating its effectiveness
in the areas of Performance of Core Responsibilities,
Decision-making Support, the Quality of Deliberations, and
Director Performance, as well as consideration of additional
Board practices and policies recommended as best practices by
recognized governance authorities. In addition, directors are
given measures of individual director effectiveness for purposes
of self-assessment, reflection and self-improvement.
Auditor Independence. Your Board
recognizes the importance of ensuring the independence of the
Companys independent auditor. See page 15 of this
Proxy Statement under the caption The Independent
Auditor for a summary of some of the policies designed to
monitor and support such independence.
Director Compensation. The compensation
paid to non-management directors in 2006, and a description of
the Companys director compensation program, are presented
at pages 48 to 49 of this Proxy Statement under the caption
Director Compensation. The principles used by the
Board in determining director compensation are set forth in the
Boards Corporate Governance Guidelines included in
Appendix 1 to this Proxy Statement.
8
Review,
Approval or Ratification of Transactions with Related
Persons
Relevant Polices. The Companys Compliance with
Laws and Business Integrity and Ethics Policy (Ethics
Policy,) prohibits employees, officers and Board members
from having a personal, financial or family interest that could
in any way prevent the individual from acting in the best
interests of the Company (a conflict of interest)
and provides that any conflict of interest waiver relating to
Board members or executive officers may only be made after
review and approval by the Board upon the recommendation of its
Governance & Nominating Committee.
In addition, the Boards Corporate Governance Guidelines
(attached as Appendix 1 to this Proxy Statement) require
that any related transaction by an executive officer
or director be pre-approved by a committee of independent and
disinterested directors. For this purpose, a related
transaction means any transaction or relationship that is
reportable under the SECs
Regulation S-K,
Item 404 or that, in the case of a non-management director,
would violate the Boards independence standards.
Reporting and Review Procedures. To implement the
foregoing policies, the Governance & Nominating
Committee has adopted a written procedure for the Handling of
Potential Conflicts of Interests which specifies a process for
the referral of potential conflicts of interests to the Board
and standards for the Boards evaluation of those matters.
This policy applies to any transaction or relationship involving
an executive officer, a member of the Board of Directors, a
nominee for election as a director of the Company, or a family
member of any of the foregoing which (1) could violate the
Companys Ethics Policy provisions regarding conflicts of
interest, (2) would be reportable under the SECs
disclosure rules, or (3), in the case of a non-management
director, would violate the Boards independence standards.
In summary, under this procedure, potential conflicts of
interest are reported to the Corporate Secretary for preliminary
analysis to determine whether referral to the
Governance & Nominating Committee is appropriate.
Potential conflicts of interest can be self-identified by the
director or executive officer or may arise from internal audits,
integrity hotline or other referrals or through periodic due
diligence conducted by the Corporate Secretarys office.
The Governance & Nominating Committee then examines the
facts and circumstances of each matter referred to it and makes
a final determination as to (1) whether the transaction or
relationship would (or does) constitute a violation of the
conflicts of interest provisions of the Companys Ethics
Policy, and (2) whether the transaction or relationship
should be approved or ratified and the conditions, if any, of
such approval or ratification. In determining whether a
transaction or relationship constitutes a violation of the
conflicts of interest provisions of the Companys Ethics
Policy, the Governance & Nominating Committee
considers, among other factors, the materiality of the
transaction or relationship to the individuals personal
interests, whether the individuals personal interest is
materially adverse to or competitive to the interests of the
Company, and whether the transaction or relationship materially
interferes with the proper performance of the individuals
duties or loyalty to the Company. In determining whether to
approve or ratify a transaction or relationship, the
Governance & Nominating Committee considers, among
other factors, whether the matter would constitute a violation
of the conflicts of interest provisions of the Companys
Ethics Policy, whether the matter would violate the NYSE listing
standards, the expected practical impact of the transaction or
relationship on the individuals independence of judgment
or ability to act in the best interests of the Company, the
availability, practicality and effectiveness of mitigating
controls or safeguards such as recusal, restricted access to
information, reassignment etc., and the best interests of the
Company and its shareholders generally.
Application of Policies & Procedures. The
employment of Mr. Ratcliffes
son-in-law
in a non-executive position as disclosed below under
Certain Relationships and Transactions does not
violate the Companys Ethics Policy or the Boards
independence standards. In addition, his hiring predated the
Boards 2004 adoption of the self-imposed requirement that
certain relationships reportable under SEC rules be pre-approved
by a committee of independent and disinterested directors.
9
Certain
Relationships and Transactions
When determining whether any director or nominee is independent,
your Board considers all facts and circumstances and any
relationships that a director or nominee may have with the
Company, directly or indirectly. To assist your Board in making
independence determinations, it also applies the independence
standards set forth in Appendix 2 to this Proxy Statement.
In determining that each non-management director is independent,
your Board considered the following circumstances and
relationships of those directors who had any direct or indirect
relationship with the Company, other than serving as a director:
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1.
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G. Jackson Ratcliffe, Jr.s
son-in-law
is employed by the Company and, during 2006, was a sourcing
manager for the Companys Global Procurement and Materials
Management function with cash compensation in the range of
$110,000-$132,000. Such non-executive employment does not
violate the Boards independence standards for service on
the Board and the Board has determined that such relationship
does not otherwise impair Mr. Ratcliffes ability to
exercise independent judgment as a director.
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2.
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In the ordinary course of its business, Praxair sells products
to, or purchases products from, the company of which
Mr. Kuehn is the non-executive Chairman, and the companies
of which Messrs. Smith and Wood are executive officers. The
dollar value of these transactions is far below the limits set
forth in your Boards independence standards and, in each
case for the last three fiscal years, were significantly less
than 1% of either Praxairs or the directors
companys consolidated revenues, except in one case where
Praxairs purchases were approximately 1.2% of the
directors companys consolidated revenues in 2005.
Therefore, your Board has determined that such relationships are
not material and do not otherwise impair the ability of any of
these directors to exercise his independent judgment as a
director.
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Section 16(a)
Beneficial Ownership Reporting Compliance
Based solely upon a review of SEC Forms 3, 4 and 5
furnished to the Company and written representations from the
Companys executive officers and directors, the Company
believes that those persons complied with all Section 16(a)
filing requirements during 2006 with respect to transactions in
the Companys stock.
10
Board
Committees
The Board currently has four standing committees as described in
the table below and each is comprised of only independent
directors. The Charters for each of these committees may be
found in the Governance section of Praxairs public
website, www.praxair.com and are available in print to any
shareholder who requests them.
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Meetings and Current Members
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Summary Responsibilities
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AUDIT COMMITTEE
Meetings in 2006: 5
Current Members:
H. Mitchell Watson, Jr., Chairman
Ronald L. Kuehn, Jr.
Raymond W. LeBoeuf
Robert L. Wood
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Assists the Board in its oversight of (a) the independence, qualifications and performance of Praxairs independent auditor, (b) the integrity of Praxairs financial statements, (c) the performance of Praxairs internal audit function, and (d) Praxairs compliance with legal and regulatory requirements. In furtherance of these responsibilities,
the Audit Committee, among other duties,
(1) appoints the independent auditor to audit Praxairs financial statements, approves the fees and terms of such engagement, approves any non-audit engagements of the independent auditor, and meets regularly with, and receives various reports from, the independent auditor. The independent auditor reports directly to the Audit Committee;
(2) reviews Praxairs principal policies for accounting and financial reporting and its disclosure controls and processes, and reviews with management and the independent auditor Praxairs annual financial statements prior to their publication;
(3) reviews assessments of Praxairs internal controls, the performance of the Corporate Audit function, and the guidelines and policies by which Praxair undertakes risk assessment and risk management; and
(4) reviews the effectiveness of Praxairs compliance with laws, business conduct, integrity and ethics policies and programs.
More information on the Audit Committees role and conclusions regarding financial reports and on the independent auditor, is presented under the captions Audit Committee Report and The Independent Auditor immediately following this table.
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11
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Meetings and Current Members
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Summary Responsibilities
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COMPENSATION & MANAGEMENT DEVELOPMENT COMMITTEE
Meetings in 2006: 4
Current Members:
Ronald L. Kuehn, Jr., Chairman
Claire W. Gargalli
Raymond W. LeBoeuf
Wayne T. Smith
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Assists the Board in its oversight
of (a) Praxairs compensation and incentive policies
and programs, and (b) management development and
succession, in both cases particularly as they apply to
Praxairs executive officers. In furtherance of these
responsibilities, the Compensation & Management
Development Committee, among other duties,
(1) determines Praxairs policies relating to
the compensation of the executive officers and assesses the
competitiveness and appropriateness of their compensation and
benefits;
(2) approves corporate goals relevant to the Chief
Executive Officers (CEO) compensation,
evaluates the CEOs performance in light of these goals and
sets the CEOs compensation accordingly;
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(3) reviews
managements long-range planning for executive development
and succession, and develops a CEO succession plan; and
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(4) reviews
Praxairs management incentive compensation and equity
compensation plans and oversees their administration.
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More information on the
Compensation & Management Development Committees
processes with respect to executive compensation is presented
under the caption The Compensation & Management
Development Committee, immediately following this table
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12
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Meetings and Current Members
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Summary Responsibilities
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GOVERNANCE & NOMINATING COMMITTEE
Meetings in 2006: 4
Current Members:
Wayne T. Smith, Chairman
José P. Alves
Ira D. Hall
H. Mitchell Watson, Jr.
Robert L. Wood
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Assists the Board in its oversight
of (a) the selection, qualifications, compensation and
performance of Praxairs directors, (b) Praxairs
governance, including the practices and effectiveness of the
Board, and (c) various important public policy concerns
that affect the Company. In furtherance of these
responsibilities, the Committee, among other duties,
(1) recommends to the Board nominees for election as
directors, and periodically reviews potential candidates,
including incumbent directors;
(2) reviews policies with respect to the composition,
organization and practices of the Board, and developments in
corporate governance matters generally; and
(3) reviews Praxairs policies and responses to
important social, political and public issues, including equal
employment opportunity, charitable contributions, legislative
issues, and important shareholder issues, including management
and shareholder proposals offered for shareholder approval.
More information on the Governance & Nominating
Committees director nomination processes is presented
under the caption The Governance & Nominating
Committee, immediately following this table.
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FINANCE & PENSION COMMITTEE
Meetings in 2006: 3
Current Members:
Claire W. Gargalli, Chairman
José P. Alves
Ira D. Hall
G. Jackson Ratcliffe, Jr.
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Assists the Board in its oversight of (a) Praxairs financial position and financing activities, (b) Praxairs financial risk management policies and activities, and (c) the ERISA-qualified, funded plans sponsored by Praxair. In furtherance of these responsibilities, the Finance & Pension Committee, among other duties,
(1) monitors Praxairs financial condition and its requirements for financing, and reviews, and recommends to the Board, the amounts, timing, types and terms of public stock issues and public and private debt issues;
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(2) reviews
Praxairs foreign exchange and interest rate exposures, the
results of its foreign exchange, hedging activities, and
Praxairs practices for managing insurable risks;
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(3) reviews
Praxairs policies on dividends and stock repurchases; and
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(4) reviews the
investment performance, administration and funded status of
Praxairs funded benefit plans and appoints administration
and investment committees to act as fiduciaries of such plans.
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13
The Audit
Committee
Audit
Committee Report
A principal role of the Audit Committee is to assist the Board
of Directors in its oversight of the Companys financial
reporting process. The Board of Directors, in its business
judgment, has determined that all members of the Audit Committee
are independent, as required by applicable listing
standards of the NYSE and by your Boards independence
standards set forth in Appendix 2 of this Proxy Statement.
As set forth in the Audit Committees Charter, the
management of the Company is responsible for: (1) the
preparation, presentation and integrity of the Companys
financial statements; (2) the Companys accounting and
financial reporting principles; and (3) internal controls
and procedures designed to ensure compliance with applicable
laws, regulations, and standards, including internal control
over financial reporting. The independent auditor is responsible
for auditing the Companys financial statements and
expressing an opinion as to their conformity with generally
accepted accounting principles.
In the performance of its oversight function, the Audit
Committee has considered and discussed the audited financial
statements with management and the independent auditor. The
Audit Committee has also discussed with the independent auditor
the matters required to be discussed by the Statement on
Auditing Standards No. 61, Communication with Audit
Committees, as currently in effect.
The Audit Committee has discussed with the independent auditor
its independence from the Company and its management. The Audit
Committee has received the written disclosures and the letter
from the independent auditor required by Independence Standards
Board Standard No. 1, Independence Discussions with
Audit Committees, as currently in effect. The Audit
Committee has also received written confirmations from
management with respect to non-audit services provided to the
Company by the independent auditor in calendar year 2006 and
those planned for 2007. The Audit Committee has considered
whether the provision of such non-audit services is compatible
with maintaining PricewaterhouseCoopers independence.
In its oversight role for these matters, the Audit Committee
relies on the information and representations made by management
and the independent auditor. Accordingly, the Audit
Committees oversight does not provide an independent basis
to certify that the audit of the Companys financial
statements has been carried out in accordance with generally
accepted auditing standards, that the financial statements are
presented in accordance with generally accepted accounting
principles or that the Companys independent auditor is, in
fact, independent.
Based upon the reports and discussions described in this report,
and subject to the limitations on the role and responsibilities
of the Audit Committee referred to above and in the Charter, the
Audit Committee recommended to the Board that the audited
financial statements be included in the Companys Annual
Report on
Form 10-K
for the year ended December 31, 2006 to be filed with the
SEC.
The Audit
Committee
H. Mitchell Watson, Jr., Chairman
Ronald L. Kuehn, Jr.
Raymond W. LeBoeuf
Robert L. Wood
14
The
Independent Auditor
Auditor
Selection and Attendance at the Annual Meeting
PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP served as Praxairs independent
auditor for the year ended December 31, 2006 and has been
selected by your Boards Audit Committee to serve in such
capacity for the year ending December 31, 2007.
Representatives of PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP are expected to be
present at the Annual Meeting to be available to respond to
appropriate questions and to make a statement if they desire.
Audit
Partner and Audit Firm Rotation
The Audit Committees policy is that the audit engagement
partner should rotate off the Companys account no less
frequently than every five years. During Praxairs
141/2
years as a public company, it has had four audit engagement
partners. The current engagement partner has been in place for
about 4 years.
With respect to audit firm rotation, the Audit Committee
believes that it is inappropriate to establish a fixed limit on
the tenure of the independent auditor. Continuity and the
resulting in-depth knowledge of the Company strengthens the
audit. Moreover, the mandatory partner rotation policy expressed
above, normal turnover of audit personnel, the Audit
Committees policy regarding the hiring of auditor
personnel as described below, and the Audit Committees
practices restricting non-audit engagements of the independent
auditor as described below, all mitigate against any loss of
objectivity that theoretically could arise from a long-term
relationship. As provided in the Audit Committees Charter
and as further described below, the Audit Committee continuously
evaluates the independence and effectiveness of the independent
auditor and its personnel, and the cost and quality of its audit
services. The Audit Committee will periodically consider
alternatives to ensure that the Audit Committee and the
Companys shareholders are receiving the best audit
services available.
Auditor
Independence
As noted in the Audit Committee Charter and in the Audit
Committee Report presented above, the independent auditor
reports directly to the Audit Committee and the Audit Committee
is charged with evaluating its independence.
Non-Audit
Engagement Pre-Approval Policy
To help ensure independence of the independent auditor, the
Audit Committee has established a policy whereby all non-audit
engagements of the independent auditor must be approved in
advance by the Audit Committee or its Chairman, has set forth
limitations codifying its bias against such engagements, and has
adopted a guideline that, absent special circumstances, the
aggregate cost of non-audit engagements in a year should not
exceed the audit fees for that year. As noted below in the
report on independent auditor fees, such non-audit engagements
were approximately 5.2% of audit fees in 2006. 100% of the
Audit-Related Fees, Tax Fees and All Other Fees disclosed below
were pre-approved by the Audit Committee.
Hiring
Policy Auditor Employees
In addition, the Audit Committee has established a policy
whereby no former employee of the independent auditor may be
elected or appointed an officer of the Company earlier than two
years after termination of the engagement or employment.
Fees
Paid to the Independent Auditor
Audit Fees. PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP billed
Praxair, Inc. and its affiliates an aggregate amount of
$5,795,000 and $5,186,000 for professional services rendered in
2006 and 2005, respectively, for the audit of Praxairs
annual financial statements, the reviews of the financial
statements included in Praxairs reports on
Form 10-Q,
attestation of managements assessment of the
Companys internal controls as required by § 404
of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002, and services that are
normally provided
15
by the independent auditor in connection with statutory and
regulatory filings or engagements for those fiscal years.
Audit-Related Fees. PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP
billed Praxair, Inc. and its affiliates an aggregate amount of
$46,000 and $77,000 for assurance and related services rendered
in 2006 and 2005, respectively, that are reasonably related to
the performance of the audit or review of Praxairs
financial statements other than the fees disclosed in the
foregoing paragraph. These fees related primarily to due
diligence services and certifications required by customers and
others.
Tax Fees. PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP billed Praxair,
Inc. and its affiliates an aggregate amount of $84,000 and
$91,000 for professional services rendered in 2006 and 2005,
respectively, for tax compliance and tax preparation, including
preparation of original and amended tax returns, and claims for
refunds.
All Other Fees. PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP billed
Praxair, Inc. and its affiliates an aggregate amount of $169,000
and $123,000 for products and services rendered in 2006 and
2005, respectively, other than those reported in the foregoing
paragraphs. These services related primarily to consulting and
advice in regard to local country issues for
non-U.S. subsidiaries.
The
Compensation & Management Development
Committee
Executive
Compensation
Praxairs Compensation & Management Development
Committee of the Board (the Compensation Committee)
consists of four non-management directors appointed by your
Board who meet the independence requirements of the NYSE and
your Boards standards for director independence as set
forth at Appendix 2 of this Proxy Statement. Among other
duties, the Compensation Committee is responsible for
considering and determining executive compensation.
Consideration and determination of directors compensation
is the responsibility of the Governance & Nominating
Committee of the Board.
Committee Charter and Responsibilities: As set forth
in the Compensation Committees charter, with respect to
the compensation of the executive officers reported in this
Proxy Statement, the Compensation Committee has the authority to:
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determine the policies relating to the executive officers,
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determine and authorize the salaries, performance-based variable
compensation, long term incentive awards, terms of employment,
retirement or severance, benefits, and perquisites of the
executive officers.
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review and approve corporate goals and objectives relevant to
the CEOs compensation, evaluate the CEOs performance
in light of those goals and objectives and set the CEOs
compensation level based on this evaluation.
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Delegation and CEO Involvement: The Compensation
Committee may not delegate any of the foregoing authority to any
other persons. With respect to the allocation of compensation
and awards to employees other than the executive officers, the
Compensation Committee may, and has, delegated authority to the
CEO, subject to guidelines established by the Compensation
Committee. The CEO does not determine the compensation of any of
the executive officers but he does offer for the Compensation
Committees consideration his views on relevant matters as
described in more detail in this Proxy Statement in the section
captioned Compensation Discussion and Analysis.
Committee Consultant: The Compensation Committee
engages an independent, third-party compensation consultant to
assist it in such analysis as is necessary to inform and support
the Compensation Committees decisions on executive
compensation. For its consideration of 2006 executive
compensation, the Compensation Committee engaged Towers Perrin
LLP. The purpose of the engagement was to provide to the
Compensation Committee data, analysis and independent advice
with regard to executive compensation. The scope of the
consultants work is described in this Proxy Statement in
the section
16
captioned Compensation Discussion and Analysis. The
engagement also included certain analyses and data requested by
management from time to time. The consultant was directed to
keep the Compensation Committee informed of the work that it
performs for management and to not compromise its independence
with respect to advice its renders to the Compensation Committee.
Committee Process for Executive Compensation: With
regard to executive compensation, the Compensation Committee
generally follows the following schedule and process in its
annual cycle of meetings:
Review trends in executive compensation and the
competitiveness of the Companys executive compensation
program as presented by the Compensation Committees
consultant.
Determine the performance-based variable
compensation plan for the following plan year including
establishment of financial and non-financial goals and payout
formulas based on levels of performance against those goals.
Determine for each executive officer the following
elements of
his/her
direct compensation for the following year: (1) salary
adjustment (typically effective on April 1), (2) target
performance-based variable compensation (percent of salary) and
(3) value and form of long term incentive award.
Determine performance based variable compensation
earned for the previous plan year based on evaluation of Company
and CEO performance against the goals previously established by
the Compensation Committee.
Determine terms and conditions of long term
incentive awards including calculation of the number of equity
units to be awarded based on the dollar value to be delivered as
established in December.
Review perquisites and personal benefits available
to executive officers.
Review executive officer stock transactions and
compliance with stock ownership guidelines.
Review proposed proxy statement disclosures with
respect to executive compensation.
The
Governance & Nominating Committee
Director
Nominations
The Governance & Nominating Committee is comprised of
five non-management directors who meet the independence
requirements of the NYSE and your Boards standards
for director independence set forth in Appendix 2 to this
Proxy Statement. Among other duties, the Governance &
Nominating Committee has responsibility for the director
nomination process.
The Governance & Nominating Committee will consider
candidate nominees for election as director who are recommended
by shareholders. Recommendations should be sent to the Secretary
of Praxair and should include the candidates name and
qualifications and a statement from the candidate that he or she
consents to being named in the proxy statement and will serve as
a director if elected. In order for any candidate to be
considered by the Governance & Nominating Committee
and, if nominated, to be included in the proxy statement, such
recommendation must be received by the Secretary on or before
the date specified on page 56 of this Proxy Statement under
the caption Shareholder Proposals for the 2008 Annual
Meeting.
17
The Governance & Nominating Committee believes that the
minimum qualifications that must be met by any director nominee
include a strong record of integrity and ethical conduct, a
record of accomplishment, lack of conflicts that might interfere
with the nominees exercise of independent judgment on
matters affecting the Company or its shareholders, and a
willingness and ability to represent all shareholders of the
Company.
The qualities and skills necessary in a director nominee are
governed by the specific needs of the Board at the time the
Governance & Nominating Committee determines to add a
director to the Board. The specific requirements of the Board
will be determined by the Governance Committee and will be based
on, among other things, the Companys then existing
strategies and business, market, geographic and regulatory
environments, and the mix of perspectives, experience and
competencies then represented by the other Board members; and
will take into account the Chief Executive Officers views
as to areas in which management desires additional advice and
counsel.
When the need to recruit a director arises, the
Governance & Nominating Committee will consult the
other directors, the Chief Executive Officer and, on occasion,
fee-paid third party recruiting firms to identify potential
candidates. The candidate evaluation process may include
inquiries as to the candidates reputation and background,
examination of the candidates experiences and skills in
relation to the Boards requirements at the time,
consideration of the candidates independence as measured
by the Boards independence standards, and other
considerations that the Governance & Nominating
Committee deems appropriate at the time. Prior to formal
consideration by the Governance & Nominating Committee,
any candidate who passes such screening would be interviewed by
the Governance & Nominating Committee (or the
Governance & Nominating Committee Chairman) and by the
Chief Executive Officer.
No new directors have been appointed or nominated since the last
annual meeting of shareholders.
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The
Board of Directors
The following pages present information about the persons who
comprise Praxairs Board of Directors, including the four
nominees for election. During 2006, the Board held nine meetings.
Director
Attendance
During his current term to-date, each nominee for reelection
attended Board meetings and meetings of committees of which he
is a member as follows: Mr. Alves, 100%; Mr. Kuehn,
100%; Mr. Watson 96%; and Mr. Wood 90%. During this
same period, the continuing directors collectively attended
approximately 99% of such meetings.
The
Directors and Nominees
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JOSÉ PAULO DE OLIVEIRA
ALVES
Director Since 2005
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Age 61
Term Expires 2007
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Former Chief Executive Officer of
CSN LLC, USA, the U.S. operation of Brazils Companhia
Siderúrgica Nacional (a steel manufacturing company), from
2001 through 2003. In addition, he served as Executive Officer
of the New Business Sector of Companhia Siderúrgica
Nacional from June 1999 through 2003, and as its Executive
Officer of the Infrastructure/Energy Sector from May 1998
through July 2002. Prior to 2004 and representing CSNs
holdings, Mr. Alves was Chairman of Eletropaulo
Metropolitana SA (an electricity distribution company) and MRS
Logistica SA (a railway/logistics company), as well as an
Alternate Director of Cia Vale do Rio Doce (CVRD).
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STEPHEN F. ANGEL
Director Since 2006
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Age 51
Term Expires 2009
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Stephen F. Angel has been Chief
Executive Officer of Praxair, Inc. since January 1, 2007,
and has been elected Chairman effective May 1, 2007. Before
becoming the Chief Executive Officer, he served as President
& Chief Operating Officer since March 1, 2006, and
served as Executive Vice President from 2001 to 2006. Prior to
joining Praxair in 2001, Mr. Angel was General Manager for
the General Electric Company Industrial Systems Power Equipment
business from 1999 to 2001, and was General Manager, Marketing
and Sales, for GEs Transportation Systems business from
1996 to 1999. He is also on the Board of the National
Association of Manufacturers.
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CLAIRE W. GARGALLI
Director Since 1992
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Age 64
Term Expires 2009
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Former Vice Chairman, Diversified
Search Companies (executive search consultants) from 1990 to
1998
Ms. Gargalli is a trustee emeritus of Carnegie Mellon
University and Middlebury College and she is also a director of
Baker Hughes, Inc., Intermec, Inc., and Virginia National Bank.
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IRA D. HALL
Director Since 2004
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Age 62
Term Expires 2008
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Former President and Chief
Executive Officer of Utendahl Capital Management, L.P. (an asset
management company) from 2002 through 2004. From 1999 to 2001,
Mr. Hall served as Treasurer of Texaco Inc., and from 1998
to 1999, he was General Manager, Alliance Management of Texaco
Inc. Prior to joining Texaco, Mr. Hall held several
positions with International Business Machines.
Mr. Hall is a director of Pepsi Bottling Group Inc. and
Ameriprise Financial, Inc. He is the past chairman of the board
of the Executive Leadership Council. He also serves on the
Deans Advisory Council of the Stanford Graduate School of
Business.
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RONALD L. KUEHN, JR.
Director Since 1992
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Age 71
Term Expires 2007
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Chairman (non-executive) of
El Paso Corporation (a natural gas and energy products
company) since March 2003. Mr. Kuehn was Chairman,
President and Chief Executive Officer of Sonat Inc. (an oil and
natural gas company) from 1986 until its merger with
El Paso Corporation in 1999. He served as Chairman of
El Paso Corporation through 2000, as its Lead Director in
2002 and 2003, and as interim Chief Executive Officer from March
through August 2003.
Mr. Kuehn is also a director of Regions Financial
Corporation and Dun and Bradstreet Corporation.
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RAYMOND W. LEBOEUF
Director Since 1997
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Age 60
Term Expires 2008
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Executive Session Presiding
Director of Praxair since 2005. Former Chairman and Chief
Executive Officer of PPG Industries, Inc. (a diversified
manufacturer of coatings, glass and chemicals) from 1997 to
2005. In 1995, Mr. LeBoeuf was elected President and Chief
Operating Officer and a director of PPG Industries, Inc.
Mr. LeBoeuf also is a director of ITT Industries, Inc.
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G. JACKSON RATCLIFFE, JR.
Director Since 1992
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Age 70
Term Expires 2009
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Former President and Chief
Executive Officer of Hubbell Incorporated (a manufacturer of
electrical and electronics products) from 1987 until 2001, and
its Chairman of the Board from 1987 until 2004.
Mr. Ratcliffe also served as Praxairs Executive
Session Presiding Director from 2002 to 2005.
Mr. Ratcliffe also is a director of Hubbell Incorporated
and Sunoco, Inc.
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DENNIS H. REILLEY
Director Since 2000
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Age 54
Term Expires 2009
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Mr. Reilley has served as
Chairman of Praxair, Inc. since December 2000. From 2000 to
2006, he also served as President & Chief Executive Officer.
Effective April 30, 2007, Mr. Reilley will retire as
Chairman and a director.
Prior to joining Praxair, he held senior management positions in
DuPont Co. beginning in 1989, and in May 1999, Mr. Reilley
was appointed Executive Vice President & Chief Operating
Officer of DuPont. Prior to 1989, Mr. Reilley held various
senior executive positions with Conoco.
Mr. Reilley is past Chairman of the American Chemistry
Council and a member of The Business Roundtable. He also is a
director of H. J. Heinz Company, Marathon Oil Company and The
Conservation Fund.
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WAYNE T. SMITH
Director Since 2001
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Age 61
Term Expires 2008
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Chairman, President & Chief
Executive Officer of Community Health Systems, Inc. (a hospital
and healthcare services company) since 2001. In 1997,
Mr. Smith was elected President and then Chief Executive
Officer and a director of Community Health Systems, Inc. Prior
to joining Community Health Systems, he served as Chief
Operating Officer, President, and a director of Humana Inc.
Mr. Smith is a director of Citadel Broadcasting Corporation
and a current member of the Board, and past Chairman of, the
Federation of American Hospitals.
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H. MITCHELL WATSON, JR.
Director Since 1992
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Age 69
Term Expires 2007
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Former President, Sigma Group of
America (a consulting company) from 1992 to 2005.
Mr. Watson was President & Chief Executive Officer of
ROLM Company (a telecommunications joint venture of IBM and
Siemens AG) from 1989 to 1992. Prior to that, he served as Vice
President, Marketing for IBM.
Mr. Watson also is a director of Community Health Systems,
Inc., chairman-emeritus of Helen Keller International, and
chairman of the Brevard Music Center.
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ROBERT L.WOOD
Director Since 2004
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Age 52
Term Expires 2007
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Chairman, President & Chief
Executive Officer of Chemtura Corporation (a specialty chemicals
company formerly known as Crompton Corporation) since 2004.
Mr. Wood became President & Chief Executive Officer of
Chemtura in January 2004 and was appointed to the additional
post of Chairman in April 2004. Prior to joining Chemtura,
Mr. Wood served in senior management positions at Dow
Chemical Company, most recently as business group president for
Thermosets and Dow Automotive from November 2000.
Mr. Wood also is a director of Jarden Corporation and a
board member of the American Chemistry Council, and has served
as chairman of the American Plastics Council.
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21
Executive
Officers
The following Executive Officers have been elected by the Board
of Directors and serve at the pleasure of the Board. It is
expected that the Board will elect officers annually following
each annual meeting of shareholders.
Stephen F. Angel, 51, See description under The Board of
Directors.
James T. Breedlove, 59, is Senior Vice President, General
Counsel and Secretary of Praxair, Inc. and served as Vice
President, General Counsel and Secretary from 2004 to 2006.
Prior to joining Praxair in 2004, Mr. Breedlove was Senior
Vice President and General Counsel at GE Equipment Services from
2002, and from 1992 to 2002, he served as a Senior Vice
President of a division of General Electric Capital Corp.
Domingos H. G. Bulus, 45, is President of White Martins Gases
Industriais Ltda. (White Martins), Praxairs
Brazilian subsidiary, and is a Vice President of Praxair, Inc.
He served as President of Praxair Asia from 2001 to 2003.
Mr. Bulus also served as Executive Director of the Andean
Treaty region for White Martins from 1996 to 2001. He assumed
his current position in 2003.
Patrick M. Clark, 45, is a Vice President of Praxair, Inc. and
its Controller. Prior to joining Praxair in those capacities,
Mr. Clark was, since 1997, Vice President, Finance and
Chief Financial Officer of Enodis North America, a subsidiary of
Enodis Plc., a global manufacturer of food equipment. He assumed
his current positions in 2002.
James J. Fuchs, 54, is a Senior Vice President of Praxair, Inc.,
and served as a Vice President from 2001 to 2006. Since 2001, he
also has been President of North American Industrial Gases, and
President of Praxair Canada. In 2006, Mr. Fuchs also
assumed responsibility for Praxairs Mexican operations.
Prior to these assignments, Mr. Fuchs served Praxair Asia
as a Vice President from 1996 and then as its President from
1998.
Randy S. Kramer, 54, is a Vice President of Praxair, Inc. and,
since 2004, President, Praxair Europe. In 1999, he was elected a
Vice President of Praxair responsible for carbon dioxide
products and services, and then for U.S. food and beverage
marketing and sales. Mr. Kramer led Praxairs
procurement organization in 2000 and, in 2001, he was appointed
as Praxairs Vice President of Sales.
Ricardo S. Malfitano, 48, is an Executive Vice President of
Praxair, Inc., overseeing Praxairs South America and Asia
regions, the Electronics business, the North American packaged
gases business, Praxair Distribution, and global supply systems,
global procurement and engineering. Mr. Malfitano served as
a Senior Vice President of Praxair from 2003 to 2006 and was
President of White Martins, Praxairs Brazilian subsidiary,
and President, Praxair South America from 2001 to 2003. He
served as President, North American Industrial Gases and
President, Praxair Canada from 1998 to 2001. Mr. Malfitano
also served as Chief Operating Officer of White Martins from
1997 to 1998. He assumed his current position in 2006.
Dennis H. Reilley, 54. See description under The Board of
Directors.
James S. Sawyer, 50, is an Executive Vice President and the
Chief Financial Officer of Praxair, Inc. From 2003 to 2006, he
served as a Senior Vice President and the Chief Financial
Officer. Mr. Sawyer became Assistant Treasurer in 1992 upon
Praxairs launch as a public company, and served as Vice
President and Treasurer from 1994 to 2000. He was designated the
Chief Financial Officer in 2000.
Robert S. Vruggink, 49 is a Senior Vice President of Praxair,
Inc. He served as President of Praxair Surface Technologies from
2003 to 2006. Mr. Vruggink joined Praxair in 2001 as area
director for industrial gases in the U.S. southern region.
Prior to joining Praxair, he had served in a wide variety of
engineering and management assignments for Conoco and DuPont. He
assumed his current position in 2006.
Wayne J. Yakich, 49, is a Vice President of Praxair, Inc. and
President, Praxair Distribution, Inc. Mr. Yakich was
formerly Vice President, Business Operations for Praxair
Distribution. He assumed his current positions in 2000.
22
Executive
Compensation
Compensation
Committee Report
The Compensation & Management Development Committee
reviewed and discussed with management the Compensation
Discussion and Analysis below and recommended to the Board
that it be included in this Proxy Statement. The Compensation
Committee has represented to management that, to the extent that
the Compensation Discussion and Analysis purports to
disclose the Compensation Committees deliberations and
thinking in making executive compensation decisions and policy,
it is accurate and materially complete.
The Compensation & Management Development
Committee
Ronald L. Kuehn, Jr., Chairman
Claire W. Gargalli
Raymond W. LeBoeuf
Wayne T. Smith
Compensation
Discussion and Analysis
This compensation discussion and analysis (CD&A)
is intended to provide context for the decisions underlying the
compensation reported in the executive compensation tables
included in this Proxy Statement for the Companys Chief
Executive Officer (CEO), Chief Financial Officer
(CFO) and the three other executive officers who had
the highest total compensation for 2006, as set
forth in the Summary Compensation Table below (these
five executive officers are collectively referred to as the
Named Executive Officers or the NEOs).
The Compensation Committee of the Companys Board of
Directors is responsible for policies and decisions regarding
the compensation and benefits for NEOs. Certain facts described
in this CD&A reflect Compensation Committee deliberations
about which management does not have personal knowledge,
although the Compensation Committee has advised management that
the information in this CD&A is accurate and materially
complete.
Objectives
of Praxairs Executive Compensation Program
The objectives of Praxairs executive compensation program
are to:
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attract and retain executive talent;
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build and support a performance-driven culture and to motivate
executives to deliver strong business results;
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align executives with shareholder expectations by closely
linking total compensation with
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short term business performance, and
longer term shareholder value creation; and
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encourage executives to own Company stock, thereby aligning
their interests with those of shareholders.
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The Compensation Committee achieves these objectives through the
following means:
Attraction
and retention of executive talent
The Compensation Committee endeavors to provide competitive
compensation to Praxairs executives. To help ensure that
Praxairs executive compensation is in-line with the
market, the Compensation Committee benchmarks each element of
Praxairs compensation program against comparator companies
representing, among others, the market for executive talent most
applicable to the Company. The Compensation Committee designs
the executive compensation program to be performance-based in
order to drive performance and also to assure that strong
performance is well rewarded, thus attracting
23
and retaining high-performing, results-oriented executives. Long
term incentives are designed, in part, to provide retention
incentive as well as to reward the creation of long term
shareholder value. In the event of a
change-in-control
of the Company, severance arrangements are intended to ensure
continuity by incenting executives to focus on performing their
duties rather than seeking immediate employment elsewhere.
Linkage
to short term business performance and to longer term
shareholder value creation
The Compensation Committee seeks to motivate executives to work
conscientiously to achieve both short term and long term goals
and, thereby, create shareholder value. A significant proportion
of each NEOs total compensation opportunity is
performance-based variable compensation which rewards executives
for annual business performance against pre-determined financial
and non-financial goals. These rewards are balanced with long
term incentives to both drive short term growth in shareholder
value and to reward long term decision-making which results in
sustainable growth in shareholder value.
Encouragement
of executive ownership of Company stock
Stock ownership guidelines are in place for NEOs (see disclosure
on details of these guidelines and their enforcement in the
Corporate Governance and Board Practices section of this Proxy
Statement under the caption Executive Stock Ownership
Guidelines). Equity-based instruments are a significant
component of the Companys executive compensation program.
Also, the Companys Compensation Deferral Program, 401(k)
savings plan and Dividend Reinvestment and Stock Purchase Plan
each provide all plan participants, including NEOs, with many
avenues to acquire and hold Praxair stock or stock-equivalent
units.
Key
Factors Supporting Compensation Decisions for Executive
Officers
The Compensation Committee considered many factors in making NEO
compensation decisions reported in this Proxy Statement. Some of
those key factors are summarized below. This section is intended
to supplement the discussion and analysis concerning individual
elements of NEOs compensation included elsewhere in this
CD&A.
As described more fully elsewhere in this CD&A, a large
component of annual performance-based variable compensation for
2006 was based on formula-calculated earnings for the
performance achieved against selected financial measures. Except
for this, individual compensation decisions in 2006 required
considerable judgment and the balancing of many objective and
subjective considerations such as those listed in this section.
The Compensation Committee did not find it practical, nor did it
attempt, to assign relative weights to various factors or
subject them to pre-defined, rigid formulas; and the importance
and relevance of specific factors varied among individual
executives.
Individual
Factors
In making its compensation decisions for NEOs in 2006, the
Compensation Committee considered a number of quantitative and
qualitative factors relating to the individual including, as
applicable:
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The Companys future financial and non-financial
performance in the executives principal area of
responsibility and the degree to which it wishes to incent and
reward such performance.
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The executives expected progress towards goals within his
area of responsibility.
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The executives performance against the critical goals
(financial, project oriented or people related) set by the CEO
under the Companys Performance Management System and the
exhibition of the values, competencies and behaviors that are
important to the success of the Company.
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The potential contributions the executive can make to the
Companys success.
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The executives experience and level of responsibility.
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The Companys retention goals for the executive.
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The relative size of base salary, annual performance-based
variable compensation opportunity, and long term incentive
grants for executives with similar responsibilities at peer
companies.
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Compensation
Consultant Data, Analysis and Advice
To assist it in meeting its objectives, the Compensation
Committee engaged Towers Perrin LLP, an independent, third-party
consultant, to provide data, analysis and independent advice.
For 2006, the scope of the consultants work included
preparation, and presentation to the Compensation Committee, of
a report on executive compensation trends, a competitive
compensation analysis covering the Companys officers,
various other materials related, for example, to the
performance-based variable compensation program and stock
options valuation, and other special projects requested by the
Compensation Committee or management. The engagement also
included certain analyses and data requested by management from
time to time. In advance of applicable Compensation Committee
meetings, the CEO and other management personnel reviewed the
consultants data and analysis to be presented at the
meeting and the CEO solicited the consultants views on his
proposed recommendations for executive officer compensation
(other than his own) based on that data. In its deliberations,
including in private sessions with the consultant, the
Compensation Committee requested the consultants opinion
of the CEOs recommendations.
Recommendations
of the Chief Executive Officer
The CEO did not determine the compensation of any of the
executive officers in 2006 but he did offer his views on
relevant matters for the Compensation Committees
consideration including:
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his recommendations with respect to salary adjustments and
target (percent of salary) performance-based variable
compensation for individual executive officers based on analysis
of the benchmark data and Individual Factors described above.
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his assessment of the Companys performance against the
non-financial goals set by the Compensation Committee and
evidence supporting that assessment.
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his recommendations on individual performance factors that
should be applied to performance-based variable compensation for
individual executive officers and the reasons for those
recommendations.
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his views as to the form of long term incentives most
appropriate to drive sustainable shareholder value creation.
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his views with respect to the companies against which it is
appropriate to benchmark the Companys executive
compensation.
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The Compensation Committee duly considered the CEOs
recommendations in each of these areas.
Benchmarking
Benchmark data was used by the Compensation Committee to help
determine the appropriate amount of each element of each
NEOs total compensation for 2006.
Selection of Benchmark Companies. Benchmark
companies were selected by the Compensation Committee with the
assistance of its consultant. From a broader base of companies
in selected industries (the Key Industry Group,
consisting, for 2006, of 297 companies) for which the
consultant maintains detailed compensation data, the
Compensation Committee selected a smaller group as the Key
Company Group. The Compensation Committee used the
Key Company Group to determine competitive pay levels for
NEO positions. The companies in this group were selected to
represent the Companys competitors, key customer segments
and the markets for executive talent most applicable to the
Company. The group was targeted at
25-30
members so as to provide meaningful but manageable data
comparisons. For 2006, the 28 companies identified below
were selected on the advice of the
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Compensation Committees consultant. From the Key
Company Group were selected 10 companies to comprise
the Compensation Committees Practices Tracking Group
for use in benchmarking compensation and benefit-related
practices such as forms of equity awards, stock ownership
guidelines, perquisites and personal benefits, retirement and
other termination arrangements, based on proxy statement
disclosures. The Practices Tracking Group comprised key
competitors as well as other companies that the consultant and
the Compensation Committee deemed appropriate for this purpose.
The companies in the Key Company Group were:
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Advanced Micro Devices
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Engelhard
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PepsiCo
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Air Liquide Americas
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General Mills
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PPG Industries
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Air Products and Chemicals
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Johnson & Johnson
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Quest Diagnostics
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Borg Warner
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Kellogg
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Rockwell Automation
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Dow Chemical
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Kerr-McGee
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Rohm and Haas
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Duke Energy
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L-3 Communications
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Sempra Energy
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DuPont
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Lyondell Chemical
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Smurfit-Stone Container
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Eastman Chemical
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MeadWestvaco
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Texas Instruments
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Ecolab
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Nova Chemicals
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Eli Lilly
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PACCAR
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Application of Benchmark Data. For each of the three
elements of direct compensation (salary, long term incentive
awards and target performance-based variable compensation), the
Compensation Committee examined the mid-range of benchmark
company data for each NEOs position, such data adjusted by
the consultant for scope of company operation. Although the
Compensation Committee uses this mid-range as a guide for
determining compensation levels, actual values set for any
individual NEO may, from time to time deviate from mid-range
(a) due to the Individual Factors described above,
(b) because of
year-to-year
swings in market median data, and (c) so as to maintain the
desired internal equity among executive positions. Unless
otherwise disclosed in the below sections on individual elements
of direct compensation, the value of compensation paid or
targeted for each NEO in 2006 was within the mid-range as
determined by the benchmarking process. The Compensation
Committee also consulted market data from the broader Key
Industry Group as a secondary check to ensure that mid-range
data from the Key Company Group in any year is generally
representative and not impacted by any unusual or short-term
factors.
Evaluation
of Aggregate Compensation
Total Compensation and Benefits. In late 2005, as a
cross check against its separate determinations of the amounts
of individual direct compensation elements for the CEO, the
Compensation Committee considered the value of the CEOs
aggregate compensation package in which all components of his
compensation and benefits were viewed together using a
tally sheet format. Based on this review, the
Compensation Committee determined that the total compensation
granted to the CEO is both fair and reasonable. Completion of a
similar analysis for most NEOs was completed in late 2006, for
use in 2007 compensation decisions. At that time, the
Compensation Committee determined that the total compensation
granted to all NEOs is both fair and reasonable.
Termination Benefits. In late 2005, the Compensation
Committee also reviewed an analysis of the total benefits to be
received by the CEO under various termination events, including
regular retirement, voluntary resignation, and termination by
the Company, including following a
change-in-control
of the Company. Based on this review, the Compensation Committee
determined that the aggregate of termination and severance
provisions and their outcomes applicable to the CEO is both fair
and reasonable. Completion of a similar analysis for most NEOs
was completed in late 2006, for use in 2007 compensation
decisions. At that time, the Compensation Committee determined
that the termination benefits granted to all NEOs is both fair
and reasonable.
26
Tax
and Accounting Considerations
Deductibility of Compensation Expense. The
Compensation Committee was cognizant of the compensation
deduction limitations under Internal Revenue Code
Section 162(m) and, accordingly, structured its
performance-based variable compensation program for the 2006
plan year consistent with the shareholder-approved
Praxair, Inc. Plan For Determining Awards under
Section 162(m) (the 162(m) Plan). The
Company believes that compensation paid under this program is
performance-based and, thereby, fully deductible
under IRS rules. In addition, 2006 option grants and the plans
under which they were determined and awarded were designed so as
to make their related compensation expense fully deductible. The
amount of the CEOs base salary that exceeds
$1 million is not deductible under IRS rules but such
non-deductibility was not a consideration in determining the
amount of such base salary.
Accounting Treatments. Accounting treatments were
reviewed but did not impact the selection and design of equity
and equity-related compensation for 2006, although all such
grants were made in a manner as to not require variable
accounting treatment.
Analysis
of the Use of Long Term Incentives
The Compensation Committee reviewed 2006 stock transactions by
executive officers and their year-end holdings so as to:
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monitor the executives use of long term incentives.
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maintain awareness of trends in executive stock transaction
activity.
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uncover hedges or other risk-management techniques applied to
stock-based incentives.
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uncover improper dispositions back to the Company or other
self-dealing.
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ensure that stock ownership guidelines are being met.
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Based on this review, the Compensation Committee determined that
the long term incentives previously granted to NEOs continue to
be used appropriately and for their intended purpose.
Audit
of Program Administration
To assist in determining the performance-based variable
compensation payable for the 2006 plan year, the Compensation
Committee engaged the Companys internal audit department
to verify that the rules of the program established by the
Compensation Committee were properly applied and the
Companys performance against the pre-established financial
measures was properly determined. The report of the internal
auditors confirmed to the Compensation Committee that the
program was properly administered.
Elements
of Direct Compensation for Executive Officers
The Company uses a combination of cash salary, annual
performance-based variable compensation (currently paid in the
form of cash) and grants of long term incentives (in the form of
stock options for 2006) as the three elements of total direct
compensation for NEOs. The ratio of each component to total
direct compensation takes into consideration the benchmark
market data specific to each position, Individual Factors as
described above and the mix of cash and equity components the
Compensation Committee deems necessary to balance retention with
shareholder value creation. The proportion of total compensation
that is dependent on the Companys business or stock
performance (or is at risk) varies by position and
increases with higher responsibility. The methods by which the
amounts of 2006 compensation for NEOs were determined are
described in the following sections for each element of direct
compensation.
Salary
The salaries reported in the Summary Compensation
Table reflect actual cash paid for the 2006 calendar year
which includes the effect of adjustments to base salaries made
as of March 1, 2006 (for Mr. Angel), April 1,
2006 (for the other NEOs) and November 1, 2006 (for
Messrs. Sawyer, Malfitano and Fuchs). The March and April
adjustments ranged from 3% to 5%, except for Messrs. Angel
and
27
Malfitano whose salary adjustments were 8-13% due to their
promotions early in the year to President & Chief
Operating Officer and Executive Vice President, respectively.
The salary adjustments for Messrs. Sawyer, Malfitano and
Fuchs as of November 1, 2006 ranged from 8%-10% of their
salaries then in effect. These adjustments were based upon
Mr. Sawyers promotion to Executive Vice President,
Mr. Malfitanos assumption of greater Company
operating responsibilities, and Mr. Fuchs promotion
to Senior Vice President. The salary level for each NEO was
established by the Compensation Committee considering both the
benchmark data for equivalent positions in the Key Company
Group and the Individual Factors as described above.
Annual
Performance-Based Variable Compensation
The performance-based variable compensation reported for each
NEO (in the column of the Summary Compensation Table
captioned Non-Equity Incentive Plan Compensation)
represents that earned for 2006 performance. The following
describes the methodologies used by the Compensation Committee
to determine the final annual performance-based variable
compensation earned by each NEO, subject to the limitations of
the 162(m) Plan:
Target Performance-Based Variable Compensation
Level. The target performance-based variable
compensation level for 2006 for each NEO (meaning the amount of
variable compensation, expressed as a percent of salary, that
would be earned for 100% achievement of the financial
performance mid-point goals) was established by the Compensation
Committee in December 2005 considering both the benchmark data
for equivalent positions in the Key Company Group and the
Individual Factors as described above.
Establishment of Financial Measures. Prior to the
start of the 2006 plan year, the Compensation Committee selected
three financial measures that it determined were appropriate to
drive desired business behavior for Praxair and would correlate
positively with total shareholder return. These financial
measures were the Companys corporate consolidated results
with respect to (1) net income, (2) sales revenue and
(3) cash flow (defined as net income plus depreciation plus
changes in operating working capital) with each measure weighted
equally. Each measure is an accounting item reported in
accordance with GAAP in the Companys public financial
statements except that the Compensation Committee permitted
adjustments to reported results based on differences between
operating plan assumptions and actual results with respect to
currency exchange rates and product price changes caused only by
changes in certain raw material costs. Similar financial
measures were established for each of 10 business units (the
measures tailored and adjusted to each business
circumstance such as using working capital as a percent of sales
rather than cash flow). Corporate consolidated financial results
and the business unit financial results were both included in
the formula by which performance-based variable compensation
earned for financial performance was determined.
Establishment of Financial Goals and Payout
Formulae. Mid-point goals were established for each
financial measure which corresponded to a 100% payout of the
target performance-based variable compensation. In addition,
values were established for each financial measure representing
minimum and maximum rewarded performance levels corresponding to
a potential payout percentage ranging from 0% to 200% of target.
The Compensation Committee designed the relationship between pay
and performance so as to ensure that performance which
significantly exceeded the mid-point goals would be rewarded
with well-above market benchmark payout levels. Similarly,
performance that did not meet the goals would reduce the
performance-based variable compensation payout to as low as zero
in the case of failure to meet the pre-established minimum
performance. In setting the mid-point goals for 100% target
payout, the Compensation Committee strived to establish
challenging but achievable goals. The factors considered by the
Compensation Committee in assessing the challenge inherent in
the goals included:
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managements internal operating plan,
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macro-economic trends and outlooks in each of the countries in
which the Company operates,
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currency exchange trends and outlook,
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28
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expected industry performance,
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shifts in key customer markets, and
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expected contribution from contracts already awarded and
decisions or actions already made or taken.
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Although the Compensation Committee performed no explicit
probability assessment, its intent was to establish the 100%
target payout level at about a 50% probability of achievement,
the minimum payout level at relatively high probability
(approximating 85%) and the maximum payout at a relatively low
probability (approximating 15%).
Non-Financial Goals. The Compensation Committee also
established non-financial goals with respect to
(1) strategic positioning, (2) performance relative to
peers, (3) safety, (4) people development,
(5) Six Sigma, and (6) audit/compliance. The
Compensation Committee retained the discretion to adjust the
performance-based variable compensation payout as determined by
the performance against financial measures based on its
assessment of the Companys performance of these
non-financial goals plus consideration of unforeseeable external
factors beyond managements control that may have helped or
hindered managements achievement of the financial goals.
Payout Based on Performance Against Goals. For 2006
performance, taking into consideration the Companys
performance against both the financial goals and non-financial
goals, the Compensation Committee determined that each NEO
earned a performance-based variable compensation payout above
target. This was based on the Company exceeding the financial
goals for revenue growth, net income and cash flow previously
established as performance-based variable compensation measures
for 2006 performance. In addition, the Compensation Committee
judged that performance against pre-established non-financial
goals was above standard and, consequently, should be a positive
factor in determining performance-based variable compensation.
Application of Individual Performance Factors. The
Compensation Committee retained the discretion to adjust a
NEOs performance-based payout (calculated as described
above) based on an individual performance factor
(IPF), determined, in part, by some of the
Individual Factors as described above. The calculated payout to
a particular NEO as determined by the above-described evaluation
of performance against the financial and non-financial goals was
adjusted by an IPF determined by the Compensation Committee
(subject to a maximum payout limit set by the 162(m) Plan)
taking into account the CEOs annual performance appraisal
of the NEO. The Compensation Committee also determined the IPF
to be applied to the CEO.
Determining Maximum Permissible Payout Under
162(m). For NEOs, the procedures set forth in the
162(m) Plan were used to establish an upper limit on
performance-based variable compensation to be earned for 2006.
For 2006, the Compensation Committee approved a schedule
identifying the maximum performance-based variable compensation
payment to be paid to each NEO for each potential level of 2006
Net Income performance. The Compensation Committee then
exercised its downward discretion available under the 162(m)
Plan to adjust the actual payment to a level it deemed
appropriate for each NEO according to the methodology described
above.
Recapture Policy. The Compensation Committee has no
established policy for the recapture of annual performance-based
variable compensation payouts in the event of a later
restatement of the results on which the payouts were based. If
such an event occurs, the Compensation Committee expects to
establish such recapture requirements as it determines are
legal, equitable and practical under the circumstances existing
at that time.
Performance Goals for 2007 Variable Compensation. In
designing the performance-based variable compensation program
for 2007, the Compensation Committee adjusted the financial
measures to be used by substituting working capital for cash
flow as was used for 2006 as described above. This change was
made to simplify the process by aligning the corporate measure
with the measure used for most of the business units as
described above.
29
Long
Term Incentive Awards
The long term incentive grants reported for each NEO in the
Grants of Plan-Based Awards table represent those
stock option grants made in February 2006. No grants were made
to any NEO in 2006 other than this annual grant.
Determining the Value to be Delivered. The dollar
value to be delivered in 2006 to each NEO in the form of long
term incentives was established by the Compensation Committee in
December 2005 considering both the benchmark data for equivalent
positions in the Key Company Group and the Individual
Factors as described above. For 2006, the Compensation Committee
granted Mr. Reilley long term incentives approximately 30%
above the market median (as estimated by the benchmark data
described above) to provide additional retention incentive and
based on the Compensation Committees evaluation of his
exceptional performance, primarily acknowledging the
Companys sustained financial performance for 2005 and
prior years and the markets recognition of his
achievements. In determining the value to be delivered in 2006
to NEOs in the form of long term incentive awards, the
Compensation Committee did not deem relevant the number or value
of incentives then held by NEOs or the amount of previous gains
received by NEOs from exercises of options.
Determining the Amount of Award. The number of
options granted to each NEO was determined by the Compensation
Committee in January 2006 based on the consultants
estimated valuation of the Companys options using a
binomial valuation model and applying that per-option value to
the dollar value to be delivered to each NEO as previously
determined.
Determining the Form of Award. The Compensation
Committee reviewed alternative forms of long term equity
incentives taking into account, among other factors, market
trends and practices, the potential shareholder dilution effect
of equity grants, and the intended purposes of such incentives.
The Compensation Committee determined that stock options were
the most appropriate vehicle for the 2006 grants. The
Compensation Committee judged at that time that stock options
presented an appropriate balance of risk and reward in that the
executive earns no compensation from stock options without an
increase in the Companys stock price and, yet, the
potential for increased value acts as a retention incentive. The
Compensation Committee also noted that, because of the
Companys record of excellent shareholder return
performance, the Companys executives place high value in
this particular long term incentive vehicle. Finally, the
Compensation Committee considered that the vesting terms as well
as the opportunity provided by stock options for substantial
leveraged value from sustainable growth in shareholder wealth
over their ten-year term encourage long term decision-making.
Determining the Grant Date. The Compensation
Committees practice has been to approve at its regular
meeting in late January the total number of stock options to be
allocated among all eligible employees and to specifically
approve the stock options to be granted to NEOs and all other
executive officers. The Compensation Committee sets the actual
grant date of these options as the date of the Boards
regular meeting in late February. The option exercise price is
fixed at 100% of the closing price of the Companys common
stock on the NYSE on that February meeting date. Separate grants
may occur on other dates throughout each year as part of hiring
new employees or to reflect promotions.
Consistent with this practice, on January 24, 2006, the
Compensation Committee established February 28, 2006 as the
grant date for NEOs and other eligible employees
options, coinciding with the Boards next scheduled meeting
date. This grant date was established so that:
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The grant date (and, thereby, the exercise price) for NEOs
options is aligned with those granted to all other eligible
employees and those granted to the non-management directors
under the 2005 Equity Compensation Plan for Non-Employee
Directors of Praxair, Inc.
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A reasonable interval would exist between the Companys
public release of 2005 earnings results in late January 2006 and
the February 28, 2006 grant date upon which the exercise
price of the options was set.
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Form of Long Term Incentives for 2007 Grant. In
designing the long term incentive program for 2007 applicable to
NEOs, the Compensation Committee determined to move to a mix of
75% of the dollar
30
value in stock options plus 25% in performance share units to be
paid out in stock based on two-year performance metrics. The
Compensation Committee decided that this mix retains the
benefits of stock options as described above but complements the
executives focus on external stock price and longer-term
shareholder wealth creation with an appropriate balance of
attention to internal performance metrics that are expected to
drive growth and medium-term decision-making.
Benefit
Plans Available to Executive Officers
The Companys practice is to make available to NEOs
essentially the same benefit plans generally available to other
employees in the U.S. Neither the financial resources of
the NEO, nor the amount or form of present or past direct
compensation paid to the NEO was deemed by the Compensation
Committee as relevant to any NEOs continuing eligibility
to participate in these plans in 2006. Benefits for NEOs under
these plans are available and calculated on the same basis as
for the other plan participants. Adjustments are made so as to
continue the benefits to all participants, including NEOs, to
the extent that they would otherwise be limited by income or
other restrictions imposed by the federal tax laws. From time to
time, the Compensation Committee may approve certain other
adjustments to be applied to an NEO when it is in the best
interests of the Company such as to facilitate the recruitment
of an executive. Any such adjustments that are in place for any
NEO are disclosed in the tables in this Proxy Statement or their
accompanying footnotes or narratives. In addition to the benefit
plans listed below, employees, including NEOs, are eligible to
participate in other Company plans such as the 401(k) Savings
Plan, medical (both active employee and retiree), dental,
relocation and vacation.
Retirement
Plans
The benefits payable to NEOs under the Companys retirement
plans are described in the Pension Benefits table
and its accompanying footnotes and narrative. As described more
fully therein, the Compensation Committee, with the advice of
its consultant, has in the past approved certain service year
credits for Messrs. Reilley and Angel, as were deemed
necessary to compensate these the executives for benefits lost
upon departure from their previous employers or to provide
additional retention incentive. Also described in the footnotes
are certain equitable adjustments for Messrs. Malfitano and
Fuchs related to their service in Brazil and Canada,
respectively, which adjustments are generally available to all
similarly situated employees.
Tax-Qualified Pension Plan. The Company maintains a
tax-qualified defined benefit pension plan for most
U.S. employees, including the NEOs.
Supplemental Retirement Income Plan. The Company
maintains an unfunded Supplemental Retirement Income Plan
(Supplemental Plan) for the primary purpose of
providing benefits that would otherwise be paid to
U.S. employees under the tax-qualified pension plan but for
the application of certain federal tax law limitations. Because
of their income levels, each NEO is eligible to participate in
the Supplemental Plan. The incremental benefits paid under the
Supplemental Plan are calculated in the same manner as the
underlying tax-qualified pension plan and result in no greater
benefit than if federal tax law limitations were not in place.
Compensation
Deferral Program
Any U.S. employee eligible to participate in the annual
performance-based variable compensation plan, including each
NEO, is eligible to participate in the Companys
Compensation Deferral Program. Contributions, earnings,
withdrawals and year-end balances for 2006 for each NEO under
the Compensation Deferral Program are reported in the
Non-Qualified Deferred Compensation table.
The primary benefit to participants in this plan is that taxes
on any compensation deferred into the plan, and on any earnings
within the plan on those deferrals, are also deferred until the
account is actually paid out to the individual. Contributions to
the plan are voluntary and represent compensation already earned
by the participant. The Company also makes contributions that
would have been made to the 401(k) Savings Plan
31
but for the application of certain federal tax law limits under
that plan. No preferential earnings opportunities are available
under the plan to participants, including NEOs. An NEOs
account balance in the plan at any point in time reflects the
value of the Company contributions noted above and his deferred
compensation as if he had invested it, at the time it was
earned, in Praxair stock or a fixed income security, as the NEO
chose at the time of deferral. Therefore, these balances are
irrelevant to any present or future compensation decisions for
the NEO or the amount of any severance payment that should be
paid to NEOs.
Perquisites
and Personal Benefits
The Companys policy is to not extend perquisites or
personal benefits to employees other than for limited and
specifically defined business purposes. The incremental costs to
the Company in 2006 of those benefits provided to NEOs that the
SEC deems to be perquisites and personal benefits
are reported in the Summary Compensation Table
(included in the amounts reported in the column captioned
All Other Compensation and further detailed in an
accompanying supplemental table). The Compensation Committee
exercises oversight over the perquisites and personal benefits
that are made available to NEOs. Accordingly, the Compensation
Committee reviewed all 2006 Company expenses, regardless of
amount, including expenses related to security arrangements,
that could be construed as a perquisite or personal benefit for
each NEO. The purposes of this review included ensuring that:
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the costs of such perquisites and personal benefits are not
unreasonable and do not constitute a misuse of Company assets.
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each such expense has a legitimate business purpose.
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such perquisites and personal benefits are within the mainstream
of the practices of the Practices Tracking Group.
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such perquisites and personal benefits are properly disclosed to
shareholders in accordance with applicable SEC rules.
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In addition, the Companys internal audit department
performed its annual audit of executive officer expense reports
for compliance with Company policies, and the independent
auditors reviewed that work. Based on these reviews, the
Compensation Committee determined that the perquisites and
personal benefits available to NEOs in 2006, and their costs to
the Company, were reasonable and properly disclosed to
shareholders.
Severance
and
Change-in-Control
Arrangements for Executive Officers
Severance
Plan
All U.S. exempt employees, including NEOs, participate in
the Companys severance plan. This plan pays to a
terminated employee a severance payment calculated based on the
employees time in service and salary rate at the time of
termination. This benefit applies only to terminations by the
Company other than for cause.
Change-in-Control
Arrangements
The Company has entered into identical severance compensation
agreements with certain senior executives, including NEOs. These
agreements provide for certain payments to be made to the
executive in the event of both (1) a
change-in-control
of the Company (as defined in the agreements), and (2) the
termination of
his/her
employment within two years thereafter by the Company without
cause or by the executive for good reason (a so-called
dual trigger). The purpose of these agreements is to
encourage retention of the executive for continuity of
management, and to keep the executive focused on acting in the
best interests of the Company, in the event of an actual or
threatened
change-in-control.
The Compensation Committee has determined that such arrangements
are well within the mainstream of corporate practice and provide
a legitimate and reasonable benefit to the Company and to its
shareholders.
32
EXECUTIVE
COMPENSATION TABLES
The tables below present compensation information for NEOs. The
seven tables provide 2006 compensation information, followed by
a narrative discussion of compensation that NEOs could receive
when their employment with the Company terminates under various
circumstances or upon a
change-in-control
of the Company. The tables include footnotes and other narrative
explanations important for your understanding of the
compensation information in each table.
The first table below, the Summary Compensation Table,
summarizes key components of NEO compensation for 2006. The six
tables following the Summary Compensation Table provide more
detailed information about the various types of NEO
compensation, some of which are included in the Summary
Compensation Table.
SUMMARY
COMPENSATION TABLE
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Change in
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Pension Value
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Non-equity
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and Nonqualified
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Stock
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Incentive Plan
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Deferred
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All other
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Awards
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Option Awards
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Compensation
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Compensation
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Compensation
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Name and Principal Position
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Year
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Salary($)
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($)(1)
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($)(1)
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($)(2)
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Earnings($)(3)
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($)(4)
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Total($)(5)
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Dennis H. Reilley, Chairman(6)
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2006
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$
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1,137,500
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$
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97,160
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$
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6,468,088
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$
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3,000,000
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$
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4,588,000
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$
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210,500
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$
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15,501,248
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Stephen F. Angel,
President & Chief Executive Officer(6)
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2006
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$
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631,250
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$
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84,883
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$
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1,355,023
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$
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1,418,000
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$
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1,061,000
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$
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37,766
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$
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4,587,922
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James S. Sawyer, Executive Vice
President & Chief Financial Officer
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2006
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$
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481,250
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$
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0
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$
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1,108,814
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$
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734,000
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$
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643,000
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$
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16,847
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$
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2,983,911
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Ricardo S. Malfitano, Executive
Vice President
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2006
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$
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498,333
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$
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0
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$
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935,940
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$
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795,000
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$
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311,000
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$
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15,819
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$
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2,556,092
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James J. Fuchs, Senior Vice
President
|
|
|
|
2006
|
|
|
|
$
|
395,083
|
|
|
|
$
|
0
|
|
|
|
$
|
684,463
|
|
|
|
$
|
540,000
|
|
|
|
$
|
682,000
|
|
|
|
$
|
27,889
|
|
|
|
$
|
2,329,435
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(1) These are the amounts that the Company recognized as
compensation expense in its financial statements for 2006 as
determined under Statement of Financial Accounting Standards
123R (FAS 123R). The Stock Awards amounts are
the expense for outstanding restricted stock grants to
Messrs. Reilley and Angel granted prior to 2006. The Option
Awards amounts are the expense for options granted in 2006 and
in certain prior years. In accordance with FAS 123R, the
Company recognizes compensation expense for stock options
granted to employees who are eligible for full retirement over
the period from the grant date to the date of such retirement
eligibility. The Option Awards amount for Mr. Reilley
includes such acceleration of compensation expense because
Mr. Reilley was eligible for full retirement under the
Companys Pension Program as of April 2006. The assumptions
used in computing the Option Awards amounts are included in
Note 16 to the Companys 2006 financial statements in
the 2006 Annual Report to Shareholders and
Form 10-K.
For Stock Awards, the Company determines the value of a
restricted stock grant (the number of shares granted times the
fair market value of the Companys stock on the date of
grant) and then recognizes this as expense ratably over the
vesting term.
The Stock Awards and Option Awards column amounts were not
actually paid to any NEO in 2006. The value of any restricted
stock that vested in 2006 is reported in the Option
Exercises and Stock Vested table below. In addition, a
stock option has value only if the Companys stock price
increases above the option exercise price (an
in-the-money
option). If a NEO exercises an
in-the-money
option, he would then realize an actual gain. Any gain actually
realized for options exercised in 2006 is reported in the
Option Exercises and Stock Vested table below.
(2) In 2006, the Company achieved certain financial and
non-financial goals that the Compensation Committee set in
December 2005 under the Companys Variable Compensation
Plan. Therefore, the Compensation Committee awarded each NEO
performance-based variable compensation payments in February
2007. These amounts are reported as Non-equity Incentive
Plan Compensation. See the detailed description of the
Variable Compensation Plan in the preceding CD&A under the
sub-heading
Annual Performance-Based Variable Compensation.
Certain NEOs elected to defer a portion of this payment under
the Companys Compensation Deferral Program described after
the Nonqualified Deferred Compensation table below.
Any amounts deferred are included in the amounts reported above.
33
(3) Amounts in this column are the 2006 increase in
actuarial present value of retirement benefits payable under the
Companys Pension Program. These amounts were not actually
paid to any NEO in 2006. See the detailed description of the
Pension Program and how these amounts are calculated following
the Pension Benefits table below. The total pension
present value accrued for each NEO through 2006 under the
Companys Pension Program is also disclosed in that table.
No amounts accumulated under the Companys Compensation
Deferral Program earn above market or preferential
interest or other earnings; therefore, no earnings are included
in this column.
(4) Amounts shown in this column are detailed in the
All Other Compensation table below.
(5) The amount reported in the Total column is
the sum of all of the columns. It includes the Stock Awards,
Option Awards and Change in Pension Value amounts, which were
not actually paid to any NEO in 2006. The Stock Awards, Option
Awards and Change in Pension Value amounts actually paid or
provided in the future may be more or less than the reported
amounts. The amount of compensation actually paid or provided to
each NEO for 2006 (being Salary, Non-equity Incentive Plan
Compensation and All Other Compensation) was: Mr. Reilley:
$4,348,000 (28% of Total Compensation reported); Mr. Angel:
$2,087,016 (45% of Total Compensation reported);
Mr. Sawyer: $1,232,097 (41% of Total Compensation
reported); Mr. Malfitano: $1,309,152 (51% of Total
Compensation reported); and Mr. Fuchs: $962,972 (41% of
Total Compensation reported).
(6) During 2006, Mr. Reilley served as Chairman &
Chief Executive Officer, and Mr. Angel served as President
& Chief Operating Officer. Mr. Angel was elected Chief
Executive Officer effective January 1, 2007, and will
become Chairman effective May 1, 2007, upon
Mr. Reilleys retirement from the Company on
April 30, 2007.
This table provides more detail regarding the amounts disclosed
in the All Other Compensation column in the Summary
Compensation Table.
All Other
Compensation
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Company
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Perquisites and other
|
|
|
Tax Reimbursements
|
|
|
Contributions to 401(k)
|
|
|
|
|
Name
|
|
|
Year
|
|
|
|
Personal Benefits(1)
|
|
|
(2)
|
|
|
and Related Plans (3)
|
|
|
Total ($)
|
|
Dennis H. Reilley
|
|
|
|
2006
|
|
|
|
$163,177
|
|
|
$6,167
|
|
|
$41,156
|
|
|
$
|
210,500
|
|
Stephen F. Angel
|
|
|
|
2006
|
|
|
|
$10,406
|
|
|
$5,657
|
|
|
$21,703
|
|
|
$
|
37,766
|
|
James S. Sawyer
|
|
|
|
2006
|
|
|
|
$0
|
|
|
$0
|
|
|
$16,847
|
|
|
$
|
16,847
|
|
Ricardo S. Malfitano
|
|
|
|
2006
|
|
|
|
$10,406
|
|
|
$5,413
|
|
|
$0
|
|
|
$
|
15,819
|
|
James J. Fuchs
|
|
|
|
2006
|
|
|
|
$8,468
|
|
|
$3,987
|
|
|
$15,434
|
|
|
$
|
27,889
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(1) Includes the Companys incremental costs of
providing financial planning services to Messrs. Reilley, Angel,
Malfitano and Fuchs. For reasons of security and time
management, the Board requires the Chief Executive Officer to
use the Companys corporate aircraft for personal use as
well as business travel. During 2006, the aggregate unreimbursed
incremental cost to the Company for Mr. Reilleys
personal use of corporate aircraft was $152,532. The aircraft is
available for the Companys use through a time-share
arrangement. The Company pays a fixed time-share charge for the
right to use the aircraft, and a per-trip charge. The Company
calculates the incremental aircraft costs for
Mr. Reilleys personal use as the full amount of those
per-trip charges attributable to his personal use. The fixed
time-share charge is not included as an incremental cost, as the
Company must pay this amount even if Mr. Reilley did not
use the aircraft for personal travel.
The Company maintains certain country club memberships for
business entertainment purposes which memberships, by club
rules, are in an executives name. By Company policy,
reimbursement of club costs is authorized only when membership
and use of the club facilities are judged to be important to the
conduct of the Companys business. As no NEO made personal
use of these club memberships during 2006, no amounts are
reported in the table.
In addition, the Company pays for or provides executive officer
travel, lodging and related expenses incurred in connection with
attending Company business related events, including Board
meetings (including the expenses related to the attendance of
spouses if they are specifically invited for appropriate
business purposes), and may provide use of Company chartered
aircraft if available. No amounts are reported in the table for
these business expenses.
(2) Under Federal tax rules, the Company imputes income to
each NEO for the value of the perquisites listed in the first
column. The amounts listed in this column are payments that were
made to NEOs as reimbursement for the taxes on imputed income.
(3) The amounts in this column are Company matching
contributions to the Companys 401(k) Savings Plan and
Company contributions to the Compensation Deferral Program. See
the description of the Compensation Deferral Program under the
Nonqualifed Deferred Compensation table below.
34
GRANTS OF
PLAN-BASED AWARDS
The following table provides more detailed information regarding
the Non-Equity Incentive Plan Compensation and the Option Awards
reported in the Summary Compensation Table above.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Estimated Possible Payouts Under Non-Equity Incentive Plan
Awards(2)
|
|
|
Estimated Possible Payouts Under Equity Incentive Plan Awards
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
All Other
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
All Other Stock
|
|
|
Option
|
|
|
Exercise or
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Compen-
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Awards:
|
|
|
Awards:
|
|
|
Base
|
|
|
Grant Date
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
sation
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Number of
|
|
|
Number of
|
|
|
Price of
|
|
|
Fair Value of
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Committee
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Shares of
|
|
|
Securities
|
|
|
Option
|
|
|
Stock and
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Approval
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Threshold
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Stock or
|
|
|
Underlying
|
|
|
Awards
|
|
|
Option
|
Name
|
|
|
Grant Date
|
|
|
Date(1)
|
|
|
Threshold($)
|
|
|
Target($)
|
|
|
Maximum($)
|
|
|
($)
|
|
|
Target($)
|
|
|
Maximum($)
|
|
|
Units(#)
|
|
|
Options(#)(3)
|
|
|
($/Sh)
|
|
|
Awards(4)
|
Dennis H.
|
|
|
2/28/2006
|
|
|
1/24/2006
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
475,000
|
|
|
$53.98
|
|
|
$5,149,000
|
Reilley
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
$0
|
|
|
$1,251,250
|
|
|
$3,412,500
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Stephen F.
|
|
|
2/28/2006
|
|
|
1/24/2006
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
130,600
|
|
|
$53.98
|
|
|
$1,415,704
|
Angel
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
$0
|
|
|
$568,125
|
|
|
$1,893,750
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
James S.
|
|
|
2/28/2006
|
|
|
1/24/2006
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
107,500
|
|
|
$53.98
|
|
|
$1,165,300
|
Sawyer
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
$0
|
|
|
$360,938
|
|
|
$1,443,750
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Ricardo S.
|
|
|
2/28/2006
|
|
|
1/24/2006
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
92,500
|
|
|
$53.98
|
|
|
$1,002,700
|
Malfitano
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
$0
|
|
|
$373,750
|
|
|
$1,494,999
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
James J.
|
|
|
2/28/2006
|
|
|
1/24/2006
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
62,600
|
|
|
$53.98
|
|
|
$678,584
|
Fuchs
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
$0
|
|
|
$256,804
|
|
|
$1,185,249
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(1) On January 24, 2006, the Compensation Committee
approved the total number of stock options to be allocated among
all eligible employees and specifically approved the stock
options to be granted to NEOs and all other executive officers.
The Compensation Committee set February 28, 2006 as the
actual grant date of these options, at an option exercise price
of 100% of the closing price of the Companys common stock
on the NYSE on that date. For a more detailed description of the
Compensation Committees option grant practices, see the
CD&A under the sub caption Long Term Incentive
Awards-Determining the Grant Date.
(2) The actual amount of performance-based variable
compensation paid in February 2007 for 2006 performance is shown
in the Summary Compensation Table under the
Non-Equity Incentive Plan Compensation column. The
amounts shown in this column are the range of potential 2006
payments that could have been made under the Companys
Variable Compensation Plan and the 162(m) Plan. As no minimum
amount was payable, no Threshold amounts are
reported. Target amounts are expressed as a percent of each
NEOs salary, assuming achieving 100% of Company financial
goals. The Maximum amounts are the maximum payments that could
be made under the 162(m) Plan (generally, up to three times
salary paid for the prior year). For more information, see the
explanation in the CD&A under the
sub-heading
Annual Performance-Based Variable Compensation.
(3) This column shows the number of shares underlying stock
option grants made in February 2006 under the 2002 Praxair, Inc.
Long Term Incentive Plan. See the explanation below this table
and in the CD&A for more information about the stock option
grants.
(4) The amounts in this column are the full grant date
values of the option grants made in February 2006 calculated in
accordance with FAS 123R. These amounts were neither paid
to any NEO nor recognized by the Company as compensation expense
in 2006 under FAS 123R. The recognized compensation expense
amounts are shown in the Option Awards column in the
Summary Compensation Table. Those 2006 compensation
expense amounts include expense for certain options granted
prior to 2006. See footnote (1) to the Summary
Compensation Table.
35
Additional
Information Regarding Plan-Based Awards
Option
Grant Terms
The 2006 option grants reported in the table above were made
under the 2002 Praxair, Inc. Long Term Incentive Plan (the
Stock Plan). Options granted to NEOs are made on the
same terms as options granted to all other eligible employees.
The material terms of these grants include:
|
|
|
|
|
Options vest in consecutive equal annual installments over three
years, beginning on the first anniversary of the grant date.
However, vesting may accelerate in certain cases discussed below.
|
|
|
|
Options expire on the tenth anniversary of the grant date.
Options will expire before ten years if employment terminates,
except for certain termination reasons described below.
|
|
|
|
Options may be exercised only while the NEO is actively employed
except:
|
|
|
|
|
(a)
|
If a NEO becomes disabled, or retires after the first
anniversary of the option grant, the option continues to become
exercisable at the times set forth in the grant agreement and,
after becoming exercisable, maybe exercised at any time up to
its termination date (the option is forfeited if the NEO retires
before the first anniversary of the grant date).
Retirement generally means reaching age 65, or
reaching age 62 with at least 10 years of service to
the Company, or accumulating 85 points (points being
the sum of age plus years of service).
|
|
|
(b)
|
If the Company terminates the NEOs employment other than
for cause, the option continues to become exercisable at the
times set forth in the grant agreement and, after becoming
exercisable, may be exercised for three years after such
termination of employment.
|
|
|
(c)
|
Upon the NEOs death, the option becomes fully vested and
may be exercised by a beneficiary or an estate for three years
after a NEOs death.
|
|
|
(d)
|
If the Company terminates the NEOs employment other than
for cause, or the NEO terminates his employment, in either case
within two years after a change-in control of the
Company, the option may be exercised for three years after such
termination (the option becomes fully vested upon a
change-in-control
whether or not employment is terminated).
|
The Stock Plan defines
change-in-control
to mean, generally, (1) any consolidation or merger in
which the Company is not the continuing or surviving
corporation; (2) the liquidation of the Company or the sale
of all or substantially all of the assets of the Company;
(3) an acquisition by a person or group of more than 20% of
the Companys outstanding shares; or (4) a change in
the majority composition of the Board not approved by two-thirds
of the directors in office before the change.
36
OUTSTANDING
EQUITY AWARDS AT FISCAL YEAR-END
The table below shows each NEOs outstanding option grants
and unvested restricted stock, if any, at the end of 2006. For
each outstanding option grant, the table shows the option shares
that have vested (or that are Exercisable) and those
not yet vested (or that are Unexercisable).
|
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|
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|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Option Awards
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Stock Awards
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Equity
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Equity
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Incentive Plan
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Incentive Plan
|
|
|
Equity Incentive
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Awards:
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Number of
|
|
|
|
|
|
Awards:
|
|
|
Plan Awards:
|
|
|
|
Number of
|
|
|
Number of
|
|
|
Number of
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Shares or
|
|
|
|
|
|
Number of
|
|
|
Market or Payout
|
|
|
|
Securities
|
|
|
Securities
|
|
|
Securities
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Units of
|
|
|
Market Value
|
|
|
Unearned
|
|
|
Value of Unearned
|
|
|
|
Underlying
|
|
|
Underlying
|
|
|
Underlying
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Stock That
|
|
|
of Shares or
|
|
|
Shares, Units
|
|
|
Shares, Units or
|
|
|
|
Unexercised
|
|
|
Unexercised
|
|
|
Unexercised
|
|
|
Option
|
|
|
|
|
|
Option
|
|
|
Have Not
|
|
|
Units of Stock
|
|
|
or Other Rights
|
|
|
Other Rights
|
|
|
|
Options(#)
|
|
|
Options(#) Unexercisable
|
|
|
Unearned
|
|
|
Exercise
|
|
|
Option Grant
|
|
|
Expiration
|
|
|
Vested
|
|
|
That Have Not
|
|
|
That Have Not
|
|
|
That Have Not
|
Name
|
|
|
Exercisable(1)
|
|
|
(1)
|
|
|
Options(#)
|
|
|
Price($)
|
|
|
Date
|
|
|
Date
|
|
|
(#)(2)
|
|
|
Vested($)(3)
|
|
|
Vested(#)
|
|
|
Vested($)
|
Dennis H. Reilley
|
|
|
270,000
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
$22.010
|
|
|
2/21/2001
|
|
|
2/21/2011
|
|
|
37,594
|
|
|
$2,230,452
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
$0
|
|
|
|
440,000
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
$27.430
|
|
|
1/2/2002
|
|
|
1/2/2012
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
400,000
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
$26.425
|
|
|
2/28/2003
|
|
|
2/28/2013
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
266,666
|
|
|
133,334
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
$36.580
|
|
|
2/24/2004
|
|
|
2/24/2014
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
151,366
|
|
|
302,734
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
$44.250
|
|
|
2/22/2005
|
|
|
2/22/2015
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
475,000
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
$53.980
|
|
|
2/28/2006
|
|
|
2/28/2016
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Stephen F. Angel
|
|
|
350,000
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
$23.105
|
|
|
4/23/2001
|
|
|
4/23/2011
|
|
|
32,529
|
|
|
$1,929,946
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
$0
|
|
|
|
110,000
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
$27.430
|
|
|
1/2/2002
|
|
|
1/2/2012
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
100,000
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
$26.425
|
|
|
2/28/2003
|
|
|
2/28/2013
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
80,000
|
|
|
40,000
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
$36.580
|
|
|
2/24/2004
|
|
|
2/24/2014
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
47,700
|
|
|
95,400
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
$44.250
|
|
|
2/22/2005
|
|
|
2/22/2015
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
130,600
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
$53.980
|
|
|
2/28/2006
|
|
|
2/28/2016
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
James S. Sawyer
|
|
|
33,600
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
$27.430
|
|
|
1/2/2002
|
|
|
1/2/2012
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
$0
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
$0
|
|
|
|
66,666
|
|
|
33,334
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
$36.580
|
|
|
2/24/2004
|
|
|
2/24/2014
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
37,800
|
|
|
75,600
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
$44.250
|
|
|
2/22/2005
|
|
|
2/22/2015
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
107,500
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
$53.980
|
|
|
2/28/2006
|
|
|
2/28/2016
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Ricardo S. Malfitano
|
|
|
70,000
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
$22.010
|
|
|
2/21/2001
|
|
|
2/21/2011
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
$0
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
$0
|
|
|
|
70,000
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
$27.625
|
|
|
12/31/2001
|
|
|
12/31/2011
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
68,000
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
$26.425
|
|
|
2/28/2003
|
|
|
2/28/2013
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
53,333
|
|
|
26,667
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
$36.580
|
|
|
2/24/2004
|
|
|
2/24/2014
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
33,333
|
|
|
66,667
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
$44.250
|
|
|
2/22/2005
|
|
|
2/22/2015
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
92,500
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
$53.980
|
|
|
2/28/2006
|
|
|
2/28/2016
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
James J. Fuchs
|
|
|
38,666
|
|
|
19,334
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
$36.580
|
|
|
2/24/2004
|
|
|
2/24/2014
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
$0
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
$0
|
|
|
|
23,466
|
|
|
46,934
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
$44.250
|
|
|
2/22/2005
|
|
|
2/22/2015
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
62,600
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
$53.980
|
|
|
2/28/2006
|
|
|
2/28/2016
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(1) Each option vests, or became fully vested, in three
consecutive, equal annual installments beginning on the first
anniversary of the grant date.
(2) The shares shown in this column are shares of
restricted stock granted to Messrs. Reilley and Angel. See the
description below this table for more information about the
terms of these grants. Mr. Reilleys grant of
25,000 shares (adjusted to 50,000 shares to reflect a
later
2-for-1
stock split) was made on February 22, 2000 in connection
with his joining the Company. The first 1/3 of the total grant
vested on February 22, 2006, and another 1/3 vested on
February 22, 2007. As Mr. Reilley is retiring from the
Company effective April 30, 2007, he will forfeit the final
1/3 of the grant that would have vested on February 22,
2008. Mr. Angels grant of 20,000 shares
(adjusted to 40,000 shares to reflect a later
2-for-1
stock split) was made on April 23, 2001, in connection with
his joining the Company. The first 25% of the total grant vested
on April 23, 2003. Another 25% will vest on April 23,
2007, and the final 50% will vest on April 23, 2011,
assuming continued employment on those dates.
(3) The market value reported in this column is the number
of shares of unvested restricted stock times the closing price
of the Companys common stock on the NYSE of
$59.33 per share on December 29, 2006.
37
Additional
Information Regarding Outstanding Equity Awards
Restricted
Stock Grants
Footnote 2 to the above table describes the general vesting
schedule of Messrs. Reilleys and Angels
restricted stock grants. The other material terms of those
grants are:
|
|
|
|
|
Any shares that have not vested will be forfeited if
(i) Messrs. Reilley or Angel terminates his employment
(other than upon death or disability), or (ii) the Company
terminates his employment for cause.
|
Regardless of the vesting schedule described above, all shares
will vest immediately if: (i) the Company terminates
Messrs. Reilleys or Angels employment other than for
cause; (ii) either becomes disabled; (iii) either
dies; or (iv) if a change-in-control of the
Company occurs. Under the restricted stock grants, a
change-in-control is generally as defined in the
Stock Plan (see Additional Information Regarding
Plan-Based Awards Option Grant Terms) but also
includes: (1) a transaction in which the Companys
common stock is converted into cash or some other security,
except for a merger in which the Companys stockholders own
the same proportion of stock in the surviving corporation,
(2) the Company is required to make a
Form 8-K
filing with the SEC to report a change-in-control, and
(3) a person or group owning 20% or more of the
Companys outstanding shares begins to solicit proxies.
|
|
|
|
|
The unvested shares earn dividends at the same rate and at the
same time as dividends are paid to all Company shareholders. The
dividends are not paid in cash, but are reinvested to purchase
additional shares of restricted stock at the NYSE closing price
of the Companys common stock on the dividend payment
dates. These reinvested shares will vest on the last vesting
date of the entire grant.
|
OPTION
EXERCISES AND STOCK VESTED
This table provides information about any options that were
exercised, or any restricted stock that vested during 2006.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Option Awards
|
|
|
Stock Awards
|
|
|
|
Number of
|
|
|
Value Realized
|
|
|
Number of
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Shares Acquired
|
|
|
on Exercise
|
|
|
Shares Acquired
|
|
|
Value Realized
|
Name
|
|
|
on Exercise (#)
|
|
|
($)(1)
|
|
|
on Vesting (#)(2)
|
|
|
on Vesting ($)(2)
|
Dennis H. Reilley
|
|
|
375,000
|
|
|
$15,564,978
|
|
|
16,666
|
|
|
$909,547
|
Stephen F. Angel
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
$0
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
$0
|
James S. Sawyer
|
|
|
90,000
|
|
|
$2,707,938
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
$0
|
Ricardo S. Malfitano
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
$0
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
$0
|
James J. Fuchs
|
|
|
114,000
|
|
|
$3,515,314
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
$0
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(1) The option exercise value realized equals the
(i) NYSE market price of the Companys common stock at
the time of the option exercise minus the option exercise price,
multiplied by (ii) the option shares exercised. These
amounts are before taxes.
(2) During 2006, 1/3 of Mr. Reilleys restricted
stock grant vested (see the discussion of this grant under the
Outstanding Equity Awards At Fiscal Year-End table
above). The restricted stock value realized reported above
equals the (i) NYSE closing price of the Companys
common stock on the vesting date, multiplied by (ii) the
number of restricted shares that vested.
38
PENSION
BENEFITS
The table below shows certain retirement benefit information
under the Companys Pension Program described after the
table.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Present Value of
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Number of Years of
|
|
|
Accumulated
|
|
|
|
Payments During Last
|
|
Name
|
|
|
Plan Name
|
|
|
Credited Service (#)
|
|
|
Benefit ($)(1)
|
|
|
|
Fiscal Year
|
|
Dennis H. Reilley(2)
|
|
|
Praxair Pension Plan
|
|
|
7
|
|
|
$
|
139,000
|
|
|
|
$
|
0
|
|
|
|
|
Supplemental Retirement Income Plan
|
|
|
33
|
|
|
$
|
25,646,000
|
|
|
|
$
|
0
|
|
Stephen F. Angel(3)
|
|
|
Praxair Pension Plan
|
|
|
6
|
|
|
$
|
101,000
|
|
|
|
$
|
0
|
|
|
|
|
Supplemental Retirement Income Plan
|
|
|
11
|
|
|
$
|
2,146,000
|
|
|
|
$
|
0
|
|
James S. Sawyer
|
|
|
Praxair Pension Plan
|
|
|
21
|
|
|
$
|
541,000
|
|
|
|
$
|
0
|
|
|
|
|
Supplemental Retirement Income Plan
|
|
|
21
|
|
|
$
|
2,794,000
|
|
|
|
$
|
0
|
|
Ricardo S. Malfitano(4)
|
|
|
Praxair Pension Plan
|
|
|
26
|
|
|
$
|
267,000
|
|
|
|
$
|
0
|
|
|
|
|
Supplemental Retirement Income Plan
|
|
|
26
|
|
|
$
|
3,655,000
|
|
|
|
$
|
0
|
|
James J. Fuchs(5)
|
|
|
Praxair Pension Plan
|
|
|
33
|
|
|
$
|
212,000
|
|
|
|
$
|
0
|
|
|
|
|
Supplemental Retirement Income Plan
|
|
|
33
|
|
|
$
|
4,316,000
|
|
|
|
$
|
0
|
|
|
|
|
Praxair Canada Pension Plan
|
|
|
27
|
|
|
$
|
496,000
|
|
|
|
$
|
0
|
|
|
|
|
Praxair Canada Supplemental
|
|
|
27
|
|
|
$
|
1,555,000
|
|
|
|
$
|
0
|
|
|
|
|
Employee Retirement Plan
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(1) See the narrative below for a description of the
Present Value of Accumulated Benefit. The values for each plan
listed above are additive.
(2) Credited years of service for Mr. Reilley under
the Supplemental Retirement Income Plan (SRIP)
include his combined service with the Company (6.75 years)
and his prior employer, DuPont (25.75 years).
Mr. Reilley joined the Company from DuPont on March 6,
2000 and at that time received credit for 25.75 years of
service with DuPont. When he retires from the Company, he will
receive benefits based on his combined service with the Company
and DuPont, less an offset of his DuPont retirement benefits.
The values shown above include the effect of this offset. At the
end of 2006, the present value of the accumulated benefit for
Mr. Reilleys 6.75 years of actual years of
service with the Company under the SRIP was $2.1 million.
(3) The Praxair Pension Plan credited years of service for
Mr. Angel represent his actual years of service with the
Company. Effective January 1, 2011, assuming continuous
employment, Mr. Angel will receive an additional credit
under the SRIP for 10.00 years of service that he had with
his prior employer, General Electric Company. He also will
receive credit under the SRIP for an additional 11.64 years
of General Electric service on January 1, 2016 if he
remains continuously employed with the Company until that date.
Under financial accounting rules (SFAS 87), the Company is
recognizing as an accrued pension liability the additional years
of credited service that Mr. Angel may receive under the
SRIP over the course of his anticipated years of service.
Therefore, the service and value amounts shown in the table
reflect this ratable accrual. When he retires from the Company,
he will receive retirement benefits under the Companys
Pension Program based on his service with the Company and any
additional General Electric service that the Company recognizes
at his retirement date (as described in the preceding
sentences), less an offset for benefits he receives under the
General Electric retirement plans. The values shown above
include the effect of this offset. At the end of 2006, the
present value of the accumulated benefit for
Mr. Angels 6 years of actual years of service
with the Company under the SRIP was $700,000.
(4) Credited years of service reported for
Mr. Malfitano combine his service with Praxair and White
Martins, the Companys Brazilian subsidiary. Years of
service reflect certain equitable adjustments for
Mr. Malfitano related to his service for White Martins,
which adjustments were generally available to all similarly
situated employees. When he retires from the Company, he will
receive Pension Program retirement benefits based on his
combined Praxair and White Martins service, less an offset for
the benefits he receives under the White Martins retirement
plans. The values shown above include the effect of this offset.
The White Matins retirement plans are not defined benefit plans
and therefore, are not separately included in the table above.
(5) Credited years of service reported for Mr. Fuchs
combine his service with Praxair and Praxair Canada, Inc. Years
of services reflect certain equitable adjustments for
Mr. Fuchs related to his service in Canada, which
adjustments were generally available to all similarly situated
employees. When he retires from the Company, he will receive
Pension Program retirement benefits based on his combined U.S.
and Canadian service, less an offset for the benefits he
receives under the Canadian retirement plans. The values shown
above include the effect of this offset.
39
Additional
Information Regarding Pension Benefits
Present
Value of Accumulated Benefit
The table above includes a Present Value of Accumulated
Benefit. This is the value in todays dollars of the
total expected future retirement benefits that each NEO may
receive under the Pension Program (described below). These are
accrued amounts as of the end of 2006; none of these amounts
have been paid. For any given year, there will be a change in
the accumulated benefit. For example, from one year to the next,
the accumulated benefit may increase because a NEO has worked
for an additional year and received credit for that or his
Pension Program compensation has increased. The change in
accumulated benefit from 2005 to 2006 is disclosed in the
Summary Compensation Table above in the Change
in Pension Value column.
The Company recognizes these amounts as a future pension
liability on its financial statements. The Company calculates
these amounts using complex actuarial valuations and
assumptions. These assumptions are described in Footnote 17
to the Companys 2006 financial statements and in
Managements Discussion and Analysis under the caption
Critical Accounting Policies-Pension Benefits in the
2006 Annual Report to Shareholders and
Form 10-K.
However, as required by SEC rules, the table above assumes that
each NEO will retire at the earliest retirement age that would
provide full benefits. This is the earliest of reaching
age 65, or reaching age 62 with at least 10 years
of service to the Company, or accumulating 85 points
(points being the sum of age plus years of service). The value
in todays dollars of the total retirement benefits that
each NEO eventually receives may be more or less than the amount
shown in the above table.
General
Terms of the Praxair Pension Program.
The Company has a retirement pension program for all of its
eligible U.S. employees (the Pension Program).
The Company has an obligation to pay pension benefits according
to formulas described below under Benefits
Calculations. The Pension Program does not include the
Companys 401(k) Savings Plan, which is a defined
contribution plan. The 401(k) Savings Plan is funded by
employee and Company contributions but the Company does not
promise any given retirement benefit. Instead, any retirement
payments will depend on employee and Company contributions and
investment earnings on those contributions. As it applies to
NEOs and certain other employees, the Pension Program has the
following two parts:
|
|
|
|
1.
|
The Praxair Pension Plan is intended to meet Federal tax
law rules so that it will be considered a tax-qualified
defined benefit retirement plan (the Pension
Plan). Applicable laws require the Company to periodically
set aside funds to meet its obligations under this plan. The
rules also limit the amount of benefits that can be paid and do
not allow using pay above certain levels to calculate retirement
benefits. One or more of these limitations apply to NEOs and to
certain other employees. Therefore, the Company maintains a
so-called non-qualified supplemental plan described
in paragraph (2) below. This supplemental plan allows
pension benefits to be paid beyond those otherwise allowed under
the Pension Plan.
|
|
|
2.
|
The Praxair Supplemental Retirement Income Plan (the
SRIP) is a non-qualified deferred compensation
plan under the Federal tax rules. Therefore, the Company may not
set aside funds to meet these plan obligations. Instead, SRIP
participants have only the Companys promise to pay the
amounts due upon their retirement. The terms of the SRIP are
largely identical to those of the Pension Plan except that:
(i) benefits payable under the SRIP are not limited by the
Federal tax law limits described above, and (ii) NEOs may
have additional benefits paid under the SRIP that are not the
same as the standard benefits of the Pension Plan (see the
footnotes to the above table regarding the crediting of extra
years of service for Messrs. Reilley and Angel).
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Each NEO participates in the Pension Program Traditional Design
(a defined benefit design providing benefits based on final
average pay and years of service), which was available to
eligible employees hired on or before April 30, 2002.
Employees hired on or after May 1, 2002 participate in the
Account-Based Design (a cash balance pension design).
40
Benefits
Calculations
The Company calculates Traditional Design benefits as follows:
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The benefit formula considers an employees final average
pay and years of service with the Company.
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Generally, an employees annual pension benefit is
determined using a formula of 1.5% times the employees
years of service with the Company times the employees
final average pay. This is subject to several reductions,
including offsets for the employees projected Social
Security benefits and certain pension benefits payable under
pension programs maintained by the Companys subsidiaries
or affiliates. For this purpose, the employees final
average pay is equal to his or her highest three years of
salary and annual performance-based variable compensation
(separately chosen) out of the last ten years of service.
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The payment of benefits may not begin while the employee is
still employed by the Company and its subsidiaries.
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Unreduced pension benefits are generally payable from the
Pension Program in an annuity form beginning upon the earliest
of (i) the employees reaching age 65,
(ii) the employees reaching age 62 and
completing at least 10 years of service with the Company,
or (iii) when the sum of the employees age plus years
of service with the Company equals at least 85.
Messrs. Reilley and Fuchs are eligible for this unreduced
retirement benefit.
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Employees may elect to retire and receive reduced early
retirement benefits as early as age 50 with the completion
of at least 10 years of service with the Company. In this
case, the employees Pension Program benefits are reduced
by 5% for each year by which his or her early retirement date
precedes the earliest date on which he would have been eligible
to commence an unreduced benefit. Mr. Sawyer is eligible
for this reduced early retirement benefit.
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Employees completing at least five years of service earn a
vested right to a pension benefit and can elect to receive a
significantly reduced pension benefit upon attaining age 50.
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In some cases, and only to the extent permissible by applicable
law, the SRIP allows an employee to elect to receive payment of
his or her SRIP benefit in the form of a single lump sum payment
in lieu of monthly annuity payments. In this case, the lump sum
amount payable to an electing employee is actuarially equivalent
to the employees accrued benefit under the SRIP and is
determined using actuarial factors set forth in the Pension
Program.
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Please see the footnotes following the table above for special
provisions applicable to certain NEOs.
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Crediting
Extra Pension Benefits
The Company may credit to an employee more years of service
under the Pension Program than the employee may actually work
for the Company. The Company will consider this as part of
negotiations to hire or to retain a highly valued executive or
certain other employees. As part of hiring Mr. Reilley in
2000, the Company provided to Mr. Reilley additional years
of service under the Pension Program Traditional Design. In
2001, the Company agreed to provide Mr. Angel with
additional service years under the Pension Program Traditional
Design in order to provide Mr. Angel with a long-term
incentive for staying with the Company. Please see the notes to
the table above for additional information.
41
NONQUALIFIED
DEFERRED COMPENSATION
This table shows information regarding compensation amounts that
(i) the NEOs decided not to receive in cash but elected to
defer to a later date under the Companys Compensation
Deferral Program, and (ii) Company contributions related to
the Compensation Deferral Program.
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Executive
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Company
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Aggregate
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Aggregate
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Contributions
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Contributions
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Earnings in
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Withdrawals/
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in Last Fiscal
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in Last Fiscal
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Last Fiscal
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Distributions
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Aggregate Balance
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Name
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Year ($)(1)
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Year ($)(2)
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Year ($)(3)
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($)(4)
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at Last FYE ($)(5)
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Dennis H. Reilley
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$0
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$32,906
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$566,489
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$0
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$4,615,273
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Stephen F. Angel
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$193,540
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$13,453
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$420,219
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$0
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$3,436,118
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James S. Sawyer
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$0
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$8,859
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$91,569
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$252,083
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$735,090
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Ricardo S. Malfitano
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$602,100
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$0
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$111,696
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$0
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$1,691,746
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James J. Fuchs
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$0
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$7,184
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$5,003
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$0
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$41,233
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(1) These amounts are deferrals made during 2006 of some or
all of the performance-based variable compensation for the 2005
plan year paid in February 2006 under the Variable Compensation
Plan. This 2005 performance-based variable compensation is not
reported in the Summary Compensation Table; only the
2006 performance-based variable compensation paid in February
2007 is reported in that table in the Non-Equity Incentive
Plan Compensation column.
(2) These amounts are Company contributions made under the
Compensation Deferral Program. These represent matching
contributions that would have been made to the 401(k) Savings
Plan on behalf of each NEO but for certain Federal tax laws
limits under that plan. These amounts are included in All
Other Compensation in the Summary Compensation
Table above.
(3) All Company contributions to the Compensation Deferral
Program are invested in a stock-unit equivalent account that
tracks the value of the Companys common stock. Amounts
that each NEO chose to defer of some or all of his eligible
compensation (performance-based variable compensation,
and/or
salary, for years prior to 2006), are invested in (i) the
Company common stock-unit account
and/or
(ii) a fixed income account. The earnings in this column
are notional earnings based on the price of the Companys
common stock as of December 29, 2006
and/or the
return on the fixed income fund. See the further explanation
below this table.
(4) Mr. Sawyer received a distribution in 2006 based
on his prior payout election.
(5) Balances are net of prior payouts and otherwise are the
total of (i) all compensation that NEOs earned in past
years (not just in 2006) but chose to defer,
(ii) Company contributions made to the Compensation
Deferral Program on behalf of each NEO, and (iii) any
notional investment earnings on these amounts. The balances are
not amounts paid in 2006.
Additional
Information Regarding Nonqualified Deferred
Compensation
The following summarizes the material terms of the Praxair, Inc.
Compensation Deferral Program (Compensation Deferral
Program):
Deferral
Elections; Company Matches
Eligible employees, including NEOs, may elect to defer receipt
of all or some portion of their annual performance-based
variable compensation payments. In exchange for this deferral,
the Company promises to pay that amount, plus amounts earned on
deferral investments, upon the employees termination from
the Company, or at some other future date specified by the
employee. Income that is deferred, and any earnings, are not
taxed as income until paid out at the end of the deferral
period. The Company does not fund or segregate any monies from
its general funds, create any trusts, or make any special
deposits for payment of benefits under the Compensation Deferral
Program. All plan balances are notional and are kept as book
entries only. A participants or beneficiarys right
to receive a payment under the Compensation Deferral Program is
no greater than the right of an unsecured general creditor of
the Company.
In the last quarter of each calendar year, eligible employees
may elect to defer some or all of their performance-based
variable compensation payments that may be earned in the
following year under the Variable Compensation Plan. Prior to
2006, employees could also defer base salary. In addition, the
Company may make contributions, as discussed in footnote
(2) to the table above.
42
Deferral
Investments
Participants may invest their performance-based variable
compensation deferrals into either (1) the Praxair
stock-unit
equivalent account whose value tracks the market value of
Praxair common stock, including reinvestment of dividends into
additional Praxair stock-equivalent units, or (2) a fixed
income account whose interest rate is fixed annually and is
equal to the
1-year
U.S. Treasury Bond rate as of the end of the immediately
preceding year, plus 50 basis points. For 2006, this fixed rate
was 4.93%. All Company contributions are made into the Praxair
stock account. No preferential earnings are paid to
participants, including NEOs.
Deferral
Payouts
At the time he or she elects to defer the amounts, a participant
has the two choices described below for receiving a future
payment of deferred amounts and their earnings. Company
contributions are paid out (i) along with performance-based
variable compensation deferral payouts, as described below, if
an employee otherwise participates in the Compensation Deferral
Program, or (ii) as part of 401(k) Savings Plan
distributions, if an employee does not otherwise participate in
the Compensation Deferral Program.
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1.
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Upon Retirement or Termination. If a
participant retires, (defined as the participants
termination of employment with the Company after reaching
age 50 and completing at least five (5) years of
service), payment would normally be made in January of the year
following the last day worked. If a participant dies or his or
her employment with the Company terminates for any reason other
than retirement, payment would normally be made as soon as
practicable following the participants death or
termination.
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2.
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January of a Specified Year. Payment is
normally made during the January of the year that a participant
specifies for payment of the amount. Once a participant
specifies a year of payment, the amount will not normally be
paid until January of that year, even if the participant earlier
retires or otherwise terminates employment. The only exception
is if the participant dies, in which case the deferred amounts
are paid immediately to the participants beneficiary.
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If the Companys Board of Directors determines that a
change-in-control
of the Company (as defined in the Compensation Deferral Program)
has occurred, the Chief Executive Officer may authorize
accelerated payments of deferred balances for all participants.
If so, payments will be made within 45 days after a
change-in-control,
regardless of any payout election that a participant previously
made.
Generally, all distributions from the Compensation Deferral
Program are made in a single lump sum. Effective as of
January 1, 2005, installment elections were no longer
permitted for new elections. Any portion of a participants
account that is invested in the Praxair
stock-unit
equivalent account will be distributed in shares of Praxair
common stock. Deferred income invested in the fixed income
account will be distributed in cash.
POTENTIAL
PAYMENTS UPON TERMINATION OR CHANGE-IN-CONTROL
If a NEOs employment with the Company terminates, or a
change-in-control
of the Company occurs, he may be entitled to receive certain
payments
and/or
benefits from the Company. Below is a discussion of the
estimated payments
and/or
benefits under the following events:
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1.
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Voluntary Termination, which includes a NEOs
resignation or retirement, and Involuntary-for-Cause
Termination, which includes the Companys termination
of the NEOs employment for reasons such as violation of
certain Company policies or for performance-related issues.
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2.
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Involuntary Termination, which includes a termination
other than for cause, but not including a termination related to
a change-in-control of the Company. Terminations due to death or
disability result in substantially the same treatment as an
Involuntary Termination, except as described below.
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3.
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A
Change-in-Control
of the Company, as defined under the Severance Agreements and
under the terms of various plans and agreements described below.
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43
The Company has entered into identical Executive Severance
Compensation Agreements related to a
change-in-control
of the Company (the Severance Agreements) with
certain executive officers, including NEOs. The Severance
Agreements are designed to retain the executives and provide
continuity of management in the event of any actual or
threatened
change-in-control.
Under the Severance Agreements, a
change-in-control
is defined substantially the same as it is defined in the Stock
Plan (see Additional Information Regarding Plan-Based
Awards Option Grant Terms).
The Severance Agreements provide generally that if a NEOs
employment is terminated within two years after a
change-in-control
either by the Company without cause, or by the NEO for good
reason, then he will be entitled to receive: (a) accrued
salary, performance-based variable compensation and benefits;
(b) enhanced life, accident, health insurance and pension
benefits; (c) a lump sum payment equal to three times the
sum of his annual salary and performance-based variable
compensation last paid; (d) reimbursement for certain of
his tax liabilities; and (e) outplacement and financial
counseling benefits. The Company will make these payments or
they will be made through a grantor trust that the Company may
adopt.
The Severance Agreements renew automatically for one-year terms,
unless the Company or the executive gives notice of termination
of the Severance Agreement. Notwithstanding any such notice of
termination, if a
change-in-control
occurs during the original or extended term of a Severance
Agreement, then it automatically renews for a period of
24 months beyond the term then in effect. A Severance
Agreement terminates if the executives employment with
Company is terminated by the executive or Praxair prior to a
change-in-control.
General
Assumptions
Set forth below is a description of payments
and/or
benefits that may be provided, if any, related to each
termination event or a
change-in-control.
Also discussed is the basis upon which the payments
and/or
benefits were calculated. Except as noted below, these amounts
are the incremental or enhanced amounts that a NEO may receive
that are greater than those that the Company would provide to
employees generally under the same circumstances. They are
estimates only and are based on various assumptions discussed
below. The actual amounts that would be paid or the benefits
that would be provided can be determined only at the time that
each event occurs.
The discussion below assumes that (i) each NEOs
employment terminated on December 31, 2006 due to, in turn,
each termination event, including termination within two years
after a
change-in-control,
as contemplated by the Severance Agreements; (ii) a
change-in-control
occurred on December 31, 2006 under the terms of various
plans and agreements unrelated to the Severance Agreements,
regardless of a termination of employment; and (iii) values
related to outstanding Long-Term Incentive stock awards reflect
the market value of the Companys common stock of
$59.33 per share, which was the closing price on the NYSE
as of December 29, 2006, the last trading day of 2006.
Severance
Benefits
Under the Companys Severance Plan, if employment
terminates for certain reasons, employees are generally entitled
to payments equal to 7.5 working days pay times completed
years of service with the Company, subject to a maximum of 260
working days pay. For NEOs, the same formula applies
except that NEOs receive a minimum of 120 working days
pay, if a NEOs years of service would not otherwise
entitle him to at least 120 working days pay.
Voluntary Termination, or
Involuntary-for-Cause
Termination. No severance would be payable in
cases of a Voluntary Termination, or an Involuntary-for-Cause
Termination.
Involuntary Termination. The value of the
minimum payment benefit to Messrs. Reilley and Angel is
$298,558 and $187,500, respectively, as they would not otherwise
be entitled to the minimum
120 working
days pay, given their respective years of service. These
amounts are the
44
difference between what Messrs. Reilley and Angel would
have received with their actual years of service and the
120-day
minimum benefit. The other NEOs have enough years of service
with the Company to enable them to receive the minimum
120 days working pay; therefore, no value is
attributed to them for the minimum benefit.
Change-in-Control. Each
NEO has a Severance Agreement with the Company described above.
These agreements provide a formula for determining the severance
benefit due to NEOs for a termination of employment in
connection with a
change-in-control
in lieu of benefits payable under the Companys Severance
Plan. Under the Severance Agreements, NEOs would receive the
following amounts: Mr. Reilley $9,945,252, Mr. Angel,
$4,835,785, Mr. Sawyer $3,437,113, Mr. Malfitano,
$3,506,946, and Mr. Fuchs $2,689,370.
Other
Post-Termination Benefits
The Company provides standard benefits that are generally
available to all employees, including group health and dental
insurance, group life and short-term and long-term disability
coverage. Any post-termination benefits for NEOs that are
greater than those generally available to all employees are
described below.
Voluntary Termination, or Involuntary-for-Cause
Termination. If an employee chooses to retire,
the Company provides continued medical insurance coverage and
also may provide some limited basic life insurance coverage.
Mr. Reilley would not be eligible to receive these benefits
but for the Pension Program extra years of credited service he
received (see footnote (2) to the Pension
Benefits table above). The value of this continued medical
coverage for Mr. Reilley resulting from these service
credits is approximately $150,000 for his life expectancy. Also,
upon Mr. Reilleys retirement, the Company will pay
for an administrative assistant to him, and this assistant also
will provide services to the Companys immediate prior
Chairman. The value of this benefit attributable to
Mr. Reilley is estimated to be $15,000 annually, including
the estimated annual salary of such assistant and the cost of
computer and related administrative office equipment and
supplies.
Involuntary Termination. Messrs. Reilley and
Angel would receive continued medical insurance coverage for six
months, which is three months longer than is generally available
to employees with Messrs. Reilleys and Angels
same actual years of service. The value of this additional
benefit is $3,000 each. The other NEOs have enough years of
service to otherwise entitle them to six months of continued
medical insurance coverage. No other benefits would be provided
to NEOs that are not otherwise generally available to employees
with the same actual years of service as NEOs.
Change-in-Control. Under
the Severance Agreements, NEOs are entitled to continued life,
accident and health insurance for at least three years. If a NEO
is re-employed and his new employer provides comparable or
better medical coverage at no cost to the NEO, then the Company
would not provide the continued coverage. The estimated value of
these continued benefits, including medical coverage, for each
NEO is approximately $39,600. In addition, NEOs would receive
$35,000 for outplacement services and $10,000 of financial
counseling services.
Deferred
Compensation Payout
Each NEOs accrued balance in his Compensation Deferral
Program account would be payable in accordance with his payout
election, as described under the Nonqualified Deferred
Compensation table above. Certain NEOs have balances
accrued in the Praxair discounted stock fund. This fund, which
has not been available for new deferrals since 2003, provided a
10% discount to the price of the Companys common stock
upon deferral. It also required that the discount balances be
held for at least five full years from the deferral date or the
discount would be forfeited.
This five-year holding period would be waived in connection with
certain termination events, and the value of the amounts in the
Praxair discounted stock fund for which forfeiture would thus be
waived as of December 31, 2006 for NEOs is described below.
45
Voluntary Termination, or
Involuntary-for-Cause
Termination. The waiver would apply in this
termination event only if a NEO retires (attains age 50
with at least 10 years of service). The amount not
forfeited resulting from the waiver is $430,081 for
Mr. Reilley and $62,617 for Mr. Sawyer. The waiver
would not apply to the other NEOs, either because they did not
meet the foregoing retirement definition (Mr. Angel) or did
not have a balance in the Praxair discounted stock fund
(Messrs. Malfitano and Fuchs) as of
December 31, 2006.
Involuntary Termination or
Change-in-Control. The
waiver would apply in the Involuntary Termination event, and
upon death, but would not apply to disability. It would also
apply to a
change-in-control
(as defined in the Compensation Deferral Program described under
the Nonqualified Deferred Compensation table
above.). The value not forfeited resulting from the waiver in
any of these events is $430,081 for Mr. Reilley, $271,929
for Mr. Angel, and $62,617 for Mr. Sawyer.
Messrs. Malfitano and Fuchs did not have a balance in the
Praxair discounted stock fund. Under the Compensation Deferral
Program, the payout of deferred balances may be accelerated upon
a
change-in-control.
There is no value calculated for this acceleration as a NEO
would be simply receiving the amount that he deferred sooner
than the time he had originally elected.
Performance-Based
Variable Compensation Payments
Performance-based variable compensation awards that NEOs may
receive are entirely at the discretion of the Boards
Compensation Committee. It is speculative whether the
Compensation Committee would have made such awards for 2006 if a
NEOs employment terminated under the Voluntary
Termination,
Involuntary-for-Cause
Termination, or the Involuntary Termination events on
December 31, 2006. If the Compensation Committee had made
such awards for 2006, it is also speculative how the amounts
might have related to the amounts set forth in the Grants
of Plan-Based Awards table in the Estimated Possible
Payouts Under Non-equity Incentive Plan Awards columns.
For a
change-in-control,
the Severance Agreements provide a formula for determining the
accrued
performance-based
variable compensation payment due to a NEO. For 2006, this
amount was based on the performance-based variable compensation
paid for the immediately preceding year (expressed as a percent
of salary for that year) times current base salary. The amounts
that would be payable to the NEOs for accrued
performance-based
variable compensation are: $2,326,705 for Mr. Reilley,
$1,062,366 for Mr. Angel, $629,962 for Mr. Sawyer,
$652,275 for Mr. Malfitano, and $516,727 for Mr. Fuchs.
Long Term
Incentive Awards
Each NEO has outstanding Long Term Incentive Awards granted
under the Stock Plan or prior equity plans. See the Grants
of Plan-Based Awards and Outstanding Equity Awards
at Fiscal Year-End tables above, and the material terms of
stock option and restricted stock grants described in the
narratives to those tables. In certain termination events, or
upon a
change-in-control,
there would be an acceleration of vesting of restricted stock
and/or stock
options. For purposes of this disclosure, values are attributed
to this acceleration, as described below.
Voluntary Termination, or
Involuntary-for-Cause
Termination. If a NEO voluntarily terminates his
employment prior to being retirement eligible, or the Company
terminates his employment for cause, his unexercised stock
options will be forfeited. If a NEO retires before the first
anniversary of the option grant date, the options associated
with that grant also will be forfeited. If the NEO retires after
the first anniversary of an options grant date, those
options will continue to become exercisable on the dates set
forth in the grant agreements, and the NEO may exercise them as
they become exercisable until their termination date. In any
case, no acceleration of the exercisability of any stock option
occurs upon retirement and, therefore, no value is attributed to
stock options under these termination events. In addition, no
value is attributed for the unvested restricted stock awards
held by Messrs. Reilley and Angel, as they would not vest in
connection with these termination events.
46
Involuntary Termination or
Change-in-Control. The
values attributable to acceleration of vesting in these
termination events (restricted stock and stock options) are:
$12,117,533 for Mr. Reilley, $4,872,242 for Mr. Angel,
$2,473,522 for Mr. Sawyer, $2,106,888 for
Mr. Malfitano, and $1,482,523 for Mr. Fuchs. As of
December 31, 2006, Messrs. Reilley and Angel had
unvested shares of restricted stock that would vest immediately.
The value of these shares is the number of shares that would
vest (37,594 for Mr. Reilley and 32,529 for Mr. Angel)
times the $59.33 per share Praxair common stock price on
December 29, 2006. Other than upon death, or upon a
change-in-control
(as defined in the Stock Plan described under the Grants
of Plan-Based Awards table), stock options do not become
immediately exercisable, but will continue to become exercisable
at the times set forth in the grant agreements, and may be
exercised until the earlier of three years or the option
termination date. In the Involuntary Termination event, the only
value is with respect to stock options whose vesting accelerates
upon death. Stock option vesting also accelerates upon a
change-in-control.
This option acceleration value is determined by the difference
between the exercise price of the accelerated options and the
$59.33 per share price of the Companys common stock
on December 29, 2006, times the number of the accelerated
option shares. There is no value attributable for stock options
already vested prior to death or prior to a
change-in-control.
Retirement
Benefits
The Pension Program benefits for each NEO are discussed as part
of the Pension Benefits table above, and no enhanced
benefits would be provided under the Pension Program that are
not otherwise included in the Pension Benefits table.
Voluntary Termination,
Involuntary-for-Cause
Termination, and Involuntary Termination. NEOs would not be
entitled to any additional or enhanced benefit under these
termination events, but any vested benefit would be preserved
and would become payable under the Pension Program at such time
as the NEOs would otherwise become eligible for pension payments.
Change-in-Control.
The Severance Agreements do not provide for the crediting of
years of service or similar enhanced benefits that would be
payable under the Pension Program itself. Instead, the Severance
Agreements provide for lump sum payments equal to the
incremental value of 3 additional years of age and service
credited under the Pension Program. Also, a lump sum payment
would be made equal to 15% of compensation in order to duplicate
3 years of the Companys matching contributions under
the 401(k) Savings Plan. The aggregate value of these payments
to each NEO, determined by applying these enhancements to each
NEO, as applicable, is $2,729,625 for Mr. Reilley,
$1,456,702 for Mr. Angel, $1,031,188 for Mr. Sawyer,
$1,669,750 for Mr. Malfitano, and $694,262 for
Mr. Fuchs.
Excise
Tax plus
Gross-up for
Income Taxes
The Company will reimburse NEOs amounts they owe under
Section 280G of the Federal tax laws due to excess
parachute payments. These reimbursements apply only
to the
Change-in-Control
termination event under the Severance Agreements. The amounts of
such reimbursements would be $10,124,000 for Mr. Reilley,
$3,491,000 for Mr. Angel, $1,897,000 for Mr. Sawyer,
$2,868,000 for Mr. Malfitano, and $2,028,000 for
Mr. Fuchs.
47
Director
Compensation
Director Compensation Program.
The Company paid the amounts reported in the table below
pursuant to its director compensation program. The Company does
not pay any director who is a Company employee (Messrs Reilley
and Angel in 2006) for serving as a member of the Board of
Directors or any committee of the Board of Directors. The
Governance & Nominating Committee of the Board
determines non-management director compensation. For 2006, this
compensation consisted of:
Cash Compensation.
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A $55,000 annual retainer paid quarterly.
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A $1,500 fee for each Board and each committee meeting attended.
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An additional $10,000 annual retainer to each chairman of a
Board committee ($15,000 for the chairman of the Audit
Committee).
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An additional $10,000 annual retainer to the Executive Session
Presiding Director.
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Equity Compensation. Each active
non-management director participates in the Praxair, Inc.
Non-Employee Directors Equity Compensation Plan which was
approved by shareholders at the 2005 Annual Meeting. The plan
allows grants of stock options, restricted stock, unrestricted
stock, phantom stock (meaning stock units under the Fees
Deferral Plan described below), or any combination thereof, as
the Governance & Nominating Committee determines. Under
that plan, the Committee may make an annual equity grant to each
non-management director having a value up to an amount set by
the Board. For 2006, the Board set this amount at $70,000. The
number of option shares that were granted in 2006 in order to
deliver this value was determined by using a binomial valuation
model as recommended by the Governance & Nominating
Committees consultant. This value is not the same as
either the FAS 123R compensation expense value reported in
the Options Awards column in the table below, or the
FAS 123R full grant date value of $82,601 reported in
footnote (2) to that table.
The Governance & Nominating Committee selected stock options
as the form of equity for the 2006 grant. The exercise price of
each option granted was 100% of the NYSE closing price of the
Companys common stock on the date of grant. These 2006
options vest in consecutive equal annual installments over three
years, beginning on the first anniversary of the grant date. All
of the 2006 options expire ten years from the date of grant. The
plan contains provisions regarding the exercisability and
vesting of outstanding options in the event of termination of
service, retirement, disability, death and change-in-control of
Praxair.
Upon the Governance & Nominating Committees
recommendation (based on a review with the Committees
compensation consultant, Towers Perrin LLP), the Board increased
the value of equity compensation to be delivered in 2007 to
$85,000. Of this amount, 75% will be granted in the form of
stock options, and 25% in the form of deferred stock.
Fees Deferral Plan. Under the Directors
Fees Deferral Plan, non-management directors may, before the
beginning of a calendar year, elect to defer to a later date
payment of some or all of the cash fees that may be earned in
the upcoming year. A director fixes this deferred payment date
when he or she makes his or her deferral election. A director
also chooses whether the deferred fees will earn amounts based
upon a Cash Account, or a Stock Unit
Account. The Cash Account earns interest at the prime
rate, while the value of the Stock Unit Account tracks the
market price of the Companys common stock. Stock Unit
Accounts are also credited with additional stock units whenever
dividends are paid on the Companys common stock. Dividends
are credited at the same rate as that paid to all shareholders.
Stock units (referred to above as phantom stock)
provide directors the economic equivalent of owning the
Companys stock, except that the units may not be
transferred or sold and they do not provide any voting or other
shareholder rights. The Cash Account is paid to the
director in cash on the designated payment date. The Stock
Unit Account is paid in shares of Company common stock.
48
Expenses. The Company pays or reimburses
directors for travel, lodging and related expenses incurred in
connection with attending board, committee and shareholder
meetings and other Company business related events (including
the expenses related to the attendance of spouses if they are
specifically invited for appropriate business purposes), and may
provide use of Company chartered aircraft if available. From
time to time, the Company may reimburse a directors
expenses for
his/her
participation in third party-supplied continuing education
related to the directors Board or Committee service.
This table shows (i) the fees that the Companys
non-management directors earned in 2006, (ii) the
FAS 123R accounting value of stock options, and
(iii) other amounts disclosed as All Other
Compensation.
DIRECTOR
COMPENSATION TABLE
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Change in
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Pension
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Value and
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Non-Equity
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Nonqualified
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Fees Earned or
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Stock
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Incentive Plan
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Deferred
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All Other
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Paid in Cash
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Awards
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Option Awards
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Compensation
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Compensation
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Compensation
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Total
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Name
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($)(1)
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($)
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($)(2)
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($)
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Earnings (3)
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($)(4)
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($)
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José P. Alves
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$
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82,000
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0
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$
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36,825
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0
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0
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0
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$
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118,825
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Claire W. Gargalli
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$
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90,500
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0
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$
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58,368
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0
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0
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0
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$
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148,868
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Ira D. Hall
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$
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79,000
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0
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$
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52,349
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0
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0
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0
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$
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131,349
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Ronald L. Kuehn, Jr.
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$
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93,500
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0
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$
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95,187
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0
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0
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$2,500
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$
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191,187
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Raymond W. LeBoeuf
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$
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92,000
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0
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$
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58,368
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0
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0
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$2,500
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$
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152,868
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G. Jackson Ratcliffe, Jr.
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$
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76,000
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0
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$
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68,617
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0
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0
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$1,500
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$
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146,117
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Wayne T. Smith
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$
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92,000
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0
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$
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58,368
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0
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0
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$2,500
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$
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152,868
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H. Mitchell Watson, Jr.
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$
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100,000
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0
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$
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58,368
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0
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0
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$2,500
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$
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160,868
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Robert L. Wood
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$
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79,000
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0
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$
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52,349
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0
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0
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$2,500
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$
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133,849
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(1) Certain non-management directors elected to defer some
or all of their cash retainers
and/or
meeting fees earned in 2006 pursuant to the Directors Fees
Deferral Plan described above. Any deferred amounts are included
in this column.
(2) The amounts shown in this column were not actually paid
to any of the directors in 2006. The actual gain that a
non-management director may receive from exercising an option
sometime in the future may be higher or lower than these
reported amounts, and these options have value only if the price
of the Companys stock increases above the options
exercise price. The reported amounts represent the amounts that
the Company recognized as compensation expense for options
granted in 2006 and in prior years, as required by
FAS 123R. Each non-management director received a stock
option grant on February 28, 2006 of 7,620 shares. The
exercise price was $53.98 per share, being 100% of the NYSE
closing price of the Companys common stock on that date.
The full grant date value of this option grant under
FAS 123R is $82,601. The assumptions used in computing
these amounts are included in Note 16 to the Companys
2006 financial statements in the 2006 Annual Report to
Shareholders and
Form 10-K.
At December 31, 2006, the non-management directors had the
following outstanding stock option awards, some of which were
not fully or partially vested: José P. Alves,
11,620 shares; Claire W. Gargalli, 52,895 shares; Ira
D. Hall, 12,895 shares; Ronald L. Kuehn, Jr.
47,895 shares; Raymond W. LeBoeuf, 47,895 shares; G.
Jackson Ratcliffe, Jr., 32,895 shares; Wayne T. Smith,
27,895 shares; H. Mitchell Watson, Jr.
22,895 shares; Robert L. Wood, 12,895 shares.
(3) Certain non-management directors defer cash fees
pursuant to the Directors Fees Deferral Plan
and/or have
balances in that plan from prior years deferrals. As none of the
earnings on these deferred amounts is above market or
preferential, no amounts are included in this column.
(4) Amounts in this column do not represent compensation
paid to the directors. These amounts are Company matching
contributions of the non-management directors charitable
donations to educational institutions made in 2006; SEC rules
require disclosure of these amounts in this table. The Praxair
Foundation matches personal donations to eligible educational
institutions, up to a $2,500 maximum per year per donor. This
matching gift program is available to Company employees and
non-management directors on the same basis.
49
Shareholder
Proposal-
Director Election Process
(Item 2
on the proxy form)
The Sheet Metal Workers National Pension Fund has
submitted the shareholder proposal below and supporting
statement. This proposal will be voted on if it is properly
presented at the Annual Meeting. The proponents address
and number of shares owned will be provided by Praxair upon
request. Your Boards statement in opposition to this
proposal is on the next page.
RESOLVED: That the shareholders of Praxair
(Company) hereby request that the Board of Directors
initiate the appropriate process to amend the Companys
governance documents (certificate of incorporation or bylaws) to
provide that director nominees shall be elected by the
affirmative vote of the majority of votes cast at an annual
meeting of shareholders, with a plurality vote standard retained
for contested director elections, that is, when the number of
director nominees exceeds the number of board seats.
Proponents Supporting Statement: In
order to provide shareholders a meaningful role in director
elections, our companys director election vote standard
should be changed to a majority vote standard. A majority vote
standard would require that a nominee receive a majority of the
votes cast in order to be elected. The standard is particularly
well-suited for the vast majority of director elections in which
only board nominated candidates are on the ballot. We believe
that a majority vote standard in board elections would establish
a challenging vote standard for board nominees and improve the
performance of individual directors and entire boards. Our
Company presently uses a plurality vote standard in all director
elections. Under the plurality vote standard, a nominee for the
board can be elected with as little as a single affirmative
vote, even if a substantial majority of the votes cast are
withheld from the nominee.
In response to strong shareholder support for a majority vote
standard in director elections, an increasing number of
companies, including Intel, Dell, Motorola, Texas Instruments,
Safeway, Home Depot, Gannett, and Supervalu, have adopted a
majority vote standard in company by-laws. Additionally, these
companies have adopted director resignation policies in their
bylaws or corporate governance policies to address post-election
issues related to the status of director nominees that fail to
win election. Other companies have responded only partially to
the call for change by simply adopting post-election director
resignation policies that set procedures for addressing the
status of director nominees that receive more
withhold votes than for votes. At the
time of the submission of this proposal, our Company and its
board had not taken either action.
We believe the critical first step in establishing a meaningful
majority vote policy is the adoption of a majority vote standard
in Company governance documents. Our Company needs to join the
growing list of companies that have taken this action. With a
majority vote standard in place, the board can then consider
action on developing post election procedures to address the
status of directors that fail to win election. A combination of
a majority vote standard and a post-election director
resignation policy would establish a meaningful right for
shareholders to elect directors, while reserving for the board
an important post-election role in determining the continued
status of an unelected director. We feel that this combination
of the majority vote standard with a post-election policy
represents a true majority vote standard.
50
YOUR
BOARD RECOMMENDS THAT YOU VOTE AGAINST THE PROPOSAL
Summary:
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Your Board is concerned that the potential unintended
consequences of adopting this proposal at this time may not be
in your best interests as shareholders.
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The combination of this proposal, if it were adopted now,
with a new NYSE rule concerning director elections, could result
in a single-issue shareholder determining a director election by
marshalling substantially less than a majority of the
total shares outstanding.
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While your Board is sympathetic to the intent of this
proposal, the foregoing result would seem to undercut the
proponents goals of a fair and meaningful role for
shareholders in the election of directors.
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Your Board respectfully suggests that, in view of the
sustained superior performance of this Company and a clear
record of responsiveness to shareholder concerns, there is no
urgency to adopt this proposal at Praxair.
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Your Board urges caution and recommends that you defer
approval of this proposal until practical experience is gained
under the new NYSE rule.
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Your Boards View of this Proposal: Were
the consequences of this fundamental reform of the director
election process better understood, your Board would not
hesitate to adopt the majority vote standard as proposed.
To help the Companys shareholders evaluate this proposal,
your Board believes you should be aware of a recent change in
NYSE rules, to be effective for 2008, which creates an equally
significant change in director elections. Contrary to
long-standing NYSE practice for director elections, brokers will
no longer be able to vote shares for which the account holder
has not given voting instructions. Currently, if an account
holder has not given voting instructions to
his/her
broker, the broker is entitled to vote those shares on the
account holders behalf. At Praxair, as with most other
public companies, a large number of account holders fail to give
voting instructions despite being invited to do so by their
receipt of the notice of meeting and proxy statement. The
current rule has stood, in part, in recognition of the fact that
the failure of many shareholders to vote could jeopardize the
attainment of a sufficient quorum to hold the annual meeting of
shareholders. Whatever the merits of this rule change, it has
been put in place for 2008 and must now be considered when
thinking about director elections and this proposal in
particular.
Under this new broker non-vote rule, only a minority
of shares outstanding could act to defeat a directors
election. Under the present shareholder proposal, the standard
for director election would be a majority of votes cast.
Under the new NYSE rule, fewer votes will be cast because
brokers will no longer be able to cast votes representing shares
for which the account holders have not bothered to give voting
instructions. Thus, a single-issue activist needs
to mobilize only a minority of shareholders to achieve
NO votes from a majority of the votes cast. In
your Companys case, the single-issue activist can defeat
the election of a director or group of directors with a majority
of the votes cast representing only 38%, or possibly less, of
the shares outstanding (based on your Companys current
share ownership profile and historical experience with
non-voting by the Companys retail
shareholders) an outcome that is grossly unfair to the
director as well as to the majority of shareholders.
Therefore, your Board urges caution with respect to the present
proposal because the combination of these two untested
fundamental reforms, the proposed majority vote standard and the
above described broker non-vote rule, risks
unintended consequences that may not be in the
shareholders best interests. Single-issue shareholder
activists have a history of mounting vote no
campaigns to signal displeasure with this or that matter and to
send a message to the Board. Under a majority vote
standard, these
send-a-message
campaigns can have real consequences. It is not clear to your
Board that shareholders generally want the consequence of a
single-issue message to be the actual failure to
elect a particular director or group of directors, a result that
could cause serious disruption to the governance of your
51
Company and its compliance with various governance standards
regarding the composition of the Board and its committees.
Under the present plurality vote standard, you may register your
dissatisfaction by means of a withhold vote on one
or more directors. Praxairs shareholders should not
underestimate the impact that a significant withhold
vote would have on your Board. There is no question that such a
withhold vote, even if only from a significant
minority of shareholders, would send a message and
cause your Board to examine the reasons for the dissatisfaction.
But at least your Board currently has the flexibility to
determine whether such a vote was intended only to send a
message to which the Board should react or was a sincere effort
to remove a director from the Board.
Praxairs shareholders are urged to wait until the combined
practical effects of these two fundamental reforms in director
elections are better understood before recommending to your
Board that it adopt a majority vote standard as proposed.
For the
foregoing reasons, your Board recommends a vote AGAINST
this item 2, the proposal requesting that your Board adopt
a majority vote standard for the election of the Companys
directors.
In order for this proposal to be adopted by the shareholders, at
least a majority of the shares cast at the Annual Meeting in
person or by proxy by the shareholders entitled to vote on the
matter must be voted in its favor. See the vote counting rules
on pages 3-4 of this Proxy Statement.
52
Shareholder
Proposal-
Rights Plan Vote
(Item 3
on the proxy form)
Chris Rossi, custodian for Vanessa Rossi, represented by John
Chevedden, submitted the shareholder proposal below and
supporting statement. This proposal will be voted on if it is
properly presented at the Annual Meeting. The proponents
address and number of shares owned will be provided by Praxair
upon request. Your Boards statement in opposition to this
proposal is on the next page.
RESOLVED: Shareholders request our Board adopt a bylaw that
our Board subject any current or future poison pill to an annual
shareholder vote, as a separate ballot item. It is essential to
this proposal that it be adopted through bylaw or charter
inclusion and that a sunset on a poison pill will not substitute
for a shareholder vote.
Proponents Supporting Statement: Currently our
management is protected by a poison pill that triggers at a 20%
threshold. A poison pill has the potential to give our directors
increased job security if our stock price declines significantly
due to our directors poor performance.
Thus an essential part of this proposal is that any year in
which a poison pill is active for any period of time, a vote
would be required as soon as feasible even if the pill had been
terminated in one way or another. Since a poison pill is such a
drastic measure that deserves shareholder input, a shareholder
vote would be required even if a pill had been allowed to expire.
Chris Rossi, P.O. Box 249, Boonville, CA 95415 sponsors
this proposal.
[Poison pill] Thats akin to the argument of a
benevolent dictator, who says, Give up more of your
freedom and Ill take care of you.
T.J. Dermot Dunphy, CEO of Sealed Air (NYSE) for 25 yeas
Thats the key negative of poison pills
instead of protecting investors, they can also preserve the
interests of management deadwood as well.
Morningstar.com, Aug. 15, 2003
Hectoring directors to act more independently is a poor
substitute for the bracing possibility that shareholders could
sell the company out from under its present management.
Wall Street Journal, Feb. 24, 2003
It is important to take a step forward and support this one
proposal since our 2006 governance standards were not
impeccable. For instance in 2006 it was reported (and certain
concerns are noted):
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The Corporate Library (TCL) http://www.thecorporatelibrary.com,
an independent research firm, rated our company Very High
Concern in executive pay.
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We had no Independent Chairman Independent oversight
concern.
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Cumulative voting was not permitted.
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One yes-vote from our 320 million shares could elect a
director under our obsolete plurality system.
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Our following directors were designated Accelerated
Vesting directors by The Corporate Library. This was due
to a directors involvement with a board that accelerated
the vesting of stock options just prior to implementation of
FAS 123R policies in order to avoid recognizing the related
expense which is now required.
Mr. Kuehn
Mr. Watson
Mr. Smith
The above status shows there is room for improvement and
reinforces the reason to take one step forward now and vote yes
for annual election of each director.
53
YOUR
BOARD RECOMMENDS THAT YOU VOTE AGAINST THE PROPOSAL
Summary:
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The Companys Stockholder Protection Rights Plan
(Rights Plan) has already been approved by
you, the Companys shareholders.
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This Rights Plan, as approved by you, will expire in May 2009
and may not be renewed without your further approval.
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This Rights Plan, as approved by you, may not be materially
amended without your approval.
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Submission of the Rights Plan for your approval was
consistent with the Boards publicly disclosed policy to
submit to a shareholder vote any Rights Plan it may adopt.
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In view of the foregoing, your Board believes that this
proposal is unnecessary and misguided.
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Your Boards View of this Proposal: This
proposals proponent fails to inform you that your
Companys current Rights Plan (referred to by the proponent
as the poison pill) has, indeed, been approved by
the Companys shareholders. Rather than merely
adopting a Rights Plan as is permissible under Delaware
Corporation Law, your Board, in a progressive move in 2004,
submitted the Rights Plan to a binding shareholder vote and it
was approved by 77% of the votes cast.
The proponent fails to remind you that this shareholder-approved
Rights Plan already provides that the plan may not be materially
modified or extended without shareholder approval.
The proponent fails to mention that submission to shareholders
of this Rights Plan was consistent with the Boards
published policy which remains in place (see Corporate
Governance Guidelines included in this proxy statement at
Appendix 1 and posted on the Companys public website,
www.praxair.com) requiring that, if your Board adopts a Rights
Plan, it will submit such a Rights Plan to a shareholder vote
within a reasonable time thereafter.
The proponent fails to note that the current
shareholder-approved Rights Plan has a limited term and will
expire in May 2009 unless extended by the shareholders and
includes a provision that, every year, the Rights Plan must be
reviewed by a committee of independent directors to determine
whether it remains in the best interests of shareholders.
At no time during the development of the Rights Plan did
any shareholder or advisor suggest that an annual
vote by shareholders was a necessary or desirable feature. A
majority of shareholders considered that the provisions cited
above plus other progressive provisions incorporated into the
Rights Plan properly balanced the legitimate beneficial purposes
of a Rights Plan with protections against potential abuse.
Your Board believes it inappropriate to change a Rights Plan
arrangement that has already been so approved by the
Companys shareholders, particularly since, if the Board
determines that it is advisable to extend the current Rights
Plan, such extension will be submitted to shareholders within
two years anyway.
Based on the Companys prior experience with the proponent,
it is your Boards opinion that the proponent is
disappointed that shareholders actually approved the Rights
Plan. He is now attempting to substitute his judgment for that
of a majority of shareholders. We believe that this proposal is
frivolous and an abuse of the shareholder proposal process in
which the proponent is using his supporting statement as a
platform to try to reverse the effect of the shareholders
previous endorsement of the Rights Plan.
Most shareholders do not need reminding of the sustained
superior performance of the Company and your investment in it
under the leadership of this Board and management. Contrary to
the assertions in the
54
proponents statement, there has been repeated external
recognition of the positive management of your Company. To cite
just a few:
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Mr. Reilley was featured in a May 2006 Forbes
magazine article headlined Executive Pay: The Best
Bosses for the Buck.
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Praxair was on Forbes magazines December 2006 list
of Americas Best Managed Companies and placed
on its Honor Roll as one of only 29 companies
to have been on this list every year since its inception in 1999.
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Praxair was atop the specialty chemicals category in
Institutional Investor magazines February 2006
Americas Most Shareholder-Friendly Companies.
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Praxair was listed among Fortune magazines March
2006 Americas Most Admired Companies.
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In July 2006, Praxairs governance was rated a 9.5 out of
10.0 by GovernanceMetrics International and Praxair was one of
only four companies out of a total of 3,220 worldwide to receive
a top rating in 4 consecutive previous ratings cycles.
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Finally, your Board would point out that the last sentence of
the proponents supporting statement admonishing you to
vote yes for annual election of each director is a
further indication of the apparent lack of care and thought that
the proponent invested in preparing this proposal. Aside from
the obvious irrelevance of this request to the proposal he has
submitted, the proponent apparently has failed to recall that
last year, shareholders approved a management proposal to
move to annual elections for directors, eliminating in stages
your Companys classified board structure. And your Board
does not understand what the proponent means, or what purpose is
served, by making a shareholder vote required even if a
pill [sic] had been allowed to expire.
For the
foregoing reasons, your Board recommends a vote AGAINST
this item 3, the proposal requesting that your Board adopt
an annual shareholder vote on the Stockholder Protection Rights
Plan.
In order for this proposal to be adopted by the shareholders, at
least a majority of the shares cast at the Annual Meeting in
person or by proxy by the shareholders entitled to vote on the
matter must be voted in its favor. See the vote counting rules
on pages 3-4 of this Proxy Statement.
55
Miscellaneous
Shareholder
Proposals for the 2008 Annual Meeting
In order to be included in Praxairs proxy statement and
form of proxy, proposals of shareholders intended to be
presented to Praxairs 2008 annual meeting of shareholders
must be received in writing at Praxairs principal
executive offices by November 19, 2007. Otherwise, in order
for a shareholder to bring other business before that
shareholder meeting, Praxairs Certificate of Incorporation
requires that proper written notice be received by Praxair on or
before February 24, 2008. Shareholder proposals should be
directed by mail to the Assistant Corporate Secretary, Praxair,
Inc., 39 Old Ridgebury Road, M-1, Danbury, CT
06810-5113.
Annual
Reports
Shareholders of record on March 1, 2007 should have
received a copy of Praxairs 2006 Annual Report to
Shareholders either with this Proxy Statement or prior to its
receipt. If, upon receipt of this proxy material, you have not
received the Annual Report to Shareholders, please write to
Investor Relations at the address below and a copy will be sent
to you.
IN ADDITION, A COPY OF PRAXAIRS ANNUAL REPORT ON
FORM 10-K
FOR THE FISCAL YEAR ENDED DECEMBER 31, 2006 IS AVAILABLE TO
EACH HOLDER OR BENEFICIAL OWNER OF PRAXAIRS COMMON STOCK
AS OF MARCH 1, 2007. THIS REPORT WILL BE FURNISHED WITHOUT
CHARGE UPON WRITTEN REQUEST TO THE INVESTOR RELATIONS
DEPARTMENT, PRAXAIR, INC., 39 OLD RIDGEBURY ROAD, M-2, DANBURY,
CT
06810-5113.
Cost
of Proxy Solicitation
The entire cost of soliciting proxies will be borne by Praxair
including the expense of preparing, printing and mailing this
Proxy Statement. Solicitation costs include payments to
brokerage firms and others for forwarding solicitation materials
to beneficial owners of Praxairs stock and reimbursement
of
out-of-pocket
costs incurred for any follow up mailings. Praxair also has
engaged Morrow & Co., Inc. to assist in the
solicitation of proxies from shareholders at a fee of $7,500
plus reimbursement of
out-of-pocket
expenses. In addition to use of the mail, proxies may be
solicited personally or by telephone by employees of Praxair
without additional compensation, as well as by employees of
Morrow & Co., Inc.
BY ORDER OF THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS
JAMES T. BREEDLOVE,
Senior Vice President, General Counsel and Secretary
March 5, 2007
YOU ARE
URGED TO PROMPTLY COMPLETE AND SUBMIT A PROXY
56
APPENDIX 1
CORPORATE
GOVERNANCE GUIDELINES
The Corporation shall comply with all applicable legal
requirements and New York Stock Exchange standards; and the
Board shall adopt such additional practices and structures that
it believes will improve the Corporations governance so as
to better serve the interests of the shareholders and the other
constituencies of the Corporation.
Business Integrity, Ethics and Compliance with
Laws. The Board believes that a strong integrity,
ethics, and compliance culture is (1) a social obligation
to those impacted by the Corporation, (2) necessary for
maintaining investor trust, and (3) a necessary condition
for effective corporate governance, the absence of which cannot
be overcome by formal practices and structures. The Board
believes further that such culture must be driven by example and
emphasis at the top of the organization.
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The Board shall adopt and periodically review a Corporate Policy
on Compliance with Laws and Business Integrity and Ethics, and
such policy shall be equally applicable to the directors of the
Corporation as it is to its officers and employees.
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The Board, acting through its Audit Committee, shall oversee and
monitor managements development and operation of
preventative, reporting, investigation, and resolution programs
for implementing that policy.
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Ethical values and performance shall be significant factors in
the selection of directors, the CEO, and senior management.
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Each elected officer of the Corporation shall be accountable to
the Board for policy compliance within
his/her
areas of responsibility and compliance performance shall be
considered in the performance reviews and compensation
determinations for such officers.
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Any related transaction by an officer or director
shall be pre-approved by a Committee of independent and
disinterested directors. A related transaction shall
mean any transaction reportable under the
Regulation S-K
Item 404 of the Securities and Exchange Commission or that
would violate the Boards Independence Standards.
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Role of the Board of Directors. The duties of the
Board are largely defined by Delaware law, federal statutes and
regulations (notably those of the Securities and Exchange
Commission), and New York Stock Exchange Listing Standards. The
Board shall focus its priorities on the following core
responsibilities:
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Advice and counsel to management regarding significant issues
facing the Corporation.
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Assessing the performance of the Chief Executive Officer and
senior management and setting compensation accordingly.
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Succession planning and management development.
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Overseeing the Corporations integrity and ethics,
compliance with laws, and financial reporting.
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Evaluating and approving the Corporations strategic
direction and initiatives and monitoring implementation and
results.
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Monitoring the Corporations operating results and
financial condition.
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Understanding and assessing risks to the Corporation and
monitoring the management of those risks.
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Board and Committee Effectiveness Assessment. To
assure that it is effectively fulfilling its role, the Board
must periodically reflect on its own performance.
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At least annually, the Board shall assess the Corporations
governance practices and structures; and its effectiveness as a
Board in fulfilling its responsibilities and in addressing the
issues facing the Corporation.
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The Governance & Nominating Committee shall be
responsible for organizing and initiating this assessment and
shall take into account the views and recommendations of
recognized governance authorities as well as national and
international codes of best governance practices.
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Each Board Committee, under the leadership of its Chairman,
shall conduct a self-assessment of its effectiveness at least
annually, including a review of its charter from the Board.
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Board Leadership. Combining the positions of
Chairman and Chief Executive Officer provides the most effective
leadership model for this Corporation but, in order to assure a
proper balance between the Chairman/CEO and the independent
directors, and to assure effective leadership in the event of a
contingency:
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Regular private meetings of the independent directors shall be
scheduled no less than quarterly.
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The independent directors shall elect an Executive Session
Presiding Director (PD) to preside at such meetings and to
provide leadership in the event of the incapacitation of the
Chairman or of a crisis or other event or circumstance which
would make management leadership inappropriate or ineffective.
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The PD shall be responsible for conducting at least annually a
formal performance review of the Chief Executive Officer.
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The PD may periodically advise the Chief Executive Officer of
the views of the independent directors. However, it is vitally
important that the Chief Executive Officer have a frank and open
relationship with each director and each director must assume
the responsibility of communicating frank advice and counsel
directly to the Chief Executive Officer.
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The Chairman shall insure that the Boards agendas,
schedules, and information flow to the directors provide
adequate focus, time, and background for the Board to fulfill
its core responsibilities.
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The Chairman shall insure that each Committees agendas
cover every item of the Committees responsibility as set
forth in the Committees charter as adopted by the Board.
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Each director shall have the right to request that items be
added to the Board and Committee agendas, that additional time
be allocated to discussion of an issue, and that additional
information be provided by management or other sources.
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The Board shall have access to management other than the Chief
Executive Officer for the purposes of information gathering and
management assessment and development.
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Board Structure. Much of the oversight work of the
Board shall be done through specialized Committees in which a
focus and expertise can be brought to bear on important issues.
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As a minimum, the Board shall have standing Committees as
follows: an Audit Committee, a Governance & Nominating
Committee, a Compensation & Management Development
Committee, and a Finance & Pension Committee.
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Each of the foregoing Committees shall be comprised only of
independent directors.
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The Board shall formally adopt a written charter for each
Committee specifying in detail the responsibilities delegated to
that Committee.
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Each Committee Charter shall provide authority to the Committee
to retain and pay such external advisors as it deems necessary
to fulfill its obligations.
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Each Committee shall regularly report to the full Board on its
reviews, actions, decisions and recommendations.
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While director qualifications, anticipated retirement dates, and
other considerations may constrain strict adherence to any fixed
rotation policy, it shall be the goal of the Board to regularly
rotate Committee Chairs and members every 3-5 years while
maintaining at all times on each Committee some number of
members having reasonable tenure and experience in the Committee.
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The Governance & Nominating Committee shall review
Committee membership at least annually and recommend to the
Board any changes that may be appropriate; and the Board shall
appoint Committees annually at the meeting immediately following
the Annual Shareholders Meeting.
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Board Independence and Shareowner
Representation. The Board recognizes its duties to the
shareowners of the Corporation and believes that it can best
fulfill those responsibilities by being and acting independent
of management.
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A substantial majority of the Board shall be independent.
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The Board shall establish and periodically review independence
standards for service on the Corporations Board.
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Board members and candidates shall be periodically evaluated for
compliance with these independence standards.
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Director stock ownership guidelines shall be established to
insure that each director has sufficient meaningful long term
stake in the performance of the company to be aligned with the
interests of long term shareowners; but not so substantial to
the individuals total wealth as to potentially compromise
the directors independence or willingness to raise issues
that may adversely affect the short-term market price.
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Any director appointed by the Board to fill a vacancy shall
stand for election at the next meeting of the shareholders for
which inclusion of such nomination in the Corporations
proxy materials is practicable.
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Director Qualifications and Performance. The Board
acknowledges the importance of insuring that it has the mix of
perspectives, experience and competencies that are appropriate
to the Corporations strategies, and its business, market,
geographic, and regulatory environments. The Board also
recognizes that its effectiveness is dependent on having
directors who have the time to focus on the Corporations
issues, and who contribute to an open Board culture that
encourages frank discussion and free exchange of information.
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The Governance & Nominating Committee shall be
responsible for evaluating the mix of Board member skills
required in connection with filling any vacancy on the Board.
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The Committee shall take into account the Chief Executive
Officers views as to areas in which management desires
additional advice and counsel.
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It shall be the Boards policy that any director whose
principal employment materially changes from that in effect at
the time s/he was first selected for service on the
Corporations Board shall offer his or her resignation as a
director.
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The Board shall establish, and periodically review, a policy
limiting each directors service on other public company
Boards and Audit Committees to assure that the
Corporations directors are able to provide sufficient
focus on their responsibilities to this Board.
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The Board shall establish such tenure policies as it deems
necessary to maintain an appropriate balance between fresh
perspectives and energy and institutional experience and
knowledge of the Corporation.
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The full Boards self-assessment of its effectiveness shall
include questions regarding the preparedness and contributions
of directors generally. The Governance & Nominating
Committee shall provide feedback to directors and suggest
additional training as deemed appropriate based on this self
assessment.
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The Governance & Nominating Committee shall privately
consider measures of director effectiveness when recommending an
incumbent director for re-election.
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Directors shall be periodically offered self-assessments as a
way to communicate expectations and the factors by which
effective directorship can be measured, to encourage reflection
and self-improvement, and to provide another means for directors
to identify their requests for additional training or
orientation to assist them in discharging their duties as
directors.
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Director
Training.
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Each director is responsible for his or her own continuing
education.
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Management shall periodically identify for the Board third
party-provided continuing education programs and the Corporation
shall sponsor the attendance of any director who wishes to
attend any such program, as well as attendance at other like
programs that may be identified by the director.
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Management shall annually conduct training related to matters
within the oversight responsibilities of the Audit Committee,
and non-Audit Committee members shall be free to attend as well.
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The Corporate Secretary will be responsible for designing and
organizing an orientation program tailored to the needs of any
new director.
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Director Compensation. Compensation for the
non-management directors service to the Corporation shall
be based on the following principles:
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Total compensation shall be competitive with that of comparable
U.S. public companies in the S&P 500.
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Compensation arrangements shall be flexible enough to allow each
director to balance a mix of equity and cash according to
his/her own
needs keeping in mind the Boards mandatory guidelines for
achieving and maintaining stock ownership.
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Some portion of directors compensation will be comprised
of long-term incentives which parallel the types of long term
incentives granted by the Board to senior management.
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Political
Donations
The Corporation shall comply with all applicable federal and
state laws governing contributions of Corporate assets for
political purposes.
In accordance with law, the Corporation may administratively
support one or more federal or state political action committees
(PAC) comprised of the voluntary contributions of employees or
retirees but individual donations to such PACs shall not be
coerced in any way nor shall an individuals donation
decision affect in any way that persons employment status
or performance evaluation.
Shareholder
Rights Plan Policy
The Board will adopt or materially amend a Stockholder Rights
Plan only if, in the exercise of its fiduciary responsibilities
under Delaware law, and acting by a majority of its independent
directors, it
1-4
determines that such action is in the best interests of
Praxairs shareholders. Also, if the Board adopts or
materially amends a Stockholder Rights Plan, it will submit such
action to a non-binding shareholder vote as a separate ballot
item at the first annual meeting of shareholders occurring at
least six months after such action.
Whenever a Rights Agreement is in place, a committee of
independent directors shall evaluate the Agreement annually to
determine whether it continues to be in the best interests of
the Companys stockholders. Among the subjects of this
annual review will be consideration of whether the threshold for
calling a special meeting is appropriate in view of the
ownership profile of the company.
Independent
Auditors
The Audit Committees Charter shall provide that this
Committee is responsible for evaluating the independence of the
Corporations independent auditors, and adopting such
policies as it deems necessary to assure that independence.
The independent auditors shall report to the Audit Committee and
that Committee shall be directly responsible for the
appointment, compensation, retention and oversight of the work
of the independent auditors.
1-5
APPENDIX 2
BOARD
POLICY
DIRECTOR
INDEPENDENCE STANDARDS
To assist the Board in determining the independence of each
director, the Boards Governance & Nominating
Committee has established the following minimum Director
Independence Standards.
Independence
Standards for Board Service
A director will not be considered independent
if:
1. the director is, or has been within the last three
years, an employee of the Company;
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an immediate family member of the director is, or has been
within the last three years, an executive officer of the Company;
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3.
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the director has received, or has an immediate family member who
has received, during any twelve-month period within the last
three years, more than $100,000 in direct compensation from the
Company, other than: (a) directors fees and pension
or other forms of deferred compensation for prior service with
the Company, provided that such compensation is not contingent
on continued service, and (b) compensation received by a
directors immediate family member for service as an
employee of the Company (other than as an executive officer);
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4.
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(A) the director or an immediate family member of the
director is a current partner of a firm that is Companys
internal or external auditor; (B) the director is a current
employee of such firm; (C) the director has an immediate
family
member1
who is a current employee of such firm and who participates in
the firms audit, assurance or tax compliance (but not tax
planning) practice; or (D) the director or an immediate
family member of the director was within the last three years
(but is no longer) a partner or employee of such firm and
personally worked on the Companys audit within that time;
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5.
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a present executive officer of the Company serves or served on
the compensation committee of the board of directors of a
company that, at the same time within the last three years,
employs or employed either the director or an immediate family
member of the director as an executive officer;
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6.
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a director is a current employee, or an immediate family member
of a director is a current executive officer, of another company
that has made payments to, or received payments from, the
Company for property or services in an amount which, in any of
the last three fiscal years, exceeds the greater of
$1 million, or two percent (2%) of the other companys
consolidated gross revenues;
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7.
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a director serves as an executive officer of a
not-for-profit,
tax exempt organization, and within the preceding three years,
the Company or the Praxair Foundation made discretionary
charitable contributions to the organization in any single
fiscal year that, in the aggregate, exceeded the greater of
(a) $1 million, or (b) two percent (2%) of that
organizations consolidated gross revenues, based on the
organizations latest publicly available financial
information.
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If any director or a directors immediate family member has
or had any relationship or transaction of a type set forth in
any of the above standards, and that relationship or transaction
does not fully meet the criteria stated in the applicable
standard, then the relationship or transaction shall be
considered immaterial and deemed to not impair the
directors independence.
2-1
Independence
Standards for Audit Committee Members
In addition to the above standards, a director will not
be considered independent for purposes of service on
the Audit Committee if the director:
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receives any direct or indirect consulting, advisory or other
compensatory fee from the Company, other than compensation for
service as a director; or
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is an affiliated person of the Company (generally,
an owner of more than 10% of the Companys voting stock).
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(the interpretation and application of these two standards shall
be governed by
Rule 10A-3
of the Securities and Exchange Commission).
For purposes of these standards:
immediate family member includes a persons
spouse, parents, step-parents, children, step-children,
siblings, mothers and
fathers-in-law,
sons and
daughters-in-law,
brothers and
sisters-in-law
and anyone (other than a tenant or domestic employees) who
shares the persons home.
executive officer, when used in the context of a
public company, has the same meaning specified for the term
officer in
Rule 16a-1(f)
under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934.
Company means Praxair, Inc. and any of its
consolidated subsidiaries.
2-2
PROXY/VOTING INSTRUCTION CARD
This proxy is solicited on behalf of the Board of Directors of Praxair, Inc.
for the Annual Meeting of Shareholders on April 24, 2007
I (we) hereby authorize James S. Sawyer and James T. Breedlove, or either of them, and
each with the power to appoint his substitute, to vote as Proxy for me (us) at the Annual Meeting
of Shareholders of Praxair, Inc. to be held at the Sheraton Danbury, 18 Old Ridgebury Road,
Danbury, CT on April 24, 2007 at 9:30 A.M., or any adjournment or postponement thereof, the number
of shares of common stock of Praxair, Inc. which I (we) would be entitled to vote if personally
present. The proxies shall vote such shares as directed on the reverse side of this card and the
proxies are authorized to vote in their discretion upon such other business as may properly come
before the Annual Meeting and any adjournments or postponements thereof. I (we) revoke all proxies
heretofore given to vote at the Annual Meeting.
If I (we) properly sign and return this proxy card, my (our) shares will be voted as I (we)
specify on each Proposal. If I (we) do not specify a choice on one or more Proposals, the proxies
will vote my (our) shares as the Board of Directors recommends on each such Proposal.
For Participants in the Praxair, Inc., Praxair Distribution, Inc., Praxair Healthcare
Services, Inc., Praxair Puerto Rico, Inc. or Dow Chemical Company Employee Savings Plans: As to
those shares of Praxair, Inc. common stock, if any, that are held for me in the aforementioned
Savings Plans, I instruct the Trustee of the applicable Savings Plan to vote my shares as I have
directed on the reverse side of this proxy card. Where I do not specify a choice, my shares will be
voted in the same proportion as the trustee votes the shares for which it receives instructions.
PRAXAIR, INC.
(Continued, and to be marked, dated and signed, on the other side)
ê FOLD AND DETACH HERE ê
ANNUAL MEETING OF SHAREHOLDERS April 24, 2007 AT 9:30 A.M.
SHERATON DANBURY DANBURY, CT
IF YOU PLAN TO ATTEND THE MEETING IN PERSON, PLEASE NOTE:
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Only shareholders and their accompanying guests, and the invited guests of Praxair, will
be granted admission to the Annual Meeting. |
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To assure admittance: |
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If you hold shares of Praxair, Inc. common stock through a broker, bank or other
nominee, please bring a copy of your broker, bank or nominee statement evidencing your
ownership of Praxair common stock as of the March 1, 2007 record date |
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Please bring a photo ID, if you hold shares of record as of March 1, 2007,
including shares in certificate or book form or in the Praxair, Inc. Dividend
Reinvestment and Stock Purchase Plan (DRISP) |
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Please bring your Praxair ID if you are an employee shareholder |
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The Annual Meeting will start promptly at 9:30 A.M. on Tuesday, April 24, 2007. |
DIRECTIONS
From Points West of Danbury:
Take I-84 East to Exit 2 (Mill Plain Road) in Danbury. Go to the bottom of the ramp and turn left.
Go to the second light and turn right (Mill Plain Road). Go to the next light and turn right (Old
Ridgebury Road). Go up the hill and the Sheraton Danbury is on your left.
From Points East of Danbury:
Take I-84 West to Exit 2A (Old Ridgebury Road) in Danbury. The exit ramp circles around and up over
the highway. The Sheraton Danbury is on your left.
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BY MARKING THIS CARD, YOU ARE VOTING ALL SHARES OF YOUR PRAXAIR COMMON STOCK
INCLUDING THOSE HELD IN THE SAVINGS PLAN(S).
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Vote MUST be
indicated (X) in
Black or Blue Ink
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x |
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With- |
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1. Election of Directors. |
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hold |
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For All |
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All |
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Except |
The Board
of Directors recommends a vote FOR the nominees listed below |
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Nominees: |
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(01) José P. Alves |
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(02) Ronald L. Kuehn, Jr., |
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(03) H. Mitchell Watson, Jr., |
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(04) Robert L. Wood |
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(INSTRUCTIONS: To withhold authority to vote for any individual nominee, mark the For All
Except box and write that nominees name in the space provided below. Such a mark will
be deemed a vote FOR all nominees other than those listed as exceptions.) |
The Board of Directors recommends a vote AGAINST
PROPOSALS 2 AND 3, and FOR Proposal 4.
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For |
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2.
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Shareholder proposal regarding director election process.
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3.
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Shareholder proposal regarding stockholder rights plan vote.
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4.
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Proposal to ratify the appointment of the Independent Auditor.
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In their discretion, the Proxies are authorized to vote upon such other business as may properly
come before the meeting or any adjournment or postponement thereof. |
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Check here if you
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Consent to future electronic delivery of Annual Report/Proxy Statement
(see explanation in the Proxy Statement) |
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Check here if you
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Have written comments or change of address on this card |
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Please be sure to sign and date
this Proxy in the box below.
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Stockholder sign above |
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Co-holder (if any) sign above |
Please sign name exactly as it appears on this card. Joint owners
should each sign. Attorneys, trustees, executors, administrators,
custodians, guardians or corporate officers should give full title.
* * * IF YOU WISH TO VOTE BY INTERNET OR TELEPHONE, PLEASE READ THE INSTRUCTIONS BELOW * * *
é FOLD AND DETACH HERE IF YOU ARE VOTING BY MAIL é
PROXY VOTING INSTRUCTIONS
Stockholders of record have three ways to vote:
1. By Mail; or
2. By Telephone (using a Touch-Tone Phone); or
3. By Internet.
Vote by Telephone
Call Toll-Free on a Touch-Tone Phone anytime prior to
3 A.M. Eastern Time, April 24, 2007.
1-888-216-1276
Vote by Internet
Prior to 3 A.M. Eastern Time, April 24, 2007, go to
https://www.proxyvotenow.com/pxa
A telephone or Internet vote authorizes the named proxies to vote your shares in the same
manner as if you marked, signed, dated and returned this proxy. Please note telephone and Internet
votes must be cast prior to 3 A.M. Eastern Time, April 24, 2007. It is not necessary to return this
proxy if you vote by telephone or Internet.
Please note that the last vote received, whether by telephone, Internet or by mail, will be the vote counted.
HOW TO RECEIVE YOUR ANNUAL REPORT AND PROXY STATEMENT ON-LINE:
Save Praxair future postage and printing expense by consenting to receive future annual reports and proxy
statements on-line on the Internet. Whether you vote by Internet, by telephone or by mail, you will be given an
opportunity to consent to future electronic delivery. See the proxy statement for more information about this
option. For your convenience, these materials are now available for viewing and downloading as follows:
2006 Annual Report: www.praxair.com/annualreport
2007 Notice of Meeting and Proxy Statement: www.praxair.com/proxy