================================================================================ 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]
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[ ] Preliminary Proxy Statement
[ ] CONFIDENTIAL, FOR USE OF THE COMMISSION ONLY (AS PERMITTED BY RULEConfidential, for use of the commission only (as permitted by
Rule 14a-6(e)(2))
[X] Definitive Proxy Statement
[ ] Definitive Additional Materials
[ ] Soliciting Material Pursuant to Section 240.14a-12
ESCALADE, INCORPORATED
(NAME OF REGISTRANT AS SPECIFIED IN ITS CHARTER)
(NAME OF PERSON(S) FILING PROXY STATEMENT, IF OTHER THAN THE REGISTRANT)(Name of Registrant as Specified in its Charter)
(Name of Person(s) filing Proxy Statement, if other than the Registrant)
Payment of Filing Fee (Check the appropriate box):
[X] No fee required.
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(1) Title of each class of securities to which transaction applies:........
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pursuant to Exchange Act Rule 0-11 (Set forth the amount on which the
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================================================================================
ESCALADE, INCORPORATED
Notice of Annual Stockholders' Meeting
April 22, 2006
9:0027, 2007
7:30 a.m. Eastern StandardCentral Daylight Savings Time
Dear Stockholder:
You are cordially invited to attend our 20062007 Annual Stockholders'
Meeting, which will be held at 9:007:30 a.m. Eastern StandardCentral Daylight Savings Time on
Saturday,Friday, April 22, 200627, 2007 at the Sheraton Indianapolis Hotel & Suites, 8787 Keystone
Crossing, Indianapolis, IN 46240principal executive offices of Escalade,
Incorporated located at 817 Maxwell Avenue, Evansville, Indiana 47711.
We are holding the annual meeting for the following purposes:
1. To elect to the Board seven (7) Directors as set forth herein;
2. To approve a special grant of 2,000 stock optionsthe proposal described in the Proxy Statement to
each ofadopt the Company's
five non-employee directors elected atEscalade, Incorporated 2007 Incentive Plan attached
as Annex 1 to the Annual Meeting;Proxy Statement; and
3. To transact such other business that may properly come before
the meeting or any adjournment thereof.
These items are fully described in the proxy statement, which is part
of this notice. We have not received notice of other matters that may be
properly presented at the annual meeting.
To ensure that your vote is promptly recorded, please vote as soon as
possible, even if you plan to attend the meeting in person. Please sign, mark
and return the Proxy enclosed with this Notice at your earliest convenience.
By order of the Board of Directors
Terry D. Frandsen
V.P. Finance, CFO & Secretary
Wabash,Evansville, Indiana March 18, 200627, 2007
1
PROXY STATEMENT
The Board of Directors of Escalade, Incorporated (hereinafter referred to as
"Escalade" or the "Company"), headquartered at 251 Wedcor817 Maxwell Avenue, Wabash,Evansville,
Indiana 46992 ((260) 569-7208),47711 (812) 467-4449, is soliciting proxies, the form of which is
enclosed, for the Annual Meeting of Stockholders to be held on Saturday,Friday, April 22, 2006,27,
2007, at 9:007:30 a.m. Eastern StandardCentral Daylight Savings Time. Each of the 13,011,14213,039,568 shares
of common stock outstanding on February 21, 200623, 2007 is entitled to one vote on all
matters acted upon at the meeting and only Stockholdersstockholders of record on the books
of the Company at the close of business on February 21, 200623, 2007 will be entitled to
vote at the meeting, either in person or by proxy.
The shares represented by all properly executed proxies received by the Company
will be voted as designated and each not designated will be voted affirmatively.
Unless discretionary authority is withheld, all other matters coming before the
meeting will be voted according to the best judgment of the proxies. Any proxy
given by a shareholderstockholder of record may be revoked at any time before it is voted,
by written notice to the Company's Secretary, by execution of a later dated
proxy, or by a personal vote at the Annual Meeting. This proxy statement is
being mailed to shareholdersstockholders on or about March 18, 2006.30, 2007.
The expense of soliciting proxies will be borne by the Company. Proxies will be
solicited principally by mail, but may also be solicited by Directors, Officers,directors, officers,
and other regular employees of the Company, who will receive no compensation in
addition to their regular salaries. Bankers and others who hold stock in trust
will be asked to send proxy materials to the beneficial owners of the stock, and
the Company may reimburse them for their expenses.
The holders of a majority of the Company's outstanding Common Stockcommon stock must be
present or represented by proxy at the Annual Meeting to constitute a quorum.
The seven (7) nominees receiving the greatest number of votes cast at the Annual
Meeting upon the presence of a quorum will be elected as directors. A properly
executed proxy marked "Withhold Authority to Vote" with respect to the election
of one or more directors will not be voted with respect to the director or
directors indicated, although it will be counted for purposes of determining
whether there is a quorum present at the Annual Meeting. The persons named as
proxies in the enclosed proxy will vote for the election of the nominees named
below unless authority to vote is withheld.
For each other item presented at the Annual Meeting, the affirmative vote of the
holders of a majority of the Company's shares present or represented by proxy at
the Annual Meeting and entitled to vote on the item will be required for
approval. A properly executed proxy marked "Abstain" with respect to any such
matter will not be voted, although it will be counted for purposes of
determining whether there is a quorum present at the Annual Meeting.
Accordingly, an abstention will have the effect of a negative vote.
If you hold your shares in "street name" through a broker or other nominee, your
broker or nominee may not be permitted to exercise voting discretion with
respect to some of the matters to be acted upon. Thus, if you do not give your
broker or nominee specific instructions, your shares may not be voted on those
matters and will not be counted in determining the number of shares necessary
for approval. Shares represented by such "broker non-votes" will, however, be
counted in determining whether there is a quorum.
The Annual Report of the Company for theits fiscal year of 20052006 is being mailed to you
with this proxy statement, but such report and financial statements are not a
part of this proxy statement.
2
CERTAIN BENEFICIAL OWNERS
Under Rule 13(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, a beneficial owner of a
security is any person who directly or indirectly has or shares voting power or
investment power over such security. Such beneficial owner under this definition
need not enjoy the economic benefit of such securities. The following table sets
forth certain information regarding beneficial ownership of the Company's Common
Stockcommon
stock by its Executive Officers and by the only stockholders deemed to be
beneficial owners of 5% or more of the Common Stockcommon stock of the Company as of
February 21, 2006.23, 2007.
2
Name and Address Amount and Nature Percentage
Title of Class Of Beneficial Owner Of Ownership Of Class
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Executive Officers
------------------
Common Stockstock Robert E. Griffin 3,320,7503,319,750 (1) 25.5% (1)
817 Maxwell Avenue
Evansville, Indiana 47717
Common Stock C. W. "Bill" Reed 965,573stock Daniel A. Messmer 202,668 (2) 7.4%1.5% (2)
251 Wedcor817 Maxwell Avenue
Wabash,Evansville, Indiana 4699247717
Common Stockstock Terry D. Frandsen 88,644115,025 (3) 0.7%0.9% (3)
251 Wedcor817 Maxwell Avenue
Wabash,Evansville, Indiana 4699247711
Other 5% Stockholders
---------------------
Common Stockstock Andrew and Charmenz Guagenti 1,072,9421,093,842 (4) 8.2%8.4% (4)
216 Water Street
Newburgh,2641 N. Collen Avenue
Evansville, Indiana 4763047715
Common Stockstock Royce & Associates, LLC 701,000 5.4%789,800 6.1%
1414 Avenue of the Americas
New York, NY 10019
(1) Includes 944,316 shares held by a Family Limited Partnership; 1,800,000
shares held by a Family Limited Liability Corporation; and 67,69269,692 shares
held by his children. Mr. Griffin disclaims beneficial ownership of those
shares. Also includes 2,598 shares issuable upon the exercise of
outstanding stock options.
(2) Includes 160,000102,500 shares issuable upon the exercise of outstanding stock
options and 7,857 shares held by his children. Mr. Reed disclaims
beneficial ownership of those shares.options.
(3) Includes 85,000110,000 shares issuable upon exercise of outstanding stock
options.
(4) Includes 416,93049,016 shares held by Mr. Guagenti, in his name, in his directed
IRA, or as Trustee, and 656,01254,370 shares owned by Mrs. Guagenti directly, in
her directed IRA, or as Trustee. Mr. Guagenti is also the beneficial owner
of 990,456 shares held by partnerships for which he is the managing
partner, of which he and Mrs. Guagenti own 488,893 shares and 376,984
shares, respectively, by virtue of their partnership interests therein. Mr.
and Mrs. Guagenti each disclaim beneficial ownership of the shares held by
the other.
ITEM NO. 1
ELECTION OF DIRECTORS
The Board of Directors currently has six members and the Board has voted to
setincrease the size of the Board atto seven (7) members.
Keith P. Williams, currently servingmembers as a Director, has elected, for personal
reasons, to retire atof the enddate of his current term and is not standing for
reelection.the Annual
Meeting. The nominees presented for election include the six individuals who are
current directors and one new independent candidate.nominee, Daniel A. Messmer, the Company's Chief
Executive Officer. Those persons whose names are set forth below are standing
for election. The term of office of the Directorsdirectors and nominee standing for
election as directors at the Annual Meeting will be until the next annual
meeting of the stockholders and until their successors are elected and
qualified.
Director candidates are nominated by the independent members of the Board of
Directors, as the Company does not believe that it is necessary to have a
separate Nominating Committee given the small size of the Board. The Board has
determined that a potential candidate to be nominated to serve as a director
3
should have the following primary attributes: high achievement expectations with
regard to increasing shareholderstockholder value; uncompromising position on maintaining
ethics; conservative attitude towards financial accounting and disclosure; and
should be a shareholderstockholder of the Company to bring the perspective of a shareholderstockholder
3
to the Board. To date, the Board has not deemed it necessary to engage a third
party search firm to assist in identifying suitable candidates for directors,
but has the authority to do so in the future. No fees were paid to any such
search firm in connection with the nominees for directors named in this proxy
statement. The Board believes that the existing Board members and executive
management of the Company have sufficient networks of business contacts that
will likely form the candidate pool from which nominees will be identified. Once
a candidate is identified, as many members of the Board as feasible will meet
with such candidate and the Board as a whole subsequently will evaluate the
candidates using the criteria outlined above. The independent Board members will
then make the final determination of whether or not to nominate the candidate.
InThe Board is increasing the size of the Board by one member and is nominating
Daniel A. Messmer, the Company's Chief Executive Officer, to fill that seat. Mr.
Messmer was appointed to the position of Chief Executive Officer and President
in August, 2006, and has participated in Board meetings since that date but has
not formally been a member of the Board. The Board believes that the
participation of the Company's Chief Executive Officer in Board matters is
essential to the effectiveness of the Board and that Mr. Messmer should formally
be elected to the Board at the Annual Meeting. The Board also believes that Mr.
Messmer satisfies the criteria set forth above in selecting him as a nominee for
director to fill the Board seat being vacated by Mr.
Keith Williams at the Annual Meeting, the Board followed the process described
in the preceding paragraph. Mr. Edward Williams, a current independent Director
of the Company, identified Mr. Richard F. Baalman, Jr. as a nominee who was then
evaluated by all members of the Board prior to being nominated.director.
The Company does not have a formal process by which stockholders can propose
nominees to serve as directors. If any stockholder would desire to submit the
names and qualifications of potential candidates for directors, the Board would
evaluate the possible nominee according to the above criteria and would consider
such person in comparison to all other candidates and the number of directors
then constituting the Board. The Company has not received any such proposals for
this Annual Meeting. Accordingly, the Board has made no rejections or refusals
of such candidates.
Information with respect to each of the nominees for the Board of Directors is
set forth as follows:
Shares of Common Stockstock of the
Company Beneficially owned on
February 21, 2006
--------------------------------23, 2007
----------------------------
Name and Principal Occupation Director Percent of
During the Past Five Years Since (1) Age Number Class
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Robert E. Griffin - Chairman since May, 1999,1999. Previously Interim 1973 71 3,320,750 72 3,319,750(1) 25.5%(1)
25.5% (1)Chief Executive Officer from April 2006 until August 2006,
Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of the Company since February 1994, Previouslyand President
and Chief Executive Officer since 19761976.
Richard F. Baalmann, Jr. - President of Bamm Inc. and related 2006 46 2,000(6) 0.0%(6)
companies since 1988, which operate ACE Hardware stores in the
St. Louis, Missouri area. Mr. Baalmann serves on the ACE
Hardware Corporation Board of Directors since 1999 and is
currently Chairman of its Retail Supply Chain Committee.
Blaine E. Matthews, Jr. - Director and Corporate Secretary of 1965 68 346,833 69 351,522(2) 2.7%(2) 2.7% (2)
of
Matthews 1812 House, Inc. since 1979, a mail order supplier of
cakes and food gifts
C. W. "Bill" Reedgifts.
Daniel A. Messmer - President and Chief Executive Officer 1997 59 965,573 (3) 7.4% (3)Nominee 53 202,668(7) 1.5%(7)
since May, 1999,August, 2006. Previously, President and Chief Operating Officer of the Company since
February, 1994 andApril, 2006, President of Martin Yale Industries, Inc. since
1980
Edward E. (Ned) Williams - Founder2005 and President of 2004 45 385,359 (4) 3.0% (4)
Ballast Tools, Incorporated, a manufacturer of industrial
equipment and supplies used for railway track maintenance.
Mr. Edward Williams is also Vice President of Good Earth
Tools, Inc. (4)Escalade Sports since 1996.
George Savitsky - Founder and managing partnerpresident of 2004 67 17,609 (6) 0.1% (6) Savitsky, Satin & Company,2004 68 22,958(4) 0.2%(4)
Bacon, a business management company specializing in managing
the financial affairs of people in the entertainment industry.
Mr. Savitsky is a certified public accountantaccountant.
4
Richard D. White - Mr. White is currently a Managing Director 2004 52 15,315 (5) 0.1% 53 20,448(5) 0.2%(5)
at Oppenheimer & Co. Inc. and head of its Private Equity
Investment Department. From 2003 until mid 2004 Mr. White was
the founder and president of Aeolus Capital Group LLC, an
investment management group focused on small capitalization
valued oriented investments in public companies and control
oriented private equity investments. From 1985 until 2002,
Mr. White served as a Managing Director of CIBC Capital
Partners as well as a Managing Director and General Partner of
its predecessor by acquisition, Oppenheimer and Co., Inc.
Mr. White also serves as a director of ActivIdentity Corp.
and,
G-III Apparel Group, Ltd., and Lakes Entertainment, Inc.
Mr. White is a certified public accountant and holds an
undergraduate degree in Economics from Tufts University in
Medford, Massachusetts and an M.B.A. in Finance and Accounting
from the Wharton Graduate School of the University of
Pennsylvania in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
Richard F. Baalmann, Jr.Edward E. Williams - Founder and President (1988 to present) of Bamm NomineeBallast Tools, 2004 46 None 0.0%390,600(3) 3.0%(3)
Incorporated, a manufacturer of industrial equipment and
supplies used for railway track maintenance. Mr. Williams is
also Vice President of Good Earth Tools, Inc. and related companies, which operate ACE Hardware stores
in the St. Louis, Missouri area. Mr. Baalmann serves on the
ACE Hardware Corporation Board of Directors (1999 to present)
and is currently Chairman of the Audit Committee of same.(4)
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
All Directors and Executive Officers as a Group (8 4,424,971 33.3%
Individuals) 5,140,083 39.5%
(1) See note (1) under "Certain Beneficial Owners".
(2) Includes 83,000 shares held by his spouse and 2,000 shares held by his
children. Mr. Blaine Matthews disclaims beneficial ownership of those
shares. Also includes 5,4346,282 shares issuable upon the exercise of
outstanding stock options.
(3) See note (2) under "Certain Beneficial Owners".
(4) Includes 37,038 shares owned by Good Earth Tools, Inc., of which Mr. Edward
Williams owns 33% of the outstanding voting stock and is an executive
officer and 337,302 shares owned by KPW Family Limited Partnership, of
which Mr. Williams is one of three partners. Mr. Williams disclaims
beneficial ownership of these shares. Also includes 5363,616 shares issuable
upon the exercise of outstanding stock options.
(4) Includes 3,652 shares issuable upon the exercise of outstanding stock
options.
(5) Includes 5363,580 shares issuable upon the exercise of outstanding stock
options.
(6) Includes 5362,000 shares issuable upon the exercise of outstanding stock
options.
(7) Includes 102,500 shares issuable upon the exercise of outstanding stock
options.
While there is no reason to believe that any of the persons nominated will,
prior to the date of the meeting, refuse or be unable to accept the nomination,
should any person nominated so refuse or become unable to accept, it is the
intention of the persons named in the proxy to vote for such other person or
persons as the Directors recommend.
The Board does not have a formal policy regarding director attendance at the
Annual Meeting. Typically, the Board holds its annual organizational meeting
directly following the Annual Meeting, which results in most directors being
able to attend the Annual Meeting.
In 2005, all seven directors elected at the
Annual Meeting were in attendance at that meeting.
The Board has determined that all of the above named incumbent directors and
nominee for director have met the independence standards of Rule 4200(a)(15) of
the National Association of Securities Dealers listing standards, with the
exceptions of Messrs. Griffin and ReedMessmer who are executive officers of the
Company.
5
EXECUTIVE OFFICERS OF THE REGISTRANT
The following is a list of the names and ages of all of the current executive
officers of the Company indicating all positions and offices held by each such
person as of the date of this Report.proxy statement. Mr. Griffin and Mr. ReedMessmer have
served the Company and/or its subsidiaries in various executive capacities
throughout the past five years. See "ELECTION OF DIRECTORS." Mr. Frandsen joined
the companyCompany in October, 2002 as Vice President of Finance. He was named Chief
Financial Officer in September, 2003. Prior to joining the Company, Mr. Frandsen
served as the Chief Operating Officer of Seiko Instruments USA, Inc. from 1998.
All such persons have been elected to serve until the next annual election of
officers and their successors are elected, or until their earlier resignation or
removal.
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
First Elected as
an Executive
Name Age as of February 21 200623, 2007 Offices and Positions Held Officer
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Robert E. Griffin 7172 Chairman 12/1976
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
C. W. "Bill" Reed 59----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Daniel A. Messmer 53 CEO and President 2/199404/2006
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Terry D. Frandsen 4849 V.P. Finance, CFO, Secretary 10/2002
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
BOARD OF DIRECTORS, ITS COMMITTEES, MEETINGS, AND FUNCTIONS
The Board of Directors of the Company currently consists of two membersone member who areis an
executive officersofficer (Robert E. Griffin and C.W. ("Bill") Reed)Griffin) and five independent members (Blaine E.
Matthews, Jr., Keith P. Williams, Edward E. Williams, Richard D. White, George Savitsky and George Savitsky)Richard
F. Baalmann, Jr.). If elected as a director at the Annual Meeting, Daniel A.
Messmer is an executive officer of the Company and will not be considered an
independent director.
During 2005,2006, all Directors attended 100% of all meetings of the Board of
Directors and the committees on which they serve, except for Keith P. Williams
who attended 71% of all such meetings.served. The Board of Directors had
four meetings,
of which Mr. Williams missed two meetings for health reasons.meetings. The independent directors held regular executive sessions at each
of the four Board Meetings. The Board has designated Mr. Blaine MathewsMatthews as a
lead or presiding director to chair those executive sessions.
The Company has a standing Audit Committee of the Board of Directors composed of
Blaine E. Matthews, Jr., Chairman, Edward E. Williams and George Savitsky. Each
of these members meets the requirements for independence set forth in the
Listing Standards of the National Association of Securities Dealers, Inc. The
Board has also determined that Blaine E. Matthews, Jr. is anand George Savitsky are
audit committee financial expert.experts. The Audit Committee as a whole held fourfive
meetings in 2005.2006. At threeall five meetings the committee met with the independent
auditors and management to review the interim financial information contained in
each quarterly earnings announcement. The main functions performed by the Audit
Committee are to (1) review with the independent auditors their observations on
internal controls of the Company and the competency of financial accounting
personnel, (2) review with the chief accounting officer and independent
auditors, the accounting for specific items or transactions as well as
alternative accounting treatments and their effects on earnings, (3) engage the
firm of independent certified public accountants to be hired by the Company and
review that firm's independence, and (4) approve all audit and non-audit
services performed by the Company's independent auditors. The Board of Directors
has adopted a written charter for the Audit Committee which can be found on the
Company's website at:
www.escaladeinc.com/OVERVIEW/Governance/Audit_Committee_Charter.pdf
- -------------------------------------------------------------------
The Board of Directors has a Compensation Committee comprised entirely of
independent directors; Richard D. White, Chairman, Richard F. Baalmann, Jr. and
George Savitsky. Prior to his retirement from the Board of Directors effective
as of the Company's 2006 annual meeting, Keith P. Williams served on the
Compensation Committee and George Savitsky.
This committeealso was an independent director. Following his
election to the Board of Directors at the 2006 annual meeting, Mr. Baalmann
replaced Keith Williams on the Compensation Committee. The Compensation
Committee met twothree times in 20052006 to review salaries and compensation levels
within the Company. This committeeThe Compensation Committee also is responsible for awards of
stock options and met one time in 20052006 to review the granting of options. The
Board of Directors has not adopted a written charter for the Compensation
Committee.
As discussed above, the Board of Directors has no nominating committee.
6
The Board of Directors has adopted the Escalade, Incorporated Code of Business
Conduct and Ethics which may be found on the Company's website at:
www.escaladeinc.com/OVERVIEW/Governance/Conduct.htm.
- ----------------------------------------------------
All employees and Directors of the Company including its chief executive officer and senior
financial officers, are subject to compliance with the
Code.
6
Stockholders may communicate directly with the Board of Directors in writing by
sending a letter to the Board at: Escalade, Incorporated, 251 Wedcor817 Maxwell Avenue,
Wabash,Evansville, Indiana 46992.47711. All communications directed to the Board will be
received and processed by the Company's office of the Chief Financial Officer
and will be transmitted to the Chairman of the Audit Committee without any
editing or screening by such office.
SectionSECTION 16 (a) Beneficial Ownership Reporting ComplianceBENEFICIAL OWNERSHIP REPORTING COMPLIANCE
To the best of the Company's knowledge, all of the Company's directors, officers
and 10% or more shareholdersstockholders have timely filed with the Securities and Exchange
Commission all reports required to be so filed pursuant to Section 16 of the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934 for 2005.
EXECUTIVE2006.
COMPENSATION DISCUSSION AND ANALYSIS (CD&A)
Compensation Philosophy
The Company's philosophy in setting compensation policies for its named
executive officers is to align pay with performance, while at the same time
providing competitive compensation that allows the Company to retain and attract
executive talent. The Compensation Committee, composed entirely of independent
Directors, establishes, approves and evaluates the Company's compensation
policies applicable to the named executive officers.
Throughout this proxy statement, all references to the "named executive
officers" means Robert E. Griffin, Daniel A. Messmer, Terry D. Frandsen and C.W.
"Bill" Reed, the individuals identified under "EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION - Summary
Compensation Table." Mr. Reed served as the Company's Chief Executive Officer
until April, 2006, after which Mr. Griffin acted as the interim Chief Executive
Officer until the Board named Mr. Messmer the new Chief Executive Officer and
President in August, 2006. Mr. Frandsen served as the Company's Chief Financial
Officer for all of 2006
The Compensation Committee strongly believes that executive compensation should
be directly linked to continuous improvements in corporate performance and
increases in stockholder value. Consequently the Compensation Committee has
adopted the following tableguidelines for use in evaluating executive compensation:
o Provide a competitive total compensation package that enables Escalade
to attract and retain key executive talent;
o Align all pay programs with Escalade's annual and long-term business
strategies and objectives; and
o Provide a mix of base and performance-leveraged variable compensation
that directly links executive compensation to the performance of
Escalade and stockholder return.
Compensation Program; Mix of Pay Components
Consistent with the above philosophy, the Compensation Committee currently
utilizes the following components of compensation for the Company's named
executive officers:
o Base salary;
o Annual incentive cash bonuses;
o Long-term equity incentives, historically in the form of stock options;
and
o Health, welfare and other benefits
Executive compensation is based on a summarypay-for-performance philosophy.
Consequently, a significant portion of annual and long-term compensation for the
named executive officers is at-risk. This provides additional upside potential
and downside risk for the Company's Chief Executive Officer and Chief Financial
Officer, recognizing that the individuals serving in these roles have greater
influence on the performance of the Company.
7
With the exception of employees working under collective bargaining agreements,
all employees of the Company, including the named executive officers, are
employed at will, without employment agreements, severance payment arrangements
or change in control agreements.
The Role of the Compensation Committee; Method of Determining Amount of Total
Compensation
The Compensation Committee is responsible for the approval and administration of
compensation paidprograms for the named executive officers. The Committee focuses on
the attraction and retention of key executives and, when making decisions,
considers the Company's compensation philosophy, the achievement of business
goals set by the Company, to
Messrs. Griffin, Reedrelevant peer data, the competitive environment in
which the Company competes for talent, how the Company is positioned for the
future, and Frandsen, itsrecommendations made by the Company's Chairman and Chief Executive
Officer. While the Committee primarily focuses on compensation for the named
executive officers, the Committee also reviews the compensation of certain other
key employees, such as the subsidiary and division heads, and the
appropriateness and fairness of the allocation of annual incentive compensation
among the participants in such plans at the subsidiary level.
In 2006, the Committee took the following steps to ensure that it effectively
carries out its responsibilities:
o Engaged Frederic W. Cook & Co., Inc., an internationally recognized
compensation consulting firm to advise on executive officer
compensation, to provide the Committee with relevant market data and to
advise the Committee on alternatives when making compensation decisions
for the last three
years.
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Long Term
Annual Compensation Compensation
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Other Annual
Name and Principal Compensation ($) Stock Options All Other
Position Year Salary ($) Bonus ($) (2) (# Shares) Compensation ($)
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Robert E. Griffin 2003 107,383 -- 64,475 -- 3,214
Chairman of the Board 2004 101,641 -- 70,523 2,598 3,139
2005 87,673 (1) -- 77,139 -- 3,025 (3)
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
C. W. "Bill" Reed 2003 239,435 600,869 32,237 30,000 14,825
President & CEO 2004 253,162 482,755 35,261 30,000 13,756
Director 2005 262,716 (1) 512,459 38,569 40,000 14,756 (3)
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Terry D. Frandsen 2003 101,241 200,290 -- 15,000 --
VP Finance, CFO 2004 123,789 160,918 -- 30,000 8,183
Secretary 2005 146,154 170,820 -- 40,000 9,525 (3)
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
(1) This amount also includes director feesnamed executive officers. Except for Mr. Griffin ($37,500) and Mr.
Reed ($20,500).
(2) The amounts shown are the interest earned pursuant to the Company's
deferred compensation plan.
(3) In 2005, the amounts shown include the Company's following contributions to
the 401K retirement plan: Mr. Griffin ($3,025); Mr. Reed ($14,000); and Mr.
Frandsen ($8,769). The amounts shown also include the dollar value of the
following group term life insurance premiums paidservices provided by
the Company: Mr. Reed
($756) and Mr. Frandsen ($756).
7
Stock Options
The following table shows information concerning individual grants of options to
purchase the Company's common stock made in 2005 to the Company's executive
officers pursuant to the 1997 Incentive Stock Option Plan.
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
INDIVIDUAL GRANTS IN 2005
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Percent of Potential Realized Value
Total Options at Assumed Annual Rates of Stock
Options Granted To Price Appreciation for Option Term
Granted Employees in Exercise Price Expiration (2)
Name (# Shares) Fiscal Year ($/Share) Date -----------------------------------
5%($) 10% ($)
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Robert E.
Griffin -- -- -- -- -- --
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
C.W. "Bill"
Reed 40,000 (1) 16.0% $13.40 2/17/10 684,087 (3) 836,603 (3)
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Terry D.
Frandsen 40,000 (1) 16.0% $13.40 2/17/10 684,087 (3) 836,603 (3)
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
(1) Options granted pursuant to the Company's 1997 Incentive Stock Option
Plan under the terms of which the right to exercise becomes vested in
equal installments over a 4 year period beginningFrederic W. Cook &Co, Inc. at the end of the
first year. The exercise price is equal to the market price on day of
grant.
(2) The potential realizable gain equals the product of the number of
shares underlying the stock option grant and the difference between the
assumed stock price and the exercise price of each option.
(3) Calculated based upon assumed stock prices for the Company's common
stock of $17.10 and $21.58 respectively, if 5% and 10% annual rates of
stock appreciation are achieved over the full term of the option.
The following table shows information on the Company's executive officers
exercise of stock options during 2005 and the number of outstanding stock
options held by such persons and the possible value of such options as of
December 31, 2005.
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
AGGREGATED OPTION EXERCISES IN 2005 AND YEAR END OPTION VALUES
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Number of Unexercised Value of Unexercised
Shares Acquired Options at 12/31/05 In-The-Money Options at
On Exercise Value Realized Exercisable/ 12/31/05 Exercisable/
Name (#) ($) (1) Unexercisable (#) Unexercisable ($) (2)
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Robert E. Griffin 4,452 44,609 6,616 / -- 32,023 / --
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
C.W. "Bill" Reed 45,000 479,250 150,000 / 70,000 685,200 / 112,800
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Terry D. Frandsen -- -- 37,500 / 47,500 35,850 / 35,850
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
(1) Value is calculated by determining the difference between the per share
exercise price and the per share fair market value of the common stock
as of the exercise date, multiplied by the number of shares acquired
upon the exercise of the options.
(2) The value of unexercised options is calculated by determining the
difference between $11.77 per share, the last reported sale price of
the common stock on the Nasdaq National Market on December 30, 2005,
and the exercise price of the option as of such date, multiplied by the
number of shares subject to the option. No value is calculated if the
option exercise price is less than the market price.
8
Compensation of Directors
During 2005, Directors of the Company were compensated as follows:
Annual Retainer Fees
Chairman of the Board 25,000
Chairman of the Audit Committee 2,000
Chairmanrequest of the Compensation
Committee, 2,000
Director 7,000
Meeting Attendance Fees
In-person Board meeting attendance 4,000
Telephonic Board meeting attendance 1,000
Committee meeting attendance 1,000there is no other affiliation between the consultant and the
Company or the Company's management.
o Conducted a review of compensation paid by companies that are similar
in terms of industry, business, market capitalization, asset size and
geographic footprint. The Chairmancompetitive market data for the study came
from two recognized external compensation survey sources, and was
deemed to fairly represent the labor markets in which the Company
competes for executive talent. The market information served as one of
the factors in determining the total compensation for the Company's
executive officers.
o Reviewed all compensation components for the Company's named executive
officers.
o Together with the Board does not receive a separate retainer as a Director,
but does receive any meeting attendance fees earned.of Directors, can electsubjectively reviewed and
evaluated the level of performance of the Company and of each executive
officer, including the Chief Executive Officer and Chief Financial
Officer, in order to receive some or all of these fees in sharesdetermine current and future appropriate
compensation levels.
o Conducted an annual review of the Company's common stock pursuantcompensation philosophy to
ensure that it remains appropriate given the Company's strategic
objectives.
Except for the 1997 Director Stock Compensation and Option Plan which was
approved by shareholdersstockholders at the 1997 annual meeting. Those
sharesmeeting, the Compensation Committee
does not participate in any programs which they administer.
Role of Executive Officers in Compensation Decisions
Mr. Griffin, the Company's Chairman and optionsformer Chief Executive Officer,
sometimes participates in Compensation Committee meetings and the compensation
of the Company's other named executive officers, but does not make any
recommendations regarding his own compensation. Consistent with the Committee's
past practices with Mr. Reed, the Company's Chief Executive Officer until April,
2006, Mr. Messmer, as the Company's current Chief Executive Officer, will make
recommendations regarding the compensation for Mr. Frandsen, the Company's Chief
Financial Officer, but will not be issued until April 24, 2006. In 2005 there were
5,539 shares issuedmake recommendations for either himself or Mr.
Griffin. Although the Committee considers recommendations by Messrs. Griffin and
2,767 stock options issued pursuantMessmer along with data provided by its other advisors, the Committee retains
full discretion to set all compensation for the plan. The
number of shares to be issued will be calculated based on the aggregate director
fees deferred by the director since the 2005 Annual Meeting divided by $13.88,
the closing share price on the first business day following the 2005 Annual
Meeting. Each director who elected to receive shares will also be granted stock
options in an amount equal to one half of the shares issued to the director at
an exercise price equal to the per share market price on April 24, 2006.
Compensation Committee Report on Executive CompensationCompany's named executive
officers.
8
Base Salary
The Compensation Committee ofseeks to compensate the Board of Directors determines executive
compensation and stock option grants. The Compensation Committee is comprised
entirely of independent Directors. Based on the Company's past compensation
practices, the Company does not currently believe that Section 162 (m) of the
Internal Revenue Code, which limits the deductibility of executive compensation
in certain events, will adversely affect the Company's ability to obtain a tax
deduction for compensation paid to its executive officers.
Report of the Compensation Committee
The Company's compensation package for itsnamed executive officers
consists primarilycompetitively within the industry while at the same time designing compensation
components that base a significant portion of base salary, incentive profit sharing bonuses and stock option grants, all of
which is determined by the Compensation Committee.total compensation on performance.
In general, base salary levels are set at the beginning of each year at levels
believed by thisthe Compensation Committee to be sufficient to attract and retain
qualified executives when considered with the other components of the Company's
compensation structure. The primary considerations in determining whether base
salaries will be adjusted is the Company's income level generated in the
previous year and any changes in level of responsibility. The Compensation
Committee also subjectively reviews the individual performance of each named
executive officer. For
2005,officer, based on the performance of the Company and the individual's
level of contribution towards that performance.
Accordingly, for fiscal 2006 the Compensation Committee established base
salaries for the Company's key executives with the intent to motivate
performance by providing significant upside potential through incentive
compensation and less on guaranteed compensation in the form of salaries. The
Compensation Committee does not target any specific benchmark for base salary
levels for its key executives compared to comparable companies within the
Company's industries, but generally believes that base salaries should be in the
lower half of such comparisons coupled with significant opportunities to achieve
high incentive, performance based compensation. The Compensation Committee
considered the scope of and accountability associated with each executive
officer's position in addition to such factors as the performance and experience
of each executive officer when setting base salary levels for fiscal 2006.
In 2006, the Compensation Committee increased the base salary for C.W. "Bill"
Reed, the Company's Chief Executive Officer as of the beginning of the Company's
fiscal year by 12.7% to $275,000. The Compensation Committee also increased the
base salary for Terry D. Frandsen, the Company's Chief Financial Officer, by
16.7% to $175,000. The Compensation Committee believed that base salariessuch increases were
warranted for executive officerseach such officer based primarily on the Company's performance and
most
other management employees should be increased. The increases ranged from about
0%their contribution to 20%. Thesuch results.
In 2006, the Compensation Committee increased Mr. Reed'sthe base salary for 2005Robert E.
Griffin, the Company's Chairman of the Board, by 5.0%.4% to $52,000. This increase
essentially represents a cost of living increase following several years in
which the Compensation Committee believeshas reduced significantly Mr. Griffin's base
salary and overall compensation commensurate with the reduction in services that
Mr. Griffin provides to the Company on a significant portionregular basis. Nonetheless, the
Committee recognizes that Mr. Griffin's knowledge of total annual cash
compensation should be subjectthe Company and its
industries is of great benefit and assistance to the Company's actual performance achieved in
that year. Consequently, the incentive profit sharing bonuses ofmanagement, as
evidenced by Mr. Griffin's ability and willingness to serve as the Company's
interim Chief Executive Officer from April, 2006 until August, 2006. The
Committee continues to believe that ongoing compensation to Mr. Griffin is
appropriate.
In August, 2006, the Board of Directors appointed Daniel A. Messmer as the
Company's Chief Executive Officer and President. Based upon the increased
responsibilities and duties that Mr. Messmer was assuming, the Compensation
Committee increased his 2006 base salary to $240,000 at that time.
In February, 2007, the Compensation Committee established the 2007 base salary
levels for Messrs. Messmer, Frandsen and Griffin, the Company's current
executive officers, can beat $247,500, $181,500 and $53,500, respectively. These
increases represent less than a significant percentage4% raise in each instance and reflect the
Compensation Committee's philosophy of their overall
compensation. Eachincreasing salaries modestly to keep pace
with cost of living increases.
Annual Incentive Bonus
The Compensation Committee believes a large portion of each executive officer's
total compensation should come from performance based results. In order to
achieve this, for 2006 the Company's subsidiaries hasCompensation Committee approved a Profit Incentive
Bonus Plan (the "Bonus Plan") that was identical to the plan used in place an incentive
profit sharing plan whereprior
years. Under this Bonus Plan, individual bonus pools are generated by each
business segment, Sporting Goods and Office Products, based on the amounts payable there underfinancial
results of that segment. At the beginning of each fiscal year, the Compensation
Committee reviews, approves and/or modifies target performance levels suggested
by management that dictate the factors used to generate the bonus pools. The
9
performance targets used are based primarily
upon the subsidiary's Earnings Beforebefore Interest, Taxes and Amortization
("EBITA") return on equity and EBITA return on average total assets. AtAs noted
below the beginninglevel of achievement dictates the factors used in calculating the
bonus pools. The bonus pool is calculated by multiplying EBITA by the sum of the
two bonus factors. Virtually all employees, including the named executive
officers, are eligible to participate in the Bonus Plan.
Amounts paid under the Bonus Plan are determined and dispersed following
completion of the annual audit. Amounts allocated to employees in each year,business
segment are discretionary and determined by the senior management team in each
business segment. The Compensation Committee reviews and approves and/or modifies target levels suggested by
management for eachthese
allocations. Criteria used in determining allocation amounts include the
employee's level of these components for each subsidiary.responsibility, level of performance, and overall
contribution to the success of the business segment.
If the subsidiarybusiness segment meets or exceeds its targets in one or more of the
performance components, a bonus pool is created with respect to such component
for payment to the subsidiary's employees. An additionalemployees of that segment. A bonus pool for the Company's
named executive officers is created based on 20.0% of any amounts payable under
the subsidiary's incentive profit sharing plan is payable toplan. Historically, this bonus pool
for the Company. The
Company in turn distributes the incentive compensation received from each
subsidiarynamed executive officers has been distributed 75% to the Company's executive officers based on a pre-determined
percentage.Chief
Executive Officer and 25% to the Company's Chief Financial Officer, although the
Compensation Committee retains discretion over the actual distribution and
amount of the bonus pool in any given year. Accordingly, each named executive
officer's incentive profit sharingcompensation is directly linked to the performance byof each
of the Company's operating 9
subsidiaries.
This Committee on an annual basis reviews the percentage and
amount attributable to each individual executive officer. This Committee
approved Mr. Reed's portion, under the plan, of $512,459 for 2005.
In 2005,2006, both the sporting goods subsidiary and the office/graphic arts
subsidiary exceeded their target levels for each of the incentive profit sharing
components and a bonus pool was created with respect to those operations.
Therefore, the 20052006 bonus amounts paid to Mr. ReedMessrs. Messmer and the Company's other
executive officersFrandsen were
generated from both the Company's sporting goods subsidiary and office/graphic
arts subsidiary. After incentive profit sharing and taxes, the Company's
consolidated net income of $11,942,000approximately $8.5 million generated a return on
assets (on average(average of beginning and ending assets) of 9.2%6.2% and a return on beginning equity
(prior year ending balance) of 17.1%11.1%. For 2006, the Committee distributed the
20% bonus in accordance with historical allocation ratios; 75% and 25% to
Messrs. Messmer and Frandsen, respectively. In recognition of services performed
during 2006, the Compensation Committee awarded Mr. Messmer an additional cash
bonus of $21,500.
The Compensation Committee also awarded Mr. Griffin an additional cash payment
of $15,000 for his services as interim Chief Executive Officer from April 2006
to August 2006, following Mr. Reed's retirement as Chief Executive Officer.
Stock Option Grants
The Compensation Committee also determines annual stock option grants to the
Company's executive officers and other eligible employees. TheHistorically, the
Committee continues to
believehas awarded stock options and believed that stocksuch options are an
effective incentive to encourage stock ownership by officers and key employees
of the Company and its subsidiaries so that those persons acquire or increase
their proprietary interest in the success of the Company. ShareholdersStockholders approved
the 1997 Incentive Stock Option Plan at the 1997 annual meeting.meeting, and that plan
provided only for the grant of stock options and no other form of equity awards.
Pursuant to that plan the committee felt it was appropriate to grant stock
options to certain executive officers of the Company in 2005.2006. The Committee
granted 40,00020,000 options Mr. Reed, 25,000 options to Mr. Frandsen, and 25,000
options to Mr. Messmer prior to his appointment as Chief Executive Officer and
President. No additional options were awarded to Mr. Messmer upon his promotion.
The Compensation Committee has determined that stock option awards to Mr.
Griffin are not necessary to incentive Mr. Griffin or to further align his
interests with stockholders because Mr. Griffin is the largest stockholder of
the Company as the beneficial owner of 25.0% of the Company's outstanding Common
stock. All stock options are awarded with an exercise price equal to the fair
market value on the date of grant.
If the stockholders approve the Company's 2007 Incentive Plan at the Annual
Meeting pursuant to Proposal 2 in this proxy statement, the Compensation
Committee will have a broader array of long-term incentive awards available for
grant to the Company's employees, including the Chief Executive Officer and
Chief Financial Officer. Such awards may be in the form of stock options, stock
appreciation rights, restricted stock, restricted stock units, performance cash,
performance shares, performance units and other stock-based awards as permitted
by the 2007 Incentive Plan. The Compensation Committee believes that in 2007 and
10
beyond, equity awards other than and/or in addition to stock options will create
greater incentive for its employees and executive officers and will strengthen
their alignment with stockholder interests. While the Compensation Committee has
not yet determined any specific awards to be made to any of the named executive
officers or other Company employees under the 2007 Incentive Plan, if approved
by stockholders, the Committee currently believes that grants of restricted
stock units will better meet the Committee's compensation philosophy and
objectives as those awards will be more directly tied to performance measures to
be achieved by the Company rather than being based upon the recipient's
continued employment with the Company.
Health, Welfare and Other Benefits
The Company provides medical, life, 401(k) plan and similar benefits to all of
its salaried employees, including the named executive officers. Other than a
non-qualified deferred compensation plan in which Mr. Griffin participates, none
of these benefits discriminate in scope, terms or operation in favor of the
named executive officers.
In 2006, with the approval of, and in the discretion of, the Compensation
Committee, the Company provided each of Mr. Reed, its former Chief Executive
Officer, and Mr. Frandsen, its current Chief Financial Officer, with certain
one-time benefits.
In connection with Mr. Reed's retirement from the Company, the Compensation
Committee determined that it was in the best interests of the Company to enter
into an agreement with Mr. Reed that provided for (a) the payment of
approximately $794,000 in installments through April 16, 2009, (b) the
acceleration of the vesting of all unvested stock options held by Mr. Reed as of
July 17, 2006 and allowing him to exercise any or all such options within the
following 90 days, (c) continuing medical coverage pursuant to COBRA for Mr.
Reed and his dependents for a period of eighteen months from the date of his
retirement, and (d) the payment of the total amount of his account balance in
the Company's deferred compensation plan in two installments. In return, Mr.
Frandsen.Reed agreed to (a) assist the Company with its management transition through his
retirement date, and (b) enter into certain covenants in favor of the Company,
including confidentiality and non-competition provisions. Mr. Reed and the
Company also mutually released each other from any potential claims against the
other, except as otherwise provided in the agreement.
With respect to Mr. Frandsen, the Company's Board of Directors requested that he
relocate his personal residence from Wabash, Indiana to Evansville, Indiana in
connection with the relocation of the Company's principal executive offices to
Evansville. In recognition of the disruption that the move would cause to Mr.
Frandsen and his family and the unfavorable market for the sale of homes in
Wabash, the Company agreed to purchase his Wabash home at its recently appraised
price and to pay him cash bonuses in the aggregate amount of $65,000, which
bonuses were designed to minimize the likelihood that Mr. Frandsen would suffer
personal financial loss as a result of the move. The relocation agreement
further provided that the Company's total net out-of-pocket expenses in
connection with his relocation would not exceed $120,000 and that, if Mr.
Frandsen's employment with the Company would be terminated by the Company for
just cause or by him without good reason, then he must reimburse the Company for
all or part of such relocation payments if such termination would occur prior to
the third anniversary of the agreement in accordance with the schedule set forth
in the Agreement.
The Compensation Committee does not intend that such agreements will create any
precedents for similar situations that may arise with executive officers in the
future, and will consider each such instance on a case-by-case basis depending
on the specific individual and on the particular circumstances existing at that
time.
Section 162(m)
Based on the Compensation Committee's past compensation practices, the Committee
does not currently believe that Section 162 (m) of the Internal Revenue Code,
which limits the deductibility of executive compensation in certain events, will
adversely affect the Company's ability to obtain a tax deduction for
compensation paid to its named executive officers.
11
REPORT OF THE COMPENSATION COMMITTEE
The Compensation Committee has reviewed and discussed with the Company's
management the preceding Compensation Discussion and Analysis ("CD&A") as well
as the accompanying tables set forth below. Based on that discussion, the
Committee recommended to the Board of Directors that the CD&A be included in
this proxy statement and incorporated into the Company's Annual Report on Form
10-K for the Company's fiscal year ended December 30, 2006.
Richard D. White, Chairman Richard F. Baalmann, Jr. George Savitsky
COMPENSATION COMMITTEE INTERLOCKS AND INSIDER PARTICIPATION
In 2006, Richard White and George Savitsky served on the Company's Compensation
Committee for the entire year. Keith P. Williams George Savitskyserved until his retirement as
a director effective as of the 2006 annual meeting, at which time Richard
Baalmann was elected to the Board and replaced Mr. Williams on the Compensation
Committee. All of the directors who served on the Compensation Committee Interlocks and Insider Participation
In 2005, Messrs. Richard White, Keith Williams and George Savitskyin 2006
were independent Directors of the Company and comprised the Company's Compensation
Committee.directors at all times. No other Directordirector or executive officer
of the Company serves on any board of directors or compensation committee of any
entity that compensates any of Messrs. White, Baalmann, Savitsky and Keith
Williams.
EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION
Summary Compensation Table for 2006
Change in
Pension
Value and
Nonqualified
Non-Equity Deferred
Cash Stock Option Incentive Plan Compensation All Other
Name and Salary Bonus Awards Awards Compensation Earnings Compensation Total
Principal Position Year ($) ($) ($) ($) ($) ($) ($) ($)
(a) (b) (c) (d) (e) (f) (g) (h) (i) (j)
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Robert E. Griffin 2006 51,704 15,000 -- 3,579 -- 84,375 49,117 203,775
Chairman of the
Board
Daniel A. Messmer 2006 214,177 21,500 -- 101,817 403,500 -- 12,730 753,724
Chief Executive
Officer and
President
Terry Frandsen 2006 170,423 -- -- 89,891 134,500 -- 122,299 517,113
Chief Financial
Officer, Vice
President
Finance and
Secretary
C.W. "Bill" Reed 2006 147,404 -- -- 97,787 -- 23,335 867,090 1,135,616
Former Chief
Executive
Officer -
Retired April
19, 2006
Column (a) - Named Executive Officers
The named executive officers include the Chairman of the Board, the Chief
Executive Officer, the Chief Financial Officer and one other person who was an
executive officer during 2006 but who was not serving as an executive officer as
of December 30, 2006 (collectively, the "named executive officers").
Column (c) - Salary
Amounts recorded in this column reflect the annual salary paid during the year
noted in column (b).
Column (d) - Cash Bonuses
Amounts recorded in this column reflect cash bonuses paid in addition to amounts
paid in connection with the annual cash incentive program noted in Column (g).
Column (f) - Option Awards
The amount recorded in this column is the compensation cost recognized by the
Company during the fiscal year indicated in column (b) under the Statement of
Financial Accounting Standard No. 123R (Share-Based Payment) for grants made in
the fiscal year indicated in column (b) and prior years.
12
The fair value of each grant is estimated on the date of grant using the
Black-Scholes option-pricing model with the following assumptions for the years
indicated:
2006 2005 2004 2003 2002 2001
Risk-free interest rate 4.35% 3.77% 3.07% 2.90% 4.65% 4.76%
Dividend yield 1.81% 1.20% 0.00% 0.00% 0.00% 0.00%
Expected volatility 51.3% 53.8% 50.0% 46.0% 38.0% 95.0%
Weighted average-fair value per share $4.35 $5.61 $8.98 $3.07 $0.37 $1.26
Column (g) - Non-Equity Incentive Plan Compensation
See "CD&A - Annual Cash Incentive" on page 7 for a description of the Incentive
Compensation Plan.
Column (h) - Change in Pension Value and Nonqualified Deferred Compensation
Earnings
The Company has a deferred compensation plan that was initiated in October 1985
and in which only certain executives were granted participation. Under the terms
of the plan, participating executives were allowed to defer up to $70,000 of
earned incentive bonuses per year to the plan for seven consecutive years from
the date the plan was initiated. The Company made matching contributions to the
plan equal to 75% of the deferral and pays interest on the cumulative balance at
9% compounded monthly.
13
Column (i) - All Other Compensation
All other compensation includes the following:
401(k) Total All
Matching Relocation Moving and Retirement Other
Name Contribution Director Assistance Closing Agreement Compensation
($) Fees ($) ($) Costs ($) ($) ($)
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Robert E. Griffin 3,117 46,000 - - - 49,117
Daniel A. Messmer 12,730 - - - - 12,730
Terry Frandsen 10,225 - 65,000 47,074 - 122,299
C. W. "Bill" Reed 15,000 11,000 - - 841,090 867,090
Grants of Plan Based Awards
The following table sets forth certain information concerning options granted to
named executive officers during 2006. Actual cash incentive awards for 2006 are
disclosed in column (g) of the Summary Compensation Table, page 12. The
accounting value of equity awards disclosed in the Summary Compensation Tables
in Column (f) includes accounting values for awards granted from 2001 through
2005 as well as awards granted in 2006.
2006 Grants of Plan Based Awards
All Other Exercise of Grant Date
Options Base Price Closing Fair Value
Awards: of Option Market of Stock and
Underlying Awards Price on Option
Name Grant Options (#) ($/Share) Grant Date Awards ($)
Date (1) (2) ($/Share) (3)
--------------------------- ------------- -------------- ------------- ------------- --------------
Robert E. Griffin - - - - -
Daniel A. Messmer 03/16/06 25,000 11.08 11.08 108,750
Terry Frandsen 03/16/06 25,000 11.08 11.08 108,750
C. W. "Bill" Reed 03/16/06 20,000 11.08 11.08 87,000
(1) The amounts disclosed in this column were issued under the 1997 Incentive
Stock Option Plan. Options are granted on the day following the Board of
Director meeting in which the grant is approved. The options granted in
2006, vest in four equal annual installments beginning one year following
the date of grant and expire five years from the date of grant.
(2) The exercise price is equal to the closing market price on the date the
options are granted.
(3) The grant date fair values are calculated based on the provision of
Financial Accounting Standard No. 123R (Share-Based Payment). The fair
value of each grant is estimated on the date of grant using the
Black-Scholes option-pricing model resulting in an estimated fair value of
$4.35 per option.
14
Outstanding Equity Awards at Year-End
The following table outlines outstanding long-term equity-based incentive
compensation awards for the named executive officers as of December 30, 2006.
Each outstanding award is shown separately. Option awards include non-qualified
and incentive stock options. The vesting schedule for each stock option is
described in the footnotes to this table. No other equity or stock-based
incentive awards have been made to the named executive officers.
Outstanding Equity Awards at December 30, 2006
Equity
Incentive
Plan
Number of Number of Awards:
Securities Securities Number of
Underlying Underlying Underlying Option
Unexercised Unexercised Unexercised Exercise Option
Options (#) Options (#) Unearned Price Expiration
Name Exercisable Unexercisable Options (#) ($/Share) Date
(2) (3)
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Robert E. Griffin 2,598 (1) - - 17.24 04/28/08
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Daniel A. Messmer 30,000 - - 19.21 02/16/09
10,000 30,000 (4) - 13.40 02/18/10
- 25,000 (5) - 11.08 03/06/11
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Terry Frandsen 11,250 3,750 (6) - 6.99 02/21/08
30,000 - - 19.21 02/16/09
10,000 30,000 (4) - 13.40 02/18/10
- 25,000 (5) - 11.08 03/06/11
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
C. W. "Bill" Reed - - - - -
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
(1) Stock options granted to Mr. Griffin were made under the 1997 Director
Stock Compensation and Option Plan. These options vest one year after grant
and expire five years from the grant date.
(2) With the exception of options granted to Mr. Griffin, all stock options
granted were made under the 1997 Incentive Stock Option Plan. These options
vest in four equal annual installments beginning one year following the
date of grant and expire five years from the date of grant.
(3) The option exercise price is equal to the closing market price on the date
the options were granted.
(4) The option was granted on February 18, 2005. Assuming continued employment
with the Company, 10,000 shares will become exercisable on February 18 of
each of 2007, 2008 and 2009.
(5) The option was granted on March 6, 2006. Assuming continued employment with
the Company, 6,250 shares will become exercisable on March 6 of each of
2007, 2008, 2009 and 2010.
(6) The option was granted on February 21, 2003. Assuming continued employment
with the Company, the shares will become exercisable on February 21, 2007.
Option Exercises and Stock Vested
The following table shows all stock options exercised and the valued realized
upon exercise by the named executive officers during 2006. None of the named
executive officers have received stock awards of any other type as of December
30, 2006.
2006 Option Exercises and Stock Vested
Option Awards
----------------------------------------------------------------
Number of
Shares Value
Acquired on Realized on
Name Exercise (#) Exercise ($)
(1)
----------------------------------------------------------------
Robert E. Griffin 4,018 28,930
Daniel A. Messmer 15,000 49,950
Terry Frandsen - -
C. W. "Bill" Reed 142,500 797,475
(1) The value realized equals the difference between the option exercise price
and the fair market value of the stock on the date of exercise, multiplied
by the number of shares for which the option was exercised.
15
Pension Benefits
Other than the Company's 401(k) defined contribution plan, the Company has no
pension plans in which the named executive officers participate.
Nonqualified Deferred Compensation
The Company maintains a nonqualified deferred compensation plan that allowed Mr.
Griffin, and certain other executive officers who are no longer with the
Company, including Mr. Reed, to defer a portion of their incentive bonuses
earned during each of the years between 1985 and 1992. The Company provided a
matching contribution equal to 70% of the deferred amount. The plan is unfunded
and amounts owed to participants under the plan are subject to the claims of
general creditors of the Company. The Company accrues interest on the balance
owed to participants at the rate of 9% compounded monthly. This plan is intended
to comply with the requirements of Section 409(A) of the Internal Revenue Code.
The following table illustrates the nonqualified deferred compensation benefits
provided to the named executive officers in 2006. It does not reflect matching
401(k) or discretionary contributions made under the Company's qualified
retirement plan.
2006 Nonqualified Deferred Compensation
Aggregate
Executive Registrant Aggregate Aggregate Balance at
Contributions Contributions Earnings in Withdrawals/ December 31,
Name in 2006 ($) in 2006 ($) 2006 ($) Distributions 2006 ($)
(1) ($)
- -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Robert E. Griffin - - 84,375 - 983,825
Daniel A. Messmer - - - - -
Terry Frandsen - - - - -
C. W. "Bill" Reed - - 23,335 411,153 61,904
(1) Amounts recorded in this column represent interest accrued on cumulative
deferred balances and is included in column (h) of the Summary of
Compensation Table.
Potential Payments Upon Termination or Change in Control
The Company currently does not have employent, severance, change in control or
similar agreements with any of its named executive officers. Other than benefits
that are generally available to all other salaried employees of the Company, the
named executive officers have no agreements that would provide them with any
cash payments upon termination of employment with the Company.
Upon a change in control of the Company, as defined in the Company's 1997
Incentive Stock Option Plan (approved by the Company's stockholders at the 1997
annual meeting), the vesting of all outstanding, unvested stock options would be
accelerated. This is true for all stock option recipients, not just the named
executive officers. Based upon the closing stock price of the Company's common
stock as of December 29, 2006 ($10.72), Mr. Terry Frandsen is the only named
executive who would potentially receive value for unexercised stock options:
approximately $14,025. The potential value of unexercised stock options is
computed as the difference between the exercise price and the closing stock
price multiplied by the number of shares. Options with exercise prices higher
than the closing market price are not included in the calculation.
Director Compensation
The following table illustrates the 2006 compensation structure for the
Company's directors. In addition to the compensation described below, each
director is reimbursed for reasonable out-of-pocket expenses incurred for travel
and attendance related to meetings of the Board of Directors or its committees.
16
Annual Retainer Fees
Chairman of the Board $25,000
Chairman of the Audit Committee $ 2,000
Chairman of the Compensation Committee $ 2,000
Director $ 7,000
Meeting Attendance Fees
In-person Board meeting attendance $ 4,000
Telephonic Board meeting attendance $ 1,000
Committee meeting attendance $ 1,000
The Chairman of the Board does not receive a separate retainer as a Director,
but does receive any meeting attendance fees earned. Each independent director
elected at the 2006 annual meeting, also received a special one time grant of
2,000 stock options, which grants were approved by stockholders at the 2006
annual meeting.
Directors can elect to receive some or all of the fees earned in shares of the
Company's common stock pursuant to the 1997 Director Stock Compensation and
Option Plan which was approved by stockholders at the 1997 annual meeting. Those
shares and options will not be issued until April 27, 2007. The number of shares
to be issued will be calculated based on the aggregate director fees deferred by
the director since the 2006 Annual Meeting divided by $11.26, the closing share
price on the first business day following the 2006 annual meeting. Each director
who elected to receive shares will also be granted stock options in an amount
equal to one half of the shares issued to the director at an exercise price
equal to the per share closing market price on April 27, 2007. In 2006 there
were 10,156 shares issued and 5,076 stock options issued pursuant to the plan.
The following table summarizes the compensation earned by or awarded to each
director who served on the Board of Directors during 2006. Compensation
reflected for Messrs. Griffin and Reed is also reflected in the "Summary
Compensation Table."
2006 Director Compensation
Fees Earned
or Paid in Option All Other
Name Cash ($) Awards ($) Compensation
(1) (2) (3) ($) Total ($)
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Blaine E. Matthews, Jr. 27,759 15,456 - 43,215
Edward E. Williams 26,024 12,334 - 38,358
George Savitsky 26,891 12,549 - 39,440
Richard D. White 25,156 12,120 - 37,276
Richard F. Baalmann, Jr. (4) - 5,280 - 5,280
Keith P. Williams (5) 16,483 5,424 - 21,907
(1) Mr. Griffin, the Chairman of the Board, is not included in this table as he
is an employee of the Company and thus his compensation is included in the
Summary Compensation Table on page 12.
(2) This column includes the fair value of common stock issued pursuant to the
1997 Director Stock Compensation and Options Plan.
(3) The amount recorded in this column is the compensation cost recognized by
the Company during 2006 under the Statement of Financial Accounting
Standard No. 123R (Share-Based Payment) for grants made in 2006 and prior
years. The fair value of each grant is estimated on the date of grant using
the Black-Scholes option-pricing model. As of December 30, 2006, each
director has the following number of options outstanding: Robert E.
Griffin: 2,598; Blaine E. Matthews, Jr.: 6,282; Edward E. Williams: 3,616;
George Savitsky: 3,652; Richard White, KeithD. White: 3,580; and Richard F. Baalmann,
Jr: 2,000.
(4) Mr. Baalmann was first elected to the Board in 2006 and consequently will
have no earnings until the April 2007 annual meeting.
(5) Mr. Williams and George Savitsky.retired from the Board effective as of the April 2006 annual
stockholder meeting.
REPORT OF THE AUDIT COMMITTEE
In accordance with its written charter as adopted by the Board of Directors
("Board"), the Audit Committee of the Board ("Committee") assists the Board in
fulfilling its responsibility for oversight of the quality and integrity of the
accounting, auditing and financial reporting practices of Escalade. All of the
Committee members are independent directors as defined under NASDAQ rules.
During fiscal year 2005,2006, the Committee met five times, and discussed the interim
17
financial information contained in each quarterly earnings announcement with the
Chief Financial Officer and independent auditors prior to public release.
In discharging its oversight responsibility as to the audit process, the
Committee obtained from the independent auditors a formal written statement
describing all relationships between the auditors and the Company that might
bear on the auditors' independence consistent with Independence Standards Board
Standard No. 1, "Independence discussions with Audit Committees," discussed with
the auditors any relationships that may impact their objectivity and
independence and satisfied itself as to the auditors' independence. The Audit
Committee also discussed and considered whether the provision of non-audit
services by the Company's auditors is consistent with the auditors'
independence. The Audit Committee has determined that the provisions of such
services are consistent with the auditors' independence. The Committee also
discussed with management, and the independent auditors the quality and adequacy
of Escalade's internal controls. The Committee reviewed with the independent
auditors their audit plan, audit scope and identification of audit risks.
The Committee discussed and reviewed with the independent auditors all
communications required by auditing standards generally accepted in the United
States of America, including those described in Statement on Auditing Standards
No. 61, as amended, "Communication with Audit Committees," and, with and without
management present, discussed and reviewed the results of the independent
auditors' examination of the financial statements.
The Committee reviewed the audited financial statements of Escalade as of and
for the year ended December 31, 2005,30, 2006, with management and the independent
auditors. Management has the responsibility for the preparation of financial
statements and the independent auditors have the responsibility for the
examination of those statements.
Based on the above-mentioned review and discussions with management and the
independent auditors, the Committee recommended to the Board that Escalade's
audited financial statements be included in its Annual Report on Form 10-K for
the year ended December 31, 2005,30, 2006, for filing with the Securities and Exchange
Commission.
Blaine E. Matthews, Jr., Chairman Edward E. Williams George Savitsky
10
INDEPENDENT PUBLIC ACCOUNTING FIRM
The independent public accounting firm of BKD LLP (the "Auditors") was engaged
by the Company's Audit Committee to audit the Company's consolidated financial
statements for the year ended December 31, 2005.30, 2006. BKD LLP, formerly known as
Olive LLP, has served as independent auditors for the Company since 1977. Audit
services performed by BKD LLP during the fiscal year most recently completed
included examinations of the financial statements of the Company, and its North
American subsidiaries, services
related to filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission and consultations
on matters related to accounting,
financial reporting and filing of federal and state income tax returns.accounting. Representatives of BKD LLP are expected to be
present at the Annual Meeting.
TheyMeeting and will have the opportunity to make a statement
if they desire to do so and are expected to be available to respond to
appropriate questions.
The Company's Audit Committee has not yet appointed a principal independent
accounting firm for fiscal year 2005. The Audit Committee is evaluating how the
Company can most effectively and efficiently continue to satisfy the provisions
of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002, including compliance with the internal
controls requirements imposed by Section 404 of that law, on an ongoing basis.
As part of that evaluation,2007 because the Audit Committee is reexaminingbelieves it
must reassess the scope and
nature of services thatCompany's professional requirements prior to making this
appointment. Typically the Company needs to obtain from its independent public
accounting firm. The Company's Audit Committee anticipates that it will select a principal independent accounting firm for fiscal year 2006is selected no
later than its
nextthe first meeting of the Audit Committee following the 2006 annual
Meeting.shareholder meeting.
PRINCIPAL ACCOUNTING FIRM FEES
The following table sets forth the aggregate fees billed to Escalade,
Incorporated for the fiscal years ended December 31, 200530, 2006 and December 25, 200431, 2005
by the Company's principal accounting firm, BKD LLP.
2006 2005
2004
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Audit Fees $ 397,802439,361 $ 576,268397,802
Audit-Related Fees --1,854 --
Tax Fees -- 21,861 119,556
All Other Fees -- --
---------- ---------------------- ------------
Total $ 441,215 $ 419,663
$ 695,824
========== ====================== ============
18
Audit Fees. Fees for audit services consist of:
o Audit of the Company's annual financial statements.
o Audit services associated with Rule 404 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of
2002 which requires the independent registered public accounting firm
to audit Management's evaluation of internal controls over financial
reporting as of the end of the fiscal year. The auditor's unqualified
opinion is contained in the 20052006 Annual Report under Item 9A - Controls
and Procedures. Fees paid to the principleprincipal accounting firm for this
portion of the audit totaled $191,500 in 2006 and $155,316 in 2005 and $407,867 in
2004.2005.
o Reviews of the Company's quarterly financial statements.
o Statutory and regulatory audits, consents and other services related to
SEC matters.
Audit-Related Fees. Fees for audit-related services consist of financial
accounting and reporting consultation.
Tax Fees. Fees for tax services consist of professional services rendered by BKD
LLP related to corporate income tax return preparation, compliance and advice.
Beginning with 2005, the Company no longer employs BKD LLP to perform tax
compliance services.
The Audit Committee is responsible for pre-approving all auditing services and
permitted non-audit services to be performed by its independent auditors, except
as described below. Pre-approval shall not be required for the provision of
non-audit services if (1) the aggregate amount of all such non-audit services
constitute no more than 5% of the total amount of revenues paid by the Company
to the auditors during the fiscal year in which the non-audit services are
provided, (2) such services were not recognized by the Company at the time of
engagement to be non-audit services, and (3) such services are promptly brought
to the attention of the Audit Committee and approved prior to the completion of
the audit. No services were provided by BKD LLP pursuant to these exceptions.
11
FINANCIAL PERFORMANCECERTAIN RELATIONSHIPS AND RELATED PERSON TRANSACTIONS
The following graph compares the Company's cumulative total shareholder return
on Escalade common stock to a broad equity market index and to an industry index
for the past five years, assuming an initial $100 investment. The broad equity
market index is the CRSP Total Return Index for The Nasdaq Stock Market ("Nasdaq
U.S.) that includes all domestic companies traded on the Nasdaq market, as are
the Escalade shares. The published industry index is the Nasdaq Total Return
Industry Index for Nasdaq Non-Financial Stock ("Nasdaq Non-Financial") which is
comprised of all Nasdaq traded companies having the standard industrial
classification (SIC) code of 1 through 59 and 70 and above, which are allAudit Committee of the non-financial industries SIC codes. The Company's SIC code falls within these
parametersBoard of Directors is charged with the responsibility
to review and pre-approve all related party or affiliate transactions between
the Company and its directors, executive officers, employees and/or their
affiliates or in which any such persons directly or indirectly is not awareinterested or
may benefit. The Company currently has no agreements, arrangements, transaction
or similar relationship with any of any other single company that is
engaged in both the same industries as Escalade. The information presented was
provided by The Nasdaq Stock Market, Inc. Cumulative total shareholder returns
for Escalade common stock are based on Escalade's fiscal year. Cumulative total
shareholder returns for Nasdaq U.S. and Nasdaq Non-Financial are based on a
calendar year.
Comparison of five year cumulative return for Escalade, Nasdaq U.S. index and
Nasdaq Non-Financial index
[GRAPHIC OMITTED]its directors or executive officers.
OTHER SECURITIES FILINGS
The information contained in this Proxy Statement under the headings "Executive"Report of
Compensation - Report of the Compensation Committee"; and "Report of the Audit Committee" and "Financial Performance" are not, and should
not be deemed to be, incorporated by reference into any prior filings by the
Company under the Securities Act of 1933 or the Securities Exchange Act of 1934
that purport to incorporate future filings or portions thereof by reference
(including this proxy statement).
ITEM NO. 2
PROPOSAL TO APPROVE SPECIAL STOCK OPTION GRANT TO NON-EMPLOYEE DIRECTORS
Upon reviewTHE 2007 INCENTIVE PLAN
DESCRIPTION OF THE 2007 INCENTIVE PLAN
Subject to stockholder approval, the Company's Board of Directors approved the
Escalade, Incorporated 2007 Incentive Plan (the "Plan") based on recommendation
of the Plan by its Compensation Committee.
The following description sets forth the material terms of the Plan. It does not
purport to be complete and is qualified in its entirety by reference to the
provisions of the Plan attached as Annex 1 to this Proxy Statement. All
capitalized terms which are not defined herein are defined in the Plan.
19
Purpose
The Plan is intended to assist the Company and its subsidiaries in attracting
and retaining selected individuals to serve as employees, directors, consultants
and/or advisors of the Company and its subsidiaries who are expected to
contribute to the Company's compensation programsuccess. The Company believes that the Plan will
provide flexibility in the types and policies for non-employee
Directors,amounts of incentives that can be provided
to these key individuals and will promote the achievement of long-term
objectives which will inure to the benefit of all stockholders of the Company.
Administration
The Compensation Committee of the Board of Directors approved,will administer the Plan.
The Compensation Committee will be composed of no fewer than two directors, each
of whom must be "independent" under applicable NASDAQ Stock Market listing rules
(or such other principal stock exchange on which the Company's common stock is
then traded), and whom, to the extent required by Rule 16b-3 under the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934 or Section 162(m) of the Internal Revenue Code
of 1986, as amended (the "Code"), qualify as "non-employee directors" and
"outside directors," respectively. The Committee has broad discretion and
authority to, among other things, select the officers, employees, directors,
consultants and advisors to whom awards may be granted, to determine the terms,
conditions, form and amount of the awards, to establish, where deemed
applicable, performance goals with respect to awards and to measure and certify
the achievement thereof, and to establish guidelines and procedures relating to
awards. The Committee will have full power to administer and interpret the Plan
and to adopt or establish, and to modify or waive, rules, regulations,
agreements, guidelines, procedures and instruments which it deems necessary or
advisable for the administration and operation of the Plan. The Committee may
delegate its authority to a committee of one or more directors of the Company or
to one or more executive officers or a committee of executive officers the right
to grant awards to employees who are not directors or executive officers of the
Company and the authority to take action on behalf of the Committee pursuant to
the Plan to cancel or suspend awards to employees who are not directors or
executive officers of the Company.
Eligibility
Any officer, employee, director, consultant or advisor of the Company or any of
its subsidiaries or affiliates is eligible to receive an award under the Plan.
As of December 30, 2006 there were approximately 891 employees and six directors
of the Company and its subsidiaries and affiliates. The selection of
participants and the nature and size of the awards is subject to stockholder approval, a
special grant of 2,000 stock options (the "Stock Options") to eachthe discretion
of the five
non-employee Directors proposedCommittee.
Shares Available for election at the Annual Meeting: Blaine E.
Matthews, Jr., Edward E. Williams, Richard D. White, George Savitsky and Richard
F. Baalman, Jr.Issuance
The Board believesPlan provides that the awardtotal number of shares of common stock which may be
issued pursuant to awards under the Plan may not exceed 1,000,000, plus any
shares underlying awards made under the Company's 1997 Incentive Stock Plan and
1997 Directors Stock Compensation and Option Plan (the "Prior Plans") which are
subsequently forfeited or otherwise become available for issuance under the
terms of the Stock Options willPrior Plans. As of December 30, 2006, a total of 544,586 shares
previously granted options are outstanding and unexercised under the Prior
Plans. Therefore, based on this information, if the Plan is approved, a total of
approximately 1,544,586 shares may be an appropriate element ofavailable for grant under the 2006 compensation to be paid to the non-employee
Directors in light of the increased time and effort required of Directors under
various new laws, rules and regulations adopted by Congress and the Securities
and Exchange Commission in recent years. The Board further believes that this
special award of the Stock Options will help retain non-employee Directors and
will help to further align the interests of non-employee Directors with thosePlan,
representing approximately 11.8% of the Company's stockholders.
12
All other compensationoutstanding stock as of
December 30, 2006. Regardless of whether the Plan is approved by the Company's
stockholders, no further grants will be made under the Prior Plans which will
expire by their terms on April 26, 2007. If the Plan is approved, then the
shares of common stock and stock options payable to directors on April 27, 2007
pursuant to their deferral elections made with respect to their 2006 director
fees will be made under this Plan rather than under the 1997 Directors Stock
Compensation and Option Plan. See "New Plan Benefits," below.
To the extent that shares of common stock subject to an outstanding award under
the Plan or the Prior Plans are not issued by reason of forfeiture, termination,
surrender, cancellation, or expiration while unexercised of such award, by
reason of the tendering or withholding of shares to pay all or a portion of the
exercise price or to satisfy all or a portion of the tax withholding obligations
relating to the Company's Directorsaward, by reason of being settled in cash in lieu of shares or
settled in a manner that some or all of the shares covered by the award are not
issued to the participant, or being exchanged for a grant under the Plan that
does not involve common stock, then such shares shall immediately again be
available for issuance under the Plan. The Committee may from time to time adopt
and observe such procedures concerning the counting of shares against the Plan
maximum as it may deem appropriate.
20
Shares of common stock issued in connection with awards that are assumed,
converted or substituted pursuant to a merger, acquisition or similar
transaction entered into by the Company or any of its subsidiaries shall not
reduce the number of shares available to be issued under the Plan.
Of the shares authorized for issuance under the Plan, up to 90% may be issued
with respect to awards which are not stock appreciation rights or stock options,
and up to 1,500,000 shares may be issued pursuant to options which are incentive
stock options under the Code. In addition, as required by Code Section 162(m),
the Plan includes a limit of 200,000 shares of common stock as the maximum
number of shares that may be subject to awards made to any one year term
beginningindividual in any
36-month period. In addition to the foregoing, the maximum dollar value that may
be earned by any participant in any 12-month period with respect to awards that
are intended to comply with the Annual Meetingperformance-based exception under Code Section
162(m) and are denominated in cash is expected$2,000,000.
The source of common stock issued with respect to awards may be authorized but
unissued shares or treasury shares. In the event there is a change in the
capital structure of the Company as a result of any stock dividend or split,
recapitalization, merger, consolidation or spin-off or other corporate change
affecting the common stock, the number of shares of common stock authorized for
issuance, available for issuance or covered by any outstanding award and the
price per share of any such award, and the various limitations described in this Proxy
Statementabove,
will be proportionately adjusted. Fractional shares will not be issued under the
heading "EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION - Compensation of
Directors." The Board intends to further reviewPlan.
Equity Compensation Plan Table
Number of Weighted-Average
Securities to be Issued Exercise Price Number of
Upon Exercise of of Outstanding Options, Securities Remaining
Outstanding Options, Warrants Available for Future
Plan Category Warrants and Rights and Rights Issuance
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Equity compensation plans approved by
security holders (1) 544,586 $13.19 884,143
Equity compensation plans not approved
by security holders -- -- --
---------- ----------
Total 544,586 884,143
========== ==========
(1) These plans are the Company's policies for
compensation of Directors during their upcoming term of service and anticipates
that1997 Incentive Stock Option Plan, the Company will present for stockholder approval at the 2007 Annual
Meeting a new incentive plan in which the Directors may participate because the
Company's existing 1997
Director Stock Compensation and Option Plan will expireand the 10,000 options to
acquire common stock issued to the Company's independent directors
following the 2006 annual meeting as approved by the Company's stockholders
at that meeting.
Awards
A participant in the Plan is permitted to receive multiple grants of awards. The
terms and provisions of a type of award with respect to any recipient need not
be the same with respect to any other recipient of such time.award.
The following is a summarytypes of awards may be granted under the material terms regarding the proposed grant of
the Stock Options.
Eligibility and Participation. Each non-employee Director of the Company elected
at the Annual Meeting on April 22, 2006 will receive the special grant of 2,000
non-qualified Stock Options.
Non-QualifiedPlan:
Stock Options. Stock Options may be nonqualified stock options representor incentive
stock options that comply with Code Section 422. The exercise period for any
stock option will be determined by the right to purchaseCommittee at the time of grant. The
exercise price per share for all shares of common stock issued pursuant to stock
options under the Plan may not be less than 100% of the Fair Market Value of a
company within a specified periodshare of time at a
specified price, also known as the exercise price. The proposed Stock Options
will not qualify as incentive stock options meeting the requirements of certain
provisions of the Internal Revenue Code and the Directors receiving the Stock
Options will not receive the favorable tax treatment that would accompany
incentive stock options.
Exercise Price. The exercise price for the Stock Options will be the closing
sale price on the NASDAQ Stock Market of the Company's common stock on April 24,
2006, the next business day following the Annual Meeting. If the NASDAQ Stock
Market would not open that day, or if no shares of Company commongrant date. Each stock would be
traded on that date, then the exercise price will be the closing sale price on
the NASDAQ Market on the next closest date after April 24, 2006 that the NASDAQ
Market is open and trades of the Company's common stock take place.
Expiration Date. The Stock Options will expire, if not exercised, on the earlier
of April 22, 2011 or within 12 months of the death of the Director or following
retirement from service as a Director of the Company.
Vesting. The Stock Options shall vest in full on April 22, 2007. No Stock
Optionsoption may be exercised priorin
whole, at any time, or in part, from time to time, after the grant becomes
exercisable. The Plan limits the term of any stock option to 10 years, except in
the event of death or disability. Unless otherwise approved by the Company's
stockholders, the Plan prohibits repricing of options.
Stock Appreciation Rights ("SARs"). The Committee may grant SARs independently
of any stock option or other award or in tandem with all or any part of a stock
21
option or other award granted under the Plan. Upon exercise, each SAR entitles a
participant to receive an amount equal to the excess of the Fair Market Value
(as defined in the Plan) of a share of common stock on the date the SAR is
exercised over the Fair Market Value of a share of common stock on the date the
SAR is granted. As determined by the Committee, the payment due upon exercise of
an SAR may be made in shares of common stock having a Fair Market Value on the
date of exercise equal to the amount due upon the exercise of the SAR, may be
paid in cash, or in a combination. Upon exercise of an SAR granted in
conjunction with a stock option, the option may be required to be surrendered.
Restricted Stock and Restricted Stock Units. An award of Restricted Stock is an
award of shares of common stock that date. Once vested,may not be sold or otherwise disposed of
during a restricted period determined by the Committee. An award of Restricted
Stock Options canUnits is an award of the right to receive a share of common stock after
the expiration of a restricted period determined by the Committee. Restricted
Stock may be exercisedvoted by the recipient. To the extent provided by the Committee in
the applicable award agreement, dividends on the Restricted Stock and Restricted
Stock Units may be payable to the recipient in cash or in additional Restricted
Stock or Restricted Stock Units.
Other Share-Based Awards. The Committee may grant other awards of shares or
other types of awards which may be based in whole or in part untilby reference to
common stock or other property. Such awards may be payable upon the expirationachievement
of performance goals or such other terms and conditions as the Committee may
prescribe.
Performance Cash, Performance Shares and Performance Units. Performance Cash,
Performance Shares and Performance Units are awards of a fixed or variable
number of shares or of dollar-denominated units that are earned by achievement
of performance goals established by the Committee. If the applicable performance
criteria are met, the shares are earned and become unrestricted with respect to
Performance Shares or an amount is payable with respect to the Performance
Units. The Committee may provide that a certain percentage of the number of
Performance Shares or Units originally awarded may be earned based upon the
attainment of the performance goals. Amounts earned under Performance Share and
Performance Unit Awards may be paid in common stock, cash or a combination of
both. During the applicable performance period for an award, the shares may be
voted by the recipient and the recipient may be entitled to receive dividends on
those shares, at the discretion of the Committee.
Performance Goals
Section 162(m) of the Code disallows federal income tax deductions for certain
compensation in excess of $1,000,000 per year paid to each of the Company's
Chief Executive Officer and its other four most highly compensated executive
officers (collectively, the "Covered Employees"). Under Section 162(m),
compensation that qualifies as "other performance-based compensation" is not
subject to the $1,000,000 deduction limit. In addition to the annual limitations
on awards described above, another condition necessary to qualify certain
incentive awards (other than SARs and stock options, which are treated as "other
performance-based compensation") as "other performance-based compensation" is
that the material criteria relating to the performance goals under which the
award is made must be disclosed to, and approved by, the stockholders of the
Company before the incentive compensation is paid.
For those types of awards under the Plan intended to meet the definition of
"other performance-based compensation" the Committee will establish performance
goals with respect to an award based upon one or more of the following
performance criteria: net sales; revenue; revenue growth or product revenue
growth; operating income (before or after taxes); pre- or after-tax income
(before or after allocation of corporate overhead and bonus); earnings per
share; net income (before or after taxes); return on equity; total shareholder
return; return on assets or net assets; appreciation in and/or maintenance of
the price of the shares or any other publicly-traded securities of the Company;
market share; gross profits; earnings (including earnings before taxes, earnings
before interest and taxes, earnings before interest, taxes and amortization, or
earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization); economic
value-added models or equivalent metrics; comparisons with various stock market
indices; reductions in costs; cash flow or cash flow per share (before or after
dividends); return on capital (including return on total capital or return on
invested capital); cash flow return on investment; improvement in or attainment
of expense levels or working capital levels; operating margins, gross margins or
cash margin; year-end cash; debt reductions; shareholder equity; market share;
regulatory achievements; and implementation, completion or attainment of
measurable objectives with respect to research, development, products or
projects, production volume levels, acquisitions and divestitures and recruiting
and maintaining personnel. Such performance goals also may be based solely by
reference to the Company's performance or the performance of a subsidiary,
22
division, business segment or business unit of the Company, or based upon the
relative performance of other companies or upon comparisons of any of the
indicators of performance relative to other companies. The Committee may also
exclude charges related to an event or occurrence which the Committee determines
should appropriately be excluded, including (a) restructurings, discontinued
operations, extraordinary items, and other unusual or non-recurring charges, (b)
an event either not directly related to the operations of the Company or not
within the reasonable control of the Company's management, or (c) the cumulative
effects of tax or accounting changes in accordance with U.S. generally accepted
accounting principles.
Such performance goals shall be set by the Committee within the time period
prescribed by, and shall otherwise comply with the requirements of, Section
162(m) of the Code, and the regulations thereunder. Section 162(m) also requires
that for compensation to be "performance-based, the Company must obtain
stockholder approval every five years of the material terms for performance
goals for such compensation. Accordingly, the Company will need to seek
reapproval of the above or revised performance goals no later than the Company's
annual meeting of stockholders in 2012 if the Company desires to obtain tax
deductions for performance-based compensation after that date.
At the end of each performance period for an award to Covered Employees, the
Committee will determine and certify the extent to which the performance goal
established for the performance period has been achieved and determine the
amount to be paid, vested or delivered as a result thereof, provided the
Committee may, in its sole discretion, reduce or eliminate such amount to the
extent permitted under the Plan and applicable law.
Termination of Employment or Services
The Committee shall determine and set forth in each award agreement whether any
awards granted in such award agreement will continue to be exercisable, and the
terms of such exercise, on and after the date that a participant ceases to be
employed by or to provide services to the Company or any subsidiary (including
as a director), whether by reason of death, disability, voluntary or involuntary
termination of employment or services, or otherwise. The date of termination of
a participant's employment or services will be determined by the Committee,
which determination will be final.
Change in Control
Unless otherwise provided by the Committee in the applicable award agreement
(including any amendment or modification thereof), upon a change in control of
the Company, all awards based on the Company's common stock shall immediately
vest 100% and all performance-based awards shall be deemed earned and payable,
either in full or pro rata based upon the portion of the performance period then
completed as of the date of the change in control.
Other Provisions
In general, except to the extent provided by the Committee in the specific terms
of an award or with respect to certain transfers of nonqualified stock options
to certain family members or foundations for no value or other consideration, no
award will be assignable or transferable except by will, the laws of descent and
distribution.
The Committee may impose such restrictions and limitations on any awards granted
under the Plan as it may deem advisable, including, but not limited to share
ownership or holding period requirements and requirements to enter into or to
comply with confidentiality, non-competition and other restrictive or similar
covenants.
The receipt of payment of cash or the delivery of shares that would otherwise be
due to a participant under an award may be deferred at the election of the
participant pursuant to an applicable deferral plan or arrangement established
by the Company or a subsidiary.
Effective Date, Amendment and Termination
If approved by the stockholders, the Plan will become effective as of the date
of such approval and will remain in effect until all shares subject to the Plan
have been purchased and/or acquired according to the provisions of the Plan,
23
provided, however, that no awards may be granted on or after the tenth
anniversary of such date. The Board of Directors may terminate the Plan at any
time and may amend or modify the Plan from time to time provided that no such
action shall materially adversely alter or impair any outstanding award without
the consent of the participant affected thereby. In addition, unless approved by
the Company's stockholders, no amendment or modification may increase the number
of shares of common stock which may be issued under the Plan (except pursuant to
an adjustment related to a corporate change affecting the Common stock), expand
the types of awards available to participants under the Plan, materially expand
the class of persons eligible to participate in the Plan, delete or limit the
provisions prohibiting the repricing of options or reduce the price at which
shares may be offered under options, extend the termination date for making
awards under the Plan, or become effective if such amendment or modification is
required under the rules and regulations of the NASDAQ Stock Option.Market or another
national exchange on which the Common stock is then listed, or other applicable
law, rules or regulations, to be approved by the stockholders.
The Committee may amend or modify any outstanding awards in any manner to the
extent that the Committee would have had the authority under the Plan initially
to make such award as so amended or modified, provided that no amendment or
modification shall materially adversely alter or impair an outstanding award
without the consent of the participant affected thereby.
Federal Income Tax Consequences.Considerations
The following discussion is a summary of certain federal income tax consequences
to participants who may receive grants of awards under the Plan. This discussion of
does not purport to be complete, and does not cover, among other things, state
and local tax treatment.
TheIncentive Stock Options are non-qualifiedOptions. No taxable income is realized by the participant upon
exercise of an incentive stock optionsoption granted under the plan, and if no
disposition of those shares is made by such participant within two years after
the date of grant or within one year after the transfer of those shares to the
participant, then (a) upon the sale of the shares, any amount realized in excess
of the exercise price will be taxed as a long-term capital gain and any loss
sustained will be taxed as a long-term capital loss, and (b) no deduction will
be allowed to the Company for federal income tax purposes. Therefore, forUpon exercise of an
incentive stock option, the participant may be subject to alternative minimum
tax on certain items of tax preference.
If the shares of common stock acquired upon the exercise of an incentive stock
option are disposed of prior to the expiration of the
two-years-from-grant/one-year-from-transfer holding period, generally (a) the
participant will realize ordinary income in the year of disposition in an amount
equal to the excess (if any) of the fair market value of the shares at exercise
(or, if less, the amount realized upon disposition of the shares) over the
exercise price, and (b) the Company will be entitled to deduct such amount. Any
additional gain or loss realized will be taxed as short-term or long-term
capital gain or loss, as the case may be, and may not be deducted by the
Company.
If an incentive stock option is exercised at a time when it no longer qualifies
as an incentive stock option, the option will be treated as a nonqualified stock
option.
Nonqualified Stock Options. For federal income tax purposes, no income is
recognized by a non-employee Directorparticipant upon the grant of the Stock Options.a nonqualified stock option. Upon
exercise, the non-employee Directorparticipant will realize ordinary income in an amount equal to the
excess of the fair market valueFair Market Value of a share of the Company common stock on the date of
exercise over the exercise price multiplied by the number of shares received
pursuant to the exercise of the Stock Options.such options. A subsequent sale or exchange of such
shares will result in gain or loss measured by the difference between (a) the
exercise price, increased by any compensation reported upon the participant's
exercise of the option and (b) the amount realized on such sale or exchange. Any
gain or loss will be capital in nature if the shares were held as a capital
asset and will be long-term if such shares were held for more than one year.
The Company is entitled to a deduction for compensation paid to a non-employee Directorparticipant at
the same time and in the same amount as the non-employee Directorparticipant realizes compensation
upon exercise of the option.
EquityStock Appreciation Rights. No taxable income is recognized by a participant upon
the grant of a SAR under the Plan. Upon the exercise of an SAR, the participant
will realize ordinary income in an amount equal to the fair market value of the
24
shares of common stock received and the amount of cash received. Shares of
common stock received upon the exercise of a SAR will, upon subsequent sale, be
eligible for capital gain treatment, with the capital gain holding period
commencing on the date of exercise of the SAR.
The Company is entitled to a deduction for compensation paid to a participant at
the same time and in the same amount as the participant realizes ordinary income
upon exercise of the SAR.
Stock Awards. A recipient of Restricted Stock, Performance Shares or any other
awards of shares of common stock generally will be subject to tax at ordinary
income rates on the Fair Market Value of the common stock at the time the shares
have been delivered and are no longer subject to forfeiture. A recipient who so
elects under Section 83(b) of the Code within 30 days of the date of the grant
of shares of common stock will have ordinary taxable income on the date of the
grant equal to the Fair Market Value of the shares as if the shares were
unrestricted or the shares were earned and could be sold immediately. If the
shares subject to such election are forfeited, the recipient will not be
entitled to any deduction, refund or loss for tax purposes with respect to the
forfeited shares. Upon sale of the Restricted Shares or Performance Shares after
the forfeiture period has expired, the holding period to determine whether the
recipient has long-term or short-term capital gain or loss begins when the
restriction period expires. If the recipient timely elects to be taxed as of the
date of the grant, the holding period commences on the date of the grant and the
tax basis will be equal to the Fair Market Value of the shares on the date of
the grant as if the shares were then unrestricted and could be sold immediately.
The Company is entitled to a deduction for compensation paid to a participant in
the amount of ordinary income recognized by the participant.
Restricted Stock Units and Performance Units. A recipient of units will
generally be subject to tax at ordinary income rates on the Fair Market Value of
any common stock issued or cash paid pursuant to such an award, and the Company
will generally be entitled to a deduction equal to the amount of the ordinary
income realized by the recipient. The Fair Market Value of any common stock
received will generally be included in income (and a corresponding deduction
will generally be available to the Company) at the time of receipt. The capital
gain or loss holding period for any common stock distributed under an award will
begin when the recipient recognizes ordinary income in respect of that
distribution.
Other Awards. A participant will recognize ordinary income upon receipt of cash
pursuant to a cash award and the Company will generally be entitled to a
deduction equal to the amount of the ordinary income realized by the recipient.
The federal income tax consequences of other incentive awards will depend on how
the awards are structured. Generally, the Company will be entitled to a
deduction with respect to other incentive awards only to the extent that the
recipient realizes compensation income in connection with such awards.
Compliance with Section 409A of the Code. The Plan is intended to comply and be
administered in a manner that is intended to comply with Section 409A of the
Code. To the extent that an award or the payment, settlement or deferral of an
award is subject to Section 409A of the Code, the award shall be granted, paid,
settled or deferred in a manner that will comply with Section 409A, including
regulations or other guidance issued with respect thereto, except as otherwise
determined by the Committee. Any provision of the Plan that would cause the
grant of an award or the payment, settlement or deferral of an award to fail to
satisfy Section 409A shall be amended to comply with Section 409A on a timely
basis, which may be made on a retroactive basis, in accordance with regulations
and other guidance issued under Section 409A.
25
New Plan Benefits
In accordance with the terms of the existing 1997 Directors Stock Compensation
and Option Plan, Information.the directors of the Company are to receive awards of shares of
common stock and stock options based upon deferral elections made in April, 2006
of certain director fees that would have otherwise been payable in cash. Because
the 1997 plan will expire before the date that such awards are to be made, the
Company will make the awards under the Plan if the stockholders approve the Plan
at the Annual Meeting. The following table shows the awards that will be made to
the directors if the Plan is approved.
New Plan Benefits
Escalade, Incorporated 2007 Incentive Plan
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Name and Position Dollar Value Number of Weighted-Average
Securities to be Issued Exercise PriceDollar Value Number of
Upon Exercise($) (1) Shares of of Outstanding($) (2) Stock Options
Securities Remaining
Outstanding Options, Warrants Available for Future
Plan Category Warrants and Rights and Rights Issuance
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Common Stock (#)
(#)
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Equity compensation plans approved by
security holders (1) 730,569 $11.95 924,169
Equity compensation plans not approved
by security holders -- -- --
-------- --------
Total 730,569 924,169
======== ========
Daniel A. Messmer, Chief Executive Officer - - - -
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Terry Frandsen, Chief Financial Officer - - - -
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Robert E. Griffin, Chairman of the Board - - - -
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Blaine E. Matthews, Jr., Director 25,106 2,575 4,208 1,287
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Edward E. Williams, Director 23,371 2,397 3,917 1,198
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
George Savitsky, Director 25,974 2,664 4,356 1,332
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Richard D. White, Director 24,239 2,486 4,065 1,243
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Richard F. Baalmann, Jr., Director 22,513 2,309 3,774 1,154
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Executive Group (3 persons) - - - -
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Non-Executive Director Group (5 persons) 121,203 12,431 20,320 6,214
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Non-Executive Officer and Employee Group 121,203 12,431 20,320 6,214
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
(1) These plans areThe value of shares issued is dependent on the market price of the
Company's 1997 Incentive Stock Optioncommon stock on the day the shares are issued. The value recorded
in this column is based on the closing market price of the Company's common
stock on March 16, 2007: $9.75 per share.
(2) The fair value of options granted will be calculated based on the
provisions of Financial Accounting Standard No. 123R (Share-Based Payment)
using the closing market price on the date the options are granted. The
value recorded in this column is based on closing market price of the
Company's common stock on March 16, 2007: $9.75 per share. Assuming this
price on the date of grant, the estimated fair value of the options using
the Black-Scholes option-pricing model is $3.27 per option.
If the Plan is not approved at the Annual Meeting, the Compensation Committee
will consider alternative compensation to the directors including, without
limitation, the payment of the cash value of the stock and option awards that
would have been paid to the directors on April 27, 2007.
Other than as specified in the above table, no determination has yet been made
as to the amount or terms of any stock-based incentives or any future cash
awards under the Plan. The Compensation Committee currently believes that awards
of restricted stock units will best meet the Company's compensation objectives
for equity incentives to executive officers and directors. The Compensation
Committee is considering annual grants to each of the five non-management
director commencing with the 2007 Annual Meeting of 1,250 restricted stock units
with a one year vesting period, but no such awards have yet been made or agreed
upon. If made, based on the Fair Market Value of the Company's common stock as
of March 16, 2007, such awards would have a value of $12,188 to each such
non-management director. Similarly, awards of restricted stock units for Mr.
Messmer and Mr. Frandsen are being considered but no specific amounts or terms
have yet been established or agreed upon by the Committee.
For additional information concerning the Company's compensation of its
directors and executive officers, please see "Compensation Discussion and
Analysis" and "Executive Compensation."
Vote Required
The affirmative vote of a majority of the votes entitled to be cast by the
holders of the Company's Common stock present or represented at the Annual
Meeting and entitled to vote thereon is required to approve the Plan.
Abstentions will have the same effect as a vote cast against the proposal.
Shares not voted by brokers and other entities holding shares on behalf of
26
beneficial owners will have no effect on the outcome. Proxies received by the
Company and not revoked prior to or at the Annual Meeting will be voted for this
proposal and the 1997
Director Stock Compensation and Option Plan.
The formadoption of the award letter forPlan unless otherwise instructed by the
proposed Stock Options is attached hereto
as Exhibit A. The Board recommends a votestockholder.
THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS RECOMMENDS A VOTE "FOR" this Item No. 2.
13ADOPTION OF THE 2007 INCENTIVE
PLAN
27
RESULTS OF THE 20052006 ANNUAL MEETING
Approximately 92.6%91.8% of the outstanding shares of the Company were voted in
person or by proxy at the 20052006 annual meeting that was held April 30, 2005.22, 2006. The
proposal to electstockholders elected each of the six nominees for election as directors to the
Board of Directors and approved the seven incumbent Directors nominated for
reelection was approved byproposal to grant each of the shareholders.
SHAREHOLDERCompany's
independent directors elected at the 2006 annual meeting 2,000 non-qualified
stock options.
STOCKHOLDER PROPOSALS FOR THE 20072008 ANNUAL MEETING
ShareholderStockholder proposals for shareholderstockholder action at the 20072008 annual meeting must be
presented in writing at the offices of the Company on or before November 17,
2006.2007. Any shareholderstockholder who intends to propose any other matter to be acted upon
at the 20072008 annual meeting of shareholdersstockholders must inform the Company no later than
February 23, 2007.12, 2008. If notice is not provided by that date, the persons named in
the Company's proxy for the 20072008 annual meeting will be allowed to exercise
their discretionary authority to vote upon any such proposal without the matter
having been discussed in the proxy statement for the 20072008 annual meeting. Only
such proposals as are (1) required by Securities and Exchange Commission Rules,
and are (2) permissible shareholderstockholder motions under the General Corporation lawLaw of
the State of Indiana will be included on the 20072008 annual meeting docket.
OTHER BUSINESS
Management does not know of any other business to be presented to the meeting
and does not intend to bring any other matters before the meeting. No
shareholderstockholder has informed the Company of any intention to propose any other
matter to be acted upon at the meeting. Accordingly, the persons named in the
accompanying Proxy are allowed to exercise their discretionary authority to vote
upon any such proposal without the matter having been discussed in this proxy
statement. If any matters properly come before the meeting, it is intended that
the persons named in the accompanying Proxy will vote thereon according to their
best judgment and interest of the Company.
By order of the Board of Directors
Terry D. Frandsen
V.P. Finance, CFO & Secretary
1428
Exhibit A
---------
Form of 2006 Special Stock Option Award to Non-Employee DirectorAnnex 1
-------
ESCALADE, INCORPORATED
Non-Qualified Stock Option2007 INCENTIVE PLAN
Escalade, Incorporated (the "Company"), an Indiana corporation, withhereby
establishes and adopts the following 2007 Incentive Plan (the "Plan").
1. PURPOSE OF THE PLAN
The purpose of the Plan is to assist the Company and its principal executive
offices locatedSubsidiaries
in Wabash, Indiana, herby grantsattracting and retaining selected individuals to serve as employees,
directors, consultants and/or advisors of the Company and its Subsidiaries who
are expected to contribute to the Company's success and to achieve long-term
objectives which will inure to the benefit of all stockholders of the Company
through the additional incentives inherent in the Awards hereunder.
2. DEFINITIONS
2.1. "Award" shall mean any Option, Stock Appreciation Right,
Restricted Stock Award, Other Stock Unit Award, Performance Award or any other
right, interest or option relating to Shares or other property (including cash)
granted pursuant to the provisions of the Plan.
2.2. "Award Agreement" shall mean any written agreement, contract
or other instrument or document evidencing any Award hereunder, including
through an electronic medium.
2.3. "Board" shall mean the board of directors of the Company.
2.4. "Code" shall mean the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as
amended from time to time.
2.5. "Committee" shall mean the Compensation Committee of the Board
or a subcommittee thereof formed by the Compensation Committee to act as the
Committee hereunder. The Committee shall consist of no fewer than two Directors,
each of whom is (i) a "Non-Employee Director" within the meaning of Rule 16b-3
of the Exchange Act, (ii) an "outside director" within the meaning of Section
162(m) of the Code, and (iii) an "independent director" for purpose of the rules
and regulations of the NASDAQ Stock Market (or such other principal securities
exchange on which the Shares are traded).
2.6. "Covered Employee" shall mean an employee of the Company or
its subsidiaries who is a "covered employee" within the meaning of Section
162(m) of the Code.
2.7. "Director" shall mean a non-employee Director
named belowmember of the Board.
2.8. "Dividend Equivalents" shall have the meaning set forth in
Section 12.5.
2.9. "Employee" shall mean any employee of the Company or any
Subsidiary and any prospective employee conditioned upon, and effective not
earlier than, such person becoming an optionemployee of the Company or any Subsidiary.
Solely for purposes of the Plan, an Employee shall also mean any consultant or
advisor who is a natural person and who provides services to the Company or any
Subsidiary, so long as such person (i) renders bona fide services that are not
in connection with the offer and sale of the Company's securities in a
capital-raising transaction and (ii) does not directly or indirectly promote or
maintain a market for the Company's securities.
2.10. "Exchange Act" shall mean the Securities Exchange Act of 1934,
as amended.
2.11. "Fair Market Value" shall mean, with respect to any property
other than Shares, the market value of such property determined by such methods
or procedures as shall be established from time to time by the Committee. The
Fair Market Value of Shares as of any date shall be the per Share closing price
of the Shares as reported on the NASDAQ Stock Market on that date (or if there
were no reported prices on such date, on the next following date on which the
prices are reported) or, if the Company is not then listed on the NASDAQ Stock
Market, on such other principal securities exchange on which the Shares are
traded, and if the Company is not listed on any securities exchange, the Fair
Market Value of Shares shall be determined by the Committee in its sole
discretion using appropriate criteria.
2.12. "Limitations" shall have the meaning set forth in Section
10.5.
2.13. "Option" shall mean any right granted to a Participant under
the Plan allowing such Participant to purchase Shares at such price or prices
and during such period or periods as the Committee shall determine.
2.14. "Other Share-Based Award" shall have the meaning set forth in
accordanceSection 8.1.
2.15. "Participant" shall mean an Employee or Director who is
selected by the Committee to receive an Award under the Plan.
2.16. "Payee" shall have the meaning set forth in Section 13.1.
2.17. "Performance Award" shall mean any Award of Performance Cash,
Performance Shares or Performance Units granted pursuant to Article 9.
2.18. "Performance Cash" shall mean any cash incentives granted
pursuant to Article 9 which will be paid to the Participant upon the achievement
of such performance goals as the Committee shall establish.
2.19. "Performance Period" shall mean the period established by the
Committee during which any performance goals specified by the Committee with
respect to such Award are to be measured.
2.20. "Performance Share" shall mean any grant pursuant to Article 9
of a unit valued by reference to a designated number of Shares, which value will
be paid to the Participant upon achievement of such performance goals as the
Committee shall establish.
2.21. "Performance Unit" shall mean any grant pursuant to Section 9
of a unit valued by reference to a designated amount of property other than
Shares (or cash), which value will be paid to the Participant upon achievement
of such performance goals during the Performance Period as the Committee shall
establish.
2.22. "Permitted Assignee" shall have the meaning set forth in
Section 12.3.
2.23. "Prior Plan" shall mean the Company's 1997 Incentive Stock
Option Plan and/or the Company's 1997 Director Stock Compensation and Option
Plan.
2.24. "Restricted Stock" shall mean any Share issued with the
restriction that the holder may not sell, transfer, pledge or assign such Share
and with such other restrictions as the Committee, in its sole discretion, may
impose (including any restriction on the right to vote such Share and the right
to receive any dividends), which restrictions may lapse separately or in
combination at such time or times, in installments or otherwise, as the
Committee may deem appropriate.
2.25. "Restricted Stock Award" shall have the meaning set forth in
Section 7.1.
2.26. "Restricted Stock Unit" means an Award that is valued by
reference to a Share, which value may be paid to the Participant by delivery of
such property as the Committee shall determine, including without limitation,
cash or Shares, or any combination thereof, and that has such restrictions as
the Committee, in its sole discretion, may impose, including without limitation,
any restriction on the right to retain such Awards, to sell, transfer, pledge or
assign such Awards, and/or to receive any cash Dividend Equivalents with respect
to such Awards, which restrictions may lapse separately or in combination at
such time or times, in installments or otherwise, as the Committee may deem
appropriate,
2.27. "Restricted Stock Unit Award" shall have the meaning set forth
in Section 7.1
2.28. "Shares" shall mean the shares of common stock of the Company,
no par value per share.
2.29. "Stock Appreciation Right" shall mean the right granted to a
Participant pursuant to Section 6.
2.30. "Subsidiary" shall mean any corporation (other than the
Company) in an unbroken chain of corporations beginning with the Company if, at
the relevant time each of the corporations other than the last corporation in
the unbroken chain owns stock possessing 50% or more of the total combined
voting power of all classes of stock in one of the other corporations in the
chain.
2.31. Substitute Awards" shall mean Awards granted or Shares issued
by the Company in assumption of, or in substitution or exchange for, awards
previously granted, or the right or obligation to make future awards, in each
case by a company acquired by the Company or any Subsidiary or with which the
Company or any Subsidiary combines.
2.32. "Vesting Period" shall have the meaning set forth in Section
7.1.
3. SHARES SUBJECT TO THE PLAN
3.1. Number of Shares. (a) Subject to the terms of this Section 3.1
and to adjustment as provided in Section 12.2, a total of 1,000,000 Shares shall
be authorized for issuance under the Plan, of which no more than 90% may be
available for Awards granted in any form provided for under this Plan other than
Options or Stock Appreciation Rights.
(b) If any Shares subject to an Award or to an award
under a Prior Plan are forfeited, expire or otherwise terminate without issuance
of such Shares, or any Award or award under a Prior Plan is settled for cash or
otherwise does not result in the issuance of all or a portion of the Shares
subject to such Award or award under such Prior Plan (including on payment in
Shares on exercise of a Stock Appreciation Right), such Shares shall, to the
extent of such forfeiture, expiration, termination, cash settlement or
non-issuance, again be available for issuance under the Plan.
(c) In the event that (i) any Option or other Award
granted hereunder is exercised through the tendering of Shares (either actually
or by attestation) or by the withholding of Shares by the Company, or (ii)
withholding tax liabilities arising from such Option or other Award are
satisfied by the tendering of Shares (either actually or by attestation) or by
the withholding of Shares by the Company, then the Shares so tendered or
withheld shall be available for issuance under the Plan. In the event that (i)
any option or award granted under a Prior Plan is exercised through the
tendering of Shares (either actually or by attestation) or by the withholding of
Shares by the Company, or (ii) withholding tax liabilities arising from such
options or awards are satisfied by the tendering of Shares (either actually or
by attestation) or by the withholding of Shares by the Company, then the Shares
so tendered or withheld shall be available for issuance under the Plan.
(d) Substitute Awards shall not reduce the Shares
authorized for grant under the Plan or authorized for grant to a Participant in
any calendar year. Additionally, in the event that a company acquired by the
Company or any Subsidiary or with which the Company or any Subsidiary combines
has shares available under a pre-existing plan approved by shareholders and not
adopted in contemplation of such acquisition or combination, the shares
available for grant pursuant to the terms of such pre-existing plan (as
adjusted, to the extent appropriate, using the exchange ratio or other
adjustment or valuation ratio or formula used in such acquisition or combination
to determine the consideration payable to the holders of common stock of the
entities party to such acquisition or combination) may be used for Awards under
the Plan and shall not reduce the Shares authorized for grant under the Plan;
provided that Awards using such available shares shall not be made after the
date awards or grants could have been made under the terms of the pre-existing
plan, absent the acquisition or combination, and shall only be made to
individuals who were not Employees or Directors prior to such acquisition or
combination.
3.2. Character of Shares. Any Shares issued hereunder may consist,
in whole or in part, of authorized and unissued shares, treasury shares or
shares purchased in the open market or otherwise.
4. ELIGIBILITY AND ADMINISTRATION
4.1. Eligibility. Any Employee or Director shall be eligible to be
selected as a Participant.
4.2. Administration. (a) The Plan shall be administered by the
Committee. The Committee shall have full power and authority, subject to the
provisions of the Plan and subject to such orders or resolutions not
inconsistent with the provisions of the Plan as may from time to time be adopted
by the Board, to: (i) select the Employees and Directors to whom Awards may from
time to time be granted hereunder; (ii) determine the type or types of Awards,
not inconsistent with the provisions of the Plan, to be granted to each
Participant hereunder; (iii) determine the number of Shares to be covered by
each Award granted hereunder; (iv) determine the terms and conditions, not
inconsistent with the provisions of the Plan, of any Award granted hereunder;
(v) determine whether, to what extent and under what circumstances Awards may be
settled in cash, Shares or other property; (vi) determine whether, to what
extent, and under what circumstances cash, Shares, other property and other
amounts payable with respect to an Award made under the Plan shall be deferred
either automatically or at the election of the Participant; (vii) determine
whether, to what extent and under what circumstances any Award shall be canceled
or suspended; (viii) interpret and administer the Plan and any instrument or
agreement entered into under or in connection with the Plan, including any Award
Agreement; (ix) correct any defect, supply any omission or reconcile any
inconsistency in the Plan or any Award in the manner and to the extent that the
Committee shall deem desirable to carry it into effect; (x) establish such rules
and regulations and appoint such agents as it shall deem appropriate for the
proper administration of the Plan; (xi) determine whether any Award will have
Dividend Equivalents; and (xii) make any other determination and take any other
action that the Committee deems necessary or desirable for administration of the
Plan.
(b) Decisions of the Committee shall be final, conclusive
and binding on all persons or entities, including the Company, any Participant,
and any Subsidiary. A majority of the members of the Committee may determine its
actions, including fixing the time and place of its meetings.
(c) To the extent not inconsistent with applicable law,
including Section 162(m) of the Code, or the rules and regulations of the NASDAQ
Stock Market (or such other principal securities exchange on which the Shares
are traded), the Committee may delegate to (i) a committee of one or more
directors of the Company any of the authority of the Committee under the Plan,
including the right to grant, cancel or suspend Awards and (ii) to the extent
permitted by law, to one or more executive officers or a committee of executive
officers the right to grant Awards to Employees who are not Directors or
executive officers of the Company and the authority to take action on behalf of
the Committee pursuant to the Plan to cancel or suspend Awards to Employees who
are not Directors or executive officers of the Company.
5. OPTIONS
5.1. Grant of Options. Options may be granted hereunder to
Participants either alone or in addition to other Awards granted under the Plan.
Any Option shall be subject to the terms and conditions of this Article and to
such additional terms and conditions, not inconsistent with the provisions of
the Plan, as the Committee shall deem desirable.
5.2. Award Agreements. All Options granted pursuant to this Article
shall be evidenced by a written Award Agreement in such form and containing such
terms and conditions as the Committee shall determine which are not inconsistent
with the provisions of the Plan. The terms of Options need not be the same with
respect to each Participant. Granting an Option pursuant to the Plan shall
impose no obligation on the recipient to exercise such Option. Any individual
who is granted an Option pursuant to this Article may hold more than one Option
granted pursuant to the Plan at the same time.
5.3. Option Price. Other than in connection with Substitute Awards,
the option price per each Share purchasable under any Option granted pursuant to
this Article shall not be less than 100% of the Fair Market Value of one Share
on the date of grant of such Option. Other than pursuant to Section 12.2, the
Committee shall not without the approval of the Company's stockholders (a) lower
the option price per Share of an Option after it is granted, (b) cancel an
Option in exchange for cash or another Award (other than in connection with
Substitute Awards), and (c) take any other action with respect to an Option that
would be treated as a repricing under the rules and regulations of the principal
securities exchange on which the Shares are traded.
5.4. Option Term. The term of each Option shall be fixed by the
Committee in its sole discretion; provided that no Option shall be exercisable
after the expiration of ten (10) years from the date the Option is granted,
except in the event of death or disability.
5.5. Exercise of Options. (a) Vested Options granted under the Plan
shall be exercised by the Participant or by a Permitted Assignee thereof (or by
the Participant's executors, administrators, guardian or legal representative,
as may be provided in an Award Agreement) as to all or part of the Shares
covered thereby, by giving notice of exercise to the Company or its designated
agent, specifying the number of Shares to be purchased. The notice of exercise
shall be in such form, made in such manner, and in compliance with such other
requirements consistent with the provisions of the Plan as the Committee may
prescribe from time to time
(b) Unless otherwise provided in an Award Agreement, full
payment of such purchase price shall be made at the time of exercise and shall
be made (i) in cash or cash equivalents (including certified check or bank check
or wire transfer of immediately available funds), (ii) by tendering previously
acquired Shares (either actually or by attestation, valued at their then Fair
Market Value), (iii) with the consent of the Committee, by delivery of other
consideration (including, where permitted by law and the Committee, other
Awards) having a Fair Market Value on the exercise date equal to the total
purchase price, (iv) with the consent of the Committee, by withholding Shares
otherwise issuable in connection with the exercise of the Option, (v) through
any other method specified in an Award Agreement, or (vi) any combination of any
of the foregoing. The notice of exercise, accompanied by such payment, shall be
delivered to the Company at its principal business office or such other office
as the Committee may from time to time direct, and shall be in such form,
containing such further provisions consistent with the provisions of the Plan,
as the Committee may from time to time prescribe. In no event may any Option
granted hereunder be exercised for a fraction of a Share. No adjustment shall be
made for cash dividends or other rights for which the record date is prior to
the date of such issuance.
5.6. Form of Settlement. In its sole discretion, the Committee may
provide that the Shares to be issued upon an Option's exercise shall be in the
form of Restricted Stock or other similar securities.
5.7. Incentive Stock Options. The Committee may grant Options
intended to qualify as "incentive stock options" as defined in Section 422 of
the Code, to any employee of the Company or any Subsidiary, subject to the
requirements of Section 422 of the Code. Solely for purposes of determining
whether Shares are available for the grant of "incentive stock options" under
the Plan, the maximum aggregate number of Shares that may be issued pursuant to
"incentive stock options" granted under the Plan shall be 1,500,000 Shares,
subject to adjustments provided in Section 12.2.
6. STOCK APPRECIATION RIGHTS
6.1. Grant and Exercise. The Committee may provide Stock
Appreciation Rights (a) in conjunction with all or part of any Option granted
under the Plan or at any subsequent time during the term of such Option, (b) in
conjunction with all or part of any Award (other than an Option) granted under
the Plan or at any subsequent time during the term of such Award, or (c) without
regard to any Option or other Award in each case upon such terms and conditions
as the Committee may establish in its sole discretion.
6.2. Terms and Conditions. Stock Appreciation Rights shall be
subject to such terms and conditions, not inconsistent with the provisions of
the Plan, as shall be determined from time to time by the Committee, including
the following:
(a) Upon the exercise of a Stock Appreciation Right, the
holder shall have the right to receive the excess of (i) the Fair Market Value
of one Share on the date of exercise (or such amount less than such Fair Market
Value as the Committee shall so determine at any time during a specified period
before the date of exercise) over (ii) the grant price of the right on the date
of grant, which, except in the case of Substitute Awards or in connection with
an adjustment provided in Section 12.2, shall not be less than the Fair Market
Value of one Share on such date of grant of the right.
(b) Upon the exercise of a Stock Appreciation Right, the
Committee shall determine in its sole discretion whether payment shall be made
in cash, in whole Shares or other property, or any combination thereof.
(c) The provisions of Stock Appreciation Rights need not
be the same with respect to each recipient.
(d) The Committee may impose such other conditions or
restrictions on the terms of exercise and the grant price of any Stock
Appreciation Right, as it shall deem appropriate. A Stock Appreciation Right
shall have (i) a grant price not less than Fair Market Value on the date of
grant (subject to the requirements of Section 409A of the Code with respect to a
Stock Appreciation Right granted in conjunction with, but subsequent to, an
Option), and (ii) a term not greater than ten (10) years
(e) Without the approval of the Company's stockholders,
other than pursuant to Section 12.2, the Committee shall not (i) reduce the
grant price of any Stock Appreciation Right after the date of grant (ii) cancel
any Stock Appreciation Right when the grant price per Share exceeds the Fair
Market Value of the underlying Shares in exchange for cash or another Award
(other than in connection with Substitute Awards), and (iii) take any other
action with respect to a Stock Appreciation Right that would be treated as a
repricing under the rules and regulations of the principal securities market on
which the Shares are traded.
(f) The Committee may impose such terms and conditions on
Stock Appreciation Rights granted in conjunction with any Award (other than an
Option) as the Committee shall determine in its sole discretion.
7. RESTRICTED STOCK AND RESTRICTED STOCK UNITS
7.1. Grants. Awards of Restricted Stock and of Restricted Stock
Units may be issued hereunder to Participants either alone or in addition to
other Awards granted under the Plan (a "Restricted Stock Award" or "Restricted
Stock Unit Award" respectively), and such Restricted Stock Awards and Restricted
Stock Unit Awards shall also be available as a form of payment of Performance
Awards and other earned cash-based incentive compensation. A Restricted Stock
Award or Restricted Stock Unit Award shall be subject to vesting restrictions
imposed by the Committee covering a period of time specified by the Committee
(the "Vesting Period"). The Committee has absolute discretion to determine
whether any consideration (other than services) is to be received by the Company
or any Subsidiary as a condition precedent to the issuance of Restricted Stock
or Restricted Stock Units.
7.2. Award Agreements. The terms of any Restricted Stock Award or
Restricted Stock Unit Award granted under the Plan shall be set forth in this Certificate,a
written Award Agreement which shall contain provisions determined by the
numberCommittee and not inconsistent with the Plan. The terms of sharesRestricted Stock
Awards and Restricted Stock Unit Awards need not be the same with respect to
each Participant
7.3. Rights of Holders of Restricted Stock and Restricted Stock
Units. Unless otherwise provided in the Award Agreement, beginning on the date
of grant of the CommonRestricted Stock Award and subject to execution of Escalade, Incorporated, at the price set forth hereinAward
Agreement, the Participant shall become a shareholder of the Company with
respect to all Shares subject to the Award Agreement and shall have all of the
rights of a shareholder, including the right to vote such Shares and the right
to receive distributions made with respect to such Shares. A Participant
receiving a Restricted Stock Unit Award shall not possess voting rights with
respect to such Award. Except as follows:
Director Name:
-------------------------------
Numberotherwise provided in an Award Agreement any
Shares or any other property (other than cash) distributed as a dividend or
otherwise with respect to any Restricted Stock Award or Restricted Stock Unit
Award as to which the restrictions have not yet lapsed shall be subject to the
same restrictions as such Restricted Stock Award or Restricted Stock Unit Award.
8. OTHER SHARE-BASED AWARDS
8.1. Grants. Other Awards of Shares for which Option is granted: 2,000 Shares of Escalade Common
Stock
Option Price per Share: See Exercise Price below
Date of Grant: April 22, 2006
Exercise Price: The exercise price for the Stock Options will be the
closing sale price on the NASDAQ Stock Market of the
Company's common stock on April 24, 2006, the next business
day following the Company's Annual Meeting of Stockholders
on April 22, 2006. If the NASDAQ Stock Market would not
openand other Awards that day, or if no shares of Company common stock
would be traded on that date, then the exercise price will
be the closing sale price on the NASDAQ Market on the next
closest date after April 24, 2006 that the NASDAQ Market is
open and trades of the Company's common stock take place.
Expiration Date: The Stock Options will expire, if not exercised, on
the earlier of April 22, 2011 or within 12 months of the
death of the Director or following retirement from service
as a Director of the Company.
Vesting: The Stock Options shall vest in full on April 22, 2007. No
Stock Options may be exercised prior to that date. Once
vested, the Stock Options can be exercisedare
valued in whole or in part untilby reference to, or are otherwise based on, Shares or
other property ("Other Share-Based Awards") may be granted hereunder to
Participants either alone or in addition to other Awards granted under the expirationPlan.
Other Share-Based Awards shall also be available as a form of payment of other
Awards granted under the Plan and other earned cash-based incentive
compensation. Other Share-Based Awards shall be subject to such Vesting Period,
if any, imposed by the Committee.
8.2. Award Agreements. The terms of Other Share-Based Award granted
under the Plan shall be set forth in a written Award Agreement which shall
contain provisions determined by the Committee and not inconsistent with the
Plan. The terms of such Awards need not be the same with respect to each
Participant.
8.3. Payment. Except as may be provided in an Award Agreement,
Other Share-Based Awards may be paid in cash, Shares, other property, or any
combination thereof, in the sole discretion of the Committee. Other Share-Based
Awards may be paid in a lump sum or in installments or, in accordance with
procedures established by the Committee, on a deferred basis subject to the
requirements of Section 409A of the Code.
9. PERFORMANCE AWARDS
9.1. Grants. Performance Awards in the form of Performance Cash,
Performance Shares or Performance Units, as determined by the Committee in its
sole discretion, may be granted hereunder to Participants, for no consideration
or for such minimum consideration as may be required by applicable law, either
alone or in addition to other Awards granted under the Plan. The performance
goals to be achieved for each Performance Period shall be conclusively
determined by the Committee and may be based upon the criteria set forth in
Section 10.2.
9.2. Award Agreements. The terms of any Performance Award granted
under the Plan shall be set forth in a written Award Agreement which shall
contain provisions determined by the Committee and not inconsistent with the
Plan, including whether such Awards shall have Dividend Equivalents. The terms
of Performance Awards need not be the same with respect to each Participant.
9.3. Terms and Conditions. The performance criteria to be achieved
during any Performance Period and the length of the Performance Period shall be
determined by the Committee upon the grant of each Performance Award. The amount
of the Award to be distributed shall be conclusively determined by the
Committee.
9.4. Payment. Except as provided in Article 11 or as may be
provided in an Award Agreement, Performance Awards will be distributed only
after the end of the relevant Performance Period. Performance Awards may be paid
in cash, Shares, other property, or any combination thereof, in the sole
discretion of the Committee. Performance Awards may be paid in a lump sum or in
installments following the close of the Performance Period or, in accordance
with procedures established by the Committee, on a deferred basis subject to the
requirements of Section 409A of the Code.
10. CODE SECTION 162(m) PROVISIONS
10.1. Covered Employees. Notwithstanding any other provision of the
Plan, if the Committee determines at the time a Restricted Stock Option.
Withholding:Award, a
Restricted Stock Unit Award, a Performance Award or an Other Share-Based Award
is granted to a Participant who is, or is likely to be, as of the end of the tax
year in which the Company would claim a tax deduction in connection with such
Award, a Covered Employee, then the Committee may provide that this Article 10
is applicable to such Award.
10.2. Performance Criteria. If the Committee determines that a
Restricted Stock Award, a Restricted Stock Unit, a Performance Award or an Other
Share-Based Award is intended to be subject to this Article 10, the lapsing of
restrictions thereon and the distribution of cash, Shares or other property
pursuant thereto, as applicable, shall be subject to the achievement of one or
more objective performance goals established by the Committee, which shall be
based on the attainment of specified levels of one or any combination of the
following: net sales; revenue; revenue growth or product revenue growth;
operating income (before or after taxes); pre- or after-tax income (before or
after allocation of corporate overhead and bonus); earnings per share; net
income (before or after taxes); return on equity; total shareholder return;
return on assets or net assets; appreciation in and/or maintenance of the price
of the Shares or any other publicly-traded securities of the Company; market
share; gross profits; earnings (including earnings before taxes, earnings before
interest and taxes, earnings before interest, taxes and amortization, or
earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization); economic
value-added models or equivalent metrics; comparisons with various stock market
indices; reductions in costs; cash flow or cash flow per share (before or after
dividends); return on capital (including return on total capital or return on
invested capital); cash flow return on investment; improvement in or attainment
of expense levels or working capital levels; operating margins, gross margins or
cash margin; year-end cash; debt reductions; shareholder equity; market share;
regulatory achievements; and implementation, completion or attainment of
measurable objectives with respect to research, development, products or
projects, production volume levels, acquisitions and divestitures and recruiting
and maintaining personnel. Such performance goals also may be based solely by
reference to the Company's performance or the performance of a Subsidiary,
division, business segment or business unit of the Company, or based upon the
relative performance of other companies or upon comparisons of any of the
indicators of performance relative to other companies. The Committee may also
exclude charges related to an event or occurrence which the Committee determines
should appropriately be excluded, including (a) restructurings, discontinued
operations, extraordinary items, and other unusual or non-recurring charges, (b)
an event either not directly related to the operations of the Company or not
within the reasonable control of the Company's management, or (c) the cumulative
effects of tax or accounting changes in accordance with U.S. generally accepted
accounting principles. Such performance goals shall be set by the Committee
within the time period prescribed by, and shall otherwise comply with the
requirements of, Section 162(m) of the Code, and the regulations thereunder.
10.3. Adjustments. Notwithstanding any provision of the Plan (other
than Article 11), with respect to any Restricted Stock Award, Restricted Stock
Unit Award, Performance Award or Other Share-Based Award that is subject to this
Section 10, the Committee may adjust downwards, but not upwards, the amount
payable pursuant to such Award, and the Committee may not waive the achievement
of the applicable performance goals, except in the case of the death or
disability of the Participant or as otherwise determined by the Committee in
special circumstances.
10.4. Restrictions. The Committee shall have the power to impose
such other restrictions on Awards subject to this Article as it may deem
necessary or appropriate to ensure that such Awards satisfy all requirements for
"performance-based compensation" within the meaning of Section 162(m) of the
Code.
10.5. Limitations on Grants to Individual Participants. Subject to
adjustment as provided in Section 12.2, no Participant may be granted (i)
Options or Stock Appreciation Rights during any 36-month period with respect to
more than 200,000 Shares or (ii) Restricted Stock Awards, Restricted Stock Unit
Awards, Performance Awards and/or Other Share-Based Awards in any 36-month
period that are intended to comply with the performance-based exception under
Code Section 162(m) and are denominated in Shares with respect to more than
200,000 Shares (the "Limitations"). In addition to the foregoing, the maximum
dollar value that may be earned by any Participant in any 12-month period with
respect to Performance Awards that are intended to comply with the
performance-based exception under Code Section 162(m) and are denominated in
cash is $2,000,000. If an Award is cancelled, the cancelled Award shall continue
to be counted toward the applicable Limitations.
11. CHANGE IN CONTROL PROVISIONS
11.1. Impact on Certain Awards. Award Agreements may provide that in
the event of a Change in Control of the Company (as defined in Section 11.3):
(i) Options and Stock Appreciation Rights outstanding as of the date of the
Change in Control shall be cancelled and terminated without payment therefore if
the Fair Market Value of one Share as of the date of the Change in Control is
less than the per Share Option exercise price or Stock Appreciation Right grant
price, and (ii) all Performance Awards shall be considered to be earned and
payable (either in full or pro rata based on the portion of Performance Period
completed as of the date of the Change in Control), and any deferral or other
restriction shall lapse and such Performance Awards shall be immediately settled
or distributed.
11.2. Assumption or Substitution of Certain Awards. (a) Unless
otherwise provided in an Award Agreement, in the event of a Change in Control of
the Company in which the successor company assumes or substitutes for an Option,
Stock Appreciation Right, Restricted Stock Award, Restricted Stock Unit Award or
Other Share-Based Award, if a Participant's employment with such successor
company (or a subsidiary thereof) terminates within 24 months following such
Change in Control (or such other period set forth in the Award Agreement,
including prior thereto if applicable) and under the circumstances specified in
the Award Agreement: (i) Options and Stock Appreciation Rights outstanding as of
the date of such termination of employment will immediately vest, become fully
exercisable, and may thereafter be exercised for 24 months (or the period of
time set forth in the Award Agreement), (ii) restrictions and deferral
limitations on Restricted Stock and Restricted Stock Units shall lapse and the
Restricted Stock and Restricted Stock Units shall become free of all
restrictions and limitations and become fully vested, and (iii) the restrictions
and deferral limitations and other conditions applicable to any Other
Share-Based Awards or any other Awards shall lapse, and such Other Share-Based
Awards or such other Awards shall become free of all restrictions, limitations
or conditions and become fully vested and transferable to the full extent of the
original grant. For the purposes of this Section 11.1, an Option, Stock
Appreciation Right, Restricted Stock Award, Restricted Stock Unit Award or Other
Share-Based Award shall be considered assumed or substituted for if following
the Change in Control the Award confers the right to purchase or receive, for
each Share subject to the Option, Stock Appreciation Right, Restricted Stock
Award, Restricted Stock Unit Award or Other Share-Based Award immediately prior
to the Change in Control, the consideration (whether stock, cash or other
securities or property) received in the transaction constituting a Change in
Control by holders of Shares for each Share held on the effective date of such
transaction (and if holders were offered a choice of consideration, the type of
consideration chosen by the holders of a majority of the outstanding shares);
provided, however, that if such consideration received in the transaction
constituting a Change in Control is not solely common stock of the successor
company, the Committee may, with the consent of the successor company, provide
that the consideration to be received upon the exercise or vesting of an Option,
Stock Appreciation Right, Restricted Stock Award, Restricted Stock Unit Award or
Other Share-Based Award, for each Share subject thereto, will be solely common
stock of the successor company substantially equal in fair market value to the
per share consideration received by holders of Shares in the transaction
constituting a Change in Control. The determination of such substantial equality
of value of consideration shall be made by the Committee in its sole discretion
and its determination shall be conclusive and binding.
(b) Unless otherwise provided in an Award Agreement, in
the event of a Change in Control of the Company to the extent the successor
company does not assume or substitute for an Option, Stock Appreciation Right,
Restricted Stock Award, Restricted Stock Unit Award or Other Share-Based Award:
(i) those Options and Stock Appreciation Rights outstanding as of the date of
the Change in Control that are not assumed or substituted for shall immediately
vest and become fully exercisable, (ii) restrictions and deferral limitations on
Restricted Stock and Restricted Stock Units that are not assumed or substituted
for shall lapse and the Restricted Stock and Restricted Stock Units shall become
free of all restrictions and limitations and become fully vested, and (iii) the
restrictions and deferral limitations and other conditions applicable to any
Other Share-Based Awards or any other Awards that are not assumed or substituted
for shall lapse, and such Other Share-Based Awards or such other Awards shall
become free of all restrictions, limitations or conditions and become fully
vested and transferable to the full extent of the original grant.
(c) The Committee, in its discretion, may determine that,
upon the occurrence of a Change in Control of the Company, each Option and Stock
Appreciation Right outstanding shall terminate within a specified number of days
after notice to the Participant, and/or that each Participant shall receive,
with respect to each Share subject to such Option or Stock Appreciation Right,
an amount equal to the excess of the Fair Market Value of such Share immediately
prior to the occurrence of such Change in Control over the exercise price per
share of such Option and/or Stock Appreciation Right; such amount to be payable
in cash, in one or more kinds of stock or property (including the stock or
property, if any, payable in the transaction) or in a combination thereof, as
the Committee, in its discretion, shall determine.
11.3. Change in Control. For purposes of the Plan, unless otherwise
provided in an Award Agreement, Change in Control means the occurrence of any
one of the following events:
(a) During any twenty-four (24) month period, individuals
who, as of the beginning of such period, constitute the Board (the "Incumbent
Directors") cease for any reason to constitute at least a majority of the Board,
provided that any person becoming a director subsequent to the beginning of such
period whose election or nomination for election was approved by a vote of at
least a majority of the Incumbent Directors then on the Board (either by a
specific vote or by approval of the proxy statement of the Company in which such
person is named as a nominee for director, without written objection to such
nomination) shall be an Incumbent Director; provided, however, that no
individual initially elected or nominated as a director of the Company as a
result of an actual or threatened election contest with respect to directors or
as a result of any other actual or threatened solicitation of proxies by or on
behalf of any person other than the Board shall be deemed to be an Incumbent
Director;
(b) Any "person" (as such term is defined in the Exchange
Act and as used in Sections 13(d)(3) and 14(d)(2) of the Exchange Act) is or
becomes a "beneficial owner" (as defined in Rule 13d-3 under the Exchange Act),
directly or indirectly, of securities of the Company representing 40% or more of
the combined voting power of the Company's then outstanding securities eligible
to vote for the election of the Board (the "Company Voting Securities");
provided, however, that the event described in this paragraph (b) shall not be
deemed to be a Change in Control by virtue of any of the following acquisitions:
(i) by the Company or any subsidiary, (ii) by any employee benefit plan (or
related trust) sponsored or maintained by the Company or any subsidiary, (iii)
by any underwriter temporarily holding securities pursuant to an offering of
such securities, (iv) pursuant to a Non-Qualifying Transaction, as defined in
paragraph (c), or (v) by any person of Voting Securities from the Company, if a
majority of the Incumbent Board approves in advance the acquisition of
beneficial ownership of 40% or more of Company Voting Securities by such person;
(c) The consummation of a merger, consolidation,
statutory share exchange or similar form of corporate transaction involving the
Company or any of its subsidiaries that requires the approval of the Company's
stockholders, whether for such transaction or the issuance of securities in the
transaction (a "Business Combination"), unless immediately following such
Business Combination: (i) at least 60% of the total voting power of (A) the
corporation resulting from such Business Combination (the "Surviving
Corporation"), or (B) if applicable, the ultimate parent corporation that
directly or indirectly has beneficial ownership of 100% of the voting securities
eligible to elect directors of the Surviving Corporation (the "Parent
Corporation"), is represented by Company Voting Securities that were outstanding
immediately prior to such Business Combination (or, if applicable, is
represented by shares into which such Company Voting Securities were converted
pursuant to such Business Combination), and such voting power among the holders
thereof is in substantially the same proportion as the voting power of such
Company Voting Securities among the holders thereof immediately prior to the
Business Combination, (ii) no person (other than any employee benefit plan (or
related trust) sponsored or maintained by the Surviving Corporation or the
Parent Corporation), is or becomes the beneficial owner, directly or indirectly,
of 40% or more of the total voting power of the outstanding voting securities
eligible to elect directors of the Parent Corporation (or, if there is no Parent
Corporation, the Surviving Corporation) and (iii) at least a majority of the
members of the board of directors of the Parent Corporation (or, if there is no
Parent Corporation, the Surviving Corporation) following the consummation of the
Business Combination were Incumbent Directors at the time of the Board's
approval of the execution of the initial agreement providing for such Business
Combination (any Business Combination which satisfies all of the criteria
specified in (i), (ii) and (iii) above shall be deemed to be a "Non-Qualifying
Transaction");
(d) The stockholders of the Company approve a plan of
complete liquidation or dissolution of the Company or the consummation of a sale
of all or substantially all of the Company's assets; or
(e) The occurrence of any other event that the Board
determines by a duly approved resolution constitutes a Change in Control.
Notwithstanding the foregoing, a Change in Control shall not be deemed to occur
solely because any person acquires beneficial ownership of more than 40% of the
Company Voting Securities as a result of the acquisition of Company Voting
Securities by the Company which reduces the number of Company Voting Securities
outstanding; provided, that if after such acquisition by the Company such person
becomes the beneficial owner of additional Company Voting Securities that
increases the percentage of outstanding Company Voting Securities beneficially
owned by such person, a Change in Control of the Company shall then occur.
12. GENERALLY APPLICABLE PROVISIONS
12.1. Amendment and Termination of the Plan. The Board may, from
time to time, alter, amend, suspend or terminate the Plan as it shall deem
advisable, subject to any requirement for stockholder approval imposed by
applicable law, including the rules and regulations of the principal securities
market on which the Shares are traded; provided that the Board may not amend the
Plan in any manner that would result in noncompliance with Rule 16b-3 of the
Exchange Act; and further provided that the Board may not, without the approval
of the Company's stockholders, amend the Plan to (a) increase the number of
Shares that may be the subject of Awards under the Plan (except for adjustments
pursuant to Section 12.2), (b) expand the types of awards available under the
Plan, (c) materially expand the class of persons eligible to participate in the
Plan, (d) amend any provision of Section 5.3, (e) increase the maximum
permissible term of any Option specified by Section 5.4 or the maximum
permissible term of a Stock Appreciation Right specified by Section 6.2(d), or
(f) amend any provision of Section 10.5. The Board may not, without the approval
of the Company's shareholders, take any other action with respect to an Option
or Stock Appreciation Right that may be treated as a repricing under the rules
and regulations of the principal securities market on which the Shares are
traded, including a reduction of the exercise price of an Option or the grant
price of a Stock Appreciation Right or the exchange of an Option or Stock
Appreciation Right for cash or another Award. In addition, no amendments to, or
termination of, the Plan shall in any way impair the rights of a Participant
under any Award previously granted without such Participant's consent.
12.2. Adjustments. In the event of any merger, reorganization,
consolidation, recapitalization, dividend or distribution (whether in cash,
shares or other property, other than a regular cash dividend), stock split,
reverse stock split, spin-off or similar transaction or other change in
corporate structure affecting the Shares or the value thereof, such adjustments
and other substitutions shall be made to the Plan and to Awards as the
Committee, in its sole discretion, deems equitable or appropriate taking into
consideration the accounting and tax consequences, including such adjustments in
the aggregate number, class and kind of securities that may be delivered under
the Plan, the Limitations, the maximum number of Shares that may be issued as
incentive stock options and, in the aggregate or to any one Participant, in the
number, class, kind and option or exercise price of securities subject to
outstanding Awards granted under the Plan (including, if the Committee deems
appropriate, the substitution of similar options to purchase the shares of, or
other awards denominated in the shares of, another company) as the Committee may
determine to be appropriate in its sole discretion; provided, however, that the
number of Shares subject to any Award shall always be a whole number.
12.3. Transferability of Awards. Except as provided below, no Award
and no Shares subject to Awards described in Article 8 that have not been issued
or as to which any applicable restriction, performance or deferral period has
not lapsed, may be sold, assigned, transferred, pledged or otherwise encumbered,
other than by will or the laws of descent and distribution, and such Award may
be exercised during the life of the Participant only by the Participant or the
Participant's guardian or legal representative. To the extent and under such
terms and conditions as determined by the Committee, a Participant may assign or
transfer an Award (each transferee thereof, a "Permitted Assignee") to (i) the
Participant's spouse, children or grandchildren (including any adopted and step
children or grandchildren), parents, grandparents or siblings, (ii) to a trust
for the benefit of one or more if the Participant or the Persons referred to in
clause (i), (iii) to a partnership, limited liability company or corporation in
which the participant or the Persons referred to in clause (i) are the only
partners, members or shareholders or (iv) for charitable donations; provided
that such Permitted Assignee shall be bound by and subject to all of the terms
and conditions of the Plan and the Award Agreement relating to the transferred
Award and shall execute an agreement satisfactory to the Company evidencing such
obligations; and provided further that such Participant shall remain bound by
the terms and conditions of the Plan. The Company shall cooperate with any
Permitted Assignee and the Company's transfer agent in effectuating any transfer
permitted under this Section.
12.4. Termination of Employment. The Committee shall determine and
set forth in each Award Agreement whether any Awards granted in such Award
Agreement will continue to be exercisable, and the terms of such exercise, on
and after the date that a Participant ceases to be employed by or to provide
services to the Company or any Subsidiary (including as a Director), whether by
reason of death, disability, voluntary or involuntary termination of employment
or services, or otherwise. The date of termination of a Participant's employment
or services will be determined by the Committee, which determination will be
final.
12.5. Deferral; Dividend Equivalents. The Committee shall be
authorized to establish procedures pursuant to which the payment of any Award
may be deferred. Subject to the provisions of the Plan and any Award Agreement,
the recipient of an Award (including any deferred Award) may, if so determined
by the Committee, be entitled to withholdreceive, currently or on a deferred basis,
cash, stock or other property dividends, or cash payments in amounts equivalent
to cash, stock or other property dividends on Shares ("Dividend Equivalents")
with respect to the amountnumber of Shares covered by the Award, as determined by the
Committee, in its sole discretion. The Committee may provide that such amounts
and Dividend Equivalents (if any) shall be deemed to have been reinvested in
additional Shares or otherwise reinvested and may provide that such amounts and
Dividend Equivalents are subject to the same vesting or performance conditions
as the underlying Award.
13. MISCELLANEOUS
13.1. Tax Withholding. The Company shall have the right to make all
payments or distributions pursuant to the Plan to a Participant (or a Permitted
Assignee thereof) (any such person, a "Payee") net of any applicable federal,
state and local taxes required to be paid or withheld as a result of (a) the
grant of any Award, (b) the exercise of an Option or Stock Appreciation Right,
(c) the delivery of Shares or cash, (d) the lapse of any restrictions in
connection with any Award or (e) any other event occurring pursuant to the Plan.
The Company or any Subsidiary shall have the right to withhold from wages or
other amounts otherwise payable to such Payee such withholding taxes as may be
required by law, or to otherwise require the Payee to pay such withholding
taxes. If the Payee shall fail to make such tax attributablepayments as are required, the
Company or its Subsidiaries shall, to the extent permitted by law, have the
right to deduct any such taxes from any payment of any kind otherwise due to
such Payee or to take such other action as may be necessary to satisfy such
withholding obligations. The Committee shall be authorized to establish
procedures for election by Participants to satisfy such obligation for the
payment of such taxes by tendering previously acquired Shares (either actually
or by attestation, valued at their then Fair Market Value), or by directing the
Company to retain Shares (up to the Participant's minimum required tax
withholding rate or such other rate that will not trigger a negative accounting
impact) otherwise deliverable in connection with the Award.
13.2. Right of Discharge Reserved; Claims to Awards. Nothing in the
Plan nor the grant of an Award hereunder shall confer upon any Employee or
Director the right to continue in the employment or service of the Company or
any Subsidiary or affect any right that the Company or any Subsidiary may have
to terminate the employment or service of (or to demote or to exclude from
future Awards under the Plan) any such Employee or Director at any time for any
reason. Except as specifically provided by the Committee, the Company shall not
be liable for the loss of existing or potential profit from an Award granted in
the event of termination of an employment or other relationship. No Employee or
Participant shall have any claim to be granted any Award under the Plan, and
there is no obligation for uniformity of treatment of Employees or Participants
under the Plan.
13.3. Prospective Recipient. The prospective recipient of any Award
under the Plan shall not, with respect to such Award, be deemed to have become a
Participant, or to have any rights with respect to such Award, until and unless
such recipient shall have executed an agreement or other instrument evidencing
the Award and delivered a copy thereof to the Company, and otherwise complied
with the then applicable terms and conditions of the Plan and the Award
Agreement.
13.4. Substitute Awards. Notwithstanding any other provision of the
Plan, the terms of Substitute Awards may vary from the terms set forth in the
Plan to the extent the Committee deems appropriate to conform, in whole or in
part, to the provisions of the awards in substitution for which they are
granted.
13.5. Cancellation of Award. Notwithstanding anything to the
contrary contained herein, an Award Agreement may provide that the Award shall
be canceled if the Participant, without the consent of the Company, while
employed by the Company or any Subsidiary or after termination of such
employment or service, establishes a relationship with a competitor of the
Company or any Subsidiary or engages in activity that is in conflict with or
adverse to the interest of the Company or any Subsidiary, as determined by the
Committee in its sole discretion. The Committee may provide in an Award
Agreement that if within the time period specified in the Agreement the
Participant establishes a relationship with a competitor or engages in an
activity referred to in the preceding sentence, the Participant will forfeit any
gain realized on the vesting or exercise of the Award and must repay such gain
to the Company.
13.6. Stop Transfer Orders. All certificates for Shares delivered
under the Plan pursuant to any shares deliverableAward shall be subject to such stop-transfer
orders and other restrictions as the Committee may deem advisable under this
Certificate after giving the
personrules, regulations and other requirements of the Securities and Exchange
Commission, any stock exchange upon which the Shares are then listed, and any
applicable federal or state securities law, and the Committee may cause a legend
or legends to be put on any such certificates to make appropriate reference to
such restrictions.
13.7. Nature of Payments. All Awards made pursuant to the Plan are
in consideration of services performed or to be performed for the Company or any
Subsidiary, division or business unit of the Company. Any income or gain
realized pursuant to Awards under the Plan constitute a special incentive
payment to the Participant and shall not be taken into account, to the extent
permissible under applicable law, as compensation for purposes of any of the
employee benefit plans of the Company or any Subsidiary except as may be
determined by the Committee or by the Board or board of directors of the
applicable Subsidiary.
13.8. Other Plans. Nothing contained in the Plan shall prevent the
Board from adopting other or additional compensation arrangements, subject to
stockholder approval if such approval is required; and such arrangements may be
either generally applicable or applicable only in specific cases.
13.9. Severability. If any provision of the Plan shall be held
unlawful or otherwise invalid or unenforceable in whole or in part by a court of
competent jurisdiction, such provision shall (a) be deemed limited to the extent
that such court of competent jurisdiction deems it lawful, valid and/or
enforceable and as so limited shall remain in full force and effect, and (b) not
affect any other provision of the Plan or part thereof, each of which shall
remain in full force and effect. If the making of any payment or the provision
of any other benefit required under the Plan shall be held unlawful or otherwise
invalid or unenforceable by a court of competent jurisdiction, such
unlawfulness, invalidity or unenforceability shall not prevent any other payment
or benefit from being made or provided under the Plan, and if the making of any
payment in full or the provision of any other benefit required under the Plan in
full would be unlawful or otherwise invalid or unenforceable, then such
unlawfulness, invalidity or unenforceability shall not prevent such payment or
benefit from being made or provided in part, to the extent that it would not be
unlawful, invalid or unenforceable, and the maximum payment or benefit that
would not be unlawful, invalid or unenforceable shall be made or provided under
the Plan.
13.10. Construction. As used in the Plan, the words "include" and
"including," and variations thereof, shall not be deemed to be terms of
limitation, but rather shall be deemed to be followed by the words "without
limitation."
13.11. Unfunded Status of the Plan. The Plan is intended to
constitute an "unfunded" plan for incentive compensation. With respect to any
payments not yet made to a Participant by the Company, nothing contained herein
shall give any such Participant any rights that are greater than those of a
general creditor of the Company. In its sole discretion, the Committee may
authorize the creation of trusts or other arrangements to meet the obligations
created under the Plan to deliver the Shares or payments in lieu of or with
respect to Awards hereunder; provided, however, that the existence of such
trusts or other arrangements is consistent with the unfunded status of the Plan.
13.12. Governing Law. The Plan and all determinations made and
actions taken thereunder, to the extent not otherwise governed by the Code or
the laws of the United States, shall be governed by the laws of the State of
Indiana, without reference to principles of conflict of laws, and construed
accordingly.
13.13. Effective Date of Plan; Termination of Plan. The Plan shall be
effective on the date of the approval of the Plan by the holders of the shares
entitled to receivevote at a duly constituted meeting of the stockholders of the
Company. The Plan shall be null and void and of no effect if the foregoing
condition is not fulfilled and in such delivery noticeevent each Award shall, notwithstanding
any of the preceding provisions of the Plan, be null and void and of no effect.
Awards may be granted under the Plan at any time and from time to time on or
prior to the tenth anniversary of the effective date of the Plan, on which date
the Plan will expire except as farto Awards then outstanding under the Plan. Such
outstanding Awards shall remain in advanceeffect until they have been exercised or
terminated, or have expired.
13.14. Foreign Employees. Awards may be granted to Participants who
are foreign nationals or employed outside the United States, or both, on such
terms and conditions different from those applicable to Awards to Employees
employed in the United States as practicablemay, in the judgment of the Committee, be
necessary or desirable in order to recognize differences in local law or tax
policy. The Committee also may impose conditions on the exercise or vesting of
Awards in order to minimize the Company's obligation with respect to tax
equalization for Employees on assignments outside their home country.
13.15. Compliance with Section 409A of the Code. This Plan is
intended to comply and shall be administered in a manner that is intended to
comply with Section 409A of the CompanyCode and shall be construed and interpreted in
accordance with such intent. To the extent that an Award or the payment,
settlement or deferral thereof is subject to Section 409A of the Code, the Award
shall be granted, paid, settled or deferred in a manner that will comply with
Section 409A of the Code, including regulations or other guidance issued with
respect thereto, except as otherwise determined by the Committee. Any provision
of this Plan that would cause the grant of an Award or the payment, settlement
or deferral thereof to fail to satisfy Section 409A of the Code shall be amended
to comply with Section 409A of the Code on a timely basis, which may defer making delivery, if any such tax is
payable, until indemnifiedbe made on
a retroactive basis, in accordance with regulations and other guidance issued
under Section 409A of the Code.
13.16. Captions. The captions in the Plan are for convenience of
reference only, and are not intended to its satisfaction.
ESCALADE, INCORPORATED
---------------------------------
C. W. (Bill) Reed, President, CEO
Accepted:
- ---------------------------
Director Signature
- ---------------------------
Director Printed Name
- ---------------------------
Date
15narrow, limit or affect the substance or
interpretation of the provisions contained herein.
PROXY
ESCALADE, INCORPORATED THIS PROXY IS SOLICITED
251 Wedcor817 Maxwell Avenue ON BEHALF OF THE
Wabash,Evansville, Indiana 4699247711 BOARD OF DIRECTORS
The undersigned hereby appoints Robert E. Griffin, Blaine E. Matthews, Jr. and
Keith P.Edward E. (Ned) Williams, or any of them, each with power of substitution, as
Proxies of the undersigned to attend the Annual Meeting of ShareholdersStockholders of
Escalade, Incorporated (the "Company") to be held on Saturday,Friday, April 22, 2006,27, 2007, at
9:007:30 a.m., Eastern StandardCentral Daylight Savings Time, at the Sheraton Indianapolis Hotel & SuitesCompany's principal executive
offices located at 8787 Keystone Crossing, Indianapolis,817 Maxwell Avenue, Evansville, Indiana 46240,47711, and any
adjournment or adjournments thereof, and to vote the number of shares of the
Company's Common Stock which the undersigned would be entitled to vote if
personally present on the following matters:
1. Election of Directors
Vote for Seven (7) Nominees to Serve as Directors of the Company for the
one-year term ending at the 20072008 Annual Meeting of Shareholders.
Withhold
Authority
Nominee For to Vote
------- --- -------
Robert E. Griffin [ ] [ ]
Blaine E. Matthews, JrRichard F. Baalmann, Jr. [ ] [ ]
C.W. "Bill" ReedBlaine E. Matthews, Jr. [ ] [ ]
Daniel A. Messmer [ ] [ ]
George Savitsky [ ] [ ]
Richard D. White [ ] [ ]
Edward E. (Ned) Williams [ ] [ ]
Richard D. White [ ] [ ]
George Savitsky [ ] [ ]
Richard Baalmann [ ] [ ]
2. Special GrantApproval of 2,000 stock options to the Company's five non-employee
DirectorsEscalade, Incorporated 2007 Incentive Plan
Vote to approve the grant of 2,000 stock optionsproposal to each ofadopt the Company's five
non-employee directors elected at the Annual Meeting.Escalade, Incorporated 2007 Incentive
Plan.
3. In their discretion, the Proxies are authorized to vote upon such other
business as may properly come before the meeting.
THIS PROXY, WHEN PROPERLY EXECUTED, WILL BE VOTED IN THE MANNER DIRECTED HEREIN
BY THE UNDERSIGNED SHAREHOLDER. IF NO DIRECTION IS MADE, THIS PROXY WILL BE
VOTED "FOR" ALL NOMINEES LISTED IN ITEM 1, "FOR" ITEM 2 AND IN THE DISCRETION OF
THE PROXIES ON SUCH OTHER BUSINESS AS MAY PROPERLY COME BEFORE THE MEETING.
1
[Shareholder's[Stockholder's Name and Address as on Record Books]
(Please sign exactly as your name or names appear hereon. When shares are held
by joint tenants, both should sign. If signing as an attorney, executor,
administrator, trustee or guardian, give your full title as such. If signing on
behalf of a corporation, the full name of the corporation should be set forth
accompanied by the signature on its behalf of a duly authorized officer.)
Signature -----------------------------------------------------__________________________________________________________
Signature if held jointly -------------------------------------__________________________________________
Dated , 2006
----------------------------_____________________________, 2007
PLEASE MARK, SIGN, DATE AND RETURN THIS PROXY PROMPTLY, USING THE ENVELOPE
PROVIDED.
2