| | | Interested shareholders should send recommendations to: β
| Merit Medical Systems, Inc. Attn: Brian G. Lloyd, Corporate Secretary 1600 West Merit Parkway South Jordan, Utah 84095 |
β
Board and Committee Meetings and Responsibilities β
In 2020, the Board met 27 times. Directors are expected to attend regular Board meetings, Board committee meetings and annual shareholder meetings. The independent directors met in executive session five times during 2020.
| | | | In 2021, the Board met 21 times. Directors are expected to attend regular Board meetings, Board committee meetings and annual shareholder meetings. The independent directors met in executive session nine times during 2021. As further described below, the Board has a standing Audit Committee, Compensation Committee, ESG Committee, Finance Committee and Operating Committee. The Company believes each of the directors serving on the Audit, Compensation, and ESG Committees is an βindependent directorβ for purposes of the Nasdaq Marketplace Rules and that each of the directors serving on the Compensation Committee is a βnon-employee directorβ for purposes of Rule 16b-3 of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended (Exchange Act). | β | β | β₯75% All directors attended at least 75% of the total number of meetings of the Board and of any committee on which he or she served. |
β | | | β | β | β | As further described below, the Board has a standing Audit Committee, Compensation Committee, ESG Committee, Finance Committee and Operating Committee. The Company believes each of the directors serving on the Audit, Compensation, and ESG Committees is an βindependent directorβ for purposes of the Nasdaq Marketplace Rules and that each of the directors serving on the Compensation Committee is a βnon-employee directorβ for purposes of Rule 16b-3 of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended (Exchange Act).
β
Audit Committee | Members | Primary Responsibilities | # of Meetings in 2021 | Lynne N. Ward (Chair) Stephen C. Evans Thomas J. Gunderson James T. Hogan β The Board has determined that Ms. Ward and Mr. Gunderson are audit committee financial experts, as defined in Item 407(d) of Regulation S-K under the Exchange Act. | The Audit Committee meets to review and discuss our accounting practices and procedures and quarterly and annual financial statements with our management and independent public accountants. The Audit Committee assists the Board in fulfilling its responsibility for oversight of the quality and integrity of our accounting, auditing and reporting practices.
β
The Audit Committeeβs primary duties include: β reviewing the scope and adequacy of internal accounting and financial controls; β reviewing the independence of our independent registered public accounting firm; β approving the scope and results of the audit activities of our independent accountants; β approving fees of, and non-audit related services by, our independent accountants; β in coordination with the Operating Committee, reviewing our risk management program with respect to financial and accounting practices, information technology and cybersecurity; β reviewing the objectivity and effectiveness of our internal audit function; β reviewing our financial reporting activities and the accounting standards and principles followed; and β reviewing and approving related person transactions. | 12 |
β β | reviewing the scope and adequacy of internal accounting and financial controls; |
β | reviewing the independence of our independent registered public accounting firm; |
β | approving the scope and results of the audit activities of our independent accountants; |
β | approving fees of, and non-audit related services by, our independent accountants; |
β | reviewing our compliance and enterprise risk management programs, including our information technology and cybersecurity risk management program; |
β | reviewing the objectivity and effectiveness of our internal audit function; |
β | reviewing our financial reporting activities and the accounting standards and principles followed; and |
β | reviewing and approving related person transactions. |
β | | β | β | β | Audit Committee Members
| β
F. Ann Millner, Ed. D.
β
Financial Experts on Audit Committee
β
The Board has determined that Ms. Ward and Mr. Gunderson are audit committee financial experts, as defined in Item 407(d) of Regulation S-K under the Exchange Act.
|
β
The Audit Committee met 13 times during 2020.
β
Compensation and Talent Development Committee | βMembers
| Primary Responsibilities | # of Meetings in 2021 | A. Scott Anderson (Chair) Lonny J. Carpenter Stephen C. Evans James T. Hogan F. Ann Millner, Ed. D. | The Compensation Committee is responsible for overseeing, reviewing and approving executive compensation and benefit programs of the Company, as well as the Companyβs talent development activities. Additional information regarding the functions, procedures and authority of the Compensation Committee is provided in the Compensation Discussion and Analysis beginning on page 5640 below. The Compensation Committee Report appears on page 7156 below. | 6 |
β 18 | Understand. Innovate. Deliver.TM
β The Compensation Committee met six times during 2020, although members of the Compensation Committee also met informally and discussed compensation issues at other times throughout the year.
| β | β | β | β | Compensation Committee Members
| β
A. Scott Anderson (Chair)
β
F. Ann Millner, Ed. D.
|
β
Environmental, Social and Governance Committee | βMembers
| Primary Responsibilities | # of Meetings in 2021 | F. Ann Millner, Ed.D. (Chair) A. Scott Anderson David K. Floyd Lynne N. Ward | The ESG Committee is responsible for oversight of the Companyβs environmental and social business practices, the Companyβs corporate governance practices, including the practices set forth in our Governance Guidelines and the Companyβs director nomination process and procedures, and matters impacting the Companyβs image and reputation and its standing as a responsible corporate citizen. As discussed earlier, the ESG Committee selects, evaluates and recommends to the full Board qualified candidates for election to the Board. The ESG Committee also provides oversight of our sustainable business practices. | 8 |
β β | | β | β | β | ESG Committee Members
| β
F. Ann Millner, Ed.D. (Chair)
|
β
The ESG Committee met five times during 2020.
β
Finance Committee | βMembers
| Primary Responsibilities | # of Meetings in 2021 | Thomas J. Gunderson (Chair) Jill D. Anderson Lonny J. Carpenter Lynne N. Ward | The Finance Committee assists the Board with oversight of the Companyβs financial management, including oversight of the Companyβs financing and capital structure objectives and plans; and the following: β the Companyβs merger and acquisition strategy; β the Companyβs investment programs and practices, including international cash management β the Companyβs strategic planning and activities; and β the Companyβs tax strategy and structure. | 6 |
β β | the Companyβs merger and acquisition strategy; |
β | the Companyβs investment programs and practices, including international cash management |
β | the Companyβs strategic planning and activities; and |
β | the Companyβs tax strategy and structure. |
β | | β | β | β | Finance Committee Members
| β
Thomas J. Gunderson (Chair)
|
β
The Finance Committee met 11 times during 2020.
β
Operating Committee | βMembers
| Primary Responsibilities | # of In 2020, the Board formed an Operating Committee pursuant to an agreement entered into with Starboard Value L.P. (Starboard). Meetings in 2021
| Lonny J. Carpenter (Chair) Jill D. Anderson David K. Floyd James T. Hogan Fred P. Lampropoulos | The Operating Committeeβs primary purpose is to work with the Companyβs management to establish operating targets for the business (subject to approval of the Board). Management reports to the Operating Committee on its progress to achieve the operating targets approved by the Board. The Operating Committee also played a significant role in the development of our Foundations for Growth program and continues to provide oversight of that program. β
| Operating Committee Members
| β
Lonny J. Carpenter (Chair)
|
β
The Operating Committee met nine times during 2020. β
Risk Management
The Board is involved in assessing and managing risks that could affect the Company. One of the roles of the Board is to periodically assess the processes used by management with respect to risk assessment and risk management, including identification by management of the principal risks of our business, and the implementation by management of appropriate systems to deal with such risks. The Board fulfills these responsibilities either directly, through delegation to committees of the Board, or, as appropriate, through delegation to individual directors.
β
When the Board determines to delegate any risk management oversight responsibilities, typically such delegation is made to the applicable standing committee(s) of the Board. The Audit Committee is generally responsible foralso provides oversight of risks such as those relating to the quality and integrity of our financial reports, the independence and qualifications of our independent registered public accounting firm, our compliance with disclosure and financial reporting requirements and overall enterprise risk management including evaluationprogram and coordinates oversight of cybersecurityparticular risk management. At least annually,areas with the standing committees to whom those areas of risk are delegated.
| 9 |
β
Board Evaluation | In 2021, the ESG Committee engaged an outside advisor to conduct a comprehensive Board and/orevaluation to assess the Audit Committee is briefedeffectiveness of our Board, committees and members. The process was led by the Companyβs Chief Technology OfficerESG Committee and other membersfacilitated by an independent third party to preserve the integrity of the process and anonymity of the feedback of the Companyβs management on information technologydirectors and cybersecurity risks andsenior executive officers who participated in the Companyβs efforts to mitigate those risks.process. The ESG Committee is generally responsible for oversight of risks addressed through the identification and recommendation of individuals qualified to become directors of the Company,evaluation process facilitator met individually with each director and management succession planning and development and implementation of corporate governance principles. The Compensation Committee is generally responsible for oversight of risks such as those relating to executive employment policies, our compensation and benefits systems, including our executive compensation program, and human capital development. These committees exercise their oversight responsibilities through reports from and meetings with officers of the Company responsible for each of these risk areas, including our Chief Financial Officer, Chief Legal Officer, Chief Compliance Officer, Chief Technology Officer, Chief Information Officer and Director of Internal Audit. In such meetings, committee members discuss and analyze such risks, and, when necessary, consult with outside advisors. β
Director Orientation and Continuing Education
β
New directors participate in an orientation program developed and overseen by our ESG Committee, which is conducted prior to or shortly after the directorβs election or appointment. This orientation program includes presentations by other directors and memberssome of the Companyβs senior management with respectexecutive officers to finance, operations, governance, legalobtain and compliance matters, regulatory issues, cybersecurity, industry developments and strategic planning. During 2020, our ESG Committee led an enhancement of our director orientation program, including scheduled orientation sessions with members of the Companyβs senior management and delivery of detailed orientation materials. In additioncompile responses to the initial onboarding process, members of the Companyβs senior management regularly provide ongoing orientation and training sessions at Board meetings, including presentations regarding business strategy, legal and regulatory compliance, information technology and cybersecurity, business development and governance. The information technology and cybersecurity training provided to the Board is an extension of the Companyβs cybersecurity awareness program providedevaluation, which included feedback from directors on other directors, for review by the Companyβs information technology department to Company employees worldwide. The Companyβs cybersecurity awareness program includes regular training courses which are available throughout the Company and periodic updates targeted to individual departments, sites or regions as appropriate. The Company also encourages directors to obtain third-party continuing
education on topics of relevance to the Company and its operations and provides to directors reimbursement of up to $5,000 of annual educational expenses.
β
Shareholder Engagement
We regularly communicate with many of our largest shareholders regarding our operations and financial results. During the years leading up to 2020, we expanded our shareholder communication efforts in an attempt to develop a better understanding of the corporate governance and executive compensation perspectives and practices which are important to our shareholders. Our shareholder engagement efforts are directed by Ann Millner, Ed.D., Chair of our ESG Committee and A. Scott Anderson,the Board.
The ESG Committee reviewed the evaluation results with the evaluation process facilitator and coordinated an opportunity for the facilitator to present the general conclusions developed in the course of the evaluation to the Board. The Board reviewed and discussed the conclusions presented by the facilitator and reviewed potential actions to be taken as a result of the evaluation. The Board intends to use the evaluation results to inform Board and committee composition and refreshment, including expansion and refinement of the attributes and experience criteria for Board membership and to address the evolving needs of the Company. The evaluation aims to (1) identify opportunities where our Lead Independent Director,Board and are supported by membersits committees can improve their performance and effectiveness, (2) assess any need to evolve the composition and expertise of our executive managementBoard and investor relations teams. β
As a consequence of the COVID-19 pandemic, the scope of engagement between(3) assure that our directorsBoard and shareholders was reduced significantly during 2020. We maintained contactits committees are operating in accordance with several of our large shareholders during the year;Governance Guidelines and committee charters.
|
β Risk Management The Board is involved in assessing and managing risks that could affect the Company. One of the roles of the Board is to periodically assess the processes used by management with respect to risk assessment and risk management, including identification by management of the principal risks of our business, and the implementation by management of appropriate systems to deal with such risks. The Board fulfills these responsibilities either directly, through delegation to committees of the Board, or, as appropriate, through delegation to individual directors. The Board has delegated risk management oversight responsibilities to the Operating Committee. However, oversight of particular risks has been further delegated to the applicable standing committee(s) of the Board. The Audit Committee is responsible for oversight of risks relating to the quality and integrity of our financial reports, the independence and qualifications of our independent registered public accounting firm, our compliance with disclosure and financial reporting requirements and overall enterprise risk management, including evaluation and oversight of cybersecurity risk management. At least annually, the Board and/or the Audit Committee is briefed by the Companyβs Chief Technology Officer and other members of the Companyβs management on information technology and cybersecurity risks and the Companyβs efforts to mitigate those risks. The Compensation Committee is generally responsible for oversight of risks such as those relating to executive employment policies, our compensation and benefits systems, including our executive compensation program, and human capital development. The ESG Committee is generally responsible for oversight of risks addressed through the identification and recommendation of individuals qualified to become directors of the Company, director and management succession planning and development and implementation of corporate governance principles. The Finance Committee is generally responsible for oversight of risks relating to mergers and acquisitions, as well as capital raising activities and transactions. These committees exercise their oversight responsibilities through reports from and meetings with officers of the Company responsible for each of these risk areas, including our Chief Financial Officer, Chief Operating Officer, Chief Legal Officer, Chief Compliance Officer, Chief Technology Officer, Chief Information Officer and Director of Internal Audit. In such meetings, committee members discuss and analyze such risks, and, when necessary, consult with outside advisors. Director Orientation and Continuing Education New directors participate in an orientation program developed and overseen by our ESG Committee, which is conducted prior to or shortly after the directorβs election or appointment. This orientation program includes presentations by other directors and members of the Companyβs senior management with respect to finance, operations, governance, legal and compliance matters, regulatory issues, cybersecurity, industry developments 20 | Understand. Innovate. Deliver.TM
and strategic planning. In recent years, our ESG Committee has led an enhancement of our director orientation program, including scheduled orientation sessions with members of the Companyβs senior management and delivery of detailed orientation materials. In addition to the initial onboarding process, members of the Companyβs senior management regularly provide ongoing orientation and training sessions at Board meetings, including presentations regarding business strategy, legal and regulatory compliance, information technology and cybersecurity, business development and governance. The information technology and cybersecurity training provided to the Board is an extension of the Companyβs cybersecurity awareness program provided by the Companyβs information technology department to Company employees worldwide. The Companyβs cybersecurity awareness program includes regular training courses which are available throughout the Company and periodic updates targeted to individual departments, sites or regions as appropriate. The Company also encourages directors to obtain third-party continuing education on topics of relevance to the Company and its operations and provides to directors reimbursement of up to $5,000 of annual educational expenses. Shareholder Engagement We regularly communicate with many of our largest shareholders regarding our operations and financial results. During the years leading up to 2021, we expanded our shareholder communication efforts in an attempt to develop a better understanding of the corporate governance and executive compensation perspectives and practices which are important to our shareholders. Our shareholder engagement efforts are directed by Ann Millner, Ed.D., our Lead Independent Director and Chair of our ESG Committee, and A. Scott Anderson, Chair of our Compensation Committee and former Lead Independent Director, and are supported by members of our executive management and investor relations teams. As a consequence of the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic, the scope of engagement between our directors and shareholders was reduced significantly during 2020 and 2021. We maintained contact with several of our large shareholders during 2021; however, most of the input we received with respect to the interests of our shareholders was provided by external advisors and focused on the development of corporate governance and executive compensation practices which are generally deemed favorable by sophisticated shareholders and their advisors. After considering that input, our Board and its ESG and Compensation Committees took a number of actions which we believe have strengthened our corporate governance and executive compensation practices. Those actions include: β
β | Increased the number of independent directors; |
β | Took steps to increase director diversity; |
β | Continued to encourage and provide oversight of expanded sustainable business practices; and |
β | Implemented long-term equity performance-based restricted stock program designed to align executive compensation with Company performance. |
β
Our
β | Took steps to increase director diversity; |
β | Identified experience and skills which would enhance the Boardβs ability to fulfill its duties and responsibilities and pursued director nominees whom the Board is committed to implementing governance, executive compensation and sustainability practices whichbelieves will contribute that experience and those skills; |
β | Continued to encourage and provide oversight of expanded sustainable business practices; |
β | Refined long-term equity performance-based restricted stock program designed to increase the long-term success of the Company. To fulfill that commitment, our Board, primarily through its ESG and Compensation Committees, will continue to seek opportunities to consult with major shareholders in appropriate situations. We anticipate Dr. Millner and Mr. Anderson will continue to lead those efforts, with the support of membersalignment of our executive compensation with Company performance; and |
β | Enhanced oversight of the Companyβs enterprise risk management and investor relations teams.β
Shareholder Communication with the Board of Directors
The Board will receive communications from Company shareholders. All communications, except those related to shareholder proposals that are discussed belowpractices, under the heading βShareholder Proposals for Annual Meeting 2022,β must be sent to our Corporate Secretary (Brian G. Lloyd) at our principal executive offices at 1600 West Merit Parkway, South Jordan, UT 84095. Communications submitted to the Board (other than communications received through our whistleblower hotline, which are reviewed and addressed by the Audit Committee) are generally reported to our directors at the next regular meetingdirection of the Operating Committee.
|
Our Board is committed to implementing governance, executive compensation and sustainability practices which will contribute to the long-term success of the Company. To fulfill that commitment, our Board, primarily through its ESG and Compensation Committees, will continue to seek opportunities to consult with major shareholders in appropriate situations. We anticipate Dr. Millner and Mr. Anderson will continue to lead those efforts, with the support of members of our executive management and investor relations teams.
Shareholder Communication with the Board of Directors The Board will receive communications from Company shareholders. All communications, except those related to shareholder proposals that are discussed below under the heading βShareholder Proposals for Annual Meeting 2023,β must be sent to our Corporate Secretary (Brian G. Lloyd) at our principal executive offices at 1600 West Merit Parkway, South Jordan, UT 84095. Communications submitted to the Board (other than communications received through our whistleblower hotline, which are reviewed and addressed by the Audit Committee) are generally reported to our directors at the next regular meeting of the Board. All directors of the Company are strongly encouraged to attend our Annual Meeting. All ten directors, then serving on the Board or nominated to the Board, were present through video conference at our 2021 annual meeting of shareholders. Governance Guidelines and Code of Ethics β
All directors of the Company are strongly encouraged to attend our Annual Meeting. All nine directors, then serving on the Board or nominated to the Board, were present through video conference at our 2020 annual meeting of shareholders.
β
Governance Guidelines and Code of Ethics
β
Corporate Governance Guidelines β
Our Governance Guidelines set forth the responsibilities of our directors. β
The Governance Guidelines include guidelines that, among other things, contemplate that directors will maintain minimum stock ownership with a value of at least threefive times the annual retainer received. The Governance Guidelines also require the CEO to maintain minimum stock ownership with a value of at least five times his or her annual base salary. Directors have threefive years from appointment to the Board to comply with the minimum stock ownership requirement. The ESG Committee provides oversight of the stock ownership guidelines and may allow waivers with respect to the stock ownership guidelines for directors and the CEO on a case-by-case basis. All current directors and nominees are within their respective three-yearfive-year transition periods except our CEO, A. Scott Anderson Thomas J. Gunderson and F. Ann Millner. Our CEO, Mr. Anderson and Dr. Millner are presently in compliance with the minimum stock ownership guidelines. After conducting its review of the stock ownership guidelines, the ESG Committee temporarily waived compliance with the minimum stock ownership guidelines for Mr. Gunderson. The ESG Committee determined that a waiver was appropriate for Mr. Gunderson due to his relatively short tenure as a director and that, upon further vesting of stock options and RSUs that he already holds and which are anticipated to vest during the current year, Mr. Gundersonβs stock ownership would exceed the minimum stock ownership guidelines. β
| | Governance Materials The following materials relating to corporate governance are available via our website at: www.merit.com/investors/corporate-governance-leadership/ | β Code of Business Conduct and Ethics | β Code of Ethics for CEO and Senior Financial Officers | β Corporate Governance Guidelines | β Compensation Committee Charter | β Audit Committee Charter | β ESG Committee Charter | β Operating Committee Charter | β Finance Committee Charter |
β Codeof Business Conduct and Ethics Our Code of Business Conduct and Ethics (Code of Conduct) applies to our directors and employees, including our NEOs, and is supplemented by additional provisions applicable to our CEO and senior financial and accounting officers. All Merit directors, officers and employees are required to act ethically at all times and in accordance with the principles and policies set forth in the Code of Conduct. Among other principles and policies, the Code of Conduct finds a conflict of interest exists when a personβs private interest interferes with the interests of the Company. The Code of Conduct recognizes that a conflict of interest occurs when the Company enters into a transaction in which an employee, officer, or director, or someone related to or affiliated with an employee, officer, or director, has a significant personal interest. The Code of Conduct also recognizes that a conflict of interest arises when an employee, officer or director of the Company receives an 22 | Understand. Innovate. Deliver.TM
improper benefit as a result of the personβs position with the Company and prohibits any form of loan or credit to directors or officers of the Company or their family members. The Code of Conduct obligates employees, officers and directors to promptly disclose conflicts of interest to a supervisor, management, or the Board. Any director who has a conflicting interest in a potential conflicting interest transaction may not participate in the review of that transaction by the Board. Any waiver of the Code of Conduct may be made only by the Board and is required to be promptly disclosed as required by law or the regulations of any exchange on which our securities are traded, including Nasdaq. β
Whistleblower Hotline β
As contemplated by the Code of Conduct, we maintain a whistleblower hotline that enables our employees, vendors, customers, and shareholders, as well as other interested parties, to submit confidential and anonymous reports of suspected or actual violations of the Code of Conduct or other issues of concern to those parties.
β
The Audit Committee regularly reviews all complaints we receive through the whistleblower hotline.
β
As contemplated by the Code of Conduct, we maintain a whistleblower hotline that enables our employees, vendors, customers, and shareholders, as well as other interested parties, to submit confidential and anonymous reports of suspected or actual violations of the Code of Conduct or other issues of concern to those parties. The Audit Committee regularly reviews all complaints we receive through the whistleblower hotline. | β | β |
| Whistleblower Hotline | | | | Our whistleblower hotline may be accessed: β
β by telephone at (877) 874-8416 β βonline at www.merit.alertline.com
|
β Trading Restrictions β
Our directors and executive officers are subject to our Corporate Policy on Insider Trading, which is designed to facilitate compliance with insider trading laws and governs transactions in our Common Stock and related derivative securities. Any director, officer or employee in possession of material, nonpublic information, or who may be deemed to possess such information by reason of his or her positions, may not (i) trade in the Companyβs securities; (ii) share the information with others (βtippingβ), or (iii) permit a member of his or her immediate family to trade in the Companyβs securities. Our policy designates certain regular periods, from 15 days prior to the end of a calendar quarter to two full business days after the release of financial results, in which trading is prohibited for individuals in information-sensitive positions, including directors and executive officers. Our policy also prohibits executive officers and directors from (i) trading in Merit stock on a short-term basis (minimum six-month holding period); (ii) engaging in short sales of Merit stock; (iii) buying or selling put options or call options or other derivative instruments associated with Merit stock; or (iv) entering into hedging transactions associated with Merit stock. β After reviewing the provisions of the policy which prohibit our directors and executive officers from maintaining margin accounts collateralized by shares of our Common Stock, the Board granted to our CEO a limited waiver of the application of the policy in order to provide him with a two-year period to close out a margin account he had established prior to the adoption of the policy.
Additional periods of trading restriction may be imposed as determined by our CEO or the Insider Trading Compliance Officers (currently our Chief Legal Officer and our Chief Financial Officer) in light of material pending developments. Further, during permitted windows, individuals in information-sensitive positions are required to seek pre-clearance for trades from an Insider Trading Compliance Officer, who assesses whether there are any important pending developments, including cybersecurity matters, which need to be made public before the individual may participate in the market. β
Director Retirement Policy In October 2017, we amended our Governance Guidelines to require that, upon reaching 75 years of age, each director of the Company must submit to the Board a letter of resignation to be effective at the next annual meeting of shareholders. The Board will generally accept such resignations unless the ESG Committee or the Board determines to extend the directorβs service through the expiration of his or her then-current term or nominate the director for another term. β
β
www.merit.com 27 |www.merit.com β 23
Sustainability β
BecauseOur environment, social, and governance (ESG) priorities are more critical than ever to our success at Merit and to our relationship with the world. As a global company, we understand that the long-term health of our employees, customers, and recognizecommunities will benefit from our responsibilityefforts to help create a healthier and more sustainable and equitable world. Meritβs sustainability strategy focuses on adding business value by assessing the communitiesrisks and opportunities of our ESG aspects, as well as addressing areas where we operate,believe we strivecan have the greatest impact. We pursue that strategy through our Enterprise Risk/Opportunity Management Program, engaging with stakeholders, and seeking to be a good corporate citizen. We work hard to conduct our business in a sustainable and transparent manner, recognizing the importance of this to our customers and supply chain partners who are striving to achieve their own corporate responsibility goals and objectives. We are dedicated to reducing our footprint on the environment. As shown below, we continually evaluate our performance on preventing pollution, reducing waste, and promoting the sustainable use of natural resources. From considering new green building technologies at the beginning of all construction projects, to re-evaluating the way we package and ship our products, to our employee pollinator garden that provides farm-to-table nutrition for our employees at our headquarters in Utah, the Company is dedicated to applying our culture of innovation to lessen our impact on the world around us. By partnering with our internal and external stakeholders, we continually seek to better understandidentify the areas where we can make the most significant impact. As a leader in the medical device industry, we are committed to establishing responsiblegreatest difference. Our sustainability objectives focus on seven key value pillars: compliance and sustainable business practices for our futureethics, diversity, equity and our communities. inclusion, employee health and safety, environmental sustainability, quality assurance, and philanthropy.
The following discussion demonstrates the ways we are workingsummarizes our efforts to better track and measure progressimplement that strategy in material areas where we believe we can achieve sustainable improvement within our business.2021. β
Energy & Greenhouse Gas (GHG) Emissions β
During 2020, we began trackingEnergy is a significant manufacturing input and cost within our global scopeoperations, so energy efficiency and conservation are important objectives within our business. Using energy effectively conserves resources, advances environmental performance, reduces the burning of fossil fuels, and improves air quality.
In comparison to our 2020 baseline year, we achieved a reduction in energy intensity and GHG emissions (scope 1 and 2 greenhouse gas2). Our energy intensity decreased by 9% and our GHG emissions utilizing theintensity decreased by 24% in 2021, as compared to 2020. The principal factors that contributed to those results were our movement to more green energy, increased energy efficiency within our operating units, increased revenues, and incremental improvement in location-based method. This added layer of tracking has provided us greater transparency to our total global environmental impact, and we are committed to reducing that footprint as we move into a more sustainable future. We have also begun tracking selected Scope 3 emissions from travel and major logistics providers.factors. We measure theseGHG emissions by carbon dioxide equivalent (CO2e). β
2,837 metric tons CO2e Scope 1 Emissions
These emissions include stationary combustion from Company-managed(CO2e) and Company-operated facilities over 10,000 square feet, as well as facility vehicle usage.
β
17,480metric tons CO2e Scope 2 Emissions
These emissions include purchased non-renewable energy at our global operation sites over 10,000 square feet.
β
10,447metric tons CO2e Scope 3 Emissions
These emissions include travel and third-party logistics. During 2020, travel decreasedintensity by approximately 90%, due primarilyunits of joules consumed to the COVID-19 pandemic, which had a significant effect on reducing our scope 3Β emissions during the year as compared to 2019.dollars of revenue earned.
| | | | | | | 3,415 | β | β | 14,785 | β | β | 0.1902 | Metric tons CO2e Scope 1 Emissions These emissions include stationary combustion from Company-managed and Company-operated facilities over 10,000 square feet, as well as facility vehicle usage. | β | β | metric tons CO2e Scope 2 Emissions These emissions include purchased non-renewable energy at our global operation sites over 10,000 square feet. | β | β | Energy Intensity (MJ/$KRev) Energy includes purchased electricity and fuels consumed by Merit-managed and operated sites greater than 10,000 ft2. |
β 24 28 |www.merit.com β Understand. Innovate. Deliver.TM
β
Total Scope 1 2 and 32 emissions during 2020 were2021 was approximately 30,76418,200 metric tons of CO2e.CO2e. Total GHG emissions indexed to revenueintensity was approximately .0320.0169 metric tons of CO2e/CO2e/$K Revenue. β
Water
β
We have identified water as one of our key environmental risks and opportunities. Water is a global concern; we seek to address goals and initiatives at the site level by understanding local/regional water basin activity and stress. We continuously work to understand the impact of water use at each of our operating facilities and to enact programs to improve water efficiency. Β
215,300m3 water used
During 2020, our Our total global waterenergy usage at sites greater than 10,000 square feet was approximately 215.3K cubic meters. Our 2020 water intensity was .223, indexed to revenue (M3/$1K Revenue)204,404,000 megajoules of which 41,454,760 (20%) came from renewable sources (wind, solar, and/or hydroelectric).
Water | | | | We have identified water as one of our key environmental risks and opportunities. Water is a global concern; we seek to address goals and initiatives at the site level by understanding local/regional water basin activity and stress. We strive to understand the impact of water use at each of our operating facilities and to enact programs to improve water efficiency. Most of the water used at Merit sites is withdrawn from surface water, for example lakes and rivers. | β | β | 243,299 | β | β | β | m3 water used During 2021, our total global water usage at sites greater than 10,000 square feet was approximately 243.3K cubic meters. Our 2021 water intensity was 0.2264, indexed to revenue (M3/$1K Revenue). This is a 6% reduction from our baseline water intensity of 0.2426 |
Water issues vary significantly by operating location. In 2020,2021, we utilized the Water Risk ToolFilter provided in collaboration between the World WideWildlife Fund for Nature (WWF) and KFW DEG to understand basin water risk at our five largestoperating locations. We have identified three Merit manufacturing facilities located inlocations (Tijuana, Mexico, South Jordan, Utah, Tijuana, Mexico, Galway, Ireland,and Pearland, Texas, and Richmond, Virginia.Texas) as water-stressed sites. The methodology disclosure for the Water Risk Filter tool notes: βthe logic that underpins the water risk assessment is to evaluate average, recent water risk conditions, as well as some level of future risk.βriskβ (waterriskfilter.org). The following table summarizes Merit operating sites located in identified water stressed regions: | | | | | | | | | | | | | | Site | Country | River Basin | Water Depletion* | Baseline Water Stress* | Available Water Remaining* | Drought Frequency Probability* | Tijuana | Mexico | Tijuana | 4 | 5 | 4 | 4 | Salt Lake City | USA | Great Salt Lake | 3 | 2 | 5 | 4 | Pearland | USA | Texas | 3 | 3 | 2 | 3 |
β | | | | | | | | | | | | | | Site | Country | River Basin | Water Depletion* | Baseline Water Stress* | Available Water Remaining* | Drought Frequency Probability* | Tijuana | Mexico | Tijuana | 4 | 5 | 4 | 4 | Salt Lake City | USA | Great Salt Lake | 3 | 2 | 5 | 4 | Pearland | USA | Texas | 3 | 3 | 2 | 3 | Richmond | USA | James | 1 | 3 | 2 | 2 | Galway | Ireland | Republic of Ireland | 1 | 1 | 2 | 1 |
*Assessed risk from 1 (very limited risk) to 5 (very high risk) β www.merit.com 29 |www.merit.com β 25
2030 Operational Sustainability Goals β
We have utilized this improved information to set operational environmental sustainability goals centered on combating climate change and reducing our usage of water resources. UtilizingUsing 2020 as a baseline year, we commit thatto achieve the following goals by 2030: β | β of our total energy usage will come from renewable sources β 10% or more, indexed to revenue β 15% or more, indexed to revenue www.merit.com/about/corporate-sustainability/. β | ββ | 2030 Operational Sustainability Goals β | Utilizing 2020 as a baseline year, we commit that by 2030: β 50% of our total energy usage will come from renewable sources |
| Our energy intensity will decrease by 10% or more, indexed to revenue |
| Our water intensity will decrease by 10% or more, indexed to revenue β Our GHG emissions will decrease by 15% or more, indexed to revenue See our Statement on Climate Change to learn more about our position and objectives related to climate change, available at www.merit.com/about/corporate-sustainability/. |
The table below captures our progress toward these goals during 2021. We adjust our baseline for changes in our portfolio, assessment methods, and boundary definitions to facilitate consistent measurement of our progress. Due to the improvement in our first yearβs results from our baseline year (2020), we intend to continue to evaluate these targets for increased performance year over year. Operational Sustainability Target Performance (Intensity measured on a per $ of revenue basis, compared to 2020) β | Our water intensity will decrease by | | Operational Sustainability Target Performance | 2030 Target | 2021 Result | Percentage Energy from Renewable Sources | 50% | 15% Increase | Energy Intensity | 10% Reduction | 9% Reduction or more, indexed to revenue | GHG Emissions (Scope 1 and 2) | 15% Reduction | 25% Reduction | Water Intensity | 10% Reduction | 6% Reduction |
See our Statement on Climate Change to learn more about our position and objectives related to climate change, available atwww.merit.com/about/corporate-sustainability/.
2020 Sustainability Highlightsβ
β 15,000 Metric Tons recycledβ
During 2020 our global facilities recycled more than 15,000 metric tons of waste produced by our operations. We recognize additional opportunities to expand our recycling efforts and strive to increase recycling each year, as well as finding ways to reduce total waste.β
2.8 million sheets of paper
Our internally designed eWORQ program is transitioning our operating lines from paper and plastic sleeves to electronic work orders. After it is fully implemented, at all our manufacturing sites, we estimate an annual savings of 2.8 million sheets of paper and 20,000 plastic sleeves.
3,000 pounds of fresh produce
During 2020, we distributed more than 3,000 pounds of fresh produce to our employees through our U-Pick program at our South Jordan facility, a program that encourages our employees to visit our Company-sponsored garden for fresh air and sunshine during their workday to pick fresh produce and participate in garden cultivation activities. Employees also participate in the garden by signing up for garden boxes to grow fresh produce for themselves and family members throughout the growing season, with the help and expertise of our knowledgeable garden staff. Each year, we donate high-quality produce to low-income senior citizen centers, and we donate lower quality produce to farm animals at a nonprofit charter school, in order to reduce waste. Green waste removed from our garden at the end of the growing season is donated to a local landfill to make compost for the next growing season.
7.5+ metric ton reduction in employee transportation related CO2e emissions
At our South Jordan and Galway facilities, we promote the usage of electric vehicles by providing employees with on-site, electric vehicle-charging stations. These stations have resulted in the prevention of over 7.5 metric tons of GHG emissions. That is the equivalent of planting 400 trees and letting them grow for ten years. Our Tijuana facility implemented a mass transportation initiative, in an effort to conserve emissions and encourage employee safety. We operate 13 fuel-efficient buses to transport approximatelyβ
26 30 |www.merit.com β Understand. Innovate. Deliver.TM
900 employees to and from the facility each workday. These buses provide safe, efficient, and comfortable transportation for our employees in Tijuana.2021 Sustainability Highlights
7.3 metric tons of CO2e diverted to natural gas systems
Our "Scrape Your Plate" program at our corporate headquarters in South Jordan, Utah has resulted in several tons of food waste diverted from the local landfill to an anaerobic digestion plant. By diverting this waste, we have helped to reduce methane gas emissions that contribute to the degradation of air quality in our high-elevation mountain valley. Our food waste is processed, resulting in a natural source of methane gas that is pumped back into the natural gas system and used to heat homes and businesses. Since the launch of the program in 2019, our employees have diverted approximately 7.3 metric tons of CO2 emissions. Thatβs the equivalent of preventing the CO2 emission from burning 7,796 pounds of coal.
Our corporate sustainability strategy focuses on adding business value by assessing the risks and opportunities of our environmental, social, and governance aspects. We achieve this through our Enterprise Opportunity Management (EOM) program, engaging with stakeholders, and considering the areas where we can have the greatest impact.
| | | β | 20,000+ metric tons recycled | During 2021 our global facilities recycled more than 20,000 metric tons of waste produced by our operations. We recognize additional opportunities to expand our recycling efforts and strive to increase recycling each year, as well as finding ways to reduce total waste. | β | Million+ sheets of paper & plastic sleeves | Our internally designed eWORQ program is transitioning our operating lines from paper and plastic sleeves to electronic work orders. After it is fully implemented, at all our manufacturing sites, we estimate annual savings of millions of sheets of paper and thousands of plastic sleeves. | β | 10,000 pounds of fresh produce | During 2021, we served over 2,500 pounds of fresh produce from our gardens in Merit cafeterias and we distributed more than 5,400 pounds of fresh produce to our employees through our U-Pick program at our South Jordan facility, a program that encourages our employees to visit our Company-sponsored garden for fresh air and sunshine during their workday to pick fresh produce and participate in garden cultivation activities. Employees also participate in the garden by signing up for garden boxes to grow fresh produce for themselves and family members throughout the growing season, with the help and expertise of our knowledgeable garden staff. Each year, we donate high-quality produce to low-income senior citizen centers, and we donate lower quality produce to farm animals at a nonprofit charter school, to reduce waste. In total our 2021 growing season produced approximately 10,000 pounds of fresh produce! Green waste removed from our garden at the end of the growing season is donated to a local landfill to make compost for the next growing season. | β | 25.5+ metric tons reduction in employee transportation related CO2e emissions | At our South Jordan and Galway facilities, we promote the usage of electric vehicles by providing employees with on-site, electric vehicle-charging stations. Since installation, these stations have resulted in the prevention of over 25.5 metric tons of GHG emissions. That is the equivalent of planting 677 trees and letting them grow for ten years. Our Tijuana facility implemented a mass transportation initiative to reduce emissions and encourage employee safety. We operate 13 fuel-efficient buses to transport over 1,000 employees to and from the facility each workday. These buses provide safe, efficient, and comfortable transportation for our employees in Tijuana. | β | 7.3 metric tons of CO2e diverted to natural gas systems | Our "Scrape Your Plate" program at our corporate headquarters in South Jordan, Utah has resulted in several tons of food waste diverted from the local landfill to an anaerobic digestion plant. By diverting this waste, we have helped to reduce methane gas emissions that contribute to the degradation of air quality in our high-elevation mountain valley. Our food waste is processed, resulting in a natural source of methane gas that is pumped back into the natural gas system and used to heat homes and businesses. Since the launch of the program in 2019, our employees have diverted approximately 13.9 metric tons of CO2 emissions. Thatβs the equivalent of preventing the CO2 emission from burning 14,415 pounds of coal. |
β
Oversight for Sustainability β
Our corporate sustainability strategy and goals are overseen by the ESG Committee, executive management, and our Corporate Sustainability Council, comprised of executives and subject-matter experts from across the organization.company. The council meets at least quarterly and leads our efforts to integrate corporate sustainability throughout the organizationcompany and ensureencourage accountability. The council consists of the following members: β
| | | | ESG Committee
| Chairman & Chief Executive Officer
| Executive Sponsor: Chief Operating Officer
| Chair: Vice President (VP), Environmental, Social & Governance
| Corporate Sustainability Council Members
| Chief Compliance Officer
| Chief Human Resource Officer
| Chief Wellness Officer
| Director, Enterprise Risk Management
| EVP - European Operations
| EVP, Global Research & Development
| Chief Strategy & Innovation Officer
| VP, Global Supply Chain
| VP, Operations - SLC
| VP, Operations - Texas
| Director of Operations - Mexico
| Director, Global Real Estate & Facilities
| Sustainability Working Groups - As Assigned
|
β
2020 Sustainability Report
β β 28 Our 2020| Understand. Innovate. Deliver.TM
2021 Sustainability Report included Our Sustainability Report for 2021 (to be released in April 2022) will provide further details about our sustainability initiatives and efforts in 2021. To learn more about our sustainability efforts, and to view Sustainability Reports for prior years, please review the following priorities related toinformation on our Sustainability Initiatives. For more information, visit website at www.merit.com/about/corporate-sustainability/. Health & Safety The health and safety of our employees is our top priority. We promote a culture where the health and safety of our environment, employees, contractors, suppliers, partners, and customers are of utmost importance. We believe that everyone across the organization is accountable and responsible for environmental health and safety, and we train and ask every employee to actively champion the behaviors and attitudes necessary to prevent work-related injuries, illnesses, property damage, and adverse impacts to the environment. In this way, employee health and safety isare an integral part of our culture and a driver for sustainable growth.
Table Our 2021 total recordable injury rate (TRIR) was 0.8, a decrease from our 2020 TRIR of Contents1.1. We made a goal in 2020 to achieve ISO certification of our Occupational Health and Safety Management System at all eight of our largest manufacturing sites by the end of 2022. As of this report, we have achieved ISO 45001 certifications at six of the eight sites. These include Singapore; South Jordan, Utah; Tijuana, Mexico; Galway, Ireland; Pearland, Texas; and Richmond, Virginia.
CORPORATE GOVERNANCE AND RELATED MATTERS
Compliance & Ethics We are committed to a strong culture of compliance and ethics. We recognize that corruption and unethical conduct of any kind undermines our integrity and reputation and are contrary to our values and long-term success. We demonstrate this advocacy by maintaining ethical and responsible policies and practices and embedding these throughout all levels of the organization. We hold ourselves accountable to high standards of honesty, fairness, and integrity. Merit compliance and anti-corruption policies are designed to ensure interactions with healthcare professionals and organizations will benefit patients and enhance the practice of medicine. Every Merit employee is responsible for adhering to these policies as well as complying with all laws and regulations, e.g., the U.S. Anti- Kickback Statute, the False Claims Act, the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act (FCPA), export and import regulations, advertising and promotion laws, and applicable Sunshine/Transparency Laws. β
Environmental Sustainability As a leading global manufacturer of medical devices, we believe we have a significant role to play in contributing to a sustainable future. Our core beliefs and our goal to be the most customer-focused company in healthcare is at the heart of everything we do. We strive to provide superior safe and effective products in a sustainable manner, providing for the health of our customers and our communities. We understand that good environmental practices are beneficial to our business and to our stakeholders, both now and in the future. β In 2019, we made a goal to achieve ISO 14001 certification of our Environmental Management System at all eight of our largest manufacturing sites by the end of 2021. We are proud to report that we achieved our goal. We now hold ISO 14001 certification at our sites located in South Jordan, Utah; Galway, Ireland; Tijuana, Mexico; Singapore, Pearland, Texas; Richmond, Virginia; Paris, France; and Venlo, Netherlands.
Diversity & Inclusion We understand that a diverse workforce brings valuable global benefits to the entire organization. Advantages include greater innovation, learning, growth, and productivity. We continue to work towards the goal of maintaining a diverse and inclusive global culture that reflects the diversity of the customers we serve and fosters an environment where all employees feel welcome, respected, and valued. With this goal in mind, in late 2020 the Company hired its first Chief Human Resources Officer who, in part, has been charged with working with our leadership team to strengthen and enhance our diversity and inclusion efforts company wide. We are committed to providing equal opportunity inrecruiting and retaining diverse team members at all aspectslevels of employment. In the U.S.,organization who can share their varied perspectives on the most complex challenges facing us as we are an equal opportunity/affirmative action employer committed to making employment decisions without regard to race, religion, ethnicity or national origin, gender, sexual orientation, gender identity or expression, age, disability, protected veteran status or any other characteristics protected by law. Aswork toward a result, over 50%more equitable world. Today, 30% of our U.S. population identifies withdirectors are women, and 40% of our directors meet the Nasdaq standard for diversity. Additionally, more than 34% of our management team are women. Our global workforce comprises 56% female team members, and 51% of our team members come from diverse minority backgrounds, and our global workforce is comprised of approximately 55% female team members.backgrounds. While we are proud of theour progress, we have made to improve diversity within the Company, we recognize there is still room for improvement and management has dedicated significant time and resources to continue to advance ourare working on initiatives in this area.
In 2021, we launched our North America Womenβs Leadership Initiative (WLI) with tremendous success. The WLI is an affinity group led by women that is open to all Merit employees. The group employs a comprehensive program to cultivate employee engagement and retention by holding meaningful events that facilitate both personal and professional development. Philanthropy From the inception of our company, we set out to improve lives around the globe. More than 30 years later, this mission still drives us forward in business and social impact. Through financial contributions, employee time and dedication, and collaboration with global and local non-profit organizations, our worldwide facilities foster stronger communities and create positive change in the areas we serve. β
Quality Assurance We are committed to delivering excellence across all aspects of our business. This includes the quality of our products, the attitude of our employees, who interact with our customers, our turnaround time on shipping and deliveries, and the additional value we can bring to the healthcare system with clinician training programs. Patient care is central to our mission. Providing high-quality, innovative products that are safe and effective is our primary goal. Meritβs Quality Policy is supported by a quality management system (QMS), which is designed to deliver innovative quality products and services throughout all stages of a productβs lifecycle, including design, manufacturing, pre- and post-clinical trials, customer evaluations, and post-market surveillance. During 2021, we participated in 36 regulatory audits, 15 customer audits, and 127 internal audits. We had zero class 1 recalls and achieved a 5% reduction in our reportable rate (per 1M units sold) compared to our 2020 rate. Continued Dedication We have long recognized the importance of operating both a sustainable and profitable enterprise for the long term. We believe our operations should not compromise the environment or the economic prospects of future generations, and, under the direction of the ESG Committee, we have focused increasing attention on sustainability and reducing our global environmental footprint in our operations through reducing waste, combating climate change, and reducing, reusing, and recycling materials.
Whether it is manufacturing processes, shipping, or the day-to-day activities at the office, our employees at all levels are engaged and passionate about developing innovative solutions to produce the highest quality medical products while reducing our global environmental footprint. We are committed to continued reduction in the environmental impact of our business, even as our operations continue to grow. To learn more about our sustainability efforts, please review the information on our website at www.merit.com/about/corporate-sustainability/. β β
30 33 |www.merit.com β Understand. Innovate. Deliver.TM
Director Compensation β
We use a combination of cash and stock-based incentive compensation to attract and retain qualified candidates to serve as directors. In setting director compensation, the Board considers the significant amount of time that directors expend in fulfilling their duties to the Company as well as the skill level required by the Company of its directors. The following table shows the annual retainer amounts payable by the Company to non-employee directors. | | | Schedule of Director Retainers | 2020(1) | 2021(2) | Lead Independent Director | $110,000 | $116,000 | Other Directors | $80,000 | $86,000 | Audit Chair | $10,000 | $20,000 | Compensation Chair | $7,500 | $15,000 | Governance Chair | $7,500 | $15,000 | Finance Chair | $7,500 | $15,000 | Operating Chair | $7,500 | $15,000 |
| Schedule of Director Retainers (1)
| Lead Independent Director (2)
| $110,000
| Other Directors(2)
| $80,000
| Audit Chair
| $10,000
| Compensation Chair
| $7,500
| Governance Chair
| $7,500
| Finance Chair
| $7,500
| Operating Chair
| $7,500
| β
|
β
(1) | Beginning in 2020, directorDirector retainers wereare paid in quarterly payments, with 50% of the amounts stated in the table2020 retainer paid in 2021. |
(2) | During 2020, the Company implemented temporary graded salary reductions for our employees. In support of these reductions, the Board voted to reduce the amount ofEffective in 2021, the director retainers for each non-employee director by 20% from the amounts indicatedwere adjusted as shown in the precedingabove table, forwith 50% of the third quarter of 2020.new retainer amounts paid in 2021. |
β Cash Compensation Paid to Directors β
During the year ended December 31, 2020,2021, all non-employee directors of the Company (except A. Scott Anderson)Anderson, F. Ann Millner, and Stephen C. Evans) received quarterly retainer payments totaling $36,000$83,000 in aggregate. Mr.Β Anderson and Ms. Millner, who each served as lead independent director for a portion of the year, each received quarterly retainer payments totaling $49,500$98,000 in aggregate. TheMr. Evans, who joined the board in June 2021, received quarterly retainer amounts paid to the non-employee directors during 2020 reflect a 20% reductionpayments totaling $43,000 in the retainer payment amounts for the third quarter of 2020, which was implemented by the Board in support of the salary reductions undertaken by the Company for many of its employees in response to the COVID-19 pandemic.aggregate. Additionally, each of the committee chairs was paid one-half of his or her chair-specific retainer(s) (as set forth in the foregoing table) during the year December 31, 2020.2021. Directors are also reimbursed for (a) out-of-pocket travel and related expenses incurred in attending Board and committee meetings and other Company events, and (b) up to $5,000 for annual educational expenses. β
Stock Awards β
Directors are eligible to participate in our equity incentive programs. Each non-employee director who served during the year ended December 31, 20202021 received 4,1882,914 restricted stock units under the 2018 Incentive Plan, which vest on June 22, 2021,17, 2022, one year from the grant date. We first began granting restricted stock units to directors during the year ended December 31, 2020. In prior years, directors were granted options to purchase shares of Common Stock, which vested in equal annual increments over a period of three years (for options granted in 2019) or five years (for options granted prior to 2019). β
www.merit.com 34 |www.merit.com β 31
The following table shows compensation for each of our non-employee directors in 2020:2021: | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | Non-Employee Director Summary Compensation | | Name (1) | Β | Fees Earned or Paid in CashΒ ($) | | Stock Awards ($) (2) | | Non-Equity Incentive Plan CompensationΒ ($) | | All Other Compensation ($) | | Total Compensation ($) | Β | Fees Earned or Paid in CashΒ ($) | | Stock Awards ($) (2) | | Non-Equity Incentive Plan CompensationΒ ($) | | All Other Compensation ($) | | Total Compensation ($) | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | |
β
(1) | Fred P. Lampropoulos served as a director of the Company during 20202021 but is not identified in the foregoing director summary compensation table because of his dual status as an NEO and director. Information regarding Mr. Lampropoulosβ 20202021 compensation can be found under βExecutive Compensationβ below. |
(2) | The amounts shown for stock awards reflect the aggregate grant date fair value of restricted stock units granted to the non-employee directors in 2020.2021. We calculated these amounts in accordance with financial statement reporting rules, using the same assumptions we used for financial statement reporting purposes pursuant to our long-term incentive plans. Assumptions used in the calculation of these amounts are included in footnotes to our Annual Report on Form 10-K.Report. As of December 31, 2020,2021, all current non-employee directors held 4,1882,914 restricted stock units. As of December 31, 2020,2021, non-employee directors held outstanding options for the following number of shares: Mr. Anderson, 106,250;61,250; Ms. Anderson, 30,976; Mr. Gunderson, 71,250; Dr. Millner, 80,49676,250; and Ms. Ward, 22,300.7,433. |
(3) | WeDuring the years ended December 31, 2020 and 2019, we made a contingent purchase price paymentpayments of approximately $800,000 and $1.0 million to Ms. Anderson under the termsa current director of our merger agreement withMerit and former shareholder of Cianna Medical during the year ended December 31, 2020.which we acquired in 2018. We made no such payments in 2021. In 2022, we have made payments of approximately $1.6 million. The terms of the acquisition, including contingent consideration payments, were determined prior to the appointment of Ms. Anderson as a director of the Company. As a former shareholder of Cianna Medical, Ms. Anderson may be eligible for additional payments for the achievement of sales milestones specified in our merger agreement with Cianna Medical. This payment hasThese payments have been excluded from the Non-Employee Director Summary Compensation table in each respective year, as it isthey represent settlement of a contingent liability recorded as part of the purchase consideration for Cianna Medical in 2018 and isare not compensation for services provided during the year ended December 31, 2020.provided. |
β
Related Person Matters β Policies and Procedures Regarding Transactions with Related Persons β
Our Code of Conduct requires that every employee avoid situations where loyalties may be divided between our interests and the employeeβs own interests. Employees and directors must avoid conflicts of interest that interfere with the performance of their duties or are not in our best interests. β
Pursuant to its written charter, the Audit Committee reviews and approves all βrelated party transactionsβ (as such term is used by ASC Topic 850 Related Party Disclosures) involving executive officers and directors, or as otherwise may be required to be disclosed in our financial statements or periodic filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) (including under Item 404 of Regulation S-K under the Securities Act of 1933), other than: β
β | grants of stock options made by the Board or any committee thereof or pursuant to an automatic grant plan; and |
β | payment of compensation authorized by the Board or any committee thereof. |
32 35 |www.merit.com β Understand. Innovate. Deliver.TM
β
A Related Person Transaction is a transaction, arrangement or relationship (or any series of similar transactions, arrangements or relationships) in which the Company (including any of its subsidiaries) was, is or will be a participant and, as relates to directors or shareholders who have an ownership interest in the Company of more than 5%, the amount involved exceeds $120,000, and in which any Related Person (defined below) had, has or will have a direct or indirect material interest. β
A Related Person includes officers, directors, nominees, five percent beneficial owners and their respective immediate family members (which in turn includes personβs spouse, parents, siblings, children, in-laws, step relatives, and any other person sharing the household (other than a tenant or household employee)). β
Related Person Transactions include transactions between the Company and its executive officers and directors. We have adopted written policies and procedures regarding the identification of Related Persons and Related Person Transactions and the approval process for such transactions. The Audit Committee considers each Related Person Transaction in light of the specific facts and circumstances presented, including but not limited to the risks, costs and benefits to the Company and the availability from other sources of comparable services or products. β
Certain Related Person Transactions β
The Board, acting through the Audit Committee, believes that the following Related Party Transactions are reasonable and fair to the Company: β
β | Justin J. Lampropoulos, former President of Merit EMEA, a division of the Company, is the son of FredΒ P.Β Lampropoulos, Chair of the Board, CEO and President of the Company. In 20202021 we provided to Mr.Β Justin J. Lampropoulos total cash and equity compensation of $1,747,275. Refer to the Summary Compensation Table for additional information regarding his compensation.$1,272,646. |
β | Joseph C. Wright, President of Merit International, a division of the Company, is the brother-in-law of Fred P.Β Lampropoulos, Chair of the Board, CEO and President of the Company. In 20202021 we provided to Mr. Wright total cash and equity compensation of $1,685,310. |
β | Charles Wright, former Director of Business Development of$1,639,849. Refer to the Company, is the brother-in-law of FredΒ P. Lampropoulos, Chair of the Board, CEO and President of the Company. In 2020 we provided to Mr. Wright total compensation of $287,116.Summary Compensation Table for additional information regarding his compensation. |
β | Anne-Marie Wright, former Vice President of Corporate Communications of the Company, is the wife of Fred P. Lampropoulos, Chair of the Board, CEO and President of the Company. In 20202021 we provided to Ms. Wright total compensation of $370,014.$274,800 associated with the exercise of stock options granted in prior years. |
β | Frank Wright, OEM Business Development Manager of the Company, is the brother-in-law of FredΒ P.Β Lampropoulos, Chair of the Board, CEO and President of the Company. In 20202021 we provided to Mr.Β Wright total compensation of $230,537.$277,211. |
β β
EQUITY COMPENSATION PLANS
β
Securities Authorized for Issuance Under Equity Compensation Plans
β
The following table contains information regarding our equity compensation plans as of December 31, 2020 (in thousands, except weighted-average price):
β
| | | | Plan Category
| Number of securities to be issued upon exercise of outstanding options, warrants and rights (a)
| Weighted-average exercise price of outstanding options, warrants and rights (b)
| Number of securities remaining available for future issuance under equity compensation plans (excluding securities reflected in column (a)) (c)
| Equity compensation plans approved by security holders
| 4,103 (1)(2)
| 35.98 (3)
| 1,337 (4)
|
β
(1) | Consists of 2,375,752 shares of Common Stock subject to options granted under the Merit Medical Systems, Inc. 2006 Long-Term Incentive Plan, 1,566,203 shares of Common Stock subject to options granted under the 2018 Long-Term Incentive Plan, 127,060 shares of Common Stock subject to performance stock units granted under the 2018 Incentive Plan, and 33,504 shares of Common Stock subject to restricted stock units under the 2018 Incentive Plan. |
(2) | Performance stock units are included in column (a) based on actual FCF and rTSR multipliers for unvested awards with completed performance periods and based on the maximum potential payout for awards with incomplete performance periods. |
(3) | The weighted-average exercise price included in the table excludes the performance stock units and restricted stock units included in column (a), as the underlying shares are issued and distributed to the recipient upon vesting and do not have an exercise price. |
(4) | Consists of 40,073 shares available to be issued under the 1996 Merit Medical Systems, Inc. Employee Stock Purchase Plan and 1,297,062 shares available to be issued under the 2018 Incentive Plan. |
β
Proposal No. 2β Approval of an Amendment to the 2018 Long-Term Incentive Plan to Increase the Number of Shares of Common Stock Authorized for Issuance Thereunder by 3,000,000 Shares
| Board Recommendation
| β
| The Board unanimously recommends a vote FOR this proposal
|
β
Upon the recommendation of our Compensation Committee, our Board has unanimously approved, and unanimously recommends that the shareholders approve, the Second Amendment to the 2018 Incentive Plan, attached hereto as Appendix A (Incentive Plan Amendment). If approved by the shareholders at the Annual Meeting, the number of shares authorized for issuance under the 2018 Incentive Plan will increase by 3,000,000 shares from 3,100,000 shares to 6,100,000 shares of our Common Stock.
The Board recommends that shareholders approve the Incentive Plan Amendment because it will allow the Company to better (a) align employee and shareholder interests, and (b) recruit and retain talented employees and senior management.
The 2018 Incentive Plan was originally approved by our shareholders in 2018, and this is the first time we have requested approval to increase the shares authorized under the 2018 Incentive Plan. As of April 20, 2021, the 2018 Incentive Plan had 1,057,172 shares of Common Stock available for grant, and if the
Incentive Plan Amendment is approved, a total of 4,057,172 shares of Common Stock will be available for grant.
Significant Historical Award Information
The following table provides information regarding the grant of equity awards under the 2018 Incentive Plan over the past three fiscal years:
| | | | Key Equity Metric | 2020 | 2019 | 2018 | Percentage of equity awards granted to NEOs (1) | 53.0% | 22.4% | 23.6% | Equity burn rate (2) | 0.9% | 2.2% | 1.3% | Dilution (3) | 9.7% | 10.9% | 11.7% | Overhang (4) | 7.4% | 7.8% | 6.4% | Potential shares issuable from options and awards granted | 489,508 | 1,244,403 | 692,002 | Shares issued under stock option exercises | 441,707 | 287,426 | 690,176 |
β
(1) | Percentage of equity awards granted to individuals who were named executive officers in the relevant year is calculated by dividing the number of shares that were issuable pursuant to equity awards that were granted to NEOs during the year by the number of shares issuable pursuant to all equity awards granted during the year. |
(2) | Equity burn rate is calculated by dividing the number of shares issuable pursuant to equity awards granted during the year by the weighted average number of shares outstanding during the year, as disclosed in our Annual Report on Form 10-K. |
(3) | Dilution is calculated by dividing the sum of (x) the number of shares issuable pursuant to equity awards outstanding at the end of the fiscal year and (y) the number of shares available under the 2018 Incentive Plan for future grants by the number of shares outstanding at the end of the year. If the shares from the Incentive Plan Amendment are included in the number of shares issuable pursuant to equity awards outstanding at the end of the fiscal year, this dilution metric would be approximately 15.1% in 2020. |
(4) | Overhang is calculated by dividing the number of shares issuable pursuant to equity awards outstanding at the end of the year by the number of shares outstanding at the end of the year. |
β
2018 Incentive Plan Summary
β
The following is a brief description of the principal features of the 2018 Incentive Plan. This summary is qualified in its entirety by reference to the full text of the 2018 Incentive Plan, which is included as an exhibit to our Annual Report on Form 10-K, and the full text of the Incentive Plan Amendment attached hereto as Appendix A.
Purpose
β
The purpose of the 2018 Incentive Plan is to assist the Company and its subsidiaries in attracting and retaining qualified individuals to serve as directors and employees of, and consultants and advisors to, the Company and our subsidiaries. The Board believes that the awards granted under the 2018 Incentive Plan align incentives of such individuals and help us achieve our long-term objectives, which in turn inure to the benefit of all our shareholders.
Eligibility
β
Directors,Β employees, consultants and advisors of the Company and our subsidiaries are eligible to receive awards under the 2018 Incentive PlanΒ to the extent designated by the Compensation Committee or its delegate. The Compensation Committee has not yet determined who will receive future awards under the 2018 Incentive Plan, but future grants consistent with the Companyβs historical equity-based compensation practices are likely.
Administration
β
The 2018 Incentive Plan is administered by the Compensation Committee. The Compensation Committee has the authority to interpret and construe the provisions of the 2018 Incentive Plan and to make all
decisions and determinations relating to the operation of the 2018 Incentive Plan, including the authority and discretion to:
β | select the individuals to receive stock option grants or other awards; |
β | determine the time or times when stock option grants or other awards will be granted and will vest; and |
β | establish the terms and conditions upon which awards may be exercised. |
Subject to certain limitations, the Compensation CommitteeΒ may delegate to the CEO authority to make stock option grants to employees other than executive officers and directors.
Duration
β
The 2018 Incentive Plan became effective on May 24, 2018 and shall continue until May 23, 2028 unless sooner terminated by the Board of Directors.
Shares Subject to Plan
β
A maximum of 3,100,000 shares of Common Stock are currently authorized for issuance under the 2018 Incentive Plan (including issuance pursuant to incentive stock options). As of the Record Date, 1,057,172 shares were available for issuance under the 2018 Incentive Plan. If the Incentive Plan Amendment is approved, a maximum of 6,100,000 shares of Common Stock will be authorized for issuance and 4,057,172 shares will be available for issuance under the 2018 Incentive Plan.
Any shares subject to options or stock appreciation rights are counted against the shares available for issuance under the 2018 Incentive Plan (Share Reserve) as one share for every share subject thereto.Β Any shares subject to awards other than options or stock appreciation rights, e.g., restricted stock units and performance share units, are counted against the Share Reserve asΒ two and one-half shares for every one share subjectΒ thereto.Β If an award under the 2018 Incentive Plan is forfeited or expires, the subject shares are again available for grant under the 2018 Incentive Plan (such forfeited or expired shares,Β Recycled Shares). To the extent that a share that was subject to an award that counted as one share against the 2018 Incentive Plan Share Reserve becomes a Recycled Share, the Share Reserve would be credited with (increased by) one share. To the extent that a share that was subject to an award that counted as two and one-half shares against the 2018 Incentive Plan Share Reserve becomes a Recycled Share, the Share Reserve is credited with two and one-half shares. The following types of shares of Common Stock are not eligible to be granted again under the 2018 Incentive Plan:
β | shares tendered by the participant, or withheld by the Company, to satisfy the purchase price of an option or any tax withholding obligation; |
β | shares which we repurchase with option proceeds; or |
β | shares subject to a stock appreciation right that are not issued in connection with the stock settlement of the stock appreciation right on exercise thereof. |
In the event the outstanding shares of Common Stock are increased, decreased, changed into, or exchanged for a different number or kind of shares or securities through reorganization, merger, recapitalization, reclassification, stock split, reverse stock split or similar transaction (Recapitalization), the Share Reserve under the 2018 Incentive Plan will be proportionately adjusted.
β
We intend to register the new shares reserved for issuance under the 2018 Incentive Plan on a Registration Statement on Form S-8 under theΒ Securities Act of 1933, as amended, as soon as practicable after receiving stockholder approval.
β
Types of Awards under the 2018 Incentive Plan
β
The 2018 Incentive Plan provides for the following types of awards (Awards): (a)stock options; (b) stock appreciation rights; (c) restricted stock; (d) restricted stock units, including performance stock units; and (e) other share-based awards. Awards under the 2018 Incentive Plan may be granted as βperformance awardsβ subject to conditions on exercise, vesting or payment that are tied to satisfaction of pre-determined financial or other performance goals designated by the Compensation Committee and set forth the applicable award agreements. Β Except in the case of certain Changes in Control, as described below, all awards under the 2018 Incentive Plan will have a minimum vesting requirement of at least one year of continuous service from the date of grant.
β
Stock Options
β
The Compensation Committee may from time to time award options to any 2018 Incentive Plan participant subject to the limitations described above. Stock options give the holder the right to purchase shares of our Common Stock within a specified time at a specified exercise price. Two types of stock options may be granted under the 2018 Incentive Plan, namely: (a) incentive stock options (ISOs), which are subject to special tax treatment as described below and which are limited to employees of the Company and our subsidiaries; and (b) non-statutory options (NSOs), which are available to all directors, employees, consultants and advisors of the Company and our subsidiaries. The exercise price of an option cannot be less than the fair market value of a share of Common Stock at the time of grant. A participant may pay the applicable Option exercise price in cash, certified check or by wire transfer, or if permitted under the applicable award agreement or by the Compensation Committee by tendering previously acquired shares, by withholding of shares or through a cashless broker-assisted exercise program. Β The expiration dates of options cannot be more than seven years after the date of the original grant. Other than appropriate adjustments as described above to reflect a Recapitalization, the Compensation Committee may not without the approval of our shareholders: (i) lower the option exercise price of an option after it is granted; (ii) cancel an option when the option exercise exceeds the fair market value of the underlying shares in exchange for another Award; or (iii) take any other action with respect to an option that may be treated as a repricing under the rules and regulations of NASDAQ.
β
Stock Appreciation Rights
β
The Compensation Committee may grant stock appreciation rights under the 2018 Incentive Plan to eligible participants. A stock appreciation right entitles the holder upon exercise to receive an amount in cash, shares of Common Stock, other property, or a combination thereof (as determined by the Compensation Committee), computed by reference to appreciation in the value of the Common Stock over its stated base value per share, which cannot be less than the fair market value of a share of Common Stock at the time of grant. The expiration dates of stock appreciation rights cannot be more than seven years after the date of the original grant.
β
Restricted Stock
β
The Compensation Committee may grant restricted shares of Common Stock under the 2018 Incentive Plan to such eligible participants, in such amounts, and subject to such terms and conditions (including the attainment of performance criteria) as the Compensation Committee determines in its discretion. Awards of restricted shares of the Common Stock may be made in exchange for services or other lawful consideration. Generally, awards of restricted shares of Common Stock are subject to the requirement that the shares be forfeited to the Company unless specified conditions are met. Subject to these restrictions, conditions and forfeiture provisions, any recipient of an award of restricted stock will have all the rights of a shareholder of the Company, including the right to vote the shares upon grant subject to these restrictions, conditions and forfeiture provisions.
β
Restricted Stock Units
β
The Compensation Committee may grant restricted stock units under the 2018 Incentive Plan having a value equal to a designated number of shares of Common Stock to such eligible participants, in such amounts, and subject to such terms and conditions (including the attainment of performance criteria) as the Compensation Committee determines in its discretion. If the requirements specified by the Compensation Committee are met, the grantee of such units will receive shares of Common Stock, cash, other property, or any combination thereof, equal to the fair market value of the designated number of shares of Common Stock. Restricted Stock Units may be granted in a manner under which the applicable payout (in shares, cash or a combination thereof) and vesting is linked to and contingent upon the attainment of designated performance measures, such as performance-based stock units (PSUs).
β
Other Share-Based Awards
β
The Compensation Committee may also make other awards measured by the value of or payable in the form of shares under the 2018 Incentive Plan subject to the satisfaction of specified performance or other criteria. Other share-based awards may be paid in shares of Common Stock, cash, other property, or any combination thereof.
β
Accelerated Exercisability and Vesting on a Change in Control
β
Under the 2018 Incentive Plan, all then outstanding awards will automatically become fully exercisable, vested and earned upon a Change in Control. Additionally, upon a Change in Control, the Company may elect to cancel all or any portion of then outstanding awards under the 2018 Incentive Plan in exchange for a payment equal to the fair market value of the cancelled awards. For this purpose, a Change in Control means: (a) certain changes in the majority of the Board within a 12-month period; (b) the acquisition by any person of 30% or more of the voting securities of the Company; (c) consummation of a merger or reorganization of the Company in which neither the Company nor another entity controlled by our shareholders is the surviving entity; (d) a sale or other disposition of all or substantially all of our assets to another entity that is not controlled by our shareholders; or (e) shareholder approval of a liquidation of the Company.
β
Recoupment/Clawback
β
The Company is entitled to recoup compensation of whatever kind paid under the 2018 Incentive Plan by the Company at any time to the extent required by applicable securities or other law or as provided in any recoupment policy adopted by the Company.
β
Provisions for Foreign Participants Β
β
The Compensation Committee may modify awards granted to participants who are foreign nationals or employed outside the United States or establish, amend or rescind rules, sub-plans or procedures under the 2018 Incentive Plan to recognize differences in laws, rules, regulations or customs of such foreign jurisdictions with respect to tax, securities, currency, employee benefits or other matters.
β
General Provisions
β
Unless authorized by the Compensation Committee in the agreement evidencing an award granted under the 2018 Incentive Plan, awards may not be transferred other than by will or the laws of descent and distribution, and may be exercised during the participantβs lifetime only by the participant or the participantβs guardian or legal representative. The Board may, from time to time, alter, amend, suspend or terminate the 2018 Incentive Plan. Unless sooner terminated by the Board of Directors, the 2018 Incentive Plan will automatically terminate on May 23, 2028. No grants may be made under the plan following the date of termination, although grants made prior to that date may remain outstanding following the termination of the 2018 Incentive Plan until their scheduled expiration date.
β
Certain Federal Income Tax Consequences
β
The following is a brief summary of certain U.S. federal income tax consequences relating to awards under the 2018 Incentive Plan. This summary is made as of the date of this Proxy Statement, is not (and is not intended to be) complete, and does not describe state, local, foreign, or other tax consequences. The tax information summarized is not tax advice. The U.S. federal tax laws may change and the federal, state and local tax consequences for any participant will depend upon his or her individual circumstances. Tax consequences for any particular individual may be different. We advise participants to consult with a tax advisor regarding the tax implications of their awards under the 2018 Incentive Plan.
β
Tax Consequences to the Company
β
To the extent that a participant recognizes ordinary income in the circumstances described below, the Company or the subsidiary for which the participant performs services will be entitled to a corresponding deduction for income tax purposes, but only if, among other things, the expense: (a) meets the test of reasonableness; (b) is an ordinary and necessary business expense; (c) is not an βexcess parachute paymentβ within the meaning of Section 280G of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986 (as amended, the Code); and (d) is not disallowed by the $1 million limitation on executive compensation under Section 162(m) of the Code.
β
Tax Consequences to Participants
β
The U.S. federal income tax consequences to participants receiving various types of awards under the 2018 Incentive Plan are summarized below.
β
Nonqualified Stock Options (NSOs). In general, for recipients of NSOs: (a) no income will be recognized by the participant at the time an NSO is granted; (b) at the time of exercise of an NSO, ordinary income will be recognized by the participant in an amount equal to the difference between the option exercise price paid for the shares of Common Stock and the fair market value of the shares, if unrestricted, on the date of exercise; and (c) at the time of sale of shares of Common Stock acquired pursuant to the exercise of an NSO, appreciation (or depreciation) in value of the shares after the date of exercise will be treated as either short-term or long-term capital gain (or loss) depending on how long the shares have been held. For post-exercise appreciation in share value to qualify for long-term capital gain treatment, the shares must be held for more than one year from their date of issuance.
β
Incentive Stock Options (ISOs). No income will be recognized by a participant upon the grant to them of an ISO. In general, no income will be recognized by the participant upon the exercise of an ISO for regular income tax purposes. However, the difference between the option price paid and the fair market value of the shares at exercise may constitute a preference item triggering alternative minimum tax on the participant. If shares of Common Stock are issued to a participant pursuant to the exercise of an ISO, and if no disqualifying disposition of such shares is made by such option holder within two years after the date of the grant or within one year after the transfer of such shares to the option holder, then upon later sale of such shares, any amount realized in excess of the option price will be taxed to the participant as long-term capital gain and any loss sustained will be a long-term capital loss. If shares of Common Stock acquired upon the timely exercise of an ISO are disposed of prior to the expiration of either holding period described above, the participant generally will recognize ordinary income in the year of disposition in an amount equal to the excess (if any) of the fair market value of such shares at the time of exercise (or, if less, the amount realized on the disposition of such shares if a sale or exchange) over the option exercise price paid for such shares. Any further gain (or loss) realized by the participant generally will be taxed as short-term or long-term capital gain (or loss) depending on the holding period.
β
Stock Appreciation Rights. No income will be recognized by a participant in connection with the grant of a stock appreciation right. When the appreciation right is exercised, the participant normally will be required to include as taxable ordinary income in the year of exercise an amount equal to the amount of cash
received and the fair market value of any unrestricted shares of Common Stock or other property received on the exercise.
β
Restricted Stock. The recipient of restricted shares of Common Stock generally will not be subject to tax until the shares are no longer subject to forfeiture or restrictions on transfer for purposes of Section 83 of the Code (Restrictions). At such time, the participant will be subject to tax at ordinary income rates on the then fair market value of the restricted shares (reduced by any amount paid by the participant for such restricted shares). However, a participant who makes an election under Section 83(b) of the Code within 30 days of the date of transfer of the shares will have taxable ordinary income on the date of transfer of the shares equal to the excess of the fair market value of such shares (determined without regard to the Restrictions) over the purchase price, if any, of such restricted shares. Any appreciation (or depreciation) after the date the value of the restricted shares initially becomes taxable to the participant which the participant later realizes upon a subsequent disposition of such shares will be treated as long-term or short-term capital gain (or loss) depending upon how long the shares have been held. If a Code Section 83(b) election has not been made, any dividends received with respect to shares of restricted stock that are subject to the restrictions generally will be treated as deferred compensation that is taxable as ordinary income to the participant.
β
Restricted Stock Units (including PSUs). Generally, no income will be recognized by a participant upon the award of restricted stock units, including PSUs. The recipient of a restricted stock unit award generally will be subject to tax at ordinary income rates on any cash received and the fair market value of any unrestricted shares of Common Stock or other property on the date that such amounts are transferred to the participant under the award (reduced by any amount paid, if any, by the participant for such restricted stock units).
β
Other Share-Based Awards. No income generally will be recognized by a participant upon the grant of other Share-Based Awards until such awards become vested and payable. Upon payment in respect of other Share-Based Awards, the recipient generally will be required to include as taxable ordinary income in the year of receipt an amount equal to the amount of cash received and the fair market value of any non-restricted shares of Common Stock or other property received.
β
Value of Benefits
β
We are unable to determine the amount of benefits that may be received by participants under the 2018 Incentive Plan if the Incentive Plan Amendment is approved (or if it is not approved) as grants of awards under the 2018 Incentive Plan are discretionary with the Compensation Committee.
β
Certain Interests of Directors
β
In considering the recommendation of the Board with respect to the Incentive Plan Amendment, shareholders should be aware that our directors have certain interests which may present them with conflicts of interest in connection with such proposal. Specifically, as discussed above, our directors are eligible to receive awards under the 2018 Incentive Plan. The Board recognizes that adoption of the 2018 Incentive Plan may benefit our directors and their successors but believes that approval of the amendment to the 2018 Incentive Plan will advance our interests and the interests of our shareholders by encouraging directors, employees, consultants and advisors to make significant contributions to our long-term success.
β
The Board believes the Incentive Plan Amendment is in the best interests of the Company and its shareholders, and therefore unanimously recommends that the shareholders vote FOR the proposal to approve the Incentive Plan Amendment.
β
Proposal No. 3β Approval of an Amendment to the 1996 Employee Stock Purchase Plan to Increase the Number of Shares of Common Stock Authorized for Issuance Thereunder by 100,000 Shares
| Board Recommendation
| β
| The Board unanimously recommends a vote FOR this proposal
|
β
The Board has unanimously approved, and unanimously recommends that the shareholders approve, the Fifth Amendment to the Merit Medical Systems, Inc. 1996 Employee Stock Purchase Plan (ESPP), attached hereto as Appendix B (ESPP Amendment). If approved by the shareholders at the Annual Meeting, the number of shares of Common Stock authorized for issuance under the ESPP will be increased by 100,000 shares from 1,493,056 shares to 1,593,056 shares. The purpose of the ESPP is to provide employees of the Company and its participating subsidiaries the opportunity to acquire an equity interest in the Company by providing favorable terms for them to purchase the Companyβs Common Stock.
The Board recommends that shareholders approve the ESPP Amendment because it believes that the opportunity to own shares of Common Stock is a significant factor in the Companyβs ability to attract, retain and motivate its employees, who are critical to the Companyβs long-term success. Furthermore, we believe that an increase in the number of shares available for issuance under the 1996 ESPP will help to better align the interests of employees and shareholders and incentivize employees to help the Company improve its financial results.
β
Only 35,443 total shares of Common Stock remain available for issuance under the ESPP as of the record date. Unless the ESPP Amendment is approved, we do not believe that there will be enough authorized shares of Common Stock under the ESPP for regular, anticipated issuances for offering periods beginning after March 2022 (based on past experience with the ESPP). The Board currently believes that the proposed increase of 100,000 shares of Common Stock authorized for issuance under the ESPP should result in an adequate number of shares of Common Stock for future issuance for approximately three to five years; however, this forecast includes several assumptions and there are several factors that could impact the Companyβs future Common Stock issuances. We are asking shareholders to vote FOR approval of the ESPP Amendment. Apart from the ESPP Amendment, no other terms or conditions of the ESPP will change.
β
Employee Stock Purchase Plan Summary
β
The following description summarizes the principal features of the ESPP but is qualified in its entirety by reference to the full text of the ESPP as filed with the SEC and included as an exhibit to our Annual Report on Form 10-K.
β
Purpose
β
The purpose of the ESPP is to provide a method whereby employees of the Company, and any subsidiary subsequently designated by the Company, will have an opportunity to acquire a proprietary interest in the Company through the purchase of shares of Common Stock. The Board believes that the ESPP is important because it provides incentives to present and future employees of the Company and its shareholders by allowing them to share in the Companyβs growth. The ESPP is intended to qualify as an βemployee stock purchase planβ under Section 423 of the Code.
β
Administration
β
The ESPP is administered by the Board or a committee designated by the Board. The Board or its delegate has the authority to interpret and construe all provisions of the ESPP and to make all decisions and determinations relating to the operation of the ESPP.
β
Duration
β
The ESPP was adopted effective as of April 15, 1996, was restated effective July 1, 2000 for the purposes, among others, of increasing the number of shares of Common Stock which may be issued pursuant to the plan and extending the term of the ESPP through the last business day of June 2006. The ESPP and was further amended on April 7, 2006, principally for the purpose of extending the term of the ESPP through the last business day of June 2016. On February 13, 2015,the ESPP was further amended to extend the term until June 30, 2026 or until earlier termination by the Board in accordance with its terms.
β
Shares Subject to Plan
β
As of the Record Date, a maximum of 35,443 shares of Common Stock remained available for issuance under the ESPP, out of a stock-split-adjusted total of 1,493,056 shares of Common Stock authorized for issuance under the ESPP. If the ESPP Amendment is approved, 1,593,056 shares of Common Stock shall be authorized for issuance and approximately 135,443 shares of Common Stock shall be available for issuance under the ESPP. In the event the outstanding shares of Common Stock are increased, decreased, changed into, or exchanged for a different number or kind of shares or securities through reorganization, merger, recapitalization, reclassification, stock split, reverse stock split or similar transaction, the maximum number of shares available for issuance under the ESPP will be proportionately adjusted.
β
Eligibility
β
Participation in the ESPP is limited to employees of the Company and any subsidiary subsequently designated by the Company who have completed 30 days of continuous employment with the Company or a designated subsidiary since their most recent employment commencement date. No employee will be granted an option under the ESPP (i) if such employee would own or have the right to purchase 5% or more of the total combined voting power of the Company or (ii) which permits him or her to purchase in excess of $25,000 of Common Stock per calendar year.
β
The number of shares that will be issued under the ESPP and the number of employees to whom such shares will be issued in the future is unknown, but if the ESPP Amendment is approved future share issuances under the ESPP consistent with historical results are likely to continue for several years.
β
Offerings Under the Plan
β
The ESPP provides for four three-month offering periods, commencing on the first business day of each January, April, July and October, in each of the years during the term of the ESPP and ending on the last business day of such calendar quarter.
β
Granting of Options
β
On the applicable offering commencement date, a participating employee will be granted an option to purchase the number of shares of Common Stock determined by dividing the participantβs balance in the plan account on the last day of the offering period by the purchase price per share of the Common Stock; provided, however, that the maximum number of shares of Common Stock that a participating employee may purchase under all employee stock purchase plans of the Company during any calendar year may not exceed $25,000 in fair market value.
β
Participation in an Offering
β
An individual who is an eligible employee at the beginning of an offering may elect to participate in such offering by submitting an enrollment form to the Company authorizing the Company to make deductions from his or her pay on each payday during the time the employee is a participant at any rate designated by the employee, from a minimum of $5.00 per offering period to a maximum of 15% of the employeeβs base pay. All such payroll deduction contributions will be held in a non-interest bearing account. An employeeβs option to purchase shares of Common Stock will be deemed to have been exercised automatically on the offering termination date applicable to such offering, i.e., at the end of the quarterly offering period, unless the employee gives written notice to the Company to withdraw such payroll deductions. The option will be deemed to have been exercised for the purchase of the number of full shares of Common Stock which the amount in the participant's account will purchase (but not in excess of the maximum number of shares for which an option has been granted to the employee), and any excess in the account will be returned to the employee.
β
Exercise Price of Options
β
The price per share to be paid by participants under the ESPP is 95% of the fair market value of the Common Stock on the applicable offering termination date. The fair market value of the Common Stock is the closing sales price as reported on The Nasdaq National Market on the applicable offering termination date or the nearest prior business day on which shares of the Common Stock traded.
β
Withdrawal; Termination of Employment
β
Upon withdrawal by a participating employee prior to an offering termination date or the termination of a participantβs employment for any reason during an offering, including retirement and death, the option granted to such employee shall immediately terminate in its entirety, and the payroll deductions or other contributions credited to the participantβs account shall be returned to the participant, or, in the case of death, his or her designated beneficiary, and shall not be used to purchase shares of Common Stock under the ESPP.
β
Amendment and Termination
β
The Board may, at any time and for any reason, amend or terminate the ESPP; provided, however, that to the extent necessary to comply with the rules of Β Nasdaq or any other securities exchange or market system on which shares of Common Stock are listed or quoted, or under Section 423 of the Code (or any successor rule or provision or any applicable law or regulation), the Company must obtain shareholder approval in such a manner and to such a degree as so required. Subject to certain exceptions, no termination, modification, or amendment of the ESPP may, without the consent of an employee then having an option under the ESPP to purchase shares of Common Stock, adversely affect the rights of such employee under such option.
β
General Provisions
β
No participant or his or her legal representatives, legatees or distributees will be deemed to be the holder of any shares of Common Stock subject to an offering under the ESPP until the option has been exercised and the purchase price for the shares has been paid. No payroll deductions credited to a participantβs stock purchase account nor any rights with regard to the exercise of an option to purchase shares of Common Stock under the ESPP may be assigned, transferred, pledged or otherwise disposed of in any way by a participant other than by will or the laws of descent and distribution. Options under the ESPP will be exercisable during a participantβs lifetime only by the participant.
β
Certain Federal Income Tax Consequences
β
The following is a brief summary of certain United States federal income tax consequences relating to the ESPP. This summary is not intended to be complete and does not describe state, local, foreign, or other tax consequences. The tax information summarized is not tax advice. The U.S. federal tax laws may change and the federal, state and local tax consequences for any participant will depend upon his or her individual circumstances. Tax consequences for any particular individual may be different. We advise participants to consult with a tax advisor regarding the tax implications of their awards under the ESPP.
β
Grant of Options
β
The ESPP is intended to qualify as an βemployee stock purchase planβ within the meaning of Section 423 of the Code. A recipient of options under the ESPP incurs no income tax liability, and the Company obtains no deduction, from the grant of the options. The payroll deductions and other contributions by a participant to his or her account, however, are made on an after-tax basis. Participants will not be entitled to deduct or exclude from income or employment taxes any part of their payroll deductions.
β
Exercise of Options
β
An employee will not be subject to federal income tax upon the exercise of an option granted under the ESPP, nor will the Company be entitled to a tax deduction by reason of such exercise. The employee will have a cost basis in the shares of Common Stock acquired upon such exercise equal to the option exercise price.
β
Disposition of Shares Acquired Under the Employee Stock Purchase Plan
β
In order to defer taxation on the difference between the fair market value and exercise price of shares acquired upon exercise of an option under the ESPP, the employee must hold the shares throughout a holding period which runs through the later of one year after the option exercise date or two years after the date the option was granted. The only exceptions are for dispositions of shares upon death, as part of a tax-free exchange of shares in a corporate reorganization, into joint tenancy with right of survivorship with one other person, or the mere pledge or hypothecation of shares.
β
If an employee disposes of stock acquired under the ESPP before expiration of the applicable holding periods in a manner not described above, such as by gift or ordinary sale of such shares, the employee must recognize as ordinary compensation income in the year of disposition the difference between the exercise price and the stockβs fair market value as of the date of exercise. This amount must be recognized as income even if it exceeds the fair market value of the shares as of the date of disposition or the amount of the sales proceeds received. In such an event, the Company will be entitled to a corresponding compensation expense deduction.
β
Disposition of shares after expiration of the required holding periods (including disposition upon death) will result in the recognition of gain or loss in the amount of the difference between the amount realized on the sale of the shares and the exercise price for such shares. Any loss on such a sale will be a long-term capital loss. Any gain on such a sale will be taxed as ordinary compensation income up to the amount of the
difference between exercise price and the stockβs fair market value as of the date of exercise, with any additional gain taxed as a long-term capital gain.
β
Value of Benefits
β
The Company is unable to determine the amount of future benefits that may be received by participants under the ESPP because participation is discretionary with each employee.
β
Certain Interests of Directors
β
In considering the recommendation of the Board with respect to the ESPP, shareholders should be aware that the members of the Board have certain interests which may present them with conflicts of interest in connection with such proposal. As discussed above, all employees of the Company, including employees who are directors and executive officers who meet designated eligibility criteria, are eligible to purchase Common Stock under the ESPP.
β
The Board recognizes that adoption of the proposed ESPP Amendment may benefit certain of the Companyβs directors and their successors but believes that approval of the proposed ESPP Amendment will advance the Companyβs interests and the interests of its shareholders by encouraging employees to make significant contributions to the Companyβs long-term success.
β
We intend to register the new shares reserved for issuance under the ESPP on a Registration Statement on Form S-8 under theΒ Securities Act of 1933, as amended, as soon as practicable after receiving stockholder approval.
β
The Board believes the ESPP Amendment is in the best interests of the Company and its shareholders, and therefore unanimously recommends that the shareholders vote FOR the proposal to approve the ESPP Amendment.
β β β β
www.merit.com 48 |www.merit.com β 33
EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION AND RELATED MATTERS β β
Executive summarySummary During the years ended December 31, 2021 and 2020, the global COVID-19 pandemic impacted our business in various ways. The most significant impact to our sales occurred in the second quarter, with sales for the three-month period ended June 30, 2020 down approximately 14.5% when compared to the corresponding period of 2019. Despite the challengingIn 2021, we observed a generally improving operating environment with fewer restrictions on elective and slower-than-expecteddeferrable procedures leading to record sales of $1.075 billion, an increase of 11.5% from 2020, and 8.0% higher than 2019 sales of $994.9. Throughout the year we experienced notable variations in the pace of recovery from the COVID-19 pandemic in many of our primary markets, in the second halfacross regions of the year, our sales were approximately equal toworld influenced by the second halfincidence and timing of 2019,COVID-19 infections and our sales in the fourth quarter of 2020 were approximately six percent higher than the third quarter of 2020.associated governmental and patient responses. In response to the COVID-19 pandemic, we implemented certain cost reduction and operating efficiency initiatives, including decreasing discretionary spending, delaying product launches, deferring or rationalizing capital spending and reducing the number of research and development projects, among other initiatives. In April 2020, due to the significant impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on our business, results of operations and financial condition, and uncertainty regarding the scope and duration of that impact, we reduced headcount, implemented targeted furloughs and temporarily reduced salaries for a number of groups, including all executive positions. These temporary salary reductions were eliminated by December 31, 2020. In support of those salary reductions, our Board voted to reduce the amount of their retainer payments for the third quarter of 2020 as well.
We continue to focus our efforts to expand our presence in foreign markets, particularly Europe, Middle East and Africa (EMEA), China, Southeast Asia, Japan, Australia and Brazil, with the objective of capitalizing on additional market opportunities. These efforts have increased certain of our selling, general and administrative expenses and lengthened our average collection period as certain geographic markets have customary payment terms which are, on average, longer than payment terms in the United States; however, we believe over time this expansion will help improve our profitability. Due in part to restrictions regarding deferrable and elective procedures, our international sales declined for theΒ year ended DecemberΒ 31,Β 2020. In 2020,2021, international sales were approximately $413.8$465.9 million, or 42.9%43.3% of our net sales, down (1.3)%up 12.6% from international sales of $419.1$413.8 million in 2019.2020. On November 10, 2020, we introduced a corporate transformation initiative known asour βFoundations for Growthβ initiative, with multi-year financial targets for growth and improved profitability.profitability for the three-year period ending DecemberΒ 31, 2023. As part of this initiative, we continue to review opportunitiesthe need to consolidate facilities, strategically reduce operating expenses and incentivize our sales force to focus on products that will improve our financial performance. During 2020,We have launched multiple initiatives to drive value creation for Merit, including SKU optimization, network consolidation, compensation and benefit programs, product line transfers and manufacturing initiatives. In the area of SKU rationalization, we have identified more than 2,000 products with revenues or gross margins which are below our targets, and in nearly all cases have moved production of 23 productscustomers to our facilities in Mexico or Texas, and we closed manufacturing operations in Temecula, California; Malvern, Pennsylvania; West Jordan, Utah; and Melbourne, Australia.alternative products. β 4934 | www.merit.com
β Understand. Innovate. Deliver.TM
Key financial results for the last five fiscal years are highlighted below: β
β
(1) | Non-GAAP net income, non-GAAP gross margin and non-GAAP earnings per share are non-GAAP financial measures. A reconciliation of non-GAAP financial measures used in this Proxy Statement to their most directly comparable GAAP financial measures is included under the heading βNon-GAAP Financial Measuresβ below. |
β The results of our operating and financial performance over the past five years are illustrated in the tables above. Although our historic results are not a guarantee of future performance, we believe Merit is well positioned for sustainable growth in profitability going forward. β
Our operating and financial results were a significant factor in the deliberations of our Compensation Committee when evaluating the amount and form of compensation paid to our CEO and other NEOs. Our Compensation Committee believes there are multiple factors that have contributed to our financial and
operating performance, however, two of the key factors have been our outstanding employees and the leadership provided by our CEO
and other executive officers. Accordingly, the Compensation Committee seeks to implement and advance an executive compensation program that recognizes Company performance and individual contribution, while encouraging long-term motivation and retention. The Compensation Committee believes our executive compensation program has been instrumental in helping the Company sustain its strong financial performance over many years. β
Under the oversight of the Compensation Committee, our compensation philosophy is to offer compensation programs to the NEOs that align the interests of management and shareholders for the purpose of maximizing shareholder value, while considering the interests of other significant stakeholders such as employees, customers, business partners and the communities in which we operate.
β
Among other objectives, those programs are designed to:
Compensation Philosophy | β The primary objectives of our compensation programs are: | βUnder the oversight of the Compensation Committee, our compensation philosophy is to offer compensation programs to the NEOs that align the interests of management and shareholders for the purpose of maximizing shareholder value, while considering the interests of other significant stakeholders such as employees, patients, customers, business partners and the communities in which we operate. | β | 1 | focus executives on achieving or exceeding measurable performance targets; |
β | β | β | β | | β | 2 | influence executives to lead our employees in the implementation of cost-saving plans; |
β | β | β | β | | β | 3 | continue our entrepreneurial spirit; |
β | β | β | β | | β | 4 | attract and retain highly-qualified and motivated executives; and |
β | β | β | β | | β | 5 | promote a highly ethical environment and maintain health and safety standards. |
β
Our executive compensation programs specific to the NEOs are overseen by the Compensation Committee. In pursuit of our compensation philosophy and objectives, the Compensation Committee believes that the compensation packages provided to the NEOs should generally include both cash and equity-based compensation. Base pay and benefits are set at levels considered necessary to attract and retain qualified and effective executives. Variable incentive pay is used to align the compensation of the NEOs with our short-term business and performance objectives, such as income and overall financial performance. Equity awards are intended to motivate executives to create long-term shareholder value. Historically, equity awards have consisted solely of stock options, but during 2019, the Compensation Committee determined to add awards of performance-based restricted stock units (PSUs) to our long-term equity incentive program and to base our short-term executive bonus program on the achievement of predetermined performance targets, with both adjustments effective in 2020. The performance-based restricted stock unitsPSUs and executive bonus targets are designed to increase the alignment of NEO compensation with the Companyβs achievement of Board-approved performance measures and relative shareholder return. During 2020,2021, the Compensation Committee, working with the Operating Committee, also provided oversight of the development and implementation of a global bonus plan for all Company employees as part of our Foundations for Growth program.initiative. β 36 51 |www.merit.com β Understand. Innovate. Deliver.TM
| | | | | Selected 20202021 Highlights | β | β | β Responded toAchieved the global COVID-19 pandemic by focusing on employee health and safety and maintaining operations, which ultimately resultedmilestone of more than $1 billion in positive operating and financial resultsrevenue
β Introduced and implemented aExceeded the Company-wide operating efficiencyperformance measures established pursuant to our Foundations for Growth initiative, (Foundations for Growth) designed to maintain growth, improve our operating margins and build a foundation for long-term profitability
β Implemented a Company-wide compensation and bonus program to award long-term performance-based restricted stock units (PSUs)designed to increase the alignment of executiveemployee compensation with the Companyβs achievement of Board-approvedthe Foundations for Growth performance measures β
Conditioned the payment of executive bonuses upon the Companyβs achievement of pre-determined performance targets
| β Prioritized reduction of our environmental footprint by continuing to implement new programs to reduce waste, conserve resources, and improve the areas where we do business β Cumulative total return on our Common Stock from December 31, 20152016 to DecemberΒ 31, 20202021 of approximately 199%135% (1) β
β Responded to the global COVID-19 pandemic by focusing on employee health and safety and maintaining operations, which ultimately resulted in positive operating and financial results (1)
|
(1) | Reflects five-year cumulative total return of our Common Stock, as reported by Nasdaq for the period from December 31, 20152016 to December 31, 2020.2021. Past results are not necessarily an indicator of future results. |
β
Executive Officers β
In addition to Fred P. Lampropoulos (whose biography is included above under βNominees for Election as DirectorsββDirectors Whose Terms of Office Continueβ), we have included the following information related to our other executive officers: β
| | |
| β
raul parraRAUL PARRA
β
| Chief Financial Officer and Treasurer β
Age: 43
| | βAge: 44
Current Position SinceSince: : July 2018 β
EducationHighlights:: B.S. (business administration with accounting emphasis), Sonoma State; Certified Public Accountant (CPA) (Inactive)
β
|
β
Highlights
β
| Previous positions at Merit include, Interim Chief Financial Officer, Vice President of Accounting, Corporate Controller and Director of Financial Reporting |
| Before joining Merit, held various audit and managerial positions at Deloitte & Touche, LLP | Education: B.S. (business administration with accounting emphasis), Sonoma State; Certified Public Accountant (Inactive) | |
β www.merit.com 52 |www.merit.com β 37
| | |
| β
RonaldRONALD A. FrostFROST
β
| Chief Operating Officer β
Age: 59
| | βAge: 60
Current Position SinceSince: : January 2014 β
EducationHighlights:: Manufacturing Engineering Technology, AAS, Machine Tooling, Weber State University
β
β
|
β
Highlights
β
| More than 28 years of service to Merit and its shareholders |
| Previous positions at Merit include Vice President (Materials and Operations), Quality Engineer, Manufacturing Engineer, Custom Kits Manager, Customer Service Manager, Production Planning and Warehouse Manager, General Manager of our Richmond, Virginia operations, and Vice President (Technology Transfer), 1991 to 2014 | Education: Manufacturing Engineering Technology, AAS, Machine Tooling, Weber State University | |
β | | |
| β
BrianBRIAN G. LloydLLOYD
β
| Chief Legal Officer, Corporate Secretary β
Age: 60
| | βAge: 61
Current Position Since:April 2016 β
Education:Highlights:B.S. (finance), Brigham Young University; J.D., Columbia Law School
|
β
Highlights
β
| Practiced as an attorney, specializing in corporate governance, securities regulation and mergers & acquisitions, with the law firm of Parr Brown Gee & Loveless in Salt Lake City, Utah for more than 20 years |
| Also practiced law in those areas of specialization as a partner with the law firm of Stoel Rives,Β LLP for four years |
| | finance)Education: B.S. (finance), Brigham Young University; J.D., Columbia Law School
β
| |
β | ROBERT J. FREDERICKS
| β
Robert J. Fredericks
β
Chief Strategy and Innovation Officer β
Age: 48
| | βAge: 49
Current Position Since:March 2021 β
Education:Highlights:M.B.A. The Wharton School, University of Pennsylvania; B.S. in Civil Engineering, Rice University; B.A. (economics), Rice University
|
β
Highlights
β
| Former Vice President and General Manager, Vascular Access Devices, at Becton Dickinson and Company (2018-2021) and C.R. Bard, Inc. (2015-2017) |
| Experience at Medtronic plc from 2003-2015 in positions including VP of Global Marketing, R&D, and Strategy, VP of Finance, and Sr. Marketing Director |
| Strategy Consultant with McKinsey & Company (1999-2003) |
β
| | B.S. (finance), Brigham Young University; J.D., Columbia Law School
β
| Education: M.B.A. The Wharton School, University of Pennsylvania; B.S. in Civil Engineering, Rice University; B.A. (economics), Rice University
| |
β 38 | Understand. Innovate. Deliver.TM
| MICHEL J. VOIGT β
| Chief Human Resources Officer β
Age: 48
| | βAge: 49
Current Position Since:December 2020 β
Education:Highlights:B.S. (business administration and management), Oklahoma State University
|
β
Highlights
β
| Former Chief Human Resources Officer of Mavenir Systems, Inc. from 2017-2020 |
| Over 20 years of experience in human resources management in various positions at Galderma/Nestle Skin Health, Lexicon Pharmaceuticals Incorporated, and Verizon |
β
| | | Education: B.S. (business administration and management), Oklahoma State University | |
β
| β
JosephJOSEPH C. WrightWRIGHT
β
| President, International Division β
Age: 51
| | βAge: 52
Current Position SinceSince: : July 2015 EducationHighlights:: B.A., (political science), Columbia University; M.B.A., (finance) Columbia University; Speaks Japanese
β
Mr. Wright is the brother-in-law of Fred P. Lampropoulos, Meritβs Chair of the Board, President and CEO
β
|
β
Highlights
β
| Previous positions at Merit include (a) President, Technology Group β overseeing Merit OEM, Merit Sensor Systems, Inc. and Meritβs coating division, (b) Vice President of Marketing, and (c)Β Vice President, International β responsible for sales in Canada, Asia Pacific, and Latin America, 2005 to 2015 |
| Manages businesses in all global markets outside the U.S. and EMEA |
| Before joining Merit, held sales, marketing and business development positions with several companies, including Motorola and Micron |
β
| | |
| β
Justin j. lampropoulos
β
President,
EMEA Division
β
Age: 38
| β
Current Position Since: December 2020
β
Mr. Justin J. LampropoulosWright is the sonbrother-in-law of Fred P. Lampropoulos, Meritβs Chair of the Board, President andΒ CEO | Education: B.A., (political science), Columbia University; M.B.A., (finance) Columbia University; Speaks Japanese | |
β Highlights
β β | From 2016 to 2020 served as Executive Vice President, Sales, Marketing and Strategy |
β | From 2010 to 2015 led Meritβs Europe, Middle East and Africa business unit from Maastricht, the Netherlands Β |
β | Began his career in the medical device technology field in 2004 |
β www.merit.com 55 |www.merit.com β 39
Compensation Discussion and Analysis This Compensation Discussion and Analysis is designed to explain our philosophy and objectives underlying our executive compensation policies, the processes we follow in setting executive compensation, and the components of executive compensation that we utilize in compensating our NEOs, who are listed below. β
| β
| β
| The Summary Compensation Table and other compensation tables under βExecutive Compensation Tablesβ below should be read in conjunction with this section. |
β | | | | | | | Chief Financial Officer and Treasurer | | | | Executive Vice President, Sales, Marketing and Strategy
| | Chief Legal Officer and Corporate Secretary | | |
β
Process for Establishing Executive Compensation Procedure The Compensation Committee has oversight responsibility for establishing compensation practices for our CEO and the other NEOs. The Compensation Committee also reviews all compensation decisions for employees of the Company who are related to our CEO. β
Performance reviews of the CEO are conducted by the Compensation Committee based on our performance during a given year, compared with our performance objectives, as well as other factors intended to maximize short-term and long-term shareholder value. β
Performance reviews of the other NEOs are based on the CEOβs evaluation of individual officer and Company performance for that year, with the objective of maximizing shareholder value. With respect to the compensation levels for the other NEOs, the Compensation Committee considers input and recommendations from the CEO. The CEO makes recommendations concerning salary adjustments, cashshort-term incentive bonus programs and long-term equity awards for the other NEOs, and the Compensation Committee considers those recommendations in determining the compensation of the other NEOs. β
Role of Consultants β
TheSince 2019, the Compensation Committee has engaged Pearl Meyer & Partners, LLC (Pearl Meyer), an independent compensation consulting firm, in 2019 and 2020 to review our executive officer and director compensation practices and advise the Compensation Committee with respect to those compensation practices, including salary, bonus, benefits and equity awards for our executive officers and retainers, meeting fees and equity awards for our directors. TheRepresentatives of Pearl Meyer meet regularly with the Compensation Committee and the Compensation Committee has generally evaluated and considered Pearl Meyerβs reports and recommendations.
β
During 2019 and 2020, the Compensation Committee consulted with Pearl Meyer to revise its annual long-term incentive and equity program for itsupdate the Companyβs executive officers.compensation programs. The Compensation Committee engaged Pearl Meyer to help revise the Companyβs executive composition practices to establish a program that was not based primarily on the award of time-vesting stock options but was based upon the achievement of pre-determined performance measures, utilizing a combination of stock options, performance sharesPSUs and annual performance-based cash bonuses. Through this collaboration, the Compensation Committee adopted an executive compensation program which became effective 40 | Understand. Innovate. Deliver.TM
during 2020 and continued through 2021. This executive compensation program is comprised of an equity feature that aims for an equity compensation mix of 60% PSUs and 40% stock options (vesting on a ratable basis over four years of service) and performance-based cash bonuses determined as a percentage of each executive officerβs base salary. This executive compensation program is designed to increase the alignment of executive compensation with the Companyβs achievement of Board-approved performance measures, as discussed on page 62. βbelow.
External Pay Comparisons β
During 2020,In its oversight of the compensation practices for our CEO and the other NEOs, the Compensation Committee reviewedreviews industry and peer compensation data for medical device companies to confirm that executive compensation is within an appropriate competitive range. The Compensation Committee considers external pay comparison data as a market check on its compensation decisions, but not for specific benchmarking. With input from Pearl Meyer, the Compensation Committee identified a peer group to guide its compensation decisions for 20202021 executive compensation that consisted of the following companies:
| | | Company | Revenue(1) (dollars in millions) | Market Capitalization at December 4, 2020 (dollars in millions) | ABIOMED, Inc. | $ | 803 | $ | 12,318 | AngioDynamics, Inc. | β | 268 | β | 580 | Cantel Medical Corp.(2) | β | 1,056 | β | 2,669 | CONMED Corporation | β | 874 | β | 2,925 | ICU Medical, Inc. | β | 1,266 | β | 4,146 | Insulet Corporation | β | 868 | β | 17,067 | Integer Holdings Corporation | β | 1,130 | β | 2,584 | Integra LifeSciences Holdings Corporation | β | 1,378 | β | 4,752 | LivaNova Plc | β | 952 | β | 2,684 | Masimo Corporation | β | 1,096 | β | 14,603 | Natus Medical Incorporated | β | 428 | β | 704 | NuVasive, Inc. (3) | β | 1,069 | β | 2,490 | Penumbra, Inc. | β | 539 | β | 7,621 | Quidel Corporation | β | 1,005 | β | 8,143 | Teleflex Incorporated | β | 2,507 | β | 18,020 | West Pharmaceutical Services, Inc. | β | 2,037 | β | 20,075 | β | β | β | β | β | Median | $ | 978 | $ | 4,449 | Merit Medical Systems, Inc. | $ | 964 | $ | 3,228 |
β
(1) | | | ABIOMED, Inc.
| Integer Holdings Corporation
| Quidel Corporation
| AngioDynamics, Inc.
| Integra LifeSciences Holdings Corporation
| Teleflex Incorporated
| Cantel Medical Corp.
| LivaNova Plc
| Varex Imaging Corp.*
| CONMED Corporation
| Masimo Corporation
| West Pharmaceutical Services, Inc.
| ICU Medical, Inc.
| Natus Medical Incorporated
| Wright Medical Group NV*
| Insulet Corporation
| Penumbra, Inc.
| β Revenue is for the trailing twelve months as of the most recently disclosed quarter as of November 30, 2020, generally September 2020. |
(2) | Acquired by STERIS plc in June 2021. |
(3) | Added to the peer group for 2021. |
β
* In December 2020, following consultation with Pearl Meyer, the Compensation Committee adjusted the Companyβs executive compensation peer group based upon its assessment of changes in the business and operations of a number of its peers, as well as the Companyβs relative position with respect to its peers. Through that process, the Compensation Committee removed Wright Medical Group NV and Varex Imaging Corp. from the Companyβs peer group because of the acquisition of Wright Medical Group NV by Stryker Corporation and the Compensation Committeeβs assessment of the weakened comparability of Varex Imaging Corp. to the Company. Β The Compensation Committee also decided to add NuVasive, Inc. to the Companyβs peer group These changes will take effect for compensation decisions with respect to the Companyβs executive officers beginning with the 2021 fiscal year.
β
The companies selected for inclusion in the Companyβs executive compensation peer group were selected by the Compensation Committee following consultation with Pearl Meyer based on revenue, market capitalization,
market peer indices and Pearl Meyerβs assessment of the strength of comparability, as well as overall business characteristics, including product offerings and end markets. β
Neither the consultations with Pearl Meyer nor our internal review yielded any significant concerns at the Compensation Committee level regarding our executive compensation practices. β
Evaluation β
In evaluating compensation of the NEOs for the year ended December 31, 2020,2021, the Compensation Committee considered, among other factors, our performance and relative shareholder return in 2020 and 2021, as compared to our performance targets for 2020 and 2021, prior analysis and reports from Pearl Meyer (which contained comparisons of our compensation and financial results with respect to the peer group), and other factors considered relevant by the Compensation Committee. β
Other Considerations β
The Compensation Committee also relied on its experience and judgment in making executive compensation decisions after reviewing our performance on a quarterly and annual basis, and evaluating each NEOβs individual performance and responsibilities with the Company, as well as current compensation arrangements. The compensation program for the NEOs and the Compensation Committee assessment process have been designed to be flexible in an effort to respond to the evolving business environment and individual circumstances relative to Company and individual performance, shareholder value, as well as internal equity for compensation levels among our executives. β
Our executive compensation program is divided into the following two general categories: fixed pay and variable pay. β
Fixed pay consists of base salary and is intended to provide each NEO with a level of assured cash compensation appropriate for his or her position within the Company. Variable pay includes annual cash bonus awards and equity-based awards in the form of PSUs and stock options, each as explained in more detail below. β
The Compensation Committee believes that a significant portion of total compensation of the NEOs should be both at-risk and tied to the Companyβs achievement of predetermined performance goals. The Compensation Committeeβs development and implementation of the Companyβs revised executive compensation program during 2020 and 2021 reflects its efforts to shift an increased portion of the total compensation payable to the Companyβs NEOs away from fixed, time-vesting compensation to at-risk, performance-based compensation. β
Pursuant to our revised executive compensation program, at the beginning of each year, the CEO identifiesand other members of the Companyβs executive management team identify performance goals which are intended to align the efforts of our executive officers, including the NEOs, with our achievement of our strategic business plan to maximize shareholder value. The CEO then reviews those performance goals with the Compensation Committee. Those goals then become targets for the PSUs and annual performance-based cash bonus component of our executive compensation program. Because the performance goals are generally established at the beginning of each year and market conditions fluctuate throughout the year, the performance goals may not correspond to subsequent annual earnings estimates released by the Company. β
Compensation Committee Consideration of Shareholder Advisory Votes β
At our annual meeting of shareholders held on June 22, 2020,17, 2021, we submitted the compensation of our executive officers to our shareholders in a non-binding vote. Our executive compensation program received the support of holders of approximately 95%98% of the shares represented at the meeting. β
At our annual meeting of shareholders held on May 24, 2017, our shareholders voted on an advisory basis with respect to the frequency of future advisory votes on executive compensation. Holders of approximately 77% of the shares represented at that meeting expressed their preference for an annual advisory vote. Accordingly, we intend 42 | Understand. Innovate. Deliver.TM
to hold an annual advisory vote on executive compensation until the next βsay-on-frequencyβ vote at our annual meeting of shareholders in 2023. β
The Compensation Committee will continue to review future shareholder voting results and determine whether changes should be made to our executive compensation program based on such voting results. β
Pay Mix β
The allocation between cash and non-cash NEO compensation is influenced by the practices of subjective and objective analysis conducted by the Compensation Committee and is intended to reflect the Compensation Committeeβs determination of the appropriate compensation mix among base pay, annual cash incentives and long-term equity incentives for each NEO. Actual cash and equity-based incentive awards are determined based on the performance of the Company and/or the individual NEO, depending on the position of the NEO, the type of award and our performance, compared to established goals. The Compensation Committee also compares the compensation mix relative to our peer group. No specific benchmark with respect to the peer group is targeted, but the Compensation Committee may be influenced by the peer group data to adjust our executive compensation mix if it significantly deviates from the median of the peer group. β
For 2020,2021, the elements of the compensation mix for the NEOs included: β
β | base salary (designed to attract and retain executives over time); |
β | annual performance-based cash bonus (designed to focus on business objectives established by the Compensation Committee for a particular year); |
β | long-term equity-based incentive compensation in the form of stock options, PSUs and, PSUsin the case of our CEO, long-term cash-based incentive compensation (designed to further align NEO pay with long-term performance); |
β | broad-based employee retirement, welfare and fringe benefits programs, and other personal benefits; and |
β | executive deferred compensation. |
βExecutive Pay Mix Summary
2021 Target Compensation The following charts show the targeted mix of compensation for our named executive officers in 2021: | | | CEO | β | AVERAGE OTHER NEOs | | β | |
www.merit.com 59 |www.merit.com β 43
β 2021 Compensation The following charts show the mix of compensation actually paid to our named executive officers for 2021, as detailed in the summary compensation table below: β | β | β | CEO | β | AVERAGE OTHER NEOs | | β | |
The Compensation Committee considered the following factors, among others, when establishing the amounts of fixed and variable compensation paid to our NEOs for 2021: | Among the factors the Compensation Committee considered when establishing the amounts of fixed and variable compensation paid to our NEOs for 2020 were:
| Fred P. Lampropoulos | β leadership and direction of our Company and employees during an unprecedented time of uncertainty and economic instability as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic;pandemic and resulting industry dynamics and business constraints; β achievement of our 20202021 operating and financial performance, including the performance targets set for our executive officers;officers in accordance with our Foundations for Growth program; β development and oversight of operating efficiency initiatives, including our Foundations for Growth program, designed to reduce operating expenses and increase profitability;
β operational management, product development, international expansion, subsidiary development, risk management, and manufacturing capacity planning; β strategic business development, and management development and oversight; and β shareholder relations. |
β Raul Parra | β responsibility for the financial and accounting affairs of an increasingly large and complex global organization; β achievement of our 20202021 operating and financial performance, including the performance targets set for our executive officers;officers in accordance with our Foundations for Growth program; β implementation of operating efficiency initiatives, including our Foundations for Growth program, designed to reduce operating expenses and increase profitability; and β oversight of our cash flow, including a substantial increase in the amount of our free cash flow, and budgeting practices. β
|
β 44 | Understand. Innovate. Deliver.TM
Ronald A. Frost | β conducting our worldwide operations within the budget established by the Board; β leadership and achievement of critical operational aspects of our Foundations for Growth program; β achievement of our 20202021 operating and financial performance, including the performance targets set for our executive officers;officers in accordance with our Foundations for Growth program; β implementation and oversight of our efforts to reduce our environmental footprint and promote sustainability; and β implementation of operating efficiency initiatives designed to reduce operating expenses and increase profitability. β
|
β β
Justin J. Lampropoulos
| β
management of our sales and marketing activities throughout the United States, Europe, the Middle East and Africa;
β
achievement of our 2020 operating and financial performance, including the performance targets set for our executive officers;
β
development and coordination of new product launches, market research, and analysis;
β
implementation of sales strategies and performance goals; and
| Brian G. Lloyd | β oversight of our legal department, with responsibility for supporting our worldwide operations; β corporate counsel and support of the Board in fulfilling its corporate governance obligations; β achievement of our 20202021 operating and financial performance, including the performance targets set for our executive officers;officers in accordance with our Foundations for Growth program; and β negotiationoversight and coordination of significant litigation and other disputes, as well as acquisition and financing transactions.
|
β Joseph C. Wright | β management of our international sales and marketing activities; β achievement of our 2021 operating and financial performance, including the performance targets set for our executive officers in accordance with our Foundations for Growth program; β development and coordination of new product launches, market research, and analysis; β implementation of sales strategies and performance goals; and |
β
Fixed Compensation Base Salary β
The Compensation Committee does not use a specific formula for evaluating individual performance of the NEOs. The performance of the NEOs other than the CEO is assessed by the Compensation Committee taking into account the CEO'sCEOβs input regarding each NEOβs contributions to our performance for the applicable year. The CEOβs performance is assessed by the Compensation Committee in formal and informal meetings with the CEO, as well as executive sessions conducted by the Compensation Committee. The criteria used in setting the base salary for each NEO, including the CEO, vary depending on the NEOβs function, but generally include the Compensation Committeeβs assessment of the NEOβs: β
β | advancement of our interests with shareholders and customers and in other strategic business relationships; |
β | achievement of our financial results, position and experience (in an effort to avoid gender or age discrimination); |
β | leadership inside and outside the Company; |
β | contribution to specific Company initiatives, such as our Foundations for Growth program, expense reduction efforts, product quality and development and environmental and social objectives; and |
β | advancement in skills and responsibility. |
β Given the subjective nature of the criteria identified above, the Compensation Committee has not attempted to develop numeric measurements in determining base salaries for the NEOs. Instead, the Compensation Committee establishes base salaries at levels commensurate with the Compensation Committeeβs evaluation of each NEOβs contribution to our business success. The Compensation Committee has also consulted with Pearl Meyer to assess the levels of base salary and other compensation paid to the CEO and other NEOs, relative to the Companyβs peers. In particular, the Compensation Committee has set the base salary and incentive cash bonus of the CEO at levels which are higher than the aggregate amount of base salary and incentive bonus paid to the principal executive officers of a number of our peers. Because
the CEO is a founder of the Company and currently owns a substantial number of shares of Common Stock, the Compensation Committee believes his personal interests are more aligned with the interests of our shareholders than our other NEOs. Therefore, the Compensation Committee believes that adjusting his compensation mix to include a greater proportion of cash payments, rather than issuing additional equity awards, serves to increase the alignment of our CEOβs interests with the interests of our shareholders. β Effective November 1, 2021, upon the recommendation of the CEO, the Compensation Committee increased the annual base salary payable to Joseph C. Wright to $700,000, on an interim basis, due to the temporary expansion of his responsibilities for oversight of the Companyβs international operations, including the Companyβs operations in Europe, Middle East and Africa, pending the Companyβs engagement of a new Chief Commercial Officer.
Based on its evaluation, the Compensation Committee approved the following NEO base salaries for the year ended December 31, 2020,2021, which are also reflected in the Summary Compensation Table under βExecutive Compensation Tablesβ below. β
| | | | | Named Executive Officer | β | Base Salary (1) | β | Base Salary (1) | Fred P. Lampropoulos | $ | 1,736,538 | $ | 1,800,000 | Raul Parra | $ | 586,154 | $ | 600,000 | Ronald A. Frost | $ | 586,154 | $ | 600,000 | Justin J. Lampropoulos | $ | 567,693 | | Brian G. Lloyd | $ | 586,154 | $ | 600,000 | β | β | β | | Joseph C. Wright | | $ | 573,077 |
β
| (1) | The base salary amounts shown above reflect amounts paid to the NEOs during 20202021 as reported in the Summary Compensation Table shown on page 73. The annual base salary amounts for fiscal year 20212022 as approved by the Compensation Committee are: Mr. F. Lampropoulos, $1,800,000; Mr. Parra $600,000; Mr. Frost, $600,000,$600,000; Mr. J. Lampropoulos $600,000,Lloyd $600,000; and Mr. Lloyd $600,000.Wright $700,000 (effective November 1, 2021 on an interim basis). |
β Long-Term Incentive Compensation β
Historically, long-term equity awards, in the form of stock options, have been granted at the Compensation Committeeβs discretion to the NEOs annually in an effort to provide long-term performance-based compensation, to encourage the NEOs to continue their engagement with the Company throughout the vesting periods, and to align management and shareholder interests. Beginning with our 2019 fiscal year, long-term equity awards were made under the 2018 Incentive Plan, and the Compensation Committee anticipates such awards will continue to be made under the 2018 Incentive Plan. Although we have traditionally made long-term equity incentive awards to our NEOs solely in the form of stock options, during 2019, the Compensation Committee developed a program, which was implemented in 2020 and continued through 2021, to grant to the Companyβs executive officers long-term equity awards in the form of stock options and PSUs, with the objective of more closely aligning management and shareholder interests. For 2020,2021, the Compensation Committee reduced the number ofawarded stock options awarded to each NEO toat a level of approximately 40% of the total target long-term incentive compensation amount for thateach NEO, with the 46 | Understand. Innovate. Deliver.TM
remaining portion (approximately 60%) of the NEOβs long-term incentive compensation amount awarded in the form of PSUs. β
In making awards under our 2018 Incentive Plan, the Compensation Committee considers grant size, the appropriate combination of equity-based awards, the impact of the grant on our financial performance (as determined in accordance with the requirements of the Financial Accounting Standards Board ASC TopicΒ 718 (ASC Topic 718)), and the corresponding compensation value used by the Company in determining the amount of the awards (which may vary from the ASC Topic 718 expense). β
Generally, the amount of long-term equity awards granted to the NEOs has been based upon the Compensation Committeeβs assessment of each NEOβs expected future contributions to the Company and other factors. The amount or existence of those awards may also be influenced by external factors such as general economic or industry-specific conditions. The Compensation Committee generally grants long-term equity awards at its regularly-scheduled meeting held in February or May of each year but may vary the date of grant from year to year. β
Performance Stock Units (PSUs) β
During 2019, the Compensation Committee, in consultation with Pearl Meyer, the Compensation Committee developed a program which was implemented 2020, to grant to the Companyβs executive officers equity awards under our 2018
Incentive Plan consisting in part of PSUs, with the objective of more closely aligning management and shareholder interests. Subject to the terms and conditions of PSU award agreements executed with the Companyβs executive officers, each executive officer is entitled to receive a payment in shares of Common Stock based upon the target number of shares, as determined by the Compensation Committee and set forth in the executiveβs PSU award agreement (Target PSU Shares), and the Companyβs performance during the applicable performance period with respect to the achievement of (a) free cash flow (FCF) targets (Free Cash Flow is calculated as GAAP operating cash flow less GAAP capital expenditures, adjusted for the cash effect of any non-GAAP adjustments to the Companyβs financial statements, and further defined in the applicable PSU award agreementsagreements) and (b)Β targeted levels of the Companyβs relative total shareholder return (rTSR) compared to the Russell 2000 index and further defined in the PSU award agreements (collectively, the Performance Goals). To reward NEOs for long-term performance, the program developed by the Compensation Committee aims to only grant PSUs with a three-year performance period. However, during the first two years of this new program (2020 and 2021), PSUs with one- and two-year performance periods were granted to help transition into this long-term approach of having PSUs with only a three-year performance period. The actual number of shares of Common Stock to be issued to each executive officer under their PSUs will be determined at the end of each applicable performance period by the Compensation Committee by multiplying (i)Β the Target PSU Shares for that performance period by (ii) the applicable FCF and rTSR multipliers, based on the Companyβs performance during the applicable performance period. The Compensation Committee has the sole authority and discretion to determine the achievement level with respect to the number of shares of Common Stock earned at the end of each performance period. The Compensation Committee consulted with Pearl Meyer in reaching its determination ofdetermining the target long-term incentive compensation levels for the NEOs, from which the Compensation Committee established the target number of shares of Common Stock subject to the PSU awards granted to each of the NEOs in 2020.2021.
During 2020,2021, the NEOs were granted PSUs with the following Target PSU Shares: | | | | | | | | | Named Executive Officer | Target PSU Shares One-Year Performance Period (2020) | Target PSU Shares Two-Year Performance Period (2020-2021) | Target PSU Shares Three-Year Performance Period (2020-2022) | Total Grant Date Fair Value of Target PSU Shares (All Performance Periods) | Target PSU Shares Two-YearΒ PerformanceΒ Period (2021-2022) | Target PSU Shares Three-Year PerformanceΒ Period (2021-2023) | Total Grant Date Fair Value of Target PSU Shares (All Performance Periods) | Fred P. Lampropoulos | 7,072 | 7,072 | 7,071 | 924,903 | 4,741 | 9,481 | 873,089 | Raul Parra | 2,652 | 2,652 | 2,651 | 346,811 | 1,778 | 3,555 | 327,393 | Ronald A. Frost | 2,652 | 2,652 | 2,651 | 346,811 | 1,778 | 3,555 | 327,393 | Justin J. Lampropoulos | 2,652 | 2,652 | 2,651 | 346,811 | | Brian G. Lloyd | 2,652 | 2,652 | 2,651 | 346,811 | 1,778 | 3,555 | 327,393 | Joseph C. Wright | | 1,778 | 3,555 | 327,393 |
β
The PSUs granted in 2020,2021 and the applicable Target PSU Shares, are divided as shown above into one-, two- and three-year performance periods. The actual shares of Common Stock to be issued upon settlement of the PSUs depend on the Companyβs level of performance during the applicable performance period. If the Companyβs performance during a performance period does not meet or exceed the applicable FCF Metric Threshold, no shares of Common Stock will be issued or paid out with respect to the PSUs for such performance period. The actual number of shares of Common Stock issued upon settlement of the PSUs will be determined by multiplying the total Target PSU Shares by the applicable FCF Multiplier (determined on an interpolated linear basis if between the threshold and target or between the target and maximum) and the applicable rTSR Multiplier from the tables below: β
FCF Metrics and Multiplier β | | | | | | | | | FCF Metric Level | One-Year Performance Period | Two-Year Performance Period | Three-Year Performance Period | FCF Multiplier | Two-Year Performance Period | Three-Year Performance Period | FCF Multiplier | Maximum | Not Applicable | $105,600,000 | $175,200,000 | 200% | $228,000,000 | $396,000,000 | 200% | Target | $35,000,000 | $88,000,000 | $146,000,000 | 100% | $190,000,000 | $330,000,000 | 100% | Threshold | $27,000,000 | $70,400,000 | $116,800,000 | 50% | $152,000,000 | $264,000,000 | 50% |
β rTSR Metric and Multiplier β | | rTSR Metric Level | rTSR Multiplier | 1st (Top) Quartile | 125% | 2nd Quartile | 100% | 3rd Quartile | 100% | 4th (Bottom) Quartile | 75% |
β
The FCF Metric Levels, FCF Metric Amounts and FCF Multipliers shown above reflect the amendments made in June 2020 to the NEOsβ PSU award agreements in light of the unforeseen adverse effect of the COVID-19 pandemic on the Company. The FCF Metric Amounts for the One-Year Performance Period were originally set at $48,000,000 (Maximum, providing an FCF Multiplier of 200%), $40,000,000 (Target, providing an FCF Multiplier of 100%) and $32,000,000 (Threshold, providing an FCF Multiplier of 50%). The amendments effectively limited the FCF Multiplier to 100% and the maximum number of shares an NEO could receive up to 125% of the total Target PSU Shares set forth in his or her PSU award agreement. For additional detail regarding the amendments to the NEOβs PSU award agreements, please refer to our current report on Form 8-K filed with the SEC on June 26, 2020.
β
Because our CEO is a substantial shareholder of the Company and his financial interests are very closely aligned with the interests of other Company shareholders, the Compensation Committee determined to provide in his PSU award agreements that approximately 55% of the targeted award amount, if any, earned by him at the end of the applicable performance periods would be paid in cash in lieu of the issuance of a portion of the shares of Common Stock that otherwise be would have been awarded under his PSU award agreements. Accordingly, the PSUs awarded to our CEO also include a feature providing for the payment of a long-term cash award based on the degree of attainment of the same designated Performance Goals that apply to the award and issuance of shares of Common Stock under the PSUs (each a PSU Cash Incentive). The actual amount of a PSU Cash Incentive to be paid is determined by multiplying the Target Cash Incentive provided in the PSU award agreement (Target Cash Incentive) by the same FCF Multiplier and rTSR Multiplier that are used to determine the number of shares of 48 | Understand. Innovate. Deliver.TM
Common Stock issued under the PSUs (from the tables above). The Target Cash Incentives included in the CEOβs PSU awards are as follows: β | | | | | Target Cash Incentive One-Year Performance Period (2020) | Target Cash Incentive Two-Year Performance Period (2020-2021) | Target Cash Incentive Three-Year Performance Period (2020-2022) | | Target Cash Incentive Two-Year Performance Period (2021-2022) | | Target Cash Incentive Three-Year Performance Period (2021-2023) | $333,333 | $333,333 | $333,334 | $666,667 |
β
If the Companyβs performance during a performance period does not meet or exceed the FCF Metric Threshold, no PSU Cash Incentive will be paid with respect to the CEOβs PSUs for such performance period. β
To be eligible to receive any shares of Common Stock or, if applicable, payment of a PSU Cash Incentive under the PSUs, the executive in question must remain employed by the Company until the second day of the calendar year following the end of the applicable performance period (Vesting Date). However, a pro rata portion may be paid after the end of the applicable performance period if, before the Vesting Date and at least one year after the PSU grant date, the executive (i) ceases employment on account of his or her death or disability (as defined in the PSU award agreements), (ii) is involuntarily terminated from employment without Cause (as defined in the award agreements), or (iii) resigns from employment for Good Reason (as defined in the PSU award agreements). β
If the Company experiences a Change in Control (as defined in the award agreements), the NEOs shall receive the total Target PSU Shares (and the CEO shall also receive the Target Cash Incentives) within thirty (30) days of such Change in Control regardless of the level of interim performance attained with respect to the applicable Performance Goals. β
20202021 PSU Award Determinations
β The Compensation Committee determined that the PSU-related target ofmaximum level for the FCF Metric and the top quartile of the rTSR Metric had been met with respect to the One-YearTwo-Year Performance Period (2020).(2020-2021) for the PSUs granted in 2020. Accordingly, shares were issued in 20212022 under the initial PSUsPSU agreements having a one-yeartwo-year performance period as follows with respect to the 2020 and 2021 fiscal year: βyears:
| | | | | | | | | Named Executive Officer | β Target PSU Shares | β FCF Metric % | β rTSR Metric % | Number of Shares Issued | Target PSU Shares | FCF Metric % | rTSR Metric % | Number of Shares Issued | Fred P. Lampropoulos | 7,072 | 100% | 125% | 8,840 | 7,072 | 200% | 125% | 17,680 | Raul Parra | 2,652 | 100% | 125% | 3,315 | 2,652 | 200% | 125% | 6,630 | Ronald A. Frost | 2,652 | 100% | 125% | 3,315 | 2,652 | 200% | 125% | 6,630 | Justin J. Lampropoulos | 2,652 | 100% | 125% | 3,315 | | Brian G. Lloyd | 2,652 | 100% | 125% | 3,315 | 2,652 | 200% | 125% | 6,630 | Joseph C. Wright | | 2,652 | 200% | 125% | 6,630 |
β
The Compensation Committee applyingalso determined that the samemaximum level for the FCF Metric and the top quartile of rTSR Metric multipliershad been met with respect to the Target Cash Incentive also determined andfor the Two-Year Performance Period (2020-2021), pursuant to the PSUs granted to Mr. Lampropoulos in 2020. Accordingly, the Company paid a PSU Cash Incentive of $416,666$833,333 to Fred P.Mr. Lampropoulos in 2021 pursuant to his PSU award agreement.2022 as follows: | | | | | Named Executive Officer | Target Cash Incentive | FCF Metric % | rTSR Metric % | PSU Cash Incentive | Fred P. Lampropoulos | $333,333 | 200% | 125% | $833,333 |
β
Stock Options β
During 2020,2021, the Compensation Committee granted non-statutory stock option awards to NEOs under the 2018 Incentive Plan in the following amounts: β | | | β | β | Named Executive Officer | Number of Options Granted (#) | Grant Date Fair Value ($) | Number of Options Granted (#) | Grant Date Fair Value ($) | Fred P. Lampropoulos | 100,334 | 1,198,851 | 58,083 | 1,200,059 | Raul Parra | 16,722 | 199,804 | 9,681 | 200,020 | Ronald A. Frost | 16,722 | 199,804 | 9,681 | 200,020 | Justin J. Lampropoulos | 16,722 | 199,804 | | Brian G. Lloyd | 16,722 | 199,804 | 9,681 | 200,020 | Joseph C. Wright | | 9,681 | 200,020 |
β
The stock options were awarded at an exercise price of $37.71$56.25 per share of Common Stock, the per share market closing price of a share of Common Stock on the date of grant. The 20202021 stock option grants vest and become exercisable over a four-year period on each of the first through fourth anniversaries of the date of grant. β
Annual Performance Cash Bonuses and Executive Bonus Plan β Our general practice is to provide our NEOs with the opportunity to earn annual performance bonus compensation under a program that recognizes attainment of key objectives. The key objectives that underlie our annual incentive compensation programs are established annually by the Compensation Committee based upon recommendations made by the CEO, and may vary between years and between NEOs, but generally include objectives that reward attainment of targeted levels of sales, earnings and gross margins. β
After reviewing our executive incentive compensation practices, and based upon the preferences communicated by the institutional shareholder community, in 2019 our Board adopted the Merit Medical Systems, Inc. Executive Bonus Plan (Executive Bonus Plan). The purposes of the Executive Bonus Plan are to motivate and reward the Companyβs executive employees by making a portion of their annual cash compensation dependent on the achievement of certain pre-determined corporate performance goals, to align the interests of those executives with those of the Company,Companyβs shareholders, and to attract and retain superior executive employees by providing a competitive bonus program that rewards outstanding performance. The Executive Bonus Plan is administered by the Compensation Committee and became effective for theCommittee. Each year, ending December 31, 2019 and thereafter. During each year of the operation of the Executive Bonus
Plan, the Compensation Committee will establishestablishes a target bonus amount (based on a certain percentage of base salary) and performance criteria and goals for each participating executive officer. At the conclusion of such year, the Compensation Committee will determine the bonus amount payable to each participating executive officer and the Company will pay to the executive officer the determined bonus amount not later than the 15th day of the third month following the conclusion of the applicable year. In determining the amount of each award to be paid, the Compensation Committee may reduce, eliminate or increase (but not above 110%150% of the applicable award amount otherwise payable) the amount of an Award if, in its discretion, such reduction, elimination or increase is appropriate. The amounts payable to executive officers participating in the Executive Bonus Plan will be determined and allocated based on the performance criteria established for the applicable year, and the Companyβs performance relative to those criteria.
β
In setting the performance bonus amounts that an NEO is eligible to earn for achieving specified objectives, the Compensation Committee and the CEO consider bonus and total cash compensation levels for each NEO. Although bonus opportunities for achieving objectives are generally established for each NEO based on job scope and contribution, the Compensation Committee retains discretion to positively or negatively adjust performance bonus amounts based on factors that are not included in the pre-determined objectives. NEOs also have the opportunity to earn additional discretionary bonuses for extraordinary performance, as determined by the Compensation Committee. β
The decision as to whether to provide an annual performance bonus program to any NEO for any year, the type and funding of any program offered, and the objectives that underlie any program, are subject to the discretion of 50 | Understand. Innovate. Deliver.TM
the Compensation Committee, taking into account the recommendation of the CEO and industry-specific conditions existing during the applicable year. The Compensation Committee may also exercise positive or negative discretion based on its assessment of the individual NEOβs contribution and accountability for the objectives that are the subject of the bonus recommendations from the CEO and any other factors the Compensation Committee considers relevant. β
For 2020,2021, the Compensation Committee established incentive cash performance bonus objectives for the NEOs. The incentive cash performance bonus objectives for Mr. F. Lampropoulos, Mr. Parra, Mr. Frost, Mr. Lloyd and Mr. J. Lampropoulosthe NEOs were initially based on sales, operating margins (calculated on a non-GAAP basis), and earnings per share (calculated on a non-GAAP basis). and achievement of the following three equally-weighted operational targets linked to our Foundations for Growth program: | β | transfer of twelve product lines to more efficient manufacturing facilities, resulting in at least $3.5 million in reduced operating expenses; |
| β | increase in manpower effectiveness to realize at least $2 million in reduced operating expenses; and |
| β | rationalization of all stock keeping units (βSKUsβ) with annual sales volumes of less than $5,000. |
βFor 2021, the Compensation Committee established the performance range for the Executive Bonus Plan to provide for incentive cash performance payments based on the following levels of attainment of each of the individual bonus objectives:
| β | less than 92.5% attainment = no payout |
| β | 92.5% attainment = 50% payout |
| β | 100% attainment = 100% payout |
| β | 110% attainment = 110% payout (cap) |
The specific 20202021 performance bonus objectives established by the Compensation Committee together with the level of our actual 20202021 performance in those categories, were as follows. β
β
β
β
| | | | | | | | | | Performance Bonus Objectives | Β | 2021 Goals | Β | 2021 Results | β | Target Weight | β | Attainment | β | Sales | Β | $1,010M | Β | $1,075M | β | 35% | β | 37.2% | β | Operating Margin (Non-GAAP) (1) | Β | 15.68% | Β | 16.0% | β | 30% | β | 30.6% | β | Earnings Per Share (Non-GAAP) (2) | Β | $1.98 | Β | $2.37 | β | 20% | β | 22.0% | (3)β | Product Transfers | β | 12 | β | Achieved | β | 5% | β | 5.0% | β | Manpower Effectiveness | β | $2M | β | Achieved | β | 5% | β | 5.0% | β | SKU Rationalization | β | SKUs < $5,000 | β | Achieved | β | 5% | β | 5.0% | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | Total Attainment | 104.8% | β |
| | | | | Performance Bonus Objectives
|
| 2020 Goals
|
| 2020 Results
| Sales
| | $1,044 β 1,064M
| | $963.9M
| Operating Margin (Non-GAAP) (1)
| | 13 β 14%
| | 13.7%
| Earnings Per Share (Non-GAAP) (2)
| | $1.58 - $1.68
| | $1.65
|
β
(1) | Non-GAAP Gross Margin is calculated by adjusting GAAP gross profit by amounts recorded for amortization of intangible assets and inventory mark-up related to acquisitions. See βNon-GAAP Financial Measuresβ presented on page 9579 of this Proxy Statement for additional information. |
(2) | Non-GAAP Earnings Per Share is calculated as GAAP net income excluding intangible amortization expense, acquisition related costs, intangible and other asset impairment charges, contingent consideration expense (benefits), certain legal expenses, and severance costs. All excluded items are tax affected and total Non-GAAP net income is divided by the weighted average diluted shares outstanding. See βNon-GAAP Financial Measuresβ presented on page 9579 of this Proxy Statement for additional information. |
β
In June 2020, in response to the COVID-19 pandemic, the Compensation Committee re-evaluated the Executive Bonus Plan objectives for the NEOs in an effort to align the interests of the NEOs with the Companyβs operational objectives, as adjusted to address the impact of that pandemic. Based upon that
(3) | Payout factor capped at 110% |
www.merit.com 66 |www.merit.com β 51
re-evaluation,Based on the attainment level calculated above and the target bonus amounts set by the Compensation Committee, replaced the initial 2020 performanceeach NEO received performance-based bonus objectives with the following operational goals:
β
β | closure or consolidation and movement of 14 specified product lines and three sites (achieving $6.7Β million in annualized savings), |
β | completion of the closure of the manufacturing operations of ITL Healthcare Pty Ltd in Australia (achieving $2 million in annualized savings), and |
β | performance of navigating the company through an unprecedented pandemic (including new products directly supporting COVID-19, achieving a minimum of $30 million in savings and $6 million in new product revenue compared to budget). |
β
As part of its revision of the 2020 Executive Bonus Plan objectives, the Compensation Committee also limited the amount of Executive Bonus Plan award payouts to 100% of the target amount and eliminated the possibility for payments in excess of that amount.
β
Following the conclusion of the 2020 fiscal year, the Compensation Committeeβs evaluation of the performance bonus objectives, as revised, indicated that the operational targets were achieved. Accordingly, the Compensation Committee determinedunder the Executive Bonus Plan awards were earned byas follows:
β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | Named Executive Officer | β | 2021 Base Salary | β | Performance Bonus Target | β | Attainment | β | Performance Bonus Payment (1) | Fred P. Lampropoulos | $ | 1,800,000 | β | 60% | β | 104.8% | β | $ | 1,131,840 | Raul Parra | β | 600,000 | β | 40% | β | 104.8% | β | $ | 251,520 | Ronald A. Frost | β | 600,000 | β | 40% | β | 104.8% | β | $ | 251,520 | Brian G. Lloyd | β | 600,000 | β | 40% | β | 104.8% | β | $ | 251,520 | Joseph C. Wright | β | 550,000 | β | 40% | β | 104.8% | β | $ | 230,560 |
| (1) | These amounts are shown in the βNon-Equity Incentive Plan Compensationβ column in the Summary Compensation Table below. |
For the NEOs in 2020 and should be paid at 100%fiscal year ending December 31, 2022, after consultation with Pearl Meyer, the Compensation Committee revised the design of the target amounts, as revised. The amountsExecutive Bonus Plan to expand the performance range, such that it aligns more closely with the Compensation Committeeβs understanding of these bonuses are shownmarket practices, and established the following levels of attainment for each of the NEOs in the Summary Compensation Table under βNon-Equity Incentive Plan Compensation.βindividual bonus objectives: β
| β | less than 92.5% attainment = no payout |
| β | 92.5% attainment = 50% payout |
| β | 100% attainment = 100% payout |
| β | 110% attainment = 125% payout |
| β | 120% attainment = 150% payout (cap) |
Return of Incentive Compensation (βClawback Policyβ) β
The Executive Bonus Plan provides to our Board the authority to obtain reimbursement from any participant in the plan if the Board determines that: (a) a significant restatement of the Companyβs financial results for any of the three prior fiscal years is required; and (b) the participantβs award amount would have been lower had the financial results been properly calculated. Such reimbursement shall consist of any portion of any award previously paid to such participant that is greater than the award that would have been paid if calculated based upon the restated financial results. The action permitted to be taken by the Board under the Executive Bonus Plan is in addition to, and not in lieu of, any and all other rights of the Board and/or the Company under applicable law or any other clawback or similar policy of the Company. The PSU agreements which are part of the long-term equity incentive program under the 2018 Incentive Plan which our Compensation Committee implemented in 2020 also include a βclawbackβ feature which permits our Compensation Committee to recover payments from award recipients if (i) the payment was predicated upon achieving financial results that were subsequently the subject of a restatement of the Companyβs financial statements filed with the SEC; (ii) the Compensation Committee determines that the recipient engaged in intentional misconduct, gross negligence or fraudulent or illegal conduct that caused or substantially caused the need for the restatement; and (iii) a lower amount would have been paid to the recipient based upon the restated financial results. Discretionary Bonuses β
In addition to the cash bonus opportunities under the performance bonus program described above, the Compensation Committee (with the input of the CEO) may choose to reward extraordinary performance and achievements by awarding discretionary bonuses to the NEOs and other executives from time to time that are not part of the annual incentive plan or any other plan. The 52 | Understand. Innovate. Deliver.TM
For the fiscal year ended December 31, 2021, the Companyβs financial and operating performance substantially exceeded the targets established by the Compensation Committee for the Executive Bonus Plan. In conducting its review of the Companyβs executive compensation program for 2021, the Compensation Committee noted that the design of the Executive Bonus Plan limited NEO bonuses to a maximum of 110% of target levels, a level substantially lower than many of the Companyβs peers and broader market practices. Recognizing this limitation and given the high level of performance the Company achieved during 2021, notwithstanding the business environment challenges, supply chain delays and disruptions and pricing pressures the Company experienced during the year, the Compensation Committee determined that no discretionaryto pay additional bonuses should be paid to anythe NEOs in 2020. Therethe following amounts in recognition of exceptional performance for the year: | | | Named Executive Officer | Discretionary Bonus | Fred P. Lampropoulos | $ | 458,501 | Raul Parra | $ | 101,889 | Ronald A. Frost | $ | 101,889 | Brian G. Lloyd | $ | 101,889 | Joseph C. Wright | $ | 93,398 |
β The foregoing amounts are reported separately in the βBonusβ column of the Summary Compensation Table shown on page 58. Notwithstanding the determination of the Compensation Committee to pay discretionary performance bonuses to the NEOs in recognition of the Companyβs outstanding performance during 2021, there is no standing expectation that all (or any) NEOs will receive discretionary performance bonuses in any particular year, and the criteria for such bonuses are not established in advance. β
Broad-Based Benefits Programs β
We offer multiple broad-based benefits programs to our employees, including our NEOs. Those programs include benefits such as health, dental, vision, disability and life insurance, health savings accounts, health care reimbursement accounts, employee stock purchase plan, paid vacation time and discretionary Company contributions to a 401(k) profit sharing plan. β
Benefits are provided to our NEOs in accordance with practices the Compensation Committee believes are consistent with industry standards. The Compensation Committee believes such benefits are a necessary element of compensation in attracting and retaining employees. In addition, the NEOs receive limited perquisites in an attempt to achieve a competitive pay package, as further detailed in the Summary Compensation Table. β
Deferred Compensation Plan β
We provide a non-qualified deferred compensation plan for the benefit of certain of our highly-compensated executives, including the NEOs. Under the non-qualified deferred compensation plan, eligible participants may elect in advance of each calendar year to defer up to 100% of their cash salary and bonus compensation earned with respect to such year. Amounts deferred are credited to an unfunded liability account maintained by the Company on behalf of the applicable participant, which account is deemed invested in and earns a rate of return based upon certain notational and self-directed investment options offered under the plan. In our discretion, we may elect to credit each eligible participantβs account under the deferred compensation plan with an employer matching contribution but, to date, we have never elected to do so. Participant account balances under the deferred compensation plan are fully-vested and will be paid by the Company to each participant upon retirement or separation from employment, or on other specified dates, in a lump sum or in installments according to a schedule elected in advance by the participant. β
The Company and its subsidiaries do not maintain any other executive pension or retirement plans for the NEOs.
Employment Agreements β
The Compensation Committee has determined that executive employment agreements are necessary to provide competitive compensation arrangements to our NEOs, particularly because such agreements are common in our industry. Moreover, the Compensation Committee believes that the change in control provisions within the executive employment agreements help to retain the NEOs by reducing personal uncertainty and anxiety that may arise from the possibility of a future business combination. β
We have entered into employment agreements (collectively, Employment Agreements) with each of the NEOs. The annual base salaries paid under the Employment Agreements for 20202021 were: β
| | | | | Named Executive Officer | β | Base Salary (1) | Base Salary (1) | Fred P. Lampropoulos | $ | 1,736,538 | $ | 1,800,000 | Raul Parra | $ | 586,154 | $ | 600,000 | Ronald A. Frost | $ | 586,154 | $ | 600,000 | Justin J. Lampropoulos | $ | 567,693 | | Brian G. Lloyd | $ | 586,154 | $ | 600,000 | Joseph C. Wright | | $ | 573,077 |
β
(1) | The base salary amounts shown above reflect amounts paid to the NEOs during 20202021 as reported in the Summary Compensation Table shown on page 73. The annual base salary amounts for fiscal year 20202022 as approved by the Compensation Committee are: Mr. F. Lampropoulos, $1,800,000; Mr. Parra $600,000; Mr. Frost, $600,000,$600,000; Mr. J. Lampropoulos $600,000,Lloyd, $600,000; and Mr. Lloyd, $600,000.Wright, $700,000 (effective November 1, 2021 on an interim basis). |
β The amount of the base salary payable to each NEO may be subject to change based on review by the Compensation Committee on an annual basis. Although the employment status of each of the NEOs is βat
will,β the Employment Agreements provide for mandatory severance payments to each NEO in the event the NEOβs employment terminates for certain reasons in connection with a βChange in Controlβ (as defined below). Those severance arrangements are discussed in greater detail below under the heading βExecutive Compensation TablesβPotential Payments upon Termination or Change in Control.β β
In addition to the annual base salary described above, the Employment Agreements also allow the NEOs to receive an annual cash bonus payment in an amount to be determined in the sole discretion of the Board (which has delegated that authority to the Compensation Committee). Notably, in fiscal years ending after a Change in Control, the annual bonus must be at least equal to an NEOβs average annual cash bonus for the last three full fiscal years ending prior to the Change in Control. β
The NEOs (and to the extent applicable, their spouses and eligible dependents) are eligible to participate in all incentive, savings and retirement, health insurance, term life insurance, long-term disability insurance, deferred compensation, employee stock purchase and other employee benefit plans, policies or arrangements we maintain for our employees generally and, at the discretion of the Compensation Committee, in the 2018 Incentive Plan and other benefit plans maintained by the Company for our executives. β
The terms of the Employment Agreements reflect in part the concern of the Compensation Committee that a future threatened or actual change in control, such as through an acquisition or merger, could cause disruption and harm to the Company in the event of the resulting loss of any of its key executives. The change in control provisions in the Employment Agreements are intended to provide a measure of incentive and security to our key executives until the resolution of any such threatened or actual change in control. β
However, the Compensation Committee believes that such agreements should not include provisions that would obligate a potential acquirer of the Company to make large payouts to the NEOs simply because a change in control has occurred. Because of this concern, the occurrence of a change in control event alone will not trigger any payment obligations to the NEOs under their respective Employment Agreements. Additional change in control payment obligations under the Employment Agreements only arise in the event the NEOβs employment is terminated βwithout Causeβ in connection with the change in control or the NEO resigns βfor Good Reasonβ (with 54 | Understand. Innovate. Deliver.TM
each capitalized term in this sentence defined in the Employment Agreements and described under the heading βPotential Payments Upon Termination or Change in ControlβEmployment Agreementsβ below) in connection with a change in control. Thus, the Compensation Committee regards the employment agreements as βdouble triggerβ change in control agreements. β
Tax Deductibility and Executive Compensation β
Section 162(m) (Section 162(m)) of the Code imposes a $1.0 million annual limit on the amount that a public company may deduct for compensation paid to a certain of a companyβs officers including its chief executive officer, chief financial officer, or any of the companyβs three other most highly compensated executive officers for a tax year. For tax years beginning before 2018, the limit did not apply to compensation that met the requirements of Section 162(m) for βqualified performance-basedβ compensation (i.e., compensation paid only if the executive meets pre-established, objective goals based upon performance criteria approved by our shareholders). Qualified performance-based awards, such as stock options, issued prior to 2018 remain under certain conditions exempt from Section 162(m) even if exercised after 2017. Because of limited guidance regarding this transition rule, we cannot provide any assurance that it will apply to stock options issued prior to 2018 and exercised after 2017. β
The Compensation Committee reviews and considers the deductibility of executive compensation under SectionΒ 162(m) and, to the extent practical, attempts to implement compensation policies and practices that maximize the potential income tax deductions available to the Company. β
In certain situations, the Compensation Committee may approve compensation that will exceed the deduction limitations of Section 162(m) in order to ensure competitive levels of total compensation for its executive officers. In such situations, the portion of the compensation payable to the executive officer that exceeds the $1.0 million limit will not be deductible for tax purposes. Although deductibility of executive compensation for tax purposes is generally preferred, tax deductibility is not the primary objective of our
executive compensation programs. The Company and the Compensation Committee believe that meeting the compensation objectives described above is more important than the benefit of being able to deduct the compensation for tax purposes. β
All compensation paid to the NEOs, other than Mr. F. Lampropoulos, during 20202021 was intended to be deductible under Section 162(m). Although Mr. F. Lampropoulosβ compensation for 20202021 exceeded the deduction limits of Section 162(m), the Compensation Committee approved that compensation amount in order to provide Mr.Β F.Β Lampropoulos with a compensation package that the Compensation Committee considers competitive and in the best interests of the Company and its shareholders. β
Additionally, under Sections 280G and 4999 of the Code, our NEOs and other Company executives may be subject to additional taxes if they receive payments or benefits in connection with a change of control of the Company that exceed certain prescribed limits (so-called Excess Parachute Payments), and the Company or its successor may not deduct such Excess Parachute Payments. The Company is not obligated to provide any NEO or other executive with a βgross-upβ or other reimbursement payment for any tax liability that the executive might owe as a result of the application of Sections 280G or 4999 of the Code. Certain potential future payments described in the table captioned βTermination Without Cause or For Good Reason in Connection with a Change in Controlβ on page 81 may, however, constitute Excess Parachute Payments that the Company or its successor could not fully deduct. β
Compensation Policies and Practices Relating to Risk Management β
The Compensation Committee has reviewed our company-wide compensation program, which applies to all of our full-time employees, including the NEOs. The Compensation Committee has also reviewed our executive compensation practices with Pearl Meyer. Based on the Compensation Committeeβs review of the various elements of our executive compensation practices and policies, the Compensation Committee believes our compensation policies and practices are designed to create appropriate and meaningful incentives for our employees without encouraging excessive or inappropriate risk taking. β
After undertaking this review, the Compensation Committee came to the following conclusions:
β | Ourour compensation policies and practices are designed to include a significant level of long-term compensation, which discourages short-term risk taking; |
β | Thethe base salaries we provide to our executive employees are generally consistent with salaries paid for comparable positions in our industry, and provide our employees with steady income while reducing the incentive for employees to take risks in pursuit of short-term benefits; |
β | Ourour incentive compensation for our NEOs is capped at levels established by the Compensation Committee, which it believes reduces the incentive for excessive risk-taking; |
β | Wewe use different performance metrics in our Executive Bonus Plan and for our PSUs, providing balance and mitigating against taking undue risk to meet a single goal.goal; |
β | Executive Bonus Plan payments and PSU awards are subject to clawback in the event of a material restatement of our financial results and in certain other cases.cases; |
β | Ourour stock-based long-term incentives either vest or are earned over a multi-year period, providing upside potential while at the same time requiring our NEOs to bear the economic risk of the award over the vesting period.period; |
β | Wewe have established and adopted codes of ethics and business conduct, which are designed to reinforce the balanced compensation objectives established by the Compensation Committee; and |
β | Wewe have adopted equity ownership guidelines for our Chief Executive Officer,CEO, which the Compensation Committee believes discourages excessive risk-taking. |
Based on the review outlined above, the Compensation Committee has further concluded that the risks arising from our compensation policies and practices for its employees are not reasonably likely to have a material adverse effect on the Company. β
Compensation Committee Report β
The Compensation Committee establishes and oversees the design and function of our executive compensation programs. β
The members of the Compensation Committee have reviewed and discussed the foregoing Compensation Discussion and Analysis with the management of the Company and recommended to the Board that the Compensation Discussion and Analysis be included in this Proxy Statement. β | β Compensation Committee: A. Scott Anderson (Chair) F. Ann Millner. Ed. D. Lonny J. Carpenter Stephen C. Evans James T. Hogan β
|
β 56 71 |www.merit.com β Understand. Innovate. Deliver.TM
PROPOSAL Proposal No. 4β 2: Advisory Vote on Executive Compensation | Board Recommendation
| β
| The Board unanimously recommends a vote FOR this proposal | |
β Section 14A of the Exchange Act (Section 14A), which was enacted pursuant to the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act, requires that we provide shareholders with the opportunity to vote on an advisory (non-binding) resolution to approve the compensation of the NEOs disclosed in this Proxy Statement (colloquially referred to as a βSay-on-Payβ proposal). β
Accordingly, the following resolution will be submitted to our shareholders for approval at the Annual Meeting: β
| β
βRESOLVED, that the Companyβs shareholders APPROVE, on an advisory basis, the compensation of the named executive officers, as disclosed in the Companyβs proxy statement for the 20212022 Annual Meeting of Shareholders, pursuant to the compensation disclosure rules of the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, including the Compensation Discussion and Analysis, the Summary Compensation Table and the other related tables and disclosures.β β
|
β As described above under the heading βCompensation Discussion and Analysis,β the Board believes our compensation of the NEOs achieves the primary goals of: β
β | focusing our executives on achieving or exceeding measurable performance targets; |
β | encouraging continuation of our entrepreneurial spirit; |
β | attracting and retaining highly-qualified and motivated executives; |
β | promoting our guiding principles for adherence to a high ethical environment, as well as health and safety standards; and |
β | aligning management compensation with shareholder value. |
β
The Board encourages shareholders to review in detail the Compensation Discussion and Analysis beginning on page 5640 of this Proxy Statement and the executive compensation tables beginning on page 7358 of this Proxy Statement. In light of the information set forth in such sections, the Board believes the compensation of the NEOs for the fiscal year ended DecemberΒ 31, 20202021 was fair and reasonable and that our compensation programs and practices are in the best interests of the Company and our shareholders. β
The advisory vote on this Say-on-Pay resolution is not intended to address any specific element of compensation; rather, the vote relates to all aspects of the compensation of the NEOs, as described in this Proxy Statement. While this vote is only advisory in nature, which means that the vote is not binding on the Company, the Board or the Compensation Committee (which is composed solely of independent directors), value the opinion of our shareholders and will consider the outcome of the vote when addressing future compensation arrangements. β
In the 2017 annual meeting of shareholders, held on May 24, 2017, our shareholders recommended that they be given an opportunity to vote on a Say-on-Pay resolution every year at our annual meeting of shareholders. Consequently, we intend to hold an annual advisory vote on executive compensation until the next βsay-on-frequencyβ vote at our annual meeting of shareholders in 2023 (as required by Section 14A). β
www.merit.com 72 |www.merit.com β 57
Approval of the resolution above (on a non-binding, advisory basis) requires that the number of votes cast at the Annual Meeting, in person or by proxy, in favor of the resolution exceeds the number of votes cast in opposition to the resolution. β
EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION TABLES TABLES
β
Summary Compensation Table β
The following Summary Compensation Table summarizes the total compensation earned by each of the NEOs for the years indicated. β
| | Salary | Bonus | Stock Awards | Option Awards | Non-Equity Incentive Plan Compensation | All Other Compensation | Total | | Salary | Bonus | Stock Awards | Option Awards | Non-Equity Incentive Plan Compensation | All Other Compensation | Total | Name and Position | Year | ($) | ($)Β (1) | ($) (2)(3)(4) | ($)Β (4)(5) | ($)Β (6) | ($) (7)(8)(9) | ($) (3) | Year | ($) | ($)Β (1) | ($) (2)(3)(4) | ($)Β (4)(5) | ($)Β (6) | ($) (7)(8) | ($) (3) | Fred P. Lampropoulos | 2020 | 1,736,538 | β | 3,778,119 | 1,198,851 | 990,000 | β | 7,703,508 | 2021 | 1,800,000 | 458,501 | 2,946,700 | 1,200,059 | 1,131,840 | β | 7,537,100 | Chair of the Board, CEO and President | 2019 | 1,804,136 | β | β | 3,008,622 | β | 236,528 | 5,049,286 | 2020 | 1,736,538 | β | 3,778,119 | 1,198,851 | 990,000 | β | 7,703,508 | | 2018 | 1,700,000 | β | β | 587,861 | 1,300,000 | 92,719 | 3,680,580 | | 2019 | 1,804,136 | β | β | 3,008,622 | β | 236,528 | 5,049,286 | | | | | β | | | | Β | | | | | β | | | Β | Raul Parra | 2020 | 586,154 | β | 693,623 | 199,804 | 210,000 | 66,735 | 1,756,316 | 2021 | 600,000 | 101,889 | 491,090 | 200,020 | 251,520 | 57,980 | 1,702,499 | Chief Financial Officer and Treasurer | 2019 | 580,769 | β | β | 567,126 | β | 20,873 | 1,168,768 | 2020 | 586,154 | β | 693,623 | 199,804 | 210,000 | 66,735 | 1,756,316 | β | 2018 | 319,231 | 275,000 | β | 154,692 | β | 51,987 | 800,910 | β | 2019 | 580,769 | β | β | 567,126 | β | 20,873 | 1,168,768 | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | Ronald A. Frost | 2020 | 586,154 | β | 693,623 | 199,804 | 210,000 | 69,231 | 1,758,812 | 2021 | 600,000 | 101,889 | 491,090 | 200,020 | 251,520 | 69,230 | 1,713,749 | Chief Operating Officer | 2019 | 598,077 | β | β | 567,126 | β | 65,515 | 1,230,718 | 2020 | 586,154 | β | 693,623 | 199,804 | 210,000 | 69,231 | 1,758,812 | β | 2018 | 532,692 | 150,000 | β | 618,768 | β | 65,499 | 1,366,959 | β | 2019 | 598,077 | β | β | 567,126 | β | 65,515 | 1,230,718 | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | Justin J. Lampropoulos | 2020 | 567,693 | β | 693,623 | 199,804 | 210,000 | 76,155 | 1,747,275 | | President, EMEA Division | 2019 | 596,154 | β | β | 567,126 | β | 48,319 | 1,211,599 | | β | 2018 | 500,000 | 50,000 | β | 309,384 | β | 45,267 | 904,651 | | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | | Brian G. Lloyd | 2020 | 586,154 | β | 693,623 | 199,804 | 210,000 | β | 1,689,581 | 2021 | 600,000 | 101,889 | 491,090 | 200,020 | 251,520 | 11,885 | 1,656,404 | Chief Legal Officer, Corporate Secretary | 2019 | 600,000 | β | β | 567,126 | β | 8,400 | 1,175,526 | 2020 | 586,154 | β | 693,623 | 199,804 | 210,000 | β | 1,689,581 | β | 2018 | 600,000 | 202,000 | β | 386,730 | β | 8,250 | 1,196,980 | β | 2019 | 600,000 | β | β | 567,126 | β | 8,400 | 1,175,526 | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | Joseph C. Wright | | 2021 | 573,077 | 93,398 | 491,090 | 200,020 | 230,560 | 51,704 | 1,639,849 | President, International | | 2020 | 537,307 | β | 693,623 | 199,804 | 211,501 | 43,075 | 1,685,310 | | β | 2019 | 550,000 | β | β | 567,126 | 300,000 | 48,632 | 1,465,758 | | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β |
β
(1) | Bonus amounts represent discretionary bonuses not based solely upon pre-determined performance criteria. |
(2) | Stock Awards include the aggregate grant date fair value of PSUs granted to the NEOs in the year shown under our 2018 Incentive Plan computed in accordance with ASC Topic 718, including the portion of Mr. F. Lampropoulosβ PSU payable in cash (i.e., his PSU Cash Incentive). Such amounts have been calculated in accordance with current financial statement reporting guidance, using the same assumptions the Company has used on the grant date for financial statement reporting purposes with respect to our long-term incentive plans. Values shown for PSUs are based on the maximum potential attainment levels,plans, which represents the probable outcome of the performance condition on the date of grant and may not be indicative of the realized value of the awards when they vest. The grant-date fair value of PSUs granted to Mr. F. Lampropoulos in 2021 includes $1,309,633 of shares and $1,637,067 of potential PSU Cash Incentive, and in 2020 includes $1,849,806 of shares and $1,928,313 of potential PSU Cash Incentive. See footnote 1 to the Grants of Plan-Based Awards table.table for additional details. The table below shows the |
58 | Understand. Innovate. Deliver.TM
| Free Cash Flow multiplier that was assessed as probable as of each grant date and the grant date fair value of stock awards based on maximum potential attainment. |
Description | 2021 | 2020 | 2019 | Probable Grant-Date Free Cash Flow Multiplier | 150% | 200% | β | Maximum Grant-date fair value of shares-Mr. F. Lampropoulous | $1,746,178 | $1,849,806 | β | Maximum Grant-date fair value of PSU cash incentive -Mr. F. Lampropoulous | $2,182,755 | $1,928,313 | β | Maximum Grant-date fair value of shares-Messrs. Parra, Frost, Lloyd and Wright | $654,786 | $693,623 | β |
(3) | On June 22, 2020, we amended the one-year performance period PSU award agreements granted in 2020 for all NEOs to reduce the maximum FCF Multiplier and the FCF Metric amount. There was no incremental fair value |
| recorded in accordance with ASC Topic 718 in connection with this modification, as this amendment reduced the grant date fair value of equity classified awards by $307,137 for Mr. F. Lampropoulos, and by $115,176 for Messrs. Parra, Frost, J. Lampropoulos,Lloyd and Lloyd.Wright. Because ASC Topic 718 does not permit a reduction in compensation cost below the value established at the grant date for equity classified awards, pursuant to the rules of the SEC, this column reports the grant date fair value of the original PSUs and does not reflect the reduction in grant date fair value of the PSUs resulting from the amendments. These amendments also reduced the fair value of the PSU Cash Incentive to Mr. F. Lampropoulos under his PSU by $383,894, which is reflected in the table above, as ASC Topic 718 does permit a reduction in compensation cost below the grant date fair value for liability classified awards. PSUs granted in 2020 with two and three-year performance periods were not amended. |
(4) | Assumptions used in the calculation of these amounts for 2021, 2020, 2019, and 20182019 are included in footnotes to our audited consolidated financial statements for the years ended December 31, 2021, 2020, 2019, and 20182019 (which are included in our Annual Reports on Form 10-K filed with the SEC on March 1, 2022, March 1, 2021 and March 2, 2020, and March 1, 2019, respectively). |
(5) | Option awards reflect the aggregate grant date fair value of the options granted to the NEOs in the year shown under our 2018 Incentive Plan, computed in accordance with ASC Topic 718. Such amounts have been calculated in accordance with current financial statement reporting guidance, using the same assumptions the Company has used for financial statement reporting purposes with respect to our long-term incentive plans. |
(6) | Annual Incentive bonuses under our Executive Bonus Plan based on pre-established performance criteria appear in the Non-Equity Incentive Plan Compensation column. Based upon the Companyβs achievement of goals established by the Compensation Committee, (as amended), the Compensation Committee determined to award and pay the full amount of the targeted annual cash bonus establishedat 104.8% of the target payment amount for each of the NEOs. Payment was made in 2021.2022. |
(7) | Amounts include vacation benefits paid to the NEOs in cash in lieu of vacation benefits, as follows: |
| β | for the year ended December 31, 2021: $57,980 for Mr. Parra; $69,230 for Mr. Frost; $11,885 for Mr. Lloyd; and $51,554 for Mr. Wright. |
| β | for the year ended December 31, 2020: $66,735 for Mr. Parra; $69,231 for Mr. Frost; and $22,970$43,075 for Mr.Β J. Lampropoulos.Wright. |
| β | for the year ended December 31, 2019: $228,128 for Mr. F. Lampropoulos; $15,865 for Mr. Parra; $57,115 for Mr. Frost; and $40,012$40,232 for Mr. J. Lampropoulos. |
| β | for the year ended December 31, 2018: $84,469 for Mr. F. Lampropoulos; $43,737 for Mr. Parra; $57,249 for Mr. Frost; and $37,536 for Mr. J. Lampropoulos.Wright. |
(8) | Amounts shown also include matching contributions made by the Company for the benefit of the NEOs to the Companyβs 401(k) Plan in the following amounts: |
| β | for the year ended December 31, 2019:2021: Mr. F. Lampropoulos, $8,400; Mr. Parra, $5,008; Mr. Frost, $8,400; Mr. J. Lampropoulos, $8,307; and Mr. Lloyd, $8,400.Joseph C. Wright, $150 |
| β | for the year ended December 31, 2018: Mr. F.2019: $8,400 for each of Messrs. Lampropoulos, $8,250; Mr. Parra, $8,250; Mr. Frost, $8,250; Mr. J. Lampropoulos, $7,731;Lloyd and Mr. Lloyd, $8,250. |
(9) | Amounts shownWright, and $5,008 for Mr. J. Lampropoulos for the year ended December 31, 2020 include relocation costs and associated payroll taxes paid on behalf of Mr. J. Lampropoulos in the amount of $53,185.Parra. |
β www.merit.com 74 |www.merit.com β 59
Grants of Plan-Based Awards β
The following table sets forth information concerning plan-based awards to the NEOs during the year ended December 31, 2020.2021. β β β β β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | | Named Executive Officer | β | Grant Date | β | Estimated Possible Payouts Under Non-Equity Incentive Plan Awards ($) | β | Estimated Possible Payouts Under Equity Incentive Plan Awards (#)Β (4)(5) | β | All other Option Awards: Number of Securities Underlying Options Granted (#) (6) | β | Exercise Price of Option Awards ($/sh) (7) | β | Grant Date Fair Value of Stock and Option Awards ($) (2)(5)(8) | Β | GrantΒ Date | Β | EstimatedΒ PossibleΒ PayoutsΒ Under Non-EquityΒ IncentiveΒ PlanΒ AwardsΒ ($) | Β | EstimatedΒ PossibleΒ PayoutsΒ Under EquityΒ IncentiveΒ PlanΒ AwardsΒ (#)Β (3) | Β | AllΒ otherΒ OptionΒ Awards: NumberΒ ofΒ Securities UnderlyingΒ OptionsΒ GrantedΒ (#)Β (4) | Β | ExerciseΒ PriceΒ of OptionΒ AwardsΒ ($/sh)Β (5) | Β | GrantΒ DateΒ FairΒ ValueΒ ofΒ StockΒ andΒ OptionΒ AwardsΒ ($)Β (4)(6) | β | β | β | β | Threshold | Target | Maximum | β | Threshold | Target | Maximum | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | Threshold | Target | Maximum | β | Threshold | Target | Maximum | β | β | β | β | β | β | Fred P. Lampropoulos β | β | 2/26/2020 (1)(2) | β | 375,000 | 1,000,000 | 2,083,334 | β | 7,956 | 21,215 | 53,038 | β | β | β | β | β | 3,778,119 | β | 3/19/2021 (1) | β | 375,000 | 1,000,000 | 2,500,000 | β | 5,333 | 14,222 | 35,555 | β | β | β | β | β | 2,946,700 | β | β | N/A (3) | β | 792,000 | 990,000 | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | N/A (2) | β | 972,000 | 1,080,000 | 1,188,000 | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | 2/26/2020 | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | 100,334 | β | 37.71 | β | 1,198,851 | β | β | 3/19/2021 | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | 58,083 | β | 56.25 | β | 1,200,059 | Raul Parra | β | 2/26/2020 | β | β | β | β | 2,984 | 7,955 | 19,888 | β | β | β | β | β | 693,623 | β | 3/19/2021 | β | β | β | β | β | 2,000 | 5,333 | 13,333 | β | β | β | β | β | 491,090 | β | β | N/A (3) | β | 168,000 | 210,000 | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | N/A (2) | β | 216,000 | 240,000 | 264,000 | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | 2/26/2020 | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | 16,722 | β | 37.71 | β | 199,804 | β | β | 3/19/2021 | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | 9,681 | β | 56.25 | β | 200,020 | Ronald A. Frost β | β | 2/26/2020 | β | β | β | β | 2,984 | 7,955 | 19,888 | β | β | β | β | β | 693,623 | β | 3/19/2021 | β | β | β | β | β | 2,000 | 5,333 | 13,333 | β | β | β | β | β | 491,090 | β | β | N/A (3) | β | 168,000 | 210,000 | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | N/A (2) | β | 216,000 | 240,000 | 264,000 | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | 2/26/2020 | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | 16,722 | β | 37.71 | β | 199,804 | β | β | 3/19/2021 | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | 9,681 | β | 56.25 | β | 200,020 | Justin J. Lampropoulos | β | 2/26/2020 | β | β | β | β | 2,984 | 7,955 | 19,888 | β | β | β | β | β | 693,623 | | β | β | N/A (3) | β | 168,000 | 210,000 | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | | β | β | 2/26/2020 | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | 16,722 | β | 37.71 | β | 199,804 | | Brian G. Lloyd | β | 2/26/2020 | β | β | β | β | 2,984 | 7,955 | 19,888 | β | β | β | β | β | 693,623 | β | 3/19/2021 | β | β | β | β | β | 2,000 | 5,333 | 13,333 | β | β | β | β | β | 491,090 | β | β | N/A (3) | β | 168,000 | 210,000 | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | N/A (2) | β | 216,000 | 240,000 | 264,000 | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | 2/26/2020 | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | 16,722 | β | 37.71 | β | 199,804 | β | β | 3/19/2021 | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | 9,681 | β | 56.25 | β | 200,020 | Joseph C. Wright | | β | 3/19/2021 | β | β | β | β | β | 2,000 | 5,333 | 13,333 | β | β | β | β | β | 491,090 | | β | β | N/A (2) | β | 198,000 | 220,000 | 242,000 | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | | β | β | 3/19/2021 | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | 9,681 | β | 56.25 | β | 200,020 |
β
(1) | The PSU agreements with Mr. F. Lampropoulos include Target PSU Shares and a Target Cash Incentive. Both the Target PSU Shares and Target Cash Incentive are considered part of an equity incentive plan and are accounted for under ASC Topic 718 because they are based, at least in part, on the price of our shares of Common Stock. However, because there is not a stated number of shares underlying the PSU Cash Incentive, the threshold, target, and maximum payments of the PSU Cash Incentive under Mr. F. Lampropoulos PSUs have been included in this table under the non-equity incentive plan awards column. These amounts are based upon achievement of the performance measures with respect to the PSU awards granted in 2020, as amended.2021. The threshold amount assumes threshold FCF performance and application of the 4th (bottom) quartile rTSR multiplier, and the maximum amount assumes maximum FCF performance and application of the 1st (top) quartile rTSR multiplier. See the section βPerformance Stock Units (PSUs)β on page 6247 for additional details regarding the PSUs, and footnote 2 to the Summary Compensation Table. | |
(2) | On June 22, 2020, we amended the one-year PSU award agreements, which reduced the maximum possible payout and the fair value of the PSU Cash Incentive to Mr. F. Lampropoulos by $416,666 and $383,894, respectively, which is reflected in the table above, as ASC Topic 718 permits a reduction in compensation cost below the grant date fair value for liability classified awards. | |
(3) | Listed amounts reflect target and threshold incentive performance bonuses for 20202021 under our Executive Bonus Plan. Target amounts also reflect the maximum possible payout. For the year ended December 31, 2020,2021, each of Messrs. F. Lampropoulos, Parra, Frost, J. Lampropoulos,Lloyd and LloydWright received 104.8% of the full targeted level of their incentive annual performance bonus, as discussed above and as shown in the βNon-Equity Incentive Plan Compensationβ column in the Summary Compensation Table above. | |
(4)(3) | Listed amounts reflect threshold, target, and maximum number of shares the named executive officer is eligible to receive based upon achievement of the performance measures with respect to performance stock units granted in 2020 based on the grant date fair value.2021. See the section βPerformance Stock Units (PSUs)β on page 6247 for additional details regarding the PSUs. The threshold amount assumes threshold FCF performance and application of the 4th (bottom) quartile rTSR multiplier, and the maximum amount assumes maximum FCF performance and application of the 1st (top) quartile rTSR multiplier. | |
(5) | On June 22, 2020, we amended the one-year PSU award agreements granted in 2020 for all NEOs to reduce the maximum FCF Multiplier and the FCF Metric amounts. There was no incremental fair value recorded in accordance with ASC Topic 718 in connection with this modification, as this amendment reduced the maximum possible payout and the grant date fair value of equity classified awards by 8,840 shares and $307,137, respectively, for Mr. F. Lampropoulos, and by 3,315 shares and $115,176, respectively, for Messrs. Parra, Frost, J. Lampropoulos, and Lloyd. Because ASC 718 does not permit a reduction in compensation cost below the value | |
| established at the grant date for equity classified awards, pursuant to the rules of the SEC, the maximum possible payout and grant date fair value columns in the table above report the applicable amounts for the original PSUs as of the grant date, and do not reflect the impact of this amendment. | |
(6)(4) | Stock options are NSOs and vest at the rate of 25% per year over four years on the first through the fourth anniversaries of the date of the grant. | |
(7)(5) | The exercise price per share for each stock option is the market closing price on the date of the grant. | |
(8)(6) | The grant-date fair value of PSUs granted to Mr. F. Lampropoulos includes $1,849,806$1,309,633 of shares and $1,928,313 of$1,637,067 potential PSU Cash Incentive. See footnote 1 for additional details regarding the PSU cash incentive. | |
β 60 | Understand. Innovate. Deliver.TM
Outstanding Equity Awards at Year End β
The following table provides information on the holdings of stock options and other stock awards by the NEOs as of DecemberΒ 31, 2020. β2021.
β β β β β β β β β β β | β | Option Awards | β | Stock Awards | β | Option Awards | β | Stock Awards | Named Executive Officer (1) | | Number of Securities Underlying Unexercised Options Exercisable | Number of Securities Underlying Unexercised Options Unexercisable (1) | | | | Number of Shares or Units of Stock that Have Not Vested (2)(3) | Market Value of Shares or Units of Stock that Have Not Vested (2)(3) | Equity Incentive Plan Awards: Number of Unearned Shares, Units or Other Rights That Have Not Vested (#) (4) | Equity Incentive Plan Awards: Market Value of Unearned Shares, Units or Other Rights That Have Not Vested ($) (4) | | Number of Securities Underlying Unexercised Options Exercisable | Number of Securities Underlying Unexercised Options Unexercisable (1) | | | | Number of Shares or Units of Stock that Have Not Vested (2)(3) | Market Value of Shares or Units of Stock that Have Not Vested (2)(3) | Equity Incentive Plan Awards: Number of Unearned Shares, Units or Other Rights That Have Not Vested (#) (4) | Equity Incentive Plan Awards: Market Value of UnearnedΒ Shares, Units or Other Rights That Have Not Vested ($) (4) | Fred P. Lampropoulos | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | 2/26/2020 | 0 | 100,334 | 37.71 | 2/26/2027 | β | 8,840 | 907,375 | 28,286 | 2,903,490 | | 2/26/2020 | 25,084 | 75,250 | 37.71 | 2/26/2027 | β | 17,680 | 1,934,797 | 14,142 | 1,547,715 | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | Justin J. Lampropoulos | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | Brian G. Lloyd | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | 2/26/2020 | β | 16,722 | 37.71 | 2/26/2027 | β | 3,315 | 184,016 | 10,606 | 588,739 | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | β | | 3/19/2021 | β | 9,681 | 56.25 | 3/19/2028 | β | β | β | 10,666 | 664,492 | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | |
(1) | Each unvestedUnvested stock option award granted in 2021 and 2020 vestsvest 25% each year for four years commencing one year from the grant date. All other outstanding stock option awards held by NEOs vest 20% each year for five years commencing one year from the grant date. |
(2) | The market value of unvested PSUs is calculated based on a market price of $55.51$62.30 per share, which was the closing price of our Common Stock on December 31, 2020,2021, as reported by Nasdaq. |
(3) | Amounts in this column represent PSUs with completed performance periods as of December 31, 2020,2021, and for Mr. F. Lampropoulos include the cash incentive of $416,666.$833,333. These PSUs and the underlying shares and cash incentive vested and were issued or paid, as applicable, on February 26, 2021.28, 2022. |
(4) | Amounts in this column represent unvested PSUs granted in 2020 with incomplete performance periods as of December 31, 2020.2021. The figures shown assume that maximum performance is achieved with respect to those PSUs issued in 2020 with ongoing performance periods extending beyond 20202021 (including the maximum $1,333,334 cash incentiveincentives of $666,668 and $2,000,000 for awards with ongoing performance periods granted to for Mr. F. Lampropoulos)Lampropoulos in 2020 and 2021, respectively) without application of the rTSR multiplier. The assumption of maximum performance is based on prior year performance. If maximum performance is achieved (including the maximum rTSR multiplier) the number and market value of shares and the cash incentive to be issued or paid, as applicable, following vesting of these PSUs would be as follows:follows for 2021: Β Mr. F. Lampropoulos: 35,35835,555 Shares ($1,962,722)2,215,077) and $1,666,668$2,500,000 of PSU Cash Incentive (total of $3,629,390)$4,715,077), Messrs. Parra, Frost, J. Lampropoulos,Lloyd and Lloyd: 13,258Wright: 13,333 shares ($735,952)830,646) and for 2020: Mr. Lampropoulos: 17,678 Shares ($1,101,339) and $833,335 of PSU Cash Incentive (total of $1,934,643), Messrs. Parra, Frost, Lloyd and Wright: 6,628 shares ($412,924). |
Option Exercises and Stock Awards Vested β
The following table provides information regarding stock options exercised by each of the NEOs and restricted stock awards (PSUs) that vested during the year ended DecemberΒ 31, 2020. No stock awards vested for NEOs during the year ended December 31, 2020. β2021.
| | | | | | | | | Option Awards | β | Stock Awards | Named Executive Officer | Number of Shares Acquired on Exercise | Value Realized on ExerciseΒ ($) (1) | Number of Shares Acquired on Exercise | Value Realized on ExerciseΒ ($) (1) | β | Number of Shares Acquired on Vesting | Value Realized on ExerciseΒ ($) (1) | Fred P. Lampropoulos | 100,000 | 2,291,500 | β | β | 8,840 | 492,565 | Raul Parra | β | β | 12,000 | 439,292 | β | 3,315 | 184,712 | Ronald A. Frost | β | β | 45,000 | 2,080,330 | β | 3,315 | 184,712 | Justin J. Lampropoulos | β | β | | Brian G. Lloyd | β | β | 45,000 | 1,894,352 | β | 3,315 | 184,712 | Joseph C. Wright | | 35,000 | 1,821,396 | β | 3,315 | 184,712 |
β
(1) | The reported value for this column is determined by multiplying the number of shares acquired upon the exercise of the applicable option by the difference between the market price of our Common Stock on the date of exercise and the exercise price of the stock option. The value is stated before payment of applicable taxes. |
β
Non-Qualified Deferred Compensation β
Pursuant to the Merit Medical Systems, Inc. Deferred Compensation Plan (Deferred Compensation Plan), NEOs may elect prior to the beginning of each calendar year to defer the receipt of base salary and bonuses earned for the ensuing calendar year. Amounts deferred are credited to an unfunded liability account maintained by the Company on behalf of the applicable NEO, which account is deemed invested in and earns a rate of return based upon certain notational, self-directed investment options offered under the Deferred Compensation Plan. The NEOsβ accounts under the Deferred Compensation Plan may also be credited with a discretionary employer matching contribution, although no such discretionary contribution was made for 20202021 or at any other time since the Deferred Compensation Planβs inception. Participant account balances under the Deferred Compensation Plan are fully-vested and will be paid by the Company to each NEO upon retirement or separation from employment, or on other specified dates, in a lump sum form or in installments according to a schedule elected in advance by the participant. The following table sets forth certain information regarding the account balance and amountamounts with respect to Mr. Frost, who was the only NEONEOs who participated in the Deferred Compensation Plan during 2020. β2021.
| Β | Executive Contributions in LastΒ FiscalΒ Year ($)Β (1) | | Registrant Contributions in LastΒ FiscalΒ Year ($) | | Aggregate Earnings in Last Fiscal Year ($) | | Aggregate Withdrawals / Distributions ($) | | Aggregate Balance at Last Fiscal YearsΒ End ($) | Β | Executive Contributions in LastΒ FiscalΒ Year ($)Β (1) | | Registrant Contributions in LastΒ FiscalΒ Year ($) | | Aggregate Earnings in Last Fiscal Year ($) {2} | | Aggregate Withdrawals / Distributions ($) | | Aggregate Balance at Last Fiscal YearsΒ End ($) | Named Executive Officer | Β | | Β | | | Β | | | Registrant Contributions in LastΒ FiscalΒ Year ($) | Β | Aggregate Earnings in Last Fiscal Year ($) {2} | | Aggregate Withdrawals / Distributions ($) | Β | Aggregate Balance at Last Fiscal YearsΒ End ($) | | Β | | Β | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | |
β
(1) | These amounts are also reflected in the Summary Compensation Table for the year ended DecemberΒ 31, 20202021 as βSalary.β |
(2) | Earnings have not been reflected in the Summary Compensation Table for the year ended December 31, 2021 because they do not reflect compensation for services provided. |
β 62 77 |www.merit.com β Understand. Innovate. Deliver.TM
The table below shows the funds available for notational investment under the Deferred Compensation Plan and their annual rate of return for the calendar year ended December 31, 2020.2021. These notational investments were generally the same as the mutual fund investment options offered in 20202021 under our 401(k) Plan: | | | Name of Fund | Rate of Return | | | | | | | MFS VIT III Mid Cap Value Svc | | | Vanguard VIF Equity Index | | | Vanguard VIF Total Stock Market Index Inv | | | T. Rowe Price Equity Income II | | | Model Portfolio - Global Growth | | | T. Rowe Price Blue Chip Growth | | | Model Portfolio - Balanced Growth | | | T. Rowe Price Mid Cap Growth II | | | Vanguard VIF Small Company Growth Inv | | | Vanguard VIF Total Stock Market Index InvModel Portfolio - Balanced Moderate
| | | Nationwide VIT International Index II | | | MFS VIT II International Value Svc | | | Vanguard VIF Equity Index
| | | American Funds IS International 2
| | | Model Portfolio - Global Growth
| | | Model Portfolio - Balanced Growth
| | | PIMCO VIT Real Return Admin
| | | Model Portfolio - Balanced Moderate
| | | Model Portfolio - Balanced Conservative | | | Model Portfolio - Income with Growth | | | PIMCO VIT Real Return Admin | | | Lazard Retirement Emerging Markets Svc | | | Nationwide VIT Money Market V | | | PIMCO VIT Total Return Admin | | | Nationwide VITAmerican Funds IS International Index II2
| | | | | | MFS VIT III Mid Cap Value Svc
| | | T. Rowe Price Equity Income II
| | | Nationwide VIT Money Market V
| | | Lazard Retirement Emerging Markets Svc
| | | | | |
β Potential Payments Upon Termination or Change in Control β Employment Agreements and PSUs β
In 2016, the Company entered into an Employment Agreement with each of Messrs. F. Lampropoulos, Frost, J. LampropoulosLloyd and Lloyd.Wright. These Employment Agreements were amended in 2017. In 2018, the Company entered into an Employment Agreement with Mr. Parra. These Employment Agreements (as amended) are described further in the βCompensation Discussion and Analysisβ discussion above. The Employment Agreements and PSU award agreements provide payments and benefits in the event of termination of employment under certain circumstances, including in connection with a Change in Control. The discussion that follows is only a summary of certain material provisions of the Employment Agreements, PSU award agreements and the 2018 Incentive Plan. This discussion is qualified in its entirety by reference to the full text of the applicable agreement or plan which can be found in the list of exhibits attached to our Annual Report on Form 10-K.Report. β
Termination Other Than in Connection with a Change in Control. β
If an Executiveβs employment with the Company is terminated for any reason, voluntarily or involuntarily, with or without Cause (as defined below), other than in Connection with a Change in Control (as defined below), we are obligated to pay the Executive a lump sum cash payment equal to his or her accrued and unpaid base salary and any accrued vacation pay earned but not yet paid through the date of termination, plus a lump sum cash payment equal to the Executiveβs accrued annual bonus earned for our last fiscal
year ending immediately prior to the Executiveβs date of termination, to the extent not already paid (the sum of such payments hereinafter referred to as Accrued Obligations). Any additional severance benefit is solely at the discretion of the Company. A termination is deemed to be in Connection with a Change in Control if it occurs on or within two years after the date of a
Change in Control or, in the case of involuntary termination without Cause, within six months prior to a Change in Control and in anticipation of the Change in Control. β
Change in Control has the meaning given to such term in the applicable agreement or plan. The Employment Agreements generally define a Change in Control as: β
β | the acquisition in one or more integrated transactions by any individual, entity or group of beneficial ownership of more than 30% of the combined voting power of the then outstanding voting securities of the Company entitled to vote generally in the election of directors; |
β | certain changes in a majority of the Board within a 12-month period; and |
β | consummation of a reorganization, merger or consolidation or sale or other disposition of all or substantially all of our assets. |
The PSU award agreements and 2018 Incentive Plan generally define a Change in Control as: β
β | certain changes in the majority of the Board within a 24-month period; |
β | the acquisition by any person of 30% or more of the Common Stock or other voting securities; |
β | consummation of a merger or reorganization of the Company that requires the approval of our shareholders, unless more than 30% of the total voting power of the surviving corporation or its parent is represented by securities held by the companyβs shareholders prior to the transaction, no person (other than an employee benefit plan sponsored or maintained by the surviving corporation or its parent) owns more than 30% of the securities eligible to elect directors of the surviving corporation or its parent, and at least a majority of the directors of the parent corporation or the surviving corporation were directors of the Company for a period of 12 months preceding such transaction; |
β | shareholder approval of a liquidation or dissolution of the Company; or |
β | a sale or other disposition of all or substantially all of our assets to another entity that is not controlled by our shareholders. |
Termination for Good Reason or Without Cause in Connection with a Change in Control β
If an NEOβs employment with the Company is terminated by the NEO for Good Reason (as defined below) in Connection with a Change in Control or by the Company without Cause in Connection with a Change in Control, the Company is obligated to: β
β | pay to the NEO any Accrued Obligations to the extent not already paid; |
β | pay to the NEO a cash severance benefit equal to two times (three times solely in the case of the CEO) the sum of (i) the NEOβs annual base salary then in effect, and (ii) the NEOβs average annual bonus for the last three full fiscal years ending prior to the Change in Control; |
β | continue to provide group health benefits to the NEO and/or NEOβs eligible spouse and dependent children for two years (three years solely in the case of the CEO) after the date of the NEOβs termination; |
β | provide the NEO with certain outplacement services at our expense; |
β | pay or provide to the NEO certain other accrued benefits to the extent not already paid or provided; and |
β | provide the total Target PSU Shares (and the Target Cash Incentive, in the case of Mr.Β F.Β Lampropoulos) under the PSU award agreements, without regard to the Companyβs performance or other vesting requirements. |
64 | Understand. Innovate. Deliver.TM
The Employment Agreements, PSU award agreements and 2018 Incentive Plan generally define Cause as: β
β | the willful and continued failure of an NEO to perform his or her duties after a written demand for substantial performance specifically identifying the deficiencies in the Executiveβs performance has been delivered to the NEO by the Board or, in the case of all NEOs other than the CEO, by the CEO; |
β | the willful engaging by an NEO in illegal conduct, intentional misconduct or gross negligence which materially and demonstrably injures the Company; or |
β | violation of written Company policies prohibiting workplace discrimination, sexual harassment, and alcohol or substance abuse. |
The Employment Agreements, PSU award agreements and 2018 Incentive Plan generally define Good Reason as: β | our assignment to the NEO, upon or within two years after a Change in Control, of any duties inconsistent with or that diminishes the NEOβs duties, authority or responsibilities under the terms of the NEOβs Employment Agreement; |
β | our failure to comply with certain compensation provisions in the Employment Agreements; |
β | requiring the NEO to relocate to another office or location upon or within two years of a Change in Control; or |
β | our failure to require any successor entity to comply with the terms of a respective Employment Agreement. |
Termination for Cause or Without Good Reason Following a Change in Control β
If the Company terminates an NEOβs employment for Cause on or after the date of a Change in Control, the Company must pay to the NEO his or her annual base salary and accrued vacation and must continue to pay and/or provide certain other welfare benefits to the extent not already provided and/or unpaid. If an NEO voluntarily terminates his or her employment without Good Reason upon or following a Change in Control, the Company is obligated to pay the NEO for Accrued Obligations and to provide certain other accrued benefits to the extent not already paid and/or provided. β
Termination upon Death or Disability β
Upon an NEOβs termination of employment as a result of death or disability, other than in Connection with a Change in Control, the Company is obligated to pay the NEO (or the NEOβs estate) an amount equal to Accrued Obligations plus any additional discretionary severance benefits approved by the Compensation Committee. If an NEOβs employment is terminated after the date of a Change in Control by reason of the NEOβs death, the Company must also continue to provide certain welfare benefits to the NEOs family for a stated period. If an NEOβs employment is terminated after the date of a Change in Control by reason of the NEOβs disability, the Company must also continue to provide certain welfare benefits. After the end of the applicable performance period under his or her PSU award agreement, each such deceased or disabled NEO (or the NEOβs estate) shall also receive a pro rata portion of the number of shares of Common Stock (and in the case of Mr. F. Lampropoulos, a pro rata portion of the PSU Cash Incentive) that would have been received under his or her PSU award agreements had the NEO remained in continuous service with the Company. β
Accelerated Stock Option and PSU Vesting Upon a Change in Control β
Under our 2018 Incentive Plan, all otherwise unvested stock options held by NEOs become fully vested upon a Change in Control, without regard to whether the NEO terminates employment. Additionally, the Target PSU Shares under unvested PSU award agreements (and the Target Cash Incentive in the case of Mr. F. Lampropoulos) shall be payable without regard to otherwise applicable performance conditions.
Amounts Payable upon a Change in Control without Termination of Employment β
The following table shows for each NEO the intrinsic value of his or her otherwise unvested stock options and PSUs on December 31, 20202021 that would have vested had a βChange in Controlβ within the meaning of the Employment Agreements occurred on that date. For options, the intrinsic value is calculated by multiplying the number of underlying shares by the closing price of Common Stock on the last trading day of 20202021 and by then subtracting the applicable option exercise price. For PSUs, the intrinsic value is calculated by multiplying the Target PSU Shares by the closing price of Common Stock on the last trading day of 2020,2021, and in the case of Mr. Lampropoulos includes the Target Cash Incentives of $1,000,000 and $666,667 under unvested PSU award agreements.awards granted in 2021 and 2020, respectively. The Employment Agreements do not provide for any additional payments to the NEOs merely upon a Change in Control (i.e., absent a termination of employment of the NEOs). β
| | | | | | | Named Executive Officer | Intrinsic Value of Stock OptionsΒ ($) | Intrinsic Value of Stock Awards (PSUs)Β ($) | Total ($) | Intrinsic Value of Stock OptionsΒ ($) | Intrinsic Value of Stock Awards (PSUs)Β ($) | Total ($) | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | |
β Amounts Payable upon Termination of Employment β
Termination without Cause or For Good Reason in Connection with a Change in Control. βControl.
The following table shows the amounts that would be payable to each NEO if the Company had undergone a Change in Control within the meaning of the Employment Agreements and the NEOβs employment with the Company terminated voluntarily for Good Reason or involuntarily without Cause, in each case, on December 31, 2020. β2021.
Amounts shown in the table do not reflect any accrued vacation and distributions from our 401(k) Plan that are payable to all salaried employees upon termination of employment: β
| | | | | | | | | | | Named Executive Officer | Salary and Bonus Continuation | Stock Option Vesting Acceleration ($) (1) | Stock Award Vesting Acceleration ($) (2)(3) | Health Plan Coverage Continuation ($) (4) | Deferred Compensation Plan ($) (5) | Total ($) | Salary and Bonus Continuation | Stock Option Vesting Acceleration ($) (1) | Stock Award Vesting Acceleration ($) (2)(3) | Health Plan Coverage Continuation ($) (4) | Deferred Compensation Plan ($) (5) | Total ($) | Fred P. Lampropoulos | 7,700,000 | 4,609,555 | 2,177,645 | 48,625 | β | 14,535,825 | 7,690,000 | 4,459,211 | 3,433,807 | 51,122 | β | 15,634,140 | Raul Parra | 1,386,683 | 510,612 | 441,582 | 31,235 | β | 2,370,112 | 1,523,333 | 623,413 | 662,623 | 32,800 | β | 2,842,189 | Ronald A. Frost | 1,433,333 | 1,258,732 | 441,582 | 31,235 | 607,012 | 3,771,894 | 1,440,000 | 1,106,213 | 662,623 | 32,800 | 706,298 | 3,947,954 | Justin J. Lampropoulos | 1,266,667 | 857,112 | 441,582 | 31,235 | β | 2,596,596 | | Brian G. Lloyd | 1,469,333 | 1,183,452 | 441,582 | 31,235 | β | 3,125,602 | 1,474,667 | 1,001,213 | 662,623 | 32,800 | β | 3,171,323 | Joseph C. Wright | | 1,941,001 | 830,713 | 662,623 | 32,800 | 2,810,461 | 6,277,618 |
β
(1) | Stock Option Vesting Acceleration represents the intrinsic value of the otherwise unvested stock options held by NEOs on December 31, 20202021 calculated by multiplying the number of shares underlying such options by the closing price of Company shares on December 31, 20202021 ($55.5162.30 per share), and by then subtracting the applicable exercise price. |
(2) | Stock Award Vesting Acceleration represents the intrinsic value of the unvested PSUs on December 31, 20202021 calculated by multiplying the Target PSU Shares underlying such awards by the closing price of the Company shares on December 31, 20202021 ($55.5162.30 per share). |
(3) | Includes the Target Cash IncentiveIncentives of $1,000,000 and $666,667 for Mr. Lampropoulos under unvested PSUs of $1,000,000 for Mr. F. Lampropoulos. Β PSU awards granted in 2021 and 2020, respectively. |
(4) | Health Plan Coverage Continuation amounts represent the estimated future cost of providing continuing Company-paid coverage under the Companyβs group health, disability and life insurance plans for the applicable severance period. The estimated amounts are based upon December 31, 20202021 actual premium rates, plus a 10% assumed rate of annual premium cost increases. |
(5) | Deferred Compensation Plan amounts represent the account balance in each NEOβs Deferred Compensation Plan account as of December 31, 2020.2021. |
β 66 | Understand. Innovate. Deliver.TM
Involuntary Termination without Cause or Termination For Good Reason (Other Than in Connection with a Change in Control). The following table shows the amounts that would be payable to each NEO if the NEOβs employment had terminated voluntarily for Good Reason or involuntarily without Cause, other than in connection with a Change in Control, on December 31, 20202021 and we had exercised our discretion to pay severance equal to one yearβs salary and the annual bonus earned in 2020. β2021.
The following amounts are in addition to accrued vacation and distributions from our 401(k) Plan that are payable to all salaried employees upon termination of employment: | | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | Named Executive Officer | Β Β | Discretionary Severance ($)Β (1) | Stock Award Vesting Acceleration ($) (2)(3) | Health Plan Coverage Continuation ($) | Deferred Compensation Plan ($)Β (4) | Total ($) | Β Β | Discretionary Severance ($)Β (1) | Stock Award Vesting Acceleration ($) (2)(3) | Health Plan Coverage Continuation ($) | Deferred Compensation Plan ($)Β (4) | Total ($) | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | Ronald A. Frost | Β | 810,000 | 490,662 | β | 607,012 | 1,907,674 | Β | 953,409 | 1,011,337 | β | 706,298 | 2,671,044 | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | |
β
(1) | Assumes the Company exercised its discretion to pay severance equal to one yearβs salary and the 20202021 earned bonus. |
(2) | Stock Award Vesting Acceleration represents the pro rata portion of the intrinsic value of unvested PSUs on December 31, 2020,2021, as amended. The pro rata portion is based on the number of full months of continuous service compared to the number of months in the performance period. The number of shares expected to be awarded is based on the estimated probable FCF and rTSR multipliers as of December 31, 2020,2021 and is multiplied by the closing price of the Company shares on December 31, 20202021 ($55.5162.30 per share) to calculate the intrinsic value. |
(3) | For Mr. F. Lampropoulos, the amount included in this column includes the pro rata portion of unvested PSU Cash Incentives of $1,111,111$2,361,111 under unvested PSU award agreements, which is based on the estimated probable FCF and rTSR multipliers as of December 31, 2020.2021. |
(4) | Deferred Compensation Plan amounts represent the account balance in the NEOβs Deferred Compensation Plan account as of December 31, 2020.2021. |
β
Termination on Account of Death, Disability, Involuntary Termination for Cause or Voluntary Resignation without Good Reason. βReason.
If, on December 31, 2020,2021, an NEO had died, his or her employment had been terminated on account of disability, his or her employment had been terminated for Cause, or he or she had voluntarily resigned without Good Reason, whether or not in connection with a Change in Control, he or she would have been entitled to receive only: β
β | his accrued salary and bonus earned through December 31, 2020;2021; |
β | accrued but unpaid vacation pay through December 31, 2020;2021; |
β | distribution of his vested account balance from our 401(k) Plan; |
β | the payment of insured benefits, if applicable, under our broad-based long-term disability insurance or group term life insurance plans; |
β | distribution of his Deferred Compensation Plan account balance; and |
β | except for termination of employment involuntarily for Cause or as a result of resignation without Good Reason, a pro rata portion of the number of shares of Common Stock (and the PSU Cash Incentive in the case of Mr. F. Lampropoulos) that would have been received under PSU award agreements had the NEO remained in continuous service with the Company through the end of the applicable performance period. |
β
www.merit.com 83 |www.merit.com β 67
CEO Pay Ratio β
The following pay ratio and supporting information compares (x) the annual total compensation for the year ended December 31, 20202021 of our median employee identified as of December 31, 20202021 by taking into account all of our employees other than our CEO, (including full-time and part-time employees and employees on leave) and annualizing permanent employees (full-time and part-time) that did not work a full year, (excluding employees on leave under the Family and Medical Leave Act of 1993, employees called for active military duty, and employees who took an unpaid leave of absence during the period for another reason) (Median Employee) against (y) the annual total compensation of our CEO (as reported in our Summary Compensation Table), as required by SectionΒ 953(b) of the Dodd-Frank Act. As illustrated in the table below, our 20202021 CEO pay ratio was 220.8198.2 to 1.1. | | β | 20202021 Compensation
($) | Fred P. Lampropoulos (1) | 7,703,5087,537,100
| Median Employee (2) | 34,89638,022
|
β
(1) | For additional information, see our Summary Compensation Table beginning on page 73. |
(2) | Amount represents taxable compensation paid, plus the fair value of equity awards granted (if applicable), to the Median Employee during 2020.2021, plus bonus accrued and paid in 2022. |
β We have reviewed the changes in our employee population and employee compensatory arrangements and determined there have been no changes to our employee population or employee compensatory arrangements that would result in a significant change to our pay ratio disclosure. However, we concluded it would no longer be appropriate to use the median employee identified in 2019 as the median employee in 2020 and 2021 because of a change in this employeeβs circumstances that makes such employee no longer a representative employee. Accordingly, as permitted by SEC rules, we identified a new median employee for 2020 and 2021 whose 2019 compensation was substantially similar to that of the 2019 median employee based on the same compensation analysis used to select the 2019 median employee. β
In calculating the original median employee in 2019, we calculated the annual total compensation (annual taxable compensation, plus the fair value of equity awards granted) for all employees of the Company (other than the CEO) for the year ended December 31, 2019. We believe that annual total compensation is a consistently applied compensation measure and appropriate for determining the median-paid employee. We used actual annual total compensation (converted, where applicable, to U.S. dollars based on an average annual exchange rate for the year ended December 31, 2019), and did not make any assumptions or adjustments to the amounts determined. β β β 68 84 |www.merit.com β Understand. Innovate. Deliver.TM
Audit MattersAUDIT MATTERS
β β
Audit Committee Report β
The Audit Committee provides oversight of our accounting and financial reporting processes, systems of internal accounting and financial controls and the audits of our financial statements. The Audit Committee reviewed with our independent registered public accounting firm and management the financial information included in our audited financial statements. All members of the Audit Committee are βindependent,β as defined in the Nasdaq Marketplace Rules. β
Management is responsible for our internal controls and financial reporting process. Our independent registered public accounting firm is responsible for performing an audit of our financial statements in accordance with generally accepted auditing standards in the United States of America and for expressing an opinion on those financial statements based on its audit. The Audit Committee reviews these processes on behalf of the Board. The Audit Committee has reviewed and discussed with our management and our independent registered public accounting firm the audited financial statements contained in our Annual Report on Form 10-K.Report. The Audit Committee has also reviewed and discussed managementβs assessment of the effectiveness of our internal control over financial reporting, and the opinion of our independent registered public accounting firm on the effectiveness of our internal control over financial reporting. β
The Audit Committee also has discussed with our independent registered public accounting firm the matters required to be discussed by Auditing Standards 1301 (βAS 1301β Communication with Audit Committee), as amended. β
The Audit Committee has received the written disclosures and the letter from our independent registered public accounting firm required by AS 1301, as amended, as adopted by the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board, and has discussed with the independent registered public accounting firm its independence. The Audit Committee has also considered whether the provision of the non-audit services described herein under the caption βProposal No. 5 - Ratification of Appointment of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firmβ is compatible with maintaining the independence of the independent registered public accounting firm. β
Based on the review and discussions referred to above, the Audit Committee recommended to the Board that the audited financial statements be included in our Annual Report on Form 10-K. βReport.
| β Audit Committee Lynne N. Ward (Chair) David K. FloydStephen C. Evans
Thomas J. Gunderson F. Ann Millner, Ed. D. β
|
β β 85www.merit.com | www.merit.com
β 69
Appointment of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm
β
| | | Proposal No. 5β 3:Ratification of Appointment of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm | Board Recommendation
| β
| The Board unanimously recommends a vote FOR this proposal.proposal | β
|
β Subject to shareholder ratification, the Audit Committee has recommended, and the Board has appointed the firm of Deloitte & Touche LLP, (Deloitte) independent registered public accountants, to audit the financial statements of the Company for the year ending December 31, 2021.2022. Deloitte has acted as the independent public accounting firm for the Company since 1988. β
The Board anticipates that representatives of Deloitte will be participating in the Annual Meeting, will have an opportunity to make a statement if they so desire, and will be available to respond to appropriate questions. β
Fees Paid to Our Independent Certified Public Accounting Firm β
The following table presents aggregate fees for audits of our consolidated financial statements and fees billed for other services rendered by Deloitte for the years ended December 31, 20202021 and 2019. β2020.
| | | | β | 2020 ($) | 2019 ($) | 2021 ($) | 2020 ($) | Audit Fees (1) | 1,173,847 | 1,384,763 | 1,378,299 | 1,173,847 | Audit-Related Fees (2) | 33,075 | 30,864 | 1,002,196 | 108,075 | Tax Fees (3) | 532,351 | 476,450 | 588,329 | 532,351 | All Other Fees (4) | 75,000 | 121,670 | β | Total | 1,814,273 | 2,013,747 | 2,968,824 | 1,814,273 |
β
(1) | Audit Fees: The aggregate fees billed by Deloitte, the member firms of Deloitte Touche Tohmatsu, and their respective affiliates (collectively, the Deloitte Firms) for professional services rendered for the audits and reviews of our financial statements filed with the SEC on Forms 10-K, 10-Q and 8-K. Audit fees8-K, for 2020 and 2019 also include fees for the audit of managementβs assessment of the effectiveness of internal control over financial reporting and the audit of the effectiveness of our internal control over financial reporting under Section 404 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002.2002, for services provided in connection with statutory and regulatory filings or engagements, and for services provided in connection with our registration statements. |
(2) | Audit-Related Fees: The aggregate fees billed by the Deloitte Firms for all audit-related services, including an auditaudits of our employee benefit plan, (in both years).due diligence services, and certain accounting consultation services. |
(3) | Tax Fees: The aggregate fees billed by the Deloitte Firms for tax compliance, tax advice and tax planning. |
(4) | All Other Fees: The aggregateDuring 2020 fees billed by the Deloitte Firms related toassociated with due diligence services rendered during 2020 and 2019, respectively.of $75,000 were presented in βAll Other Fees.β For comparability, they have been included as Audit-Related Fees in the current year. |
β Pre-Approval Policies and Procedures β
The Audit Committee ensures that the Company engages its independent registered public accounting firm to provide only audit and non-audit services that are compatible with maintaining the independence of its public accountants. The Audit Committee approves or pre-approves all services provided by our public accountants. Permitted services include audit and audit-related services, tax and other non-audit related services. Certain services are identified as restricted. Restricted services are those services that may not be provided by our external public accountants, whether identified in statute or determined in our opinion to be incompatible with the role of an independent auditor. All fees identified in the preceding table were approved by the Audit Committee. During 2020,2021, the Audit Committee reviewed all non-audit services provided by our independent registered public accounting firm and concluded that the provision of such non-audit services was compatible with maintaining the independence of the external public accountants. β β 70 86 |www.merit.com β Understand. Innovate. Deliver.TM
Stock Ownership and TradingSTOCK OWNERSHIP AND TRADING
β Principal Holders of Voting Securities β
The following table sets forth information as of AprilΒ 20, 2021,MarchΒ 22, 2022, with respect to the beneficial ownership of shares of Common Stock by each person known by the Company to be the beneficial owner of more than 5% of the Common Stock, by each director, by each director nominee, by each NEO and by all directors and executive officers as a group. β
For each individual and group included in the table below, percentage ownership is calculated by dividing the number of shares beneficially owned by such person or group by the sum of the 55,958,20156,634,691 shares of Common Stock outstanding as of AprilΒ 20, 2021,MarchΒ 22, 2022, plus the number of shares of Common Stock that such person or group had the right to acquire on or within 60 days after AprilΒ 20, 2021. βMarchΒ 22, 2022.
Unless otherwise noted, each person named has sole voting and investment power with respect to the shares indicated. β
| | | | | Principal Shareholders | Number of Shares | Percentage of Outstanding Common Stock | Number ofΒ Shares | PercentageΒ ofΒ Outstanding CommonΒ Stock | Blackrock, Inc. (1) | 7,610,111 | 13.6% | 8,334,516 | 14.7% | The Vanguard Group, Inc. (1) | 5,620,791 | 10.0% | 5,737,781 | 10.1% | William Blair Investment Management, LLC (1) | | 3,357,638 | 5.9% | ArrowMark Colorado Holdings, LLC (1) | 4,523,911 | 8.1% | 3,111,000 | 5.5% | Starboard Value LP (1) | 3,984,085 | 7.1% | | William Blair Investment Management, LLC (1) | 3,387,365 | 6.1% | | β | β | β | β | β | Officers, Directors and Nominees | β | β | β | β | Fred P. Lampropoulos (2) (3) | 1,386,699 | 2.5% | 1,536,815 | 2.7% | Ronald A. Frost (2) (3) | 138,808 | * | 162,192 | * | Joseph C. Wright (2) (3) | | 110,814 | * | Brian G. Lloyd (3) | | 88,317 | * | A. Scott Anderson (3) | 102,928 | * | 83,337 | * | Brian G. Lloyd (3) | 81,877 | * | | Justin J. Lampropoulos (3) | 70,524 | * | | F. Ann Millner, Ed.D. (3) | 68,090 | * | 72,278 | * | Thomas J. Gunderson (3) | 49,166 | * | 53,354 | * | Raul Parra (2) (3) | 32,430 | * | 42,686 | * | Jill Anderson (3) | 20,650 | * | 27,230 | * | Lynne N. Ward (3) | 7,434 | * | 9,585 | * | David K. Floyd | 425 | * | 5,772 | * | Lonny J. Carpenter | 370 | * | 4,558 | * | James T. Hogan | | 4,188 | * | Stephen C. Evans | - | * | - | * | James T. Hogan | - | * | | Laura S. Kaiser | | - | * | Michael R. McDonnell | | - | * | Total Officers, Directors and Nominees (17 people) | 2,080,387 | 3.7% | 2,203,564 | 3.8% |
β
*Β Β Β Β Β Β Represents a holding of less than 1.0% β (1) | Based upon the most recent Schedules 13F or 13G available on the SECβs website as of April 20, 2021,March 22, 2022, with holdings reported as of December 31, 2020 (March 31, 2021 for The Vanguard Group, Inc).2021. Number of shares listed represents aggregate number of shares of Common Stock beneficially owned by each reporting person as indicated in the applicable Schedule 13F or 13G report. |
(2) | The computations above include the following share amounts that are held in our 401(k) Plan on behalf of participants as of April 20, 2021:March 22, 2022: |
| β | Mr. F. Lampropoulos, 95,88096,522 shares |
| β | Mr. Frost, 16,28416,265 shares |
| β | Mr. Parra, 2,9062,872 shares |
| β | All executive officers and directors as a group, 115,069115,676 shares |
(3) | The computations above include the following share amounts that are subject to options exercisable within 60 days after April 20, 2021,March 22, 2022, none of which had been exercised as of such date: |
| | β Mr. F. Lampropoulos, 321,544458,580 shares | β Mr. Gunderson, 49,166Dr. Millner, 54,166 shares | β Mr. Frost, 120,181130,783 shares | β Mr. Parra, 27,181Gunderson, 49,166 shares | β Mr. Anderson, 84,166Wright, 93,783 shares | β Ms. Anderson, 20,650Mr. Parra, 32,783 shares | β Mr. Lloyd, 76,18178,783 shares | β Ms. Ward, 7,434Anderson, 23,892 shares | β Mr. J. Lampropoulos, 68,181Anderson, 39,166 shares β Dr. Millner, 54,166 shares
| β All executive officers and directors as a group, 935,031963,523 shares | β | β |
Delinquent Section 16(a) Reports Section 16(a) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (Exchange Act) requires directors, certain officers, and greater than ten percent holders of our common stock to file reports indicating their holdings of, and transactions in, our equity securities. Based on the review of these reports and written representations from our directors and the applicable officers, we believe that in 2021 all reports, except one, were timely filed with the SEC. An inadvertently late Form 4 was filed on behalf of A. Scott Anderson, one of our directors, that related to the exercise of stock options on May 17, 2021. Securities Authorized for Issuance Under Equity Compensation Plans The following table contains information regarding our equity compensation plans as of December 31, 2021 (in thousands, except weighted-average price): Plan Category | Number of securities to be issued upon exercise of outstanding options, warrants and rights (a) | Weighted-average exercise price of outstanding options, warrants and rights (b) | Number of securities remaining available for future issuance under equity compensation plans (excluding securities reflected in column (a)) (c) | Equity compensation plans approved by security holders | 3,871 (1)(2) | 44.70 (3) | 3,327 (4) |
(1) | Consists of 1,573,417 shares of Common Stock subject to options granted under the Merit Medical Systems, Inc. 2006 Long-Term Incentive Plan, 2,067,000 shares of Common Stock subject to options granted under the 2018 Long-Term Incentive Plan, up to 203,938 shares of Common Stock subject to performance stock units granted under the 2018 Incentive Plan, and 26,226 shares of Common Stock subject to restricted stock units under the 2018 Incentive Plan. |
(2) | Performance stock units are included in column (a) based on actual FCF and rTSR multipliers for unvested awards with completed performance periods and based on the maximum potential payout for awards with incomplete performance periods. |
(3) | The weighted-average exercise price included in the table excludes the performance stock units and restricted stock units included in column (a), as the underlying shares are issued and distributed to the recipient upon vesting and do not have an exercise price. |
(4) | Consists of 121,959 shares available to be issued under the 1996 Merit Medical Systems, Inc. Employee Stock Purchase Plan and 3,205,529 shares available to be issued under the 2018 Incentive Plan. |
β β β β β 72 88 |www.merit.com β Understand. Innovate. Deliver.TM
Other Proxy InformationOTHER PROXY INFORMATION
β Information about the Annual Meeting and Voting β
On behalf of the Company, the Board is soliciting your proxy to vote at our Annual Meeting (or at any adjournment of the meeting). This Proxy Statement includes information you need to know to vote at the Annual Meeting. β
Date, Time and Place of the Annual Meeting β
Date:June 17, 2021May 19, 2022 β Time:2:00 p.m. (Mountain Time) We encourage you to access the Annual Meeting prior to the start time and allow plenty of time to log into the Annual Meeting. β Place:Online at www.virtualshareholdermeeting.com/MMSI2021MMSI2022 β The Annual Meeting platform is fully supported across browsers and devices running the most updated versions of the applicable software and plugins. Participants should ensure that they have a strong Internet connection wherever they intend to participate in the Annual Meeting. β
This Proxy Statement, the Notice of the 20212022 Annual Meeting of Shareholders and the accompanying form of proxy are first being mailed or made available to our shareholders on or about May 3, 2021. βApril 7, 2022.
We will bear all costs and expenses relating to the solicitation of proxies, including the costs of preparing, printing and mailing to shareholders this Proxy Statement and accompanying materials, as well as the expense of making this Proxy Statement and accompanying materials available on the Internet (although shareholders must bear any costs associated with their Internet access). In addition to the solicitation of proxies by use of the mail and the Internet, our directors, officers, and employees, without receiving additional compensation, may solicit proxies personally or by telephone, electronic mail or facsimile. Arrangements will be made with brokerage firms and other custodians, nominees and fiduciaries for the forwarding of solicitation materials to the beneficial owners of the shares of Common Stock held by those persons, and we will reimburse those brokerage firms, custodians, nominees and fiduciaries for reasonable out-of-pocket expenses incurred by them in connection therewith. β
The Board has fixed the close of business on April 20, 2021March 22, 2022 as the Record Date for determination of shareholders entitled to receive notice of and to vote at the Annual Meeting. As of the Record Date, there were issued and outstanding 55,958,20156,634,691 shares of Common Stock. The holders of record of the shares of Common Stock on the Record Date entitled to be voted at the Annual Meeting are entitled to cast one vote per share on each matter submitted to a vote at the Annual Meeting. β
Method for Electronic Viewing and Printing of the Proxy Materials β
The Record Date is April 20, 2021.March 22, 2022. Shareholders of record on the Record Date will be entitled to notice and to vote, in person or by proxy, at the Annual Meeting and any adjournments or postponements thereof. β
SEC rules allow companies to furnish their proxy materials over the Internet. As a result, the Company is mailing to most of its shareholders a Notice of Internet Availability of Proxy Materials (the Notice) instead of a paper copy of this Proxy Statement and our Annual Report on Form 10-K.Report. The Notice contains instructions on how to access those documents over the Internet. The Notice also contains instructions on how to request a paper copy of our proxy materials, including this Proxy Statement, the Annual Report on Form 10-K and a form of proxy card or voting instruction card. All shareholders who do not receive a Notice will receive a paper copy of the proxy materials by mail. We believe this process will allow us to provide
shareholders with the information they need in a more efficient manner, while reducing the environmental impact and lowering the costs of printing and distributing these proxy materials.
All shareholders may choose to access our proxy materials on the website (www.proxyvote.com) or may request to receive a printed set of our proxy materials. This Proxy Statement contains information regarding the proposals to be considered at the Annual Meeting, and shareholders are encouraged to read it in its entirety. β
Proxies β
Shares of Common Stock that are entitled to be voted at the Annual Meeting and are represented by properly executed proxies will be voted in accordance with the instructions on those proxies. β
If no instructions are indicated, shares on a properly executed proxy will be voted: β
β | FOR the election of each of the four director nominees identified in this Proxy Statement; |
β | FOR the proposal to increase the number of shares authorized for the grant of awards under the 2018 Incentive Plan; |
β | FOR the proposal to increase the number of shares authorized for purchase under the ESPP; |
β | FOR the non-binding resolution to approve the compensation of our NEOs; |
β | FOR the ratification of the appointment of Deloitte to serve as our independent registered public accounting firm for the year ending December 31, 2021.2022. |
In respect of any other matters that may properly come before the Annual Meeting, shares represented by properly executed proxies may be voted at the discretion of the proxy holder. The Board is not currently aware of any other matters to be presented at the Annual Meeting. β
Revocation of Proxies β
A shareholder who has executed and returned a proxy may revoke it at any time prior to its exercise at the Annual Meeting by executing and returning a proxy bearing a later date by mail, by voting via the Internet, by filing with Brian G. Lloyd, our Corporate Secretary, at the address set forth above, a written notice of revocation bearing a later date than the proxy being revoked, or by voting the Common Stock covered thereby in person at the Annual Meeting. In order to revoke a proxy executed with respect to shares held in street name, the shareholder must contact the appropriate broker or nominee. β
Broker Non-Votes β
Shares of Common Stock that are held in βstreet name,β which means shares of Common Stock held of record by a trustee or in an account at a brokerage firm, bank, dealer, or other similar organization (collectively, brokerage firms), may be voted, even if the beneficial holder does not provide the brokerage firm with voting instructions. Brokerage firms have the authority under applicable securities rules to cast votes on certain βroutineβ matters, even if they do not receive instructions from their customers. However, the ratification of our independent registered accounting firm is considered the only routine matter for which brokerage firms may vote un-instructed shares. The election of directors and the advisory vote to approve named executive officer compensation are not considered routine matters under current securities rules. When a proposal is not a routine matter and the brokerage firm has not received voting instructions from the beneficial owner of the shares with respect to that proposal, the brokerage firm cannot vote the shares on that proposal. This is called a βbroker non-vote.β β
As all of the proposals described in this Proxy Statement, other than the proposal to ratify our independent registered accounting firm, are considered to be non-routine matters, it is particularly important that beneficial owners instruct their brokers how they wish to vote their shares.
Vote Required β
A majority of the issued and outstanding shares of Common Stock entitled to vote, properly represented in person or by proxy, is required for a quorum at the Annual Meeting. Abstentions and broker non-votes will be counted as βrepresentedβ for the purpose of determining the presence or absence of a quorum. Under the Utah Revised Business Corporation Act, once a quorum is established, shareholder approval with respect to a particular proposal is generally obtained when the votes cast in favor of the proposal exceed the votes cast against the proposal. β74 | Understand. Innovate. Deliver.TM
Holders of shares of Common Stock are entitled to one vote at the Annual Meeting for each share of Common Stock held of record on the Record Date. The vote required for each of the proposals described in this Proxy Statement is as follows: β
Proposal 1: In the election of directors, shareholders will not be allowed to cumulate their votes. Each director-nominee who receives a majority of the votes cast with respect to his or her election will be elected as a director of the Company. β
Proposal 2: The proposal to increase the number of shares authorized for the grant of awards under the 2018 Incentive Plan requires that the votes cast in favor of the proposal must exceed the votes cast against the proposal. β
Proposal 3: The proposal to increase the number of shares authorized for purchase under the ESPP requires that the votes cast in favor of the proposal must exceed the votes cast against the proposal.
β
Proposal 4: The advisory vote on executive compensation is non-binding. Nevertheless, we will record the number of votes cast in favor of and against the proposal and will report the voting results.
β
Proposal 53: The proposal to ratify the appointment of Deloitte to serve as our independent registered public accounting firm for the year ending December 31, 20212022 requires that the votes cast in favor of the proposal must exceed the votes cast against the proposal. β
Abstentions and broker non-votes will not affect the outcome of any proposals to be considered at the Annual Meeting; however, because the fifth proposal is considered a routine matter, brokerage firms may vote un-instructed shares for or against the proposal. β
| β No Dissentersβ Rights of Appraisal There are no rights of appraisal or similar dissentersβ rights with respect to any matter to be acted upon pursuant to this Proxy Statement. β
|
Attending the Annual Meeting The Annual Meeting will be online and a completely virtual meeting of shareholders dueshareholders. This format is more cost-efficient and makes the meeting accessible to the ongoing public health impact of the COVID-19 pandemic. This decision was made in light of the protocols that federal, state, and local governments have imposed and taking into account the health and safetymore of our shareholders, directors, members of management and employees. Conducting a virtual meeting will also allow shareholders whose travel may be restricted due to the COVID-19 pandemic to participate in the meeting. βshareholders.
To participate in the Annual Meeting, visit www.virtualshareholdermeeting.com/MMSI2021MMSI2022 and enter the 16-digit control number included on your Notice, on your proxy card, or on the voting instructions that accompanied your proxy materials. If you do not have your 16-digit control number, you will be able to access and listen to the Annual Meeting but you will not be able to vote your shares or submit questions during the Annual Meeting. If you wish to submit a question before the meeting, you may log into
www.proxyvote.com and enter your 16-digit control number. Once past the login screen, click on βQuestion for Management,β type in your question, and click βSubmit.β Alternatively, if you want to submit your question during the meeting, log into the virtual meeting platform at www.virtualshareholdermeeting.com/MMSI2021,MMSI2022, type your question into the βAsk a Questionβ field, and click βSubmit.β β
Questions pertinent to meeting matters will be answered during the meeting, subject to time constraints. Questions regarding personal matters, including those related to employment or product or service issues, are not pertinent to meeting matters and therefore will not be answered. β
You may begin to log into the Annual Meeting platform beginning at 1:45 p.m. MDT on June 17, 2021.May 19, 2022. The Annual Meeting will begin promptly at 2:00 p.m. MDT on June 17, 2021.May 19, 2022. A list of registered shareholders of record entitled to vote shall be open to any shareholder for any purpose relevant to the Annual Meeting for ten days before the Annual Meeting, during normal business hours, at the Office of the Corporate Secretary. A list of registered shareholders as of the close of business on the Record Date will also be available for examination by the shareholders throughout the meeting at www.virtualshareholdermeeting.com/MMSI2021.MMSI2022. The virtual meeting platform is fully supported across browsers (Internet Explorer, Firefox, Chrome, and Safari) and devices (desktops, laptops, tablets, and cell phones) running the most updated version of applicable software and plugins. Participants should ensure that they have a strong Wi-Fi connection wherever they intend to participate in
the meeting. Participants should also give themselves plenty of time to log in and ensure that they can hear streaming audio prior to the start of the meeting. If you encounter any difficulties accessing the Annual Meeting during the check-in or meeting time, please call the technical support number that will be posted on the Annual Meeting login page. Technical support will be available starting at 1:45 p.m. MDT on June 17, 2021May 19, 2022 and through the conclusion of the meeting. Proxy Solicitation on Behalf of the Board The Board is soliciting proxies to provide an opportunity for all shareholders to vote, whether or not the shareholders are able to participate in the Annual Meeting or any adjournment or postponement thereof. Directors, officers and employees of the Company may solicit proxies on behalf of the Board in person, by mail, by telephone or by electronic communication. The proxy representatives of the Board will not be specially compensated for their services in this regard. β
Methods of Voting β
The method of voting by proxy differs for shares of Common Stock registered directly in a shareholderβs name, considered the shareholder of record, and shares held in βstreet name,β which means shares held of record by a trustee or in an account at a brokerage firm, bank, dealer, or other similar organization. β
Holders of Record β
If the shareholder holds shares as a record holder, the shareholder may vote the shares by proxy on www.proxyvote.com, by means of the telephone (at 1-800-690-6903), by mail (by requesting a printed copy of this Proxy Statement and then voting by mail), or by participating in the Annual Meeting and voting over the Internet. Each method is discussed further below: β
β | Voting by Mail. If a shareholder chooses to vote by mail, simply mark the proxy card mailed or transmitted to the shareholder (the Proxy) and complete, sign, date and mail it in the postage-paid envelope provided. The Proxy must be completed, signed and dated by the shareholder or the shareholderβs authorized representative. |
β | Voting by Telephone. Shareholders of record can vote by phone by following the instructions on the Proxy or by calling toll-free at 1-800-690-6903. Voice prompts will instruct shareholders to vote their shares and confirm that their vote has been properly recorded. |
β | Voting over the Internet. Shareholders of record can vote on the Internet by accessing the Internet at www.proxyvote.com. As with telephone voting, shareholders can confirm that their votes have been properly recorded. We provide Internet proxy voting to allow shareholders to vote their shares online, with procedures designed to ensure the authenticity and correctness of proxy vote instructions. However, please be aware that shareholders must bear any costs associated with their Internet access, such as usage charges from Internet access providers and telephone companies. |
β | Voting in Person. The Annual Meeting will be held entirely online, so there will be no way to vote in person at the meeting. Registered shareholders may vote over the Internet during the Annual Meeting. |
β If a shareholder votes his, her or its Proxy by telephone, the Internet or by returning the Proxy to us before the Annual Meeting, the individuals designated in the Proxy will vote as the Proxy directs. If a shareholder votes by telephone or over the Internet, the shareholder does not need to return the Proxy. β
Telephone and Internet voting facilities for shareholders will be available 24 hours a day and will close at 11:59Β P.M. ET on June 16, 2021May 18, 2022 for shares held directly and by 11:59 P.M. ET on June 14, 2021May 16, 2022 for shares held in the Companyβs 401(k) Profit Sharing Plan. β76 | Understand. Innovate. Deliver.TM
Holders in βStreet Nameβ β
If a shareholder holds shares in βstreet name,β the shareholder should have received a voting instruction form from the broker, bank or other nominee holding the shares. The shareholder should follow the instructions in the voting instruction form in order to instruct your broker, bank or other nominee on how to vote your shares. The availability of telephone and Internet voting will depend on the voting process of the broker, bank or nominee. β
A large number of banks and brokerage firms are participating in the Broadridge Investor Communications Solutions, Inc. (Broadridge) online program. This program provides eligible shareholders the opportunity to vote via the Internet or by telephone. If a shareholderβs bank or brokerage firm is participating in Broadridgeβs program, the voting form will provide instructions. β
If a shareholder holds shares in βstreet nameβ and the shareholder wishes to vote at the Annual Meeting, the shareholder will need the 16-digit control number included on her, his or its proxyΒ cardΒ orΒ voting instruction form (if the shareholder received a printed copy of the proxy materials) or included inΒ theΒ email to the shareholder, if she, he or it received the proxy materials by email in order to be able to vote her, his or its shares at the Annual Meeting. β
Shareholders receiving multiple Notices, or whose shares are registered in more than one name or are registered in different accounts, should follow the voting instructions on each Notice to ensure that all of their shares are voted. β
Employee 401(k) Profit Sharing Plan Shares β
Employees participating and owning shares in the Companyβs 401(k) Profit Sharing Plan will receive a voting instruction form. Your executed form will provide voting instructions to the plan trustee.Β If no instructions are provided, the plan trustee will vote the shares assigned to your plan account in the same proportion as to which it has received instructions from other plan participants. To allow sufficient time for voting, your voting instructions must be received by the trustee by 11:59 P.M. Eastern Time on June 14, 2021.May 16, 2022. You may not vote your shares held in the Companyβs 401(k) Profit Sharing Plan virtually at the Annual Meeting. β www.merit.com 93 |www.merit.com β 77
Additional Information and Additional Copies of Proxy Materials β
We will provide without charge to any person from whom a proxy is solicited by the Board, upon the written request of that person, a copy of our Annual Report, on Form 10-K, including the financial statements and schedules thereto (as well as exhibits thereto, if specifically requested). β
We will generally deliver one copy of this Proxy Statement, or Notice, as applicable, to each address where multiple record holders of our Common Stock reside, unless we have received instructions to the contrary (i.e., βhouseholdingβ). Upon written or oral request, we will promptly deliver another copy of this Proxy Statement and the Annual Report, on Form 10-K, or Notice, as applicable, to any holder of our Common Stock living at a shared address where we have delivered only one copy. Shareholders who receive multiple copies of this Proxy Statement or the Notice at their address and would like to request householding of their communications should contact their broker. β
Requests for copies of our Annual Report, on Form 10-K, additional information or additional Proxy Statements should be directed to: | β Merit Medical Systems, Inc. Attn: Brian G. Lloyd, Corporate Secretary 1600 West Merit Parkway South Jordan, Utah 84095 β
|
β β
Other Matters β
As of the date of this Proxy Statement, the Board knows of no matters to be presented for action at the Annual Meeting other than those matters described in the preceding pages. If, however, any further business should properly come before the Annual Meeting, the persons named as proxies in the accompanying form will vote on that business in accordance with their best judgment. β
Shareholder Proposals for Annual Meeting 2022 β2023
If any shareholder intends to present a proposal to be considered for inclusion in our proxy materials in connection with our 20222023 annual meeting of shareholders, the proposal must be in proper form (per SEC RegulationΒ 14A, RuleΒ 14a-8 - Shareholder Proposals) and received by our Corporate Secretary no later than January 3,December 8, 2022. Nominations of persons for election as directors must be made consistent with the provisions of our Bylaws, including the requirement that the shareholder provide timely notice of the nomination in proper written form to our Corporate Secretary. β
In accordance with the procedures set forth in our Bylaws, shareholders who wish to submit a proposal for consideration at our 20222023 annual meeting of shareholders, including a nomination for director, but who do not wish to submit a proposal for inclusion in our proxy statement, must deliver notice of the proposal to our Corporate Secretary at our principal executive offices no earlier than January 18,December 20, 2022 and no later than February 17, 2022.JanuaryΒ 19, 2023. Such proposals must contain all information required by our Bylaws. If the month and day of the next annual meeting is advanced or delayed by more than 30 calendar days from the month and day of the annual meeting to which this Proxy Statement relates, we will inform our shareholders of the change in a timely manner, as well as any change in the date by which proposals of shareholders must be received. β 78 94 |www.merit.com β Understand. Innovate. Deliver.TM
Non-GAAP Financial Measures β
Although our financial statements are prepared in accordance with accounting principles generally accepted in the U.S. (GAAP) and the majority of the financial measures described in this Proxy Statement are calculated in accordance with GAAP, the Board and Compensation Committeeits committees use certain non-GAAP financial measures referenced in this Proxy Statement in order to assess year-over-year performance. We believe that such non-GAAP financial measures provide investors with useful information regarding the underlying business trends and performance of our ongoing operations and can be useful for period-over-period comparisons of such operations. Non-GAAP financial measures referenced in this Proxy Statement include: β
β | non-GAAP gross margin; |
β | non-GAAP net income; and |
β | non-GAAP earnings per share |
βnon-GAAP earnings per shareβ
β
β
non-gaap financial measures β
Non-GAAP Gross Margin: Non-GAAP gross margin is calculated by reducing GAAP cost of sales by amounts recorded for amortization of intangible assets, certain inventory write-offs and inventory mark-up related to acquisitions. β
Non-GAAP Net Income: Non-GAAP net income is calculated by adjusting GAAP net income for certain items which are deemed by Meritβs management to be outside of core operations and vary in amount and frequency among periods, such as expenses related to new acquisitions, non-cash expenses related to amortization or write-off of previously acquired tangible and intangible assets, certain severance expenses, performance-based stock compensation expenses, corporate transformation expenses, expenses resulting from non-ordinary course litigation or administrative proceedings and resulting settlements, government proceedings or changes in tax or industry regulations, debt issuance costs, and gains or losses on disposal of certain assets, as well as other items set forth in the tables below. β
Non-GAAP Earnings Per Share: Non-GAAP earnings per share is defined as non-GAAP net income divided by the diluted shares outstanding for the corresponding period. β
|
β Our management team uses these and other non-GAAP financial measures to evaluate our profitability and efficiency, to compare operating results to prior periods, to evaluate changes in the operating results of our operating segments, and to measure and allocate financial resources internally. Our Board and Compensation Committee may also use these non-GAAP financial measures to assess the performance of certain of our NEOs. Neither our management nor our Board or Compensation Committee consider any such non-GAAP measures in isolation or as an alternative to such measures determined in accordance with GAAP. β
You should consider non-GAAP measures used in this Proxy Statement in addition to, not as a substitute for, financial reporting measures prepared in accordance with GAAP. These non-GAAP financial measures generally exclude some, but not all, items that may affect our financial results. In addition, they are subject to inherent limitations as they reflect the exercise of judgment by management about which items are excluded. We believe it is useful to exclude such items in the calculation of non-GAAP net income, non-GAAP earnings per share and non-GAAP gross margin (in each case, as further illustrated in the reconciliation tables below) because such amounts in any specific period may not directly correlate to the underlying performance of our business operations and can vary significantly between periods as a result
of factors such as such new acquisitions, non-cash expenses related to amortization or write-off of previously acquired tangible and intangible assets, certain severance expenses, performance-based stock compensation expenses, corporate transformation expenses, expenses resulting from non-ordinary course litigation or administrative proceedings and resulting settlements, government proceedings or
changes in tax or industry regulations, debt issuance costs, and gains or losses on disposal of certain assets. We may incur similar types of expenses in the future, and the non-GAAP information included in this Proxy Statement should not be viewed as a statement or indication that these types of expenses will not recur. Additionally, the non-GAAP financial measures used in this Proxy Statement may not be comparable with similarly titled measures of other companies. We urge readers to review the reconciliations of our non-GAAP financial measures to the comparable GAAP financial measures, and not to rely on any single financial measure to evaluate our business or results of operations. β
Tables reconciling our 2021, 2020, 2019, 2018 2017 and 20162017 non-GAAP gross margin, non-GAAP net income and non-GAAP earnings per share to equivalent GAAP measures are included below: Reconciliation of GAAP Net (LOSS) and (Loss) per share to Non-GAAP Net Income and earnings per share (Unaudited, in thousands except per share amounts) | | | | | | | | | | | | | β | Year Ended December 31, 2021 | β | Pre-Tax | Tax Impact | After-Tax | PerΒ Share Impact | GAAP net income | $ | 53,917 | β | $ | (5,463) | β | β | $ | 48,454 | β | $ | 0.84 | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | Non-GAAP adjustments: | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | Cost of Sales | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | Amortization of intangibles | β | 42,453 | β | β | (10,543) | β | β | β | 31,910 | β | β | 0.56 | Inventory write-off (1) | β | 1,620 | β | β | (202) | β | β | β | 1,418 | β | β | 0.02 | Operating expenses | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | Contingent consideration benefit | β | 3,161 | β | β | 52 | β | β | β | 3,213 | β | β | 0.06 | Impairment charges | β | 4,283 | β | β | (481) | β | β | β | 3,802 | β | β | 0.07 | Amortization of intangibles | β | 7,183 | β | β | (1,798) | β | β | β | 5,385 | β | β | 0.09 | Performance-based share-based compensation (2) | β | 5,035 | β | β | (604) | β | β | β | 4,431 | β | β | 0.08 | Corporate transformation and restructuring (3) | β | 18,649 | β | β | (4,620) | β | β | β | 14,029 | β | β | 0.24 | Acquisition-related | β | 8,473 | β | β | (2,100) | β | β | β | 6,373 | β | β | 0.11 | Medical Device Regulation expenses (4) | β | 4,036 | β | β | (1,001) | β | β | β | 3,035 | β | β | 0.05 | Other (5) | β | 16,652 | β | β | (2,977) | β | β | β | 13,675 | β | β | 0.24 | Other (Income) Expense | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | Amortization of long-term debt issuance costs | β | 604 | β | β | (150) | β | β | β | 454 | β | β | 0.01 | β | β | β | β | β | Non-GAAP net income | $ | 166,066 | β | $ | (29,887) | β | β | $ | 136,179 | β | $ | 2.37 | β | β | β | β | β | Diluted shares | β | β | β | 57,359 |
β β 80 | Understand. Innovate. Deliver.TM
β Reconciliation of GAAP Net (LOSS) and (Loss) per share to Non-GAAP Net Income and earnings per share (Unaudited, in thousands except per share amounts) | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | β | Year Ended December 31, 2020 | Year Ended December 31, 2020 | β | Pre-Tax | Tax Impact | After-Tax | Per Share Impact | Pre-Tax | Tax Impact | After-Tax | PerΒ Share Impact | GAAP net income | $ | (13,231) | β | $ | 3,388 | β | β | $ | (9,843) | β | $ | (0.18) | $ | (13,231) | β | $ | 3,388 | β | β | $ | (9,843) | β | $ | (0.18) | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | Non-GAAP adjustments: | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | Cost of Sales | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | Amortization of intangibles | β | 50,696 | β | β | (13,065) | β | β | β | 37,631 | β | β | 0.67 | β | 50,696 | β | β | (13,065) | β | β | β | 37,631 | β | β | 0.67 | Inventory write-off (1) | β | 1,752 | β | β | (465) | β | β | β | 1,287 | β | β | 0.02 | β | 1,752 | β | β | (465) | β | β | β | 1,287 | β | β | 0.02 | Inventory mark-up related to acquisitions | β | 191 | β | β | (49) | β | β | β | 142 | β | β | 0.00 | β | 191 | β | β | (49) | β | β | β | 142 | β | β | 0.00 | Operating expenses | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | Contingent consideration benefit | β | (7,960) | β | β | 466 | β | β | β | (7,494) | β | β | (0.13) | β | (7,960) | β | β | 466 | β | β | β | (7,494) | β | β | (0.13) | Impairment charges | β | 36,504 | β | β | (7,115) | β | β | β | 29,389 | β | β | 0.52 | β | 36,504 | β | β | (7,115) | β | β | β | 29,389 | β | β | 0.52 | Amortization of intangibles | β | 7,943 | β | β | (2,141) | β | β | β | 5,802 | β | β | 0.10 | β | 7,943 | β | β | (2,141) | β | β | β | 5,802 | β | β | 0.10 | Performance-based share-based compensation (2) | β | 3,735 | β | β | (475) | β | β | β | 3,260 | β | β | 0.06 | β | 3,735 | β | β | (475) | β | β | β | 3,260 | β | β | 0.06 | Corporate transformation and restructuring (3) | β | 14,105 | β | β | (3,683) | β | β | β | 10,422 | β | β | 0.18 | β | 14,175 | β | β | (3,700) | β | β | β | 10,475 | β | β | 0.19 | Acquisition-related | β | 1,299 | β | β | (334) | β | β | β | 965 | β | β | 0.02 | β | 1,229 | β | β | (317) | β | β | β | 912 | β | β | 0.02 | Medical Device Regulation expenses (4) | β | 1,379 | β | β | (359) | β | β | β | 1,020 | β | β | 0.02 | β | 1,379 | β | β | (359) | β | β | β | 1,020 | β | β | 0.02 | Other (5) | β | 24,438 | β | β | (3,815) | β | β | β | 20,623 | β | β | 0.37 | β | 24,438 | β | β | (3,815) | β | β | β | 20,623 | β | β | 0.37 | Other (Income) Expense | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | Amortization of long-term debt issuance costs | β | 604 | β | β | (155) | β | β | β | 449 | β | β | 0.01 | β | 604 | β | β | (155) | β | β | β | 449 | β | β | 0.01 | Gain on disposal of business unit | β | (517) | β | β | 133 | β | β | β | (384) | β | β | (0.01) | β | (517) | β | β | 133 | β | β | β | (384) | β | β | (0.01) | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | Non-GAAP net income | $ | 120,938 | β | $ | (27,669) | β | β | $ | 93,269 | β | $ | 1.65 | $ | 120,938 | β | $ | (27,669) | β | β | $ | 93,269 | β | $ | 1.65 | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | Diluted shares | β | β | β | 56,374 | β | β | β | 56,374 |
β β www.merit.com 96 |www.merit.com 81
Reconciliation of GAAP Net Income and earnings per share to Non-GAAP Net Income and earnings per share (Unaudited, in thousands except per share amounts) | | | | | | | | | | | | | β | Year Ended December 31, 2019 | β | Pre-Tax | Tax Impact | After-Tax | PerΒ Share Impact | GAAP net income | $ | 2,193 | β | $ | 3,258 | β | β | $ | 5,451 | β | $ | 0.10 | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | Non-GAAP adjustments: | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | Cost of Sales | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | Amortization of intangibles | β | 49,707 | β | β | (12,730) | β | β | β | 36,977 | β | β | 0.66 | Inventory mark-up related to acquisitions | β | 1,122 | β | β | (289) | β | β | β | 833 | β | β | 0.01 | Operating expenses | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | Contingent consideration benefit | β | (232) | β | β | (47) | β | β | β | (279) | β | β | (0.00) | Impairment charges | β | 23,750 | β | β | (6,113) | β | β | β | 17,637 | β | β | 0.31 | Amortization of intangibles | β | 10,964 | β | β | (2,884) | β | β | β | 8,080 | β | β | 0.14 | Corporate restructuring (6) | β | 5,551 | β | β | (1,433) | β | β | β | 4,118 | β | β | 0.07 | Acquisition-related | β | 3,497 | β | β | (743) | β | β | β | 2,754 | β | β | 0.05 | Medical Device Regulation expenses (4) | β | 562 | β | β | (98) | β | β | β | 464 | β | β | 0.01 | Other (5) | β | 7,282 | β | β | (1,874) | β | β | β | 5,408 | β | β | 0.10 | Other (Income) Expense | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | Amortization of long-term debt issuance costs | β | 821 | β | β | (211) | β | β | β | 610 | β | β | 0.01 | Tax expense related to restructuring (7) | β | β | β | β | 93 | β | β | β | 93 | β | β | 0.00 | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | Non-GAAP net income | $ | 105,217 | β | $ | (23,071) | β | β | $ | 82,146 | β | $ | 1.46 | β | β | β | β | β | Diluted shares | β | β | β | 56,235 |
β β 82 | Understand. Innovate. Deliver.TM
Reconciliation of GAAP Net Income and earnings per share to Non-GAAP Net Income and earnings per share (Unaudited, in thousands except per share amounts) β
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | β | Year Ended December 31, 2019 | Year Ended December 31, 2018 | β | Pre-Tax | Tax Impact | After-Tax | Per Share Impact | Pre-Tax | Tax Impact | After-Tax | PerΒ Share Impact | GAAP net income | $ | 2,193 | β | $ | 3,258 | β | $ | 5,451 | β | $ | 0.10 | $ | 49,519 | β | $ | (7,502) | β | β | $ | 42,017 | β | $ | 0.78 | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | Non-GAAP adjustments: | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | Cost of Sales | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | Amortization of intangibles | β | 49,707 | β | β | (12,730) | β | β | β | 36,977 | β | β | 0.66 | β | 31,795 | β | β | (8,123) | β | β | β | 23,672 | β | β | 0.43 | Inventory mark-up related to acquisitions | β | 1,122 | β | β | (289) | β | β | β | 833 | β | β | 0.01 | β | 5,233 | β | β | (1,347) | β | β | β | 3,886 | β | β | 0.07 | Operating expenses | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | Contingent consideration benefit | β | (232) | β | β | (47) | β | β | β | (279) | β | β | (0.00) | β | (698) | β | β | (21) | β | β | β | (719) | β | β | (0.01) | Impairment charges | β | 23,750 | β | β | (6,113) | β | β | β | 17,637 | β | β | 0.31 | β | 657 | β | β | (169) | β | β | β | 488 | β | β | 0.01 | Amortization of intangibles | β | 10,964 | β | β | (2,884) | β | β | β | 8,080 | β | β | 0.14 | β | 9,438 | β | β | (2,503) | β | β | β | 6,935 | β | β | 0.12 | Corporate restructuring (6) | β | 5,551 | β | β | (1,433) | β | β | β | 4,118 | β | β | 0.07 | β | 920 | β | β | (205) | β | β | β | 715 | β | β | 0.01 | Acquisition-related | β | 3,497 | β | β | (743) | β | β | β | 2,754 | β | β | 0.05 | β | 7,584 | β | β | (1,679) | β | β | β | 5,905 | β | β | 0.11 | Medical Device Regulation expenses (4) | β | 562 | β | β | (98) | β | β | β | 464 | β | β | 0.01 | | Other (5) | β | 7,282 | β | β | (1,874) | β | β | β | 5,408 | β | β | 0.10 | β | 6,445 | β | β | (1,659) | β | β | β | 4,786 | β | β | 0.09 | Other (Income) Expense | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | Amortization of long-term debt issuance costs | β | 821 | β | β | (211) | β | β | β | 610 | β | β | 0.01 | β | 804 | β | β | (207) | β | β | β | 597 | β | β | 0.01 | Tax expense related to restructuring (7) | β | β | β | β | 93 | β | β | β | 93 | β | β | 0.00 | | Tax expense related to tax reform (8) | | β | β | β | β | 3,005 | β | β | β | 3,005 | β | β | 0.06 | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | Non-GAAP net income | $ | 105,217 | β | $ | (23,071) | β | $ | 82,146 | β | $ | 1.46 | $ | 111,697 | β | $ | (20,410) | β | β | $ | 91,287 | β | $ | 1.69 | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | Diluted shares | β | β | β | 56,235 | β | β | β | 53,931 |
β
β www.merit.com 97 |www.merit.com β 83
Reconciliation of GAAP Net Income and earnings per share to Non-GAAP Net Income and earnings per share (Unaudited, in thousands except per share amounts) β
| | | | | | | | | | | | | β | Year Ended December 31, 2018 | β | Pre-Tax | Tax Impact | After-Tax | Per Share Impact | GAAP net income | $ | 49,519 | β | $ | (7,502) | β | β | $ | 42,017 | β | $ | 0.78 | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | Non-GAAP adjustments: | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | Cost of Sales | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | Amortization of intangibles | β | 31,795 | β | β | (8,123) | β | β | β | 23,672 | β | β | 0.43 | Inventory mark-up related to acquisitions | β | 5,233 | β | β | (1,347) | β | β | β | 3,886 | β | β | 0.07 | Operating expenses | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | Contingent consideration benefit | β | (698) | β | β | (21) | β | β | β | (719) | β | β | (0.01) | Impairment charges | β | 657 | β | β | (169) | β | β | β | 488 | β | β | 0.01 | Amortization of intangibles | β | 9,438 | β | β | (2,503) | β | β | β | 6,935 | β | β | 0.12 | Corporate restructuring (6) | β | 920 | β | β | (205) | β | β | β | 715 | β | β | 0.01 | Acquisition-related | β | 7,584 | β | β | (1,679) | β | β | β | 5,905 | β | β | 0.11 | Other (5) | β | 6,445 | β | β | (1,659) | β | β | β | 4,786 | β | β | 0.09 | Other (Income) Expense | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | Amortization of long-term debt issuance costs | β | 804 | β | β | (207) | β | β | β | 597 | β | β | 0.01 | Tax expense related to tax reform (8) | β | β | β | β | 3,005 | β | β | β | 3,005 | β | β | 0.06 | β | β | β | β | β | Non-GAAP net income | $ | 111,697 | β | $ | (20,410) | β | β | $ | 91,287 | β | $ | 1.69 | β | β | β | β | β | Diluted shares | β | β | β | 53,931 |
β
Reconciliation of GAAP Net Income and earnings per share
to Non-GAAP Net Income and earnings per share
(Unaudited, in thousands except per share amounts)
β
| | | | | | | | | | | | | β | Year Ended December 31, 2017 | β | Pre-Tax | Tax Impact | After-Tax | Per Share Impact | GAAP net income | $ | 35,881 | β | $ | (8,358) | β | β | $ | 27,523 | β | $ | 0.55 | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | Non-GAAP adjustments: | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | Cost of Sales | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | Amortization of intangibles | β | 20,705 | β | β | (7,550) | β | β | β | 13,155 | β | β | 0.26 | Inventory mark-up related to acquisitions | β | 3,400 | β | β | (1,253) | β | β | β | 2,147 | β | β | 0.04 | Operating expenses | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | Contingent consideration benefit | β | (298) | β | β | 116 | β | β | β | (182) | β | β | (0.00) | Impairment charges | β | 809 | β | β | β | β | β | β | 809 | β | β | 0.02 | Amortization of intangibles | β | 6,111 | β | β | (2,324) | β | β | β | 3,787 | β | β | 0.07 | Corporate restructuring (6) | β | 2,185 | β | β | (847) | β | β | β | 1,338 | β | β | 0.03 | Acquisition-related | β | 6,648 | β | β | (2,048) | β | β | β | 4,600 | β | β | 0.09 | Other (5) | β | 24,931 | β | β | (5,075) | β | β | β | 19,856 | β | β | 0.40 | Other (Income) Expense | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | Gain on bargain purchase (9) | β | (11,039) | β | β | β | β | β | β | (11,039) | β | β | (0.22) | Amortization of long-term debt issuance costs | β | 685 | β | β | (267) | β | β | β | 418 | β | β | 0.01 | Tax expense related to tax reform (8) | β | β | β | β | 1,855 | β | β | β | 1,855 | β | β | 0.04 | β | β | β | β | β | Non-GAAP net income | $ | 90,018 | β | $ | (25,751) | β | β | $ | 64,267 | β | $ | 1.28 | β | β | β | β | β | Diluted shares | β | β | β | 50,101 |
β
β
Reconciliation of GAAP Net Income and earnings per share
to Non-GAAP Net Income and earnings per share
(Unaudited, in thousands except per share amounts)
β
β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | Year Ended December 31, 2016 | β | Pre-Tax | Tax Impact | After-Tax | Per Share Impact | GAAP net income | $ | 25,386 | β | $ | (5,265) | β | β | $ | 20,121 | β | $ | 0.45 | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | Non-GAAP adjustments: | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | Cost of Sales | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | Amortization of intangibles | β | 15,122 | β | β | (5,592) | β | β | β | 9,530 | β | β | 0.21 | Inventory mark-up related to acquisitions | β | 2,990 | β | β | (1,163) | β | β | β | 1,827 | β | β | 0.04 | Severance | β | 56 | β | β | (22) | β | β | β | 34 | β | β | 0.00 | Operating expenses | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | Contingent consideration expense | β | 61 | β | β | (24) | β | β | β | 37 | β | β | 0.00 | Amortization of intangibles | β | 4,167 | β | β | (1,595) | β | β | β | 2,572 | β | β | 0.06 | Corporate restructuring (6) | β | 10,271 | β | β | (3,878) | β | β | β | 6,393 | β | β | 0.14 | Acquisition-related | β | 4,503 | β | β | (1,448) | β | β | β | 3,055 | β | β | 0.07 | Other (5) | β | 1,577 | β | β | (612) | β | β | β | 965 | β | β | 0.02 | Other (Income) Expense | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | Amortization of long-term debt issuance costs | β | 952 | β | β | (370) | β | β | β | 582 | β | β | 0.01 | β | β | β | β | β | Non-GAAP net income | $ | 65,085 | β | $ | (19,969) | β | β | $ | 45,116 | β | $ | 1.01 | β | β | β | β | β | Diluted shares | β | β | β | 44,862 |
β
| | | | | | | | | | | | | β | Year Ended December 31, 2017 | β | Pre-Tax | Tax Impact | After-Tax | PerΒ Share Impact | GAAP net income | $ | 35,881 | β | $ | (8,358) | β | β | $ | 27,523 | β | $ | 0.55 | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | Non-GAAP adjustments: | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | Cost of Sales | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | Amortization of intangibles | β | 20,705 | β | β | (7,550) | β | β | β | 13,155 | β | β | 0.26 | Inventory mark-up related to acquisitions | β | 3,400 | β | β | (1,253) | β | β | β | 2,147 | β | β | 0.04 | Operating expenses | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | Contingent consideration benefit | β | (298) | β | β | 116 | β | β | β | (182) | β | β | (0.00) | Impairment charges | β | 809 | β | β | β | β | β | β | 809 | β | β | 0.02 | Amortization of intangibles | β | 6,111 | β | β | (2,324) | β | β | β | 3,787 | β | β | 0.07 | Corporate restructuring (6) | β | 2,185 | β | β | (847) | β | β | β | 1,338 | β | β | 0.03 | Acquisition-related | β | 6,648 | β | β | (2,048) | β | β | β | 4,600 | β | β | 0.09 | Other (5) | β | 24,931 | β | β | (5,075) | β | β | β | 19,856 | β | β | 0.40 | Other (Income) Expense | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | Gain on bargain purchase (9) | β | (11,039) | β | β | β | β | β | β | (11,039) | β | β | (0.22) | Amortization of long-term debt issuance costs | β | 685 | β | β | (267) | β | β | β | 418 | β | β | 0.01 | Tax expense related to tax reform (8) | β | β | β | β | 1,855 | β | β | β | 1,855 | β | β | 0.04 | β | β | β | β | β | Non-GAAP net income | $ | 90,018 | β | $ | (25,751) | β | β | $ | 64,267 | β | $ | 1.28 | β | β | β | β | β | Diluted shares | β | β | β | 50,101 |
(1) | Represents the write-off of inventory related to the closuredivestiture or exit of the ITL Healthcare Pty Ltd. procedure pack operations in Australia and suspension of Meritβs distribution agreement with NinePoint Medical, Inc.certain businesses or product lines. |
(2) | Represents performance-based share-based compensation expense, including stock-settled and cash-settled awards. |
(3) | Includes severance related to corporate initiatives, write-offs and valuation adjustments of other long-term assets associated with restructuring activities, expenses related to Meritβsthe Foundations for Growth program,Program, and other transformation costs. |
(4) | Represents incremental expenses incurred to comply with the Medical Device Regulation (MDR) in Europe. |
(5) | Represents expense from acquired in-process research and development, charges related to abandoned patents, costs incurred in responding to an inquiry from the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ), and,accrued class action litigation settlement costs of $10 million in 2020 only, fees associated2021, net of expected insurance proceeds, accrued contract termination costs of approximately $6 million in 2021 to renegotiate certain terms of an acquisition agreement, costs to comply with Meritβs settlement of a shareholder disputeagreement with the DOJ in 2021, and $18.7 million of settlement costs relatedin 2020 to fully resolve an investigation conducted by the DOJ, inquiry.and activist shareholder settlement fees in 2020. |
(6) | Includes severance related to corporate initiatives, and in 2019 write-offs and valuation adjustments of other long-term assets associated with restructuring activities. |
(7) | Represents net tax expense related to non-recurring tax withholdings in connection with restructuring of certain international subsidiaries. |
(8) | Represents net tax impact related to the enactment of the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act. |
(9) | Represents the gain on bargain purchase realized from the acquisition of the critical care division of Argon Medical Devices, Inc. |
β β 84 100 |www.merit.com β Understand. Innovate. Deliver.TM
Reconciliation of Reported Gross Margin (GAAP) to Non-GAAP Gross Margin (Non-GAAP) (Unaudited, as a percentage of reported revenue) β
| | | | | | β | Year Ended | Year Ended | β | December 31, | December 31, | β | 2020 | 2019 | 2018 | 2017 | 2016 | 2021 | 2020 | 2019 | 2018 | 2017 | Reported Gross Margin | 41.6% | 43.5% | 44.7% | 44.8% | 43.9% | 45.2% | 41.6% | 43.5% | 44.7% | 44.8% | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | Add back impact of: | β | β | β | β | β | β | β | Amortization of intangibles | 5.3% | 5.0% | 3.6% | 2.8% | 2.5% | 4.0% | 5.3% | 5.0% | 3.6% | 2.8% | Inventory write-off (1) | 0.2% | β | β | 0.2% | 0.2% | β | β | Inventory mark-up related to acquisitions | 0.0% | 0.1% | 0.6% | 0.5% | 0.5% | β | 0.0% | 0.1% | 0.6% | 0.5% | Severance | β | β | 0.0% | | Non-GAAP Gross Margin | 47.1% | 48.6% | 48.9% | 48.1% | 46.9% | 49.3% | 47.1% | 48.6% | 48.9% | 48.1% |
β (1) | Represents write-off of inventory related to the closuredivestiture or exit of the ITL Healthcare Pty Ltd. procedure pack operations in Australia and suspension of Meritβs distribution agreement with NinePoint Medical, Inc.certain businesses or product lines. |
β www.merit.com 101 |www.merit.com β 85
APPENDIX A
SECOND AMENDMENT TO THE
MERIT MEDICAL SYSTEMS, INC.
2018 LONG-TERM INCENTIVE PLAN
β
β
THIS SECOND AMENDMENT TO THE MERIT MEDICAL SYSTEMS, INC. 2018 LONG-TERM INCENTIVE PLAN (this "Amendment") is made and adopted effective April 15, 2021 by Merit Medical Systems, Inc., contingent upon approval of this Amendment by the shareholders of the Company not later than June 30, 2021.
β
WHEREAS, Merit Medical Systems, Inc. (the "Company") maintains the Merit Medical Systems, Inc. 2018 Long-Term Incentive Plan (the "Plan") for the benefit of its employees and the employees of its participating subsidiaries; and
β
WHEREAS, it is necessary and desirable to amend the Plan to increase the number of shares of Company common stock (βSharesβ) authorized for grant under the Plan from 3,100,000 Shares to 6,100,000 Shares; and
β
WHEREAS, the Company, acting through its Board of Directors (the "Board"), has reserved the right to amend the Plan at any time and from time to time, subject to shareholder approval in the case of certain material modifications;
β
NOW, THEREFORE, contingent upon approval of this Amendment by the shareholders of the Company not later than June 30, 2021, the Plan is amended as follows effective April 15, 2021:
β
1. Β The first sentence of Section 3.1(a) of the Plan, setting forth the number of Shares authorized for grant under the Plan, is amended to read as follows:
β
"(a)Subject to adjustment as provided in Section 12.2, a total of 6,100,000 Shares shall be authorized for grant under the Plan. Β Any Shares that are subject to Awards of Options or Stock Appreciation Rights shall be counted against this limit as one (1) Share for every one (1) Share granted. Β Any Shares that are subject to Awards other than Options or Stock Appreciation Rights shall be counted against this limit as two and one-half (2Β½) Shares for every one (1) Share granted.β
β
2. Β The third sentence of Section 5.7 of the Plan, relating to the maximum number of Shares with respect to which incentive stock options may be granted under the Plan is amended to read as follows:
β
βSolely for the purposes of determining whether Shares are available for the grant of Incentive Stock Options under the Plan, the maximum aggregate number of Shares with respect to which Incentive Stock Options may be issued under the Plan shall be 6,100,000 Shares, subject to adjustment under Section 12.2.β
β
3. Β Notwithstanding the foregoing, if the shareholders of the Company fail to approve this Amendment by June 30, 2021, this Amendment shall be null and void. Β Except as provided above, the terms of the Plan are hereby ratified and confirmed in all respects.
β
β
APPENDIX B
FIFTH AMENDMENT TO THE
MERIT MEDICAL SYSTEMS, INC.
1996 EMPLOYEE STOCK PURCHASE PLAN
β
THIS FIFTH AMENDMENT TO THE MERIT MEDICAL SYSTEMS, INC. 1996 EMPOLOYEE STOCK PURCHASE PLAN (this "Amendment") is made and adopted effective April 15, 2021 by Merit Medical Systems, Inc., contingent upon approval of this Amendment by the shareholders of the Company not later than June 30, 2021.
β
WHEREAS, Merit Medical Systems, Inc. (the "Company") maintains the Merit Medical Systems, Inc. 1996 Employee Stock Purchase Plan (the "Plan") for the benefit of its employees and the employees of its participating subsidiaries; and
β
WHEREAS, it is necessary and desirable to amend the Plan to increase the number of shares of Company common stock (βSharesβ) authorized for grant under the Plan from 1,493,056 Shares to 1,593,056 Shares; and
β
WHEREAS, the Company, acting through its Board of Directors (the "Board"), has reserved the right to amend the Plan at any time and from time to time, subject to shareholder approval in the case of certain material modifications;
β
NOW, THEREFORE, contingent upon approval of this Amendment by the shareholders of the Company not later than June 30, 2021, the Plan is amended as follows effective April 15, 2021:
β
1. Β The first sentence of Section 10.1 of the Plan, setting forth the number of Shares authorized for grant under the Plan, is amended to read as follows:
β
"The maximum number of shares of Common Stock that may be issued under the Plan, subject to adjustment upon changes in capitalization of the Company as provided in Section 12.4 below, shall be 1,593,056 shares for all Offerings (including offerings prior to April, 2001).β
β
2. Β Notwithstanding the foregoing, if the shareholders of the Company fail to approve this Amendment by June 30, 2021, this Amendment shall be null and void. Β Except as provided above, the terms of the Plan are hereby ratified and confirmed in all respects.
β
VOTE BY INTERNET Before The Meeting β Go to www.proxyvote.com Use the Internet to transmit your voting instructions and for electronic delivery of information. Vote by 11:59 P.M. Eastern Time on June 16, 2021May 18, 2022 for shares held directly and by 11:59 P.M. Eastern Time on June 14, 2021May 16, 2022 for shares held in the Merit Medical Systems, Inc. 401(k) Profit Sharing Plan. Have your proxy card in hand when you access the web site and follow the instructions to obtain your records and to create an electronic voting instruction form. β During The Meeting β Go to www.virtualshareholdermeeting.com/MMSI2021MMSI2022 β You may attend the meeting via the Internet and vote during the meeting. Have the information that is printed in the box marked by the arrow available and follow the instructions. β VOTE BY PHONE - 1-800-690-6903 Use any touch-tone telephone to transmit your voting instructions. Vote by 11:59 P.M. Eastern Time on June 16, 2021May 18, 2022 for shares held directly and by 11:59 P.M. Eastern Time on June 14, 2021May 16, 2022 for shares held in the Merit Medical Systems, Inc. 401(k) Profit Sharing Plan. Have your proxy card in hand when you call and then follow the instructions. β VOTE BY MAIL Mark, sign and date your proxy card and return it in the postage-paid envelope we have provided or return it to Vote Processing, c/o Broadridge, 51 Mercedes Way, Edgewood, NY 11717. β β | | | TO VOTE, MARK BLOCKS BELOW IN BLUE OR BLACK INK AS FOLLOWS: | | KEEP THIS PORTION FOR YOUR RECORDS | | | DETACH AND RETURN THIS PORTION ONLY |
β 86 104 |www.merit.com β Understand. Innovate. Deliver.TM
THIS PROXY CARD IS VALID ONLY WHEN SIGNED AND DATED. | | | | | | MERIT MEDICAL SYSTEMS, INC. The Board of Directors recommends you vote FOR the following: | | The election of four (4) directors to the Merit Medical Systems, Inc. Board of Directors of the Company, each for a three (3) year term or until his or her successor istheir successors are elected and qualified. Nominees: For Against Abstain | | 1a. Fred P. LampropoulosF. Ann Millner | | | 1b. A. Scott AndersonThomas J. Gunderson | | | 1c. Lynne M. WardLaura S. Kaiser | | | 1d. Stephen C. EvansMichael R. McDonnell | | | | | The Board of Directors recommends you vote FOR proposals 2 3, 4 and 5.3. For Against Abstain β | | Approval of an amendment to the 2018 Long-Term Incentive Plan to increase the number of shares of Common Stock authorized for issuance thereunder by 3,000,000 shares.
| | | | | | Approval of an amendment to the 1996 Employee Stock Purchase Plan to increase the number of shares of Common Stock authorized for issuance thereunder by 100,000 shares.
| | | | | | | | | Approval of a non-binding, advisory resolution approving the compensation of the Company's named executive officers as described in the Merit Medical Systems, Inc. Proxy Statement. | | | | | | | | | Ratification of the Audit Committeeβs appointment of Deloitte & Touche LLP to serve as the independent registered public accounting firm of the Company for the year ending December 31, 2021.2022. | | | | | | | | NOTE: In their discretion, proxies are authorized to vote upon such other business as may properly come before the meeting or any postponement or adjournment of the meeting. | |
Please sign exactly as your name(s) appear(s) hereon. When signing as attorney, executor, administrator, or other fiduciary, please give full title as such. Joint owners should each sign personally. All holders must sign. If a corporation or partnership, please sign in full corporate or partnership name by authorized officer. | | | | | | | | | | Signature [PLEASE SIGN WITHIN BOX] | | | | |
β www.merit.com 105 |www.merit.com β 87
Important Notice Regarding the Availability of Proxy Materials for the Annual Meeting: The Notice of Annual Meeting,and Proxy Statement and Annual Report are available at www.proxyvote.com. β MERIT MEDICAL SYSTEMS, INC. Annual Meeting of Shareholders June 17, 2021,May 19, 2022, 2:00 PM (Mountain Time)
This proxy is solicited by the Board of Directors β The undersigned hereby appoints Fred P. Lampropoulos, Brian G. Lloyd and Raul Parra and each of them, as proxies, with full power of substitution, and hereby authorizes each of them to represent and vote, as designated below, all shares of the Common Stockcommon stock of Merit Medical Systems, Inc., a Utah corporation (the βCompanyβ), held of record by the undersigned on April 20, 2021March 22, 2022 at the Annual Meeting of Shareholders (the βAnnual Meetingβ) to be held virtually via live webcast at www.virtualshareholdermeeting.com/MMSI2021,MMSI2022, on Thursday, June 17, 2021,May 19, 2022, at 2:00 p.m., local time,Mountain Time, or at any adjournment or postponement thereof, upon the matters set forth below, all in accordance with and as more fully described in the accompanying Notice of Annual Meeting and Proxy Statement, receipt of which is hereby acknowledged. β This proxy also provides voting instructions to the Trustee of the Merit Medical Systems, Inc. 401(k) Profit Sharing Plan and directs such Trustee to vote at the Annual Meeting all of the shares of the Company's Common Stock which are allocated to the undersigned's employee plan account in the manner directed on the reverse side of this card. If no direction is given or if direction is received after June 14, 2021,May 16, 2022, the Trustee will vote the shares in the same proportion as to which it has received instructions from other plan participants. β This proxy card, when properly executed, will be voted in the manner directed herein. If no such direction is made, this proxy will be voted in accordance with the Board of Directors' recommendations (FOR Proposals 1 through 5)3) and in the discretion of the proxies, or Trustee of the Merit Medical Systems, Inc. 401(k) Profit Sharing Plan, as applicable, upon such other matters as may properly come before the Annual Meeting. The undersigned shareholder may revoke this proxy card at any time before it is voted at the Annual Meeting by executing and returning a proxy card bearing a later date by mail, by voting via the Internet, by filing with the Secretary of the Company, at the address set forth above, a written notice of revocation bearing a later date than the proxy card being revoked, or by voting the Common Stock covered thereby in person at the Annual Meeting. β (Continued and to be marked, dated and signed on reverse side) 88 106 |www.merit.com β Understand. Innovate. Deliver.TM
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