o | Preliminary proxy statement | |
o | Confidential, for use of the Commission Only (as permitted by Rule 14a-6(e)(2)) | |
þ | Definitive Proxy Statement | |
o | Definitive Additional Materials | |
o | Soliciting Material Pursuant to §240.14a-12 |
þ | No fee required. | |
o | Fee computed on table below per Exchange Act Rules 14a-6(i)(1) and 0-11. |
(1) | Title of each class of securities to which transaction applies: | ||
(2) | Aggregate number of securities to which transactions applies: | ||
(3) | Per unit price or other underlying value of transaction computed pursuant to Exchange Act Rule 0-11 (set forth the amount on which the filing fee is calculated and state how it was determined): | ||
(4) | Proposed maximum aggregate value of transaction: | ||
(5) | Total fee paid: |
o | Fee paid previously with preliminary materials. | |
o | Check box if any part of the fee is offset as provided by Exchange Act Rule 0-11(a)(2) and identify the filing for which the offsetting fee was paid previously. Identify the previous filing by registration statement number, or the Form or Schedule and the date of its filing. |
(1) | Amount Previously Paid: | ||
(2) | Form, Schedule or Registration Statement No.: | ||
(3) | Filing Party: | ||
(4) | Date Filed: |
Selective Insurance Group,
Inc. 40 Wantage Avenue Branchville, New Jersey 07890 (973) 948-3000 |
1. | Elect three (3) Class II directors for a term expiring in 2012; |
2. | Approve the amended and restated Selective Insurance Group, Inc. Employee Stock Purchase Plan (2009); |
3. | Ratify the appointment of KPMG LLP as independent public accountants for the fiscal year ending December 31, 2009; and |
4. | Consider and vote upon a stockholder proposal relating to the declassification of the Board of Directors. |
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A-1 |
Page 1
PROPOSAL 1. | ELECTION OF DIRECTORS |
| Vote in favor of all the nominees; | ||
| Withhold your votes as to all nominees; or | ||
| Withhold your votes as to specific nominees. |
PROPOSAL 2. | APPROVAL OF AMENDED AND RESTATED SELECTIVE INSURANCE GROUP, INC. EMPLOYEE STOCK PURCHASE PLAN (2009) |
| Vote in favor of Proposal 2; | ||
| Vote against Proposal 2; or | ||
| Abstain from voting. |
PROPOSAL 3. | RATIFICATION OF APPOINTMENT OF INDEPENDENT PUBLIC ACCOUNTANTS |
| Vote in favor of Proposal 3; | ||
| Vote against Proposal 3; or | ||
| Abstain from voting. |
Page 2
PROPOSAL 4. | STOCKHOLDER PROPOSAL RELATING TO THE DECLASSIFICATION OF THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS. |
| Vote in favor of Proposal 4; | ||
| Vote against Proposal 4; or | ||
| Abstain from voting. |
Page 3
1. | BY MAIL. Mark your voting instructions on, then sign and date the proxy card. Then return the proxy card in the postage-paid envelope provided. If you mail your proxy card, we must receive it before the beginning of the meeting. | ||
If we receive your signed proxy card, but you do not give voting instructions, the named proxies will vote your shares FOR Proposals 1, 2, 3, and 4. If any other matters arise during the meeting which require a vote, the named proxies will exercise their discretion, to the extent permitted by applicable law and NASDAQ and SEC rules and regulations. | |||
2. | BY TELEPHONE. Call the toll-free number on your proxy card to vote by telephone. Follow the instructions on your proxy card and the voice prompts. IF YOU VOTE BY TELEPHONE, YOU DO NOT NEED TO RETURN YOUR PROXY CARD. | ||
3. | BY INTERNET. Go to the website listed on your proxy card to vote through the Internet. Follow the instructions on your proxy card and the website. If you vote through the Internet, you may incur telephone and/or Internet access charges from your service providers. IF YOU VOTE BY INTERNET, YOU DO NOT NEED TO RETURN YOUR PROXY CARD. | ||
4. | IN PERSON. Attend the Annual Meeting, or send a personal representative with an appropriate proxy, in order to vote. |
Page 4
Page 5
CLASS II Directors Nominated to Continue in Office Until the 2012 Annual Meeting of Stockholders |
Name, Age, Year Elected To Board of Directors | Occupation And Background | |
A. David Brown, 66 Independent Director, 1996 |
Senior Vice President, Human Resources, Linens n Things,
Inc., 2006 to 2009. In May 2008, Linens and Things, Inc. filed
for protection under Chapter 11 of the U.S. Bankruptcy Code. |
|
Managing Partner, Bridge Partners, LLC, an executive
recruiting firm, 2003 to 2006. |
||
Partner, Whitehead Mann, executive recruiters, 1997 to
2003. |
||
Director, Hanover Direct, 2003 to 2006. |
||
Director, Zale Corporation, 1997 to 2006. |
||
Director, The Sports Authority, Inc., 1998 to 2003. |
||
Trustee, Jackie Robinson Foundation. |
||
Graduate of Monmouth University (B.S.). |
||
S. Griffin McClellan III, 71
|
Retired Banking Executive. |
|
Independent Director, 1980
|
Self-employed Consultant, 1994 to 2001. |
|
Graduate of Harvard University (B.A.). |
Page 6
Name, Age, Year Elected To Board of Directors | Occupation And Background | |
J. Brian Thebault, 57
|
Chairman, Earth-Thebault, since 2007. |
|
Independent Director, 1996
|
Partner, Thebault Associates, since 2007. |
|
Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, L.P. Thebault
Company, 1998 to 2007; President and Chief Executive Officer, L.P.
Thebault Company, 1984 to 1998. |
||
Trustee, The Peck School, since 1994. |
||
Trustee, The Delbarton School, 1990 to 2007. |
||
Graduate of University of Southern California (B.S.). |
CLASS I | | Directors Continuing in Office Until the 2010 Annual Meeting of Stockholders |
Name, Age, Year Elected To Board of Directors | Occupation And Background | |
W. Marston Becker, 56 Independent Director, 2006 |
Chairman and CEO, Max Capital Group Ltd., since October
2006; Director, since 2004. |
|
Chairman and General Partner of West Virginia Media
Holdings, since 2001. |
||
Chairman and CEO of LaSalle Re Holdings Ltd., 2002 to
2008. |
||
Director, BrickStreet Mutual Insurance Company, since
2008. |
||
Director, Dorado Insurance, Ltd., since 2007. |
||
Director, Coal Contractors Insurance, Ltd., since 2002. |
||
Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, Trenwick Group,
Ltd., 2002 to 2005; Director, Trenwick Group, Ltd., 1997 to 2003. |
||
Director, Mountain Companies, since 2007. |
||
Director, Beazley Group plc, 2006 to 2008. |
||
CEO, McDonough-Caperton Insurance Group, 1986 to 1994. |
||
Advisory Board Member, Conning Funds, since 1997. |
||
Advisory Board Member, American Securities Funds, since
1997. |
||
Graduate of West Virginia University (B.S. and J.D.). |
||
Gregory E. Murphy, 53
|
Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer of
Selective, since May 2000. |
|
Employee Director, 1997
|
President and Chief Executive Officer of Selective, May
1999 to May 2000. |
|
President and Chief Operating Officer of Selective, 1997
to May 1999. |
||
Other senior executive, management, and operational
positions at Selective, since 1980. |
||
Certified Public Accountant (New Jersey) (Inactive). |
||
Director, Newton Memorial Hospital Foundation, Inc.,
since 1999. |
||
Director, Property Casualty Insurers Association of
America, since 2008. |
||
Director, Insurance Information Institute, since 2000. |
||
Trustee, the American Institute for CPCU (AICPCU) and the
Insurance Institute of America (IIA), since 2001. |
||
Graduate of Boston College (B.S. Accounting). |
||
Harvard University (Advanced Management Program). |
||
M.I.T. Sloan School of Management. |
Page 7
Name, Age, Year Elected To Board of Directors | Occupation And Background | |
William M. Rue, 61
|
President, Rue Insurance, general insurance agency, since
1969. |
|
Non-Independent Director, 1977
|
President, Rue Financial Services, Inc., since 2002. |
|
Director, 1st Constitution Bank, since 1989, Secretary of
the Board, since 2005. |
||
Director, 1st Constitution Bancorp, since 1999, Secretary
of the Board, since 2005. |
||
Director, Robert Wood Johnson University Hospital at
Hamilton, since 1994. |
||
Trustee, Rider University, since 1993. |
||
Director, Robert Wood Johnson University Hospital
Foundation, since 1999. |
||
Member, National Association of Securities Dealers. |
||
Member, Council of Insurance Agents & Brokers. |
||
Member, Society of CPCU. |
||
Member, Professional Insurance Agents Association. |
||
President, The Rue Foundation, since 2004. |
||
Graduate of Rider College (B.A.). |
CLASS III | | Directors Continuing in Office Until the 2011 Annual Meeting of Stockholders |
Name, Age, Year Elected To Board of Directors | Occupation And Background | |
Paul D. Bauer, 65
|
Retired financial executive.
|
|
Independent Director, 1998
|
Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer of
Tops Markets, Inc., 1970 to 1993. |
|
Director, Rosina Holdings Inc., since 2002. |
||
Director, R.P. Adams Co., 1991 to 2004. |
||
Director, IMC, Inc., 1995 to 2000. |
||
Co-founder and President, Buffalo Inner-City Scholarship
Opportunity Network, since 1995. |
||
Trustee, Holy Angels Academy, since 2005. |
||
Graduate of Boston College (B.S. Accounting). |
||
John C. Burville, 61
|
Insurance Consultant to the Bermuda Government, 2003 to
2007. |
|
Independent Director, 2006
|
Bermuda Insurance Advisory Committee, 1985 to 2003. |
|
Chief Actuary and Senior Rating Agency Manager of ACE
Limited, 1992 to 2003. |
||
Graduate of Leicester University in the United Kingdom
(BSc and Ph.D.). |
||
Fellow of the Institute of Actuaries. |
Page 8
Name, Age, Year Elected To Board of Directors | Occupation And Background | |
Joan M. Lamm-Tennant, 56
|
Risk Strategist, Marsh & McLennan Companies, Inc., since
Feb. 2009. |
|
Independent Director, 1993
|
Global Chief Economist & Risk Strategist, Guy Carpenter &
Company, LLC, since 2007. |
|
Senior Vice President, General Re Corporation, 1997 to
2007. |
||
Adjunct Professor, the Wharton School of the University of
Pennsylvania, since 2006. |
||
Professor of Finance, Villanova University, 1988 to 2000. |
||
Director, IVANS, Inc., since 2004. |
||
Member, American Risk and Insurance Association. |
||
Member, International Insurance Society. |
||
Member, Association for Investment Management and Research. |
||
Graduate of St. Marys University (B.B.A. and M.B.A.). |
||
Graduate of the University of Texas (Ph.D.). |
||
Michael J. Morrissey, 61
|
Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, Firemark
Investments, since 1983. |
|
Independent Director, 2008
|
Director, CGA Group, Ltd., since 1998. |
|
President, Chief Operating Officer, Chief Investment
Officer and Director, Manhattan Life Insurance Company, 1985 to
1987. |
||
Chief Executive Officer, Manhattan Capital Management,
1985. |
||
Senior Vice President, Crum & Forster Insurance Group,
1978 to 1983. |
||
Chartered Financial Analyst. |
||
Graduate of Boston College (B.A.). |
||
Graduate of Dartmouth College (M.B.A.). |
||
Ronald L. OKelley, 64
|
President and Chief Executive Officer, U.S. Shipping
Partners, L.P., since 2008. |
|
Independent Director, 2005
|
Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, Atlantic Coast
Venture Investments Inc., 2003 to 2008; Director, Atlantic Coast
Venture Investments Inc., since 2003. |
|
Executive Vice President, Chief Financial Officer and
Treasurer, State Street Corporation, 1995 to 2002. |
||
Director, U.S. Shipping Partners L.P., 2004 to 2008. |
||
Director, Refco Inc., 2005 to 2006. |
||
Advisory Director, Donald H. Jones Center for
Entrepreneurship, Tepper School of Business, Carnegie Mellon
University, since 2003. |
||
Member, National Association of Corporate Directors. |
||
Graduate of Duke University (A.B.). |
||
Graduate of Carnegie Mellon University (M.B.A.). |
Page 9
| The number of shares of Selective common stock beneficially owned by each director, the Chairman of the Board, President and Chief Executive Officer (the CEO), the Chief Financial Officer (the CFO), and the three most highly compensated executive officers other than the CEO and CFO (collectively, with the CEO and CFO, referred to as the named executive officers). | ||
| The number of shares of Selective common stock beneficially owned by the directors and executive officers of Selective as a group. |
Number of Shares | ||||||||||||||||
Options | ||||||||||||||||
Name of Beneficial | Exercisable Within | Total Shares | Percent of | |||||||||||||
Owner | Common Stock (1) | 60 Days | Beneficially Owned | Class | ||||||||||||
Bauer, Paul D. |
38,001 | 51,544 | 89,545 | * | ||||||||||||
Becker, W. Marston |
12,225 | 15,544 | 27,769 | * | ||||||||||||
Brown, A. David |
40,208 | 45,544 | 85,752 | * | ||||||||||||
Burville, John C. |
7,813 | 15,544 | 23,357 | * | ||||||||||||
Connell, Richard F. |
50,337 | 17,184 | 67,521 | * | ||||||||||||
Guthrie, Kerry A. |
63,559 | (2) | 55,684 | 119,243 | * | |||||||||||
Kearns, William M., Jr. |
201,579 | 51,544 | 253,123 | * | ||||||||||||
Lamm-Tennant, Joan M. |
45,373 | 51,544 | 96,917 | * | ||||||||||||
McClellan, S. Griffin, III |
40,825 | (3) | 27,544 | 68,369 | * | |||||||||||
Morrissey, Michael J. |
1,045 | 0 | 1,045 | * | ||||||||||||
Murphy, Gregory E. |
121,381 | 70,002 | 191,383 | * | ||||||||||||
OKelley, Ronald L. |
15,326 | 21,544 | 36,870 | * | ||||||||||||
Rue, William M. |
410,338 | (4) | 51,544 | 461,882 | 1 | % | ||||||||||
Thatcher, Dale A. |
53,494 | 17,184 | 70,678 | * | ||||||||||||
Thebault, J. Brian |
52,825 | (5) | 51,544 | 104,369 | * | |||||||||||
Zaleski, Ronald J., Sr. |
35,755 | 41,176 | 76,931 | * | ||||||||||||
All directors and
executive officers, as a
group (20 persons) |
1,242,405 | 600,457 | 1,842,862 | 3 | % |
* | Less than 1% of the common stock outstanding. | |
(1) | Certain directors and executive officers hold Selective stock in margin accounts but, except as set forth in the footnotes to this table, no director or officer has pledged Selective stock for a loan or stock purchase. | |
(2) | 5,196 of the shares held by Kerry A. Guthrie, Selectives Executive Vice President and Chief Investment Officer, were pledged as collateral for a loan made by Selective to purchase Selective common stock in 1998, which loan is grandfathered under the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002 and was authorized by the Board of Directors to encourage Selective stock ownership. This loan was repaid in full as of March 6, 2009. | |
(3) | Includes 4,000 shares held by Mr. McClellans wife, for which Mr. McClellan disclaims beneficial ownership. | |
(4) | Includes: (i) 34,727 shares held by Chas. E. Rue & Sons, Inc. t/a Rue Insurance (Rue Insurance), a general insurance agency of which Mr. Rue is President and owner of more than a 10% equity interest (see page 11 of this Proxy Statement for more information); and (ii) 1,980 shares held by Mr. Rues wife. | |
(5) | Includes: (i) 217 shares held in custody for and 213 shares held by Mr. Thebaults son; (ii) 217 shares held in custody for and 207 shares held by a daughter of Mr. Thebault; and (iii) 210 shares held in custody for another daughter of Mr. Thebault. |
Page 10
Amount & Nature of | Percentage of | |||||||||||||||
Title of Class | Name & Address of Beneficial Owner | Beneficial Ownership | Class | |||||||||||||
Common Stock |
Dimensional Fund Advisors LP | 4,480,467 shares | 8.49 | % | ||||||||||||
Palisades West, Building One | of common stock | |||||||||||||||
6300 Bee Cave Road | ||||||||||||||||
Austin, TX 78746 | ||||||||||||||||
Common Stock |
Barclays Global Investors, NA and Affiliates | 3,593,318 shares | 6.81 | % | ||||||||||||
400 Howard Street | of common stock | |||||||||||||||
San Francisco, CA 94105 | ||||||||||||||||
| Rue Insurance placed insurance policies with Selectives insurance subsidiaries. Direct premiums written associated with these polices was $8.3 million in 2008, $9.9 million in 2007, and $9.5 million in 2006. In return, Selectives insurance subsidiaries paid commissions to Rue Insurance of $1.7 million in 2008 and 2007, and $1.9 million in 2006. | ||
| Rue Insurance placed human resource outsourcing contracts with Selective HR Solutions resulting in revenues to Selective HR Solutions of approximately $79,000 in 2008, $69,000 in 2007, and $62,000 in 2006. In return, Selective HR Solutions paid commissions to Rue Insurance of $12,000 in 2008, $15,000 in 2007, and $14,000 in 2006. | ||
| Rue Insurance placed insurance coverage for Selective with non-Selective insurance companies for which Rue Insurance was paid commission pursuant to its agreements with those carriers. Selective paid premiums for such insurance coverage of $0.5 million in 2008, $0.5 million in 2007, and $0.5 million in 2006. | ||
| Selective paid reinsurance commissions of $0.2 million in 2008, 2007, and 2006 to PL, LLC. PL, LLC is an insurance fund administrator of which Rue Insurance owns 33.33% and which places reinsurance through a Selective insurance subsidiary. |
Page 11
Page 12
Page 13
| Audit Committee; | ||
| Corporate Governance and Nominating Committee; | ||
| Executive Committee; | ||
| Finance Committee; and | ||
| Salary and Employee Benefits Committee. |
Written Charter is available on
the Corporate Governance
section of www.selective.com
|
2008 Meetings: 6 | |
| Oversee the accounting and financial reporting processes and the audits of the financial statements. |
| Review and discuss with Selectives management and independent auditors Selectives financial reports and other financial information provided to the public and filed with the SEC. |
| Monitor the activities of Selectives Internal Audit Department and the appointment, replacement, reassignment or dismissal of the Director of Internal Audit. |
| Monitor Selectives internal controls regarding finance, accounting and legal compliance. |
| Discuss significant financial risk exposures and the steps management has taken to monitor, control and report such exposures. |
| Appoint Selectives independent public accountants and supervise the relationship between Selective and its independent auditors, including reviewing their performance, making decisions with respect to their compensation, retention and removal, reviewing and approving in advance their audit services and permitted non-audit services, and confirming the independence of the independent auditors. |
Director Members: | Independent | |
Paul D. Bauer, Chairperson and Designated Audit Committee Financial
Expert under SEC Safe Harbor
|
Yes | |
Joan M. Lamm-Tennant
|
Yes | |
Ronald L. OKelley
|
Yes | |
J. Brian Thebault
|
Yes |
Page 14
Written Charter is available on the Corporate Governance section of www.selective.com |
2008 Meetings: 4 | |
| Establish criteria for the selection of directors and identify and recommend to the Board the nominees for director. |
| Review and assess Selectives Corporate Governance Guidelines and recommend any changes to the Board. |
| Recommend to the Board the directors to serve on the various Board committees and as chairpersons of the respective committees. |
| Advise the Board with respect to Board composition, procedures and committees. |
| Review and update Selectives Code of Conduct and review conflicts of interest or other issues that may arise under the Code of Conduct involving Selectives officers or directors. |
| Oversee the self-evaluations of the Board and each committee of the Board. |
| Review, jointly with the Salary and Employee Benefits Committee, executive staff succession planning and professional development. |
Director Members: | Independent | |
A. David Brown, Chairperson
|
Yes | |
W. Marston Becker
|
Yes | |
William M. Kearns, Jr.
|
Yes |
| Directors and management; |
| Third party search firms that it may engage from time-to-time; and |
| Stockholders. |
| Personal and professional ethics, integrity, character, and values; |
| Professional and personal experience; |
| Subject matter expertise; |
| Independence; |
| Diversity; |
| Business judgment; |
| Insurance industry knowledge; |
| Willingness to dedicate and devote sufficient time to Board duties and activities; |
| Potential or actual conflicts of interest; and |
| Other appropriate and relevant factors, including the qualification and skills of the current members of the Board. |
Page 15
2008 Meetings: 1 | ||
| Authorized by By-laws to exercise the Board of Directors powers and authority in the management of Selectives business and affairs between Board meetings. | |
| Has the right and authority to exercise all the powers of the Board of Directors on all matters brought before it except matters concerning Selectives investments. |
Director Members: | ||
Gregory E. Murphy, Chairperson |
William M. Kearns, Jr., Lead Director |
|
Paul D. Bauer |
William M. Rue |
|
A. David Brown |
J. Brian Thebault |
Written Charter is available on
the Corporate Governance
section of www.selective.com
|
2008 Meetings: 5 |
| Review and approve changes to Selectives investment policies, strategies, and programs. | |
| Review investment transactions made on behalf of Selective and review the performance of Selectives investment portfolio. | |
| Review matters relating to the investment portfolios of the benefit plans of Selective and its subsidiaries, including the administration and performance of such portfolios. | |
| Appoint members of Selectives Management Investment Committee. | |
| Review and make recommendations to the Board regarding payment of dividends. | |
| Review Selectives capital structure and provide recommendations to the Board regarding financial policies and matters of corporate finance. |
Director Members: | |||
William M. Rue, Chairperson |
S. Griffin McClellan III |
||
W. Marston Becker |
Michael J. Morrissey |
||
William M. Kearns, Jr. |
Ronald L. OKelley |
||
Joan M. Lamm-Tennant |
Page 16
Written Charter is available on
the Corporate Governance
section of www.selective.com
|
2008 Meetings: 8 | |
| Oversee, review, and administer all compensation, equity, and employee benefit plans and programs related to Selectives and its subsidiaries employees and management. | |
| Review annually and approve corporate goals and objectives relevant to executive compensation and evaluate performance in light of those goals. | |
| Review annually and approve Selectives compensation strategy for employees. | |
| Review annually and determine the individual elements of total compensation of the CEO and other members of Senior Management. | |
| Review and approve compensation for non-employee directors. |
Director Members: | Independent | |
J. Brian Thebault, Chairperson |
Yes | |
Paul D. Bauer |
Yes | |
John C. Burville |
Yes | |
Michael J. Morrissey |
Yes |
Page 17
| Base salary; | ||
| Annual cash incentive payments; | ||
| Long-term incentive awards in the form of stock options, performance-based restricted stock units, and performance-based cash incentive units; and | ||
| Retirement and deferred compensation plans. |
Page 18
| Market/Product Group organizations that compete with Selective in the sale of products and services; | ||
| Size Group companies of similar size; | ||
| Property and Casualty Insurance Compensation Survey; | ||
| McLagan Partners Investment Management Survey Insurance Companies; and | ||
| ClearSolutionsHR Actuarial Salary Surveys. |
Market/Product
Group |
Size Group |
|
The Chubb Corporation |
Arch Capital Group, Ltd. |
|
Cincinnati Financial Corporation |
Commerce Group, Inc. |
|
CNA Financial Corporation |
Hanover Group |
|
EMC Insurance Group Inc. |
MaxCapital Group Ltd. |
|
Hanover Group |
Mercury General Corporation |
|
Harleysville Group, Inc. |
Ohio Casualty Corporation |
|
Hartford Financial Services Group |
Old Republic International Corporation |
|
Ohio Casualty Corporation |
Radian Group Inc. |
|
PMA Capital Corporation |
Unitrin, Inc. |
|
Safeco Corporation |
Zenith National Insurance Corp. |
|
The Travelers Companies, Inc. |
||
State Auto Financial Corporation |
Page 19
ACE |
Great American Insurance Group |
|
Acuity |
Hanover Group |
|
Allstate Insurance Company |
Harleysville Group, Inc. |
|
American Family Insurance |
Hartford Financial Services Group |
|
American International Group |
Liberty Mutual Group |
|
Argonaut Group, Inc. |
Main Street America Group |
|
The Auto Club Group |
Mercury General Corporation |
|
Automobile Club of Southern California |
MetLife |
|
California State Automobile Association |
Nationwide |
|
Central Insurance Companies |
Ohio Casualty Corporation |
|
The Chubb Corporation |
OneBeacon Insurance Group, Ltd |
|
CNA Financial Corporation |
PMA Capital Corporation |
|
Country Insurance & Financial Services |
Safeco Corporation |
|
Crum & Forster |
Sentry Insurance |
|
Erie Indemnity Company |
The Travelers Companies, Inc. |
|
Farmers Insurance Group |
State Farm Insurance Company |
|
FBL Financial Group, Inc. |
USAA |
|
Firemans Fund Insurance Company |
Utica National Insurance Group |
|
GEICO |
Winterthur North America |
|
GE Insurance |
Zenith National Insurance Corp. |
|
Zurich North America |
40/86 Advisors, Inc |
Mutual of Omaha |
|
Advantus Capital Management, Inc |
Nationwide Insurance | |
AEGON USA |
New York Life Investment Management LLC |
|
Aetna, Inc. |
Northwestern Mutual Life Insurance Company |
|
AIG Global Investment Group |
OneAmerica Financial Partners |
|
Allianz Life Insurance of North America |
Opus Investment Management (Hanover Ins) |
|
Allianz of America, Inc. |
Pacific Life Insurance Company |
|
Allstate Investments, LLC |
PartnerRe Asset Management Company |
|
Assurant, Inc |
PPM America, Inc. |
|
AVIVA USA (formerly AmerUs) |
Principal Global Investors |
|
AXA Equitable |
Progressive Corporation |
|
The Chubb Corporation |
Prudential Financial |
|
CIGNA Investment Management |
Security Benefit Corporation |
|
Country Insurance & Financial Services |
Sentinel Asset Management, Inc. |
|
CUNA Mutual Group |
Sentry Insurance |
|
FBL Financial Group |
Standard Life Investments (USA) Limited |
|
Fort Washington Investment Advisors, Inc. |
State Farm Insurance Companies |
|
Genworth Financial |
Sun Life Financial |
|
Guardian Life Insurance Company |
Swiss Re |
|
Hartford Investment Management Company |
Thrivent Financial for Lutherans |
|
ING Investment Management |
TIAA-CREF |
|
Liberty Mutual Group |
The Travelers Companies, Inc. |
|
MBIA Asset Management |
USAA Investment Management Company |
|
MEAG New York Corporation (Munich RE) |
||
MetLife Investments |
||
MFC Global Investment Management |
||
Mutual of Omaha |
||
Modern Woodmen of America |
Page 20
ACE INA |
Harleysville Insurance |
|
Acuity |
The Hartford |
|
Aipso |
Insurance Services Office |
|
Allstate Corporation |
Liberty Mutual Group |
|
American Family Insurance |
The Main Street America Group |
|
American International Group |
Mercury Insurance Group |
|
Argonaut Group, Inc. |
MetLife Auto and Homeowners Insurance |
|
Assurant Solutions |
Michigan Education Employees Mutual |
|
Automobile Club Group/AAA Michigan |
Insurance Company |
|
Automobile Club of Southern California |
Munich Reinsurance America, Inc. |
|
California Casualty Management |
Nationwide Insurance |
|
Association |
NCCI Holdings, Inc. |
|
California State Automobile Association |
Ohio Casualty Corporation |
|
The Chubb Corporation |
Pennsylvania National Mutual Casualty |
|
CNA |
Insurance Company |
|
Crum & Forster/US Fire Insurance |
PMA Insurance Group |
|
CUNA Mutual Group |
Safeco Corporation |
|
Employers Mutual Casualty Company |
Selective Insurance Company of America |
|
Erie Insurance Group |
State Farm Insurance Companies |
|
Farmers Insurance |
Swiss Reinsurance Company |
|
FBL Financial Group, Inc. |
Towers-Perrin |
|
Firemans Fund Insurance Company |
Traveler |
|
GEICO |
United Services Automobile Association |
|
GMAC Motors Insurance Corporation |
White Mountains Reinsurance Services |
|
GM Insurance Management Corporation |
Winterhur U.S. Holdings |
|
GM Reinsurance Corporation |
XL Capital |
|
Great American Insurance Company |
Zurich North America |
|
The Hanover Insurance Group |
Page 21
| the functional role of the position; | ||
| the level of responsibility; | ||
| growth of the executive in the role, including skills and competencies; | ||
| the contribution and performance of the executive; and | ||
| the organizations ability to replace the executive. |
Page 22
| New agent appointments and revenue growth; |
| Achievement of premium target in specified market segment; |
| Complete efforts to achieve targeted expansion of company footprint; |
| Achieve targeted pricing goals established under predictive modeling underwriting process; |
| Achieve service and compliance goals; and |
| Achieve stated litigation management and workers compensation operational improvements. |
Officer | Title | Maximum ACIP Opportunity | ||
Gregory E. Murphy
|
Chairman, President & CEO | 200% of base salary | ||
Dale A. Thatcher
|
Executive Vice President & CFO | 150% of base salary | ||
Richard F. Connell
|
Senior Executive Vice President | 175% of base salary | ||
Ronald Zaleski
|
Executive Vice President & Chief Actuary | 150% of base salary |
Page 23
Page 24
Page 25
| Three-year vesting period; and | ||
| Achievement at any time during the vesting period of either: (i) a cumulative operating return on equity of fifteen percent (15%), computed by excluding from the determination of average equity any unrealized gain occurring after December 31, 2007, or (ii) a five percent (5%) cumulative growth in net premiums written. |
Page 26
| Three-year performance period; | ||
| The value of each cash incentive unit initially awarded increases or decreases to reflect total shareholder return on Selective common stock over the three-year performance period for the award; and | ||
| The number of cash incentive units ultimately earned increases or decreases based on: (i) cumulative three-year statutory net premium written growth relative to a peer index, and (ii) cumulative three-year statutory combined ratio relative to a peer index. Awards are earned at target level if these performance measures are between the 45th and 54.9th percentile of the peer group. If both measures are at or above the 80th percentile, 200% of the units initially awarded are earned. If both measures are below the 35th percentile, none of the units initially awarded are earned. |
Auto-Owners Insurance Group |
CNA Group LLC |
|
Liberty Mutual Group Inc. |
The Travelers Companies, Inc. |
|
Hartford Fire Group |
Harleysville Group Inc. |
|
Safeco Insurance Company of America |
Utica National Insurance Group |
|
Erie Insurance Exchange |
Hanover Insurance Group, Inc. |
|
Cincinnati Financial Corporation |
W. R. Berkley Corporation |
|
OneBeacon Insurance Group, Ltd |
| Each director shall, within five (5) years of his or her first election to the Board, beneficially own at least four (4) times the cash value of his or her annual retainer in shares of Selective common stock. Shares of Selective common stock currently owned, awards of restricted stock or restricted stock units not yet vested and shares of Selective common stock held in benefit plan investments (i.e., 401(k) Plan) are considered in determining such ownership. Unexercised stock options are not counted in calculating ownership. Deferred stock units held in the accounts of directors under the Deferred Compensation Plan for directors are counted in calculating ownership. |
Page 27
| The current requirements for certain officers of Selective are as follows: |
Chairman, President & CEO
|
4 x base salary | |
Senior Executive Vice Presidents
and Executive Vice Presidents
|
2.5 x base salary | |
Senior Vice Presidents
|
1.5 x base salary |
Page 28
Page 29
Change in | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Non-Equity | Pension Value | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Incentive | and Nonqualified | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Name | Stock | Option | Plan | Deferred | All Other | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
And | Salary | Awards | Awards | Compensation | Compensation | Compensation | Total | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
Principal Position | Year | ($)(1) | ($)(2) | ($)(3) | ($)(4) | Earnings ($)(5) | ($)(6) | ($) | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Gregory E. Murphy |
2008 | 900,000 | 1,708,294 | 23,139 | 650,000 | 459,931 | 42,150 | 3,783,514 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Chairman, President
and Chief |
2007 | 900,000 | 1,876,425 | 25,633 | 900,000 | 85,449 | 40,989 | 3,828,496 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Executive Officer |
2006 | 876,923 | 2,460,513 | 28,066 | 1,500,000 | 158,637 | 42,900 | 5,067,039 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Dale A. Thatcher |
2008 | 465,769 | 164,747 | 12,662 | 250,000 | 43,062 | 21,193 | 957,433 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Executive Vice |
2007 | 405,000 | 207,953 | 15,664 | 300,000 | 13,696 | 18,428 | 960,741 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
President, Chief |
2006 | 342,308 | 242,166 | 17,152 | 420,000 | 14,245 | 17,075 | 1,052,946 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Financial Officer
and Treasurer |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Richard F. Connell |
2008 | 450,000 | 597,923 | 23,139 | 275,000 | 96,035 | 21,491 | 1,463,588 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Senior Executive |
2007 | 411,538 | 561,175 | 24,318 | 350,000 | 49,037 | 19,250 | 1,415,318 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Vice President and |
2006 | 375,385 | 327,237 | 18,351 | 485,000 | 44,406 | 17,755 | 1,268,134 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Chief
Administrative
Officer |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Kerry A. Guthrie |
2008 | 421,154 | 543,683 | 23,139 | 325,000 | 151,006 | 19,279 | 1,483,261 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Executive Vice |
2007 | 392,615 | 607,940 | 25,633 | 495,000 | 49,640 | 20,762 | 1,591,590 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
President and Chief |
2006 | 347,077 | 338,280 | 20,047 | 400,000 | 59,761 | 18,263 | 1,183,428 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Investment Officer |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Ronald J. Zaleski |
2008 | 395,385 | 218,379 | 14,470 | 200,000 | 54,649 | 17,990 | 900,873 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Executive Vice |
2007 | 367,385 | 183,074 | 15,746 | 275,021 | 19,157 | 21,869 | 882,252 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
President and Chief |
2006 | 349,923 | 219,045 | 17,152 | 390,000 | 22,178 | 21,162 | 1,019,460 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Actuary |
(1) | The amounts in this column include portions of salary that certain named executive officers have deferred into SICAs Deferred Compensation Plan. Such amounts are also included in the Nonqualified Deferred Compensation table on page 36. | |
(2) | This column reflects amounts recognized as expense for the 2008 grants of performance-based restricted stock units, 2007 and 2006 grants of performance-based restricted stock, and 2008, 2007, 2006 and performance-based cash incentive unit awards. Grants of performance-based restricted stock and performance-based restricted stock units were made pursuant to the Omnibus Stock Plan, under which such shares vest three years from the date of grant, conditioned upon the attainment of certain predetermined performance goals. Grants of cash incentive unit awards were made pursuant to the Cash Incentive Plan, under which such units vest at the payment date, which is as soon as practicable in the calendar year following the end of the calendar year coincident with the end of the three-year performance period. The value of each cash incentive unit initially awarded increases or decreases to reflect total shareholder return on Selective common stock over the three-year performance period for the award. The number of cash incentive units ultimately earned increases or decreases based on: (i) cumulative three-year statutory net premium written growth relative to a peer index, and (ii) cumulative three-year statutory combined ratio relative to a peer index. Restricted stock, restricted stock unit, and cash incentive unit awards are subject to forfeiture should the grantee resign or be terminated for cause prior to vesting. Amounts recognized as expense for performance-based restricted stock and performance-based cash incentive unit awards granted in 2006 to the named executive officers are as follows: Mr. Murphy: $709,476 restricted stock and $1,751,037 cash incentive units; Mr. Thatcher: $69,838 restricted stock and $172,328 cash incentive units; Mr. Connell: $77,237 restricted stock and $250,000 cash incentive units; Mr. Guthrie: $71,067 restricted stock and $267,213 cash incentive units; and Mr. Zaleski: $63,171 restricted stock and $155,874 cash incentive units. Amounts recognized as expense for performance-based restricted stock and performance-based cash incentive unit awards granted in 2007 to the named executive officers are as follows: Mr. Murphy: $1,331,279 restricted stock and $545,146 cash incentive units; Mr. Thatcher: $147,518 restricted stock and $60,435 cash incentive units; Mr. Connell: $398,125 restricted stock and $163,050 cash incentive units; Mr. Guthrie: $431,302 restricted stock and $176,638 cash incentive units; and Mr. Zaleski: $129,868 restricted stock and $53,206 cash incentive units. Amounts recognized as expense for performance-based restricted stock unit and performance-based cash incentive unit awards granted in 2008 to the named executive officers are as follows: Mr. Murphy: $1,024,973 restricted stock units and $683,321 cash incentive units; Mr. Thatcher: $94,931 restricted stock units and $69,816 cash incentive units; Mr. Connell: $358,715 restricted stock units and $239,208 cash incentive units; Mr. Guthrie: $326,221 restricted stock units and $217,462 cash incentive units; and Mr. Zaleski: $129,854 restricted stock units and $88,525 cash incentive units. The expense reported in this column assumes the following: (i) the predetermined performance goals for the restricted stock unit grants are probable of being attained; (ii) per units values for the 2008, 2007, and 2006 cash incentive unit awards of $102.09, $81.89, and $109.69, respectively; and (iii) a 150% peer group unit multiplier for the 2007 and 2006 grants and a 125% peer group unit multiplier for the 2008 grants. | |
(3) | This column reflects amounts recognized as expense for the 2008, 2007, and 2006 option grants. The grant date fair value of these grants is calculated using the Black-Scholes option valuation method, in accordance with FAS 123R. For a discussion of the weighted-average assumptions used in the valuation of these awards, see Item 8. Financial Statements and Supplementary Data, Note 16, Share-Based Payments, in Selectives Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2008; Item 8. Financial Statements and Supplementary Data, Note 17, Share-Based Payments, in Selectives Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2007; and Item 8. Financial Statements and Supplementary Data, Note 18, Share-Based Payments, in Selectives Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2006. Grants were made pursuant to the Omnibus Stock Plan, under which such options vest one-third each year, beginning the first anniversary of the grant date. The grants are subject to forfeiture should the grantee resign or be terminated for cause prior to vesting. |
Page 30
(4) | Amounts in this column include: (i) ACIP awards earned in 2008 and paid in March 2009 under the Cash Incentive Plan for Messrs. Murphy, Thatcher, Connell, and Zaleski, and for Mr. Guthrie, includes the annual incentive compensation payment earned in 2008 and paid in March 2009 under the IDCP; (ii) ACIP awards earned in 2007 and paid in 2008 under the Cash Incentive Plan for Messrs. Murphy, Thatcher, Connell, and Zaleski, and for Mr. Guthrie, includes the annual incentive compensation payment earned in 2007 and paid in 2008 under the IDCP; and (iii) ACIP awards earned in 2006 and paid in 2007 under the Cash Incentive Plan for Messrs. Murphy, Thatcher, Connell, and Zaleski, and for Mr. Guthrie, includes the annual incentive compensation payment earned in 2006 and paid in 2007 under the Investment Compensation Program. | |
(5) | Amounts in this column reflect the actuarial increase in the present value of each named executive officers pension benefits under all defined benefit pension plans of the company, determined using the same interest rate and mortality assumptions as those used for financial statement reporting purposes. There were no changes to the benefit formulas under the defined pension benefit plans in 2008. The increase in pension values reported in this column are attributable to the use of a different mortality table, a decrease in the discount rate used to calculate present value, along with the increase of years of service of the named executive officers. There were no above-market or preferential earnings on deferred compensation under the companys nonqualified deferred compensation program. | |
(6) | For 2006, amounts in this column for each named executive officer reflect the following: |
| Mr. Murphy: $33,075 of company matching contributions to Mr. Murphys Deferred Compensation Plan, $3,000 for tax preparation services, and $6,825 of company matching contributions to Mr. Murphys 401(k) plan. | ||
| Mr. Thatcher: $13,312 of company matching contributions to Mr. Thatchers Deferred Compensation Plan, $1,500 for tax preparation services, and $2,263 of company matching contributions to Mr. Thatchers 401(k) plan. | ||
| Mr. Connell: $7,330 of company matching contributions to Mr. Connells Deferred Compensation Plan, $675 for tax preparation services, and $9,750 of company matching contributions to Mr. Connells 401(k) plan. | ||
| Mr. Guthrie: $12,936 of company matching contributions to Mr. Guthries Deferred Compensation Plan, $1,660 for tax preparation services, $2,937 of company matching contributions to Mr. Guthries 401(k) plan, and $730 representing the difference between the market rate of interest and the actual rate of interest on indebtedness to the company. | ||
| Mr. Zaleski: $10,237 of company matching contributions to Mr. Zaleskis Deferred Compensation Plan, $1,175 for tax preparation services, and $9,750 of company matching contributions to Mr. Zaleskis 401(k) plan. |
| Mr. Murphy: $30,875 of company matching contributions to Mr. Murphys Deferred Compensation Plan, and $10,114 of company matching contributions to Mr. Murphys 401(k) plan. | ||
| Mr. Thatcher: $15,569 of company matching contributions to Mr. Thatchers Deferred Compensation Plan, and $2,859 of company matching contributions to Mr. Thatchers 401(k) plan. | ||
| Mr. Connell: $8,650 of company matching contributions to Mr. Connells Deferred Compensation Plan, $525 for tax preparation services, and $10,075 of company matching contributions to Mr. Connells 401(k) plan. | ||
| Mr. Guthrie: $14,790 of company matching contributions to Mr. Guthries Deferred Compensation Plan, $2,280 for tax preparation services, $3,075 of company matching contributions to Mr. Guthries 401(k) plan, and $617 representing the difference between the market rate of interest and the actual rate of interest on indebtedness to the company. | ||
| Mr. Zaleski: $16,716 of company matching contributions to Mr. Zaleskis Deferred Compensation Plan, $1,415 for tax preparation services, and $3,738 of company matching contributions to Mr. Zaleskis 401(k) plan. |
| Mr. Murphy: $30,875 of company matching contributions to Mr. Murphys Deferred Compensation Plan, $1,200 for tax preparation services, and $10,075 of company matching contributions to Mr. Murphys 401(k) plan. | ||
| Mr. Thatcher: $11,118 of company matching contributions to Mr. Thatchers Deferred Compensation Plan, and $10,075 of company matching contributions to Mr. Thatchers 401(k) plan. | ||
| Mr. Connell: $10,400 of company matching contributions to Mr. Connells Deferred Compensation Plan, $1,016 for tax preparation services, and $10,075 of company matching contributions to Mr. Connells 401(k) plan. | ||
| Mr. Guthrie: $7,762 of company matching contributions to Mr. Guthries Deferred Compensation Plan, $938 for tax preparation services, $10,075 of company matching contributions to Mr. Guthries 401(k) plan, and $504 representing the difference between the market rate of interest and the actual rate of interest on indebtedness to the company. | ||
| Mr. Zaleski: $7,915 of company matching contributions to Mr. Zaleskis Deferred Compensation Plan, and $10,075 of company matching contributions to Mr. Zaleskis 401(k) plan. |
Page 31
Grant Date | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Fair Value | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Estimated Future Payouts Under Equity | All Other | of Cash | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Incentive Plan Awards(2) | Option | Incentive | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Re- | Awards: | Exercise | Unit, | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Estimated Future | stricted | Number of | or Base | Restricted | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Payouts Under Non- | Stock | Securities | Price of | Stock, and | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Equity Incentive Plan | Awards | Underlying | Option | Option | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Awards(1) | Cash Incentive Unit Awards(3) | (#) | Options | Awards | Awards(4) | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Name | Grant Date | Minimum($) | Maximum ($) | Threshold (#) | Target (#) | Maximum (#) | Maximum (#) | (#) | ($/Sh) | ($) | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Gregory E. Murphy |
2/6/2008 | $ | 0 | $ | 1,800,000 | 2,760 | 5,520 | 11,040 | 42,583 | 4,154 | $ | 24.07 | $ | 1,600,111 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Dale A. Thatcher |
2/6/2008 | $ | 0 | $ | 712,500 | 923 | 1,845 | 3,690 | 14,228 | 4,154 | $ | 24.07 | $ | 550,106 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Richard F. Connell |
2/6/2008 | $ | 0 | $ | 787,500 | 966 | 1,932 | 3,864 | 14,903 | 4,154 | $ | 24.07 | $ | 575,053 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Kerry A. Guthrie |
2/6/2008 | $ | 0 | $ | 797,160 | 879 | 1,757 | 3,514 | 13,553 | 4,154 | $ | 24.07 | $ | 525,059 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Ronald J. Zaleski |
2/6/2008 | $ | 0 | $ | 600,000 | 748 | 1,495 | 2,990 | 11,528 | 4,154 | $ | 24.07 | $ | 450,117 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
(1) | For Messrs. Murphy, Thatcher, Connell, and Zaleski, amounts represent minimum and maximum potential ACIP award to each named executive officer under our Cash Incentive Plan for 2008. Maximum awards reflect the maximum ACIP award established by the SEBC pursuant to the requirements of Section 162(m) of the Internal Revenue Code. For Mr. Guthrie, the amounts represent the minimum and maximum potential annual cash incentive award under the IDCP for 2008. Actual payouts of the above-referenced awards are included in the Non-Equity Incentive Compensation Plan column of the Summary Compensation Table. For information regarding the ACIP and the annual cash incentive payment under the IDCP, see the section of the Compensation Discussion and Analysis beginning on page 22 entitled Annual Cash Incentive Program. | |
(2) | Performance-based cash incentive unit awards are granted under the Cash Incentive Plan, and performance-based restricted stock unit awards and stock option awards are granted under the Omnibus Stock Plan. For a description of the material terms of such awards, see pages 25-27 of the Compensation Discussion & Analysis. | |
(3) | The number of performance-based cash incentive units paid can range from 0-200%, and therefore, has the potential to pay $0. The threshold selected represents 35-44.9th percentile of the Cash Incentive Unit Peer Group; the target represents 45-54.9th percentile of the Cash Incentive Unit Peer Group; and the maximum represents greater than or equal to 80th percentile of the Cash Incentive Unit Peer Group. | |
(4) | This column includes restricted stock unit awards calculated at grant date fair value, cash incentive unit awards with an initial value of $100 per unit, and stock options valued at the Black-Scholes value on the date of grant. |
Page 32
Option
Awards |
Stock
Awards |
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Name | No. of | No. of | Option | Option | No. of Shares | Market Value | Equity | Equity | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Securities | Securities | Exercise | Expiration | or Units of | of Shares or | Incentive Plan | Incentive Plan | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
Under- | Under- | Price | Date | Stock That | Units of Stock | Awards: No. of | Awards: | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
lying | lying | ($/Sh)(2) | Have Not | That Have Not | Unearned | Market or | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Unexer- | Unexer- | Vested | Vested | Shares, Units | Payout Value | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
cised | cised | (#)(3)(4) | ($) | or Other Rights | of Unearned | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Options | Options (#) | That Have Not | Shares, Units | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
(#) | Unexer- | Vested | or Other | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Exercis- | cisable(1) | Rights That | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
able | Have Not | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Vested | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
($)(8) | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Gregory | 21,062 | 11.1875 | 02/06/2011 | 43,569 | 999,036 | 10,642 | (5) | 975,982 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
E. | 10,362 | 10.375 | 02/05/2012 | 4,438 | (6) | 371,044 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Murphy | 11,394 | 11.6175 | 02/04/2013 | 5,520 | (7) | 1,127,127 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
10,000 | 17.395 | 02/03/2014 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
10,000 | 22.025 | 02/01/2015 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
2,320 | 1,160 | 28.74 | 01/30/2016 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
1,160 | 2,320 | 27.44 | 01/30/2017 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
4,154 | 24.07 | 02/06/2018 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Dale A. | 10,000 | 22.025 | 02/01/2015 | 19,419 | 445,272 | 3,142 | (5) | 288,154 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Thatcher | 2,320 | 1,160 | 28.74 | 01/30/2016 | 7,290 | 167,160 | 1,476 | (6) | 123,403 | |||||||||||||||||||||||
1,160 | 2,320 | 27.44 | 01/30/2017 | 16,128 | 369,815 | 1,845 | (7) | 376,730 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
4,154 | 24.07 | 02/06/2018 | 14,557 | 333,802 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Richard | 10,000 | 22.025 | 02/01/2015 | 15,248 | 349,638 | 3,292 | (5) | 301,911 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
F. | 2,320 | 1,160 | 28.74 | 01/30/2016 | 1,438 | (6) | 120,226 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
Connell | 1,160 | 2,320 | 27.44 | 01/30/2017 | 1,932 | (7) | 394,494 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
4,154 | 24.07 | 02/06/2018 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Kerry A. | 4,000 | 7.594 | 02/03/2010 | 13,867 | 317,966 | 2,842 | (5) | 260,641 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Guthrie | 4,500 | 11.1875 | 02/06/2011 | 1,438 | (6) | 120,226 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
10,000 | 10.375 | 02/05/2012 | 1,757 | (7) | 358,762 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
12,000 | 11.6175 | 02/04/2013 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
8,000 | 17.395 | 02/03/2014 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
10,000 | 22.025 | 02/01/2015 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
2,320 | 1,160 | 28.74 | 01/30/2016 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
1,160 | 2,320 | 27.44 | 01/30/2017 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
4,154 | 24.07 | 02/06/2018 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Ronald J. | 9,638 | 10.375 | 02/05/2012 | 19,419 | 445,272 | 2,842 | (5) | 260,641 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Zaleski | 8,606 | 11.6175 | 02/04/2013 | 6,594 | 151,200 | 1,263 | (6) | 105,595 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
5,748 | 17.395 | 02/03/2014 | 13,804 | 316,526 | 1,495 | (7) | 305,263 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
10,000 | 22.025 | 02/01/2015 | 11,795 | 270,457 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
2,320 | 1,160 | 28.74 | 01/30/2016 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
1,160 | 2,320 | 27.44 | 01/30/2017 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
4,154 | 24.07 | 02/06/2018 |
(1) | The options listed in this column vest ratably over three years beginning on the first anniversary of the date of grant. | |
(2) | The exercise price of option grants issued under the Omnibus Stock Plan is the closing market price on the date of the grant. The exercise price on options grants issued under previous equity plans is the average of the high and the low market price on the date of grant. | |
(3) | In the event of a termination of employment on or after an individuals Early Retirement Date, as defined under the Retirement Income Plan for Selective Insurance Company of America (Retirement Income Plan), holders of performance-based restricted stock and restricted stock unit awards are fully vested in such awards subject to the attainment of applicable performance measures. Early Retirement Dates for the named executive officers are as follows: Mr. Murphy, 10/26/2002; Mr. Thatcher, 12/3/2015; Mr. Connell, 2/3/2008; Mr. Guthrie, 9/8/2007; and Mr. Zaleski, 12/7/2009. | |
(4) | As noted below, amounts in this column include shares attained through Selectives Dividend Reinvestment and Stock Purchase Plan (DRP). Pursuant to equity grants made under Selectives previous equity plans, the grantee can choose on the date of vesting to take the dividends on the granted shares in cash or in accumulated dividend reinvestment shares of Selectives common stock. One thousand four hundred and nineteen shares (1,419) included in this column for Messrs. Thatcher and Zaleski were |
Page 33
forfeited on February 1, 2009 and the dividends on the awards that vested on February 1, 2009 were paid to Messrs. Thatcher and Zaleski in cash. | ||
(5) | Reflects number of performance-based cash incentive units initially granted in 2006 to the named executive officers for the three-year performance period ending December 31, 2008. In the event of a termination of employment on or after an individuals Early Retirement Date, as defined under the Retirement Income Plan, holders of such awards are vested in such awards, with the initial number of units and the value of each unit subject to adjustment, based on the attainment of specified performance measures. Early Retirement Dates for the named executive officers are as follows: Mr. Murphy, 11/11/2002; Mr. Thatcher, 12/10/2015; Mr. Connell, 2/7/2008; Mr. Guthrie, 9/11/2007; and Mr. Zaleski, 12/9/2009. Settlement of the 2006 cash incentive award will be made as soon as practicable in the 2009 calendar year, following the determination of the attainment of the applicable performance measures. | |
(6) | Reflects number of performance-based cash incentive units initially granted in 2007 to the named executive officers for the three-year performance period ending December 31, 2009. In the event of a termination of employment on or after an individuals Early Retirement Date, as defined under the Retirement Income Plan, holders of such awards are vested in such awards, with the initial number of units and the value of each unit subject to adjustment, based on the attainment of specified performance measures. Early Retirement Dates for the named executive officers are as follows: Mr. Murphy, 11/11/2002; Mr. Thatcher, 12/10/2015; Mr. Connell, 2/7/2008; Mr. Guthrie, 9/11/2007; and Mr. Zaleski, 12/9/2009. Settlement of the 2007 cash incentive award will be made as soon as practicable in the 2010 calendar year, following the determination of the attainment of the applicable performance measures. | |
(7) | Reflects number of performance-based cash incentive units initially granted in 2008 to the named executive officers for the three-year performance period ending December 31, 2010. In the event of a termination of employment on or after an individuals Early Retirement Date, as defined under the Retirement Income Plan, holders of such awards are vested in such awards, with the initial number of units and the value of each unit subject to adjustment, based on the attainment of specified performance measures. Early Retirement Dates for the named executive officers are as follows: Mr. Murphy, 11/11/2002; Mr. Thatcher, 12/10/2015; Mr. Connell, 2/7/2008; Mr. Guthrie, 9/11/2007; and Mr. Zaleski, 12/9/2009. Settlement of the 2008 cash incentive award will be made as soon as practicable in the 2010 calendar year, following the determination of the attainment of the applicable performance measures. | |
(8) | The amounts in this column reflect: (i) the target 100% unit multiplier for the number of cash incentive units granted for the 2006 and 2007 grants and the maximum 200% unit multiplier for the number of cash incentive units granted for the 2008 grant based on performance against the Cash Incentive Unit Peer Group; and (ii) an $91.71 per unit value for the 2006 grant, an $83.61 per unit value for the 2007 grant, and $102.09 per unit value for 2008 grant based on total shareholder return at December 31, 2008. The target 100% unit multiplier is used in the calculation for the 2006 and 2007 grants because performance through December 31, 2008 is at target and the maximum 200% unit multiplier is used in the calculation for the 2008 grant because performance through December 31, 2008 has exceeded the target amounts, which are identified for the 2008 grant in the Grants of Plan Based Awards table on page 32. |
Option Awards | Stock Awards(1) | |||||||||||||||
Number of | Number of | |||||||||||||||
Shares Acquired | Value Realized | Shares Acquired | Value Realized | |||||||||||||
on Exercise | on Exercise | on Vesting | on Vesting | |||||||||||||
Name | (#) | ($) | (#) | ($) | ||||||||||||
Gregory E. Murphy |
6,832 | 88,720 | 48,516 | 1,152,255 | ||||||||||||
Dale A. Thatcher |
0 | 0 | 19,333 | 459,154 | ||||||||||||
Richard F. Connell |
0 | 0 | 60,689 | 1,452,383 | ||||||||||||
Kerry A. Guthrie |
4,000 | 59,940 | 15,718 | 373,303 | ||||||||||||
Ronald J. Zaleski |
0 | 0 | 19,333 | 459,154 |
(1) | In the event of a termination of employment on or after an individuals Early Retirement Date as defined under the Retirement Income Plan, holders of restricted stock awards become fully vested in such awards, provided any related performance measures have been attained. As a result, the value became subject to ordinary income taxation upon a holder attaining his Early Retirement Date, notwithstanding the continued employment of the holder by the company. Due to the imposition of this accelerated income tax liability, the SEBC determined it appropriate to fully vest and remove the restrictions on such shares. Accordingly, the numbers and amounts shown for Messrs. Murphy and Guthrie reflect grants awarded to them in 2007 and the amount shown for Mr. Connell reflects grants awarded to him in 2005, 2006, and 2007. |
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Present Value of | Payments | |||||||||||||||||||
Number of Years | Accumulated | During Last | ||||||||||||||||||
Early Retirement | Credited Service | Benefit | Fiscal Year | |||||||||||||||||
Name | Eligible | Plan Name | (#)(1) | ($)(2) | ($) | |||||||||||||||
Gregory E. Murphy |
Yes | Retirement Income Plan | 27.58 | 537,053 | 0 | |||||||||||||||
SERP | 27.58 | 1,610,320 | 0 | |||||||||||||||||
Dale A. Thatcher |
No | Retirement Income Plan | 7.67 | 72,989 | 0 | |||||||||||||||
SERP | 7.67 | 47,177 | 0 | |||||||||||||||||
Richard F. Connell |
Yes | Retirement Income Plan | 7.33 | 182,966 | 0 | |||||||||||||||
SERP | 7.33 | 138,617 | 0 | |||||||||||||||||
Kerry A. Guthrie |
Yes | Retirement Income Plan | 20.00 | 330,599 | 0 | |||||||||||||||
SERP | 20.00 | 204,992 | 0 | |||||||||||||||||
Ronald J. Zaleski |
No | Retirement Income Plan | 8.25 | 116,995 | 0 | |||||||||||||||
SERP | 8.25 | 72,273 | 0 |
(1) | The Retirement Income Plan imposes a one-year waiting period for plan participation. | |
(2) | Present value as of December 31, 2008 is calculated on the basis of normal retirement age of 65. A 6.24% discount rate is applied and the RP-2000 Mortality Table is used to calculate the values indicated. |
Page 35
Executive | Selective | Aggregate | Aggregate Balance | |||||||||||||||||
Contributions | Contributions in | Aggregate | Withdrawals/ | at December 31, | ||||||||||||||||
in 2008 | 2008 | Earnings in 2008 | Distributions | 2008 | ||||||||||||||||
Name | ($)(1) | ($)(2) | ($)(3) | ($) | ($)(4) | |||||||||||||||
Gregory E. Murphy |
47,500 | 30,875 | (359,070 | ) | 0 | 548,856 | ||||||||||||||
Dale A. Thatcher |
46,577 | 11,118 | (149,556 | ) | 0 | 180,449 | ||||||||||||||
Richard F. Connell |
212,147 | 10,400 | (715,185 | ) | 0 | 1,032,602 | ||||||||||||||
Kerry A. Guthrie |
148,906 | 7,762 | (363,725 | ) | 0 | 506,981 | ||||||||||||||
Ronald J. Zaleski |
246,059 | 7,915 | (930,042 | ) | 0 | 1,159,024 |
(1) | Amounts in this column attributable to 2008 salary deferred by the named executive officers are included in the Salary column of the Summary Compensation Table. Such amounts are as follows: Mr. Murphy, $47,500; Mr. Thatcher, $46,577; Mr. Connell, $124,643; Mr. Guthrie, $74,656; and Mr. Zaleski, $108,548. The balance of the amounts in this column, $87,504 for Mr. Connell, $74,250 for Mr. Guthrie, and $137,511 for Mr. Zaleski, are attributable to the deferral of a portion of their ACIP paid in March 2008. | |
(2) | 100% of the information in this column is included in the All Other Compensation Column of the Summary Compensation Table. | |
(3) | The information in this column is not included in the Summary Compensation Table because such earnings are not above market earnings. | |
(4) | The Aggregate Balance as of December 31, 2008 includes the following contributions of the named executive officers and SICA to the Deferred Compensation Plan which are included in the Summary Compensation Table |
| For 2006: Mr. Murphy, $329,498; Mr. Thatcher, $42,927; Mr. Connell, $470,907; Mr. Guthrie, $36,561; and Mr. Zaleski, $376,604. | ||
| For 2007: Mr. Murphy, $283,262; Mr. Thatcher, $56,069; Mr. Connell, $342,899; Mr. Guthrie, $185,990; and Mr. Zaleski, $303,659. | ||
| For 2008: Mr. Murphy, $78,375; Mr. Thatcher, $57,695; Mr. Connell, $222,547; Mr. Guthrie, $156,668; and Mr. Zaleski, $253,974. |
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Term | Continuation of the Prior Agreements initial three (3) year term,(1) automatically renewed for additional one (1) year periods unless terminated by either party with written notice. | ||||||||||||
Compensation | Base salary.(2) | ||||||||||||
Benefits | Eligible to participate in incentive compensation plan, stock plan, 401(k) plan, defined benefit pension plan and any other stock option, stock appreciation right, stock bonus, pension, group insurance, retirement, profit sharing, medical, disability, accident, life insurance, relocation plan or policy, or any other plan, program, policy or arrangement of Selective or SICA intended to benefit SICAs employees generally. | ||||||||||||
Vacation and Reimbursements |
Vacation time and reimbursements for ordinary travel and entertainment expenses in accordance with SICAs policies. | ||||||||||||
Perquisites | Suitable offices, secretarial and other services, and other perquisites to which other executives of SICA are generally entitled. | ||||||||||||
Severance and Benefits on Termination without Change in Control |
| For Cause or Resignation by Executive other than for Good Reason: Salary and benefits accrued through termination date. |
|||||||||||
| Death or Disability: Multiple(3) of: (i) Executives salary, plus (ii) average of three (3) most recent annual cash incentive payments; provided that any such severance payments be reduced by life or disability insurance payments under policies with respect to which SICA paid premiums. | ||||||||||||
| Without Cause by SICA, Relocation of Office over Fifty (50) Miles (without Executives consent), Resignation for Good Reason by Executive: | ||||||||||||
| Multiple(3) of: (i) Executives salary, plus (ii) average of three (3) most recent annual cash incentive payments. | ||||||||||||
| Medical, dental, vision, disability and life insurance coverage in effect for Executive and dependents until the earlier of specified period of months(4) following termination or commencement of equivalent benefits from a new employer. | ||||||||||||
| Stock Awards: Except for termination for Cause or resignation by the Executive other than for Good Reason, immediate vesting and possible extended exercise period, as applicable, for any previously granted stock options, stock appreciation rights, cash incentive units, restricted stock and stock bonuses. | ||||||||||||
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Severance and Benefits on Termination after Change in Control |
For termination Without Cause or by Executive with Good Reason within two (2) years following a Change in Control (as defined in the Employment Agreement), Executive is entitled to: | |||||||||
| Severance payment equal to multiple(5) of the greater of: (i) Executives salary plus target annual cash incentive payment; or (ii) Executives salary plus the average of Executives three (3) immediately prior annual cash incentive payments. | |||||||||
| Medical, dental, vision, disability and life insurance coverage in effect for Executive and dependents until the earlier of period of months(6) following termination or commencement of equivalent benefits from a new employer. | |||||||||
| Stock Awards, same as above, except that the initial number of cash incentive units is increased by 150%. | |||||||||
| Tax Gross-Up Payment, if necessary, to offset any excise tax imposed on Executive for such payments or benefits. | |||||||||
Release; Confidentiality and |
| Receipt of severance payments and benefits conditioned upon: | ||||||||
Non-Solicitation | | Entry into release of claims; and | ||||||||
| No disclosure of confidential or proprietary information or solicitation of employees to leave the Registrant or its subsidiaries for a period of two (2) years following the termination of the Employment Agreement. |
(1) | Initial three (3) year term ends on April 25, 2009 for Mr. Murphy and July 31, 2009 for Messrs. Connell, Thatcher, Guthrie, and Zaleski. | |
(2) | As of January 31, 2009, the annual base salaries for the Executives were as follows: Mr. Murphy, $900,000; Mr. Thatcher, $475,000; Mr. Connell, $450,000; Mr. Guthrie, $425,000; and Mr. Zaleski, $400,000. | |
(3) | For Mr. Murphy the multiple is 2; for Mr. Connell the multiple is 1.75; and for Messrs. Thatcher, Guthrie, and Zaleski the multiple is 1.5. | |
(4) | For Mr. Murphy the period is 24 months; for Mr. Connell, 21 months; and for Messrs. Thatcher, Guthrie, and Zaleski, 18 months. | |
(5) | For Mr. Murphy the multiple is 2.99; for Mr. Connell the multiple is 2.5; and for Messrs. Thatcher, Guthrie, and Zaleski the multiple is 2. | |
(6) | For Mr. Murphy the period is 36 months; and for Messrs. Connell, Thatcher, Guthrie, and Zaleski, 24 months. |
Resignation(1) | ||||||||||||||||||||
or Termination | Death or | Termination | Change in | |||||||||||||||||
For Cause | Retirement(2) | Disability | Without Cause | Control | ||||||||||||||||
Name | ($) | ($) | ($)(3) | ($)(4) | ($)(5) | |||||||||||||||
Gregory E. Murphy |
| 2,909,625 | 7,309,625 | 7,328,733 | 14,512,045 | |||||||||||||||
Dale A. Thatcher |
| 1,915,970 | 3,188,470 | 3,204,258 | 5,629,276 | |||||||||||||||
Richard F. Connell |
| 969,021 | 2,491,531 | 2,493,748 | 4,854,803 | |||||||||||||||
Kerry A. Guthrie |
| 878,213 | 2,138,213 | 2,141,650 | 3,882,278 | |||||||||||||||
Ronald J. Zaleski |
| 1,702,300 | 2,872,310 | 2,885,303 | 4,832,953 |
(1) | Other than a resignation for Good Reason | |
(2) | This column includes the value of unvested restricted stock and restricted stock units granted under the Omnibus Stock Plan and any related accrued DEUs, all of which shares would normally vest upon retirement for any participant in such plans and be payable upon the achievement of the specified performance goals applicable to each such award. Also included is the current intrinsic value of performance-based cash incentive units awarded under the Cash Incentive Plan to the named executive officers, which, as for any other participant, would fully vest upon retirement and be payable following the end of the applicable three-year performance period, subject to the achievement of the specified performance goals applicable to each such award. |
Page 38
(3) | This column includes the value of unvested restricted stock and restricted stock units granted under the Omnibus Stock Plan and any related accrued DEUs, all of which shares would normally vest upon death or disability for any participant in such plans. The restricted stock granted would be payable upon the achievement of the specified performance goals applicable to each such award. The restricted stock units granted would, in the event of death, be payable immediately and, in the event of disability, upon the achievement of the specified performance goals applicable to each such award. This column also includes the severance payment provided for in each named executive officers Employment Agreement. Also included is the current intrinsic value of performance-based cash incentive units awarded under the Cash Incentive Plan to the named executive officers, which, as for any other participant, would fully vest upon death or disability and be payable following the end of the applicable three-year performance period, subject to the achievement of the specified performance goals applicable to each such award. Payments in this column will be reduced by life or disability insurance payments under policies with respect to which SICA paid premiums. | |
(4) | Also applicable to resignation for Good Reason. This column includes: (i) the value of unvested restricted stock and restricted stock units granted under the Omnibus Stock Plan and any related accrued DEUs, all of which shares would vest upon a termination Without Cause or for Good Reason and be payable upon the achievement of the specified performance goals applicable to each such award; (ii) the severance payment; and (iii) the value of medical, dental, vision, disability, and life insurance coverages, all as provided for in each named executive officers Employment Agreement. This column also includes the current intrinsic value of performance-based cash incentive units awarded under the Cash Incentive Plan to the named executive officers, which would fully vest and be payable following the end of the applicable three-year performance period, subject to the achievement of the specified performance goals applicable to each such award. | |
(5) | This column includes: (i) the value of unvested restricted stock and restricted stock units granted under the Omnibus Stock Plan and any related accrued DEUs payable upon the achievement of the specified performance goals applicable to each such award, and (ii) the value of 150% of the number of outstanding performance-based cash incentive units awarded to the named executive officers under the Cash Incentive Plan, calculated using a per unit value at December 31, 2008 of $91.71 for the 2006 grant, $83.61 for the 2007 grant, and $102.09 for the 2008 grant, all of which would vest upon a change in control for any participant holding such awards under such plans. This column also includes the severance payment and the value of medical, dental, vision, disability, and life insurance coverages, as provided for in each named executive officers Employment Agreement. This column also includes the value of any tax gross-up payment necessary to offset any excise tax imposed for the payment and benefits disclosed in this column. |
Fees Earned or | ||||||||||||||||
Paid in Cash | Stock Awards | Option Awards | Total | |||||||||||||
Name | ($) | ($)(1) | ($)(2) | ($) | ||||||||||||
Paul D. Bauer |
34,500 | 82,555 | 32,524 | 149,579 | ||||||||||||
W. Marston Becker |
8,000 | 82,555 | 32,524 | 123,079 | ||||||||||||
A. David Brown |
13,500 | 82,555 | 32,524 | 128,579 | ||||||||||||
John C. Burville |
30,000 | 62,552 | 32,524 | 125,076 | ||||||||||||
William M. Kearns, Jr. |
29,000 | 82,555 | 32,524 | 144,079 | ||||||||||||
Joan M. Lamm-Tennant |
9,500 | 82,555 | 32,524 | 124,579 | ||||||||||||
S. Griffin McClellan III |
32,000 | 57,560 | 32,524 | 122,084 | ||||||||||||
Michael J. Morrissey |
26,670 | 17,202 | 0 | 43,872 | ||||||||||||
Ronald L. OKelley |
31,500 | 70,069 | 32,524 | 134,093 | ||||||||||||
John F. Rockart |
11,898 | 40,432 | 32,524 | 84,854 | ||||||||||||
William M. Rue |
15,500 | 82,555 | 32,524 | 130,579 | ||||||||||||
J. Brian Thebault |
32,500 | 82,555 | 32,524 | 147,079 |
(1) | This column reflects amounts recognized as expense for the 2008 grants of restricted stock units to directors, based on a grant date fair market value of $23.93, and the portion of each directors annual retainer paid in stock, 50% of which annual retainer, as set forth below, must be paid to a director in Selective common stock. | |
(2) | This column reflects amounts recognized as expense for the 2008 option grants to directors using the Black Scholes option valuation method in accordance with FAS 123R. The grant date fair value of each of these grants is $150,161. The aggregate number of options outstanding at December 31, 2008 for each director is as follows: Messrs. Bauer, Kearns, and Rue: 51,544; Messrs. Becker and Burville: 15,544; Mr. Brown: 45,544; Mr. McClellan: 27,544; Mr. OKelley: 21,544; Mr. Rockart: 33,544; and Mr. Thebault and Ms. Lamm-Tennant: 57,544. |
Page 39
Type of Compensation | Amount | |||
Annual Retainer Fee |
$ | 50,000 | ||
Grant Date Fair Value of Annual Equity Award |
$ | 32,500 | ||
Black-Scholes Value of Annual Option Grant |
$ | 32,500 | ||
Board Meeting Attendance |
$ | 0 | ||
Committee Attendance Fee |
||||
In person |
$ | 1,500 | ||
By telephone |
$ | 1,000 | ||
Annual Chairperson Fee |
||||
Audit Committee |
$ | 15,000 | ||
Corporate Governance and Nominating
Committee |
$ | 7,500 | ||
Finance Committee |
$ | 7,500 | ||
Salary & Employee Benefits Committee |
$ | 12,500 | ||
Lead Director Fee |
$ | 15,000 | ||
Expenses |
Reasonable |
Page 40
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Name or Position | Dollar Value | |||
Gregory E. Murphy |
$ | 5,447 | ||
Dale A. Thatcher |
$ | 3,609 | ||
Richard F. Connell |
$ | 0 | ||
Kerry A. Guthrie |
$ | 2,511 | ||
Ronald J. Zaleski |
$ | 0 | ||
Executive Officer Group |
$ | 11,567 | ||
All other Employees |
$ | 619,717 |
Page 45
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Category | 2008 | 2007 | ||||||
Audit Fees |
$ | 1,215,000 | $ | 1,319,500 | ||||
Audit-Related Fees(1) |
$ | 497,150 | $ | 132,000 | ||||
Tax Fees |
$ | 0 | $ | 0 | ||||
All Other Fees |
$ | 0 | $ | 0 | ||||
TOTAL |
$ | 1,712,150 | $ | 1,451,500 |
(1) | Audit-Related Fees for 2008 consisted primarily of: (i) amounts associated with audits of our benefit plans for 2007 and 2006; (ii) an audit of our flood operations; and (iii) the independent actuarial review and reserve opinion related to the Audit. Audit-Related Fees for 2007 consisted primarily of: (i) the independent actuarial review and reserve opinion related to the Audit; and (ii) audits of the employee benefit plans for 2007 and 2006. |
Page 48
| Periodically met with and held discussions with management regarding the quality, not just the acceptability, of the accounting principles, the reasonableness of significant judgments, and the clarity of disclosures in Selectives financial statements. | ||
| Reviewed and discussed the audited financial statements for the year ended December 31, 2008, included in the Annual Report on Form 10-K, with management, which represented to the Audit Committee that: (i) the financial statements were prepared in accordance with U.S. generally accepted accounting principles; and (ii) management had reviewed Selectives disclosure controls and procedures and believes those controls are effective. | ||
| Reviewed and discussed with KPMG LLP, Selectives independent registered public accounting firm, which is responsible for expressing an opinion on the conformity of those audited financial statements in accordance with U.S. generally accepted accounting principles, their judgments as to the quality, not just the acceptability, of Selectives accounting principles and such other matters as are required to be discussed with the Audit Committee under Statements of the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board, including the Statement on Auditing Standards No. 61, as amended. | ||
| Discussed with KPMG LLP, the independent registered public accounting firms independence from Selective and its management, including the matters in the written disclosures from the independent accounts delivered to the Audit Committee as required by the applicable requirements of the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board. |
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| the business proposed to be brought before the annual meeting; | ||
| the reasons for conducting such business at the annual meeting; | ||
| any material interest of the stockholder in such business; | ||
| the beneficial owner, if any, on whose behalf the proposal is made; | ||
| the name and address of the stockholder giving the notice, as they appear on our books, and of the beneficial owner of those shares; and | ||
| the class and number of shares which are owned beneficially and of record by the stockholder and the beneficial owner. |
| all information relating to each person whom the stockholder proposes to nominate for election as a director as would be required to be disclosed in a solicitation of proxies for the election of such person as a director pursuant to Regulation 14A under the Exchange Act (including such persons written consent to being named in the proxy statement as a nominee and to serving as a director if so elected); | ||
| the name and address of the stockholder giving the notice, as they appear on our books, and of the beneficial owner of those shares; and | ||
| the class and number of shares which are owned beneficially and of record by the stockholder and the beneficial owner. |
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Page 53
1.1. | Selective Insurance Group, Inc. established the Employee Stock Purchase Savings Plan effective as of July 1, 1987. The purpose of the Plan is to provide a greater community of interest between Selective stockholders and the employees of Selective and its subsidiaries which adopt the Plan, and to facilitate the purchase by employees of shares of common stock of Selective. It is intended that the Plan qualify as an employee stock purchase plan under Section 423 of the Code, and the provisions of the Plan shall be construed in a manner consistent with the requirements of Section 423 of the Code. | |
1.2. | The Plan is hereby amended and restated effective with respect to Offering Periods commencing on and after July 1, 2009, and is renamed the Selective Insurance Group, Inc. Employee Stock Purchase Plan (2009). |
2.1. | Account means a bookkeeping account established by the Company with respect to the funds that are accumulated for each individual Participant as a result of payroll deductions for the purpose of purchasing Shares under the Plan. The funds that are allocated to a Participants Account may be commingled with the general funds of the Company. | |
2.2. | Acquisition means a merger or consolidation of Selective with and into another person or the sale, transfer, or other disposition of all or substantially all of the assets of Selective to one or more persons (other than any wholly-owned subsidiary Selective) in a single transaction or series of related transactions. | |
2.3. | Base Pay means a Participants regular annualized base salary or regular straight time base earnings, excluding payments for overtime, bonuses and other incentive compensation, commissions, pension, welfare and fringe benefits, and any other special, irregular or infrequent benefits or remuneration; provided, however, that Base Pay shall include remuneration paid by the Company for paid-time off (bank days) used while in the employ of the Company, short-term disability wage continuation payments, military leave payments, military leave differential payments and workers compensation wage continuation payments, as well as any salary deferral contributions made by the Participant to the Selective Insurance Retirement Savings Plan, the Selective Insurance Company of America Selections Plan, and the Selective Insurance Company of America Deferred Compensation Plan. | |
2.4. | Board means the Board of Directors of Selective. | |
2.5. | Code means the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended. | |
2.6. | Commencement Date with respect to an Option means the first day of the Offering Period in which such Option was granted. | |
2.7. | Committee means the Salary and Employee Benefits Committee of the Board. |
Page A-1
2.8. | Company means, collectively, Selective, Selective Insurance Company of America, Selective HR Solutions VI, Inc., and any Parent or other Subsidiary of Selective which adopts the Plan as a participating employer with the consent of and subject to any conditions imposed by Selective. Notwithstanding the foregoing, the Committee may exclude Selective Insurance Company of America, Selective HR Solutions, Inc. and/or any other Parent or Subsidiary of Selective adopting the Plan from participation in the Plan with respect to any Offering Period by written action prior to the commencement of such Offering Period. | |
2.9. | Employee means any common law employee of the Company, including an officer or a member of the Board of Directors of the Company, who is customarily employed by the Company more than five (5) months in a calendar year, and who (i) is regularly scheduled to work on a full-time basis; (ii) is regularly scheduled to work on a part-time basis; or (iii) is not regularly scheduled to work on either a full-time or part-time basis, but is customarily employed more than twenty (20) hours per week, all as set forth in the books and records of the Company. | |
2.10. | Exercise Date with respect to any Option means the last day of the Offering Period in which such Option was granted. | |
2.11. | Fair Market Value of the Shares on any given date shall be calculated as follows: (i) if the Shares are listed on a national securities exchange or traded on the NASDAQ National Market or the NASDAQ SmallCap Market and sale prices are regularly reported for the Shares, then the Fair Market Value shall be the closing selling price for a Share reported on the applicable composite tape or other comparable reporting system on the applicable date, or, if the applicable date is not a trading day, on the most recent trading day immediately prior to the applicable date; or (ii) if closing selling prices are not regularly reported for the Shares as described in clause (i) above but bid and asked prices for the Shares are regularly reported, then the Fair Market Value shall be the arithmetic mean between the closing or last bid and asked prices for the Shares on the applicable date or, if the applicable date is not a trading day, on the most recent trading day immediately prior to the applicable date; or (iii) if prices are not regularly reported for the Shares as described in clause (i) or (ii) above, then the Fair Market Value shall be such value as the Committee in good faith determines. | |
2.12. | Offering Period means any of the successive periods of time not to exceed one (1) year used for purposes of purchasing Shares by Participants under the Plan, as described in Section 4.1. | |
2.13. | Option means the right to purchase Shares under the Plan. | |
2.14. | Parent means a parent, as that term is defined under Section 424(e) of the Code. | |
2.15. | Participant means an Employee who has elected to participate in the Plan in accordance with Article V. | |
2.16. | Plan means this Selective Insurance Group, Inc. Employee Stock Purchase Plan (2009), as amended from time to time. | |
2.17. | Selective means Selective Insurance Group, Inc., or any successor. | |
2.18. | Shares mean shares of common stock of Selective, par value $2.00 per share, subject to adjustments which may be made in accordance with Article XV. | |
2.19. | Subsidiary means a subsidiary, as that term is defined under Section 424(f) of the Code. |
Page A-2
3.1. | Any person who is an Employee during the enrollment period established by the Committee for an Offering Period and as of the first day of an Offering Period, shall be eligible to participate in the Plan with respect to such Offering Period, subject to the limitations imposed by Section 423 of the Code. | |
3.2. | Notwithstanding any provision of the Plan to the contrary, no Employee shall be granted an Option: |
(i) | if such Employee, immediately after the Option is granted, owns stock possessing five percent (5%) or more of the total combined voting power or value of all classes of stock of Selective or of any Parent or Subsidiary of Selective (taking into account stock which would be attributed to such Employee pursuant to Section 424(d) of the Code); or | ||
(ii) | which gives the Employee the right to purchase stock under all employee stock purchase plans (within the meaning of Section 423 of the Code) of Selective and its Parents and Subsidiaries, including the Plan, to accrue at a rate which exceeds $25,000 of the Fair Market Value of such stock (determined as of the Commencement Date of the Offering Period to which the Option relates) for each calendar year in which such Option is outstanding at any time. The term accrue shall be interpreted in accordance with Section 423(b)(8) of the Code and the regulations thereunder. |
4.1. | Shares shall be offered for purchase under the Plan through a series of successive or non-overlapping Offering Periods until such time as: (i) the maximum number of Shares available for issuance under the Plan shall have been purchased; or (ii) the Plan shall have been sooner terminated. Each Offering Period shall be of such duration (not to exceed twelve (12) months) and commence on such dates as determined by the Committee prior to the Commencement Date of such Offering Period. At any time and from time to time, the Committee may change the duration and/or the frequency of Offering Periods or suspend operation of the Plan with respect to Offering Periods not yet commenced. Unless otherwise determined by the Committee from time to time, an Offering Period shall commence on the first business day in January and July of each year and end on the last business day in the following June and December, respectively. | |
4.2. | The Committee may at any time suspend any Offering Period if required by law or if the Committee shall deem such suspension to be in the best interests of the Company. |
5.1. | Any person who is an Employee during the enrollment period established by the Committee for an Offering Period and as of the Commencement Date of an Offering Period, may become a Participant in the Plan for such Offering Period by enrolling in the Plan and authorizing payroll deductions prior to the Commencement Date of such Offering Period in the manner provided by the Committee from time to time. | |
5.2. | Participation in one Offering Period under the Plan shall neither limit, nor require, participation in any other Offering Period. | |
5.3. | Participation in the Plan shall be voluntary. |
Page A-3
6.1. | Upon enrollment in the Plan, a Participant shall authorize the Company to make payroll deductions of a whole percentage of his Base Pay each payroll period at a rate not in excess of ten percent (10%) of such payroll period Base Pay. The Committee may, from time, change the limitations on the maximum and/or minimum percentage or amount of payroll deductions that may be made by Participants; provided, however, that, except as provided in Articles XII and XV, a Participants existing rights under any Offering Period that has already commenced may not be adversely affected by such change. | |
6.2. | Payroll deductions for a Participant shall commence with the first regular payroll date occurring on or after the Commencement Date of the Offering Period for which a payroll deduction authorization has been filed. Payroll deductions shall end on the last payroll date that is on or prior to the Exercise Date, unless the Participant has discontinued his participation in the Plan with respect to that Offering Period earlier as provided in Article IX. | |
6.3. | At the conclusion of each Offering Period, the Company shall automatically re-enroll each Participant in the next Offering Period, and payroll deductions shall continue at the rate selected by the Participant in his payroll deduction authorization for the prior Offering Period, unless the Participant discontinues his participation in the Plan earlier as provided in Article IX, or increases or reduces his contribution percentage with respect to, and prior to the Commencement Date of, such subsequent Offering Period. | |
6.4. | All payroll deductions made for a Participant shall be credited to a payroll deduction Account in the name of the Participant under the Plan. The Participant may not make any separate cash payments into such Account nor may payment for Shares be made from other than the Participants Account. | |
6.5. | A Participant may elect to discontinue his participation in the Plan and terminate his payroll deduction authorization as provided in Article IX, but may not alter the amount or rate of payroll deductions during an Offering Period or make any other change during an Offering Period. | |
6.6. | No interest will be paid or allowed in respect of any payroll deduction amount under any circumstances. | |
6.7. | Notwithstanding anything in this Article VI to the contrary, to the extent necessary to comply with Section 423(b)(3) or Section 423(b)(8) of the Code and Section 3.2 herein, a Participant may be excluded from participating in an Offering Period, or a Participants payroll deductions may be limited, decreased or terminated during any Offering Period. Except to the extent required to ensure compliance with Section 423(b)(3) or Section 423(b)(8) of the Code and Section 3.2 herein, payroll deductions limited, decreased or terminated pursuant to this Section 6.7 shall re-commence automatically at the rate provided in such Participants payroll deduction authorization at the beginning of the next Offering Period, unless terminated by the Participant as provided in Article IX or modified by the Participant with respect to the next Offering Period. | |
6.8. | Notwithstanding anything in this Article VI to the contrary, in the event that an Employee who is a participant in any pension plan maintained by the Company or any of its affiliates which includes a cash or deferred arrangement pursuant to Section 401(k) of the Code takes a hardship distribution, within the meaning of Section 401(k)(2)(B)(i)(IV) of the Code, from such plan, the Committee may decrease the Employees payroll deductions under the Plan to zero percent (0%) during an Offering Period, and/or may restrict the Employee from participating in the Plan with respect to a new Offering Period, if and to the extent necessary to satisfy the requirements of Treasury Regulation Section 1.401(k)-1(d)(3)(iv)(E)(2). |
Page A-4
7.1. | Options granted pursuant to the Plan shall be evidenced by agreements, if any, in such form, including electronic form, as the Committee shall require, and shall comply with and be subject to the terms and conditions set forth in this Article VII. All Employees shall have the same rights and privileges under the Plan. | |
7.2. | On the Commencement Date of each Offering Period, Selective shall grant to each Participant in such Offering Period an Option to purchase as many full Shares as may be purchased by such Participant with the amount credited to his Account at the Exercise Date for such Option, subject to the limitations of Section 7.4. A Participant shall be granted a separate purchase right for each Offering Period in which he participates. | |
7.3. | The Option price of the Shares shall be the lower of: |
(i) | 85% of the Fair Market Value of the Shares on the Commencement Date of the Offering Period; and | ||
(ii) | 85% of the Fair Market Value of the Shares on the Exercise Date for the Offering Period. |
7.4. | In no event may the number of Shares purchased by any Participant during an Offering Period exceed 2,400 shares, as the same may be adjusted pursuant to Article XV. |
8.1. | Unless a Participant has received a refund of or withdrawn the balance of his Account pursuant to Article IX, his Option for the purchase of Shares will be exercised automatically on the Exercise Date, and the maximum number of Shares shall be purchased at the applicable Option price with the accumulated payroll deductions in his Account. | |
8.2. | Any balance remaining in any Participants Account at the Exercise Date of an Offering Period equaling less than the sum required to purchase a full Share shall be used to purchase fractional Shares. |
9.1. | Upon termination of a Participants employment with the Company for any reason, including death, prior to an Exercise Date for an Offering Period, the payroll deductions credited to the Participants Account for such Offering Period shall be returned to him (or, in the event of the Participants death, to his estate) in cash, without interest. | |
9.2. | Subject to rules and procedures adopted by the Committee, a Participant may withdraw all but not less than all of the balance in his Account and thereby withdraw from participation in the Plan with respect to an Offering Period by giving written notice to the Committee no later than fourteen (14) business days prior to the last day of the Offering Period. Upon receipt of such notice: (a) the Participants Option for the Offering Period shall automatically terminate; (b) no further contributions to his Account shall be permitted for such Offering Period; and (c) as soon as administratively practicable, the Company shall refund to the Participant the funds that remain in the Participants Account, without interest. | |
9.3. | An Employee who has previously withdrawn from the Plan may re-enter by complying with the requirements of Article V. Upon compliance with such requirements, an Employees re- |
Page A-5
entry into the Plan will become effective on the Commencement Date of the next Offering Period following the date the Employee complies with Article V with respect to the re-entry. |
10.1. | The Shares to be sold to Participants under this amended and restated Plan may, at the election of the Board, be either treasury Shares, Shares originally issued for such purpose, or issued and outstanding Shares purchased for such purpose in the open market. Subject to adjustment pursuant to Article XV, the aggregate number of Shares available for issuance under the Plan shall be the lesser of: (i) 4,500,000; and (ii) (A) 1,500,000 plus (B) 2,882,890; plus (C) the number of Shares issued to Participants on the exercise of Options for the Offering Period ending June 30, 2009. For the avoidance of doubt, the aggregate number of Shares remaining available for issuance under the Plan with respect to Offering Periods commencing on or after July 1, 2009 shall be 1,500,000 (subject to adjustment pursuant to Article XV). | |
10.2. | If for any reason any Option under the Plan terminates or is cancelled in whole or in part, Shares that may have been purchased upon the exercise of such Option may be made subject to another Option under the Plan. | |
10.3. | If, on any date, the total number of Shares for which outstanding Options have been granted exceeds the number of Shares then available under this Article X after deduction of all Shares that have been purchased under the Plan, the Committee shall make a pro-rata allocation of the Shares that remain available in as nearly a uniform manner as shall be practicable and as it shall determine, in its sole judgment, to be equitable. In such event, the number of Shares each Participant may purchase shall be reduced and the Committee shall give to each Participant a written notice of such reduction. | |
10.4. | Selective shall deliver, or cause to be delivered, to each Participant, as promptly as practicable after any Exercise Date, a statement indicating the number of Shares, including any fractional Shares, purchased upon exercise of his Option that are being held in an account established by Selective for and in the Participants name. Notwithstanding the foregoing, the Committee may, in its sole discretion, issue certificates for Shares to a Participant, subject to payment by the Participant of such reasonable charge as the Committee may impose. | |
10.5. | A Participant will have no interest in Shares covered by his Option, and will have no rights as a stockholder and no voting rights with respect to any such Shares, until such Option has been exercised and such Shares issued to the Participant. |
11.1. | The Plan shall be administered by the Salary and Benefits Committee of Selective Insurance Group, Inc. For any period during which no such committee is in existence, Committee shall mean the Board, and all authority and responsibility assigned to the Committee under the Plan shall be exercised, if at all, by the Board. | |
11.2. | The Committee shall be vested with full and exclusive discretionary authority to administer the Plan, to construe, interpret and apply its terms, to determine eligibility to participate in the Plan, to adjudicate all disputed claims made with respect to the Plan and to adopt such rules and regulations as it deems necessary to administer the Plan. Without limiting the generality of the foregoing, the Committee may, at any time, change the timing of an Offering Period, limit the frequency and/or number of changes in the amount withheld during an Offering Period, permit payroll withholding in excess of the amount designated by a Participant in order to adjust for delays or mistakes in the Companys processing of properly completed |
Page A-6
payroll deduction authorizations, establish reasonable waiting and adjustment periods and/or accounting and crediting procedures to ensure that amounts applied toward the purchase of Shares for each Participant properly correspond with amounts withheld from the Participants Base Pay, and establish such other limitations or procedures as the Committee determines in its sole discretion advisable which are consistent with the Plan. | ||
11.3. | Any determination, decision, or action of the Committee with respect to the construction, interpretation, administration, or application of the Plan, any Option agreement entered into pursuant to the Plan or any other forms or procedures used in connection with or relating to the Plan shall be final, conclusive, and binding on all persons having or claiming any interest under this Plan. | |
11.4. | The Committee may, at any time and in its sole discretion by action in writing, delegate to any individual, committee or entity any of its powers and responsibilities under the Plan. Without limiting the generality of the foregoing, the Committee may appoint an employee or employees of the Company and delegate to such employee(s) its authority to administer the day-to-day operations of the Plan. | |
11.5. | In addition to such other rights of indemnification as they may have as directors, officers, employees or members of the Committee, the members of the Committee shall be indemnified by Selective against the reasonable expenses, including attorneys fees, actually and necessarily incurred in connection with the defense of any action, suit or proceeding, or in connection with any appeal therein, to which they or any of them may be a party by reason of any action taken or failure to act under or in connection with the Plan or any Option granted thereunder, and against all amounts paid by them, or any of them, in settlement thereof (provided such settlement is approved by independent legal counsel selected by Selective) or in satisfaction of a judgment in any such action, suit or proceeding, except in relation to matters as to which it shall be adjudged in such action, suit or proceeding that such Committee member is liable for negligence or misconduct in the performance of his duties; provided, that within 60 days after institution of any such action, suit or proceeding a Committee member shall in writing offer the Company the opportunity, at its own expenses, to handle and defend the same. |
12.1. | The Board may amend the Plan at any time in such respects as it shall deem advisable; provided, however, that stockholder approval will be required for any amendment that will increase the total number of Shares as to which Options may be granted under the Plan or for any amendment which, without such stockholder approval, would cause this Plan to fail to continue to qualify as an employee stock purchase plan under Section 423 of the Code. | |
12.2 | The Board may suspend or terminate this Plan at any time. Upon a suspension or termination of the Plan while an Offering Period is in progress, the Committee shall either shorten such Offering Period by setting a new Exercise Date before the date of such suspension or termination of the Plan, or shall refund to each Participant the balance, if any, of each Participants Account, without interest. | |
12.3 | Without stockholder consent and without regard to whether any Participant rights may be considered to have been adversely affected, the Committee, as administrator of the Plan, shall be entitled to make changes to the Offering Periods and other terms of participation in the Plan permitted by Article 11, including, without limitation, Section 11.2. |
Page A-7
13.1. | Neither the Options, the payroll deductions credited to a Participants Account, nor any rights with regard to the exercise of an Option or the receipt of Shares under the Plan may be assigned, transferred, pledged, or otherwise disposed of in any way by a Participant, other than by will or the laws of descent or distribution, and any such attempted assignment, transfer, pledge, or other disposition shall be null and void and without effect, but Selective may treat such act as an election to withdraw from the Plan in accordance with Article IX. No Option may be exercised during a Participants lifetime by any person other than the Participant. | |
13.2. | Unless otherwise determined by the Committee, Shares purchased under the Plan may be registered only in the name of the Participant, or, if such Participant so indicates on his payroll deduction authorization form, in his name jointly with a member of his family, with right of survivorship. A Participant who is a resident of a jurisdiction which does not recognize such a joint tenancy may have Shares registered in the Participants name as tenant in common with a member of the Participants family, without right of survivorship. |
14.1. | All payroll deductions received or held by the Company under this Plan may be used by the Company for any corporate purpose, and the Company shall not be obligated to, and shall not, segregate such payroll deductions. On each Exercise Date, sufficient funds to acquire the number of Shares being purchased by the Participants employed by each Company shall be transferred to Selective by the Company which employs such Participants. |
15.1. | Subject to any required action by the stockholders of Selective, the number of Shares covered by each Option under the Plan which has not yet been exercised and the number of Shares which have been authorized for issuance under the Plan but have not yet been placed under Option (collectively, the Reserves), as well as the maximum number of Shares which may be purchased by a Participant in an Offering Period, the number of Shares set forth in Sections 7.4 and 10.1 above, and the price per Share covered by each Option which has not yet been exercised, shall be proportionately adjusted for any increase or decrease in the number of the issued Shares resulting from a stock split, reverse stock split, stock dividend, combination or reclassification of the Shares (including any such change in the number of Shares effected in connection with a change in domicile of Selective), or any other increase or decrease in the number of Shares effected without receipt of consideration by Selective; provided however, that conversion of any convertible securities of Selective shall not be deemed to have been effected without receipt of consideration. Such adjustment shall be made by the Committee, whose determination in that respect shall be final, binding and conclusive. | |
15.2. | In the event of a dissolution or liquidation of Selective, the Plan and the Offering Period then in progress will terminate immediately prior to the consummation of such action. Unless otherwise provided by the Committee, any outstanding Option granted with respect to the Offering Period then in progress will terminate immediately prior to the consummation of such action, and the entire amount credited to each Participants Account will be paid to him or her in cash without interest. | |
15.3. | In the event of an Acquisition, each Option outstanding under the Plan shall be assumed or an equivalent option shall be substituted by the successor corporation or a Parent or Subsidiary of such successor corporation. In the event that the successor corporation or |
Page A-8
Parent or Subsidiary of such successor corporation refuses to assume or substitute for outstanding Options, then the Committee shall provide for either (i) or (ii) below to occur: |
(i) | The Offering Period then in progress shall be shortened and a new Exercise Date shall be set with respect to such Offering (the New Exercise Date), as of which date the Offering Period then in progress will terminate. The New Exercise Date shall be on or before the date of consummation of the transaction and the Committee shall notify each Participant in writing, at least ten (10) days prior to the New Exercise Date, that the Exercise Date for his Option has been changed to the New Exercise Date and that his Option will be exercised automatically on the New Exercise Date, unless prior to such date he has withdrawn from the Plan with respect to such Offering Period as provided in Article IX. | ||
(ii) | The Offering Period then in progress will terminate immediately prior to the consummation of the Acquisition, any outstanding Option granted with respect to the Offering Period then in progress will terminate, and the entire amount credited to each Participants Account will be paid to him or her in cash without interest. |
For purposes of this Article XV, an Option granted under the Plan shall be deemed to be assumed, without limitation, if, at the time of issuance of the stock or other consideration upon an Acquisition, each holder of an Option would be entitled to receive upon exercise of the Option the same number and kind of shares of stock or the same amount of property, cash or securities as such holder would have been entitled to receive upon the occurrence of the transaction if the holder had been, immediately prior to the transaction, the holder of the number of Shares covered by the Option at such time (after giving effect to any adjustments in the number of Shares covered by the Option as provided for in this Article XV); provided, however, that if the consideration received in the transaction is not solely common stock of the successor corporation or its Parent, the Committee may, with the consent of the successor corporation, provide for the consideration to be received upon exercise of the Option to be solely common stock of the successor corporation or its Parent equal in Fair Market Value to the per Share consideration received by holders of Shares in the transaction. | ||
15.4. | The Committee shall make an appropriate and proportionate adjustment, as determined in the exercise of its sole discretion, to the Reserves, as well as the price per Share and the kind of shares covered by each outstanding Option, in the event that Selective effects one or more reorganizations, recapitalizations, rights offerings or other increases or reductions of Shares, and in the event of a merger or other consolidation of Selective with or into any other corporation. |
16.1. | Shares shall not be issued with respect to an Option unless the exercise of such Option and the issuance and delivery of such Shares pursuant thereto shall comply with all applicable provisions of law, domestic or foreign, including, without limitation, the Securities Act of 1933, as amended, the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended, the rules and regulations promulgated thereunder, applicable state securities laws and the requirements of any stock exchange upon which the Shares may then be listed, and shall be further subject to the approval of counsel for the Company with respect to such compliance. | |
16.2. | As a condition to the exercise of an Option, the Committee may require the person exercising such Option to represent and warrant at the time of any such exercise that the Shares are being purchased only for investment and without any present intention to sell or distribute such Shares if, in the opinion of counsel for the Committee, such a representation is required by any of the aforementioned applicable provisions of law. |
Page A-9
17.1. | A Participant may, if and to the extent permitted by the Committee, file a written designation of a beneficiary who is to receive any Shares and cash, if any, from the participants Account under the Plan in the event of such Participants death subsequent to the end of an Offering Period but prior to delivery to him of such Shares and cash. Any such beneficiary shall also be entitled to receive any cash from the Participants Account under the Plan in the event of such Participants death during an Offering Period. | |
17.2. | Such designation of beneficiary may be changed by the Participant at any time by written notice to the Committee. In the event of the death of a Participant and in the absence of a beneficiary validly designated under the Plan who is living at the time of such Participants death, the Committee shall deliver such Shares and/or cash to the executor or administrator of the estate of the Participant, or if no such executor or administrator has been appointed (to the knowledge of the Committee), the Committee, in its discretion, may deliver such Shares and/or cash to the spouse or to any one or more dependents or relatives of the Participant, or if no spouse, dependent or relative is known to the Committee, then to such other person as the Committee may designate. |
18.1. | If a Participant disposes of any Shares received by him pursuant to an Option within two (2) years after the Commencement Date or within one (1) year after the Exercise Date of the Offering Period to which such Option relates, the Participant shall notify Selective in writing within 30 days after the date of any such disposition, and shall provide such details of the disposition, including the date of the disposition, as the Committee may require. | |
18.2. | No provision of the Plan or transaction hereunder shall confer upon any Participant any right to be employed by the Company or any subsidiary or affiliate thereof, or to interfere in any way with the right of the Company to increase or decrease the amount of any compensation payable to such Participant. | |
18.3. | Each Participant who purchases Shares under the Plan shall thereby be deemed to have agreed that the Company shall be entitled to withhold, from any other amounts that may be payable to the Participant at or around the time of the purchase, such federal, state, local and foreign income, employment and other taxes which may be required to be withheld under applicable laws. In lieu of such withholding, the Company may require the Participant to remit such taxes to the Company as a condition of the purchase. | |
18.4. | In the event that any provision of the Plan shall be declared illegal or invalid for any reason, such illegality or invalidity shall not affect the remaining provisions of the Plan but shall be fully severable, and the Plan shall be construed and enforced as if such illegal or invalid provision had never been a part of the Plan. | |
18.5. | The validity, construction, and effect of the Plan shall be determined in accordance with the laws of the State of New Jersey, without giving effect to principles of conflicts of laws, to the extent not preempted by federal law. | |
18.6. | Whenever used in the Plan, unless the context otherwise indicates, words in the masculine will be deemed to include the feminine, and the singular will be deemed to include the plural. |
Page A-10
Selective Insurance Group, Inc. 40 Wantage Avenue Branchville, New Jersey 07890 |
proxy | |||
This proxy is solicited by the Board of Directors of Selective Insurance Group, Inc. for use at the
Annual Meeting of Stockholders to be held on April 29,
2009. |
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The undersigned, a stockholder of Selective Insurance Group, Inc. (the Company), hereby
constitutes and appoints John C. Burville and Ronald L. OKelley and/or any one of them (with full
power of substitution and the full power to act without the other), proxies to vote all the shares
of the Common Stock of the Company, registered in the name of the undersigned, at the Annual
Meeting of Stockholders of the Company to be held on Wednesday, April 29, 2009 at 3:00 p.m., in the
auditorium at the headquarters of the Company at 40 Wantage Avenue, Branchville, New Jersey, and at
any adjournment thereof. |
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Specify your choices by marking the appropriate box (see reverse side), but you need not mark any
box if you wish to vote in accordance with the Board of Directors recommendations. The proxies
cannot vote your shares unless you sign and return this proxy, submit a proxy by telephone or
through the Internet, or attend the meeting and vote by ballot. |
ADDRESS BLOCK |
COMPANY
# |
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Vote by Internet, Telephone, or Mail 24 Hours a Day, 7 Days a Week |
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Your phone or Internet vote authorizes the named proxies to vote your shares in the same manner as if you marked, signed, and returned your proxy card. |
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INTERNET www.eproxy.com/sigi Use the Internet to vote your proxy until 12:00 p.m. (CT) on April 28, 2009. Please have your proxy card and the last four digits of your Social Security Number or Tax Identification Number available and follow the instructions to obtain your records and create an electronic ballot. |
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PHONE 1-800-560-1965 Use a touch-tone telephone to vote your proxy until 12:00 p.m. (CT) on April 28, 2009. Please have your proxy card and the last four digits of your Social Security Number or Tax Identification Number available and follow the instructions. |
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MAIL Mark, sign and date your proxy card and return it in the postage-paid envelope provided or return it to Selective Insurance Group, Inc., c/o Shareowner ServicesSM, P.O. Box 64873, St. Paul, MN 55164-0873. |
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If you vote your proxy by Internet or by telephone, you do NOT need to mail back your proxy card. |
The Board of Directors Recommends a Vote FOR Items 1, 2, 3, and 4. |
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1. |
Election of three (3) Class II directors |
01 A. David Brown |
o | Vote FOR |
o | Vote WITHHELD |
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for a term expiring in 2012: | 02 S. Griffin McClellan III | all nominees | from all nominees | ||||||||||||||
03 J. Brian Thebault | (except as marked) | ||||||||||||||||
(Instructions: To
withhold authority to vote for any indicated nominee, write the number(s) of the nominee(s) in the box provided to the right.) |
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2. | Approve the amended and
restated Selective Insurance Group, Inc. Employee Stock Purchase Plan (2009). |
o | For | o | Against | o Abstain | |||||||||||
3. | Ratify the appointment
of KPMG LLP as independent public accountants for the fiscal year ending December 31, 2009. |
o | For | o | Against | o Abstain | |||||||||||
4. | Stockholder proposal relating to the declassification of the Board of Directors. | o | For | o | Against | o Abstain | |||||||||||
THIS PROXY WHEN PROPERLY EXECUTED WILL BE VOTED AS DIRECTED OR, IF NO DIRECTION IS GIVEN, WILL BE VOTED FOR EACH PROPOSAL. | |||||||||||||||||
Date | |||||||||||||||||
Address Change? Mark Box o Indicate changes below: | |||||||||||||||||
Signature(s) in Box Please sign exactly as your name(s) appears on the proxy. If held in joint tenancy, all persons should sign. Trustees, administrators, etc., should include title and authority. Corporations should provide full name of corporation and title of authorized officer signing the proxy. |
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