DEF 14A
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UNITED STATES

SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION

Washington, D.C. 20549

 

 

SCHEDULE 14A INFORMATION

Proxy Statement Pursuant to Section 14(a) of the

Securities Exchange Act of 1934

(Amendment No.     )

 

 

Filed by the Registrant  ☒                             Filed by a Party other than the Registrant  ☐

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  Preliminary Proxy Statement
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  Definitive Proxy Statement
  Definitive Additional Materials
  Soliciting Material under Rule 14a-12

KEYCORP

(Name of Registrant as Specified In Its Charter)

 

(Name of Person(s) Filing Proxy Statement, if other than the Registrant)

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Table of Contents

 

 

 

LOGO

2017 Proxy Statement and

Notice of 2017 Annual Meeting

of Shareholders

 

 

LOGO


Table of Contents

 

LOGO

127 PUBLIC SQUARE

CLEVELAND, OHIO 44114

March 29, 2017

Dear Shareholder,

We are pleased to invite you to KeyCorp’s 2017 Annual Meeting of Shareholders on Thursday, May 18, 2017. The meeting will be held at the Albright-Knox Art Gallery, 1285 Elmwood Avenue, Buffalo, New York 14222, beginning at 8:30 a.m., local time.

The notice and proxy statement contain important information about proxy voting and the business to be conducted at the meeting. We encourage you to read it carefully before voting. We hope you will attend the meeting, but even if you plan to attend we encourage you to vote your shares in advance of the meeting by telephone, online, or by returning your completed proxy card to us.

Every shareholder vote is important and we want to ensure your shares are represented at the meeting. Please vote your shares as promptly as possible.

Thank you for your continued support of KeyCorp. We look forward to seeing you at the meeting.

Sincerely,

 

LOGO

Beth E. Mooney

Chairman of the Board and

Chief Executive Officer


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LOGO

127 PUBLIC SQUARE

CLEVELAND, OHIO 44114

Notice of Annual Meeting of Shareholders of KeyCorp

 

Date and Time:   Thursday, May 18, 2017, at 8:30 a.m., local time
Place:  

Albright-Knox Art Gallery

1285 Elmwood Avenue

Buffalo, New York 14222

Items of Business:  

At the meeting, the shareholders will vote on the following matters:

 

1.    Election of the 16 directors named in the proxy statement to serve for one-year terms expiring in 2018;

2.    Ratification of Ernst & Young LLP as independent auditors for KeyCorp for the fiscal year ending December 31, 2017;

3.    Advisory approval of KeyCorp’s executive compensation;

4.    Advisory approval of the frequency of the shareholder vote on KeyCorp’s executive compensation;

5.    A shareholder proposal seeking an independent Board Chairman; and

6.    Such other business as may properly come before the meeting or any postponement or adjournment thereof.

Record Date:   Shareholders of record of KeyCorp common shares at the close of business on Friday, March 24, 2017, have the right to receive notice of and to vote at the Annual Meeting and any postponement or adjournment thereof.
Delivery of Proxy Materials:   We will first mail the Notice of Internet Availability of Proxy Materials to our shareholders on or about April 3, 2017. On or about the same day, we will begin mailing paper copies of our proxy materials to shareholders who have requested them.

Internet Availability

of Proxy Materials:

  IMPORTANT NOTICE REGARDING THE AVAILABILITY OF PROXY MATERIALS FOR THE SHAREHOLDER MEETING TO BE HELD ON THURSDAY, MAY 18, 2017: Our 2017 proxy statement, proxy card, and Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2016, are available at www.envisionreports.com/key.
Voting:   It is important that your shares are represented and voted at the meeting. You may vote by telephone, online, or by mailing your signed proxy card in the enclosed return envelope if the proxy statement was mailed to you. If you do attend the meeting, you may withdraw any previously-voted proxy and personally vote on any matter properly brought before the meeting.

By Order of the Board of Directors

 

LOGO

Paul N. Harris

Secretary and General Counsel

March 29, 2017


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LOGO

127 PUBLIC SQUARE

CLEVELAND, OHIO 44114

Proxy Statement

The Board of Directors of KeyCorp (“Key,” the “Company,” “our,” “us” or “we”) is furnishing you with this proxy statement to solicit shareholder proxies to be voted at the 2017 Annual Meeting of Shareholders to be held on May 18, 2017 (the “Annual Meeting”), and at all postponements and adjournments thereof. The 2017 Annual Meeting will be held at the Albright-Knox Art Gallery, 1285 Elmwood Avenue, Buffalo, New York 14222.

The mailing address of our principal executive office is 127 Public Square, Cleveland, Ohio 44114. KeyCorp employs the cost-effective and environmentally-conscious “notice and access” delivery method. This allows us to give our shareholders access to a full set of our proxy materials online. Beginning on or about April 3, 2017, we will send to most of our shareholders, by mail or e-mail, a notice explaining how to access our proxy materials and vote online. This notice is not a proxy card and cannot be used to vote your shares. On or about April 3, 2017, we will also begin mailing paper copies of our proxy materials to shareholders who have requested them.

All record holders of KeyCorp common shares at the close of business on Friday, March 24, 2017, are entitled to vote. On that date, there were 1,082,015,914 KeyCorp common shares outstanding. Holders of KeyCorp common shares are entitled to one vote for each share held of record.


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Proxy Statement Summary

This summary contains highlights of information contained elsewhere in our proxy statement and does not contain all of the information that you should consider. Please read the entire proxy statement before you vote.

2017 Director Nominees

 

Name   Age   Director
Since
  Independent   Committee Memberships
                    Audit   C&O   NCGC   Risk   Executive
 Austin A. Adams   73   2016   Yes          

 Bruce D. Broussard

  54   2015   Yes          

 Charles P. Cooley

  61   2011   Yes   Chair        

 Gary M. Crosby

  62   2016   No          

 Alexander M. Cutler (1)

  65   2000   Yes       Chair    

 H. James Dallas

  58   2005   Yes          

 Elizabeth R. Gile

  61   2010   Yes         Chair  

 Ruth Ann M. Gillis

  62   2009   Yes          

 William G. Gisel, Jr.

  64   2011   Yes          

 Carlton L. Highsmith

  65   2016   Yes          

 Richard J. Hipple

  64   2012   Yes          

 Kristen L. Manos

  57   2009   Yes          

 Beth E. Mooney

  62   2010   No           Chair

 Demos Parneros

  55   2014   Yes          

 Barbara R. Snyder

  61   2010   Yes          
 David K. Wilson   62   2014   Yes          

 

  (1) Serves as KeyCorp’s independent Lead Director.

2016 Performance Highlights

2016 was a significant year for KeyCorp, with strong results and momentum across our businesses. Additionally, we successfully completed the acquisition of First Niagara Financial Group, Inc. (“First Niagara”), on August 1, 2016. The acquisition was the largest acquisition in Key’s 200-year history. The acquisition added $23 billion in loans, $27 billion in deposits, one million new clients, expanded capabilities, and a stronger market presence. We completed the conversion of branches, systems, and clients in October 2016, which resulted in adding over 300 new branches and over 400 new ATMs.

Other significant aspects of our 2016 performance included the following:

 

LOGO

 

  (1) Non-GAAP financial measure. Please see Figure 4 on page 39 of our 2016 Annual Report on Form 10-K for more information on this non-GAAP measure and a reconciliation to the most comparable GAAP measure.

 



 

Positive Operating Leverage
Increased earnings per share by 8%, compared to 2015, excluding merger-related charges(1), and grew pre-provision net revenue(1) for the third consecutive year, excluding merger-related charges, as growth in revenue outpaced expenses
Produced strong results in our fee-based businesses, including a record year for investment banking and debt placement fees, cards and payments income, and corporate services income
Continued to effectively manage our expenses; cash efficiency ratio, excluding merger-related charges(1), improved over 150 basis points to 64.3% in 2016
Strong Risk Management
Maintained credit discipline with strong asset quality; net charge-offs to average loans ratio remained below our targeted range, at .29%
Disciplined Capital Management
Increased our quarterly common share dividend by 13% in the second quarter
Returned $133 million to shareholders in 2016 through common share repurchases following the First Niagara merger
First Niagara Merger
Successfully completed the First Niagara merger and the conversion of branches, systems, and clients

 

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LOGO  2017 Proxy Statement Summary 

 

Executive Compensation Highlights

The objectives of our executive compensation program are to:

 

    Make pay decisions based on performance of the Company, the business unit and the individual;
    Deliver pay in a way that reinforces focus on balancing short- and long-term financial performance objectives; and
    Support sustainable performance with policies that are focused on prudent risk-taking and the balance between risk and reward.

We support our compensation program with a number of best practices in governance and executive compensation, including the following:

 

What We Do:    What We Don’t Do:

     Impose robust stock ownership guidelines

 

     Subject shares to post-vesting holding period

 

     “Double trigger” change of control agreements

 

     Use tally sheets

 

     Review share utilization

 

     Retain an independent compensation consultant

 

     Subject all incentives to risk adjustment and clawback

  

     No employment agreements for executive    officers

 

     No tax gross-ups

 

     No SERPs

 

     No hedging or pledging of KeyCorp securities

 

     No “timing” of equity grants

 

     No repricing of stock options

In 2016, KeyCorp demonstrated the ability to grow in a challenging environment. As a result of the momentum in our core businesses and our acquisition of First Niagara, we are now uniquely positioned to build on the progress we have made. We have clear and compelling strategic priorities, which include growing relationships, effectively managing risk and capital, generating strong returns, and achieving our financial targets. Our 2016 compensation highlights include:

 

 

LOGO

 



 

Annual Incentive Plan
CEO Compensation
NEO Compensation
120% Funding
2016 total direct compensation of $8.1 million, including $2.7 million annual incentive (135% of target) and $4.4 million long-term incentive (110% of target)
Annual incentive plan payouts ranged from 120% to 135% of target for 2016
Funding reflects strong financial performance, but also quality of execution against challenging technology initiatives and aggressive First Niagara integration timeline
Target total direct compensation for 2017 increased to $7.8 million
2014 Performance Award funding of 91.4% of target driven by relative TSR below Peer Group median and the effect of the continued low-rate environment on cumulative EPS target

 

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Corporate Governance Practices

We are committed to meeting high standards of ethical behavior, corporate governance, and business conduct. Some of our corporate governance best practices include:

Director Elections

 

    Annual elections for all directors (page 1)
    Majority voting in uncontested elections (page 4)

Board Independence

 

    All director nominees, other than Ms. Mooney and Mr. Crosby, are independent under the New York Stock Exchange’s and KeyCorp’s standards of independence (page 20)
    Our standing Board committees (Audit, Compensation and Organization, Nominating and Corporate Governance, and Risk) consist solely of independent directors (page 15)
    Independent Lead Director—Alexander M. Cutler—with extensive responsibilities (page 14)
    Annual Lead Director evaluation and review of Board leadership structure by independent directors (page 15)
    Prior approval from the Lead Director of the Board agenda, schedule and materials (page 14)

Standing Board Committees

 

    Audit Committee—14 meetings in 2016 (page 16)
    Compensation and Organization Committee—7 meetings in 2016 (page 17)
    Nominating and Corporate Governance Committee—6 meetings in 2016 (page 17)
    Risk Committee—9 meetings in 2016 (page 18)

Practices and Policies

 

    Experienced, diverse Board membership
    Commitment to Board refreshment, with an average tenure of five years and four new directors added since 2015 (page 14)
    Independent and non-management members of the Board met in executive session at every regular 2016 Board meeting (page 15)
    Approximately 90% average attendance by directors at Board and committee meetings (page 16)
    Strong Board leadership in the oversight of enterprise risk (pages 18 and 19)
    Annual disclosure of KeyCorp political spending (page 23)
    Strong director education program (page 22)

Shareholder Engagement

 

    Active shareholder engagement program (page 21)
    Directors are available to meet with our larger shareholders

For a more detailed discussion concerning KeyCorp’s corporate governance practices, please refer to the section entitled “The Board of Directors and Its Committees” beginning on page 14 of this proxy statement.

 



 

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LOGO  2017 Proxy Statement Summary 

 

Proposals for the Annual Meeting

 

Proposal   Page   Board Recommendation

1.    Election of Directors

You are being asked to elect 16 directors. Each of the nominees is standing for election to hold office until the 2018 Annual Meeting of Shareholders.

  1   “FOR” each nominee

2.    Auditor Ratification

You are being asked to ratify the Audit Committee’s appointment of Ernst & Young LLP as our independent auditor for fiscal year 2017. One or more representatives of Ernst & Young LLP will be present at the meeting to respond to appropriate questions from shareholders.

  68   “FOR”

3.    Say-on-Pay

You are being asked to give advisory approval of compensation paid to KeyCorp’s Named Executive Officers (as defined on page 28 of this proxy statement). This advisory vote has been held on an annual basis, and shareholders are also being asked to vote again on the frequency of the advisory vote (see Proposal Four).

  69   “FOR”

4.    Frequency of Say-on-Pay

You are being asked to give advisory approval of how frequently KeyCorp should seek an advisory vote on the compensation of KeyCorp’s Named Executive Officers. This advisory vote is held once every six years.

  70   FOR “1 YEAR”

5.    Shareholder Proposal Seeking an Independent Board Chairman

A shareholder proposal requesting that KeyCorp adopt a policy and amend its governance documents so that the role of Chairman of the Board of Directors be held by an independent director is being presented for vote.

  71   “AGAINST”

Voting Your Shares

 

Who May Vote:

  Shareholders of record as of the close of business on March 24, 2017.

Voting Online:

  Registered holders can go to www.envisionreports.com/key and follow the instructions. If you hold your shares in street name, please follow the instructions found on your voting instruction form.

Voting by Telephone:

  Follow the instructions in the Notice of Internet Availability of Proxy Materials or on your proxy card.

Voting by Mail:

  Complete, sign, and date the proxy card and return it in the envelope that was provided in the proxy statement mailing package.

Voting in Person:

  If you choose to attend the Annual Meeting in person, you will be asked to present photo identification and proof that you own KeyCorp common shares before entering the meeting. If you want to vote shares that you hold in street name in person at the Annual Meeting, you must bring a legal proxy in your name from the broker, bank, or other nominee that holds your shares. Even if you plan to attend the Annual Meeting, we encourage all shareholders to vote in advance of the meeting.

 



 

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PROPOSAL ONE: Election of Directors

     1  

Director Recruitment and Qualifications

     1  

Election Process

     4  

2017 Nominees for Director

     4  

The Board of Directors and Its Committees

     14  

Board Leadership Structure

     14  

Board and Committee Responsibilities

     15  

Audit Committee

     16  

Compensation and Organization Committee

     17  

Nominating and Corporate Governance Committee

     17  

Risk Committee

     18  

Board Oversight of Risk

     18  

Oversight of Compensation-Related Risks

     19  

Director Independence

     20  

Related Party Transactions

     20  

Shareholder Engagement

     21  

Director Education

     22  

Communication with the Board

     22  

Corporate Governance Documents

     23  

Corporate Governance Guidelines

     23  

Code of Ethics

     23  

Statement of Political Activity

     23  

Ownership of KeyCorp Equity Securities

     24  

Executive Officer and Director Equity Ownership Guidelines

     26  

Pledging and Speculative Trading of KeyCorp Securities

     26  

Section 16(a) Beneficial Ownership Reporting Compliance

     26  

Equity Compensation Plan Information

     26  

Compensation Discussion and Analysis

     28  

Table of Contents

     28  

Executive Summary

     28  

Objectives of Our Compensation Program

     32  

Alignment of Pay and Performance

     35  

Elements of Our Compensation Program

     37  

Other Elements of Compensation

     42  

How We Make Pay Decisions

     43  

Tax and Accounting Treatment of Executive Compensation

     46  

Compensation and Organization Committee Report

     48  

Compensation of Executive Officers and Directors

     49  

2016 Summary Compensation Table

     49  

2016 Grants of Plan-Based Awards Table

     51  

2016 Outstanding Equity Awards at Fiscal Year-End Table

     53  

2016 Option Exercises and Stock Vested Table

     56  

2016 Pension Benefits Table

     57  

2016 Nonqualified Deferred Compensation Table

     58  

Potential Payments Upon Termination or Change of Control

     60  

2016 Post-Termination Tables

     61  

Directors’ Compensation

     63  

2016 Director Compensation Table

     64  

 

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LOGO  2017 Proxy Statement—Table of Contents

 

Audit Matters

     66  

Ernst & Young’s Fees

     66  

Pre-Approval Policies and Procedures

     66  

Audit Committee Report

     67  

PROPOSAL TWO: Ratification of Independent Auditor

     68  

PROPOSAL THREE: Advisory Approval of KeyCorp’s Executive Compensation

     69  
PROPOSAL FOUR: Advisory Approval of the Frequency of the Shareholder Vote on KeyCorp’s Executive Compensation      70  

PROPOSAL FIVE: Shareholder Proposal Seeking an Independent Board Chairman

     71  

Board of Directors Recommendation and Statement

     72  

General Information about the Annual Meeting

     74  

Matters to Be Presented

     74  

How Votes Will Be Counted

     74  

Revoking a Proxy

     75  

Cost of Proxy Solicitation

     75  

Attending the Annual Meeting

     75  

Additional Information

     76  

Proxy Statement Proposals for the 2018 Annual Meeting of Shareholders

     76  

Other Proposals and Director Nominations for the 2018 Annual Meeting of Shareholders

     76  

Eliminating Duplicative Proxy Materials

     76  

Annual Report

     76  

 

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PROPOSAL ONE:

Election of Directors

Our Board of Directors (the “Board”), elected by KeyCorp’s shareholders, oversees the business and management of KeyCorp. Members of the Board monitor and evaluate KeyCorp’s business performance through regular communication with the CEO and senior management and by participating in Board and Board committee meetings. The Board is committed to sound and effective corporate governance policies and high ethical standards. The size of the Board will be fixed at 16 members, effective as of the Annual Meeting of Shareholders. Joseph A. Carrabba, who served as a director during 2016, will continue to serve as a director of KeyCorp until this Annual Meeting, when he will retire and his term as a director will end. Under KeyCorp’s Regulations, directors are elected to one-year terms expiring at each subsequent Annual Meeting of Shareholders.

Director Recruitment and Qualifications

The Nominating and Corporate Governance Committee is responsible for identifying, evaluating, and recommending to the Board a slate of nominees for election at each Annual Meeting of Shareholders. All director nominees must have a record of high integrity and other requisite personal characteristics and must be willing to make the time commitment required of directors. The Nominating and Corporate Governance Committee uses the following criteria when evaluating candidates who may become nominees for director:

 

    a demonstrated breadth and depth of management and/or leadership experience, preferably in a senior leadership role with a large or recognized organization (private sector (profit or nonprofit), governmental, or educational);

 

    a high level of professional or business expertise relevant to KeyCorp (including information technology, marketing, finance, banking or the financial industry, or risk management);

 

    in the case of non-employee directors, satisfaction of the “independence” criteria set forth in KeyCorp’s Standards for Determining Independence of Directors;

 

    the candidate does not serve as a director of more than (i) two other public companies if he or she is a senior executive officer of a public company, or (ii) three other public companies if he or she is not a senior executive officer of a public company; and

 

    the ability to think and act independently, as well as the ability to work constructively in the overall Board process.

The criteria used in director recruitment are flexible guidelines to assist in evaluating and focusing the search for director candidates.

The Board also considers whether the candidate would enhance the diversity of the Board in terms of gender, race, experience, and/or geography. The current composition of the Board reflects the Nominating and Corporate Governance Committee’s focus in this area and the importance of diversity to the Board as a whole, with five female directors, including the Chairman of our Board, and two minority directors.

In evaluating Board nominees who satisfy the above criteria, the committee also considers:

 

    the skills and business experience currently needed for the Board by using a comprehensive skills matrix;

 

    the current and anticipated composition of the Board in light of the business activities and strategic direction of KeyCorp and the diverse communities and geographies served by KeyCorp; and

 

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LOGO  2017 Proxy Statement—Proposal One: Election of Directors 

 

    the interplay of the candidate’s expertise and professional/business background in relation to the expertise and professional/business background of current Board members, as well as such other factors (including diversity) as the committee deems appropriate.

The Chair of the Nominating and Corporate Governance Committee extends an invitation to join the Board as a first-time director or to stand for election as a first-time nominee for director after discussion with and approval by the committee as a whole. If the candidate accepts, the Nominating and Corporate Governance Committee recommends the candidate to the entire Board for final approval.

The Nominating and Corporate Governance Committee retains an independent search firm to assist with identifying director candidates. The Nominating and Corporate Governance Committee has the sole authority to retain and terminate any search firm used to identify director candidates, including sole authority to approve its fees and the other terms of its engagement.

The Nominating and Corporate Governance Committee utilizes a matrix approach that tracks each director’s and director nominee’s qualities and qualifications in a tabular format to assist the committee in maintaining a well-rounded, diverse, and effective Board. In addition, the matrix approach helps the Nominating and Corporate Governance Committee identify any qualities, qualifications, and experience for potential director nominees that would help improve the composition of and add value to the Board. The Nominating and Corporate Governance Committee seeks directors who have held leadership positions in public companies and have experience in mergers and acquisitions, risk management, regulatory matters, the banking or financial industry, finance, cybersecurity, marketing, and retail and small business. The chart on the following page describes the qualifications and experience of our non-management directors who served on the Board during 2016.

 

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Public Company Experience

 

 

                                                                               
             12/16 Directors       
   

 

As a public company, we are subject to regulations by the Securities and Exchange Commission and the New York Stock Exchange. We believe that directors who have held leadership positions in a public company possess an understanding of the regulations and considerations that are unique to a public company.

 

   

Mergers and Acquisitions

 

 

                             
             11/16 Directors       
   

 

We regularly evaluate merger and acquisition and strategic partnership opportunities. Most recently, we completed the First Niagara merger, the largest acquisition in Key’s history. We value directors who have experience with mergers and acquisitions.

 

   

Cybersecurity

 

                                      
             11/16 Directors       
   

 

We rely heavily on information technology systems to conduct our business. A significant portion of our operations relies on the secure processing, storage, and transmission of personal and confidential information, such as the personal information of our customers. Cybersecurity experience is an increasingly important skill that we value in our directors.

 

   

Risk Management

 

 

                             
             8/16 Directors       
   

 

Effectively managing risk and reward is one of Key’s strategic priorities. In light of the Board’s role in overseeing risk management and understanding the most significant risks facing Key, having directors with risk management experience is important to us.

 

   

Regulatory

 

 

                                
             7/16 Directors       
   

 

Because we are subject to specialized regulations as a financial institution, we find it valuable to have directors with knowledge of banking regulations. Our Board also benefits from having a director who is a former bank regulator.

 

   

Banking or Financial Industry

 

 

                             
             6/16 Directors       
   

 

We value directors who have experience in our industry. The First Niagara merger allowed us to increase the number of directors with experience in the banking industry.

 

   

Finance

 

 

                                   
                5/16 Directors       
   

 

We use numerous financial metrics to measure our performance and are also required to maintain certain minimum capital ratios. An understanding of finance and accounting is an important qualification for our directors. Several of our directors qualify as “audit committee financial experts” under SEC regulations.

 

   

Marketing

 

                                      
             3/16 Directors       
   

 

We operate in a highly competitive industry. As we strive to grow organically and increase our market share, having directors who have marketing experience is important to us.

 

   

Retail and Small Business

 

 

                             
             3/16 Directors       
   

 

We provide banking products to our customers, including small businesses, through our network of branches and ATMs. We believe that directors with retail and small business experience provide valuable insight into our retail branch network.

 

 

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LOGO  2017 Proxy Statement—Proposal One: Election of Directors 

 

The Nominating and Corporate Governance Committee is continually in the process of identifying potential director candidates, and individual Board members are encouraged to submit any potential nominee to the Chair of the Nominating and Corporate Governance Committee. Shareholders may also submit potential director nominees by providing appropriate prior written notice to the Secretary of KeyCorp. Page 76 of this proxy statement includes important information for shareholders who intend to submit a director nomination for the 2018 Annual Meeting of Shareholders.

In accordance with the terms of the merger agreement pursuant to which KeyCorp acquired First Niagara, during 2016 KeyCorp increased the number of directors on the KeyCorp Board from 14 to 17, and the KeyCorp Board appointed three former First Niagara directors to fill the vacancies. The three new directors, Austin A. Adams, Gary M. Crosby, and Carlton L. Highsmith, were reviewed and approved by the Nominating and Corporate Governance Committee and the full Board of Directors. Our new directors enhance our Board with their knowledge of the First Niagara businesses and the geographic markets in which First Niagara operated as well as by adding additional experience in the banking industry and with cybersecurity matters.

Election Process

KeyCorp has adopted a majority voting standard in uncontested elections of directors and plurality voting in contested elections. In an uncontested election, a nominee must receive a greater number of votes “FOR” than “AGAINST” his or her election. If an uncontested nominee who is already a director receives more “AGAINST” votes than “FOR” votes, that director nominee will continue to serve as a “holdover director,” but must submit to the Board an offer to resign as a director. The Nominating and Corporate Governance Committee will consider the holdover director’s resignation and will submit a recommendation to accept or reject the resignation to the Board. The Board (excluding the holdover director) will act on the committee’s recommendation and publicly disclose its decision.

2017 Nominees for Director

Upon the recommendation of the Nominating and Corporate Governance Committee, the Board has nominated the individuals identified on the following pages for election as directors. Each nominee is currently a director of KeyCorp. Biographical information for each nominee is provided as of the most recent practicable date. The Board believes that the qualifications and experience of the director nominees, as described below, will contribute to an effective and well-functioning Board. The Board and the Nominating and Corporate Governance Committee believe that the directors, individually and as a whole, possess the necessary qualifications to provide effective oversight of KeyCorp’s business and quality advice and counsel to KeyCorp’s management.

If elected, each nominee will continue to serve as a director until KeyCorp’s 2018 Annual Meeting of Shareholders or until he or she resigns or is otherwise removed and his or her successor is duly elected and qualified. There is no reason to believe that any of these director nominees will be unable or unwilling to serve if elected. Should any nominee be unable to accept nomination or election, the proxies may be voted for the election of a substitute nominee recommended by the Board. Alternatively, the Board may recommend a shareholder vote holding the position vacant, to be filled by the Board at a later date.

Our Corporate Governance Guidelines provide that an incumbent director is not eligible to stand for election as a director upon reaching age 72. The Board of Directors has the authority to waive the retirement age for a specific director for special circumstances. Such a waiver has been granted with respect to Austin A. Adams, who is currently 73 years old. Mr. Adams joined the Board on August 1, 2016, in connection with the First Niagara merger. As a former director of First Niagara, the Board believes that Mr. Adams’s continued presence on the Board will facilitate our post-merger integration efforts and that Mr. Adams enhances our Board with his experience in the banking industry and with

 

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cybersecurity matters. The Board thus granted Mr. Adams a waiver from the retirement age limit under our Corporate Governance Guidelines for the upcoming term.

 

The Board of Directors unanimously recommends that shareholders vote “FOR” each of the director nominees identified on the following pages.

 

 

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LOGO  2017 Proxy Statement—Proposal One: Election of Directors 

 

Austin A. Adams

 

 

LOGO   Age:  

73

 

  Director Since:  

2016

 

  KeyCorp Committee(s):  

Risk Committee

 

  Other Public Directorships:  

Spectra Energy Corp (since 2007)

CommScope Holding Company, Inc. (since 2014)

 

  Biography:   Mr. Adams joined the Board in August 2016 in connection with the First Niagara merger. In 2006, Mr. Adams retired as Executive Vice President and Corporate Chief Information Officer (“CIO”) at JPMorgan Chase (“JPM”). Mr. Adams joined JPM upon its merger with Bank One in July 2004. Prior to the merger, he held CIO positions at Bank One and First Union Corporation. From 2011 to 2014, he served as Chairman of the Board of CommunityOne Bank, N.A. Mr. Adams was recognized as the 2004 CIO of the Year by Waters magazine, and in 2002, Business 2.0 magazine named him one of the 16 most influential technology people in the world.

Select Qualifications and Experience

 

  A 35-year banking veteran with significant experience overseeing technology and operations at large financial institutions.

 

  As CIO at JPM, was a member of the 13-person Operating Committee and was responsible for 28,000 employees and a $7 billion budget.

Bruce D. Broussard

 

 

LOGO   Age:  

54

 

  Director Since:  

2015

 

  KeyCorp Committee(s):  

Compensation and Organization

 

  Other Public Directorships:  

Humana, Inc. (since 2013)

U.S. Physical Therapy, Inc. (1999–2011)

 

  Biography:   Mr. Broussard is the President and Chief Executive Officer and a Director of Humana, Inc., a publicly-held health and well-being company. Prior to his election as Humana’s Chief Executive Officer in 2013 and as President in 2011, Mr. Broussard held numerous senior executive and senior financial roles with McKesson Corporation, a health care services company, and its predecessor U.S. Oncology. Mr. Broussard also previously served as a director of U.S. Physical Therapy, Inc. from 1999 to 2011. Mr. Broussard is a member of the Business Roundtable and a member of the Board of Directors of America’s Health Insurance Plans (AHIP), serving on AHIP’s Executive Committee.

Select Qualifications and Experience

 

  Significant executive leadership experiences in the highly-regulated healthcare and insurance industries, including Chief Executive and Chief Financial Officer roles with Humana, McKesson Corporation, Harbor Dental, Inc., Sun Healthcare Group, Inc., and Regency Health Services, Inc.

 

  Extensive financial and accounting background with healthcare and health insurance companies and major global accounting firms.

 

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Charles P. Cooley

 

 

LOGO   Age:  

61

 

  Director Since:  

2011

 

  KeyCorp Committee(s):  

Audit (Chair)

Nominating and Corporate Governance

Executive

 

  Other Public Directorships:  

Modine Manufacturing Company (since 2006)

 

  Biography:   Mr. Cooley was the Chief Financial Officer of The Lubrizol Corporation, a manufacturer of specialty chemicals and technologies in the global transportation, industrial, and consumer markets, from 1998 until his retirement in 2011. Mr. Cooley had global responsibility for The Lubrizol Corporation’s finance function and its corporate development and strategic planning activities. Mr. Cooley is the Chair of the Board of Trustees of Hawken School in Cleveland and a Trustee of the Cleveland Institute of Music. He is also a member of the Board of Directors of KeyBank.

Select Qualifications and Experience

 

  Former Chief Financial Officer of The Lubrizol Corporation, where he was responsible for finance, accounting, and capital planning. Held finance positions of increasing responsibility at Atlantic Richfield Company for over fifteen years, including treasury, capital markets, corporate development, financial reporting, and operating segment financial management. Mr. Cooley qualifies as an “audit committee financial expert” as defined by the Securities and Exchange Commission.

 

  As Chief Financial Officer of The Lubrizol Corporation, had significant responsibility for financial risk management of a global publicly-traded enterprise.

Gary M. Crosby

 

 

LOGO   Age:  

62

 

  Director Since:  

2016

 

  Biography:   Mr. Crosby joined the Board in August 2016 in connection with the First Niagara merger. Mr. Crosby served as President and Chief Executive Officer and as a Director of First Niagara from 2013 through the consummation of the merger. He joined First Niagara as Chief Administrative Officer in 2009 and served as Chief Operating Officer from 2010-2013. In 2004, Mr. Crosby was asked to help the Buffalo City School District as Chief Financial Officer and Chief Operating Officer and provided his service to the district by spearheading its financial management reform until 2009. Mr. Crosby also was a venture capital partner with Seed Capital Partners and a founding shareholder of ClientLogic Corporation, serving as Chief Financial and Chief Operating Officer. He has also held senior financial leadership positions in banking and manufacturing and was a CPA with KPMG Peat Marwick. Mr. Crosby is President of the First Niagara Foundation, a director of the Buffalo Public Schools Foundation and Trustee Emeritus of the YMCA Buffalo Niagara.

Select Qualifications and Experience

 

  As former Chief Executive Officer of First Niagara, brings extensive knowledge of the First Niagara businesses and the geographic markets in which First Niagara operated as well as leadership experience in the banking industry.

 

  Significant experience in financial management, accounting, operations, risk management, mergers and acquisitions, and integration of acquired companies from a distinguished career as Chief Financial Officer, Chief Operating Officer, and Chief Executive Officer across a wide variety of industries and public companies.

 

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LOGO  2017 Proxy Statement—Proposal One: Election of Directors 

 

Alexander M. Cutler

 

 

LOGO   Age:  

65

 

  Director Since:  

2000

 

  KeyCorp Committee(s):  

Nominating and Corporate Governance (Chair)

Compensation and Organization

Executive

 

  Other Public Directorships:  

Eaton (2000-2016)

E.I. du Pont Nemours and Company (since 2008)

 

  Biography:   Mr. Cutler is KeyCorp’s independent Lead Director. From 2000 through May of 2016, he was the Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of Eaton, a publicly-held, global diversified power management company with approximately 97,000 employees that sells products to customers in more than 175 countries. He is a member of the board of directors of the United Way of Greater Cleveland and the Musical Arts Association.

Select Qualifications and Experience

 

  Experience across a wide range of senior management and executive roles with Eaton and certain of its predecessor companies. Significant corporate governance experience and public company board experience through his role as Chairman of Eaton, his service on the E.I. du Pont Nemours and Company board, and as a former member of the Executive Committee of the Business Roundtable.

 

  Extensive experience negotiating and completing acquisitions and divestitures and integrating acquired companies gained through leadership positions with Eaton.

H. James Dallas

 

 

LOGO   Age:  

58

 

  Director Since:  

2005

 

  KeyCorp Committee(s):  

Audit

 

  Other Public Directorships:  

Cappella Education Company (since 2015)

WellCare Health Plans, Inc. (since 2016)

 

  Biography:   In 2013, Mr. Dallas retired as Senior Vice President of Quality and Operations at Medtronic Inc., a global medical technology company. Mr. Dallas, who joined Medtronic Inc. in 2006, had previously served as Senior Vice President and Chief Information Officer at Medtronic Inc. Mr. Dallas’s responsibilities included executing cross-business initiatives to maximize the company’s global operating leveraging. Mr. Dallas also served as a member of Medtronic Inc.’s executive management team. Mr. Dallas is an independent consultant focusing on information technology strategy and risk. He also serves as vice chairman of the Atlanta Community Food Bank and on the Board of Grady Memorial Hospital Corporation.

Select Qualifications and Experience

 

  Significant experience with information technology, information technology security and data privacy, including prior service as the Chief Information Officer of Medtronic Inc. and, prior to that, as Chief Information Officer of Georgia-Pacific Corporation.

 

  As Chief Information Officer for major public corporations, had primary responsibility for risks related to information technology and security. As Senior Vice President of Quality and Operations with Medtronic Inc., held significant responsibility for operational risk management.

 

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Elizabeth R. Gile

 

 

LOGO   Age:  

61

 

  Director Since:  

2010

 

  KeyCorp Committee(s):  

Risk (Chair)

Nominating and Corporate Governance

 

  Biography:   In 2005, Ms. Gile retired from Deutsche Bank AG where she was Managing Director and the Global Head of the Loan Exposure Management Group (2003 to 2005). From 2007 to 2009, Ms. Gile was Managing Director and Senior Strategic Advisor to BlueMountain Capital Management, a hedge fund management company. Ms. Gile has been a director of Deutsche Bank Trust Corporation and Deutsche Bank Trust Company Americas since 2005 and serves in leadership roles in a number of civic and community organizations.

Select Qualifications and Experience

 

  A distinguished career in the banking, finance, and capital markets industries with leading global financial institutions. Significant roles with J.P. Morgan, Deutsche Bank AG, and Toronto Dominion Securities managing loan portfolios, capital markets, derivatives and corporate lending transactions, and credit research.

 

  As Global Head of the Loan Exposure Management Group for Deutsche Bank AG, had global responsibility for managing the credit risk of loans and lending-related commitments, giving her experience in identifying, assessing, and managing risk exposures of a large, complex financial firm.

Ruth Ann M. Gillis

 

 

LOGO   Age:  

62

 

  Director Since:  

2009

 

  KeyCorp Committee(s):  

Risk

 

  Other Public Directorships:  

Potlatch Corporation (2003–2013)

Snap-on Incorporated (since 2014)

Voya Financial Inc. (since 2015)

 

  Biography:   From 2008 until her retirement in 2014, Ms. Gillis served as the Executive Vice President and Chief Administrative Officer of Exelon Corporation, a publicly-held electric utility company. Ms. Gillis also served as President of Exelon Business Services Company, a subsidiary of Exelon Corporation. She served as a member of the Exelon Corporation’s executive committee, pension investment committee, and the corporate risk management committee, and was a member of the Exelon Foundation Board. Prior to those roles, she served as Chief Financial Officer of Exelon Corporation. Ms. Gillis serves on the Boards of Trustees of the Lyric Opera of Chicago and the Goodman Theatre.

Select Qualifications and Experience

 

  Served as Chief Financial Officer of Exelon Corporation and as Chief Financial Officer and Treasurer of Unicom Corporation.

 

  Significant experience with operational and financial risk management as Chief Administrative Officer and former Chief Financial Officer of Exelon Corporation. Extensive leadership and experience leading organizations in highly-regulated industries such as banking, healthcare and utilities.

 

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LOGO  2017 Proxy Statement—Proposal One: Election of Directors 

 

William G. Gisel, Jr.

 

 

LOGO   Age:  

64

 

  Director Since:  

2011

 

  KeyCorp Committee(s):  

Compensation and Organization

 

  Other Public Directorships:  

MOD-PAC CORP. (2002–2013)

Moog Inc. (since 2012)

 

  Biography:   Mr. Gisel is the President and Chief Executive Officer of Rich Products Corporation, a global manufacturer and supplier of frozen foods with annual sales of approximately $3.5 billion. Rich Products Corporation is a leading supplier to the consumer products, food service and bakery segment of the food industry internationally. Prior to becoming Chief Executive Officer in 2006, Mr. Gisel began his career at Rich Products Corporation as General Counsel and also spent four years at Philips, Lytle, LLC. Mr. Gisel is a member of the Board of Directors of the Grocery Manufacturers Association and a Trustee of John R. Oishei Foundation.

Select Qualifications and Experience

 

  In various capacities with Rich Products Corporation, led the company’s expansion into foreign markets, including Asia, Africa, Europe, and Latin America. As President of Rich Products Corporation’s Food Group and its Chief Operating Officer, managed the international expansion of Rich Products Corporation through acquisitions and organic growth.

 

  As Chief Executive Officer of Rich Products Corporation, responsible for directing the company’s overall strategy and its worldwide business operations. Has held positions of increasing responsibility with Rich Products Corporation, including as Chief Operating Officer and President of the company’s Food Group and Executive Vice President for International and Strategic Planning.

Carlton L. Highsmith

 

 

LOGO   Age:  

65

 

  Director Since:  

2016

 

  KeyCorp Committee(s):  

Nominating and Corporate Governance Committee

 

  Biography:   Mr. Highsmith joined the Board in August 2016 in connection with the First Niagara merger. He was a member of First Niagara’s Board since 2011, serving on the Governance/Nominating Committee and the Audit Committee. He previously served on the Board of NewAlliance Bancshares from 2006 until it was acquired by First Niagara in 2011. He founded The Specialized Packaging Group (“SPG”) based in Hamden, Connecticut in 1983, and served as its President and Chief Executive Officer from 1983 to 2009. Mr. Highsmith is a Trustee of Quinnipiac University, Chairman of Connecticut Center for Arts & Technology, and Chairman of I Have a Dream, New Haven. He served on the Federal Reserve Bank of Boston Community Development Advisory Council of New England.

Select Qualifications and Experience

 

  Successful corporate executive and entrepreneur with significant bank board experience, having served on both the NewAlliance and First Niagara Board of Directors.

 

  Under Mr. Highsmith’s leadership, SPG grew to become the largest minority owned, and 7th largest overall, manufacturer of paperboard packaging in North America before it merged with PaperWorks Industries in 2009.

 

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Richard J. Hipple

 

 

LOGO   Age:  

64

 

  Director Since:  

2012

 

  KeyCorp Committee(s):  

Audit

 

  Other Public Directorships:  

Materion Corporation (since 2006)

Ferro Corporation (since 2007)

 

  Biography:   Mr. Hipple is the Executive Chairman of Materion Corporation (formerly known as Brush Engineered Materials Inc.), a publicly-held manufacturer of highly engineered advanced materials and related services. Mr. Hipple previously served as Chairman of the Board and Chief Executive Officer of Materion Corporation from 2006 to 2017 and President from 2005 to 2017. Prior to that, Mr. Hipple served in the steel industry for 26 years in a number of capacities, including project engineer, strategic planning, supply chain management, operations, sales and marketing, and executive management. Mr. Hipple is a trustee for the Manufacturers Alliance for Productivity and Innovation, Inc., Chairman of the Trustees of the Cleveland Institute of Music, and a director of the Greater Cleveland Partnership.

Select Qualifications and Experience

 

  Extensive exposure to global commerce as former Chief Executive Officer of Materion Corporation, which serves customers in more than 50 countries and employs 2,500 people worldwide, and as a director of Ferro Corporation, a leading developer in technologies for the ceramics, electronics, glass, and pigment markets with facilities in 26 countries and sales in more than 100 countries. With significant experience in the oversight and management of financial risks, Mr. Hipple qualifies as an “audit committee financial expert” as defined by the Securities and Exchange Commission.

 

  Significant corporate governance and executive-level management experience, including as the Executive Chairman and former President and Chief Executive Officer of Materion Corporation and as Chairman of the Compensation Committee of Ferro Corporation, both publicly-traded companies.

Kristen L. Manos

 

 

LOGO   Age:  

57

 

  Director Since:  

2009

 

  KeyCorp Committee(s):  

Audit

Executive

 

  Other Public Directorships:  

American Capital, Ltd. (since 2015)

 

  Biography:   Ms. Manos is a partner with Sanderson Berry, a business strategy and advisory services firm. In 2014, Ms. Manos retired as President, Americas of Wilsonart LLC, the leading producer of high pressure decorative laminate products in North America. From 2004 to 2009, Ms. Manos served as President of Herman Miller North American Office and Executive Vice President of Herman Miller Inc., a global manufacturer and distributor of furnishings for a wide variety of professional and residential environments. She has participated in corporate risk evaluation, risk management, and scenario planning for both Wilsonart and Herman Miller, as well as for Herman Miller clients related to their facilities. Ms. Manos serves on the board of Columbia Forest Products, which is the largest hardwood plywood manufacturer in the United States. She has also served on the boards of American Capital Ltd., Select Comfort Corp, Holland Hospital, and International Relief and Development, where she also served as Interim Chief Executive Officer for four months in 2014.

Select Qualifications and Experience

 

  As President, Americas, of Wilsonart LLC, Ms. Manos was responsible for the direction and operation of a $600 million organization, and led the company through its sale to private equity. In prior roles as Executive Vice President and President of Herman Miller North American Office Environments, was responsible for the direction and operation of a $1.5 billion organization.

 

  During her tenure with Herman Miller, Inc., held responsibility for marketing and development where she established a branding strategy and a vertical selling strategy in education and healthcare. Responsible for high-level business strategy, development, and assessment as a partner with Sanderson Berry.

 

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LOGO  2017 Proxy Statement—Proposal One: Election of Directors 

 

Beth E. Mooney

 

 

LOGO   Age:  

62

 

  Director Since:  

2010

 

  KeyCorp Committee(s):  

Executive (Chair)

 

  Other Public Directorships:  

AT&T (since 2013)

 

  Biography:   Ms. Mooney has been KeyCorp’s Chairman and Chief Executive Officer since May 1, 2011. She was elected President and Chief Operating Officer on November 18, 2010, and served in that role until she became Chairman and Chief Executive Officer. Ms. Mooney joined KeyCorp in 2006 as Vice Chair and head of Key Community Bank. Prior to joining KeyCorp, Ms. Mooney served in a number of executive and senior finance roles with banks and bank holding companies including AmSouth Bancorp (where she served as Chief Financial Officer), Bank One Corporation, Citicorp Real Estate, Inc., Hall Financial Group, and Republic Bank of Texas/First Republic. Ms. Mooney is a member of The Clearing House and the Financial Services Roundtable, a Board member of the Greater Cleveland Partnership and Catalyst, and a Trustee of the Musical Arts Association and the Cleveland Clinic Foundation. On January 1, 2017, Ms. Mooney was appointed to a one-year term on the Federal Advisory Council of the Federal Reserve Board of Cleveland.

Select Qualifications and Experience

 

  Over 30 years of financial services experience in retail banking, commercial lending, and real estate financing with KeyCorp and other significant banking organizations across the United States. Significant executive and leadership experience in prior roles such as Chief Operating Officer of KeyCorp and Chief Financial Officer of AmSouth Bancorp.

 

  As Chief Executive Officer and former Chief Operating Officer of KeyCorp, leads the operations of one of the largest financial service companies in the United States with nearly 20,000 employees. Provides critical insight on KeyCorp’s business and operations to the Board of Directors.

Demos Parneros

 

 

LOGO   Age:  

55

 

  Director Since:  

2014

 

  KeyCorp Committee(s):  

Risk

 

  Biography:   Mr. Parneros is the Chief Operating Officer of Barnes & Noble, Inc. From January 2013 until March 2016, Mr. Parneros was President, North American Stores and Online, for Staples, Inc., a publicly-held company and the world’s largest office products supply company and second largest internet retailer with 2015 revenues of more than $20 billion and 34,000 full-time employees worldwide. Previously, Mr. Parneros served as President, U.S. Stores, for Staples, Inc. He joined Staples, Inc. in October 1987, and served in various capacities including Senior Vice President of Operations from March 1999 to March 2002 and Vice President of Operations from October 1996 to February 1999.

Select Qualifications and Experience

 

  Held executive responsibility for Staples, Inc.’s largest business segment, North American Stores and Online, and for all aspects of Staples, Inc.’s online and mobile retail operation. In this position, had responsibility for creating, communicating, and implementing company vision and direction, and providing leadership in negotiations with vendors and firms.

 

  Extensive experience developing complementary and integrated online and brick and mortar retail strategies, integrating technology into traditional retail stores to enhance convenience and the customer experience, and leveraging mobile and online experiences to capture next-generation consumers.

 

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Barbara R. Snyder

 

 

LOGO   Age:  

61

 

  Director Since:  

2010

 

  KeyCorp Committee(s):  

Compensation and Organization

Executive

 

  Other Public Directorships:  

Progressive Insurance Corporation (since 2014)

 

  Biography:   Ms. Snyder has been the President of Case Western Reserve University, a private research university located in Cleveland, Ohio, since 2007. Prior to joining Case Western Reserve University, Ms. Snyder served as Executive Vice President and Provost of The Ohio State University (“OSU”). She served as a faculty member of OSU’s Moritz College of Law from 1998 to 2007. From 2000 to 2007 she held the Joanne W. Murphy/Classes of 1965 and 1973 Professorship at OSU. Ms. Snyder serves on the boards of several nonprofit organizations including the Greater Cleveland Partnership. She was the chair of the board of the Business-Higher Education Forum, an organization of senior business and higher education leaders dedicated to strengthening America’s competitiveness by partnering on workforce solutions.

Select Qualifications and Experience

 

  President of Case Western Reserve University, one of the nation’s leading universities and a major private research institution with significant focus on science, engineering, and technology. Since 2007, Case Western Reserve University has tripled undergraduate admissions applications, become twice as selective, and dramatically increased the academic quality of the entering class.

 

  Under Ms. Snyder’s leadership, Case Western Reserve University has experienced unprecedented fundraising success, setting new records for annual attainment and reaching a $1 billion capital campaign goal two years ahead of schedule.

David K. Wilson

 

 

LOGO   Age:  

62

 

  Director Since:  

2014

 

  KeyCorp Committee(s):  

Risk

 

  Biography:   Until his retirement in January 2014, Mr. Wilson served in a variety of positions with the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (“OCC”) over the course of a 32-year career, including as Examiner-In-Charge (“EIC”) of two global banks and in a number of policy focused roles. In 2009, Mr. Wilson transitioned from Large Bank EIC into policy work, initially as Senior National Bank Examiner and co-chair of the OCC’s National Risk Committee. In 2010, he was appointed Deputy Comptroller for Credit and Market Risk. He then briefly served as Senior Deputy Comptroller and Chief National Bank Examiner before returning to the field as an EIC. Mr. Wilson is an independent consultant focusing on bank regulatory and risk strategy matters. He is also a member of the Board of Directors of KeyBank.

Select Qualifications and Experience

 

  Significant bank regulatory and risk strategy expertise, including providing advice and counsel to the Comptroller of the Currency, testifying before Congress, developing policy, and regulatory rulemaking following the Dodd-Frank Act.

 

  Extensive experience and understanding of the financial services regulatory climate, including participating in the Financial Stability Oversight Council (“FSOC”), serving as the OCC representative on FSOC’s Systemic Risk Committee, and chairing the Federal Financial Institutions Examination Council Task Force on Supervision.

 

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The Board of Directors and Its Committees

Effective August 1, 2016, upon the closing of the First Niagara merger, the Board added Mr. Adams, Mr. Crosby, and Mr. Highsmith from the First Niagara Board, at which point the Board became comprised of 15 independent directors, one member of management (Ms. Mooney), and one non-management, non-independent director (Mr. Crosby). During the first seven months of 2016, the Board was comprised of 13 independent directors and one member of management (Ms. Mooney). The Board has added four new directors since 2015. Including the three newest directors added to the Board as a result of the First Niagara merger, both the median and average tenure of our current Board members is five years.

Board Leadership Structure

Our Board is committed to independent Board leadership. The Board’s independent leadership and oversight responsibilities are realized through the guidance of our independent Lead Director, through our independent Board committee chairs, and through the full involvement of each of our independent directors. KeyCorp’s independent directors have elected Alexander M. Cutler, who has served on the Board since 2000, as the Board’s independent Lead Director for 2017.

Among his specific responsibilities, the independent Lead Director:

 

    presides at all meetings of the Board at which the Chairman is not present, including executive sessions of the independent and non-management directors held after each regularly scheduled Board meeting;

 

    serves as liaison between the Chairman and the independent and non-management directors;

 

    approves Board meeting schedules as well as meeting materials and agendas for each full Board meeting and executive sessions of independent and non-management directors;

 

    has the authority to call meetings of the independent and non-management directors or the full Board at any time;

 

    participates in discussions with major shareholders regarding governance matters as part of KeyCorp’s proactive shareholder engagement approach;

 

    is in frequent contact with the Chairman with respect to major issues and strategic opportunities before KeyCorp, and any significant actions contemplated by KeyCorp are discussed with the Lead Director at an early stage;

 

    advises on the retention of independent consultants to the Board;

 

    interviews all candidates for election to the Board;

 

    oversees changes to the composition of Board committees;

 

    assists the Board and management in assuring compliance with applicable securities laws and fiduciary duties to shareholders;

 

    oversees initiatives to implement improvements to KeyCorp’s governance policies and the Corporate Governance Guidelines;

 

    serves as a focal point for independent Committee Chairs, providing guidance, coordination, and advice for the committees;

 

    together with the Chair of the Compensation and Organization Committee, facilitates the evaluation of the performance of KeyCorp’s Chief Executive Officer; and

 

    is available for additional duties as they may arise.

The Lead Director seeks input from independent and non-management directors during executive sessions with respect to items to be included on the agenda for each Board meeting and provides feedback from the independent and non-management directors while engaging in the agenda-building process.

 

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Annually, the independent and non-management directors assess the effectiveness of the Lead Director and provide important feedback on the performance of the Lead Director’s specified responsibilities. The formal evaluation process is conducted with the Lead Director excused from participation.

Each standing committee of the Board is chaired by an independent director and consists solely of independent directors. Our independent directors have extensive corporate governance and leadership experience, and many have significant public company experience. During 2016, four of our independent directors were or had been chief executive officers with public companies.

In 2011, the Board elected Beth Mooney as KeyCorp’s Chairman and Chief Executive Officer. The Board believes that KeyCorp has been well served by Ms. Mooney’s combined role as Chairman and Chief Executive Officer. Ms. Mooney’s combined leadership role has allowed her to set the overall tone and direction for KeyCorp, maintain consistency in the internal and external communication of our strategic and business priorities, and have primary responsibility for managing KeyCorp’s operations. Our many conversations between our directors and our shareholders regarding their views on Board leadership and independent oversight have confirmed our view that a strong, effective Lead Director, like Mr. Cutler, an independent Board, and independent key committees provide the independent leadership necessary to balance the combined Chairman and Chief Executive Officer role and, with the formal and informal mechanisms we have in place to facilitate the work of the Board and its committees, results in the Board effectiveness and efficiency that our shareholders expect. At last year’s Annual Meeting, 73% of the shares represented at the meeting voted against a shareholder proposal to require an independent Board Chairman.

The Board annually (or more often if a new Chief Executive Officer is selected) evaluates KeyCorp’s leadership structure to assess whether it remains appropriate for the Company, taking into account a variety of factors including KeyCorp’s size, the nature of its business, the regulatory framework in which it operates, and the leadership structure of its peers. The Board believes that a primary consideration for KeyCorp is that, as a large financial institution subject to significant regulation, KeyCorp must communicate swiftly and consistently with our stakeholders, including our regulators. We believe that swift and consistent communication is significantly furthered if KeyCorp’s leadership, through our Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, speaks as a single voice on behalf of both the Board and management.

The Board believes it is in the best interest of KeyCorp and its shareholders to maintain the flexibility to determine the best way to realize independent Board leadership, rather than establishing a leadership structure through rigid policy. In this regard, our Regulations provide the Board with flexibility to separate or combine the roles of Chairman and Chief Executive Officer as it deems necessary from time to time and on a case-by-case basis.

Board and Committee Responsibilities

KeyCorp’s Board of Directors delegates various responsibilities and authority to its four standing committees: Audit, Compensation and Organization, Nominating and Corporate Governance, and Risk. The Board has also established an Executive Committee that serves the functions described on page 18 of this proxy statement. The committees regularly report on their activities and actions to the full Board. The Board, with the recommendation of the Nominating and Corporate Governance Committee and in consultation with the Lead Director, appoints the members of the committees, and has determined that each member of a standing committee is an independent director under New York Stock Exchange independence standards.

The Board held 14 meetings during 2016. At every regularly-scheduled Board meeting, the independent and non-management members of the Board met in executive session (i.e., without

 

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LOGO  2017 Proxy Statement—The Board of Directors and Its Committees    

 

Ms. Mooney or any other employee of KeyCorp present). The members of the Board attended, on average, approximately 90% of Board meetings and committee meetings held during the period for which he or she was a director during 2016. No director attended less than 75% of such meetings. KeyCorp Board members are expected to attend the Annual Meeting of Shareholders, and all Board members serving at that time did so for the 2016 Annual Meeting of Shareholders.

The following describes the responsibilities and current membership of the standing committees of the Board and the number of times each committee met in 2016. Mr. Carrabba will continue to serve on the Board and his respective committees until the Annual Meeting, when he will retire and his term as a director will end.

 

 

Audit Committee

 

 

Chair:  

Charles P. Cooley  

 

Other Members:  

H. James Dallas  

Richard J. Hipple  

Kristen L. Manos  

 

Number of   Meetings in 2016: 14  

 

 

Primary Responsibilities

•     Oversees the development of, and reviews, the financial information provided to KeyCorp’s shareholders

•     Is directly responsible for the appointment, compensation, retention, and oversight of our independent auditor, oversees the audit fees negotiations with our independent auditor, and has sole authority to approve audit fees

•     Has responsibility over all KeyCorp risk review functions (including internal audit), financial reporting, legal matters, and fraud risk

•     Oversees any material examinations of KeyCorp and its affiliates conducted by federal, state, or other authorities, and may supervise and direct any other special projects or investigations the committee deems necessary

•     Together with the Risk Committee, oversees and reviews our allowance for loan and lease losses methodology, and

•     Serves as the audit committee for KeyCorp’s subsidiary, KeyBank.

 

Independence

The Audit Committee has been established in accordance with Section 3(a)(58)(A) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (the “Exchange Act”). The Board has determined that all members of the Audit Committee are “independent” as that term is defined in Section 303A.02 of the New York Stock Exchange’s listing standards.

 

Audit Committee Financial Experts

The Board of Directors has determined that Mr. Cooley and Mr. Hipple each qualify as an “audit committee financial expert,” as defined in Item 407(d)(5) of Regulation S-K.

 

 

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Compensation and Organization Committee

 

 

 

Chair:  

Joseph A. Carrabba  

 

Other Members:  

Bruce D. Broussard  

Alexander M. Cutler  

William G. Gisel, Jr.  

Barbara R. Snyder  

 

Number of

Meetings in 2016: 7  

 

 

Primary Responsibilities

•     Supports KeyCorp’s efforts to attract, retain, develop, and reward talent so that we can achieve our business objectives

•     Is responsible for overseeing the compensation of our senior executives, certain of our compensation programs, and our talent management and organizational development processes

•     Evaluates the competitiveness of our compensation programs and assesses the effectiveness of our succession planning, leadership development, and strategic hiring objectives

•     Approves the performance goals, performance objectives, and the compensation of our Chief Executive Officer and other senior executives and evaluates their performance relative to those goals and objectives

•     Establishes our overall compensation philosophy and oversees the implementation of this philosophy as it relates to our incentive compensation arrangements, including through approval of our incentive compensation policy

•     Is responsible for enforcing the compensation clawback policy

•     Appoints, directs, and oversees its independent advisors and performs additional duties described in its Charter, and

•     May delegate its authority to a subcommittee of its members and may allow limited delegations to management.

 

Independence

The Board of Directors has determined that all members of the Compensation Committee are “independent” as that term is defined in Section 303A.02 of the New York Stock Exchange’s listing standards.

 

Further discussion of the Compensation Committee can be found beginning on page 28 of this proxy statement under the heading “Compensation Discussion and Analysis.”

 

 

 

Nominating and Corporate Governance Committee

 

 

Chair:  

Alexander M. Cutler  

 

Other Members:  

Joseph A. Carrabba  

Charles P. Cooley  

Elizabeth R. Gile  

Carlton L. Highsmith  

 

Number of  

Meetings in 2016: 6  

 

 

Primary Responsibilities

•     Recommends to the Board nominees to stand for election as directors

•     Oversees the annual Board self-assessment process (including individual director self-assessments and the evaluation of the Lead Director), as well as KeyCorp’s policies and practices on significant issues of corporate social responsibility

•     Oversees corporate governance matters generally

•     Oversees and reviews KeyCorp’s directors’ and officers’ liability insurance program

•     Supports the Compensation and Risk Committees by facilitating a meeting of all independent Board committee Chairs to discuss the linkage between enterprise risk and compensation at KeyCorp, and

•     With the aid of market data, annually reviews and recommends to the Board a director compensation program that may include equity-based incentive compensation plans (no executive officer of KeyCorp has any role in determining the amount of director compensation, although the committee may seek assistance from our executive officers in designing equity compensation programs for directors).

 

 

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Risk Committee

 

 

Chair:  

Elizabeth R. Gile  

 

Other Members:  

Austin A. Adams  

Ruth Ann M. Gillis  

Demos Parneros  

David K. Wilson  

 

Number of  

Meetings in 2016: 9  

 

 

Primary Responsibilities

•     Is responsible for assisting the Board with strategies, policies, procedures, and practices relating to the assessment and management of KeyCorp’s enterprise-wide risks, including credit risk, market risk, liquidity risk, compliance risk, operational risk, and other risks

•     Plays a crucial role in overseeing KeyCorp’s capital adequacy and compliance with regulatory capital requirements

•     Annually reviews and approves capital plan submissions to KeyCorp’s regulatory authorities and recommends share repurchase authorizations to the Board consistent with approved capital plans

•     May exercise such authority as the Board delegates in connection with the authorization, sale, and issuance by KeyCorp of debt and other equity securities, and

•     Together with the Audit Committee, oversees and reviews the allowance for loan and lease losses methodology.

 

The Board also has an Executive Committee, comprised of Ms. Mooney (Chair), Mr. Carrabba, Mr. Cooley, Mr. Cutler, Ms. Manos, and Ms. Snyder, which may exercise the authority of the Board, to the extent permitted by law, on any matter requiring Board or committee action between Board or committee meetings. The Executive Committee did not hold any meetings in 2016.

Board Oversight of Risk

Our Board leadership and committee structure supports the Board’s risk oversight function. Generally, each Board committee oversees the following risks:

 

    The Risk Committee has primary oversight responsibility for enterprise-wide risk at KeyCorp, including credit risk, market risk, liquidity risk, compliance risk, operational risk, as well as reputational and strategic risks, and oversight of the actions taken to mitigate these risks.

 

    The Audit Committee has primary oversight responsibility for internal audit, financial reporting, legal matters, and fraud risk.

 

    The Compensation Committee has primary oversight responsibility for risks related to KeyCorp’s compensation policies and practices.

 

    The Nominating and Corporate Governance Committee has primary oversight responsibility for significant issues of corporate social responsibility.

The Audit and Risk Committees jointly oversee and review the allowance for loan and lease losses methodology.

The committees receive, review, and evaluate management reports on risk for their areas of risk oversight. At each Board meeting, the Chair of each Board committee reports to the full Board on risk oversight issues.

Our Board structure enables the Board to exercise vigorous oversight of key issues relating to management development, succession and compensation, compliance and integrity, corporate governance, cybersecurity, and company strategy and risk. With respect to risk, the Board oversees that Key’s risks are managed in a manner that is effective and balanced and adds value for Key’s shareholders. The Board understands Key’s risk philosophy, approves Key’s risk appetite, inquires about risk practices, reviews the portfolio of risks, compares the actual risks to the risk appetite, and is apprised

 

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of significant risks, both current and emerging, and determines whether management is responding appropriately. With respect to risk and other areas that it oversees, the Board challenges management and promotes accountability.

KeyCorp has formed a senior level management committee, the Enterprise Risk Management Committee (“ERM Committee”), consisting of Ms. Mooney and other senior officers at KeyCorp, including William L. Hartmann, KeyCorp’s Chief Risk Officer. The ERM Committee meets weekly and is central to seeing that the corporate risk profile is managed in a manner consistent with KeyCorp’s risk appetite. The ERM Committee also is responsible for implementation of KeyCorp’s Enterprise Risk Management Policy that encompasses KeyCorp’s risk philosophy, policy framework, and governance structure for the management of risks across the entire company. The Risk Committee of the Board oversees KeyCorp’s risk management program, including the ERM Committee. The Board of Directors approves the Enterprise Risk Management Policy and sets the overall level of risk KeyCorp is willing to accept and manage in pursuit of its strategic objectives.

Oversight of Compensation-Related Risks

KeyCorp’s compensation program is designed to offer competitive pay for performance, aligned with KeyCorp’s short- and long-term business strategies, approved risk appetite and defined risk tolerances, and shareholders’ interests. Reviews of KeyCorp’s compensation plans by the Compensation Committee and KeyCorp management did not identify any plan that was reasonably likely to have a material adverse impact on KeyCorp or that would incentivize excessive risk-taking. The Compensation Committee also reviewed KeyCorp’s compensation plans to monitor compliance with KeyCorp’s risk management tolerances and safety and soundness requirements.

KeyCorp has a well-developed governance structure for its incentive compensation programs, including roles for the Board of Directors, senior management, lines of business and control functions. The Board oversees KeyCorp’s incentive compensation programs, primarily through the Compensation Committee, with additional input and guidance from its Nominating and Corporate Governance, Risk, and Audit Committees. In addition to directly approving compensation decisions for senior executives, the Compensation Committee also approves KeyCorp’s overall Incentive Compensation Policy and Program so that KeyCorp’s incentive compensation practices remain in alignment with KeyCorp’s risk management practices. KeyCorp’s Incentive Compensation Policy and Program are intended to enhance KeyCorp’s risk management practices by rewarding appropriate risk-based performance.

We maintain a detailed and effective strategy for implementing and executing incentive compensation arrangements that provide balanced risk-taking incentives. KeyCorp’s incentive compensation arrangements are designed, monitored, administered, and tested by a multidisciplinary team drawn from various areas of KeyCorp, including Risk Management. This team is charged with seeing that our incentive compensation arrangements align with risk management practices and support the safety and soundness of the organization. From initial plan design to individual awards, KeyCorp’s program incorporates sound compensation principles and risk-balancing at every stage of the incentive compensation process, including:

 

    the identification of employees who have the ability to influence or control material risk;

 

    the use of risk-balancing mechanisms across all incentive plans that take into account the primary risks associated with employee roles;

 

    the deferral of incentive compensation to balance risk and align an employee’s individual interests with KeyCorp’s future success and safety and soundness;

 

    the development of clawback policies and procedures to recoup certain incentive compensation paid to employees in the event of certain risk-based events; and

 

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    the annual assessment of risk-balancing features, the degree to which selective plan design features affect risk-taking, the alignment of incentive metrics with business objectives, the overall competitiveness of the pay opportunity, the participation of control functions, and the effectiveness of monitoring and administration of the plans.

Director Independence

The Board of Directors has determined that all members of the Board of Directors (i.e., Mss. Gile, Gillis, Manos, and Snyder, and Messrs. Adams, Broussard, Carrabba, Cooley, Cutler, Dallas, Gisel, Highsmith, Hipple, Parneros, and Wilson), other than Ms. Mooney and Mr. Crosby, are independent directors and independent for purposes of the committees on which they serve. This determination was made after reviewing the relationship of these individuals to KeyCorp in light of KeyCorp’s Standards for Determining Independence of Directors and the independence standards set by the New York Stock Exchange. Due to Mr. Crosby’s former position as Chief Executive Officer of First Niagara, the Board determined that Mr. Crosby was not an independent director.

To determine the independence of the members of the Board, the Board considered certain transactions, relationships, or arrangements described below between those directors, their immediate family members, or their affiliated entities, on the one hand, and KeyCorp or one or more of its subsidiaries, on the other hand. Certain directors, their respective immediate family members, and/or affiliated entities have commercial relationships with Key, such as consumer banking products or credit relationships. In addition, an affiliated entity of one of the directors received a charitable contribution from Key. The Board determined that all of these transactions, relationships, or arrangements were made in the ordinary course of business, were made on terms comparable to those that could be obtained in arms’ length dealings with an unrelated third party, complied with applicable banking laws, were immaterial, and did not impair any director’s independence. The value of the payments made during the year pursuant to the transactions with any affiliated entities of the directors did not in any of the last three fiscal years exceed 1% of the consolidated gross revenue of either KeyCorp, on the one hand, or the affiliated entity, on the other hand.

Related Party Transactions

Any transaction, relationship, or arrangement with KeyCorp or its subsidiaries in which a KeyCorp director, executive officer, or other related person has a direct or indirect material interest is subject to KeyCorp’s Policy for Review of Transactions between KeyCorp and its Directors, Executive Officers, and Other Related Persons. The Nominating and Corporate Governance Committee is responsible for applying the policy and uses the following factors identified in the policy in making its determinations:

 

    whether the transaction conforms to KeyCorp’s Code of Ethics and Corporate Governance Guidelines and is in KeyCorp’s best interests;

 

    whether the terms of the transaction are comparable to terms that could be obtained in arms’ length dealings with an unrelated third party;

 

    whether the transaction must be disclosed under Item 404 of Regulation S-K under the Exchange Act; and

 

    whether the transaction could call into question the independence of any of KeyCorp’s non-employee directors.

The policy provides exceptions for certain transactions, including those available to all KeyCorp employees generally, those involving compensation or indemnification of executive officers or directors authorized by the Board of Directors or one of its committees, those involving the reimbursement of routine business expenses, and those occurring in the ordinary course of business.

 

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Banking and Credit Transactions with KeyCorp Executive Officers and Directors

From time to time during 2016, the directors referenced in the “Director Independence” section above, some of our executive officers, and some of their immediate family members and affiliated entities were customers of or had transactions with KeyBank or other KeyCorp subsidiaries in the ordinary course of business. Additional transactions and banking relationships may continue in the future. In addition, First Niagara Bank, which became a wholly-owned subsidiary of KeyCorp effective upon the closing of the First Niagara merger and subsequently merged into KeyBank, previously made a residential mortgage loan to each of Mr. Crosby and an immediate family member of Mr. Crosby under First Niagara Bank’s loan program for employees, which included an interest rate discount. Mr. Crosby’s loan amount outstanding at December 31, 2016, was $358,627, and the largest amount outstanding on the loan during 2016 was $368,180. The amount of principal and interest paid during 2016 was $21,337, and the amount of interest payable during the remainder of the loan is $141,027. Subsequent to December 31, 2016, Mr. Crosby’s mortgage was paid in full. At December 31, 2016, the amount outstanding on the loan to Mr. Crosby’s immediate family member was $188,908, and the largest amount outstanding on the loan during 2016 was $193,416. The amount of principal and interest paid during 2016 was $10,898, and the amount of interest payable during the remainder of the loan is $83,537.

Except as described above regarding the residential mortgage loan for Mr. Crosby and his immediate family member, all loans, loan commitments, and transactions involving other financial products and services with our directors and executive officers were made in the ordinary course of business on substantially the same terms, including interest rate and collateral terms, as those prevailing at the time for comparable transactions with unrelated third parties and did not present heightened risks of collectability or other unfavorable features to KeyCorp or its subsidiaries.

Loans and extensions of credit by KeyBank to our directors, executive officers, and their affiliated entities were made in compliance with Regulation O under federal banking law and KeyBank’s related policies and procedures. In addition to satisfying the standard set forth in the preceding paragraph, our Regulation O policies and procedures require that:

 

    the amount of credit extended does not exceed individual and aggregate lending limits, depending upon the identity of the borrower and the nature of the loan; and

 

    any extension of credit in excess of $500,000 be approved by the Board of Directors of KeyBank.

Shareholder Engagement

In order for management and the Board to better understand and consider shareholders’ perspectives, we regularly communicate with our larger shareholders to solicit and discuss their views on governance, executive compensation and other matters. We believe our regular engagement has been productive and provides an open exchange of ideas and perspectives for both the Company and our shareholders.

During fiscal 2016, members of management and our independent Lead Director participated in discussions with a number of institutional shareholders, including many of our largest shareholders. Overall, participating investors expressed support for the Company’s governance and compensation practices, including our current board leadership structure. Feedback received during these meetings is presented to and discussed by the Nominating and Corporate Governance Committee, Compensation Committee and, as appropriate, other Board committees and the entire Board.

After considering feedback received from shareholders in recent years, we have:

 

    formalized additional responsibilities for the independent Lead Director and added disclosure about the Lead Director’s activities (see page 14 of this proxy statement);

 

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    formalized an annual evaluation of the Lead Director and incorporated the evaluation process in our Corporate Governance Guidelines;

 

    increased our website disclosure with respect to our political spending and activity;

 

    provided additional disclosure about the Audit Committee’s oversight and engagement of the independent auditor in the Audit Committee Report at page 67 in this proxy statement; and

 

    created a robust summary (at pages S-1 to S-4 in this proxy statement) and enhanced our Compensation Discussion and Analysis that begins at page 28 in this proxy statement.

In addition, our Chief Executive Officer, Chief Financial Officer, Director of Investor Relations, and other members of our senior management team receive regular feedback from the investment community—through investor visits, meetings and conferences—regarding our strategy, financial results and other topics of interest, and regularly brief our Board on this feedback.

Director Education

Throughout the year, our directors participate in continuing education activities and receive educational materials on a wide variety of topics (including, for example, corporate governance, the financial services industry, executive compensation, risk management, finance and accounting). Annually, the Board holds director education sessions focusing on topics suggested by the directors at the November meeting of the Board and its committees. From time to time, our directors may also attend seminars and other educational programs at KeyCorp’s expense. These educational opportunities provide our directors with timely updates on best practices among our peers and in the general marketplace and further supplement our directors’ significant business and leadership experiences.

Communication with the Board

Interested parties may submit comments about KeyCorp to the directors in writing at KeyCorp’s headquarters at 127 Public Square, Cleveland, Ohio 44114. Correspondence should be addressed to “Lead Director, KeyCorp Board of Directors, care of the Secretary of KeyCorp” and marked “Confidential.”

Interested parties wishing to communicate with the Audit Committee regarding accounting, internal accounting controls, or auditing matters may directly contact the Audit Committee by mailing a statement of their comments and views to KeyCorp at its corporate headquarters at 127 Public Square, Cleveland, Ohio 44114. Such correspondence should be addressed to “Chair, Audit Committee, KeyCorp Board of Directors, care of the Secretary of KeyCorp” and should be marked “Confidential.”

 

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Corporate Governance Documents

The KeyCorp Board of Directors’ Committee Charters, KeyCorp’s Corporate Governance Guidelines, KeyCorp’s Code of Ethics, KeyCorp’s Standards for Determining Independence of Directors, KeyCorp’s Policy for Review of Transactions between KeyCorp and its Directors, Executive Officers, and Other Related Persons, and KeyCorp’s Statement of Political Activity for 2016 are all posted on KeyCorp’s website: www.key.com/ir. Copies of these documents will be delivered, free of charge, to any shareholder who contacts KeyCorp’s Investor Relations Department at (216) 689-4221.

Corporate Governance Guidelines

The Board has adopted written Corporate Governance Guidelines (the “Guidelines”) that detail the Board’s corporate governance duties and responsibilities, many of which are described herein. The Guidelines take into consideration, and are reviewed annually and updated periodically to reflect, best practices in corporate governance and applicable laws and regulations. The Guidelines address a number of matters applicable to directors (such as director qualification standards and independence requirements, share ownership guidelines, and succession planning and management) and management (such as stock ownership guidelines for management and procedures for the annual evaluation of our Chief Executive Officer). The Nominating and Corporate Governance Committee undertook a comprehensive review of the Guidelines in 2015, and our Board approved a revised set of Guidelines in January 2016. In September 2016, the Guidelines were updated to reflect the increase in the maximum number of directors from 16 to 17.

Code of Ethics

We are committed to the highest standards of ethical integrity. Accordingly, the Board of Directors has adopted a Code of Ethics for all of KeyCorp’s (and its subsidiaries’) employees, officers, and directors, which was last amended in July 2016. We will promptly disclose any waiver or amendment to our Code of Ethics for our executive officers or directors on our website. Our Code of Ethics ensures that each employee, officer, and director understands the basic principles that govern our corporate conduct and our core values of Teamwork, Respect, Accountability, Integrity, and Leadership.

Statement of Political Activity

An important part of our commitment to our community includes active participation in the political and public policy process that impacts the lives of our customers, shareholders, and business. As a large financial institution, our business is highly regulated at the federal, state, and local levels. We believe it is critically important to take a constructive role in the political process that will shape the future of business, our industry, and our community.

The Nominating and Corporate Governance Committee of the Board meets annually with a member of KeyCorp’s Government Relations team to review KeyCorp’s policies and practices regarding political contributions. Policies and practices reviewed by the Nominating and Corporate Governance Committee include KeyCorp’s policies regarding doing business with public entities, the Government Relations pre-approval process for ballot issue support and the KeyCorp Advocates Fund (political action committee) annual report.

A statement of our political activities, including our annual political contributions, is made available to our shareholders on our website: www.key.com/ir.

 

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Ownership of KeyCorp Equity Securities

The following table reports the number of KeyCorp equity securities that were beneficially owned by the directors of KeyCorp, the Named Executive Officers, and all directors, nominees for director and all executive officers of KeyCorp as a group, and each person reported to us to beneficially own more than 5% of our common shares. Beneficially-owned KeyCorp equity securities include directly or indirectly owned KeyCorp common shares and any KeyCorp common shares that could be acquired within 60 days of the record date through the exercise of an option or through the vesting or distribution of deferred shares. The column “Other Deferred Shares Owned” reports the number of deferred shares owned that will not vest or be distributed within 60 days of the record date.

This information is provided as of the record date, March 24, 2017.

 

Name  

Common

Shares

   

Options

(1)

   

Deferred

Shares

(2)(3)(4)

   

Total

Beneficial

Ownership
(5)

   

Total

Beneficial

Ownership

as a % of

Outstanding

Common

Shares
(6)

               

Other

Deferred

Shares

Owned

(2)(3)(4)

   

Combined
Beneficial
Ownership
and Other
Deferred
Shares
Owned

(5)

 

Austin A. Adams

    16,702                   16,702                 14,543       31,245  

Bruce D. Broussard

    10,000             7,702       17,702                       17,702  

Edward J. Burke

    123,077       128,086             251,163                 260,659       511,821  

Joseph A. Carrabba

    23,322                   23,322                 38,763       62,085  

Charles P. Cooley

    25,005                   25,005                 74,120       99,125  

Gary M. Crosby

    536,989                   536,989                       536,989  

Alexander M. Cutler

    50,000                   50,000                 152,549       202,549  

H. James Dallas

    52,946             10,913       63,859                 29,208       93,067  

Elizabeth R. Gile

    23,615             7,702       31,317                 29,377       60,694  

Ruth Ann M. Gillis

    43,634                   43,634                 80,795       124,429  

William G. Gisel, Jr.

    17,900                   17,900                 38,763       56,663  

Christopher M. Gorman

    476,925       670,458             1,147,383                 507,646       1,655,029  

Carlton L. Highsmith

    61,125       24,078             85,203                       85,203  

Richard J. Hipple

    13,544             7,702       21,246                 23,359       44,604  

Donald R. Kimble

    197,004       49,646             246,650                 267,193       513,843  

Kristen L. Manos

    66,673                   66,673                 89,390       156,063  

Beth E. Mooney

    769,822       1,469,013             2,238,835                 850,710       3,089,545  

Andrew J. “Randy” Paine III

    135,138       179,253             314,391                 286,330       600,721  

Demos Parneros

    14,000             10,913       24,913                       24,913  

Barbara R. Snyder

    14,010                   14,010                 74,176       88,186  

David K. Wilson

    11,500             7,702       19,202                       19,202  
All directors and executive officers as a group (30 persons)     3,437,794       3,498,306       52,634       6,988,734                 3,896,904       10,885,638  

The Vanguard Group (7)

                      103,685,447       9.58                

State Street Corporation (8)

                      59,960,865       5.54                

BlackRock, Inc. (9)

                      88,625,954       8.19                

 

  (1) This column includes options (including in-the-money and out-of-the-money options) to acquire KeyCorp common shares exercisable on or within 60 days of March 24, 2017.  

 

  (2)

Deferred shares issued under the prior KeyCorp Directors’ Deferred Share Plan or the current Directors’ Deferred Share Sub-Plan to the KeyCorp 2013 Equity Compensation Plan (the “Directors’ Deferred Share Sub-Plan”) are payable three years from their award date, one-half in cash and one-half in common shares, or immediately if a director separates from the Board for any reason prior to the third anniversary of the award. A director may elect

 

 

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to defer the payment of all or some of his or her deferred shares beyond the third anniversary of the award date (“Further Deferred Shares”). In that case, the Further Deferred Shares will be distributed entirely in common shares on (and only on) the deferral date selected by the director. Deferred shares payable in common shares (other than Further Deferred Shares) are included in the column “Deferred Shares” because they may be distributed to the director as common shares immediately upon separation from the Board. Further Deferred Shares, and directors’ fees that have been deferred under the Directors’ Deferred Share Sub-Plan or, previously, the KeyCorp Second Directors’ Deferred Compensation Plan, are included in the column “Other Deferred Shares Owned” because they are only payable on the deferral date selected by the director, which is not on or within 60 days of March 24, 2017 for any director. Deferred shares payable in cash are not reflected in this table. For more information, please see “Directors’ Compensation” on page 63 of this proxy statement.

 

 

  (3) The column “Deferred Shares” includes deferred shares, performance units, and restricted stock units held by executive officers that will be payable in KeyCorp common shares on or within 60 days of March 24, 2017. Deferred shares, performance units, and restricted stock units payable in common shares to executive officers, but not on or within 60 days of March 24, 2017, are reported in the column “Other Deferred Shares Owned.” Performance units are subject to vesting based on the achievement of certain performance goals, as discussed in the Compensation Discussion and Analysis beginning on page 28 of this proxy statement. The number of performance units set forth in these columns reflects a “target” amount of performance units determined for each executive officer on the grant date. The number of performance units that ultimately vest as common shares for each executive officer may be higher or lower depending upon actual performance relative to the performance goals at the end of the measurement period.  

 

  (4) Deferred shares, performance units, and restricted stock units payable in common shares do not have common share voting rights or investment power until the shares or units have been distributed as common shares in accordance with the plan or agreement under which they were granted or awarded.  

 

  (5) Totals may not foot due to rounding.  

 

  (6) No director or executive officer beneficially owns (and collectively all 30 directors and executive officers do not beneficially own) common shares, and options, deferred shares, performance units, and restricted stock units payable in common shares on or within 60 days of March 24, 2017, totaling more than 1% of the outstanding common shares of KeyCorp. The percentages set forth in this column for the holders of more than 5% of our common shares appear as reported by each such holder to the Securities and Exchange Commission on Schedules 13G, as discussed below.  

 

  (7) Based solely upon information contained in the Schedule 13G/A filed by The Vanguard Group, Inc. (“Vanguard”) with the Securities and Exchange Commission on February 10, 2017. Vanguard reported that it owned beneficially 103,685,447 common shares, held sole voting power over 1,707,870 common shares, held sole power to dispose or to direct the disposition of 101,793,818 common shares, held shared voting power over 199,695 common shares, and held shared power to dispose or to direct the disposition of 1,891,629 common shares. Vanguard Fiduciary Trust Company, a wholly-owned subsidiary of Vanguard, is the beneficial owner of 1,396,639 common shares as a result of its serving as investment manager of collective trust accounts. Vanguard Investments Australia, Ltd., a wholly-owned subsidiary of Vanguard, is the beneficial owner of 806,221 common shares as a result of its serving as investment manager of Australian investment offerings. The reported address of Vanguard is 100 Vanguard Blvd., Malvern, PA 19355.  

 

  (8) Based solely upon information contained in the Schedule 13G filed by State Street Corporation (“State Street”) with the Securities and Exchange Commission on February 7, 2017. State Street reported that it owned beneficially, and had shared voting power and shared power to dispose or to direct the disposition of 59,960,865 common shares. Each of the following entities has been identified by State Street as a direct or indirect subsidiary that beneficially owns KeyCorp common shares: State Street Global Advisors France S.A.; State Street Bank and Trust Company; SSGA Funds Management, Inc.; State Street Global Advisors Ltd.; State Street Global Advisors, Australia Limited; State Street Global Advisors (Japan) Co., Ltd.; and State Street Global Advisors (Asia) Limited. The reported address of State Street and its subsidiaries is State Street Financial Center, One Lincoln Street, Boston, MA 02111.  

 

  (9)

Based solely upon information contained in the Schedule 13G/A filed by BlackRock, Inc. (“BlackRock”), for itself and on behalf of various subsidiaries identified therein, with the Securities and Exchange Commission on January 25, 2017. BlackRock reported that it owned beneficially and held sole power to dispose or to direct the disposition of 88,595,159 common shares, and held sole power to vote or direct the voting power over 78,531,693 common shares. Each of the following entities has been identified by BlackRock as a direct or indirect subsidiary that beneficially owns KeyCorp common shares: BlackRock (Luxembourg) S.A.; BlackRock (Netherlands) B.V.;

 

 

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LOGO   2017 Proxy StatementOwnership of KeyCorp Equity Securities 

 

 

BlackRock (Singapore) Limited; BlackRock Advisors (UK) Limited; BlackRock Advisors, LLC; BlackRock Asset Management Canada Limited; BlackRock Asset Management Ireland Limited; BlackRock Asset Management North Asia Limited; BlackRock Asset Management Schweiz AG; BlackRock Capital Management; BlackRock Financial Management, Inc.; BlackRock Fund Advisors; BlackRock Fund Managers Ltd; BlackRock Institutional Trust Company, N.A.; BlackRock International Limited; BlackRock Investment Management (Australia) Limited; BlackRock Investment Management (UK) Ltd; BlackRock Investment Management, LLC; BlackRock Japan Co Ltd; and BlackRock Life Limited. The reported address of BlackRock is 55 East 52nd Street, New York, NY 10055.

 

Executive Officer and Director Equity Ownership Guidelines

KeyCorp’s Corporate Governance Guidelines state that, by the fifth anniversary of his or her election to the Board or as an officer of KeyCorp: (i) each non-employee director should own KeyCorp equity securities with a value at least equal to five times KeyCorp’s non-employee director annual retainer, including at least 1,000 directly-owned KeyCorp common shares; (ii) the Chief Executive Officer should own KeyCorp equity securities with a value at least equal to six times her base salary, including at least 10,000 directly-owned KeyCorp common shares; (iii) the senior executives who are members of KeyCorp’s Management Committee should own KeyCorp equity securities with a value at least equal to three times his or her base salary, including at least 5,000 directly-owned KeyCorp common shares; and (iv) other senior executives should own KeyCorp equity securities with a value at least equal to two times his or her base salary, including at least 2,500 directly-owned KeyCorp common shares. For more information, please see our Compensation Discussion and Analysis beginning on page 28 of this proxy statement.

Pledging and Speculative Trading of KeyCorp Securities

Our insider trading policy restricts our employees, officers and directors from engaging in speculative trading transactions involving KeyCorp securities and restricts our officers and directors who are subject to reporting requirements under Section 16 of the Exchange Act from pledging our securities. During 2016, no director or executive officer pledged as collateral or engaged in speculative trading with respect to any KeyCorp securities.

Section 16(a) Beneficial Ownership Reporting Compliance

KeyCorp’s directors, executive officers, and beneficial owners of more than 10% of any class of equity securities of KeyCorp (currently none) are required to report their initial ownership and certain changes in ownership of KeyCorp securities to the Securities and Exchange Commission. The Securities and Exchange Commission has established certain due dates and requirements for these reports. Based upon our review of records received by KeyCorp and written representations from the directors and executive officers, KeyCorp knows of no director or executive officer who failed to timely file any report required to be filed during 2016, except that Elizabeth R. Gile inadvertently did not timely file one Form 4 report for one transaction in an account over which she exercised no investment discretion; Andrew J. “Randy” Paine III inadvertently did not timely file one Form 4 report for one transaction in an account over which he exercised no investment discretion; and Demos Parneros inadvertently did not timely file one Form 4 report for one transaction.

Equity Compensation Plan Information

KeyCorp is authorized to issue its common shares under the KeyCorp 2013 Equity Compensation Plan (the “Equity Plan”) and the KeyCorp Amended and Restated Discounted Stock Purchase Plan (the “DSP Plan”). KeyCorp is no longer authorized to issue its common shares under, but still has awards outstanding under: (i) the KeyCorp 2010 Equity Compensation Plan (the “2010 Plan”); (ii) the KeyCorp Deferred Equity Allocation Plan; (iii) the KeyCorp Directors’ Deferred Share Plan; (iv) the KeyCorp 2004 Equity Compensation Plan (the “2004 Plan”); and (v) the KeyCorp Amended and Restated 1991 Equity Compensation Plan (amended as of March 13, 2003) (the “1991 Plan”).

 

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Shareholders approved the Equity Plan at the 2013 Annual Meeting of Shareholders. At December 31, 2016, 46,761,309 common shares remained available for future issuance under the Equity Plan. Shareholders approved the DSP Plan in 2003. At December 31, 2016, 2,078,784 common shares remained available for future issuance under the DSP Plan.

The following table provides information about KeyCorp’s equity compensation plans as of December 31, 2016:

 

     (a)      (b)      (c)  
Plan Category   

Securities to
be issued
upon exercise
of outstanding
options,
warrants and
rights

(#)

    

Weighted-
average
exercise
price of
outstanding
options,
warrants
and rights

($)

    

Securities
remaining available
for future issuance
under equity
compensation
plans (excluding
securities reflected
in column (a))

(#)(2)

 

Equity compensation plans approved by security holders (1)

         12,112,954                13.08                      48,840,093  

Equity compensation plans not approved by security holders (3)

                    

Total

     12,112,954        13.08        48,840,093  

 

  (1) The table does not include 18,439,857 unvested shares of time-lapsed and performance-based restricted stock awarded under the 2013 Plan, the 2010 Plan, the 2004 Plan, and the 1991 Plan and 2,102,723 unvested shares of time-lapsed restricted stock grants assumed in connection with the First Niagara merger during 2016. These unvested restricted shares were issued when awarded and consequently are included in KeyCorp’s common shares outstanding.  

 

  (2) The Compensation Committee of the Board has determined that KeyCorp may not grant options to purchase KeyCorp common shares, shares of restricted stock, or other share grants under its long-term compensation plans in an amount that exceeds six percent of KeyCorp’s outstanding common shares in any rolling three-year period.  

 

  (3) The table does not include outstanding options to purchase 383,572 common shares assumed in connection with the First Niagara merger during 2016. At December 31, 2016, these assumed options had a weighted-average exercise price of $14.60 per share. No additional options may be granted under the plan that governs these options.  

More information about these awards can be found in Note 16 (“Stock-Based Compensation”) to the Consolidated Financial Statements beginning on page 178 of our Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2016 (the “2016 Annual Report”), which was filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission on February 28, 2017.

 

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Compensation Discussion and Analysis

This Compensation Discussion and Analysis describes how we compensate our executives, including the following individuals (our “Named Executive Officers”) whose titles as of December 31, 2016, are listed below, along with the year in which they were hired or promoted into their current position:

 

    Name   Title   Year Hired/Promoted  

    Beth E. Mooney

  Chairman and Chief Executive Officer   2011

    Donald R. Kimble

  Chief Financial Officer   2013

    Christopher M. Gorman

  Merger Integration Executive (1)   2016

    Andrew J. “Randy” Paine III

  Co-Head, Key Corporate Bank   2016

    Edward J. (EJ) Burke

  Co-President, Key Community Bank   2014

 

  (1) Mr. Gorman served as President of Key Corporate Bank prior to becoming Merger Integration Executive in 2016.  

 

       Additional information on the compensation of our Named Executive Officers can be found in the 2016 Summary Compensation Table on page 49 of this proxy statement.  

Table of Contents

The contents of the Compensation Discussion and Analysis are organized as follows:

 

Executive Summary

     28  

Objectives of Our Compensation Program

     32  

Alignment of Pay and Performance

     35  

Elements of our Compensation Program

     37  

Other Elements of Compensation

     42  

How We Make Pay Decisions

     43  

Tax and Accounting Treatment of Executive Compensation

     46  

Executive Summary

The following Executive Summary highlights our 2016 performance and the corresponding compensation actions approved by the Compensation Committee for our Named Executive Officers with respect to their performance in 2016. Also included is the approved payout level of our 2014 awards of performance shares, which vested in 2017, based on our performance between 2014 and 2016.

Overview of 2016 Performance

In 2016, we had momentum in our core businesses and improved our performance relative to our Peer Group, while also completing our acquisition of First Niagara and successfully integrating our two organizations. Our 2016 performance included:

 

    A third consecutive year of pre-provision net revenue (“PPNR”) growth, excluding merger-related charges, including another consecutive record year for investment banking and debt placement fees.

 

    Earnings per share (“EPS”) growth of 8%, compared to 2015, excluding merger-related charges reflecting solid performance of our core businesses, as well as growth from our acquisition of First Niagara.

 

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    The acquisition of First Niagara, as we welcomed one million new clients and approximately 5,000 new team members while adding $23 billion in loans, $27 billion in deposits, and over 300 branches.

 

    Strong performance relative to our Peer Group, including revenue growth and PPNR growth that put us in the top quartile of our Peer Group, as described in greater detail on page 39 of this proxy statement.

The information above includes certain non-GAAP financial measures. Please see Figure 4 on page 39 in our 2016 Annual Report on Form 10-K for more information on these non-GAAP measures and reconciliations to the most comparable GAAP measures. Page 45 of this proxy statement also includes more information about PPNR and EPS.

Reflecting the progress we made during 2016, our core businesses have momentum and are producing results, the investments we have made are generating returns, and the First Niagara merger will continue to provide opportunities to accelerate our performance. KeyCorp has demonstrated the ability to grow in a challenging environment and is now uniquely positioned to build on the progress we have made. We have clear and compelling strategic priorities, which include growing relationships, effectively managing risk and capital, generating strong returns, and achieving our financial targets.

2016 Annual Incentive Plan Funding and Awards

Based on our 2016 performance and the achievement against the financial goals in our 2016 Annual Incentive Plan, the Compensation Committee approved a funding level of 120% for this plan, from which our Named Executive Officers and all employees, other than those in a line of business incentive plan, are provided annual cash incentive awards. Our 2016 Annual Incentive Plan, including a full description of the performance measures selected by the Compensation Committee and our performance against these measures, can be found beginning on page 37 of this proxy statement.

Pay of our Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

The Compensation Committee awarded Ms. Mooney an annual incentive for 2016 performance of $2,700,000 and granted her long-term incentives of $4,400,000. Ms. Mooney’s annual incentive represented 135% of her annual incentive target of $2,000,000, and reflects the Compensation Committee’s recognition of her efforts in leading the organization that showed core growth while demonstrating the agility to quickly and decisively complete the First Niagara merger. Ms. Mooney’s long-term award was 110% of her long-term incentive target and 100% of her prior year award, reflecting the Compensation Committee’s continued support of our long-term strategy.

As a result of our acquisition of First Niagara, which allowed us to grow assets by almost 40%, along with the changes made to our Peer Group for 2017 described on page 44 of this proxy statement, the Compensation Committee elected to evaluate Ms. Mooney’s 2017 target total direct compensation, which has been unchanged since 2014. Based on this review, the Compensation Committee decided to increase Ms. Mooney’s target total direct compensation for 2017 from $7,000,000 to $7,800,000, with all of the increase allocated to her long-term incentive opportunity. Thus, for 2017, Ms. Mooney’s target total direct compensation consists of $1,000,000 in base salary, a $2,000,000 annual incentive target, and a $4,800,000 long-term incentive target. When establishing Ms. Mooney’s target pay for 2017, the Compensation Committee considered KeyCorp’s complexity relative to our Peer Group and Ms. Mooney’s performance and tenure, as well as factors such as asset size and revenue. The Compensation Committee felt that the increase to Ms. Mooney’s target total direct compensation, as well as the mix of pay, accurately represented Key’s relative position within our Peer Group following the acquisition of First Niagara.

 

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Pay of our Other Named Executive Officers

After assessing each individual’s performance during 2016, the Compensation Committee approved the annual and long-term incentive awards for our other Named Executive Officers described below.

2016 Annual Incentive Awards

The Compensation Committee approved the following annual incentive awards for our other Named Executive Officers, considering the performance of each during 2016 as well as the 120% approved funding of our Annual Incentive Plan bonus pool:

 

Name    Target
Annual
Incentives
($)
    

Actual
Payout

(% of
Target)

   Actual
Payout
($)(1)
 

 Donald R. Kimble

     750,000      125%      950,000   

 Christopher M. Gorman

     1,700,000      135%      2,300,000   

 Andrew J. “Randy” Paine III

     1,500,000      120%      1,800,000   

 Edward J. Burke

     1,050,000      125%      1,300,000   

 

  (1) We require that at least 50% of the “total incentive”—that is, the sum of the 2016 annual incentive and 2017 long-term incentives—of each Named Executive Officer (60% for our Chairman and CEO) be delivered in the form of deferred compensation, subject to a multi-year vesting schedule and risk-adjusted vesting. If the total incentive does not satisfy this requirement, a portion of the Named Executive Officer’s discretionary cash incentive is delivered as deferred compensation. A portion of the 2016 annual incentive for Mr. Burke was subject to this mandatory deferral requirement and was converted into restricted stock units subject to a four-year vesting schedule.  

When establishing the annual incentive awards for our Named Executive Officers, the Compensation Committee considered the following:

 

    Mr. Kimble’s award reflects the significant contributions he made to our First Niagara merger integration efforts, as he oversaw our financial and accounting integration as well as our corporate real estate activities (which included the conversion of First Niagara branches and branch consolidations in 2016), obtained approval through the Comprehensive Capital Analysis and Review process to begin share repurchases, and continued to demonstrate credibility with our investors and the analyst community.

 

    Mr. Gorman, as Merger Integration Executive, participated in a modified annual incentive plan structure under which 50% of his annual incentive opportunity considered the success of our integration efforts and the remaining 50% considered our 2016 Annual Incentive Plan performance. Mr. Gorman’s 135% payment represents our performance under this modified structure, as described in greater detail beginning on page 37 of this proxy statement.

 

    The award for Mr. Burke considered his involvement in our integration efforts, as he was responsible for implementing a new mortgage origination platform and salesforce, while integrating First Niagara’s commercial bankers and the new Key Insurance team.

 

    Mr. Paine’s award reflects the continued strong, core performance of our Corporate Bank, which saw another consecutive record year for investment banking and debt placement fees in 2016.

 

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2017 Long-Term Incentive Awards

On February 20, 2017, the Compensation Committee approved long-term incentive award opportunities for our other Named Executive Officers based on 2016 performance and anticipated future contributions, as set forth in the table below. This table also shows the percentage of each Named Executive Officer’s long-term incentive as a percentage of his total incentive—including any portion of the 2016 annual incentive required to be deferred—demonstrating that each satisfies our deferral requirements.

 

Name   Target
Long-Term
Incentive
($)
   

Actual
Award

(as %
of
Target)

  Actual
Award
($)
   

Total
Incentive
Deferred

(%)(1)

 Donald R. Kimble

    1,300,000     115%     1,500,000     61%

 Christopher M. Gorman

    2,000,000     120%     2,400,000     51%

 Andrew J. “Randy” Paine III

    1,800,000     100%     1,800,000     50%

 Edward J. Burke (2)

    1,050,000     105%     1,100,000     50%

 

  (1) This column shows the actual percentage of each Named Executive Officer’s total incentive delivered as deferred incentive compensation, including any portion of the Named Executive Officer’s annual incentive required to be deferred.  

 

  (2) In order to satisfy our deferral requirements, $100,000 of the annual incentive award otherwise payable to Mr. Burke was deferred and delivered as deferred incentive compensation, consistent with our risk-balancing requirements as described beginning on page 33 of this proxy statement. This was in addition to his $1,100,000 long-term incentive award, described in the table above.  

Payout of 2014 Performance Awards

On February 17, 2014, each Named Executive Officer received an award of performance shares as part of his or her long-term incentive opportunity. The Named Executive Officers could earn between 0% and 150% of the performance shares granted based on the achievement of our 2014 long-term incentive plan, described below.

On February 20, 2017, the Compensation Committee approved a final performance level for our 2014 long-term incentive plan of 91.4%, as described below. This performance level represents the right to receive 91.4% of the target 2014 performance share opportunity based on the closing price of our common stock of $18.96 as of February 17, 2017.

 

2014-2016 Long-Term Incentive Plan      Actual
Result
     Final
Funding
 
            Performance Req’d
for Payout
       
Performance Goals    Weight      Min.      Target      Max.        

Total Shareholder Return vs. Peer Group

     25%        25% ile        50% ile        75% ile        38% ile        77%  

Return on Assets vs. Peer Group

     25%        25% ile        50% ile        75% ile        56% ile        113%  

Cumulative Earnings Per Share (1)

     50%        $2.57        $3.43        $4.28        $3.22        88%  

Calculated Performance

 

     91.4%  

Committee Approved Performance

 

     91.4%  

 

  (1) EPS was calculated based on continuing operations and the EPS goal reflects adjustments approved by the Compensation Committee as a result of the First Niagara merger, as described below under the heading “Elements of our Compensation Program—Annual Incentives.”  

 

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Performance of our 2014 long-term incentive plan was impacted by two factors. First, our cumulative total shareholder return was below the median of our Peer Group. Second, our cumulative EPS target, established in early 2014, included an assumption around a number of interest rate increases that were not realized during the performance period and caused our cumulative EPS to trail the target.

Before approving this final performance level, the Compensation Committee considered our Enterprise Risk Management dashboard and our execution against strategic priorities and, based on this review, concluded that no reduction in calculated performance was warranted.

Objectives of Our Compensation Program

Our success depends on the ability to attract, retain, motivate and develop our people. Competition for talent in our business is ongoing and we make investments to hire and retain the people we need to serve our customers. Our compensation program is an integral part of these efforts and is designed to reward employees based on performance, be informed by the market, and align with the interests of our shareholders and the expectations of regulators.

Our compensation philosophy is to:

 

    Make pay decisions based on performance of the Company, the business unit, and the individual;

 

    Deliver pay in a way that reinforces focus on balancing short- and long-term financial performance objectives; and

 

    Support sustainable performance with policies that are focused on prudent risk-taking and the balance between risk and reward.

We execute this compensation philosophy by:

Emphasizing variable and performance-based compensation: 86% of the 2016 target total direct compensation of our Chairman and Chief Executive Officer (and, on average, 83% of the 2016 target total direct compensation of our other Named Executive Officers) was either variable or performance-based (including restricted stock units and stock options, the value of which are dependent on our share price), as illustrated in the charts below.

 

LOGO

 

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Requiring Executive Officers to satisfy robust levels of deferral: At least 60% of the annual “total incentive” (the sum of the annual incentive paid and the value of long-term incentives granted in a particular year) of the Chairman and Chief Executive Officer (and at least 50% for the other Named Executive Officers) is required to be deferred over a multi-year period and subject to risk-adjustment, as described in more detail below.

Balancing compensation risk and reward through a robust governance process overseen by the Compensation Committee: We design our compensation programs to appropriately balance risk and reward and regularly monitor these programs to determine whether they create incentives that encourage risk-taking outside of our risk tolerances. The Compensation Committee:

 

    Reserves the right to decrease funding for our discretionary incentive plans by as much as 100% based on our Enterprise Risk Management dashboard or the occurrence of any risk event that warrants such an adjustment;

 

    Considers each Named Executive Officer’s scorecard performance—including individual risk performance—before approving any discretionary incentive award; and

 

    May forfeit, offset, reduce, or claw back any Named Executive Officer’s deferred incentives based on the actual risk-related outcomes of each executive’s performance on which the award is based.

Compensation Governance Best Practices

We support our compensation program with a number of best practices in governance and executive compensation. In addition, the Compensation Committee regularly evaluates our compensation practices to address areas of concerns raised by our shareholders or shareholder advisory firms.

 

 What we do:

 

    Impose Robust Stock Ownership Guidelines: Our Corporate Governance Guidelines contain robust share ownership requirements, ranging from six times base salary for our Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, with a minimum direct ownership requirement of 10,000 common shares, to three times base salary for our other Executive Officers, with a minimum direct ownership requirement of 5,000 common shares. As of February 28, 2017, each Named Executive Officer, including the Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, satisfied his or her share ownership requirements.

 

    Subject Shares to Post-Vesting Holding Period: Each Named Executive Officer must hold the net shares acquired upon vesting of equity awards until he or she satisfies our share ownership guidelines. In 2015, we amended our insider trading policies to require that our Chairman and Chief Executive Officer notify the Chair of the Compensation Committee before she engages in any discretionary transactions involving our shares. Also in 2015, the Compensation Committee adopted a policy recommending against the use of so-called “10b5-1” trading plans for our Executive Officers.

 

    “Double Trigger” Change of Control Agreements: Our Change of Control Agreements are “double trigger,” meaning that severance benefits are due, and equity awards that are assumed in a change of control transaction vest, only if a senior executive experiences a qualifying termination of employment in connection with a change of control. This requirement is intended to prevent senior executives from receiving change of control benefits without a corresponding loss of employment.

 

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    Use Tally Sheets: The Compensation Committee annually reviews tally sheets for our Named Executive Officers that include the estimated value of severance payments, the accumulated value of vested and unvested equity awards, and retirement benefits. The Compensation Committee also reviews the levels and types of compensation provided to executive officers in similar positions at companies in our Peer Group. This practice allows the Compensation Committee to evaluate the total compensation package provided to these employees and consider the impact of isolated adjustments or incremental changes to specific elements of compensation.

 

    Review Share Utilization: We regularly review share overhang levels and run-rates and maintain share utilization levels well within industry norms.

 

    Retain an Independent Consultant: The Compensation Committee retains an independent consultant to assist in developing and reviewing our executive compensation strategy and program. The Compensation Committee, with the assistance of the independent consultant, regularly evaluates our executive compensation program in light of the compensation practices of our Peer Group to confirm that our compensation programs are consistent with market practice.

 

    Subject All Incentives to Risk-Adjustment: All incentive awards are subject to a multi-step risk-adjustment process that begins before grant and extends beyond payment, which is part of our overall compensation philosophy. We reserve the right to adjust funding and/or awards to reflect risks that may be realized and subject all discretionary incentives to forfeiture, reduction, offset, and clawback.

 

    Subject All Incentives to Clawback: Our clawback policy allows us to recover cash and equity incentive compensation paid to any Named Executive Officer, including deferred annual and long-term incentives, if based on financial results that are subsequently restated, and to cancel outstanding equity awards and recover realized gains if the executive engages in certain “harmful activity.”

 

 What we don’t do:

 

    No Employment Agreements: No Executive Officer, including any Named Executive Officer, is a party to an employment agreement.

 

    No Tax Gross-Ups: We do not provide for tax gross-ups on change of control payments or for perquisites, other than on relocation benefits provided to certain senior-level employees upon hire.

 

    No SERPs: We froze our executive pension plans in 2009. No Named Executive Officer participates in an active supplemental defined benefit plan, although vesting service continues for those Named Executive Officers who participated in such a plan prior to 2009.

 

    No Hedging or Pledging of KeyCorp Securities: Our insider trading policy restricts our employees, officers, and directors from engaging in hedging transactions involving our common shares, and it restricts our officers and directors who are subject to reporting requirements under Section 16 of the Exchange Act from pledging our common shares.

 

    No “Timing” of Equity Grants: We maintain a disciplined equity approval policy. We do not grant equity awards in anticipation of the release of material, non-public information. Similarly, we do not time the release of material, non-public information based on equity grant dates.

 

    No Repricing: We do not reprice or back-date stock options.

 

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Consideration of Our Say-on-Pay Shareholder Vote

We continue to receive strong shareholder support for our Named Executive Officers’ compensation program, as reflected in the results of our annual “say-on-pay” proposals, which have received approximately 95% or greater support each year since 2012. We view the results of our say-on-pay votes as evidence that our executive compensation program provides pay for performance and appropriately aligns the interests of our Named Executive Officers with those of our shareholders.

Shareholder Outreach

We maintain an active shareholder engagement program through which we periodically receive feedback from and have discussions with institutional investors around our compensation philosophy and structure. These continuing conversations with our institutional investors help us better understand matters of importance to our investors regarding our executive compensation program and help us to shape our pay-for-performance strategy.

Alignment of Pay and Performance

Our executive compensation program is designed so that a substantial portion of the pay of our Chairman and Chief Executive Officer is delivered in the form of long-term incentives—which means that both her Realized Pay (the amount she actually may receive in any year) as well as her Realizable Pay (her future pay opportunity) are tied directly to our share price performance and achievement of our long-term financial goals.

Ms. Mooney’s pay, as reported in the Summary Compensation Table (“SCT”), reflects the accounting value of long-term incentives at grant and not the value actually received from these grants or their potential future value. As a result, we believe that it is useful to compare Ms. Mooney’s Adjusted SCT Pay, Realized Pay and Realizable Pay, in each case between 2014 and 2016, with our total shareholder return for the same period. This comparison shows the alignment of Ms. Mooney’s pay and changes in our share price, as illustrated below:

 

 

LOGO

 

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Ms. Mooney’s Realized Pay between 2014 and 2016 consisted of:

 

    

2014

($)

   

2015

($)

   

2016

($)

 

 Base salary received

    1,000,000       1,038,462     1,000,000  

 Annual incentive payments

    1,900,000       1,900,000       2,700,000  

 Restricted stock/units vesting

    690,506       1,190,664       1,267,879  

 Performance share vesting

    2,213,139       3,906,520       3,075,096  

 Total**

    5,803,645       8,035,646       8,042,975  

 

  * Ms. Mooney’s 2015 base salary includes an additional pay period in December 2015.

 

  ** Ms. Mooney did not exercise any stock options in 2014, 2015, or 2016.

The preceding chart and table are not substitutes for the information required to be contained in the Summary Compensation Table, but provide additional information with regard to our Chairman and Chief Executive Officer’s pay.

For purposes of the preceding chart and table, we define:

 

    “Adjusted SCT” as the compensation reported in the Summary Compensation Table for the applicable year (i.e., 2014, 2015, or 2016), adjusted by excluding “Changes in Pension Value and Nonqualified Deferred Compensation Earnings” and “All Other Compensation.” We excluded these items because they represent amounts that are not realizable pay or that will never become realized pay or which will not become realized pay until termination of employment or later, and do not have a realizable value.

 

    “Realizable Pay” as the sum of: (i) actual base salary and incentives paid for the applicable year; (ii) the value of all restricted stock units granted during the applicable year based on the December 31, 2016, closing price of our common shares; (iii) the intrinsic value (i.e., the excess, if any, of the December 31, 2016, closing price of our common shares over the option exercise price) of all stock options granted during the applicable year; and (iv) the target value of all performance awards granted during the applicable year based on the December 31, 2016, closing price of our common shares.

 

    “Realized Pay” as the sum of (i) actual base salary and incentives paid for the applicable year plus (ii) the amount reported as income upon vesting of performance awards, restricted stock or units, or exercise of stock options.

 

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Elements of Our Compensation Program

The principal components of our total direct compensation program are summarized below. The table below also includes a summary of 2016 pay actions and 2017 pay adjustments for our Named Executive Officers.

 

Element    Characteristic    Purpose    Summary of 2016 Actions / 2017 Adjustments
Base Salary    Fixed compensation subject to annual adjustment and review if appropriate.    Attract, retain, and motivate Named Executive Officers and to align with market practices.   

We generally review base salaries each year and set salaries around the Peer Group median.

 

For 2017, the Compensation Committee adjusted the salary of Mr. Burke after considering internal equity and market practices.

Annual

Incentive

   Variable compensation based on achievement of corporate and/or business unit performance goals and other strategic objectives.    Motivate and reward Named Executive Officers for achieving our annual financial and strategic goals and for effectively managing risks within our approved risk tolerances.   

The Compensation Committee approved 2016 annual incentives for Named Executive Officers ranging from $1,300,000 to $2,700,000, which considered both the 120% pool funding of our Annual Incentive Plan for Executive Officers, individual performance, and business unit performance, if applicable.

 

For 2017, the Compensation Committee adjusted the annual incentive target of Mr. Kimble and Mr. Burke after considering market practices and tenure.

Long-Term

Incentive

   Variable compensation based on share price growth and achievement of performance relative to that of our peers and other corporate performance goals.    Motivate and reward Named Executive Officers for achieving our long-term financial and strategic goals and for continued management of our risk profile, while aligning their interests with those of our shareholders.   

The Compensation Committee approved long-term incentive awards for our Named Executive Officers on February 20, 2017, ranging from $1,200,000 to $4,840,000, which were allocated 50% to performance shares, 40% to restricted stock units, and 10% to stock options. Please see the discussion under “2017 Long-Term Incentives” for a description of our long-term incentive grants and vehicles.

 

In addition to the adjustment to Ms. Mooney’s long-term incentive target described above, for 2017, the Compensation Committee adjusted the long-term incentive target of Mr. Kimble and Mr. Burke after considering market practices, their mix of pay and our deferral expectations.

Base Salary

Base salaries are reviewed and approved by the Compensation Committee on a competitive basis each year following a market assessment of base salaries paid to comparable executives at peer companies, including companies in our Peer Group, to the extent that a comparable position can be identified. Base salaries for 2016 are reported in the “Salary” column to the 2016 Summary Compensation Table on page 49 of this proxy statement.

Annual Incentives

All Named Executive Officers are eligible to receive discretionary cash incentive awards under our Annual Incentive Plan. The funding of the overall bonus pool under our Annual Incentive Plan is based on the achievement of various financial and strategic goals compared to pre-established targets, as described below. Annual Incentive Plan funding is capped at 150%, with 0% funding for the Named Executive Officers if a threshold level of performance (85%) is not achieved.

 

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The actual annual incentive that may be awarded to any individual Named Executive Officer is determined by the Compensation Committee after considering the approved funding level of the bonus pool, the executive’s experience and performance, market information, and the practices of our Peer Group relative to the target annual incentive established by the Compensation Committee, but in no event may exceed 200% of this target.

2016 Performance Measures

In 2016, for Named Executive Officers other than Mr. Gorman, 60% of our Annual Incentive Plan pool funding was based on our performance against the following three equally-weighted goals compared to pre-established targets:

 

    PPNR

 

    Cash Efficiency Ratio

 

    EPS

The Compensation Committee selected PPNR and Cash Efficiency Ratio as performance goals in 2016 to reflect our ongoing focus on growing revenue and managing expenses and used EPS to evaluate the quality of our earnings relative to our outstanding shares.

An additional 20% of our Annual Incentive Plan pool funding was based on our revenue growth, PPNR growth, Tangible Common Equity Ratio, and the ratio of Net Charge-Offs to Average Loans compared to our Peer Group. We selected these measures to evaluate our growth, ability to manage capital, and management of risk, in each case relative to that of our peers.

The remaining 20% of our Annual Incentive Plan pool funding was based on the Compensation Committee’s qualitative assessment of the quality of our integration with First Niagara and effectiveness of continuous improvement efforts, as described in greater detail below.

For 2016, as in 2015, our Annual Incentive Plan pool was designed to fund at 100% if our financial performance fell within a likely “middle” range of performance, generally corresponding to between 98% and 102% of target performance.

Mr. Gorman, as Merger Integration Executive, participated in a modified version of our Annual Incentive Plan in which his opportunity was based 50% on financial measures and strategic measures and 50% based on the Compensation Committee’s assessment of the quality of our integration with First Niagara and the effectiveness of continuous improvement efforts.

 

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2016 Funding

When evaluating our performance against the financial and strategic goals in our Annual Incentive Plan, the Compensation Committee considered that 2016 was a unique year for Key. We significantly accelerated delivery of a number of challenging technology initiatives and mobilized our workforce to undertake substantial new responsibilities to acquire and integrate First Niagara—the largest bank acquisition since the financial crisis—all while continuing to grow our core business and improve performance compared to our peers. The results of these efforts are illustrated in the following table, and described in more detail, below.

 

KeyCorp 2016 Annual Incentive Plan     
    Performance Required for Payout                     

Performance Goals*

Funding %

 

Min.

50%

  

Middle

100%

  

Max.

150%

   Actual
Result
   Funding
Rate
   Weight        Final
Funding

 PPNR (in millions)

  $1,389    $1,702-1,772    $2,034    $1,742    100%    20%    20%

 Cash Efficiency Ratio

  69.5%    65.8-64.4%    61.4%    64.3%    109%    20%    22%

 EPS

  $0.85    $1.04-1.08    $1.27    $1.13    112%    20%    22%

 Relative Progress to Peers

 

Bottom

Quartile

  

Middle

Quartiles

  

Top

Quartile

   Mid-Top Quartiles    125%    20%    25%

 Operational Excellence

  Qualitative Assessment    Exceeds    150%    20%    30%

 Calculated Funding

                    119%

 Compensation Committee Approved Funding

   120%

 

  * The performance goals in the Annual Incentive Plan were established in early 2016 and did not consider the impact of the First Niagara merger. Following closing, the Compensation Committee approved adjustments to these goals set to reflect the impact of the acquisition. These adjustments were intended to minimize the benefit or detriment of the transaction and generally resulted in an increase to the PPNR target and slight changes to the Cash Efficiency Ratio and EPS targets.  

In 2016, we showed strong growth in our core franchise, with growth in loans and deposits and a record year for cards and payments income as well as investment banking and debt placement fees. This growth is reflected in our performance against the financial metrics in our Annual Incentive Plan that met or exceeded our targeted levels of performance. Our success in delivering core results was reflected in our performance compared to our peers, which placed us in the top quartiles for revenue growth and PPNR growth and the middle quartiles for the ratio of our Net Charge-Offs to Average Loans and Tangible Common Equity Ratio, as illustrated in the table below.

Relative Performance to Peers

 

Measure    Actual Result

 Revenue Growth

   Top Quartile

 PPNR Growth

   Top Quartile

 Tangible Common Equity Ratio

   Middle Quartiles

 Net Charge-Offs / Average Loans

   Middle Quartiles

The Annual Incentive Plan also involved the Compensation Committee’s subjective assessment of the quality of our execution of, and our ability to: (i) accelerate delivery of key strategic technology initiatives while continuing to deliver business as usual strategic initiatives; and (ii) create value through the disciplined and timely execution against an aggressive integration schedule for First Niagara. We categorized these initiatives as “operational excellence,” the results of which are described in greater detail below.

 

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Accelerated Delivery of Technology Initiatives

In 2016, we accelerated delivery of several significant enterprise-wide technology initiatives. First, we delivered “next generation KTT”—our improved commercial client online portal—four months ahead of schedule, delivering substantial enhancements to our clients, including providing early access to a select number of high value First Niagara clients that allowed us to avoid client disruption from a later reconversion. In addition, we delivered our enhanced digital banking platform—dubbed “Digital 17” to reflect the original year slated for rollout—by August 2016, which avoided a future conversion for First Niagara clients and the results of which have exceeded our expectations. Finally, we launched a new Commercial Client Profitability tool and enhanced Risk Reporting ahead of schedule allowing us to realize savings by avoiding the need to test legacy First Niagara systems, and delivering risk reporting capabilities that surpassed our expectations.

Disciplined Execution Against Aggressive Integration Timeline

At the same time, we mobilized a significant portion of our workforce to deliver against an aggressive integration schedule that resulted in our closing the largest bank acquisition since the financial crisis on a relatively short timeframe, which allowed us to realize substantial savings in terms of third-party spend and personnel expense.

The transaction was managed at multiple levels across the organization, including a merger integration leadership team that was supported by cross-functional teams for critical business and functional areas, change management and value attainment. This structure allowed us to meet our business-as-usual commitments while simultaneously executing our integration strategy.

Following the announcement of the merger, our plans included significant outreach to shareholders and the investment community. Our efforts resulted in over 90% of the votes cast on the merger proposal being voted in favor of the merger.

We invested significantly in change management to ensure a client-centric conversion with a focus on our employees—who are the primary vehicle through which we interact with clients, shareholders, regulators, and communities. This investment allowed us to execute a full systems conversion that preserved client information (account numbers, debit/credit card numbers, bill pay, log-in credentials) with minimal disruptions that were remediated swiftly, collaboratively, and decisively. We welcomed one million new clients and approximately 5,000 new employees through a robust onboarding effort and benefited from retention of client facing roles, critical personnel, and “top talent.”

We quickly negotiated and closed on a branch divestiture on a timeline and terms that exceeded our expectations. We completed systems and client conversion in 2016 to assist with client experience and drive value attainment. We consolidated 106 branches, 70 of which occurred concurrently with the systems and client conversion. We accomplished all of this within our risk appetite, while continuously monitoring risks and strengthening our risk profile, even while adding new businesses.

Our execution of this highly complex and multi-dimensional transaction required the development of a disciplined and well-structured integration plan and extraordinary efforts by our employees. The Compensation Committee considered that the quality of our efforts to accelerate delivery of technology solutions and achieve an aggressive integration schedule exceeded its expectations. Considered along with the strength of our core financial performance and relative performance to our Peer Group, the Compensation Committee approved a funding rate of 120% of our Annual Incentive Plan.

Before establishing this funding level, the Compensation Committee considered our Enterprise Risk Management dashboard and whether any event occurred or was realized in 2016 that warranted an adjustment to funding.

 

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2017 Long-Term Incentives

All Named Executive Officers are eligible to receive long-term incentive awards that are granted based on a combination of past performance and anticipated future contributions. The Compensation Committee establishes long-term incentive opportunity levels for any year by considering the Named Executive Officer’s performance and by reviewing our historic grant levels, the dilutive impact and financial accounting cost of the long-term incentive program, and market information, including the practices of our Peer Group.

Our executive compensation program is based upon a Named Executive Officer’s “total incentive” award (i.e., the sum of the annual incentive payable for 2016 performance plus the long-term incentive granted in 2017 based on a combination of past performance and anticipated future contributions). At least 50% of the total incentive of each Named Executive Officer (60% for our Chairman and Chief Executive Officer) is required to be deferred and subject to risk-adjusted vesting. When determining whether a Named Executive Officer satisfies this requirement, we first consider whether the long-term incentive (100% of which is delivered as equity-based compensation subject to a multi-year, risk-adjusted vesting schedule) satisfies the required deferral percentage. If not, a portion of the Named Executive Officer’s annual incentive is required to be deferred and delivered in the form of equity-based compensation subject to a multi-year risk-adjusted vesting schedule.

Vehicles and Vesting

The long-term incentive awards granted to our Named Executive Officers in 2017 were delivered as follows

 

Vehicles

(Subject to Risk-Adjusted Vesting)

   Weight    Vesting
Schedule

Performance Shares

   50%    3-year cliff

Restricted Stock Units

   40%    4-year ratable

Stock Options

   10%    4-year ratable

The award types and vesting terms are unchanged from 2016.

2017 Performance Shares

The performance shares granted in 2017 provide our Named Executive Officers with the opportunity to receive between 0% and 150% of their “target” number of shares based on our level of achievement of the following performance goals during the three-year performance period ending on December 31, 2019:

 

2017-2019 Long-Term Incentive Plan     
        Performance Required for Payout   

Other Factors

(Vesting Reduction Only)

Performance Goals   Weight   Min.   Target   Max.   

TSR vs. Peers

  25%   25% ile   50% ile   75% ile    ERM Dashboard

Return on TCE vs. Peers

  25%   25% ile   50% ile   75% ile    Execution of Strategic Priorities

Cumulative Earnings Per Share

  50%   75% of Plan   100% of Plan   125% of Plan    Other factors, as appropriate

The “target” number of performance shares granted was determined by dividing 50% of each Named Executive Officer’s long-term incentive opportunity by the grant date closing price of our common shares of $18.96 on February 17, 2017.

The Compensation Committee believes that each of the performance goals set forth above strongly correlates to long-term shareholder value creation. For 2017, the Compensation Committee elected to

 

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use Return on Tangible Common Equity (“TCE”) as a metric in the long-term incentive plan. The Compensation Committee made this change as it believed that Return on TCE showed a stronger correlation with long-term shareholder value creation than return on assets, which was the metric it replaced. When selecting the performance goals, the Compensation Committee considered that EPS also is a performance metric in our Annual Incentive Plan, but determined that achievement of three-year EPS goals rewards sufficiently different performance than annual EPS goals such that the metrics do not meaningfully overlap. The “other factors” included in the performance metrics may only reduce the vesting of performance shares if, in the Compensation Committee’s judgment, performance with regard to these “other factors” is insufficient.

The Compensation Committee believes that performance shares encourage our Named Executive Officers to make decisions and to deliver results over a multi-year time period, thereby keeping a focus on our long-term performance objectives. In addition, performance shares allow us to retain executive talent because executives generally must remain employed through the end of the performance period to realize the full value of the award.

Restricted Stock Units

Restricted stock units allow our Named Executive Officers to receive common shares subject to their continued employment during a four-year vesting period. Restricted stock units align the interests of our executives with those of our shareholders by providing a direct link to share price, seeing that our executives maintain robust levels of share ownership, and providing strong incentives for retention of key executives.

Stock Options

Stock options allow our Named Executive Officers to purchase shares at a price not less than the grant date closing price of our common shares on the New York Stock Exchange (or, if there is no reported closing price on the grant date, the closing price on the preceding business day). Stock options vest ratably over a four-year period and have a ten-year term.

We believe that stock options are an effective tool to align the interests of our shareholders with those of our executives as long as they are appropriately risk-balanced and granted in measured amounts. Our regulators, however, have expressed concerns about the leverage associated with stock options and the possibility of executives realizing a disproportionate award; accordingly, since 2013, we have limited our usage of stock options to 10% of each Named Executive Officer’s annual long-term incentive opportunity.

Other Elements of Compensation

Perquisites

The perquisites currently made available to all Named Executive Officers include an annual executive physical as well as a tax and financial planning perquisite, which was introduced in 2016. The Compensation Committee introduced the tax and financial planning benefit after consideration of market practices and in recognition that the personal tax and financial situations of our Executive Officers is more complex than that of other employees. We also provide Ms. Mooney with residential security services and, in some instances, require that she use a secure automobile and professionally trained driver as a matter of security. Ms. Mooney pays for the cost of the automobile and driver when used solely for personal purposes. In addition, we pay the annual premium on an individual disability insurance policy for Mr. Gorman that was put into place before he became an Executive Officer.

 

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Retirement Programs

Our Named Executive Officers are eligible to participate in our qualified 401(k) Savings Plan on the same basis as all other eligible employees. The 401(k) Savings Plan provides for matching contributions up to 6% on amounts deferred and a discretionary profit sharing contribution on participants’ eligible compensation, each subject to applicable Internal Revenue Service (“IRS”) limitations. The Compensation Committee established the profit sharing contribution for 2016 at 2.5% of a participant’s eligible earnings.

Our Named Executive Officers also are eligible to participate in our non-qualified Deferred Savings Plan, which provides a select group of highly compensated individuals with the ability to receive matching contributions on compensation in excess of what is eligible to be deferred to the 401(k) Savings Plan. In 2014, the Compensation Committee eliminated the annual profit sharing contribution to the Deferred Savings Plan and, beginning in 2015, capped the amount of compensation eligible for a matching contribution at $500,000.

The matching and profit sharing contributions made to the 401(k) Savings Plan and the matching contributions made to the Deferred Savings Plan on behalf of the Named Executive Officers are included in the “All Other Compensation” column to the 2016 Summary Compensation Table on page 49 of this proxy statement.

Ms. Mooney and Mr. Gorman participated in our Cash Balance Pension Plan and Second Excess Cash Balance Pension Plan, each of which we froze effective December 31, 2009. Additional information about our pension programs is included in the narrative to the 2016 Pension Benefits Table beginning on page 57 of this proxy statement.

Separation Pay

We maintain the KeyCorp Separation Pay Plan, which generally covers all of our employees, including our Named Executive Officers, and provides assistance upon termination as a result of a reduction in staff. Our Separation Pay Plan is described in the Potential Payments Upon Termination or Change of Control table on page 60 of this proxy statement.

Change of Control Agreements

Each Named Executive Officer has entered into a Change of Control Agreement with us. We use Change of Control Agreements to help attract and retain executive talent. The Compensation Committee and the Board of Directors each believes that it is in the best interests of shareholders to ensure that our Named Executive Officers are able to evaluate objectively the merits of a potential transaction without being distracted by its potential impact on their personal employment situations. The Compensation Committee believes that most companies in our Peer Group maintain similar change of control arrangements for their executive officers. Our Change of Control Agreements are described in the Potential Payments Upon Termination or Change of Control table on page  60 of this proxy statement.

How We Make Pay Decisions

We seek to maintain a competitive level and mix of pay reflective of the market in which we compete for talent. We do this by reviewing the levels and types of compensation paid to executive officers in similar positions at companies in our Peer Group and the other companies with whom we compete for talent.

 

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Peer Group

In setting compensation for our Named Executive Officers, the Compensation Committee examines the compensation data of our peer companies provided by Compensation Advisory Partners (“CAP”), an independent executive compensation advisory firm, to better understand whether our pay practices remain appropriate when measured against the competitive landscape. While this market data is useful, the Compensation Committee does not rely only on this data for targeting compensation levels, but uses it as a basis for validating relative competitive pay for our Named Executive Officers. The Compensation Committee also considers market conditions, promotions, individual performance, and other relevant circumstances as it determines our Named Executive Officers’ compensation levels.

For 2016, the Compensation Committee continued to use a Peer Group comprised of banks with similar characteristics, including size and capabilities. The companies in our Peer Group maintain a strong brand and reputation and actively compete with us for executive talent. The companies in our 2016 Peer Group were (listed in alphabetical order):

 

BB&T Corp   Huntington Bancshares Inc.   Regions Financial Corp.
Comerica, Inc.   M&T Bank Corp.   SunTrust Banks, Inc.
Fifth Third Bancorp   People’s United Financial Inc.   US Bancorp
First Horizon National Corp.   PNC Financial Services Group, Inc.   Zions Bancorporation

As of December 31, 2016, the median asset size, full year revenue, and market capitalization of the Peer Group compared to our asset size, total revenue, and market capitalization is set forth in the table below:

 

Full Year Average Assets ($)

(in billions)

 
      Full Year  
2016  
 

U.S. Bancorp

     433.3  

PNC Financial

     361.3  

BB&T Corp

     218.9  

Sun Trust

     199.0  

Fifth Third Bank

     142.3  

Regions Financial

     125.5  

M&T Bank

     124.3  

KeyCorp

     114.2  

Huntington Bancshares

     83.1  

Comerica

     71.7  

Zions Bancorp

     60.0  

People’s United

     39.8  

First Horizon

     27.4  

Median (excl. KeyCorp)

     124.9  

Median

     124.3  

Full Year Revenue ($)

(in billions)

 
      Full Year  
  2016
 

U.S. Bancorp

     21.1  

PNC Financial

     15.2  

BB&T Corp

     10.8  

Sun Trust

     8.6  

Fifth Third Bank

     6.3  

Regions Financial

     5.6  

M&T Bank

     5.3  

KeyCorp

     5.0  

Huntington Bancshares

     3.5  

Comerica

     2.8  

Zions Bancorp

     2.4  

People’s United

     1.3  

First Horizon

     1.3  

Median (excl. KeyCorp)

     5.4  

Median

     5.3  

Market Capitalization ($)

(in billions)

 
      At Dec. 31,  
  2016
 

U.S. Bancorp

     87.2  

PNC Financial

     56.7  

BB&T Corp

     38.1  

Sun Trust

     26.9  

M&T Bank

     24.4  

Fifth Third Bank

     20.2  

KeyCorp

     19.7  

Regions Financial

     17.4  

Huntington Bancshares

     14.4  

Comerica

     11.9  

Zions Bancorp

     8.7  

People’s United

     6.1  

First Horizon

     4.7  

Median (excl. KeyCorp)

     18.8  

Median

     19.7  
 

 

The Compensation Committee identified an opportunity to review the Peer Group in light of Key’s merger with First Niagara and the evolving regulatory environment. Based on a multi-dimensional review, the Compensation Committee modified the Peer Group for 2017 by adding Citizens Financial Group and removing People’s United Financial Inc. and First Horizon National Corp. These changes to our Peer Group for 2017 were made after considering a number of factors, such as asset size relative to the other

 

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institutions within the Peer Group and, in the case of People’s United Financial Inc. and First Horizon National Corp., due to the different regulatory expectations for institutions with less than $50 billion in assets.

Definitions of Certain Financial Goals

As described previously in this Compensation Discussion and Analysis, we use a balanced mix of financial and strategic goals to measure performance under our Annual Incentive Plan and for purposes of determining the vesting of performance shares. The financial goals are defined as follows:

 

    Cash Efficiency Ratio (non-GAAP measure): Noninterest expense (GAAP) less intangible asset amortization divided by net interest income (GAAP) plus taxable-equivalent adjustment (non-GAAP) plus noninterest income.

 

    EPS: Income from continuing operations attributable to KeyCorp common shareholders, divided by weighted-average common shares and potential common shares outstanding.

 

    PPNR (non-GAAP measure): Net interest income (GAAP) plus taxable-equivalent adjustment (non-GAAP) plus noninterest income (GAAP) less noninterest expense (GAAP), all from continuing operations.

 

    Return on Tangible Common Equity (non-GAAP measure): Income from continuing operations attributable to Key common shareholders (GAAP) divided by average KeCorp shareholders’ equity, less average intangible assets, adjusted for average purchased credit card relationships, less average preferred stock.

 

    Net Loan Charge-Offs: Total loans charged off less total loan recoveries, all from continuing operations.

 

    Tangible Common Equity Ratio (non-GAAP measure): KeyCorp shareholders’ equity (GAAP) less intangible assets, adjusted for purchased credit card relationships, less preferred stock, net of capital surplus, divided by total assets (GAAP) less intangible assets, adjusted for purchased credit card relationships.

 

    Total Shareholder Return: Based on average closing share price over the last 20 trading days in the base year (i.e., for performance shares awarded in 2016, the last 20 trading days of 2015) versus average closing share price in the last 20 days in year three, plus investment of dividends paid during the measurement period.

Cash Efficiency Ratio, EPS, PPNR, and Return on Tangible Common Equity also exclude merger-related charges incurred in connection with the First Niagara acquisition. In its judgment, the Compensation Committee may adjust the performance goals for certain extraordinary items identified by the Compensation Committee to reflect changes in accounting, the regulatory environment, strategic corporate transactions, and other unusual or unplanned events. For 2016, no adjustments were made to the performance goals under the Annual Incentive Plan or with respect to outstanding performance awards except as otherwise described in this proxy statement related to the First Niagara merger.

A reconciliation of GAAP to non-GAAP financial measures and our reasons for using non-GAAP financial measures can be found in Figure 4 on page 39 of our 2016 Annual Report.

 

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Compensation Committee Independence, Interlocks and Insider Participation

The members of the Compensation Committee are Bruce Broussard, Joseph A. Carrabba (Chair), Alexander M. Cutler, William G. Gisel, Jr., and Barbara R. Snyder, each of whom is an independent director under KeyCorp’s categorical independence standards, the general independence standards for directors established by the New York Stock Exchange, and the heightened independence standards required of Compensation Committee members by the New York Stock Exchange. No member of the Compensation Committee is a current, or during 2016 was a former, officer or employee of KeyCorp or any of its subsidiaries or affiliates. During 2016, no member of the Compensation Committee had a relationship that must be described under the SEC rules relating to disclosure of related party transactions. In 2016, none of our executive officers served on the board of directors or compensation committee of any entity that had one or more of its executive officers serving on our Board or Compensation Committee.

Role of the Compensation Committee

The Compensation Committee sets the pay and evaluates the performance of our Chairman and Chief Executive Officer and reviews and approves the compensation of a select group of other executives, including the Named Executive Officers. Our Chairman and Chief Executive Officer attends Compensation Committee meetings and provides information and input about the pay levels and performance of our Named Executive Officers, other than herself. The Compensation Committee regularly meets in executive session, during which no member of Management is present, to discuss the recommendations and approve pay actions for our Named Executive Officers, including our Chairman and Chief Executive Officer.

Compensation Consultant

The Compensation Committee has retained the services of CAP, an independent executive compensation advisory firm. At the Compensation Committee’s request, CAP provides it with information on current trends in compensation design and emerging compensation practices. CAP also provides the Compensation Committee with an annual review and analysis of the compensation programs of our Peer Group, which it updates during the latter half of the year to determine whether the compensation targets of the Named Executive Officers remain competitive. CAP reports directly to, and serves at the sole pleasure of, the Compensation Committee. CAP provided no other services to us other than the executive compensation consulting services that were requested by the Compensation Committee.

As part of its annual evaluation of its advisors, the Compensation Committee solicited information from CAP regarding any actual or perceived conflicts of interest and to evaluate its independence. Based on the information received from CAP, the Compensation Committee believes that the work CAP performed in 2016 did not raise a conflict of interest and that it is independent.

Tax and Accounting Treatment of Executive Compensation

Favorable accounting and tax treatment of the various elements of our executive compensation programs are a significant—but not a controlling—consideration in their design. Under Section 162(m) of the Internal Revenue Code, compensation paid to certain of our Named Executive Officers that exceeds $1 million annually is not deductible unless it qualifies as “performance-based compensation” as defined in Section 162(m). We generally try to preserve the deductibility of certain incentive compensation paid to our Named Executive Officers. For example, to facilitate the deductibility of 2016 annual incentive bonuses paid to certain executives who were anticipated to be subject to the limitations of Section 162(m), those incentive opportunities were granted under our 2011 Annual Performance Plan,

 

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which capped the maximum annual incentive actually payable to each at a percentage of our 2016 PPNR. Similarly, certain of our performance share awards were granted subject to a funding “hurdle” that will be satisfied if the ratio of our PPNR to average assets (from continuing operations) during the three-year performance period is at least equal to a specified percentage of the ratio of our PPNR to average assets (from continuing operations) for the preceding three years. If the hurdle is not satisfied, those performance shares do not fund—and none of those performance shares will vest—regardless of the level of achievement of the other performance goals described above. However, the Compensation Committee has not adopted a policy that requires all compensation to be deductible because we want to preserve the ability to provide cash or equity compensation to an executive that is not deductible under Section 162(m) if we believe that it is in our shareholders’ best interests.

 

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Compensation and Organization Committee Report

The Compensation and Organization Committee has reviewed and discussed with management the Compensation Discussion and Analysis set forth beginning on page 28 of this proxy statement and, based on this review and discussion, has recommended to the KeyCorp Board of Directors the inclusion of the Compensation Discussion and Analysis in this proxy statement.

Compensation and Organization Committee of the KeyCorp Board of Directors

Bruce Broussard

Joseph A. Carrabba (Chair)

Alexander M. Cutler

William G. Gisel, Jr.

Barbara R. Snyder

 

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Compensation of Executive Officers and Directors

2016 Summary Compensation Table

The following table sets forth the compensation paid to, awarded to, or earned by the Named Executive Officers with respect to the years ending December 31, 2016, 2015 and 2014, to the extent applicable. Andrew J. “Randy” Paine III was not a Named Executive Officer in 2015 and 2014. Therefore, his compensation for those years is not included in the Summary Compensation Table below.

 

Name and Principal
Position
  Year   Salary
($)
  Bonus
($)
  Stock
Awards
($) (1)
  Option
Awards
($) (2)
  Non-Equity
Incentive Plan
Compensation
($) (3)
  Change in
Pension Value
and
Nonqualified
Deferred
Compensation
Earnings ($)
(4)
  All Other
Compensation
($)
(See chart
below) (5)
  Total ($)

Beth E. Mooney

  2016       1,000,000             3,959,985       439,999       2,700,000       4,176       63,043       8,167,203

Chairman and CEO

  2015       1,038,462             3,599,983       399,997       1,900,000       4,987       51,275       6,994,704
  2014       1,000,000             3,599,990       399,997       1,900,000       4,532       220,047       7,124,566

Donald R. Kimble

  2016       638,462             1,349,990       149,999       950,000             36,625       3,125,076

Chief Financial Officer

  2015       623,077             1,169,987       130,000       760,000             52,617       2,735,681
  2014       600,000             1,079,983       119,996       625,000             5,200       2,430,179

Christopher M. Gorman

  2016       638,462             2,159,985       239,999       2,300,000       23,448       36,625       5,398,519

Merger Integration Executive

  2015       623,077             2,249,981       249,997       1,800,000       27,998       35,300       4,986,353
  2014       600,000             1,799,988       199,996       1,600,000       25,448       137,200       4,362,632

Andrew J. “Randy” Paine III

  2016       500,000             1,732,486       192,499       1,800,000       18,015       36,625       4,279,625

Co-Head, Key Corporate Bank

  2015                                                
  2014                                                

Edward J. Burke

  2016       550,000             944,992       104,999       1,200,000       17,540       22,525       2,840,056

Co-President, Community Bank

  2015       571,154             2,144,988       104,998       1,000,000       20,943       21,200       3,863,283
  2014       533,127             1,124,971       74,997       1,050,000       19,036       20,800       2,822,931

 

  (1) Amounts reported as “Stock Awards” reflect the grant date fair value of stock awards calculated in accordance with Financial Accounting Standards Board Accounting Standards Codification Topic 718, Compensation—Stock Compensation (FASB ASC Topic 718). See Note 16 to the Consolidated Financial Statements contained in our 2016 Annual Report for an explanation of the assumptions made in valuing these awards.  

 

       On February 15, 2016, each Named Executive Officer (other than Mr. Paine) received stock awards consisting of a target number of performance shares and restricted stock units representing 50% and 40%, respectively, of each executive’s long-term incentive opportunity. Mr. Paine received stock awards consisting of a target number of cash performance shares and stock units representing 30% and 60%, respectively, of his long-term incentive opportunity. The target number of performance shares and restricted stock units awarded to each Named Executive Officer was determined by dividing the dollar amount of the Named Executive Officer’s performance share and restricted stock unit awards by the grant date closing price of a common share (rounded down to the nearest whole share). February 15, 2016 was not a trading day and our equity compensation plan requires that in that circumstance, the closing price of our common shares on the most recent trading day—in this case February 12, 2016—be used as the grant date closing price. On February 12, 2016, the closing price of our common shares was $10.49.  

 

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LOGO  2017 Proxy Statement—Compensation of Executive Officers and Directors 

 

       If our performance during the measurement period resulted in the maximum number of 2016 performance shares vesting, our executives would be entitled to a maximum award with a grant date fair value of the maximum award set forth in the following table.  

 

Named Executive Officer    Grant Date Fair Value of
Performance Shares at
Maximum Award ($)
 

 Beth E. Mooney

   $ 3,299,991  

 Donald R. Kimble

   $ 1,124,990  

 Christopher M. Gorman

   $ 1,799,990  

 Andrew J. “Randy” Paine III

   $ 866,243  

 Edward J. Burke

   $ 787,490  

 

  (2) Amounts reported in the “Option Awards” column reflect the aggregate grant date fair value of options using the Black-Scholes option pricing model. On February 15, 2016, each Named Executive Officer received an annual long-term incentive award consisting, in part, of an award of nonqualified stock options. See Note 16 to the Consolidated Financial Statements contained in our 2016 Annual Report for an explanation of the assumptions made in valuing stock options granted to our Named Executive Officers in 2016.  

 

  (3) Amounts reported as “Non-Equity Incentive Plan Compensation” reflect annual incentives earned by each Named Executive Officer for the applicable year.  

 

  (4) Amounts reported in the “Change in Pension Value and Nonqualified Deferred Compensation Earnings” column reflect the interest credits allocated to Ms. Mooney, Mr. Gorman, Mr. Paine, and Mr. Burke under the frozen Cash Balance Pension Plan and Second Excess Cash Balance Pension Plan. We froze our pension benefits for all employees, including the Named Executive Officers, effective December 31, 2009, as described in the narrative to the 2016 Pension Benefits Table beginning on page 57 of this proxy statement. No above market or preferential earnings were paid to any Named Executive Officer on nonqualified deferred compensation.  

 

  (5) The following table sets forth detail about the amounts reported in the “All Other Compensation” column:  

 

Name   Executive
Physical
($) (a)
    Executive
Security
($) (b)
    Financial
Planning
($) (c)
    Matching
Contribution
($) (d)
    Profit
Sharing
($) (e)
    Total
($)
 

Beth E. Mooney

    5,976       17,935       2,507       30,000       6,625       63,043  

Donald R. Kimble

                —                       —                                   —       30,000       6,625       36,625  

Christopher M. Gorman

                —                       —                                   —       30,000       6,625       36,625  

Andrew J. “Randy” Paine III

                —                       —                                   —       30,000       6,625       36,625  

Edward J. Burke

                —                       —                                   —       15,900       6,625       22,525  

 

 

  (a) The maximum benefit utilized by any Named Executive Officer was $5,976. For privacy reasons, this amount is shown regardless of actual usage.  

 

  (b) Based on the recommendations of an independent security study, the Compensation Committee approved a comprehensive security program for Ms. Mooney. Under this program, we are paying for certain security upgrades and have authorized, and in some instances required, her to use a secure automobile and professionally-trained driver for business and personal travel. Ms. Mooney reimburses us for the cost of automobile and driver when used solely for personal purposes.  

 

  (c) The Compensation Committee approved a tax and financial planning perquisite, which was introduced in 2016. The amount shown in this column represents the cost to Key for any Named Executive Officer who utilized this benefit.  

 

  (d) The amounts in this column consist of Company contributions to the qualified 401(k) Savings Plan and the nonqualified Deferred Savings Plan. For more information about these plans, see pages 43 and 59 of this proxy statement.  

 

  (e) Employees participating in our 401(k) Savings Plan receive a discretionary profit sharing contribution equal to a percentage of their plan-eligible compensation. The contribution percentage is determined annually by the Compensation Committee. For 2016, the profit sharing contribution to this plan was 2.5%. For more information about this plan, see page 43 of this proxy statement.  

 

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2016 Grants of Plan-Based Awards Table

 

   

Grant

Date

  Estimated Possible Payouts
Under Non-Equity Incentive Plan
Awards
($)(1)
   

Estimated Future Payouts

Under Equity Incentive Plan

Awards

(#)(2)

    All
Other
Stock
Awards
(# of
Shares or
Units)(3)
   

All Other

Option

Awards

(# of
Shares

Underlying

Options)(4)

   

Exercise

or Base

Price of

Option

Awards

($/Sh)(5)

   

Grant

Date Fair

Value of

Stock
and

Option

Awards

($)(6)

 
Name     Threshold     Target     Maximum     Threshold     Target     Maximum          
                       

Beth E. Mooney

      1,000,000       2,000,000       4,000,000                                            
  2/15/16                       104,862       209,723       314,585                         2,199,994  
  2/15/16                                               205,607       10.49       439,999  
  2/15/16                                         167,778                   1,759,991  

Donald R. Kimble

      375,000       750,000       1,500,000                                            
  2/15/16                       35,748       71,496       107,244                         749,993  
  2/15/16                                               70,093       10.49       149,999  
  2/15/16                                         57,197                   599,997  

Christopher M. Gorman

      850,000       1,700,000       3,400,000                                            
  2/15/16                       57,197       114,394       171,591                         1,199,993  
  2/15/16                                               112,149       10.49       239,999  
  2/15/16                                         91,515                   959,992  

Andrew J. “Randy” Paine III

      750,000       1,500,000       3,000,000                                            
  2/15/16                       27,526       55,052       82,578                         577,495  
  2/15/16                                               89,953       10.49       192,499  
  2/15/16                                         110,104                   1,154,991  

Edward J. Burke

      525,000       1,050,000       2,100,000                                            
  2/15/16                       25,024       50,047       75,071                         524,993  
  2/15/16                                               49,065       10.49       104,999  
  2/15/16                                         40,038                   419,999  

 

  (1) Amounts reported as “Estimated Possible Payouts Under Non-Equity Incentive Plan Awards” reflect the individual annual incentive opportunity each of the Named Executive Officers could receive at threshold (50% of target), at target, and at maximum (200% of target) performance for the one-year performance period ended December 31, 2016. The maximum individual opportunity that any Named Executive Officer can earn is different than the maximum funding level of our Annual Incentive Plan described in the Compensation Discussion and Analysis section of this proxy statement. Actual annual incentive payments are reflected in the 2016 Summary Compensation Table on page 49 of the proxy statement.  

 

  (2) Amounts reported in the “Estimated Future Payouts Under Equity Incentive Plan Awards” column reflect the threshold (50% of target), target, and maximum (150% of target) long-term incentive awards in the form of performance shares that each Named Executive Officer could earn for the three-year performance period beginning on January 1, 2016, and ending December 31, 2018. Our performance share awards are discussed in the Compensation Discussion and Analysis section of this proxy statement. The dollar value awarded to each of the Named Executive Officers as performance shares was converted into a book entry target number of phantom shares that track the stock price and pay out in the form of shares. The price at which the performance shares were converted was based on the grant date closing price of our common shares of $10.49. Please see footnote 1 to the 2016 Summary Compensation Table for a discussion of how we arrive at the grant date closing price. Dividend equivalents on the target number of shares are reinvested and subject to the same terms and restrictions otherwise applicable to the underlying performance shares.  

 

  (3) Amounts reported in the “All Other Stock Awards” column are the number of restricted stock units granted to each of the Named Executive Officers on February 15, 2016, which vest in four equal installments following the grant date.  

 

  (4) Amounts reported in the “All Other Option Awards” column are the number of KeyCorp common shares underlying the stock options granted to each of the Named Executive Officers on February 15, 2016. Stock options granted in 2016 vest in four equal annual installments following the grant date.  

 

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LOGO  2017 Proxy Statement—Compensation of Executive Officers and Directors 

 

  (5) We set the exercise price of all stock options using the grant date closing price of our common shares of $10.49. Please see footnote 1 to the Summary Compensation Table for a discussion of how we arrive at the grant date closing price. The Compensation Committee does not reprice options. We have not and will not back-date options, nor do we provide loans to employees in order to exercise options. If an equity-based award is granted in a month in which our earnings are publicly disclosed, the grant date will be the date of the Compensation Committee meeting granting the equity-based award or three days following the earnings release, whichever is later.  

 

  (6) Amounts reported in the “Grant Date Fair Value of Stock and Options Awards” column represent the aggregate grant date fair value of equity awards granted during the respective year. The accounting assumptions used in calculating the grant date fair value for the equity awards are described in Note 16 to the Consolidated Financial Statements contained in our 2016 Annual Report.  

The impact of terminations and a change of control on the Grants of Plan-Based Awards is shown in more detail in the Potential Payments Upon Termination or Change of Control table on page 60 of this proxy statement.

 

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2016 Outstanding Equity Awards at Fiscal Year-End Table

The following table sets forth information for each Named Executive Officer with respect to (i) each stock option that had not been exercised and remained outstanding as of December 31, 2016, (ii) each award of restricted stock units that had not vested and remained outstanding as of December 31, 2016, and (iii) each award of performance shares or cash performance shares that had not been vested and remained outstanding as of December 31, 2016.

 

               

Option Awards

 

         

Stock Awards

 

 
Name  

Grant Date

 

         

Number of
Securities
Underlying
Unexercised
Options

Exercisable
(#)(1)

 

   

Number of
Securities
Underlying
Unexercised
Options
Unexercisable
(#)(2)

 

   

Option
Exercise
Price
($)(3)

 

   

Option
Expiration
Date

 

         

Number
of
Shares
or
Units
of
Stock
That
Have
Not
Vested

(#)(4)

 

   

Market
Value of
Shares
or Units
of Stock
That
Have
Not
Vested

($)

 

   

Equity
Incentive
Plan
Awards:
Number
of
Unearned
Shares,
Units or
Other
Rights
That
Have Not
Vested

(#)(5)

 

   

Equity
Incentive
Plan
Awards:
Market or
Payout
Value of
Unearned
Shares,
Units or
Other
Rights
That
Have Not
Vested

($)

 

 

Beth E. Mooney

    7/20/2007         105,000             36.20       7/20/2017                            
    7/25/2008         175,000             11.16       7/25/2018                            
    6/12/2009         350,000             6.12       6/12/2019                            
    5/19/2011         296,443             8.59       5/19/2021                            
    3/2/2012         450,268             7.98       3/2/2022                            
    3/1/2013         84,507       28,169       9.33       3/1/2023                            
    2/17/2014         38,023       38,022       12.92       2/17/2024                            
    2/16/2015         23,095       69,283       14.11       2/16/2025                            
    2/15/2016               205,607       10.49       2/15/2026                            
   

 

Aggregate non-
option awards

 


 

 

                                525,049       9,592,640       545,278       9,962,235  

 

Donald R. Kimble

 

 

 

 

2/17/2014

 

 

   

 

 

 

11,407

 

 

 

 

 

 

11,406

 

 

 

 

 

 

12.92

 

 

 

 

 

 

2/17/2024

 

 

   

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

    2/16/2015         7,506       22,517       14.11       2/16/2025                            
    2/15/2016               70,093       10.49       2/15/2026                            
 

 

 

 

 

Aggregate non-
option awards

 

 


 

 

   

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

   

 

 

 

152,662

 

 

 

 

 

 

2,789,144

 

 

 

 

 

 

182,348

 

 

 

 

 

 

3,331,490

 

 

 

Christopher M. Gorman

 

 

 

 

7/20/2007

 

 

   

 

 

 

42,857

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

36.20

 

 

 

 

 

 

7/20/2017

 

 

   

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

    7/25/2008         65,000             11.16       7/25/2018                            
    5/19/2011         188,442             8.59       5/19/2021                            
    3/2/2012         235,215             7.98       3/2/2022                            
    3/1/2013         40,141       13,380       9.33       3/1/2023                            
    2/17/2014         19,012       19,010       12.92       2/17/2024                            
    2/16/2015         14,434       43,302       14.11       2/16/2025                            
    2/15/2016               112,419       10.49       2/15/2026                            
 

 

 

 

 

Aggregate non-
option awards

 

 


 

 

   

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

   

 

 

 

280,299

 

 

 

 

 

 

5,121,064

 

 

 

 

 

 

315,130

 

 

 

 

 

 

5,757,421

 

 

Andrew J. “Randy” Paine III

    7/20/2007         3,810             36.20       7/20/2017                            
    7/25/2008         25,000             11.16       7/25/2018                            
    6/12/2009         20,000             6.12       6/12/2019                            
    3/4/2011         34,696             9.26       3/4/2021                            
    3/2/2012         39,919             7.98       3/2/2022                            
    3/1/2013         9,507       3,169       9.33       3/1/2023                            
    2/17/2014         6,654       6,653       12.92       2/17/2024                            
    2/16/2015         5,341       16,021       14.11       2/16/2025                            
    2/15/2016               89,953       10.49       2/15/2026                            
 

 

 

 

 

Aggregate non-
option awards

 

 


 

 

   

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

   

 

 

 

274,000

 

 

 

 

 

 

5,005,975

 

 

 

 

 

 

115,588

 

 

 

 

 

 

2,111,788

 

 

Edward J. Burke

    7/20/2007         42,857             36.20       7/20/2017                            
    7/25/2008         65,000             11.16       7/25/2018                            
    6/12/2009         48,000             6.12       6/12/2019                            
    7/27/2010         50,201             8.42       7/27/2020                            
    5/19/2011         46,639             8.59       5/19/2021                            
    3/2/2012         57,661             7.98       3/2/2022                            
    3/1/2013         13,732       4,577       9.33       3/1/2023                            
    2/17/2014         7,130       7,128       12.92       2/17/2024                            
    2/16/2015         6,063       18,186       14.11       2/16/2025                            
    2/15/2016               49,065       10.49       2/15/2026                            
   

 

Aggregate non-
option awards

 


 

 

                                215,356       3,934,559       135,433       2,474,370  

 

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LOGO  2017 Proxy Statement—Compensation of Executive Officers and Directors 

 

 

  (1) This column shows the number of common shares underlying outstanding stock options that have vested as of December 31, 2016.  

 

  (2) This column shows the number of common shares underlying outstanding stock options that have not vested as of December 31, 2016. The remaining vesting dates are shown in the following table. All options described below vest in four equal annual installments from the grant date, unless otherwise noted.  

 

Name

 

   Grant
Date
   Options
Outstanding
   Remaining Vesting Dates

 Beth E. Mooney

       3/1/2013        28,169    3/1/2017
       2/17/2014        38,022    2/17/2017, 2/17/2018
       2/16/2015        69,283    2/17/2017, 2/17/2018, 2/17/2019
       2/15/2016        205,607    2/17/2017, 2/17/2018, 2/17/2019, 2/17/2020

 Donald R. Kimble

       2/17/2014        11,046    2/17/2017, 2/17/2018
       2/16/2015        22,517    2/17/2017, 2/17/2018, 2/17/2019
       2/15/2016        70,093    2/17/2017, 2/17/2018, 2/17/2019, 2/17/2020

 Christopher M. Gorman

       3/1/2013        13,380    3/1/2017
       2/17/2014        19,010    2/17/2017, 2/17/2018
       2/16/2015        43,302    2/17/2017, 2/17/2018, 2/17/2019
       2/15/2016        112,149    2/17/2017, 2/17/2018, 2/17/2019, 2/17/2020

 Andrew J. “Randy” Paine III

       3/1/2013        3,169    3/1/2017
       2/17/2014        6,653    2/17/2017, 2/17/2018
       2/16/2015        16,021    2/17/2017, 2/17/2018, 2/17/2019
       2/15/2016        89,953    2/17/2017, 2/17/2018, 2/17/2019, 2/17/2020

 Edward J. Burke

       3/1/2013        4,577    3/1/2017
       2/17/2014        7,128    2/17/2017, 2/17/2018
       2/16/2015        18,816    2/17/2017, 2/17/2018, 2/17/2019
       2/15/2016        49,065    2/17/2017, 2/17/2018, 2/17/2019, 2/17/2020

 

 

  (3) This column shows the exercise price for each stock option reported in the table, which was at least 100% of the fair market value of our common shares on the grant date.  
  (4) This column shows the aggregate number of restricted stock units outstanding as of December 31, 2016, and the number of 2014 performance shares or cash performance shares earned based on performance of 91.4% through December 31, 2016, that remain outstanding as of that date. The remaining vesting dates are shown in the following table. All awards described below vest in four equal annual installments from the grant date, unless otherwise noted under “Vesting Schedules.”  

 

Name   Grant
Date
  Shares or
Units
Outstanding
  Remaining Vesting Dates   Vesting Schedules

 Beth E. Mooney

  3/1/2013   47,055   3/1/2017  
  2/17/2014   150,844   2/17/2017   Performance shares vest in full on 2/17/2017.
  2/17/2014   66,015   2/17/2017, 2/17/2018  
  2/16/2015   89,037   2/17/2017, 2/17/2018, 2/17/2019  
  2/15/2016   172,098   2/17/2017, 2/17/2018, 2/17/2019, 2/17/2020  

 Donald R. Kimble

  2/17/2014   45,253   2/17/2017   Performance shares vest in full on 2/17/2017.
  2/17/2014   19,804   2/17/2017, 2/17/2018  
  2/16/2015   28,936   2/17/2017, 2/17/2018, 2/17/2019  
  2/15/2016   58,669   2/17/2017, 2/17/2018, 2/17/2019, 2/17/2020  

 Christopher M. Gorman

  3/1/2013   22,351   3/1/2017  
  2/17/2014   75,422   2/17/2017   Performance shares vest in full on 2/17/2017.
  2/17/2014   33,007   2/17/2017, 2/17/2018  
  2/16/2015   55,648   2/17/2017, 2/17/2018, 2/17/2019  
  2/15/2016   93,871   2/17/2017, 2/17/2018, 2/17/2019, 2/17/2020  

 

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Name   Grant
Date
  Shares or
Units
Outstanding
  Remaining Vesting Dates   Vesting Schedules

 Andrew J. “Randy” Paine III

  3/1/2013   7,940   3/1/2017  
  2/17/2014   15,838   2/17/2017   Cash performance shares vest in full on 2/17/2017.
  2/17/2014   37,133   2/17/2017   100% vests on the third anniversary of the grant date.
  2/17/2014   17,328   2/17/2017, 2/17/2018  
  2/16/2015   51,939   2/17/2018   100% vests on the third anniversary of the grant date.
  2/16/2015   30,883   2/17/2017, 2/17/2018, 2/17/2019  
  2/15/2016   112,939   2/17/2017, 2/17/2018, 2/17/2019, 2/17/2020  

 Edward J. Burke

  3/1/2013   11,469   3/1/2017  
  2/17/2014   16,969   2/17/2017   Cash performance shares vest in full on 2/17/2017.
  2/17/2014   37,133   2/17/2017   100% vests on the third anniversary of the grant date.
  2/17/2014   18,566   2/17/2017, 2/17/2018  
  2/16/2015   23,372   2/17/2017, 2/17/2018, 2/17/2019  
  2/16/2015   66,778   2/17/2017, 2/17/2018, 2/17/2019  
  2/15/2016   41,069   2/17/2017, 2/17/2018, 2/17/2019, 2/17/2020  

 

 

  (5) This column shows the aggregate number of performance shares or cash performance shares outstanding and shown at the maximum value of 150% based on performance as of December 31, 2016, other than the 2014 award of performance shares or cash performance shares which were earned based on performance between 2014 and 2016 and vested in full on February 17, 2017. The vesting dates for each award of performance shares or cash performance shares (including reinvested dividends) are shown in the following table. All awards described below vest in full after three years from the grant date, unless otherwise noted.

 

Name    Grant Date   

Shares or
Units

Outstanding

   Remaining
Vesting
Dates
 Beth E. Mooney    2/16/2015    222,594    2/17/2018
     2/15/2016    322,684    2/17/2019
 Donald R. Kimble    2/16/2015    72,343    2/17/2018
     2/15/2016    110,005    2/17/2019
 Christopher M. Gorman    2/16/2015    139,121    2/17/2018
     2/15/2016    176,009    2/17/2019
 Andrew J. “Randy” Paine III    2/16/2015    30,884    2/17/2018
     2/15/2016    84,704    2/17/2019
 Edward J. Burke    2/16/2015    58,430    2/17/2018
     2/15/2016    77,003    2/17/2019

 

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2016 Option Exercises and Stock Vested Table

The following table provides information regarding the vesting of restricted stock units during the year ended December 31, 2016, for the Named Executive Officers. The Named Executive Officers did not exercise any stock options in 2016.

 

     Option Awards         Stock Awards
Name    Number of
Shares
Acquired in
Exercise
(#)
   Value
Realized
on Exercise
($)
        Award
Vesting Date
   Number of
Shares
Acquired on
Vesting (#)
   Value
Realized on
Vesting ($)

Beth E. Mooney

                          2/17/2016(1)          32,179        351,721
                          2/17/2016(2)          28,935        316,257
                          3/1/2016(3)          280,191        3,054,082
                          3/1/2016(4)          45,192        492,589
                          3/2/2016(5)          9,426        106,605
                          3/15/2016(6)          1,881        21,014
                          3/15/2016(7)          63        707
                           397,867        4,342,975

Donald R. Kimble

                          2/17/2016(1)          9,654        105,516
                          2/17/2016(2)          9,404        102,790
                          6/3/2016(8)          69,255        880,228
                          6/15/2016(9)          505        5,887
                           88,818        1,094,421

Christopher M. Gorman

                          2/17/2016(1)          16,090        175,861
                          2/17/2016(2)          18,084        197,659
                          3/1/2016(3)          133,091        1,450,690
                          3/1/2016(4)          21,466        233,978
                          3/2/2016(5)          7,176        81,156
                          3/15/2016(6)          894        9,982
                          3/15/2016(7)          48        538
                           196,849        2,149,864

Andrew J. “Randy” Paine III

                          2/17/2016(1)          8,447        92,327
                          2/17/2016(2)          10,037        109,707
                          3/1/2016(3)          18,912        206,144
                          3/1/2016(4)          7,625        83,117
                          3/2/2016(5)          5,308        60,036
                          3/2/2016(10)          5,086        57,525
                          3/15/2016(6)          127        1,418
                          3/15/2016(7)          36        398
                          3/15/2016(11)          34        381
                           55,612        611,053

Edward J. Burke

                          2/17/2016(1)          9,050        98,916
                          2/17/2016(2)          7,596        83,022
                          2/17/2016(12)          21,701        237,195
                          3/1/2016(3)          27,318        297,769
                          3/1/2016(4)          11,015        120,068
                          3/2/2016(5)          3,938        44,541
                          3/2/2016(10)          7,346        83,085
                          3/15/2016(6)          183        2,049
                          3/15/2016(7)          26        295
                          3/15/2016(11)          49        551
                           88,222        967,491

 

  (1) Ms. Mooney and Messrs. Kimble, Gorman, Paine, and Burke each received a grant of restricted stock units on February 17, 2014, one-quarter of which vested on February 17, 2016.  

 

  (2) Ms. Mooney and Messrs. Kimble, Gorman, Paine, and Burke each received a grant of restricted stock units on February 16, 2015, one-quarter of which vested on February 17, 2016.  

 

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  (3) Ms. Mooney and Messrs. Gorman, Paine, and Burke each received a grant of cash performance shares as part of our annual long-term incentive program on March 1, 2013, which were earned based on our performance between 2013 and 2015 and fully vested and were paid in cash on March 1, 2016.  

 

  (4) Ms. Mooney and Messrs. Gorman, Paine, and Burke each received a grant of restricted stock units as part of the our long-term incentive program on March 1, 2013, one-quarter of which vested on March 1, 2016.  

 

  (5) Ms. Mooney and Messrs. Gorman, Paine, and Burke each were required to defer a portion of their annual incentive award into restricted stock units on March 2, 2012, one-quarter of which vested on March 2, 2016.  

 

  (6) Ms. Mooney and Messrs. Gorman, Paine, and Burke each received a grant of cash performance shares as part of our annual long-term incentive program on March 1, 2013, which were earned based on our performance between 2013 and 2015 and fully vested and were paid in cash on March 1, 2016. The dividends earned prior to the award fully vesting were paid in cash on March 15, 2016.  

 

  (7) Ms. Mooney and Messrs. Gorman, Paine, and Burke each were required to defer a portion of their annual incentive award into restricted stock units on March 2, 2012, one-quarter of which vested and was paid in shares on March 2, 2016. The dividends earned prior to the award fully vesting were paid in shares on March 15, 2016.  

 

  (8) Mr. Kimble received a grant of restricted stock units on June 3, 2013, in connection with his joining the company, one-third of which vested on June 3, 2016.  

 

  (9) Mr. Kimble received a grant of restricted stock units on June 3, 2013, in connection with his joining the company, one-third of which vested and was paid in shares on June 3, 2016. The dividends earned prior to the award fully vesting were paid in shares on June 15, 2016.  

 

  (10) Messrs. Paine and Burke received a grant of restricted stock units on March 2, 2012, as part of our long-term incentive program, one-quarter of which vested on March 2, 2016.  

 

  (11) Messrs. Paine and Burke received a grant of restricted stock units on March 2, 2012, as part of our long-term incentive program, one-quarter of which vested and was paid on March 2, 2016. The dividends earned prior to the award fully vesting were paid in shares on March 15, 2016.  

2016 Pension Benefits Table

The following table presents information about the Named Executive Officers’ participation in KeyCorp’s defined benefit pension plans as of December 31, 2016. Named Executive Officers who have not participated in KeyCorp’s defined benefit pension plans are excluded from this table.

 

Name   Plan Name    Years of
Credited
Service
(#)
   Present
Value of
Accumulated
Benefits
($)
 

 Beth E. Mooney

  Cash Balance Pension Plan    4      51,424  
  Second Excess Cash Balance Pension Plan    4      98,766  

 Christopher M. Gorman

  Cash Balance Pension Plan    18      197,053  
  Second Excess Cash Balance Pension Plan    18      646,221  

 Andrew J. “Randy” Paine III

  Cash Balance Pension Plan    16      197,123  
  Second Excess Cash Balance Pension Plan    16      450,720  

 Edward J. Burke

  Cash Balance Pension Plan    13      195,392  
  Second Excess Cash Balance Pension Plan    13      435,396  

KeyCorp previously maintained both a qualified Cash Balance Pension Plan (the “Pension Plan”) and a nonqualified Second Excess Cash Balance Pension Plan (the “Excess Plan”) in which employees, including Named Executive Officers, could participate. Credited service for Pension Plan and Excess Plan purposes was frozen as of December 31, 2009. Vesting service, however, continues to accrue.

Pension Plan

Effective December 31, 2009, KeyCorp froze the Pension Plan. Benefits accrued up through December 31, 2009, will continue to be credited with interest until the participant commences distribution

 

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of benefits. The Pension Plan’s interest crediting rate is established annually and is based on the rate for 30-year U.S. Treasury securities. For 2016, the Pension Plan’s interest crediting rate was 2.83%. For 2017, the Pension Plan’s interest crediting rate is 2.6%. Participants’ Pension Plan distributions may be made upon the participant’s retirement, termination of employment, or death. Distributions may be made in the form of a single lump sum payment, in the form of an annuity, or in a series of actuarially equivalent installments.

Excess Plan

KeyCorp established the Excess Plan effective January 1, 2005, and the Excess Plan was frozen on December 31, 2009. Benefits that accrued through December 31, 2009, continue to be credited with interest until distribution. The Excess Plan’s interest crediting rate is the same as the interest crediting rate for the Pension Plan. To be eligible to receive a distribution from the Excess Plan, a participant must be age 55 or older with a minimum of five years of vesting service. Participants who are involuntarily terminated for reasons other than for cause may receive a distribution of their Excess Plan benefits provided that, at the time of termination, the participant (i) has a minimum of 25 years of vesting service with KeyCorp, and (ii) enters into an employment separation agreement (containing a full release with noncompete and nonsolicitation requirements) with us. Distributions are in the form of an annuity or actuarially equivalent installments (unless the participant’s benefit is under $50,000, in which case it is distributed as a single lump sum payment).

Ms. Mooney and Messrs. Gorman, Paine, and Burke participate in both the Pension Plan and Excess Plan.

2016 Nonqualified Deferred Compensation Table

The following table shows the nonqualified deferred compensation activity for the Named Executive Officers for 2016 under our Deferred Savings Plan. All executive contributions and KeyCorp contributions to the Deferred Savings Plan are also included in current-year compensation presented in the 2016 Summary Compensation Table on page 49 of this proxy statement.

 

Name    Executive
Contributions
in Last FY
($)(1)
     KeyCorp
Contributions
in Last FY
($)(1)
     Aggregate
Earnings
in Last FY
($)(2)
     Aggregate
Withdrawals/
Distributions
($)
     Aggregate
Balance at
Last FYE
($)(3)
         

Beth E. Mooney

     158,100                 14,100                 529,799                 —                 3,479,653              

Donald R. Kimble

     68,008                 14,100                 15,110                 —                 140,969              

Christopher M. Gorman

     543,365                 14,100                 433,167                 —                 5,918,463              

Andrew J. “Randy” Paine III

     108,600                 14,100                 277,869                 —                 2,016,961              

Edward J. Burke

     —                 —                 69,609                 —                 326,433              

 

  (1) Executive contributions and KeyCorp contributions in the last fiscal year are reflected in the 2016 Summary Compensation Table on page 49 of this proxy statement.  

 

  (2) Aggregate earnings in the last fiscal year are not reflected in the 2016 Summary Compensation Table on page 49 of this proxy statement because the earnings were neither preferential nor above-market. Each of the Named Executive Officers had positive earnings results in 2016 and benefited from the gain in the price of KeyCorp common shares as well as KeyCorp common share dividends since the prior year end.  

 

  (3) The aggregate balances at the last fiscal year-end represent the total ending account balance (employee and Company balances) at December 31, 2016, for each Named Executive Officer.  

Previously reported Summary Compensation Table values for executive contributions and KeyCorp contributions under rules adopted in 2006 include: Ms. Mooney executive contributions of $2,336,145, and KeyCorp contributions of $819,120; and Mr. Kimble executive contributions of $30,462, and KeyCorp

 

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contributions of $14,100; and Mr. Gorman executive contributions of $2,420,097, and KeyCorp contributions of $549,659. Messrs. Paine and Burke did not have previous executive and KeyCorp contributions to report.

Deferred Savings Plan

KeyCorp maintains the Deferred Savings Plan (“DSP”). Participating employees may defer up to 50% of their base salary and up to 100% of their annual incentive awards (collectively referred to as “participant deferrals”) to the DSP once their compensation for the applicable plan year reaches the IRS compensation limits for the year. Prior to January 1, 2015, eligibility generally was restricted to employees based on salary grade. Effective January 1, 2015, eligibility was expanded to include employees with annual compensation exceeding IRS compensation limits for the year; however, the Compensation Committee (or its delegate) has the authority to exclude or include any employee from participating in the plan. We provide participants with an employer match on the first 6% of participant deferrals deferred under the DSP in excess of the IRS compensation limits. Effective January 1, 2015, we amended the DSP so that the employer match may not exceed 6% of the lesser of (i) $500,000 or (ii) the participant’s annual compensation. The employer match is subject to a 3-year vesting requirement. Prior to 2014, the DSP permitted us to make a discretionary profit sharing contribution in any amount, if any, determined annually by KeyCorp’s Board of Directors or its authorized committee. Effective beginning in 2014, the discretionary profit sharing contribution feature was eliminated from the DSP.

Participant deferrals are invested on a bookkeeping basis in investment funds that mirror the funds offered under the 401(k) Savings Plan as well as in an interest-bearing fund. The interest-bearing fund is credited with a monthly interest rate equal to 120% of the applicable long-term federal rate as published by the Internal Revenue Service. Distributions of vested DSP benefits are made upon the employee’s separation from service.

 

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Potential Payments Upon Termination or Change of Control

The following table describes the compensation and benefit enhancements that would be provided to the Named Executive Officers in various scenarios involving a termination of employment, other than compensation and benefits generally available to all salaried employees. The table describes our 2016 equity grant practices. To the extent relevant, prior practices are described in the footnotes.

 

Termination Event
(1)
   Severance
Pay
  Annual
Incentive(3)
   Stock
Options
  Restricted
Stock Units(7)
  Performance
Awards
   Nonqualified
Pension
Benefits(8)
  Nonqualified
Deferred
Compensation(9)

Death

   None   Forfeited
unless
employed on
payment
date
   Full vesting; all
expire at earlier
of four years or
normal
expiration(4)(5)
  Full vesting and
distribution on
remaining
vesting
dates(4)
  Pro rata vesting    Full vesting of
unvested
balance with
five years of
service
  Full vesting of unvested company contributions

Disability

   None   Forfeited
unless
employed on
payment
date
   Full vesting; all
expire at earlier
of five years or
normal
expiration(4)(5)
  Full vesting and
distribution on
remaining
vesting
dates(4)
  Pro rata vesting    Full vesting of
unvested
balance upon
termination
  Full vesting of unvested company contributions

Retirement

   None   Forfeited
unless
employed on
payment
date
   Pro rata vesting;
all expire at
earlier of five
years or normal
expiration(5)(6)
  Pro rata
vesting(6)
  Pro rata vesting    Full vesting of
unvested
balance
  Full vesting of unvested company contributions with three years of service

Limited

Circumstances

   Up to 52
weeks
salary
continuation
(capped at
$530,000 in
2016)
  Forfeited
unless
employed on
payment
date
   Pro rata vesting;
all expire at
earlier of three
years or normal
expiration
  Pro rata vesting   Pro rata vesting    Unvested
balance
forfeited unless
25 years of
service
  Full vesting of unvested company contributions

Change of

Control

Termination

   Two times
sum of
base salary
and the
target
annual
incentive
(CEO
receives a
three-times
benefit (2))

 

Payment
equal to 18
months
COBRA
premiums

  Forfeited
unless
employed on
payment
date
   Full vesting; all
expire at earlier
of two years or
normal expiration
  Full vesting   Full vesting    Full vesting of
unvested
balance
 

Full vesting of unvested company contributions

Payment equal to two additional years of matching contributions under qualified and nonqualified retirement plans(2)

 

  (1) For purposes of the table above and, where applicable, the following tables, we define:  

 

       “Retirement” to mean a Named Executive Officer’s voluntary termination on or after age 55 with five years of service;  

 

       “Limited Circumstances” as a termination in which a Named Executive Officer becomes entitled to severance benefits under our Separation Pay Plan which generally provides all employees with benefits in the event of a loss of employment due to a reduction in staff. Although we may negotiate severance arrangements in the context of any employee’s termination, we generally do not provide any Named Executive Officer with severance benefits solely upon an involuntary termination, other than in the context of a change of control. As a result, no information is included about payments or benefits in the event of an involuntary termination without cause; and  

 

       “Change of Control Termination” as a Named Executive Officer’s involuntary termination or voluntary termination for “good reason,” in each case within two years following a change of control.  

 

  (2) Select executives who had Change of Control Agreements providing for a greater than two-times benefit when we restructured these agreements in 2012 were permitted to retain the greater benefit.  

 

  (3) All employees are eligible to receive a discretionary annual incentive for the year of termination.  

 

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  (4) Prior to 2013, unvested awards pro rata vested upon death or disability.  

 

  (5) Prior to 2013, vested stock options expired at the earlier of three years or normal expiration.  

 

  (6) Awards granted in 2013 or later fully vest if employee’s Retirement or Limited Circumstances termination occurs on or after age 60 with 10 years of service after first anniversary of grant.  

 

  (7) Any restricted stock units attributable to annual cash incentives that were required to be deferred in accordance with our deferral requirements will vest in full on the remaining vesting dates if an employee terminates.  

 

  (8) Please see the narrative to the Pension Benefits Table for more information about our nonqualified pension plans.  

 

  (9) Please see the narrative to the Nonqualified Deferred Compensation Table for more information about our nonqualified deferred compensation plans.  

2016 Post-Termination Tables

The following tables set forth the compensation that would be paid by KeyCorp to the Named Executive Officers assuming a termination of employment and/or Change of Control Termination on December 31, 2016, in the various scenarios outlined below. Except as otherwise noted below, the values reported for stock options, restricted stock units, and performance awards are based on the closing price of KeyCorp common shares on December 30, 2016, of $18.27 (less the applicable exercise price, in the case of stock options).

Beth E. Mooney

 

Termination
Event
 

Severance
Pay

($)

   

Annual
Incentive

($)

   

Stock
Options

($)

   

Restricted
Stock Units

($)

   

Performance
Awards

($)

   

Nonqualified
Pension
Benefits

($)

   

Nonqualified
Deferred
Compensation

($)

   

Totals

($)

 

Death

                2,343,088        6,836,717       5,596,284                   14,776,089   

Disability

                2,343,088        6,836,717       5,596,284                   14,776,089   

Retirement (1)

                1,076,714        4,347,529       5,596,284                   11,020,527   

Limited Circumstances (2)

    530,000             1,076,714        4,347,529       5,596,284                   11,550,527   

Change of Control Termination (3)

    9,009,217             2,343,088        6,836,717       9,656,723             540,000       28,385,745   

 

  (1) Ms. Mooney is retirement eligible under the definition of age 60 with 10 years of service and therefore would receive full vesting treatment on unvested restricted stock units or stock option equity awards (as long as the award is more than one year outstanding). Ms. Mooney is also fully vested in all retirement and pension benefits, so there would be no accelerated value associated with a termination.  

 

  (2) In the event of a termination under limited circumstances, Ms. Mooney would be entitled to salary continuation of the maximum amount allowed under the KeyCorp Separation Pay Plan.  

 

  (3) Ms. Mooney is entitled to receive severance of three times the sum of her base salary and target annual incentive plus annual COBRA medical premiums as a result of a Change of Control Termination, as well as three additional years of deferred compensation matching contributions.  

Donald R. Kimble

 

Termination
Event
 

Severance
Pay

($)

   

Annual
Incentive

($)

   

Stock
Options

($)

   

Restricted
Stock
Units

($)

   

Performance
Awards

($)

   

Nonqualified
Pension
Benefits

($)

   

Nonqualified
Deferred
Compensation

($)

   

Totals

($)

 

Death

                700,016       1,962,374       1,764,937                   4,427,327  

Disability

                700,016       1,962,374       1,764,937                   4,427,327  

Retirement (1)

                                               

Limited Circumstances (2)

    412,500             199,757       721,866       1,764,937                   3,099,060  

Change of Control Termination (3)

    2,816,524             700,016       1,962,374       3,125,556             168,000       8,772,470  

 

  (1) Mr. Kimble is not retirement eligible and therefore all unvested, outstanding equity awards would be forfeited.  

 

  (2) In the event of a termination under limited circumstances, Mr. Kimble would be entitled to salary continuation in the amount equal to 33 weeks of base salary as defined under the KeyCorp Separation Pay Plan.  

 

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LOGO  2017 Proxy Statement—Compensation of Executive Officers and Directors 

 

  (3) Mr. Kimble is entitled to receive severance of two times the sum of his base salary and target annual incentive plus annual COBRA medical premiums as a result of a Change of Control Termination, as well as two additional years of deferred compensation matching contributions.  

Christopher M. Gorman

 

Termination
Event
 

Severance
Pay

($)

   

Annual
Incentive

($)

   

Stock
Options

($)

   

Restricted
Stock
Units

($)

   

Performance
Awards

($)

   

Nonqualified
Pension
Benefits

($)

   

Nonqualified
Deferred
Compensation

($)

   

Totals

($)

 

Death

                1,273,976       3,743,102       3,054,854                   8,071,932   

Disability

                1,273,976       3,743,102       3,054,854                   8,071,932   

Retirement (1)

                448,503       1,633,228       3,054,854                   5,136,585   

Limited Circumstances (2)

    530,000             448,503       1,633,228       3,054,854                   5,666,585   

Change of Control Termination (3)

    7,073,134             1,273,976       3,743,102       5,345,897             423,000       17,859,109   

 

  (1) Mr. Gorman is retirement eligible and therefore would receive pro rata vesting treatment on all unvested, outstanding equity awards. Mr. Gorman is also fully vested in all retirement and pension benefits, so there would be no accelerated value associated with a termination.  

 

  (2) In the event of a termination under limited circumstances, Mr. Gorman would be entitled to salary continuation of the maximum amount allowed under the KeyCorp Separation Pay Plan.  

 

  (3) Mr. Gorman is entitled to receive severance of three times the sum of his base salary and target annual incentive plus annual COBRA medical premiums as a result of a Change of Control Termination, as well as three additional years of deferred compensation matching contributions.  

Andrew J. “Randy” Paine III

 

Termination
Event
 

Severance
Pay

($)

   

Annual
Incentive

($)

   

Stock
Options

($)

   

Restricted
Stock
Units

($)

   

Performance
Awards

($)

   

Nonqualified
Pension
Benefits

($)(1)

   

Nonqualified
Deferred
Compensation

($)

   

Totals

($)

 

Death

                830,406       4,716,617       815,427       450,720             6,813,170   

Disability

                830,406       4,716,617       815,427       450,720             6,813,170   

Retirement (2)

                                              —   

Limited Circumstances (3)

    500,000             228,101       2,676,035       815,427                   4,219,563   

Change of Control Termination (4)

    4,025,777             830,406       4,716,617       1,724,442       450,720       240,000       11,987,962   

 

  (1) Mr. Paine would receive accelerated vesting and payment of his outstanding Second Excess Cash Balance Pension Plan in the event of death, disability, or a change of control termination.  

 

  (2) Mr. Paine is not retirement eligible and therefore all unvested, outstanding equity awards would be forfeited.  

 

  (3) In the event of a termination under limited circumstances, Mr. Paine would be entitled to salary continuation of the maximum amount allowed under the KeyCorp Separation Pay Plan.  

 

  (4) Mr. Paine is entitled to receive severance of two times the sum of his base salary and target annual incentive plus annual COBRA medical premiums as a result of a Change of Control Termination, as well as two additional years of deferred compensation matching contributions.  

 

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Edward J. Burke

 

Termination
Event
 

Severance
Pay

($)

   

Annual
Incentive

($)

   

Stock
Options

($)

   

Restricted
Stock
Units

($)

   

Performance
Awards

($)

   

Nonqualified
Pension
Benefits

($)

   

Nonqualified
Deferred
Compensation

($)

   

Totals

($)

 

Death

                536,433       2,946,115       1,015,757                   4,498,305  

Disability

                536,433       2,946,115       1,015,757                   4,498,305  

Retirement (1)

                234,226