Unassociated Document
UNITED
STATES
SECURITIES
AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
Washington,
D.C. 20549
SCHEDULE
14A
Proxy
Statement Pursuant to Section 14(a)
of the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934
Filed by
the Registrant þ
Filed by
a Party other than the Registrant o
Check the
appropriate box:
o
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Preliminary
Proxy Statement
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o
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Confidential, for Use of the
Commission Only (as permitted by Rule
14a-6(e)(2))
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þ
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Definitive
Proxy Statement
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o
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Definitive
Additional Materials
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o
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Soliciting
Material Pursuant to § 240.14a-12
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Delcath
Systems, Inc.
(Name of
Registrant as Specified In Its Charter)
(Name of
Person(s) Filing Proxy Statement, if other than the Registrant)
Payment
of Filing Fee (Check the appropriate box):
o
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Fee
computed on table below per Exchange Act Rules 14a-6(i)(1) and
0-11.
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(1) Title
of each class of securities to which transaction applies:
(2)
Aggregate number of securities to which transaction applies:
(3) Per
unit price or other underlying value of transaction computed pursuant to
Exchange Act Rule 0-11 (set forth the amount on which the filing fee is
calculated and state how it was determined):
(4)
Proposed maximum aggregate value of transaction:
(5) Total
fee paid:
o
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Fee
paid previously with preliminary
materials.
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o
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Check
box if any part of the fee is offset as provided by Exchange Act Rule
0-11(a)(2) and identify the filing for which the offsetting fee was paid
previously. Identify the previous filing by registration
statement number, or the Form or Schedule and the date of its
filing.
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(1)
Amount Previously
Paid:______________________________________________________________
(2) Form,
Schedule or Registration Statement
No.:______________________________________________
(3)
Filing
Party:________________________________________________________________________
(4) Date
Filed:_________________________________________________________________________
NOTICE
OF ANNUAL MEETING OF STOCKHOLDERS
TO
BE HELD ON MAY 6, 2010
Notice is
hereby given that the 2010 Annual Meeting of Stockholders of Delcath Systems,
Inc. will be held on Thursday, May 6, 2010, at 10:00 a.m., local time, at the
Sheraton New York Hotel & Towers, 811 Seventh Avenue, New York, New
York.
The
following matters will be voted on at the Annual Meeting:
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1.
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Election
of each of Harold S. Koplewicz, M.D. and Robert B. Ladd as Class I
directors, each to serve until the 2013 annual meeting of stockholders and
until his successor is duly elected and
qualified;
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2.
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Ratification
of the appointment by our Audit Committee of Ernst & Young LLP as
Delcath’s independent registered public accounting firm for the fiscal
year ending December 31, 2010;
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3.
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Approval
of an amendment to Delcath’s 2009 Stock Incentive Plan to increase the
total number of shares of Delcath common stock reserved for issuance under
the plan by 2,200,000 shares, from 2,000,000 to 4,200,000 shares of
Delcath common stock; and
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4.
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Such
other business as may properly come before the meeting or any adjournment
or postponement of the meeting.
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We are not aware of any other business
to come before the meeting.
These items of business are more fully
described in the Proxy Statement which accompanies this Notice of Annual
Meeting.
The Board of Directors has fixed the
close of business on Monday, March 22, 2010 as the record date for the Annual
Meeting. Only stockholders of record of Delcath common stock
at the close of business on that date are entitled to notice of and to vote at
the Annual Meeting and at any adjournment or postponement of the
meeting.
Your
vote is important. Whether
or not you plan to attend the Annual Meeting, please complete, sign, date and
return the accompanying proxy card in the enclosed postage-paid envelope.
Returning the proxy card does NOT deprive you of your right to attend the
meeting and to vote your shares in person. The Proxy Statement
explains proxy voting and the matters to be voted on in more detail. Please read
the Proxy Statement carefully.
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By
Order of the Board of Directors
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New
York, New York
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Eamonn
P. Hobbs
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March
30, 2010
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President
and Chief Executive Officer
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DELCATH
SYSTEMS, INC.
PROXY
STATEMENT
FOR
2010
ANNUAL MEETING OF STOCKHOLDERS
TABLE
OF CONTENTS
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Page
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INFORMATION
ABOUT THE ANNUAL MEETING AND VOTING
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1
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Important
Notice Regarding the Availability of Proxy Materials for the Stockholder
Meeting to be Held on Thursday, May 6, 2010
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3
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SECURITY
OWNERSHIP OF CERTAIN BENEFICIAL OWNERS AND MANAGEMENT
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4
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CORPORATE
GOVERNANCE
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5
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Board
of Directors
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5
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Board
Independence
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5
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Attendance
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5
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Board
Leadership Structure
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5
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Board’s
Role in Risk Oversight
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6
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Board
Committees
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6
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Recommendations
by Stockholders of Director Nominees
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7
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Stockholder
Communications with the Board of Directors
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8
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Compensation
Committee Interlocks and Insider Participation
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8
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Transactions
with Related Persons
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8
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ELECTION
OF DIRECTORS (PROPOSAL ONE)
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9
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Information
About Directors
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9
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Board
Nominees
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9
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Continuing
Directors
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10
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Director
Compensation
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12
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INFORMATION
ABOUT OUR EXECUTIVE OFFICERS
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13
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EXECUTIVE
COMPENSATION
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14
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Compensation
Discussion & Analysis
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14
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Elements
of Executive Compensation
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15
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Compensation
and Stock Option Committee Report
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19
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Summary
Compensation Table
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20
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Grants
of Plan-Based Awards in 2009
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21
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Outstanding
Equity Awards at 2009 Fiscal Year-End
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22
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Options
Exercises and Stock Vested in 2009
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23
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Deferred
Compensation Program
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23
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Employment
Agreements
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23
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Potential
Payments upon Termination or Change of Control
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27
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REPORT
OF THE AUDIT COMMITTEE
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27
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RATIFICATION
OF THE APPOINTMENT OF INDEPENDENT REGISTERED PUBLIC ACCOUNTING FIRM
(PROPOSAL TWO)
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28
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Audit
and Non-Audit Fees
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29
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Policy
on Audit Committee Pre-Approval of Audit and Permissible Non-Audit
Services of Independent Auditors
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29
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SECTION
16(a) BENEFICIAL OWNERSHIP REPORTING COMPLIANCE
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29
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APPROVAL
OF AN AMENDMENT TO THE 2009 STOCK INCENTIVE PLAN (PROPOSAL
THREE)
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29
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Description of the 2009 Plan (as
amended)
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30
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Federal
Income Tax Consequences
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32
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EQUITY
COMPENSATION PLAN INFORMATION
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34
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STOCKHOLDER
PROPOSALS FOR THE 2011 ANNUAL MEETING
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34
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ANNUAL
REPORT
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35
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APPENDIX
A
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A-1
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600
Fifth Avenue, 23rd
Floor
New
York, New York 10020
_____________________
PROXY
STATEMENT
_____________________
For the 2010 Annual Meeting of
Stockholders to be held on May 6, 2010
The enclosed proxy is solicited by the
Board of Directors of Delcath Systems, Inc. (“Delcath”, “we,” “our”, “us” or the
“Company”) to be voted at our 2010 Annual Meeting of Stockholders (the “Annual
Meeting”) to be held on Thursday, May 6, 2010 at 10:00 a.m., local time,
and at any adjournment or
postponement of the meeting. The Annual Meeting will be held
at the Sheraton New York Hotel & Towers, 811 Seventh Avenue, New
York, New York. This Proxy
Statement and the accompanying Notice of Annual Meeting of Stockholders, proxy
card and Delcath’s Annual Report on Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended December
31, 2009 (the “Form 10-K”), were first mailed on or about March 30, 2010, to our
stockholders entitled to vote at the meeting.
INFORMATION
ABOUT THE ANNUAL MEETING AND VOTING
Purpose
of the Annual Meeting.
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At
the Annual Meeting, stockholders will consider and vote on the following
matters:
1.
Election of each of Harold S. Koplewicz, M.D. and Robert B. Ladd as Class
I directors, each to serve until the 2013 annual meeting of stockholders
and until his successor is duly elected and qualified (Proposal
One);
2.
Ratification of the appointment by our Audit Committee of Ernst &
Young LLP as Delcath’s independent registered public accounting firm for
the fiscal year ending December 31, 2010 (Proposal Two);
3.
Approval of an amendment to Delcath’s 2009 Stock Incentive Plan to
increase the total number of shares of Delcath common stock reserved for
issuance under the plan by 2,200,000 shares, from 2,000,000 to 4,200,000
shares of our common stock (Proposal Three); and
4.
Such other business as may properly come before the meeting or any
adjournment or postponement of the
meeting.
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Stockholders entitled to
vote.
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Stockholders
of record at the close of business on Monday, March 22, 2010 (the “Record
Date”) of our common stock, $0.01 par value per share, are entitled to
notice of and to vote at the Annual Meeting and at any adjournment or
postponement of the meeting. At the close of business on the
Record Date there were 36,655,734 shares of
Delcath common stock issued, outstanding and entitled to
vote.
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Number of
votes.
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You
have one vote for each share of Delcath common stock held by you on the
Record Date.
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Voting.
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You
may vote your shares in person or by proxy.
Stockholders of
Record. If you hold your shares in your own name as a
holder of record, you can vote your common stock by:
·
completing the
enclosed proxy card and returning it signed and dated in the enclosed
postage-paid envelope. The persons named in the proxy card (the “proxies”
or “proxy holders”) will vote your shares in accordance with your
instructions in your completed and returned proxy card;
or
· attending the Annual Meeting and
delivering your completed proxy card in person or by completing a ballot
at the meeting. Ballots will be available at the
meeting.
Beneficial Owners. If your shares are held in the
name of a bank, broker or other holder of record, you will receive
instructions from the holder of record on how to vote your
shares. You must follow the instructions of your broker or
other nominee in order for your shares to be voted. If your
shares are not registered in your name and you plan to vote your shares in
person at the meeting, you must obtain and bring with you to the meeting a
“legal proxy” from the broker or other nominee holding your shares that
confirms your beneficial ownership of the shares and gives you the right
to vote your shares at the meeting.
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Quorum.
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A
majority of our outstanding shares of common stock present in person or by
proxy at the Annual Meeting constitutes a quorum. For purposes of determining the
presence of a quorum for transacting business at the Annual Meeting,
abstentions and “broker non-votes” (proxies from brokers or other nominees
indicating that they have not received instructions from the beneficial
owner(s) on a particular matter(s) with respect to which the brokers or
nominees do not have discretionary voting authority) will be treated as
shares that are present.
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Non-Routine
Proposals; Broker Non-Votes.
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Your broker or nominee will have
discretionary authority to vote your shares with respect to “routine”
proposals, but not with respect to “non-routine”
proposals.
·
Non-routine
proposals. Proposal
One (election of directors) and Proposal Three (amending the 2009 Stock
Incentive Plan) are non-routine proposals.
·
Routine
proposal. Proposal Two
(ratification of the appointment of our independent registered public
accounting firm) is a routine proposal.
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Vote Required;
Treatment of Abstentions and Broker Non-Votes.
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The two nominees for director
receiving a plurality, or the highest number of “FOR” votes, of votes cast
at the Annual Meeting, will be elected as our Class I directors. Shares
that are not voted, either because you marked your proxy card to withhold
authority for one or more nominees or you did not complete and return your
proxy card, will have no impact on the election of
directors. Broker non-votes will not be considered entitled to
vote on Proposal One.
The affirmative vote of the
majority of shares of our common stock present in person or by proxy at
the Annual Meeting and entitled to vote on Proposal Two (ratification of
the appointment of our independent registered public accounting firm) and
Proposal Three (amending the 2009 Stock Incentive Plan) is required to
approve these proposals. “Abstentions” will have the effect of
a vote against Proposal Two and Proposal Three, and broker non-votes will
have no effect on the outcome of these
proposals.
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Voting of
Proxies.
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Your
shares of Delcath common stock will be voted in accordance with the
instructions contained in your proxy card. If you return a signed proxy
card without giving specific voting instructions, your shares will be
voted:
·
“FOR” the
election of Harold S. Koplewicz, M.D. and Robert B. Ladd as Class I
directors;
·
“FOR” the
ratification of the appointment of Ernst & Young LLP as our
independent registered public accounting firm for the fiscal year ending
December 31, 2010; and
·
“FOR” the
approval of the amendment to Delcath’s 2009 Stock Incentive Plan to
increase the total number of shares of Delcath common stock reserved for
issuance under the plan by 2,200,000 shares, from 2,000,000 to 4,200,000
shares of our common stock.
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Other
Matters.
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We are not aware of any matters to
be presented at the Annual Meeting other than those described in this
Proxy Statement. If any matters not described in this Proxy Statement are
properly presented at the meeting, the proxy holders will use their own
judgment to determine how to vote your shares. If the meeting is adjourned
or postponed, the proxy holders can vote your shares on the new meeting
date as well, unless you have subsequently revoked your
proxy.
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Revoking your
Proxy.
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Stockholders of
Record. You can revoke your proxy at any time before it
is voted at the Annual Meeting by doing any one of the following
things:
·
giving our Corporate Secretary a written notice of revocation
before (addressed to Mr. Jason Rifkin, Corporate Secretary, Delcath
Systems, Inc., 600 Fifth Avenue, 23rd
Floor, New York, New York 10020) or at the meeting; or
·
delivering a properly executed, later dated proxy card;
or
·
attending the Annual Meeting and voting in person at the meeting.
Your attendance at the
meeting in and of itself will not be sufficient to revoke your
proxy.
Beneficial
Owners. If you instructed your broker or nominee to vote
your shares, you can change your vote only by following your broker or
nominee’s instructions for doing so.
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Expenses and
Solicitation.
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The
costs of solicitation of proxies, including printing and mailing costs,
will be borne by Delcath. In addition to the solicitation of proxies by
mail, proxies may also be solicited personally by directors, officers and
employees of Delcath, without additional compensation to these
individuals. Delcath may request banks, brokers and other firms holding
shares in their names which are beneficially owned by others to send proxy
materials and obtain proxies from such beneficial owners, and will
reimburse such banks, brokers and other firms for their reasonable
out-of-pocket costs.
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Important Notice Regarding the
Availability of Proxy Materials for the Stockholder Meeting to be Held on
Thursday, May 6, 2010. A copy of this Proxy Statement, the
proxy card and our Annual Report on Form 10-K are available at:
https://materials.proxyvote.com/24661P.
SECURITY
OWNERSHIP OF CERTAIN BENEFICIAL OWNERS AND MANAGEMENT
The
following table contains information regarding the beneficial ownership of our
common stock as of March 22, 2010, held by (i) each stockholder known by us to
beneficially own more than 5% of our common stock; (ii) each of our directors
(and nominees); (iii) each of our named executive officers in the Summary
Compensation Table; and (iv) all of our current directors and executive officers
as a group.
Beneficial
Owner:
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Number of
Shares
Beneficially Owned(1)
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Percent of
Class
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More
than 5%:
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FMR LLC (2)
82 Devonshire Street,
Boston,
Massachusetts 02109
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2,493,700
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6.80%
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Laddcap Value Partners L.P.
(3)
650
Fifth Avenue, Suite 600
New
York, New York 10019
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2,382,863
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6.50%
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Management:
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Harold S. Koplewicz,
M.D.(4)
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300,485
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*
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Robert B. Ladd, MBA,
CFA(3)(5)
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2,438,348
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6.64%
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Richard L. Taney, J.D.
(6)
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601,485
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1.62%
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Laura A. Philips, Ph.D., MBA
(7)
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206,485
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*
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Roger G. Stoll, Ph.D. (8)
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115,485
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*
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Pamela R. Contag, Ph.D.
(9)
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80,485
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*
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Eamonn P. Hobbs (10)
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500,000
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1.35%
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David A. McDonald (11)
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133,336
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*
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Krishna Kandarpa, M.D., Ph.D.
(12)
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240,606
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*
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Jason Rifkin, J.D., M.B.
(13)
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92,802
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*
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Barbra Keck (14)
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11,000
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*
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All current directors and
executive officers as a group (13 people)(15):
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4,846,515
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12.65%
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* Less
than 1%
(1)
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Except
as indicated in these footnotes, the persons named in this table have sole
voting and investment power with respect to all shares of common stock
beneficially owned. The number of shares beneficially owned by
each person as of March 22, 2010 includes shares of common stock that such
person has the right to acquire on or within 60 days after March 22, 2010
upon the exercise of stock options. For each individual
included in the table, percentage ownership is calculated by dividing the
number of shares beneficially owned by such person by the sum of the
36,655,734 shares of common stock outstanding on March 22, 2010 plus the
number of shares of common stock that such person or group has the right
to acquire on or within 60 days after March 22,
2010.
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(2)
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FMR
LLC, is a parent holding company. Fidelity Management & Research
Company (“Fidelity”), a wholly-owned subsidiary of FMR LLC, and a
registered investment adviser, is the beneficial owner of 2,493,700 shares
of Delcath common stock as a result of acting as investment adviser to
various registered investment companies; one investment company, Fidelity
Mid-Cap Stock Fund, owns 2,000,000 of such shares of Delcath common
stock. Edward C. Johnson 3d, Chairman of FMR LLC, and FMR LLC,
through its control of Fidelity, and the funds each has sole power to
dispose of the 2,493,700 shares owned by such funds. Neither
FMR LLC nor Edward C. Johnson has the sole power to vote or direct the
voting of the shares owned directly by the Fidelity funds, such power
resides with the respective funds' boards of trustees. Fidelity
carries out the voting of the shares under written guidelines established
by the funds' boards of trustees. The information in this
footnote was derived from a Schedule 13G filed by FMR LLC with the
Securities and Exchange Commission on February 16,
2010.
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(3)
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Robert
Ladd, a director of Delcath, is the managing member of Laddcap Value
Advisors LLC, which is the investment advisor of Laddcap Value Partners
L.P (“Laddcap”). Mr. Ladd also serves as managing member of Laddcap Value
Associates LLC, which is the general partner of Laddcap. Laddcap Value
Advisors LLC, Laddcap Value Associates LLC and Mr. Ladd share
voting and dispositive power with respect to the shares of Delcath common
stock beneficially owned by Laddcap Value Partners L.P. The information in
this footnote was derived from a Schedule 13D filed by Laddcap Value
Partners L.P. with the Securities and Exchange Commission on April 2,
2009. Laddcap Value Partners L.P. has sole voting and
dispositive power with respect to the 2,382,863 shares of Delcath common
stock covered by the Schedule 13D. Laddcap Value Advisors LLC and Laddcap
Value Associates LLC disclaim beneficial ownership of the shares of
Delcath common stock covered by the Schedule 13D. Mr. Ladd
disclaims beneficial ownership of the shares of Delcath common stock
covered by the Schedule 13D, other than 10,000 shares, which are included
in the shares reported as beneficially owned by Mr. Ladd in this
table.
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(4)
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Includes
stock options to purchase 240,000 shares of common
stock.
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(5)
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Includes
stock options to purchase 40,000 shares of common
stock.
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(6)
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Includes
stock options to purchase 390,000 shares of common
stock.
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(7)
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Includes
12,000 shares owned of
record by Dr. Philips’ spouse with respect to which shares Dr. Philips
disclaims beneficial ownership; 20,000 shares owned jointly by Dr. Philips
and her spouse; and stock options to purchase 150,000 shares of
common stock.
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(8)
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Consists
of stock options to purchase 75,000 shares of common
stock.
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(9)
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Consists
of stock options to purchase 75,000 shares of common
stock.
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(10)
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Includes
stock options to purchase 400,000 shares of common
stock.
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(11)
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Includes
stock options to purchase 83,336 shares of common
stock.
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(12)
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Includes
stock options to purchase 56,000 shares of common
stock.
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(13)
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Includes
stock options to purchase 91,667 shares of common
stock.
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(14)
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Includes
1,000 shares owned jointly with spouse and stock options to purchase
10,000 shares of common stock.
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(15)
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The
number of shares beneficially owned by all current directors and executive
officers as a group includes 1,661,001 shares of common stock issuable
upon exercise of stock options.
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CORPORATE
GOVERNANCE
Board of
Directors. The Board of Directors oversees our business
affairs and monitors the performance of management. In accordance
with our corporate governance principles, our Board does not involve itself in
day-to-day operations. The directors keep themselves informed through
discussions with our Chief Executive Officer, or CEO, and Chief Financial
Officer, or CFO, and other key executives and by reading the reports and other
materials that management sends them and by participating in Board and committee
meetings. Our directors hold office until their successors have been
elected and qualified unless the director resigns or is removed or by reason of
death or other cause is unable to serve in the capacity of
director.
Board Independence. The Board
has determined that a majority of our directors, namely the directors standing
for re-election: Harold S. Koplewicz, M.D. and Robert B. Ladd, and the
continuing directors: Laura A. Philips, Roger G. Stoll and Pamela Contag are
“independent” directors within the meaning of the NASDAQ listing
rules.
Attendance. The Board of
Directors met 13 times during the fiscal year ended December 31, 2009 (including
regularly scheduled and special meetings). During 2009, each director
attended at least 75% of the aggregate of: (i) the total number of meetings of
the Board (held during the period for which he or she served as a director) and
(ii) the total number of meetings held by all committees of the Board of
Directors on which he or she served (held during the period that he or she
served). It is the Company’s policy that, absent unusual or unforeseen
circumstances, all directors are expected to attend annual meetings of
stockholders, and all attended the Company’s 2009 Annual Meeting.
Board Leadership Structure.
Our current leadership structure is comprised of an independent director serving
as Chairman of the Board (Dr. Koplewicz), a Company employee serving as Chief
Executive Officer and President (Mr. Hobbs) and strong, active independent
directors serving on our Board committees. We believe that this
structure is appropriate for the Company because it allows one person, our CEO
and President, to concentrate on the day-to-day operations of the Company and to
speak for and lead the Company, while providing for effective oversight by an
independent Chairman and Board. The Chairman is responsible for the
strategic operations of the Board and sets the agenda for and presides over
Board Meetings. For
a company like Delcath, that is focused on the development, approval and
commercialization of a specialized product in an extremely technical, highly
regulated and intensely competitive industry, we believe our CEO and President
is in the best position to lead our management team and to respond to the
current pressures and needs of a company at the stage of growth and development
of Delcath. Our Chairman, on the other hand, is in the best position
to focus the Board’s attention on the broader issues of corporate
governance. We believe that splitting the roles of Chairman and CEO
(and President) minimizes any potential conflicts that may result from combining
the roles of CEO and Chairman, and maximizes the effectiveness of our management
and governance processes to the benefit of our stockholders.
Board’s Role in Risk
Oversight. The Board as a whole is
responsible for risk oversight, with reviews in certain areas being conducted by
the relevant Board committees. Each of the Board’s committees
oversees the management of risks associated with their respective areas of
responsibility. In performing this oversight function, the committees are
assisted by management which provides visibility about the identification,
assessment and management of potential risks and management’s strategy to
mitigate such risks. Key members of management responsible for a particular area
report directly to the Board committee charged with oversight of the associated
function, and if the circumstances require, the whole Board. The Board
committees review various risk exposures with the full Board and otherwise keep
the full Board abreast of the committees’ risk oversight activities throughout
the year, as necessary or appropriate.
Board Committees. Our Board
has three standing committees: a Compensation and Stock Option Committee, an
Audit Committee and a Nominating and Corporate Governance
Committee.
Compensation and
Stock Option Committee. The Compensation and Stock
Option Committee, or the “Compensation Committee”, assists the Board of
Directors in the discharge of the Board’s responsibilities with respect to the
compensation of the Company’s directors, executive officers, and other key
employees and consultants. As further described in the
“Compensation Discussion and Analysis” section of this Proxy Statement, the
Compensation and Stock Option Committee establishes the overall compensation
philosophy of the Company and is authorized to approve the compensation
payable to our executive officers, including our named executive officers, and
other key employees, including all perquisites, equity incentive awards, cash
bonuses, and severance packages. The Compensation Committee also
administers certain of the Company’s employee benefit plans, including its
equity incentive plans.
The
current members of the Compensation and Stock Option Committee are Roger G.
Stoll (Chair), Harold S. Koplewicz, M.D. and Robert B. Ladd, each of whom is
“independent” within the meaning of the NASDAQ listing rules. During 2009, the
Compensation and Stock Option Committee met seven times. The charter
of the Compensation and Stock Option Committee is available on the Company’s
website, go to www.delcath.com, click on “Investors” and click on “Company
Charters”.
|
·
|
the
selection, evaluation and, where appropriate, replacement of the Company’s
outside auditors;
|
|
·
|
an
annual review and evaluation of the qualifications, performance and
independence of the Company’s outside
auditors;
|
|
·
|
the
approval of all auditing services and permitted non-audit services
provided by the Company’s outside
auditors;
|
|
·
|
the
review of the adequacy and effectiveness of the Company’s accounting and
internal controls over financial reporting;
and
|
|
·
|
the
review and discussion with management and the outside auditors of the
Company’s financial statements to be filed with the Securities and
Exchange Commission.
|
The
current members of the Audit Committee are Laura A. Philips (Chair), Harold S.
Koplewicz, M.D. and Robert B. Ladd, each of whom is “independent” within the
meaning of the NASDAQ listing rules. The Board has determined that
Laura Philips and Robert Ladd each qualify as an “audit committee financial
expert” as defined in the rules of Securities and Exchange
Commission. During 2009, the Audit Committee met five
times. The charter of the Audit Committee is available on the
Company’s website, go to www.delcath.com, click on “Investors”
and click on “Company Charters”.
Nominating and
Corporate Governance Committee. The Nominating and Corporate Governance
Committee, or “Nominating Committee”, is responsible for identifying individuals
qualified to become Board members, and recommends to the Board the director
nominees to be proposed by the Board for election by the stockholders (as well
as any director nominees to be appointed by the Board to fill interim
vacancies). The Nominating Committee also recommends the directors to be
selected for membership on each Board committee. The Nominating and Corporate
Governance Committee is also responsible for developing and recommending to the
Board appropriate corporate governance guidelines and policies, and for leading
the Board in its annual review of the Board’s performance.
The
current members of the Nominating and Corporate Governance Committee are Pamela
R. Contag (Chair), Laura A. Philips and Roger G. Stoll, each of whom is
“independent”, within the meaning of the NASDAQ listing rules. During 2009, the
Nominating and Corporate Governance Committee met five times. The
charter of the Nominating and Corporate Governance Committee is available on the
Company’s website, go to www.delcath.com, click on “Investors”
and click on “Company Charters”.
In
considering candidates for the Board, the Nominating and Corporate Governance
Committee considers the entirety of each candidate’s credentials
including, but not necessarily limited to, outstanding achievement in a
candidate’s personal career, broad and relevant experience, integrity, sound and
independent judgment, experience and knowledge of the business environment and
markets in which the Company operates, business acumen, and willingness and
ability to devote adequate time to Board duties. The Nominating and
Corporate Governance Committee considers the diversity of its members in the
context of the Board as a whole, including the personal characteristics,
experience and background of directors and nominees to facilitate Board
deliberations that reflect a broad range of perspectives.
Recommendations by Stockholders of
Director Nominees. The Nominating Committee will consider any
recommendation by a stockholder of a candidate for nomination as a director. If
a stockholder wants to recommend a director candidate for consideration by the
Nominating Committee, the stockholder should submit the name of the proposed
nominee, together with the reasons why the stockholder believes the election of
the candidate would be beneficial to the Company and its stockholders and the
information about the nominee that would be required in a proxy statement
requesting proxies to vote in favor of the candidate. The stockholder’s
submission must be accompanied by the written consent of the proposed nominee to
being nominated by the Board and the candidate’s agreement to serve if nominated
and elected. Any such submission should be directed to the Nominating
and Corporate Governance Committee at the Company’s principal office, 600 Fifth
Avenue, 23rd Floor,
New York, New York 10020. If a stockholder intends to nominate a
person for election to the Board of Directors at an annual meeting, the
stockholder must provide the Company with written notice of his or her intention
no later than the deadline for receiving a stockholder proposal for inclusion in
the Company’s proxy statement for such meeting (as described below under the
heading “Stockholder Proposals For the 2011 Annual Meeting”), and
must otherwise comply with our amended and restated certificate of
incorporation. Copies of any recommendation received in accordance
with these procedures will be distributed to each member of the Nominating and
Corporate Governance Committee. One or more members of the Nominating and
Corporate Governance Committee may contact the proposed candidate to request
additional information.
At the
request of any director, the candidacy of a proposed director nominee will be
considered by the full Nominating and Corporate Governance Committee. The
Nominating and Corporate Governance Committee will not, however, be obligated to
notify a stockholder who has recommended a candidate for consideration by the
Nominating Committee as a director of the reasons for any action the Nominating
Committee may or may not take with respect to such recommendation.
Stockholder Communications with the
Board of Directors. Any stockholder wishing to communicate with the Board
or with any specified director should address his or her communication to the
Board of Directors or to the particular director(s) in care of the Corporate
Secretary, Delcath Systems, Inc., 600 Fifth Avenue, 23rd Floor, New York, New
York 10020. All such written communication, other than items
determined by our legal counsel to be inappropriate for submission to the
intended recipient(s), will be submitted to the Board or to the particular
director(s). Any stockholder communication not so delivered, will be made
available upon request to any director. Examples of stockholder communications
that would be considered inappropriate for submission include, without
limitation, customer complaints, business solicitations, product promotions, job
inquiries, junk mail and mass mailings, as well as material that is unduly
hostile, threatening, illegal or similarly unsuitable.
Compensation Committee Interlocks and
Insider Participation. The members of our Compensation and Stock Option
Committee are: Roger G. Stoll (Chair), Harold S. Koplewicz, M.D. and Robert B.
Ladd. None of the members of the Compensation and Stock Option
Committee is a current or former officer or employee of the Company, nor did any
Compensation and Stock Option Committee member engage in any “related person”
transaction that would be required to be disclosed under Item 404 of Regulation
S-K. During 2009, none of the Company’s executive officers served on the
compensation committee (or equivalent) or on the board of directors of another
entity whose executive officers served on the Compensation and Stock Option
Committee or the Company’s Board of Directors.
Transactions
with Related Persons
Policy for Review
and Approval of Related Person Transactions. The Company has adopted
a written policy for the review and approval or ratification of transactions
between the Company and Related Parties. Under the policy, the
Company’s Nominating and Corporate Governance Committee will review the material
facts of proposed transactions involving the Company in which a Related Party
will have a direct or indirect material interest. The Committee will
either approve or disapprove the Company’s entry into the transaction or, if
advance approval is not feasible, will consider whether to ratify the
transaction. The Committee may establish guidelines for ongoing transactions
with a Related Party, and will review such transactions at least annually. If
the aggregate amount of the transaction is expected to be less than $200,000,
such approval or ratification may be made by the Chair of the Committee. In
determining whether to approve or ratify a transaction with a Related Party, the
Committee (or Chair) will consider, among other factors, whether the transaction
is on terms no less favorable than terms generally available to an unaffiliated
third-party and the extent of the Related Party’s interest in the
transaction.
Certain
transactions are deemed pre-approved under the Policy, including compensation of
executive officers and directors (except that employment of an immediate family
member of an executive officer requires specific approval), and transactions
with a company at which the Related Party’s only relationship is as a
non-officer employee, director, or less than 10% owner if the aggregate amount
involved does not exceed 2% of the company’s total annual revenues (or, in the
case of charitable contributions by the Company, 2% of the charity’s total
annual receipts). Pre-approval is not required if the amount involved in the
transaction is not expected to exceed $120,000 in any calendar
year.
For
purposes of the policy, a Related Party is generally anyone who since the
beginning of the last full fiscal year is or was an executive officer, director
or director nominee, owner of more than 5% of the Common Stock, or immediate
family member of any of such persons.
Related Person
Transactions During Fiscal 2009. No related person
transactions occurred during fiscal 2009.
ELECTION
OF DIRECTORS
(PROPOSAL
ONE)
The Board
of Directors of the Company currently consists of seven directors divided into
three approximately equal classes. The directors hold office for staggered terms
of three years (and until their successors are elected and qualified). One of
the three classes is elected each year to succeed the directors whose terms are
expiring.
The
nominees for director at the 2010 Annual Meeting are Harold S. Koplewicz, M.D.
and Robert B. Ladd. Each of these nominees is currently a director and has been
nominated by the Board of Directors, upon the recommendation of its Nominating
and Corporate Governance Committee, to stand for election for a term expiring at
the annual meeting of stockholders to be held in 2013. Each of these nominees
has consented to being named in this Proxy Statement as a Board nominee and to
serve if elected. Should any of the nominees not remain a candidate
for election at the date of the Annual Meeting, proxies will be voted in favor
of the nominees who remain candidates and may be voted for substitute nominees
selected by the Board of Directors.
THE
BOARD OF DIRECTORS RECOMMENDS A VOTE “FOR” THE ELECTION OF THE ABOVE NOMINEES AS
DIRECTORS.
Information About
Directors. The following
table sets forth certain information regarding the directors standing for
re-election and members of the Board of Directors of the Company whose terms
will continue after the Annual Meeting.
Name
|
Age
|
Position(s)
with the Company
|
Director
Since
|
Director
Class
|
Term
Expires
|
Pamela
R. Contag
|
52
|
Director
|
2008
|
II
|
2011
|
Eamonn
P. Hobbs
|
51
|
President,
Chief Executive Officer and Director
|
2008
|
II
|
2011
|
Harold
S. Koplewicz
|
57
|
Chairman
of the Board
|
2006
|
I
|
2010(1)
|
Robert
B. Ladd
|
51
|
Director
|
2006
|
I
|
2010(1)
|
Laura
A. Philips
|
52
|
Director
|
2007
|
III
|
2012
|
Roger
G. Stoll
|
67
|
Director
|
2008
|
III
|
2012
|
Richard
L. Taney
|
53
|
Director
|
2006
|
II
|
2011
|
(1)
|
Nominee for re-election at the
2010 Annual Meeting for a term expiring in
2013.
|
Set forth
below is certain information with respect to the nominees and other directors of
the Company. Unless otherwise indicated, the principal occupation listed below
for each person has been his or her principal occupation for the past five
years.
Board Nominees.
Harold S. Koplewicz, M.D. was
first appointed a director in September 2006 and was appointed
Chairman of the Board in February 2007. He is one of the nation’s leading child
and adolescent psychiatrists, honoured by the American Psychiatric Association,
the American Society for Adolescent Psychiatry, and the American Academy of
Child & Adolescent Psychiatry. In May 2006, he was appointed by then-New
York Governor George Pataki to the position of Director of the Nathan S. Kline
Institute for Psychiatric Research, where he is the third person to hold this
position since the institution’s founding in 1952. In 2007, Dr. Koplewicz became
the first Vice Dean of External Affairs at the NYU Langone Medical Center.
During his tenure, over $500 million in philanthropic support was raised for the
Medical Center. Dr. Koplewicz founded the NYU Child Study Center in 1997 and
served as its Director for twelve years. Under his leadership, the NYU Child
Study Center made remarkable contributions to the field through expert clinical
care, a robust research portfolio, and advocacy for child mental health. A
graduate of Albert Einstein College of Medicine, Dr. Koplewicz completed his
psychiatric residency at New York Hospital Westchester Division, a fellowship in
Child Psychiatry at Columbia University’s College of Physicians and Surgeons, a
NIMH Research Fellowship at the New York State Psychiatric Institute, and the
Executive Program in Health Policy and Management at Harvard University’s School
of Public Health. He has served as a member of the National Board of Medical
Examiners and as a Commissioner of the New York State Commission on Youth, Crime
and Violence and Reform of the Juvenile Justice System. Since 1997, he has been
the Editor-in-Chief of the Journal of Child and Adolescent Psychopharmacology.
He has also served as a member of the working group organized by the U.S.
Assistant Surgeon General and the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services
to address the effects of terrorism on children’s mental health. The Nominating
and Corporate Governance Committee considered these qualifications, in addition
to his leadership experience and valuable insights in the medical field, as well
as the overall composition of the Board, in making the determination that Dr.
Koplewicz should be a nominee for director of the Company.
Robert B. Ladd was first
appointed a director in October 2006. Since January 2003, Mr. Ladd has served as
the founder and managing member of Laddcap Value Associates LLC, the general
partner of Laddcap Value Partners LP, an investment management company. From
1988 to November 2002, Mr. Ladd served as a Managing Director of Neuberger
Berman, an investment management company, where his responsibilities included
serving as a portfolio manager for various high net worth clients and as a
securities analyst. Mr. Ladd graduated from the University of
Pennsylvania’s Wharton School with a B.S. in Economics in 1980. He
received his MBA from Northwestern University’s Kellogg School of Management in
1983. Mr. Ladd has also earned a CFA designation. Mr. Robert Ladd served on the
Board of Directors of InFocus Corp. from 2007 to 2009, a former public company.
The Nominating and Corporate Governance Committee considered these
qualifications, in addition to his financial acumen and insights to the Board
gained from his broad financial experience, as well as the overall composition
of the Board, in making the determination that Mr. Ladd should be a nominee for
director of the Company.
Continuing
Directors.
Laura A. Philips, Ph.D., MBA
was appointed as a director in May 2007. Dr. Philips currently serves on the
Boards of Directors of: China Yongxin Pharmaceuticals Inc., where she serves on
the compensation committee; Wellgen, Inc., where she serves on the audit
committee; and Boyce Thompson Institute, where she serves as vice chair, chairs
the compensation committee and serves on the audit and investment committees of
that Board. Ms. Philips is also Chair Emeritus of the Board of Planned
Parenthood of New York City. China Yongxin Pharmaceuticals is a publicly traded
company. Wellgen Inc. is privately held. Dr. Philips is also currently a
consultant for early stage companies. From 2003 to 2006, she was Chief Operating
Officer and Acting Chief Financial Officer of NexGenix Pharmaceuticals. Prior to
that, she was Vice President, Program Management for the AMDeC Foundation. Dr.
Philips worked at Corning Incorporated from 1997 to 2002, where she held several
positions including Program Director of the Fuel Cells Division. From 1994 to
1996, Dr. Philips held various government positions in Washington, D.C., most
recently in a Presidential appointment as Senior Policy Advisor to Secretary of
Commerce Ronald Brown. Dr. Philips was on the faculty of Cornell University in
the Department of Chemistry from 1987 to 1994 and was an NIH Post-Doctoral
Fellow at the University of Chicago. She received a B.A. in Chemistry from
Williams College, a Ph.D. in Physical Chemistry from the University of
California Berkeley and an MBA with Distinction from Cornell University’s
Johnson School of Management. Dr. Philips’ scientific and business knowledge and
financial aptitude contribute to full discussion and evaluation by the Board of
its objectives and alternatives. Dr. Philips currently serves on several other
boards, including both public and private companies. The Nominating and
Corporate Governance Committee considered these qualifications, in addition to
her financial expertise and audit committee experience, as well as the overall
composition of the Board, in making the determination that Dr. Philips should
serve as a director of the Company.
Roger G. Stoll, Ph.D. was
appointed as a director in December 2008. From 2002 to 2008, he
served as Chief Executive Officer and President of Cortex Pharmaceuticals, Inc.,
a publicly traded company, where he was appointed Executive Chairman in August
2008. From 2001 to 2002, he was a consultant to several east coast venture
capital firms and startup ventures. From 1998 to 2001, he was
Executive Vice President of Fresenius Medical Care-North America, in charge of
the dialysis products division and the diagnostic systems business units, which
included hemodialysis machines and dialysis filters equipment. From
1991 to 1998, Dr. Stoll was Chief Executive of Ohmeda, a global leader in
anesthesia pharmaceuticals and related operating room equipment and
devices. He also served on the boards of directors of St. Jude
Medical and the BOC Group, plc. From 1986 to 1991, Dr. Stoll held
several executive management positions at Bayer, AG, including Executive
Vice-President and General Manager for the worldwide Diagnostic Business
Group. Prior to that, Dr. Stoll worked for American Hospital Supply
Corp., where he rose from Director of Clinical Pharmacology to President of its
American Critical Care Division. He began his pharmaceutical career
at the Upjohn Company in 1972. Dr. Stoll obtained his B.S. in
Pharmacy from Ferris State University, obtained a Ph.D. in Biopharmaceutics and
Drug Metabolism at the University of Connecticut, and was a post-doctoral fellow
for two years at the University of Michigan. Dr. Stoll also serves on
the board of directors of Chelsea Therapeutics and School of Pharmacy Advisory
Board of the University of Connecticut. Dr. Stoll currently serves on the Board
of Directors of Chelsea Therapeutics International, Ltd., a publicly traded
company, and is a member of that Board’s audit committee, his service commenced
in 2008. The Nominating and Corporate Governance Committee considered these
qualifications, in addition to his relevant management and pharmaceutical
experience, as well as the overall composition of the Board, in making the
determination that Dr. Stoll should serve as a director of the
Company.
Eamonn P. Hobbs was appointed
President and Chief Executive Officer of Delcath in July 2009 and has been a
director of the Company since October 2008. He has over 25 years of experience
in the interventional radiology, interventional cardiology and gastroenterology
medical device industries. From 1988 until 2009, Mr. Hobbs was President and CEO
of AngioDynamics, Inc. In 2004, AngioDynamics was spun off from E-Z-EM, Inc., a
healthcare company focused on diagnostic technologies, where Mr. Hobbs served as
Senior Vice-President since 1988. Before his involvement with these companies,
Mr. Hobbs was the Director of Marketing and Product Development at NAMIC,
Founder, President and CEO of Hobbs Medical, Inc., and a Product Development
Engineer at Cook Incorporated. He received a Bachelor of Science in Plastics
Engineering with a Biomaterials emphasis at the University of Massachusetts,
Lowell in 1980. In addition, since 2001, Mr. Hobbs has served as the only
industry member of the strategic planning committee of the Society of
Interventional Radiology, was elected to and served from 2002 to 2008 on the
Board of Directors of the Society of Interventional Radiology Foundation (SIRF)
and is currently Vice Chairman of the Medical Device Manufacturers Association
(MDMA). Mr. Hobbs currently serves on the Board of Directors of Antares Pharma
Co., a publicly traded company, and is a member of that Board’s audit committee,
his service commenced in August 2009. Mr. Hobbs also served on the Board of
Directors of AngioDynamics, Inc., a publicly traded company from 1988 to
2009. In 2010, Mr. Hobbs also joined the Board of Directors of
Cappella Cardiovascular Innovations, Inc. The Nominating and Corporate
Governance Committee considered these qualifications, in addition to his public
company and medical device experience, together with his knowledge of
drug/device combination products and marketing, provide valuable perspective and
insight, as well as the overall composition of the Board, in making the
determination that Mr. Hobbs should serve as a director of the
Company.
Pamela R. Contag, Ph.D. was
appointed a director in December 2008. Dr. Contag founded ConcentRx Corp., a
developer of cell based cancer therapies and currently serves as Chairman and
CEO. Prior to starting ConcentRx she founded Cobalt Technologies, where she
served as CEO and Chairman from 2006 to 2008. Cobalt specializes in biofuel
production from microbes and won an award for one the top 20 cleantech in 2008.
Prior to Cobalt, she founded Xenogen Corporation, which specializes in
technology and services for preclinical drug development and testing, where she
served as President and Director from 1995 to 2006. Xenogen, which went public
in 2004, was acquired in 2006 by Caliper Life Sciences. Xenogen was listed as
one of the “Top 25 Young Businesses” by Fortune Small Business and twice
received the “R&D 100 Award.” Dr. Contag was also recognized as one of the
“Top 25 Women in Small Business” by Fortune magazine. Dr. Contag received her
Ph.D. in Microbiology and Immunology from the University of Minnesota Medical
School and completed her postdoctoral training at Stanford University School of
Medicine. Dr. Contag is a consulting Professor at the Stanford School of
Medicine and is widely published in the field of non-invasive molecular and
cellular imaging including 35 patents. The Nominating and Corporate
Governance Committee considered these qualifications, in addition to her
significant scientific experience and strong management, organizational and
leadership skills, as well as the overall composition of the Board, in making
the determination that Dr. Contag should serve as a director of the
Company.
Richard L. Taney, J.D. was
first appointed a director in November 2006. Mr. Taney served as our Chief
Executive Officer from December 2006 until July 2009 and our President from
April 2007 until July 2009 and is currently an independent consultant. Mr. Taney
was a founding partner of Sandpiper Capital Partners, an investment partnership
that focuses on private equity investments and advisory work for privately held
companies involved in a variety of emerging technologies, and managing partner
from March 2003 until December 2006. In 1999, he founded T2 Capital Management,
LLC, an investment management company and was the managing member until December
2004. Prior to establishing his money management ventures, he spent 20 years
advising and managing assets for high net worth and institutional clients, at
Salomon Brothers, Goldman Sachs and most recently as Managing Director of Banc
of America Securities. He earned his B.A. from Tufts University and his J.D.
from Temple University School of Law. The Nominating and Corporate Governance
Committee considered these qualifications, in addition to his tenure on our
Board and as the Company’s previous Chief Executive Officer in order to provide
a historic perspective and ongoing insight for the Board, Mr. Taney’s financial
expertise, as well as the overall composition of the Board, in making the
determination that Mr. Taney should serve as a director of the
Company.
Director Compensation. During
2009, Delcath’s non-employee directors received: a cash retainer of $5,000 per
quarter (payable in arrears); $1,000 for each Board and committee meeting
attended; $2,500 per quarter to the Chairman of the Board and the Chair of each
committee; and reimbursement for reasonable travel expenses. In
addition, our non-employee directors are eligible to receive equity awards under
our 2009 Stock Incentive Plan.
The
following table shows the compensation paid to our non-employee directors for
the fiscal year ended December 31, 2009.
Director
Compensation for 2009
Name
|
Fees
Earned or
Paid
in Cash
|
Stock
Awards(1)
|
Total
|
Harold
S. Koplewicz, M.D.
|
$
54,000
|
$
30,003
|
$
84,003
|
Robert
B. Ladd
|
47,000
|
30,003
|
77,003
|
Laura
A. Philips, Ph.D., MBA
|
53,000
|
30,003
|
83,003
|
Pamela
R. Contag, Ph.D.
|
48,000
|
30,003
|
78,003
|
Roger
G. Stoll, Ph.D.
|
52,000
|
30,003
|
82,003
|
Richard
Taney(2)
|
16,000
|
30,003
|
46,003
|
Eamonn
P. Hobbs(2)
|
19,000
|
−
|
19,000
|
(1)
|
The
amounts included in the “Stock Awards” column represents the grant date
fair value for each director’s restricted stock awards granted during
fiscal 2009, computed in accordance with Financial Accounting Standards
Board’s Accounting Standards Codification Topic 718 (“FASB ASC Topic 718”)
– 5,485 shares of restricted stock each at $5.47, the closing price of
Delcath’s common stock on December 10,
2009.
|
(2)
|
Mr.
Hobbs served as a non-employee director until July 6, 2009, when he was
appointed President and CEO of the Company. Mr. Taney resigned
as President and CEO of the Company effective July 6, 2009, and subsequent
to his resignation began receiving fees and awards as a non-employee
director.
|
Effective
as of January 1, 2010, non-employee directors receive: a cash retainer of $6,000
per quarter (payable in arrears); $1,000 for each Board and committee meeting
attended in person; $500 for each Board and committee meeting attended
telephonically; $3,000 per quarter to the Chairman of the Board and to the Chair
of the Nominating and Corporate Governance Committee and Compensation and Stock
Option Committee; and $4,000 per quarter to the Chair of the Audit
Committee.
Our
non-employee directors are also covered by the Company’s directors and officer
insurance, and each of our directors and executive officers is a party to an
indemnification agreement with us. The indemnification agreements require the
Company to hold harmless and to indemnify each indemnitee to the fullest extent
authorized or permitted by the Delaware General Corporation Law, the Company’s
amended and restated certificate of incorporation and amended and restated
bylaws, subject to specified limitations. The indemnification agreements also
provide for the advancement of reasonable litigation expenses to an indemnitee,
subject to the requirement that the indemnitee reimburse the Company for such
expenses if it is ultimately determined that the indemnitee is not entitled to
such indemnification.
INFORMATION
ABOUT OUR EXECUTIVE OFFICERS
The
following table provides information concerning the current executive officers
of Delcath.
Name
|
Age
|
Office
Currently Held
|
Eamonn
P. Hobbs (1)
|
51
|
President
and Chief Executive Officer
|
David
A. McDonald
|
49
|
Chief
Financial Officer
|
Agustin
V. Gago
|
50
|
Executive
Vice President, Global Sales and Marketing
|
Krishna
Kandarpa, M.D., Ph.D.
|
59
|
Executive
Vice President, Research and Development, and Chief Medical
Officer
|
John
Purpura
|
48
|
Executive
Vice President, Regulatory Affairs and Quality
Assurance
|
Barbra
Keck
|
32
|
Vice
President, Controller
|
(1)
|
Information
about Mr. Hobbs is provided under the heading “Information about Directors
– Continuing
Directors.”
|
The
following is a brief description of the business experience of the following
officers:
David A. McDonald joined Delcath as
Chief Financial Officer in September 2009. He was formerly the Senior Vice
President of Business Development at AngioDynamics, Inc., where he led the
company’s business development activities. Mr. McDonald founded
Minneapolis-based Cornerstone Healthcare Advisors LLC in April 2005, which he
led until joining AngioDynamics in July 2008. At Cornerstone he provided
advisory and consulting services to emerging medical technology companies and
their financial sponsors. Prior to 2005, Mr. McDonald was a Managing Director
and leader of Medical Technology Investment Banking at RBC Capital Markets.
Before his involvement with these companies, Mr. McDonald was a Senior Vice
President and Equity Portfolio Manager at Investment Advisers, Inc. as well as a
research analyst covering the healthcare industry for more than a dozen years.
He received a Bachelor of Arts Degree in Economics from St. Olaf College in
Northfield, Minnesota in 1982.
Agustin V. Gago joined Delcath
as Executive Vice President for Global Sales and Marketing in November
2009. Prior to joining Delcath, he was Vice President for
International Oncology Surgery Sales at AngioDynamics, Inc., since
2008. From 2002 to 2008, he was Vice President for the Global GI
Business Unit at E-Z-EM, Inc., and from 1998 to 2002 he was Vice President of
International Operations at E-Z-EM, Inc. Mr. Gago earned his B.S. in Business
Management at Hofstra University and diplomas in International and Export
Practices at universities overseas.
Krishna Kandarpa, M.D., Ph.D.
joined Delcath as Executive Vice President, Research and Development and Chief
Medical Officer in October 2009. Prior to joining Delcath, from 2002 to 2009, he
was a tenured Professor and former Chair of the Department of Radiology at the
University of Massachusetts Medical School (UMMS) and Radiologist-in-Chief at
the University of Massachusetts Memorial Medical Center. Before joining the
University of Massachusetts Memorial Medical Center in 2002, he was at the Weill
Medical College of Cornell University, where he was a Professor of Radiology and
Chief of Service and Director of the Division of Cardiovascular &
Interventional Radiology at The New York Presbyterian Hospital (Cornell). He was
also a faculty member at the Harvard-Massachusetts Institute of Technology,
Division of Health Sciences and Technology from 1987 to 1998. Before deciding to
attend medical school at the University of Miami, Dr. Kandarpa was a Research
and Development Engineer at Duracell International Laboratory for Physical
Science. He earned a Ph.D. in Engineering Science & Mechanics from Penn
State University and a B.S. in Aerospace & Mechanical Engineering from
Washington University (St. Louis). Dr. Kandarpa is past-President (1997-2001)
and past-Chair (2001-2002) of the Cardiovascular & Interventional Radiology
Research and Education Foundation (CIRREF) of the Society of Interventional
Radiology (SIR). He completed his final term on the Board of Directors of the
Academy of Radiology Research in 2007. Dr. Kandarpa has authored over 50
original peer-reviewed scientific publications, including book chapters and
solicited review articles, and is the author/editor of several specialized
books, including The Handbook of Interventional Radiologic Procedures, and a new
textbook entitled Peripheral Vascular Interventions (2008), which will be
available in Chinese this year.
John Purpura joined Delcath as
Executive Vice President for Global Sales and Marketing in November
2009. Prior to joining Delcath, he was with E-Z-EM, Inc. as Vice
President and then Executive Director of International Regulatory Affairs from
2007 to 2008 and Head of Regulatory Affairs for North America and Latin America
from 2008 to 2009. Prior to E-Z-EM, Inc., Mr. Purpura had an 11 year
career with Sanofi-Aventis, ultimately serving as Associate Vice President for
Regulatory CMC from 2005 to 2007. From 1985 to 1995, he had various
quality and regulatory management roles with Bolar Pharmaceuticals, Luitpold
Pharmaceuticals and Eon Labs Manufacturing. He earned his MS in
Management & Policy and B.S. degrees in Chemistry and Biology at the State
University of New York at Stony Brook.
Barbra Keck joined Delcath as
Controller in January 2009 and promoted to Vice President in October 2009. Prior
to joining Delcath, she was an audit assistant with Deloitte & Touche, LLP
from August 2008 to December 2008. From June 2006 to August 2008, Ms. Keck was
the Assistant to the Vice President and Dean of Baruch College, Zicklin School
of Business, and from September 2005 to May 2006 she was the Donor Relations and
Communications Manager for Young Audiences New York. From 2002 to 2005, Ms. Keck
was the Manager, UD Arts Series at the University of Dayton, where she also
served as the Manager, Arts and Cultural Events from 1999 to 2002. Between those
positions, from 2002 to 2003, she was the Director of Teacher Programs at the
Muse Machine. Ms. Keck served as the General Manager of Dayton Bach Society and
the Manager of UD Arts Series from 1999 to 2002. She earned her MBA in
Accountancy from Baruch College and Bachelor of Music in Music Education from
the University of Dayton.
EXECUTIVE
COMPENSATION
Compensation
Discussion & Analysis
Compensation
Philosophy and
Objectives. Our Compensation and Stock Option Committee, or
“Compensation Committee,” is responsible for formulating and establishing our
overall compensation philosophy with respect to our directors, executive
officers, including our named executive officers, other key employees and
consultants. The Company believes that a strong management team
comprised of the most talented individuals in key positions at Delcath is
critical to the development and growth of the Company. Accordingly, a
key objective of executive compensation is to attract and retain such
individuals, while motivating them to perform and make decisions consistent with
the Company’s operating goals and objectives and culture. In
furtherance of this objective, we believe that it is vital that our executive
compensation be performance-based, as well as competitive with compensation paid
to executive officers who are similarly situated to our named executive
officers, in order to align a significant portion of each executive’s total
compensation with the annual and long-term performance of the Company and the
interests of the Company’s stockholders.
In
consideration of the Company’s new management team, retained during the last
half of 2009, the Compensation Committee intends to develop more specific and
individualized performance objectives, expected to include both corporate
financial and strategic objectives, as well as specific performance objectives
for each named executive officer, in order to enhance the Company’s compensation
practices to encourage and reward our executives who achieve pre-determined
milestones so as to promote our growth and increase stockholder
value.
Role of Executive
Officers in Determining Compensation. The Compensation Committee, based on
input from the Company’s CEO, determines the compensation of our
executive officers. The
CEO assists the Compensation Committee by providing performance
assessments and compensation recommendations for each of the Company’s executive
officers, including the named executive officers (other than the
CEO). Except for Mr. Hobbs’ negotiation with the Company prior to his
employment, the CEO does not participate in the formulation or discussion of his
compensation.
Role of
Compensation Consultant in 2010 Compensation Planning. The
Compensation Committee recently retained Pearl Meyer & Partners, LLC
(“PM&P”), as its independent compensation consultant to assist the Committee
in evaluating executive compensation programs and setting executive officers’
compensation in the future. PM&P reports directly to the
Compensation Committee, and PM&P is not permitted to perform services for
management unless approved by the Compensation Committee. PM&P
was engaged to assist the Compensation Committee in designing and developing a
short-term incentive plan and to evaluate Delcath’s long-term incentive plan,
specifically with respect to its competitiveness, participation, plan design and
financial impact on the Company and its executives. With the
engagement of PM&P, the Compensation Committee expects to obtain advice and
feedback related to maintaining programs that provide compensation opportunities
for executives to enable the Company to fulfill its compensation objectives set
forth above.
The
Compensation Committee will consider the information provided by PM&P, as
well as input from members of the Board and management, when making decisions or
recommendations to the full Board regarding executive compensation.
Elements
of Executive Compensation
The three
components of the compensation program for named executive officers are base
salary, annual cash incentive compensation and long-term equity-based incentive
awards in the form of stock options and restricted stock
awards. These components are administered with the goal of providing
total compensation that is competitive in the marketplace, while recognizing
meaningful differences in individual performance and offering the opportunity to
earn superior rewards when merited by individual and corporate
performance.
The
Compensation Committee’s policy is to establish ranges for base salary, annual
cash incentive compensation and long term, equity-based incentive awards for
named executive officers, including the CEO, with consideration to the
compensation paid by similarly-situated companies, which include publicly-traded
companies of similar structure and stage of development in the healthcare
industry as the Company. The Compensation Committee believes an understanding of
the compensation practices of companies with whom the Company competes for
talent is important information for purposes of determining the type and mix of
compensation components and target compensation levels. Accordingly, the
Compensation Committee periodically obtains and evaluates surveys used for
benchmarking compensation. In 2009, the Compensation Committee used
the Radford Life Sciences Survey to determine competitive market practices
within the industry, and this information, in combination with other factors,
such as an individual’s particular expertise, and experience in and knowledge of
the healthcare industry, the Company’s need to secure the employment of an
individual(s) having a particular skill, expertise and/or knowledge in a
particular area and the number of qualified candidates available to the Company.
The Compensation Committee did not
attach any particular weight to the survey information or factors it considered
in establishing the compensation paid to our named executive officers, rather,
the Compensation Committee made its determination based on the total mix of
information available to it, and the particular individual and
position.
Base salary.
Base salary is determined based on two factors. The first is an
evaluation by the Compensation Committee of the salaries paid in
the marketplace to executives with similar responsibilities, and the second is
the executive’s unique role, job performance and other
circumstances. Evaluating both of these factors allows the Company to
offer a competitive total compensation value to each individual executive
officer taking into account the unique attributes of, and circumstances relating
to, each individual, as well as marketplace factors, such as the specialized
nature of the healthcare industry and the unknown elements and risks associated
with employment by a development stage company. This allows the Company to meet
its objective of offering a competitive total compensation value, while
attracting and retaining key personnel.
Mr.
Taney’s base salary for 2009 was $396,000 per year, which is the same base
salary paid in 2008. Mr. Taney served as the Company’s CEO from
December 2006 until his resignation as of July 6, 2009.
Mr.
Hobbs’ base salary for 2009 was $425,000 per year, which is the amount provided
for under his employment agreement. The Compensation Committee
believes that this base salary is reasonable in light of Mr. Hobbs’
qualifications and the Company’s need to hire a CEO with experience in the
healthcare industry. Mr. Hobbs’ employment was effective as of July
6, 2009. The terms of his employment agreement are discussed in the
section entitled “Employment Agreements.”
Mr.
McDonald’s base salary for 2009 was $325,000 per year, which is the amount
provided for under his employment agreement. The Compensation
Committee believes that this base salary is reasonable in light of Mr.
McDonald’s qualifications and the Company’s need to hire a CFO with experience
in the healthcare industry. Mr. McDonald’s employment was effective
as of September 14, 2009. The terms of his employment agreement are discussed in
the section entitled “Employment Agreements.”
Dr.
Kandarpa’s base salary for 2009 was $375,000 per year, which is the amount
provided for under his employment agreement. The Compensation
Committee believes that this base salary is reasonable in light of Dr.
Kandarpa’s qualifications and the Company’s need to hire a Chief Medical Officer
to guide the development of the Delcath PHP System. Dr. Kandarpa’s employment
was effective as of October 20, 2009. The terms of his employment agreement are
discussed in the section entitled “Employment Agreements.”
Mr.
Rifkin’s annual base salary from January to October 2009 was $185,000. In
recognition of Mr. Rifkin’s outstanding job performance and industry knowledge
and expertise, which were key to the Company achieving certain of its goals and
objectives during 2009, his annual base salary was increased in October 2009 to
$225,000, and he was awarded an incentive cash bonus of $67,500 (paid in fiscal
2010). Mr. Rifkin does not have an employment agreement with the
Company.
Ms.
Keck’s annual base salary from January to October 2009 was $75,000. In
recognition of Ms. Keck’s outstanding job performance and financial expertise,
which were key to the Company achieving certain of its goals and objectives
during 2009, her annual base salary was increased in October 2009 to $125,000,
and she was awarded an incentive cash bonus of $37,500 (paid in fiscal
2010). Ms. Keck does not have an employment agreement with the
Company.
Annual Incentive
Compensation. Annual incentive compensation is intended to establish a
direct correlation between annual awards and the performance of the
Company. Prior to 2009, the Company generally did not grant annual
incentive bonuses to its named executive officers. However, the
employment agreements for Mr. Hobbs, Mr. McDonald and Dr. Kandarpa provide for
annual incentive cash bonuses in 2010. The target bonus levels for each of Mr.
Hobbs, Mr. McDonald and Dr. Kandarpa are: 50%, 30% and 35%, respectively, of
each such named executive officer’s annual base salary, based upon the
satisfaction of performance objectives (which may include corporate, business
unit or division, financial, strategic, individual or other objectives)
reasonably established by the Compensation Committee. Determination of whether
performance objectives are met and whether bonuses should be paid, and, if so,
the amount, is made by the Compensation Committee.
Mr. Taney
received an $80,000 cash bonus in 2009 in recognition of his prior service as
President and Chief Executive Officer of the Company. Further, and
consistent with the Compensation Committee’s intention to develop a more
deliberate and measured compensation practice, with specific and individualized
performance objectives, and in an effort to move the Company’s compensation
practice in the direction of a “manage by objectives format”, that is singular
in focus and quantifies performance objectives, each of the following named
executive officers was paid (in fiscal 2010) a pro rata portion of their
incentive bonuses. The Compensation Committee determined that these
pro rata bonus amounts were earned in 2009 in consideration of Mr. Hobbs’
($100,000), Mr. McDonald’s ($30,000) and Dr. Kandarpa’s ($23,500) individual
efforts, knowledge, expertise and experience in the healthcare industry and
their individual job performance, which individually and in the aggregate
resulted in the Company’s achievement of certain goals and objectives in
furtherance of its growth and development in the industry.
Long-Term
Compensation. Long-term compensation is an area of emphasis in
the Company’s strategy to compensate its named executive officers, as this will
align a significant portion of each executive’s total compensation with the
long-term performance of the Company and the interests of the Company’s
stockholders.
In 2004,
the Company adopted the 2004 Stock Incentive Plan, or the 2004
Plan. In 2009, the Company adopted the 2009 Stock Incentive Plan, or
the 2009 Plan, and collectively with the 2004 Plan, the Plans. The
Plans, which were approved by the Company’s stockholders, provide for the grant
of incentive awards, including performance share awards, performance unit
awards, restricted stock awards and restricted stock unit awards, as well as
incentive and non-qualified stock options and stock appreciation
rights. To date, the Compensation Committee has made grants of stock
options and restricted stock awards. In the future, it expects to
continue offering awards under the 2009 Plan in order to align our named
executive officers’ decision making and performance with the Company’s long-term
operating goals in order to build shareholder value and to reward these
individuals for their contribution to the Company’s performance.
In 2009,
the Company used long-term equity grants as an incentive for the newly hired
executive officers to join the Company. Equity grants were made to
Mr. Hobbs, Mr. McDonald and Dr. Kandarpa in order to align their interests with
the Company’s stockholders. Mr. Hobbs was granted an option under the
Plans to purchase 800,000 shares of the Company’s common stock. Mr.
McDonald was granted an option under the 2009 Plan to purchase 250,000 shares of
the Company’s common stock and was granted 50,000 shares of restricted stock.
Dr. Kandarpa was granted an option under the 2009 Plan to purchase 100,000
shares of the Company’s common stock and was granted 200,000 shares of
restricted stock.
Equity
grant practices were high in 2009 as a result of our retaining the services of
highly skilled, qualified executive officers; however, it is the Company’s
intention that over the next three fiscal years, beginning with fiscal 2010, it
will not grant equity awards under the 2009 Plan at an average rate greater than
4% (based on the average of the 2009 and 2010 allowable industry standard annual
burn rates) of the number of shares of our common stock that we believe will be
outstanding over such three year period. For purposes of calculating
the number of shares granted in a year, any full value awards will count as more
than 1 based on the Company's stock price volatility factor.
The
long-term equity awards made to other executive officers in 2009 have primarily
been in the form of stock options and restricted stock awards. This is because
the Company believes that stock options directly align the value of the benefit
being provided to the executive officers with stockholder interests, since an
optionee realizes no value unless the stock price increases. Options
are generally exercisable over a three-year term. For executive
officers other than the CEO, the Compensation Committee determines the number of
options to grant based on its consideration of awards of similarly situated
companies and in keeping with the Company’s objective of offering a competitive
total compensation value. With regards to Dr. Kandarpa, his
employment agreement provides for a minimum annual bonus of an option to
purchase 50,000 shares. The Compensation Committee will determine if
Dr. Kandarpa will be entitled to additional equity grants based upon the
criteria used for the other executive officers. No other employment
agreement with the Company provides for any such guaranteed
benefit.
Stock
option grants generally are made to each named executive officer upon his or her
joining the Company and satisfying the requirements for eligibility under the
Plans, with additional grants being made annually as determined by the
Compensation Committee. Stock options granted under the Plans
generally have a three-year vesting schedule and generally expire 10 years from
the date of grant. In the event of the named executive officer’s
termination of employment, all of his or her unvested options will be
forfeited. The exercise price of options granted under the Plans must
be at least 100% of the fair market value of the underlying stock on the date of
grant. The number of stock options granted to each named executive officer is
generally based upon several factors, including the named executive officer’s
position with the Company, salary and performance, and are targeted to
approximate the grants made, on average, by similarly situated companies to
executives with similar responsibilities. The number and value of the
option grants during fiscal 2009 are presented in the table titled Grant of
Plan-Based Awards.
In
addition, grants of restricted stock awards may also be made to each named
executive officer upon his or her joining the Company and satisfying the
requirements for eligibility under the Plans, with additional grants being
determined by the Compensation Committee. Restricted stock awards
typically have a three-year vesting schedule and are conditioned, among other
things, upon the employee remaining active with the Company through the vesting
dates.
The
Company does not backdate options or grant options
retrospectively. In addition, the Company does not coordinate grants
of options so that they are made before announcements of favorable information,
or after announcement of unfavorable information. The Company’s
options are granted at fair market value on a fixed date with all required
approvals obtained in advance of or on the actual grant date. All
grants to executive officers require the approval of the Compensation
Committee. The exercise price of the stock options is determined as
the closing price of a share of the Company’s common stock on The NASDAQ Capital
Market on the date of grant.
Currently,
the Company has not adopted a policy which requires its named executive officers
to own a certain number of the Company’s securities.
Please
see the Summary Compensation Table and the Grants of Plan-Based Awards table
presented in this Proxy Statement and the accompanying narrative disclosure for
more information regarding the number and value of the stock option and
restricted stock awards received by each of the named executives.
Additional
Benefits; 401(k) Plan. All salaried
employees participate in a variety of retirement, health and welfare, and paid
time-off benefits designed to enable the Company to attract and retain a
talented workforce in a competitive marketplace. These benefits and related
plans help ensure that the Company has a productive and focused workforce. The
Company utilizes a 401(k) savings plan to enable employees to plan and save for
retirement. The Company does not provide matching
contributions.
Other
Compensation. As a development stage company, the Company does not have
pension or deferred compensation plans or arrangements.
CEO
Compensation. The Compensation Committee evaluates, at least
annually, the performance of our CEO and recommends to the Board for approval
the CEO’s annual compensation including base salary, bonus and equity-based
compensation.
For the
period January 1, 2009 – July 6, 2009, Mr. Taney served as President and CEO of
the Company. On July 2, 2007, the Company entered into an employment
agreement with Mr. Taney, which provided for Mr. Taney to serve the Company as
its CEO through July 1, 2009. Mr. Taney resigned from employment with the
Company as of July 6, 2009. The Company entered into a separation and
general release agreement with Mr. Taney on July 5, 2009, which provided for a
cash severance payment of $396,000 and a bonus payment of
$80,000. During his service as CEO in 2009, Mr. Taney’s base salary
and bonus compensation were determined in accordance with the criteria described
above for other named executive officers.
Effective
July 6, 2009, the Company entered into an employment agreement with Mr. Hobbs
which provides for his employment through July 6, 2011. The employment agreement
provides for a one time special bonus of $175,000 to cover moving expenses and a
gross-up to cover tax expenses. Mr. Hobbs is entitled to receive an
incentive cash bonus on the anniversary of his employment date during each year
of his agreement, targeted to equal 50% of his total base salary paid during the
preceding 12 months, based on performance objectives (which may include
corporate, business unit or division, financial, strategic, individual or other
objectives) reasonably established with respect to that particular year by the
Compensation Committee. No incentive bonus shall be paid unless the applicable
performance objectives have been attained, and the Compensation Committee shall
determine whether an incentive bonus is merited in any given period. Mr. Hobbs
shall not be entitled to an incentive bonus for any year in which his employment
is terminated for cause. As described above, the Compensation Committee
determined that a pro rata portion of Mr. Hobbs’ annual bonus was earned in 2009
($100,000) in consideration of Mr. Hobbs individual efforts, knowledge, business
and operational expertise and experience in the healthcare industry and his
outstanding job performance, which were key to the Company’s achievement of
certain goals and objectives in furtherance of its growth and development in the
industry.
Pursuant
to his employment agreement, in July 2009, Mr. Hobbs received an option award
under the 2004 Plan and 2009 Plan to purchase 850,000 shares of the Company’s
common stock at the market price on the date of grant in connection with his
hiring, of which 800,000 were granted in July 2009. In January 2010,
Mr. Hobbs was granted an option under the 2009 Plan to purchase 50,000 shares of
the Company’s common stock at the market price on the date of
grant.
For
information regarding additional terms of Messrs. Hobbs’ and Taney’s employment
agreements, as well as the terms of the employment agreements with the other
named executive officers, please see the section entitled “Employment
Agreements.”
Change of Control
Provisions. The options granted to Ms. Keck, Mr. Rifkin, Dr.
Kandarpa, and Mr. Hobbs, as well as the restricted stock granted to Dr.
Kandarpa, are subject to immediate vesting in the event of a “Change of
Control,” as defined in the Plans. There are no other change of
control agreements or arrangements currently in effect for the named executive
officers.
Internal Revenue
Code Section 162(m) Considerations. Section 162(m) of the Internal
Revenue Code generally denies publicly-held corporations a federal income tax
deduction for compensation exceeding $1,000,000 paid to the Chief Executive
Officer and each of the four other highest paid executive officers, excluding
performance-based compensation. It is the Company’s intention that
any stock options and stock appreciation rights (SARs) granted under its 2009
Stock Incentive Plan will qualify as performance-based under Section
162(m).
Compensation
and Stock Option Committee Report
The Compensation and Stock Option
Committee of the Board of Directors has reviewed and discussed the foregoing
“Compensation Discussion and Analysis” section of this Proxy Statement with
management. Based on this review and these discussions, the Compensation and
Stock Option Committee recommended to the Board of Directors that the section
entitled “Compensation Discussion and Analysis” be included in this Proxy
Statement and incorporated by reference into the Company’s Annual Report on Form
10-K for the fiscal year ended December 31, 2009.
Submitted
by the Compensation and Stock Option Committee of the Board of
Directors,
Roger G. Stoll,
Chair
Harold S.
Koplewicz, M.D.
Robert B.
Ladd
Summary Compensation
Table. The following table sets forth the
total compensation of the Company’s named executive officers for the fiscal
years ended December 31, 2009, 2008, and 2007 during which they served in such
capacities. The Company’s named executive officers are (i) those persons
who were, during fiscal 2009, our CEO (Eamonn P. Hobbs from July 6, 2009, and
Richard Taney to July 6, 2009), (ii) those persons who were, during fiscal
2009, our principal financial officers (David A. McDonald, our CFO, from
September 14, 2009, and Barbra Keck, our Vice President, Controller, to
September 14, 2009), and (iii) those persons who were, at the end of fiscal
2009, our most highly compensated executive officers other than our CEO, CFO and
Vice President, Controller.
Name
and
Principal
Position
|
Year
|
Salary
|
Bonus
|
Stock
Awards(1)
|
Option
Awards(1)
|
All
Other Compensation
|
Total
|
Richard
Taney
Former
President, CEO and Treasurer(3)
(10)
|
2009
2008
2007
|
$200,966
396,000
373,000
|
$
−
60,000
−
|
$117,753
108,100
211,000
|
$117,785
87,904
225,500
|
$517,000(2)
75,000(4)
−
|
$953,503
727,004
809,500
|
Jason
Rifkin
Senior
Vice President Clinical Operations and Corporate Secretary(5)
|
2009
2008
2007
|
193,279
150,000
87,500
|
67,500
−
−
|
−
−
−
|
273,612
20,204
32,106
|
−
−
−
|
534,391
170,204
119,606
|
David
A. McDonald
Chief
Financial Officer(6)
|
2009
|
97,254
|
30,000
|
196,000
|
645,175
|
125,000
|
1,093,428
|
Eamonn
P. Hobbs
President,
CEO and Director(7)(10)
|
2009
|
207,670
|
100,000
|
−
|
1,823,079
|
194,000
|
2,324,749
|
Krishna Kandarpa, M.D.,
Ph.D.
Executive
Vice President, Research & Development, and Chief Medical Officer(8)
|
2009
|
75,284
|
23,500
|
1,218,000
|
400,630
|
199,910
|
1,917,324
|
Barbra
Keck,
Vice
President Controller(9)
|
2009
|
86,018
|
37,500
|
−
|
292,234
|
−
|
415,751
|
(1)
|
The
amounts included in the “Stock Awards” column and the “Option Awards”
column represent the grant date fair value of restricted stock awards and
the grant date fair value of stock option awards granted to our named
executive officers, calculated in accordance FASB ASC Topic 718. We
caution that the amounts reported for these awards may not represent the
amounts that the named executive officers will actually realize from the
awards. Whether, and to what extent, a named executive officer realizes
value will depend on the Company’s stock price and the named executive
officer’s continued employment. For a discussion of the valuation
assumptions used to calculate these amounts, see Note 3 to our financial
statements included in our Annual Report on Form 10-K for the fiscal year
ended December 31, 2009.
|
(2)
|
Includes
a one-time severance payment of $396,000, a bonus of $80,000 and a $25,000
reimbursement for the payment of taxes associated with a stock
grant.
|
(3)
|
Mr.
Taney resigned as President and CEO on July 6,
2009.
|
(4)
|
Includes
reimbursement for payment of taxes associated with stock
grant.
|
(5)
|
Mr.
Rifkin’s employment began on June 1,
2007.
|
(6)
|
Mr.
McDonald’s employment began on September 14, 2009. The amount included in
the “All Other Compensation” column reflects a bonus paid to Mr. McDonald
to cover relocation expenses.
|
(7)
|
Mr.
Hobbs’ service as President and CEO began on July 6, 2009. The
amount included in the “All Other Compensation” column reflects a bonus
paid to Mr. Hobbs to cover relocation expenses and a gross-up to cover tax
expenses.
|
(8)
|
Dr.
Kandarpa’s employment began on October 20, 2009. The amount
included in the “All Other Compensation” column reflects a bonus paid to
Dr. Kandarpa to cover relocation expenses and a gross-up to cover tax
expenses.
|
(9)
|
Ms.
Keck’s employment began on January 5,
2009.
|
(10)
|
The
amounts included in the “Stock Awards” column, the “All Other
Compensation” column and the “Total” column for Mr. Taney and Mr. Hobbs
includes fees paid and the aggregate fair market value of stock awards
granted to them in their capacities as non-employee directors of the
Company. Mr. Taney from July 6, 2009 (fees: $16,000, grant date
fair value of stock awards $30,003) and Mr. Hobbs to July 6, 2009 (fees:
$19,000). This information is also set forth in the “Director
Compensation for 2009” table above.
|
Grants of Plan-Based Awards in
2009. The following table sets forth grants of plan-based
awards made during the fiscal year ended December 31, 2009 to the named
executive officers. Such grants were made under the Company’s 2009 Stock
Incentive Plan and 2004 Stock Incentive Plan.
Name
|
Grant
Date
|
|
All
Other Stock Awards:
Number
of Shares of Stock or Units
(#)
|
|
All
Other Option Awards:
Number
of Securities Underlying Options
(#)
|
|
Exercise
or Base Price of Option Awards
($/Sh)
|
|
Grant
Date Fair Value of Stock and Option Awards
($)
|
Richard
Taney
|
1/2/09
|
|
–
|
|
50,000(1)
|
|
$
1.24
|
|
$
28,076
|
7/2/09
|
|
–
|
|
50,000(1)
|
|
3.51
|
|
89,709
|
|
7/2/09
|
|
25,000(2)
|
|
–
|
|
–
|
|
87,750
|
Jason
Rifkin
|
10/12/09
|
|
–
|
|
75,000(3)
|
|
$5.46
|
|
273,612
|
Barbra
Keck
|
6/9/09
|
|
−
|
|
10,000(4)
|
|
3.66
|
|
18,622
|
10/12/09
|
|
−
|
|
75,000(3)
|
|
5.46
|
|
273,612
|
David
McDonald
|
9/14/09
|
|
−
|
|
250,000(5)
|
|
3.92
|
|
645,175
|
9/14/09
|
|
50,000(6)
|
|
−
|
|
−
|
|
196,000
|
Krishna
Kandarpa
|
10/20/09
|
|
−
|
|
100,000(7)
|
|
6.09
|
|
400,630
|
10/20/09
|
|
200,000(8)
|
|
−
|
|
−
|
|
1,218,000
|
Eamonn
Hobbs
|
7//6//09
|
|
−
|
|
800,000(9)
|
|
3.36
|
|
1,823,079
|
(1)
|
Options
granted under the 2004 Plan pursuant to a stock option grant letter; 100%
vested at grant; expire July 6,
2014.
|
(2)
|
Shares
granted under the 2009 Plan pursuant to a stock option grant
letter.
|
(3)
|
Options
granted under the 2009 Plan pursuant to a stock option grant letter; vest
over three years; expire October 12,
2019.
|
(4)
|
Options
granted under the 2004 Plan pursuant to a stock option grant letter; 100%
vested at grant; expire June 9,
2014.
|
(5)
|
Options
granted under the 2009 Plan pursuant to a stock option grant letter;
10,417 shares vest monthly for 23 months, thereafter 10,409 shares vest on
24th
month; expire September 14, 2019.
|
(6)
|
Shares
of restricted stock granted under the 2009 Plan pursuant to a restricted
stock agreement; 25,000 shares vested March 14, 2010 and 25,000 shares
vest September 14, 2010.
|
(7)
|
Options
granted under the 2009 Plan pursuant to a stock option grant letter; vest
ratably over 24 months; accelerated vesting upon consummation of a
follow-on offering, submission of pre-market approval to FDA, and final
FDA approval; expire October 20,
2019.
|
(8)
|
Shares
of restricted stock granted under the 2009 Plan pursuant to a restricted
stock agreement; vest 100,000 shares on October 20, 2010 and 2011;
accelerated vesting upon consummation of a follow-on offering, submission
of pre-market approval to FDA, and final FDA
approval.
|
(9)
|
Options
granted under the 2004 and 2009 Plans pursuant to a stock option grant
letter; vest over three years; accelerated vesting upon consummation of a
follow-on offering, submission of pre-market approval to FDA, and final
FDA approval; expire July 6, 2019.
|
Outstanding Equity Awards at 2009
Fiscal Year-End. The following table sets forth information relating to
the vested and unvested option awards held by the named executive officers as of
December 31, 2009.
|
Option
Awards
|
|
Stock
Awards
|
Name
|
Number
of Securities Underlying Unexercised Options
(#
Exercisable)
|
|
Number
of Securities Underlying Unexercised Options
(#
Unexercisable)
|
|
Option
Exercise Price
($)
|
|
Option
Expiration Date
|
|
Number
of Shares or Units of Stock That Have Not Vested
(#)
|
|
Market
Value of Shares or Units of Stock That Have Not Vested
($)
|
Richard
Taney
|
40,000
|
|
–
|
|
$3.28
|
|
11/14/2011
|
|
−
|
|
−
|
|
50,000
|
|
–
|
|
3.90
|
|
7/6/2014
|
|
−
|
|
−
|
|
100,000
|
|
–
|
|
5.85
|
|
7/6/2014
|
|
−
|
|
−
|
|
50,000
|
|
–
|
|
1.74
|
|
7/6/2014
|
|
−
|
|
−
|
|
50,000
|
|
–
|
|
2.44
|
|
7/6/2014
|
|
−
|
|
−
|
|
50,000
|
|
–
|
|
1.24
|
|
7/6/2014
|
|
−
|
|
−
|
|
50,000
|
|
–
|
|
3.51
|
|
7/6/2014
|
|
−
|
|
−
|
Jason
Rifkin
|
33,333
|
|
16,667
|
|
4.52
|
|
6/1/2012
|
|
−
|
|
−
|
|
20,000
|
|
–
|
|
1.88
|
|
11/30/2012
|
|
−
|
|
−
|
|
6,667
|
|
13,333
|
|
1.87
|
|
5/1/2013
|
|
−
|
|
−
|
|
25,000
|
|
–
|
|
1.43
|
|
12/15/2013
|
|
−
|
|
−
|
|
–
|
|
75,000
|
|
5.46
|
|
10/12/2019
|
|
−
|
|
−
|
Eamonn
P. Hobbs
|
50,000
|
|
–
|
|
1.23
|
|
10/14/2013
|
|
−
|
|
−
|
|
100,000
|
|
–
|
|
1.845
|
|
10/14/2013
|
|
−
|
|
−
|
|
250,000
|
|
550,000
|
|
3.36
|
|
7/6/2019
|
|
−
|
|
−
|
David
A. McDonald
|
31,251
|
|
218,749
|
|
3.92
|
|
9/14/2019
|
|
25,000
|
|
$98,000
|
Krishna
Kandarpa
|
36,000
|
|
64,000
|
|
6.09
|
|
10/20/2019
|
|
150,000
|
|
$913,500
|
Barbra
Keck
|
10,000
|
|
–
|
|
3.66
|
|
6/9/2014
|
|
−
|
|
−
|
|
–
|
|
75,000
|
|
5.46
|
|
10/12/2019
|
|
|
|
|
Options Exercises and Stock Vested in
2009. The following table provides information relating to the exercise
of stock options by, and the vesting of stock awards granted to, the named
executive officers, during the fiscal year ended December 31, 2009.
|
|
|
|
Name
|
Number
of Shares
Acquired
on Exercise
|
|
Value
Realized on Exercise
|
|
Number
of Shares Acquired on Vesting (#)
|
|
Value
Realized on Vesting ($)
|
Richard
Taney
|
–
|
|
–
|
|
25,000
|
|
$
87,750
|
Jason
Rifkin
|
–
|
|
–
|
|
–
|
|
–
|
Eamonn
P. Hobbs
|
–
|
|
–
|
|
–
|
|
–
|
David
A. McDonald
|
–
|
|
–
|
|
–
|
|
–
|
Krishna
Kandarpa
|
–
|
|
–
|
|
50,000
|
|
210,000
|
Barbra
Keck
|
–
|
|
–
|
|
–
|
|
–
|
Deferred Compensation Program.
We do not sponsor or maintain any deferred compensation programs for the benefit
of any of our named executive officers.
Employment
Agreements. The Company entered into employment agreements and
separation agreements with the named executive officers listed
below. The employment agreements provide for payments upon
termination prior to the expiration of the agreement in certain limited
circumstances and the quantitative payout amounts under these agreements are set
forth below in the section entitled “Potential Payments upon Termination or
Change of Control.”
Eamonn P.
Hobbs. On July 6, 2009, the Company entered into an employment
agreement with Mr. Hobbs which provides for his continued employment as the
Company’s President and Chief Executive Office through July 6,
2011. Mr. Hobbs’ annual base salary shall be a minimum of $425,000
and shall be reviewed annually by the Compensation Committee. He is
eligible to receive an annual cash bonus based on the satisfaction of
performance objectives (which may include corporate, business unit or division,
financial, strategic, individual or other objectives) reasonably established by
the Compensation Committee at a target level of 50% of Mr. Hobbs’ total base
salary. No incentive bonus shall be paid unless the performance
objectives are satisfied and no bonus shall be paid in any year in which Mr.
Hobbs is terminated for “cause” on or prior to the bonus payment date. As
described above, the Compensation Committee determined that a pro rata portion
of Mr. Hobbs’ annual bonus was earned in 2009 ($100,000) in consideration of Mr.
Hobbs individual efforts, knowledge, business and operational expertise and
experience in the healthcare industry and his outstanding job performance, which
were key to the Company’s achievement of certain goals and objectives in
furtherance of its growth and development in the industry. Mr. Hobbs’ employment
agreement also provides for an option to purchase 850,000 shares of the
Company’s common stock, subject to forfeiture in the event of certain
circumstances and acceleration upon achieving certain Company performance
milestones, a change of control (as defined in the 2009 Plan) or involuntary
termination. He received a special one-time starting bonus for
$175,000 to cover relocation and tax-gross up expenses, which is subject to
claw-back in certain circumstances. Mr. Hobbs is also entitled to
vacation, retirement, welfare and insurance benefits.
Pursuant
to the terms of his employment agreement, in the event that Mr. Hobbs’
employment is terminated by the Company without “cause” or by Mr. Hobbs for
“good reason” (referred to in the agreement as “Involuntary Termination”) he is
entitled to receive, subject to tax withholding and other authorized deductions,
his base salary for the greater of: (i) 12 months or (ii) if termination occurs
before July 6, 2011, the period of time between termination and July 6, 2011, as
well as a performance bonus for the bonus year in which termination occurred to
the extent performance goals have been met; any bonus would be pro-rated for the
portion of the bonus year during which he was employed. This
severance benefit is to be paid in substantially equal installments in
accordance with the Company’s standard payroll practices over a period of 12
months. Certain of the options awarded to Mr. Hobbs will also vest
immediately upon an Involuntary Termination occurring after July 6, 2010 or upon
a Change in Control (as defined in the 2009 Plan); if Mr. Hobbs’ employment
terminates as a result of an Involuntary Termination before July 6, 2010,
partial vesting will occur. Mr. Hobbs is obligated to execute a
general release as a condition of receiving the severance payments and Mr. Hobbs
is restricted from competing with the Company during the 12 month period he is
receiving severance pay.
Mr. Hobbs
has agreed to preserve all confidential and proprietary information relating to
the Company's business and to refrain from disparaging the Company and its
affiliates during the term of his employment and thereafter. In addition, Mr.
Hobbs has agreed to non-solicitation provisions regarding employees,
consultants, and customers for a period of two years after the severance
date. If Mr. Hobbs breaches his obligations, the Company is no longer
obligated to pay any remaining portion of the severance amount (except for
$5,000 which shall be paid in the event Mr. Hobbs signs the required
release).
Mr. Hobbs
has the right to terminate the employment agreement at his sole discretion, upon
90 days written notice, in which case he shall be entitled to receive his base
salary to the date of termination. He also has the right to terminate
the employment agreement immediately for good reason and shall be entitled to
the severance benefits set forth above. In the event of Mr. Hobbs’
death or the Company’s termination of his employment on account of disability
(defined as his inability to perform essential functions of his employment for a
period of 90 days in any 180-day period on account of mental or physical
impairment), he is entitled to receive his unpaid base salary to the date of
termination and any reimbursements for business expenses due at
termination. If the Company terminates Mr. Hobbs’ employment for
“cause” he shall receive only his unpaid base salary to the date of
termination.
Under Mr.
Hobbs’ employment agreement, “cause” generally means (i) commission of a felony,
(ii) engaging in acts of fraud, dishonesty, gross negligence or other criminal
misconduct including abuse of controlled substances, that is injurious to the
Company, its affiliates or any of their customers, clients or employees, (iii)
willful failure to perform or uphold his duties under the agreement and/or
willful failure to comply with reasonable directives of the Board, or (iv) any
breach of any provision of the confidentiality, non-solicitation,
non-competition and non-disparagement provisions, or any material breach of any
other contract to which Mr. Hobbs is a party to with the Company or any of its
affiliates including the Code of Ethics or another material written
policy. “Good Reason” generally means a termination of his employment
by means of resignation by Mr. Hobbs after the occurrence (without his consent)
of any one or more of the following conditions: (i) a material diminution in Mr.
Hobbs rate of base salary, (ii) a material diminution in his authority, duties,
or responsibilities, (iii) a material change in the geographic location of Mr.
Hobbs’ principal office with the Company (for this purpose, in no event shall a
relocation of such office to a new location that is not more than 50 miles from
the current location of the Company’s executive offices constitute a “material
change”), or (iv) a material breach by the Company of the employment
agreement.
David A.
McDonald. On September 13, 2009, the Company entered into an
employment agreement with Mr. McDonald which provides for his continued
employment as the Company’s Chief Financial Officer through September 13,
2011. Mr. McDonald’s annual base salary shall be a minimum of
$325,000. He is eligible to receive an annual cash bonus based on the
satisfaction of performance objectives (which may include corporate, business
unit or division, financial, strategic, individual or other objectives)
reasonably established by the Compensation Committee at a target level of 30% of
Mr. McDonald’s total base salary. No incentive bonus shall be paid
unless the performance objectives are satisfied and no bonus shall be paid in
any year in which Mr. McDonald is terminated for “cause” on or prior to the
bonus payment date. As described above, the Compensation Committee determined
that a pro rata portion of Mr. McDonald’s annual bonus was earned in 2009
($30,000) in consideration of Mr. McDonald’s individual efforts, knowledge,
financial expertise and experience in the healthcare industry and his
outstanding job performance, which were key to the Company’s achievement of
certain goals and objectives in furtherance of its growth and development in the
industry. His employment agreement also provides for an option to purchase
250,000 shares of the Company’s common stock and the grant of 50,000 shares of
restricted stock. He received a special one-time starting bonus for
$125,000 to cover relocation expenses, which is subject to claw-back in certain
circumstances. Mr. McDonald is also entitled to vacation, retirement,
welfare and insurance benefits.
Pursuant
to the terms of his employment agreement, in the event that Mr. McDonald’s
employment is terminated by the Company without “cause” or by Mr. McDonald for
“good reason” (referred to in the agreement as “Involuntary Termination”) he is
entitled to receive, subject to tax withholding and other authorized deductions,
his base salary for 12 months. This severance benefit is to be paid
in substantially equal installments in accordance with the Company’s standard
payroll practices over a period of 12 months. Under the terms of the
stock option grant letter, dated September 14, 2009, if Mr. McDonald is
terminated for cause, his options will terminate on the date of
termination. If he resigns or is terminated without cause, the
options shall terminate 90 days after termination. If Mr. McDonald
dies or becomes disabled, his options will terminate one year after the date of
termination. Mr. McDonald is obligated to execute a general release
as a condition of receiving the severance payments and he restricted from
competing with the Company during the 12 month period he is receiving severance
pay.
Mr.
McDonald has agreed to preserve all confidential and proprietary information
relating to the Company's business and to refrain from disparaging the Company
and its affiliates during the term of his employment and thereafter. In
addition, Mr. McDonald has agreed to non-solicitation provisions regarding
employees, consultants, and customers for a period of two years after the
severance date. If Mr. McDonald breaches his obligations, the Company
is no longer obligated to pay any remaining portion of the severance amount
(except for $5,000 which shall be paid in the event Mr. McDonald signs the
required release).
Mr.
McDonald has the right to terminate the employment agreement at his sole
discretion, upon 90 days written notice, in which case he shall be entitled to
receive his base salary to the date of termination. He also has the
right to terminate the employment agreement immediately for good reason and
shall be entitled to the severance benefits set forth above. In the event of Mr.
McDonald’s death or the Company’s termination of his employment on account of
disability (defined as his inability to perform essential functions of his
employment for a period of 90 days in any 180-day period on account of mental or
physical impairment), he is entitled to receive his unpaid base salary to the
date of termination and any reimbursements for business expenses due at
termination. If the Company terminates Mr. McDonald’s employment for
“cause” he shall receive only his unpaid base salary to the date of
termination.
Under Mr.
McDonald’s employment agreement, “cause” generally means (i) commission of a
felony, (ii) engaging in acts of fraud, dishonesty, gross negligence or other
criminal misconduct including abuse of controlled substances, that is injurious
to the Company, its affiliates or any of their customers, clients or employees,
(iii) willful failure to perform or uphold his duties under the agreement and/or
willful failure to comply with reasonable directives of the Board, or (iv) any
breach of any provision of the confidentiality, non-solicitation,
non-competition and non-disparagement provisions, or any material breach of any
other contract to which Mr. McDonald is a party to with the Company or any of
its affiliates including the Code of Ethics or another material written
policy. “Good Reason” generally means a termination of his employment
by means of resignation by Mr. McDonald after the occurrence (without his
consent) of any one or more of the following conditions: (i) a material
diminution in Mr. McDonald rate of base salary, (ii) a material diminution in
his authority, duties, or responsibilities, (iii) a material change in the
geographic location of Mr. McDonald principal office with the Company (for this
purpose, in no event shall a relocation of such office to a new location that is
not more than 50 miles from the current location of the Company’s executive
offices constitute a “material change”), or (iv) a material breach by the
Company of the employment agreement.
Dr. Krishna
Kandarpa. On September 25, 2009, the Company entered into an
employment agreement with Dr. Kandarpa which provides for his employment through
September 25, 2011. Dr. Kandarpa’s annual base salary shall be a minimum of
$375,000 and shall be reviewed annually by either the CEO or the Compensation
Committee. He is eligible to receive an annual cash bonus based on
the satisfaction of performance objectives (which may include corporate,
business unit or division, financial, strategic, individual or other objectives)
reasonably established by the Compensation Committee at a target level of 35% of
Dr. Kandarpa’s total base salary. As described above, the
Compensation Committee determined that a pro rata portion of Dr. Kandarpa’s
annual bonus was earned in 2009 ($23,500) in consideration of Dr. Kandarpa’s
individual efforts, knowledge, medical expertise and experience in the
healthcare industry and his outstanding job performance, which were key to the
Company’s achievement of certain goals objectives in furtherance of its growth
and development in the industry.
Dr.
Kandarpa is also entitled to a minimum annual stock option bonus to purchase
50,000 shares of the Company’s stock. His employment agreement also provides for
an option to purchase 100,000 shares of the Company’s common stock, subject to
forfeiture in the event of certain circumstances and acceleration upon achieving
certain Company performance milestones, a change in control or involuntary
termination and 200,000 shares of restricted stock. He received a
special one-time starting bonus for $100,000 to cover relocation expenses, which
is subject to claw-back in certain circumstances. Dr. Kandarpa is
also entitled to vacation, retirement, welfare and insurance
benefits.
Pursuant
to the terms of his employment agreement, in the event that Dr. Kandarpa’s
employment is terminated by the Company without “cause” or by Dr. Kandarpa for
“good reason” (referred to in the agreement as “Involuntary Termination”) he is
entitled to receive, subject to tax withholding and other authorized deductions,
his base salary for the greater of: (i) 12 months or (ii) if termination occurs
before September 30, 2011, the period of time between termination and September
30, 2011, as well as a performance bonus and annual minimum stock option bonus
or the bonus year in which termination occurred to the extent performance goals
have been met; any bonus would be pro-rated for the portion of the bonus year
during which he was employed. This severance benefit is to be paid in
substantially equal installments in accordance with the Company’s standard
payroll practices over a period of 12 months. Under the terms of the
stock option grant letter, dated October 20, 2009, if Dr. Kandarpa is terminated
for cause, his options will terminate on the date of termination. If
he resigns or is terminated without cause, the options shall terminate 90 days
after termination. If Dr. Kandarpa dies or becomes disabled, his
options will terminate one year after the date of termination. Dr.
Kandarpa is obligated to execute a general release as a condition of receiving
the severance payments and he is restricted from competing with the Company
during the 12 month period he is receiving severance pay.
Dr.
Kandarpa has agreed to preserve all confidential and proprietary information
relating to the Company's business and to refrain from disparaging the Company
and its affiliates during the term of his employment and
thereafter. In addition, Dr. Kandarpa has agreed to non-solicitation
of employees, consultants, and customers for a period of two years after the
severance date. If Dr. Kandarpa breaches his obligations, the Company
is no longer obligated to pay any remaining portion of the severance amount
(except for $5,000 which shall be paid in the event Dr. Kandarpa signs the
required release).
Dr.
Kandarpa has the right to terminate the employment agreement at his sole
discretion, upon 90 days written notice, in which case he shall be entitled to
receive his base salary to the date of termination. He also has the
right to terminate the employment agreement immediately for good reason and
shall be entitled to the severance benefits set forth above. In the event of Dr.
Kandarpa’s death or the Company’s termination of his employment on account of
disability (defined as his inability to perform essential functions of his
employment for a period of 90 days in any 180-day period on account of mental or
physical impairment), he is entitled to receive his unpaid base salary to the
date of termination and any reimbursements for business expenses due at
termination. If the Company terminates Dr. Kandarpa employment for
“cause” he shall receive only his unpaid base salary to the date of
termination.
Under Dr.
Kandarpa’s employment agreement, “cause” generally means (i) commission of a
felony, (ii) engaging in acts of fraud, dishonesty, gross negligence or other
criminal misconduct including abuse of controlled substances, that is injurious
to the Company, its affiliates or any of their customers, clients or employees,
(iii) willful failure to perform or uphold his duties under the agreement and/or
willful failure to comply with reasonable directives of the Board, or (iv) any
breach of any provision of the confidentiality, non-solicitation,
non-competition and non-disparagement provisions, or any material breach of any
other contract to which Dr. Kandarpa is a party to with the Company or any of
its affiliates including the Code of Ethics or another material written
policy. “Good Reason” generally means a termination of his employment
by means of resignation by Dr. Kandarpa after the occurrence (without his
consent) of any one or more of the following conditions: (i) a material
diminution in Dr. Kandarpa rate of base salary, (ii) a material diminution in
his authority, duties, or responsibilities, (iii) a material change in the
geographic location of Dr. Kandarpa’s principal office with the Company (for
this purpose, in no event shall a relocation of such office to a new location
that is not more than 50 miles from the current location of the Company’s
executive offices constitute a “material change”), or (iv) a material breach by
the Company of the employment agreement.
Richard L.
Taney. On July 2, 2007, the Company entered into an employment
agreement with Mr. Taney, which provided for Mr. Taney to serve the Company as
its Chief Executive Officer through July 1, 2009, with an automatic one year
renewal unless Mr. Taney gave at least 90 days notice of
non-renewal. Mr. Taney resigned from employment with the Company as
of July 6, 2009. The Company entered into a separation and general
release agreement with Mr. Taney on July 5, 2009, which provided for a cash
severance payment of $396,000 and a bonus payment of $80,000 paid in a lump sum
and the vesting of outstanding stock options. For a period of 12
months, the Company will pay the entire premium due for Mr. Taney’s continued
participation in the Company’s medical and dental plans under
COBRA. Mr. Taney granted the Company a general release as a condition
to the severance benefits. Under his employment agreement, Mr. Taney has agreed
to preserve all confidential and proprietary information relating to the
Company's business and to non-competition and non-solicitation provisions for a
period of one year after employment.
Potential Payments upon Termination
or Change of Control. As set forth in the section entitled
“Employment Agreements,” Messrs. Hobbs and McDonald and Dr. Kandarpa are each
eligible to receive termination payments in the event of an Involuntary
Termination. By way of example, if either Mr. Hobbs’, Mr. McDonald’s
or Dr. Kandarpa’s employment was terminated as a result of an Involuntary
Termination on December 31, 2009, he would have been entitled to a
post-termination payment, payable in cash, in the amount of: $644,582, $325,000,
and $651,025, pursuant to the terms of their respective employment agreements,
plus accelerated vesting of any outstanding equity grants awarded to either Mr.
Hobbs, Mr. McDonald or Dr. Kandarpa, as the case may be. The post-termination
payments would be made in substantially equal installments in accordance with
the Company’s standard payroll practices over a period of 12 months, and the
executive (as applicable) would be subject to post-termination covenants
contained in his employment agreement. Further, in the event either
Mr. Hobbs or Dr. Kandarpa were terminated on December 31, 2009 as a result of a
change of control (as defined in the 2009 Plan), Mr. Hobbs or Dr. Kandarpa (as
applicable) would be entitled to accelerated vesting of any outstanding equity
grants awarded to him. In addition to the post-termination payments and
accelerated vesting of equity grants, if applicable, each of the executives
would be entitled to welfare and insurance benefits to the extent such benefits
are provided on a nondiscriminatory basis to salaried employees generally upon
termination of employment, including accrued salary and vacation pay, and
distribution of plan balances under the Company’s 401(k) Plan. The
Company is not obligated to pay any excise tax gross-up amounts under any
employment agreements.
Mr. Taney
resigned effective July 6, 2009 and is not entitled to post-termination payments
or benefits. Ms. Keck and Mr. Rifkin are not entitled to any
post-termination benefits (other than receipt of benefits otherwise due
terminated employees under group insurance coverage consistent with the terms of
the Company’s welfare benefit plan, continued health care coverage under COBRA,
and receipt of benefits otherwise due in accordance with the Company’s 401(k)
Plan).
REPORT
OF THE AUDIT COMMITTEE
The Audit
Committee reviewed and discussed the Company’s audited financial statements for
the fiscal year ended December 31, 2009 with management and CCR LLP, the
Company’s independent registered public accounting firm for the fiscal year
ended December 31, 2009. The Audit Committee also discussed with CCR
LLP the matters required to be discussed by the Statement on Auditing Standards
No. 61, as amended, as adopted by the Public Company Accounting Oversight
Board in Rule 3200T regarding “Communication with Audit
Committees”. The Audit Committee has received and reviewed the
written disclosures and the letter from CCR LLP required by applicable
requirements of the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board regarding CCR
LLP’s communications with the Audit Committee concerning independence, and has
discussed with CCR LLP its independence from the Company.
Based on
the review and discussions referred to above, the Audit Committee recommended to
the Board of Directors that the Company’s audited financial statements be
included in the Company’s Annual Report on Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended
December 31, 2009 for filing with the Securities and Exchange
Commission.
Submitted
by the Audit Committee of the Board of Directors,
Laura A.
Philips, Chair
Harold S.
Koplewicz, M.D.
Robert B.
Ladd
RATIFICATION
OF THE APPOINTMENT OF
INDEPENDENT
REGISTERED PUBLIC ACCOUNTING FIRM
(PROPOSAL
TWO)
The Audit
Committee has approved Ernst & Young LLP to serve as the Company’s
independent registered public accounting firm for the year ending December 31,
2010. If our stockholders fail to ratify this appointment, the Audit Committee
will reconsider whether to retain Ernst & Young LLP and may retain that firm
or another firm without resubmitting the matter to our stockholders. Even if the
appointment is ratified, the Audit Committee may, in its discretion, direct the
appointment of a different independent auditor at anytime during the year if it
determines that such change would be in the Company’s best interests and in the
best interests of our stockholders.
CCR LLP served as the Company’s
independent registered public accounting firm for the fiscal year ended December
31, 2009. On March 2, 2010, the Company filed a Current Report on
Form 8-K announcing that on February 26, 2010, it had dismissed CCR LLP as its independent
registered public accounting firm, and that on March 1, 2010, it had engaged
Ernst & Young LLP as the Company’s new independent registered public
accounting firm for the fiscal year ending December 31, 2010. In our previously
filed Current Report on Form 8-K, we advised that:
·
CCR LLP’s reports on the
Company's financial statements for the Company’s fiscal years ended December 31,
2009 and December 31, 2008 did not contain an adverse opinion or disclaimer of
opinion, nor were they qualified or modified as to uncertainty, audit scope or
accounting principles;
·
During the Company’s two
most recent fiscal years ended December 31, 2009 and December 31, 2008 and the
subsequent interim period preceding the dismissal of CCR LLP, there were no
disagreements with CCR LLP on any matter of accounting principles or practices,
financial statement disclosure, or auditing scope or procedure, which
disagreement(s), if not resolved to CCR LLP’s satisfaction, would have caused
CCR LLP to make reference to the subject matter of the disagreement(s) in
connection with its report on the Company's financial statements for such years.
None of the reportable events described under Item 304(a)(1)(v) of Regulation
S-K occurred within the Company's two most recent fiscal years and the
subsequent interim period preceding CCR LLP’s dismissal; and
·
During the Company’s two
most recent fiscal years ended December 31, 2009 and December 31, 2008, and
through the date of the engagement of Ernst & Young LLP, the Company did not
consult Ernst & Young LLP with respect to the application of accounting
principles to a specified transaction, either completed or proposed, or the type
of audit opinion that might be rendered on the Company's financial statements,
or regarding any other matters or reportable events described under Item
304(a)(2)(i) and (ii) of Regulation S-K.
The Company’s change in independent
registered public accounting firms was approved by the Company’s Audit
Committee. As disclosed in the Company’s previously filed Current
Report on Form 8-K, CCR LLP was provided with a copy of the disclosures in the
preceding paragraphs, and a letter from CCR LLP to the Securities and Exchange
Commission dated March 2, 2010, stating its agreement with these
statements, was filed as Exhibit 16.1 to that Current
Report.
Representatives of Ernst & Young LLP
are expected to be present at the Annual Meeting and will be available to
respond to questions. Representatives of CCR LLP will not attend our
Annual Meeting.
THE
BOARD OF DIRECTORS RECOMMENDS A VOTE “FOR” THE RATIFICATION OF THE APPOINTMENT
OF ERNST & YOUNG LLP AS THE COMPANY’S
INDEPENDENT REGISTERED PUBLIC ACCOUNTING FIRM FOR 2010.
|
|
|
|
|
|
2009
|
|
|
2008
|
|
Audit
Fees
|
|
|
$123,100 |
|
|
|
$119,500 |
|
Audit-Related
Fees
|
|
|
$53,100 |
|
|
|
$0 |
|
Tax
Fees
|
|
|
$0 |
|
|
|
$0 |
|
Total
|
|
|
$176,200 |
|
|
|
$119,500 |
|
Audit Fees.
Fees for professional services in connection with the audit of the
Company’s annual financial statements and internal control over financial
reporting, and reviews of the Company’s quarterly financial
statements.
Audit-Related
Fees. The Audit-Related Fees during the fiscal year ended December 31,
2009 are related to the Company’s registration statement on Form S-3 and related
prospectuses for offering of the Company’s common stock and costs of due
diligence for the Company’s financings. During the fiscal year ended December
31, 2008, CCR LLP did not provide any audit-related services to the Company not
included in “Audit Fees”.
Tax
Fees. Tax fees include fees for tax
compliance, tax advice, and tax planning. During the fiscal years
ended December 31, 2009 and 2008, CCR LLP did not provide any tax services to
the Company.
All Other
Fees. During
the fiscal years ended December 31, 2009 and 2008, CCR LLP did not provide any
services to the Company other than those described above.
Policy on Audit Committee
Pre-Approval of Audit and Permissible Non-Audit Services of Independent
Auditors. The Audit Committee pre-approves all audit and non-audit
services provided by the independent auditors prior to the engagement of the
independent auditors with respect to such services. The Chair of the Audit
Committee has been delegated the authority by the committee to pre-approve
interim services by the Company’s independent auditors other than the annual
audit. The Chair must report all such pre-approvals to the entire Audit
Committee at the next Committee meeting.
SECTION
16(a) BENEFICIAL OWNERSHIP REPORTING COMPLIANCE
Section
16(a) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended, requires our directors
and officers, and persons who are beneficial owners of more than 10% of our
common stock to file with the Securities and Exchange Commission reports of
holdings and changes in beneficial ownership of the Company’s equity
securities. Based on a review of copies of reports furnished to the
Company or written representations that no reports were required, we believe that all reports were timely
filed in 2009, except Mr. Taney who had two late Form 4s, one reporting the
grant of restricted stock and stock options and the other reporting the grant of
restricted stock, Mr. Ladd who had one late Form 4 reporting one sale
transaction, and Ms. Contag, Ms. Keck and Mr. Rifkin who each had a late Form
3.
APPROVAL
OF AN AMENDMENT TO THE 2009 STOCK INCENTIVE PLAN
(PROPOSAL
THREE)
The
purpose of the increase in authorized shares is to secure adequate shares to
fund expected awards under the Company’s long-term incentive program, which is
intended to promote the interests of Delcath through grants of awards to
employees, directors and consultants in order to: (i) attract and retain
employees, directors and consultants; (ii) provide an additional incentive to
each award holder to work to increase the value of Delcath’s stock; and (iii)
provide each award holder with a stake in the future of Delcath that strengthens
the mutuality of interests between such award holder and Delcath’s
stockholders.
The Board
believes that the 2,200,000 additional shares represents a reasonable amount of
potential equity dilution and allows the Company to continue awarding stock
options, restricted stock, and other equity incentive awards, which are an
important component of Delcath’s overall compensation program. As of
March 22, 2010, only 165,424 shares remained available for grant of future
equity awards under the 2009 Plan. It is the Company’s intention that
over the next three fiscal years, beginning with fiscal 2010, it will not grant
equity awards under the 2009 Plan at an average rate greater than 4% (based on
the average of the 2009 and 2010 allowable industry standard annual burn rates)
of the number of shares of our common stock that we believe will be outstanding
over such three year period. For purposes of calculating the number of shares
granted in a year, any full value awards will count as more than 1 based on the
Company's stock price volatility factor.
In
connection with the Board’s review of the 2009 Plan, and approval of the
proposed amendment to the 2009 Plan that is the subject of this proposal for
which stockholder approval is being sought, our Board also approved and effected
(as of March 25, 2010) certain other non-material, clarifying amendments to the
2009 Plan. The following summary
describes material features of the 2009 Plan as amended. The summary
is qualified in its entirety by the full text of the 2009 Plan, which is
included as Appendix
A to this Proxy Statement
and reflects the proposal and the Board’s amendments.
Description of the 2009 Plan (as
amended)
Purpose. The purpose of the 2009 Plan is to
enable the Company to attract and retain employees, directors, and consultants
by providing them with an additional incentive to increase the value of Delcath
stock and thereby strengthen the mutuality of interests between award holders
and our stockholders.
Eligibility. Awards may be granted to
current and prospective directors of the Company as well as current and
prospective employees and consultants of the Company and its
subsidiaries.
Administration. The 2009 Plan is
administered by the Compensation and Stock Option Committee of the Board,
consisting of non-employee directors (the “Committee”), except that the full
Board administers the 2009 Plan as it relates to awards to non-employee
directors. (References to the Committee in this description include
the Board with respect to non-employee director awards.) The
Committee is authorized by the 2009 Plan to establish rules and guidelines for
the administration of the plan; select the individuals to whom awards are
granted; determine the types of awards to be granted and the number of shares or
amount of cash covered by such awards; set the terms and conditions of such
awards; amend awards; interpret the plan and award documents; and make all
determinations necessary for the administration of the plan. The
Committee may delegate to a committee of two or more officers the authority to
grant awards other than to executive officers and directors.
Shares
Available for Awards. Prior to the requested increase, the 2009
Plan authorizes 2,000,000 shares to be issued. If the
stockholders approve the requested increase, 4,200,000 shares of Delcath common
stock will be available for issuance under the 2009 Plan. In addition, any
shares previously authorized for grant under the Company’s 2004 Stock Incentive
Plan that remained available for grant on the effective date of the 2009 Plan
(June 9, 2009) or that subsequently become available as a result of forfeitures
will be rolled over in the 2009 Plan. If any shares covered by an
award under the 2009 Plan are forfeited or an award is settled in cash or
otherwise terminated without delivery of shares, then the shares covered by that
award will again be available for future awards under the 2009
Plan. Shares withheld from awards for the payment of tax withholding
obligations, shares surrendered to pay the exercise price of stock options, and
shares that were not issued as a result of the net exercise of stock options
will also become available for future awards under the 2009 Plan. With respect to the issuance of stock
appreciation rights (“SARs”) that may be settled in shares of Delcath common
stock, the number of shares available for future awards under the 2009 Plan will
be reduced by the total number of shares of common stock as to which a SAR is
granted. No
individual may be granted any combination of stock options, SARs, restricted
stock, restricted stock units (“RSUs”), or other stock-based awards with respect
to more than 500,000 shares in any fiscal year. The 2009 Plan limits
do not apply to any shares that may be issued under awards assumed by the
Company in a corporate acquisition.
Stock
Options and Stock Appreciation Rights. The Committee may award
stock options (which may be nonqualified options or incentive stock options) or
stock appreciation rights, each with a maximum term of ten
years. Each stock option or SAR must have an exercise price not less
than the fair market value of the Company’s stock on the date of
grant. Unless approved by the stockholders, the Committee
shall have no power to amend the terms of outstanding stock options or SARs to
reduce the option price or base price of such awards or to cancel or surrender
outstanding stock options or SARs and grant substitute cash or other awards or
stock options or SARs with a lower option price or base price than the cancelled
awards. The Committee will
establish the vesting schedule for the award as well as the method of payment of
the option exercise price, which may include cash, shares, broker-assisted
cashless exercise, and net exercise. Prior to the requested increase, no more
than 2,000,000 shares may
be issued with respect to incentive stock options. If the stockholders approve
the requested increase, the limit on shares available for issuance with respect
to incentive stock options will be increased to 4,200,000.
Restricted
Stock and Restricted Stock Units. The Committee may award restricted
stock and RSUs and establish the conditions on which they vest, which may
include continued employment and/or satisfaction of performance
objectives. The Committee may provide for payment of an RSU award
upon vesting or at a later date. The Committee may determine whether
unvested awards entitle the holder to receive dividends or dividend equivalents,
and if so, the terms on which such amounts will be paid.
Other
Stock-Based Awards. The Committee may grant other
stock-based awards that are denominated or payable in shares or valued in whole
or in part by reference to shares, under such terms and conditions as the
Committee may determine, including a grant of fully vested
shares.
Cash
Awards. The Committee may grant cash awards that
entitle the award holder to receive cash upon the satisfaction of performance
objectives and other terms and conditions set forth in the award. The
performance objectives and amount of the award may be stated as a range of
amounts payable upon attainment of specified levels of satisfaction of the
performance objectives, and may relate to performance periods of one year or
multiple years. The Committee may provide for payment of the award at
the end of the performance period or at a later date, and may provide for
dividend equivalents or other earnings to be credited on deferred
amounts. The maximum cash award that may be paid to any individual in
any fiscal year (measured at the end of the performance period ending in the
fiscal year, and without regard to increase in value of the award during any
deferral period) is $500,000.
Performance
Awards. The
Committee may designate any restricted stock, RSU, other stock-based awards, or
cash awards under the 2009 Plan as performance awards which are intended to
qualify as “performance-based compensation” under Section 162(m) of the
Code. The grant or vesting of such performance awards will require
the achievement of performance goals during performance periods, as specified by
the Committee in accordance with Section 162(m). Performance awards
may be based on any one or more of the following performance measures, which may
be applied to the Company as a whole or to a subsidiary, business unit, business
segment or business line:
|
(1)
|
Net earnings or net income (before
or after taxes);
|
|
(3)
|
Net sales or revenue
growth;
|
|
(4)
|
Gross revenues (and/or gross
revenue growth) and/or mix of revenues among the Company’s business
activities;
|
|
(5)
|
Net operating profit (or reduction
in operating loss);
|
|
(6)
|
Return measures (including, but
not limited to, return on assets, capital, invested capital, equity,
sales, or revenue);
|
|
(7)
|
Cash flow (including, but not
limited to, operating cash flow, free cash flow, cash flow return on
equity, and cash flow return on
investment);
|
|
(8)
|
Earnings before or after taxes,
interest, depreciation, amortization, and/or other non-cash
items;
|
|
(9)
|
Gross or operating
margins;
|
|
(10)
|
Productivity ratios (and/or such
ratios as compared to various stock market
indices);
|
|
(11)
|
Stock price (including, but not
limited to, growth measures and total shareholder
return);
|
|
(12)
|
Stock price and market
capitalization ratios (including, but not limited to, price-to-earnings
ratio and enterprise
multiple);
|
|
(13)
|
Expense targets (including, but
not limited to, expenses-to-sales
ratios);
|
|
(15)
|
Operating
efficiency;
|
|
(17)
|
Customer
satisfaction;
|
|
(18)
|
Employee satisfaction or
retention;
|
|
(19)
|
Development and implementation of
employee or executive development programs (including, but not limited to,
succession programs);
|
|
(20)
|
Working capital
targets;
|
|
(21)
|
Economic value
added;
|
|
(23)
|
Debt to equity
ratio;
|
|
(24)
|
Strategic business goals relating
to acquisitions, divestitures and joint
ventures;
|
|
(25)
|
Attaining specified clinical,
trial site initiation or patient enrollment
targets;
|
|
(26)
|
Filing of the Company’s PMA
application to the Food and Drug
Administration;
|
|
(27)
|
Obtaining regulatory approvals,
including of the Company’s PHP System in the United States or other
countries;
|
|
(28)
|
Sale of the
Company;
|
|
(29)
|
Consummating a specified equity
based capital offering;
|
|
(30)
|
Reaching specified technology
development objectives; and
|
|
(31)
|
Reaching specified employment
time-points governed by an employment
agreement.
|
Each goal may be expressed as an
absolute measure, as a measure of improvement relative to prior performance, or
as a measure of comparable performance relative to a peer group of companies or
published or special index.
Change
in Control. The
Committee may provide that awards will become fully or partially vested upon a
change in control and may provide that awards will be paid as soon afterwards as
permitted under the tax laws. A change in control is deemed to occur
in very general terms upon (1) the acquisition of 50% or more of the
Company’s voting securities, (2) the failure of the current directors (and
any directors approved by them) to constitute a majority of the Company’s Board,
(3) a merger in which the Company’s stockholders before the transaction
fail to own at least a majority of the voting power of the surviving corporation
or the Company’s directors fail to constitute at least a majority of the board
of the surviving corporation, (4) the sale of substantially all of the
Company’s assets, and (5) stockholder approval of the liquidation of the
Company.
Adjustments. In the event of certain corporate
transactions or events affecting the number or type of outstanding common shares
of the Company, including, for example, a recapitalization, stock split, reverse
stock split, reorganization, merger, spin-off or distribution of assets, if the
Committee determines that certain adjustments are required in order to prevent
dilution or enlargement of benefits intended to be made available under the 2009
Plan, the Committee is required to make such adjustments. These
adjustments include changing the number and class of shares available under the
Plan; and changing the number and class of shares subject to outstanding awards
and the price of shares subject to outstanding awards.
Amendment
and Termination. The Board may amend the 2009
Plan from time to time. The Board will seek stockholder approval of
material amendments to the 2009 Plan as may be required by law, regulation or
stock exchange rules. The Committee may waive conditions or amend the terms of
outstanding awards, subject to certain limitations. No award may be
granted under the 2009 Plan after the tenth anniversary of stockholder approval
of the 2009 Plan unless the 2009 Plan has been re-approved by the Company’s
stockholders prior to such date. No performance award may be granted
after the Company’s annual meeting held in 2014 unless the performance
objectives and other 2009 Plan provisions that require approval under Section
162(m) of the Code have been re-approved by the Company’s stockholders prior to
such date.
Federal Income Tax
Consequences. The following is a summary of certain federal
income tax consequences of certain types of awards that may be made under the
2009 Plan, as amended.
Stock
options. No income is recognized by the award holder at the time of grant
of a non-qualified stock option. Upon exercise of the option, the holder
recognizes ordinary income in an amount equal to the excess of the fair market
value of the shares on the date of exercise over the exercise price. At
disposition of the shares, any appreciation after the date of exercise is
treated as capital gain. An employee generally will not recognize income upon
the grant of an ISO or upon its exercise while an employee (or within specified
times thereafter). However the “spread” between the fair market value of the
shares at the time of exercise and the exercise price may be subject to the
alternative minimum tax. If the shares received upon exercise are held for the
applicable holding period, the optionee will recognize capital gain or loss when
he/she disposes of the shares. Such gain or loss will be measured by the
difference between the exercise price and the amount received for the shares at
the time of disposition. If the shares acquired upon exercise of an ISO are
disposed of before the end of the applicable holding period, the optionee will
recognize ordinary income in an amount generally equal to the lesser of (i) the
excess of the value of the shares on the option exercise date over the exercise
price or (ii) the excess of the amount received upon disposition of the shares
over the exercise price. Any excess of the amount received upon disposition of
the shares over the value of the shares on the exercise date will be taxed to
the optionee as capital gain.
Other
awards. A recipient of SARs
will generally recognize ordinary income at the time of exercise of the SAR in
an amount equal to the fair market value of any shares received plus the amount
of cash received. A recipient of restricted stock generally will recognize
ordinary income at the time the award is no longer subject to a substantial risk
of forfeiture, in an amount equal to the fair market value of the stock at such
time (less any amount paid for the stock). A recipient of RSUs generally will
recognize ordinary income equal to the amount of cash or the fair market value
(on the delivery date) of the stock delivered in settlement of the award. A
recipient of fully vested stock generally will recognize ordinary income on the
date of delivery of the stock in an amount equal to the fair market value of the
stock on such date. A recipient of a cash performance award or other cash
payment generally will recognize ordinary income on the date of payment. RSUs
and certain other awards will be subject to the requirements applicable to
nonqualified deferred compensation under Code Section 409A (the failure to
comply with which would subject the recipient to an additional 20% tax and
interest).
Company
Deductions. As a general
rule, the Company will be entitled to a deduction for federal income tax
purposes at the same time and in the same amount that an award holder recognizes
ordinary income from awards under the 2009 Plan, to the extent such income is
considered reasonable compensation under the Internal Revenue Code. The Company
will not, however, be entitled to a deduction with respect to payments that are
contingent upon a change in control if such payments are deemed to constitute
“excess parachute payments” under Section 280G of the Code and do not qualify as
reasonable compensation pursuant to that Section; such payments will subject the
recipients to a 20% excise tax. In addition, the Company will not be entitled to
a deduction to the extent compensation in excess of $1 million is paid to each
of certain executive officers, unless the compensation qualifies as “performance
based” under Section 162(m) of the Code. The Company intends that options and
SARs granted under the 2009 Plan will qualify as performance-based under Section
162(m). Other awards under the 2009 Plan may, but need not, qualify depending on
the terms of the particular award.
THE
BOARD OF DIRECTORS RECOMMENDS A VOTE “FOR”
THE
PROPOSAL TO AMEND THE 2009 STOCK INCENTIVE PLAN.
EQUITY
COMPENSATION PLAN INFORMATION
The
following table shows shares of Delcath common stock authorized for issuance
under the Company’s equity compensation plans as of December 31,
2009.
Plan
Category
|
Number
Of Securities To Be Issued Upon Exercise Of Outstanding Options, Warrants
And Rights (a)
|
Weighted
Average Exercise Price Of Outstanding Options, Warrants And Rights
(b)
|
Number
Of Securities
Remaining
Available For Issuance Under Equity Compensation
Plans (Excluding Securities Reflected In Column (a))
(c)
|
Equity
compensation plans approved by stockholders
|
3,345,000(1)
|
$
3.72
|
245,424
(2)
|
Equity
compensation plans not approved by stockholders
|
None
|
None
|
None
|
Total
|
3,345,000
|
$
3.72
|
245,424
|
(1)
|
Includes
3,345,000 shares subject to outstanding stock options granted under the
Company’s 2009 Stock Incentive Plan and 2004 Stock Incentive Plan. Does not include
594,576 shares of restricted stock that were granted and outstanding as of
December 31, 2009.
|
(2)
|
These
shares are available for issuance under the Company’s 2009 Stock Incentive
Plan. This plan, as approved by stockholders, provides for the grant of
stock options, stock appreciation rights, restricted stock, restricted
stock units, and other stock-based
awards.
|
The last
sales price of the Company’s common stock on March 22, 2010 was $6.18 as
reported on The NASDAQ Capital Market.
STOCKHOLDER
PROPOSALS FOR THE 2011 ANNUAL MEETING
In order
for a stockholder proposal to be eligible for inclusion in the Company’s proxy
statement for the 2011 annual meeting of stockholders, the proposal must be
received by the Corporate Secretary no later than November 29, 2010, and must otherwise comply with the
requirements of Rule 14a-8(e) of the Securities Exchange Act of
1934. In addition, in order for a stockholder to present a
proposal or other matter or to nominate a person for election as a director at
the 2011 annual meeting of stockholders, the stockholder must give the Company
written notice of the proposal or other matter to be presented at the meeting by
November 29, 2010, and must otherwise comply with our amended and restated
certificate of incorporation. If the date set for the 2011 annual meeting is
more than 30 calendar days before or after May 6, 2011, such notice must instead
be received no later than 60 calendar days before the date set for such meeting.
Proposals or notices of intent to present a proposal should be addressed to the
Corporate Secretary, Delcath Systems, Inc., 600 Fifth Avenue, 23rd Floor, New
York, New York 10020, and should be sent by overnight delivery or certified
mail, return receipt requested.
ANNUAL REPORT
A copy of
the Company’s Annual Report on Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended
December 31, 2009 (without exhibits) is being distributed with this Proxy
Statement. The Annual Report on Form 10-K is also available, without charge, by
writing or telephoning Barbra Keck, Controller, Delcath Systems, Inc., 600 Fifth
Avenue, 23rd Floor, New York, New York 10020, (212) 489-2100.
New
York, New York
March
30, 2010
|
By
Order of the Board of Directors
|
|
|
|
|
|
EAMONN
P. HOBBS
President
and Chief Executive Officer
|
Appendix
A
DELCATH
SYSTEMS, INC.
2009
STOCK INCENTIVE PLAN, AS AMENDED
The
purpose of this Delcath Systems, Inc. 2009 Stock Incentive Plan, as amended, is
to promote the interests of Delcath Systems, Inc. (the “Company”) and its
Subsidiaries through grants of awards to employees, directors and consultants in
order to (i) attract and retain employees, directors and consultants, (ii)
provide an additional incentive to each award holder to work to increase the
value of Delcath stock, and (iii) provide each award holder with a stake in the
future of Delcath that strengthens the mutuality of interests between such award
holder and Delcath’s shareholders.
SECTION
2
|
Types
of Awards
|
Awards
under the Plan may be in the form of Stock Options, Stock Appreciation Rights
(SARs), Restricted Stock, Restricted Stock Units (RSUs), Other Stock-Based
Awards, and Cash Awards.
Awards
may be free-standing or granted in tandem. If two awards are granted
in tandem, the award holder may exercise (or otherwise receive the benefit of)
one award only to the extent he or she relinquishes the tandem
award.
“Beneficiary”
means an award holder’s designated beneficiary or estate, as determined under
Section 15.
“Board”
means the Board of Directors of Delcath.
“Cash
Award” means an award granted under Section 12 of the Plan.
“Delcath”
or the “Company” means Delcath Systems, Inc., a Delaware corporation, and any
successor to such corporation.
“Code”
means the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended from time to
time.
“Committee”
means (i) with respect to awards to Non-Employee Directors, the entire Board;
and (ii) with respect to all other awards, a committee of the Board designated
by the Board to administer this Plan and which shall consist of at least two
members of the Board, or if no such committee is appointed, the entire
Board.
“Consultant”
means any individual, other than an Employee or Non-Employee Director, who is
engaged by Delcath or a Subsidiary to render services, other than a person whose
services are rendered in connection with capital-raising or promoting or
maintaining a market for Delcath securities.
“Employee”
means an employee of Delcath or of any Subsidiary.
“Exchange
Act” means the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended from time to
time.
“Fair
Market Value” of the Stock means (i) if the Stock is readily tradable on an
established securities market (within the meaning of Section 409A of the Code),
the closing price for a share of Stock on such exchange or market as is
determined by the Committee to be the primary market for the Stock on the date
in question, or if the date in question is not a trading day on such market, the
closing price on such exchange or market for the trading day immediately
preceding the day in question, and (ii) otherwise, such other price as the Board
determines is appropriate after taking into account the requirements of Section
409A of the Code.
“Incentive
Stock Option” or “ISO” means a Stock Option granted under the Plan that both is
designated as an ISO and qualifies as an incentive stock option within the
meaning of Section 422 of the Code.
“Non-Employee
Director” means a member of the Board who is not an Employee.
“Non-Qualified
Option” or “NQSO” means a Stock Option granted under the Plan which either is
designated as NQSO or does not qualify as an incentive stock option within the
meaning of Section 422 of the Code.
“Other
Stock Based Award” means an award described in Section 11 of the
Plan.
“Plan”
means this Delcath Systems, Inc. 2009 Stock Incentive Plan, as amended from time
to time.
“Performance
Award” means an award granted under Section 9, 10, 11, or 12 of the Plan that
meets the requirements of Section 13 of the Plan and is intended to qualify as
“performance-based compensation” under Section 162(m) of the Code.
“Performance
Objectives” means objective measures of performance for earning an award, which
in the case of Performance Awards, shall be based on one or more of the criteria
specified in Section 13.2.
“Restricted
Stock” means an award described in Section 9 of the Plan.
“Restricted
Stock Unit” or “RSU” means an award described in Section 10 of the
Plan.
“Stock”
means common stock of Delcath, par value one cent ($.01).
“Stock
Appreciation Right” or “SAR” means an award described in Section 8 of the
Plan.
“Stock
Option” means an Incentive Stock Option or a Non-Qualified Stock
Option.
“Subsidiary”
means any corporation, partnership, joint venture, or other entity in which
Delcath owns, directly or indirectly, 50% or more of the ownership
interests.
4.1 The
Plan shall be administered by the Committee.
The
Committee shall have the following authority and discretion with respect to
awards under the Plan: to grant awards (subject to any limitations
contained in the Plan); to adopt, alter and repeal such administrative rules,
guidelines and practices governing the Plan as it shall deem advisable; to
interpret the terms and provisions of the Plan and any award granted under the
Plan; to make all factual and other determinations necessary or advisable for
the administration of the Plan; and to otherwise supervise the administration of
the Plan. In particular, and without limiting its authority and
powers, the Committee shall have the authority:
(1)
to determine whether and to what extent any award or combination of awards will
be granted hereunder and whether they will be Performance Awards;
(2) to
select the Employees, Non-Employee Directors, and Consultants to whom awards
will be granted;
(3) to
determine the number of shares of Stock to be covered by each award granted
hereunder subject to the limitations contained herein;
(4) to
determine the terms and conditions of any award granted hereunder, including,
but not limited to, any vesting or other restrictions based on such Performance
Objectives, continued employment, and such other factors as the Committee may
establish, and to determine whether the Performance Objectives and other terms
and conditions of the award have been satisfied;
(5) to
determine the treatment of awards upon an award holder’s retirement, disability,
death, termination for cause or other termination of employment or
service;
(6) to
determine whether amounts equal to the amount of any dividends declared with
respect to the number of shares covered by an award (i) will be paid to the
award holder currently, or (ii) will be deferred and deemed to be
reinvested or otherwise credited to the award holder and paid at the date
specified in the award, or (iii) that the award holder has no rights with
respect to such dividends (in each case, subject to any restrictions imposed by
Section 409A of the Code);
(7) to
amend the terms of any award, prospectively or retroactively; provided however that (i) no
amendment shall impair the rights of the award holder with respect to an
outstanding award without his or her written consent; (ii) unless approved by
the stockholders, the Committee shall have no power to amend the terms of
outstanding Stock Options or SARs to reduce the option price or base price of
such awards or to cancel or surrender
outstanding Stock Options or SARs and grant substitute cash or other awards or Stock
Options or SARs with a lower option price or base price than the cancelled
awards; and (iii) the Committee shall consider the provisions of Section 409A of
the Code prior to amending any award;
(8) to
correct any defect, supply any omission, or reconcile any inconsistency in the
Plan or any award in the manner and to the extent it shall deem desirable to
carry out the purpose of the Plan;
(9) to
determine whether, to what extent, and under what circumstances Stock and other
amounts payable with respect to an award will be deferred either automatically
or at the election of an award holder, including providing for and determining
the amount (if any) of deemed earnings on any deferred amount during any
deferral period (in each case, subject to any restrictions imposed by Section
409A of the Code);
(10) to
determine, pursuant to a formula or otherwise, the Fair Market Value of the
Stock on a given date;
(11) subject
to any restrictions imposed by Section 409A of the Code, to provide that the
shares of Stock received as a result of an award shall be subject to a right of
repurchase by the Company and/or a right of first refusal, in each case subject
to such terms and conditions as the Committee may specify;
(12) to
adopt one or more sub-plans, consistent with the Plan, containing such
provisions as may be necessary or desirable to enable awards under the Plan to
comply with the laws of other jurisdictions and/or qualify for preferred tax
treatment under such laws;
(13) to
the extent permitted by law, to delegate to a committee of two or more officers
of the Company the authority to grant awards to Employees who are not officers
or directors of the Company for purposes of Section 16 of the Securities
Exchange Act of 1934; provided, however, that any such delegation shall be set
forth in a resolution of the Committee that specifies the total number of shares
as to which awards may be granted under such delegation and any other
limitations as may be imposed by the Committee; and
(14) to
delegate such administrative duties as it may deem advisable to one or more of
its members or to one or more employees or agents of the Company.
4.2 All
determinations and interpretations made by the Committee pursuant to the
provisions of the Plan shall be final and binding on all persons, including the
Company and award holders.
4.3 The
Committee may act by a majority of its members at a meeting (present in person
or by conference telephone), by unanimous written consent or by any other method
of director action then permitted under the General Corporation Law of the State
of Delaware.
SECTION
5
|
Stock
Subject to Plan
|
5.1 The
total number of shares of Stock that may be issued under the Plan shall be 4,200,000 plus any unused shares
authorized for awards under the Company’s 2004 Stock Incentive Plan (the “2004
Plan”), in each case subject to adjustment as provided in Section
5.4. No more than 4,200,000 shares may be granted
with respect to Incentive Stock Options (subject to adjustment as provided in
Section 5.4). Shares issued under the Plan may consist of authorized
but unissued shares or shares which have been issued and reacquired by the
Company. The payment of any award in cash shall not count against
this share limit, regardless of the original intent, structure or nature of such
award. Any dividend equivalents
that are granted with respect to other awards under this Plan and are paid in
shares shall also not count against the share limit for the
Plan.
In
connection with a merger or consolidation of an entity with the Company or the
acquisition by the Company or a Subsidiary of property or stock of an entity,
the Company may assume awards granted by such entity or grant Stock Options or
other awards in substitution for awards granted by such entity or an affiliate
thereof, and such assumed or substituted awards shall not count against the
share limit under this Plan.
5.2 Subject
to the terms of Section 5.1, to the extent a Stock Option or Stock Appreciation
Right terminates without shares having been issued, or an award terminates
without the holder having received shares in payment of the award, or shares
awarded are forfeited (in each case including terminations and forfeitures of
outstanding awards granted under the 2004 Plan), the shares subject to such
award shall again be available for distribution in connection with future awards
under this Plan. Shares of Stock equal in number to the shares
surrendered in payment of the option price, and shares of Stock that are
withheld in order to satisfy federal, state or local tax withholding obligations
with respect to any award, shall not count against the above limit, and shall
again be available for grants under the Plan. In the event that any
Stock Option or SAR is exercised or settled by delivery of only the net shares
representing the appreciation in the Stock, only the net shares delivered shall
be counted against the Plan’s share limit. With respect
to the issuance of SARs that may be settled in shares of Stock, the total number
of shares of Stock as to which the SAR is granted shall be counted against the
Plan’s share limit.
5.3 No
individual shall be granted Stock Options, SARs, Restricted Stock, RSUs, or
Other Stock-Based Awards, or any combination thereof with respect to more than
500,000 shares of Stock in any fiscal year (subject to adjustment as provided in
Section 5.4). The maximum Cash Award that may be paid to any
individual in any fiscal year (measured at the end of the performance period or
periods ending in the fiscal year, and without regard to increase in value of
the award during any deferral period) is $500,000.
5.4 In
the event of a change in the outstanding stock of the Company (including but not
limited to changes in either the number of shares or the value of shares) by
reason of any stock split, reverse stock split, dividend or other distribution
(whether in the form of shares, other securities or other property, but not
including regular cash dividends), extraordinary cash dividend,
recapitalization, merger in which the stockholders of the Company immediately
prior to the merger continue to own a majority of the voting securities of the
successor entity immediately after the merger, consolidation, split-up,
spin-off, reorganization, combination, repurchase or exchange of shares or other
securities, or other similar corporate transaction or event, if the Committee
shall determine in its sole discretion that, in order to prevent dilution or
enlargement of the benefits or potential benefits intended to be made available
under the Plan, such transaction or event equitably requires an adjustment in
the aggregate number and/or class of shares of Stock available under the Plan
(including for this purpose the number of shares of Stock available for issuance
under the Plan) or in the number, class and/or price of shares of Stock subject
to outstanding Stock Options and/or outstanding awards), such adjustment shall
be made by the Committee and shall be conclusive and binding for all purposes
under the Plan. A participant holding an outstanding award has a legal right to
an adjustment that preserves without enlarging the value of such award, with the
terms and manner of such adjustment to be determined by the
Committee.
In
addition, upon the dissolution or liquidation of the Company or upon any
reorganization, merger, or consolidation as a result of which the Company is not
the surviving corporation (or survives as a wholly-owned subsidiary of another
corporation), or upon a sale of substantially all the assets of the Company, the
Board or the Committee may take such action as it in its discretion deems
appropriate, subject to any limitations imposed by Section 409A of the Code, to
(i) accelerate the time when awards vest and/or may be exercised and/or may be
paid, (ii) cash out outstanding Stock Options and/or other awards at or
immediately prior to the date of such event, (iii) provide for the assumption of
outstanding Stock Options or other awards by surviving, successor or transferee
corporations or entities, (iv) provide that in lieu of shares of Stock, the
award recipient shall be entitled to receive the consideration he or she would
have received in such transaction in exchange for such shares of Stock (or the
fair market value thereof in cash), and/or (v) provide that Stock Options and
SARs shall be exercisable for a period of at least 10 business days from the
date of receipt of a notice from the Company of such proposed event, following
the expiration of which period any unexercised Stock Options or SARs shall
terminate.
No
fractional shares shall be issued or delivered under the Plan. The
Board or the Committee shall determine whether the value of fractional shares
shall be paid in cash or other property, or whether such fractional shares and
any rights thereto shall be cancelled without payment.
The
Board’s or Committee’s determination as to which adjustments shall be made under
this Section 5.4 and the extent thereof shall be final, binding and
conclusive.
Employees,
Non-Employee Directors, and Consultants are eligible to be granted awards under
the Plan. In addition, awards may be granted to prospective
Employees, Non-Employee Directors, or Consultants but such awards shall not
become effective until the recipient’s commencement of employment or service
with the Company or Subsidiary. Incentive Stock Options may be
granted only to employees and prospective employees of the Company or of any
parent corporation or subsidiary of the Company (as those terms are defined in
Section 424 of the Code). The participants under the Plan shall be
selected from time to time by the Committee, in its sole discretion, from among
those eligible.
7.1 The
Stock Options awarded under the Plan may be either Incentive Stock Options or
Non-Qualified Stock Options. To the extent that any Stock Option is
either designated as a Non-Qualified Stock Option or does not qualify as an
Incentive Stock Option, it shall constitute a Non-Qualified Stock
Option.
7.2 Subject
to the following provisions, Stock Options awarded under the Plan shall be in
such form and shall have such terms and conditions as the Committee may
determine:
(1) Option
Price. The option price per share of Stock purchasable under a Stock
Option shall be determined by the Committee, but shall not be less than the Fair
Market Value of the Stock on the date of grant of the Stock
Option. The date of grant of any Stock Option shall be the date of
Committee approval of the Stock Option or a prospective date specified by the
Committee, and for prospective Employees shall be no earlier than the first day
of employment.
(2) Option
Term. The term of each Stock Option shall be fixed by the Committee,
but shall not exceed ten years.
(3) Exercisability. Stock
Options shall be exercisable at such time or times and subject to such terms and
conditions as shall be determined by the Committee. The Committee may
waive such exercise provisions or accelerate the exercisability of the Stock
Option at any time in whole or in part.
(4) Method
of Exercise. Stock Options may be exercised in whole or in part at
any time during the option period by giving notice of exercise, in such manner
as may be determined by the Company (which may be written or electronic),
specifying the number of whole shares to be purchased, accompanied by payment of
the aggregate option price for such shares. Payment of the option
price shall be made in such manner as the Committee may provide in the award,
which may include (i) cash (including cash equivalents), (ii) delivery (either
by actual delivery of the shares or by providing an affidavit attesting to
ownership of the shares) of shares of Stock already owned by the optionee, (iii)
broker-assisted “cashless exercise” in which the optionee delivers a notice of
exercise together with irrevocable instructions to a broker acceptable to the
Company to sell shares of Stock (or a sufficient portion of such shares)
acquired upon exercise of the Stock Option and remit to the Company a sufficient
portion of the sale proceeds to pay the total option price and any withholding
tax obligation resulting from such exercise, (iv) application of shares
subject to the Stock Option to satisfy the option price, (v) any other manner
permitted by law, or (vi) any combination of the foregoing. Any shares used to
pay the option price shall be valued at their Fair Market Value on the date of
exercise.
(5) No
Stockholder Rights. An optionee shall have neither rights to
dividends or other rights of a stockholder with respect to shares subject to a
Stock Option until the optionee has duly exercised the Stock Option and a
certificate for such shares has been duly issued (or the optionee has otherwise
been duly recorded as the owner of the shares on the books of the
Company).
(6) Surrender
Rights. Subject to the terms of
Section 4.1(7), the Committee may
provide that options may be surrendered for cash upon any terms and conditions
set by the Committee.
(7) Non-transferability. Unless
otherwise provided by the Committee, (i) Stock Options shall not be transferable
by the optionee other than by will or by the laws of descent and distribution,
and (ii) during the optionee’s lifetime, all Stock Options shall be exercisable
only by the optionee or by his or her guardian or legal
representative. The Committee, in its sole discretion, may permit
Stock Options to be transferred to such transferees and on such terms and
conditions as may be determined by the Committee.
(8) Termination
of Employment. Following the termination of an optionee’s employment
or service with the Company or a Subsidiary, the Stock Option shall be
exercisable to the extent determined by the Committee. The Committee
may provide different post-termination exercise provisions with respect to
termination of employment or service for different reasons. The
Committee may provide at the time of grant that, notwithstanding the option term
fixed pursuant to Section 7.2(2), a Stock Option that is outstanding on the date
of an optionee’s death shall remain outstanding for an additional period after
the date of such death. The Committee shall have absolute discretion
to determine the date and circumstances of any termination of employment or
service.
7.3 Notwithstanding
the provisions of Section 7.2, Incentive Stock Options shall be subject to the
following additional restrictions:
(1) No
Incentive Stock Option shall have an option price that is less than 100% of the
fair market value (as determined for purposes of Section 422 of the Code) of the
Stock on the date of grant of the Incentive Stock Option. The date of
grant of any Incentive Stock Option shall be the date of Committee approval of
the Incentive Stock Option or a prospective date specified by the Committee, and
for prospective employees shall be no earlier than the first day of
employment.
(2) No
Incentive Stock Option shall be exercisable more than ten years after the date
such Incentive Stock Option is granted.
(3) No
Incentive Stock Option shall be awarded more than ten years after April 8, 2009,
the date of Board approval of the Plan.
(4) No
Incentive Stock Option granted to an employee who owns more than 10% of the
total combined voting power of all classes of stock of the Company or any of its
parent or subsidiary corporations, as defined in Section 424 of the Code, shall
(A) have an option price which is less than 110% of the fair market value of the
Stock on the date of grant of the Incentive Stock Option or (B) be exercisable
more than five years after the date such Incentive Stock Option is
granted.
(5) The
aggregate fair market value (determined as of the time the Incentive Stock
Option is granted) of the shares with respect to which Incentive Stock Options
(granted under the Plan and any other plans of the Company, its parent
corporation or subsidiary corporations, as defined in Section 424 of the Code)
are exercisable for the first time by an optionee in any calendar year shall not
exceed $100,000.
(6) An
optionee’s right to exercise an Incentive Stock Option shall be subject to the
optionee’s agreement to notify the Company of any “disqualifying disposition”
(for purposes of Section 422 of the Code) of the shares acquired upon such
exercise.
(7) Incentive
Stock Options shall not be transferable by the optionee, other than by will or
by the laws of descent and distribution, subject to such additional limitations
as may be imposed by the Committee. During the optionee’s lifetime,
all Incentive Stock Options shall be exercisable only by such
optionee.
The
Committee may, with the consent of the optionee, amend an Incentive Stock Option
in a manner that would cause loss of Incentive Stock Option status, provided the
Stock Option as so amended satisfies the requirements of Section
7.2.
7.4 Substitute
Options. In connection with a merger or consolidation of an entity
with the Company or the acquisition by the Company or a Subsidiary of property
or stock of an entity, the Committee may grant Stock Options in substitution for
any options or other stock awards or stock-based awards granted by such entity
or an affiliate thereof. Such substitute Stock Options may be granted
on such terms as the Committee deems appropriate to prevent dilution or
enlargement of the benefits under the prior award, notwithstanding any
limitations on Stock Options contained in other provisions of this Section 7,
but after considering the provisions of Section 409A of the Code.
SECTION
8
|
Stock
Appreciation Rights (SARs)
|
A Stock
Appreciation Right shall entitle the holder thereof to receive, for each share
as to which the award is granted, payment of an amount, in cash, shares of
Stock, or a combination thereof as determined by the Committee, equal in value
to the excess of the Fair Market Value of a share of Stock on the date of
exercise over an amount (the base price) specified by the
Committee. Any such award shall be in such form and shall have such
terms and conditions as the Committee may determine; provided, however, that no
SAR shall have a base price below the Fair Market Value of the Stock on the date
of grant or a term longer than ten years. The award shall specify the
number of shares of Stock as to which the SAR is granted.
SECTION
9
|
Restricted
Stock
|
Subject
to the following provisions, all awards of Restricted Stock shall be in such
form and shall have such terms and conditions as the Committee may
determine:
(1) The
Restricted Stock award shall specify the number of shares of Restricted Stock to
be awarded, the price, if any, to be paid by the recipient of the Restricted
Stock and the date or dates on which, or the conditions upon the satisfaction of
which, the Restricted Stock will vest. The grant and/or the vesting
of Restricted Stock may be conditioned upon the completion of a specified period
of service with the Company and/or its Subsidiaries, upon the attainment of
specified Performance Objectives, and/or upon such other criteria as the
Committee may determine.
(2) Stock
certificates representing the Restricted Stock awarded shall be registered in
the award holder’s name (or the holder shall be recorded as the owner of the
shares on the books of the Company), but the Committee may direct that such
certificates be held by the Company or its designee on behalf of the award
holder (or that transfer restrictions be placed on the
shares). Except as may be permitted by the Committee, no share of
Restricted Stock may be sold, transferred, assigned, pledged or otherwise
encumbered by the award holder until such share has vested in accordance with
the terms of the Restricted Stock award. At the time Restricted Stock
vests, a certificate for such vested shares shall be delivered to the award
holder (or his or her Beneficiary in the event of death), (or the award holder
(or his or her Beneficiary in the event of death) shall be duly recorded as the
owner of the shares on the books of the Company), in each case free of all
restrictions.
(3) The
Committee may provide that the award holder shall have the right to vote and/or
receive dividends on Restricted Stock. Unless the Committee provides
otherwise, Stock received as a dividend on, or in connection with a stock split
of, Restricted Stock (or pursuant to adjustment under Section 5.4) shall be
subject to the same restrictions as the Restricted Stock.
(4) Except
as may be provided by the Committee, in the event of an award holder’s
termination of employment or service before all of his or her Restricted Stock
has vested, or in the event any conditions to the vesting of Restricted Stock
have not been satisfied prior to any deadline for the satisfaction of such
conditions set forth in the award, the shares of Restricted Stock which have not
vested shall be forfeited, and the Committee may provide that (i) any purchase
price paid by the award holder shall be returned to the award holder or (ii) a
cash payment equal to the Restricted Stock’s Fair Market Value on the date of
forfeiture, if lower, shall be paid to the award holder.
(5) The
Committee may waive, in whole or in part, any or all of the conditions to
receipt of, or restrictions with respect to, any or all of the award holder’s
Restricted Stock (except that the Committee may not waive conditions or
restrictions with respect to Performance Awards if such waiver would cause the
award to fail to qualify as “performance-based compensation” within the meaning
of Section 162(m) of the Code).
SECTION
10
|
Restricted
Stock Units (RSUs)
|
Subject
to the following provisions, all awards of Restricted Stock Units shall be in
such form and shall have such terms and conditions as the Committee may
determine:
(1) The
Restricted Stock Unit award shall specify the number of RSUs to be awarded and
the duration of the period (the “Deferral Period”) during which, and the
conditions under which, receipt of the Stock will be deferred. The
Committee may condition the grant or vesting of Restricted Stock Units, or
receipt of Stock or cash at the end of the Deferral Period, upon the completion
of a specified period of service with the Company and/or its Subsidiaries, upon
the attainment of specified Performance Objectives, and/or upon such other
criteria as the Committee may determine.
(2)
Except as may be provided by the Committee, RSU awards
may not be sold, assigned, transferred, pledged or otherwise encumbered during
the Deferral Period.
(3) At
the expiration of the Deferral Period, the award holder (or his or her
Beneficiary in the event of death) shall receive (i) certificates for the
number of shares of Stock equal to the number of shares covered by the RSU award
(or the shares shall be duly recorded as owned by such holder on the books of
the Company), (ii) cash equal to the Fair Market Value of such Stock, or
(iii) a combination of shares and cash, as the Committee may
determine.
(4) Except
as may be provided by the Committee, in the event of an award holder’s
termination of employment or service before the RSU has vested, his or her RSU
award shall be forfeited.
(5) The
Committee may waive, in whole or in part, any or all of the conditions to
receipt of, or restrictions with respect to, Stock or cash under a Restricted
Stock Unit award (except that the Committee may not waive conditions or
restrictions with respect to Performance Awards if such waiver would cause the
award to fail to qualify as “performance-based compensation” within the meaning
of Section 162(m) of the Code). In addition, the Committee shall not
accelerate the payment of an RSU if such acceleration would violate Section 409A
of the Code.
SECTION
11
|
Other
Stock-Based Awards
|
The
Committee may grant Other Stock-Based Awards, which shall consist of any right
that is not an award described in Sections 7, 8, 9 or 10 hereof and that is
denominated or payable in Stock, or valued in whole or in part by reference to
or otherwise based on or related to Stock (including, without limitation,
securities convertible into Stock). The Committee shall determine the
terms and conditions of any such award, subject to any limitations contained in
the Plan.
12.1 The
Committee may grant Cash Awards, which shall entitle the award holder to receive
cash upon the satisfaction of the Performance Objectives and other terms and
conditions set forth in the award. At the time of grant of a Cash
Award, the Committee shall specify the applicable Performance Objectives and the
performance period to which they apply, as well as the amount of the Cash Award
to be paid upon satisfaction of the Performance Objectives (which may be stated
as a range of amounts payable upon attainment of specified levels of
satisfaction of the Performance Objectives). The Committee may
determine that a Cash Award shall be payable upon achievement of any one
Performance Objective, or any one of several Performance Objectives, or that two
or more of the Performance Objectives must be achieved as a condition to payment
of a Cash Award.
12.2
The Committee shall specify at the time of grant of a Cash Award the date or
dates such Cash Award, to the extent earned, shall be payable, and may require
all or a portion of the Cash Award to be deferred and payable only upon
satisfaction of continued employment or other specified conditions. The
Committee may also permit all or a portion of a Cash Award to be deferred at the
award holder’s election, subject to Section 409A of the
Code. Deferred portions of a Cash Award may be credited with
interest, deemed invested in Stock, or deemed invested in such other investments
as the Committee may specify.
SECTION
13
|
Performance
Awards
|
13.1 The
Committee shall have the right to designate awards under Section 9, 10, 11 or 12
as Performance Awards, in which case the following provisions shall apply to
such awards (in addition to the provisions under Section 9, 10, 11, or 12, as
applicable).
13.2
The grant or vesting of a Performance Award shall be subject to the achievement
of Performance Objectives established by the Committee based on one or more of
the following criteria, in each case applied to the Company on a consolidated
basis and/or to a Subsidiary, business unit, business segment or business line,
and which the Committee may use as an absolute measure, as a measure of
improvement relative to prior performance, or as a measure of comparable
performance relative to a peer group of companies or published or special index
that the Committee deems appropriate:
|
(1)
|
Net
earnings or net income (before or after
taxes);
|
|
(3)
|
Net
sales or revenue growth;
|
|
(4)
|
Gross
revenues (and/or gross revenue growth) and/or mix of revenues among the
Company’s business activities;
|
|
(5)
|
Net
operating profit (or reduction in operating
loss);
|
|
(6)
|
Return
measures (including, but not limited to, return on assets, capital,
invested capital, equity, sales, or
revenue);
|
|
(7)
|
Cash
flow (including, but not limited to, operating cash flow, free cash flow,
cash flow return on equity, and cash flow return on
investment);
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|
(8)
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Earnings
before or after taxes, interest, depreciation, amortization, and/or other
non-cash items;
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(9)
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Gross
or operating margins;
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|
(10)
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Productivity
ratios (and/or such ratios as compared to various stock market
indices);
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(11)
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Stock
price (including, but not limited to, growth measures and total
shareholder return);
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(12)
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Stock
price and market capitalization ratios (including, but not limited to,
price-to-earnings ratio and enterprise
multiple)
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(13)
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Expense
targets (including, but not limited to, expenses-to-sales
ratios);
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|
(15)
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Operating
efficiency;
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|
(17)
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Customer
satisfaction;
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(18)
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Employee
satisfaction or retention;
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(19)
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Development
and implementation of employee or executive development programs
(including, but not limited to, succession
programs);
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(20)
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Working
capital targets;
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|
(21)
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Economic
value added;
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(23)
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Debt
to equity ratio;
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(24)
|
Strategic
business goals relating to acquisitions, divestitures and joint
ventures;
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(25)
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Attaining
specified clinical, trial site initiation or patient enrollment
targets;
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(26)
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Filing
of the Company’s PMA application to the Food and Drug
Administration;
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(27)
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Obtaining
regulatory approvals, including of the company’s PHP System in the United
States or other countries;
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(28)
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Sale
of the company;
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(29)
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Consummating
a specified equity based capital
offering;
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(30)
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Reaching
specified technology development objectives;
and
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(31)
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Reaching
specified employment time-points governed by an employment
agreement
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The Committee may provide in any
Performance Award that any evaluation of performance may include or exclude any
of the following events that occurs during the performance period: (i) asset
write-downs, (ii) litigation or claim judgments or settlements, (iii) the effect
of changes in tax laws, accounting principles, or other laws or provisions
affecting reported results, (iv) any reorganization and restructuring programs,
(v) extraordinary nonrecurring items as described in Accounting Principles Board
Opinion No. 30 and/or in management’s discussion and analysis of financial
condition and results of operations appearing in the Company’s annual report to
stockholders for the applicable year, (vi) the impact of adjustments to the
Company’s deferred tax asset valuation allowance, (vii) acquisitions or
divestitures, and (viii) foreign exchange gains and losses. To the extent such
inclusions or exclusions affect awards intended to be performance-based within
the meaning of Section 162(m) of the Code, they shall be prescribed in a form
that meets the requirements of Section 162(m).
13.3 The
following additional requirements shall apply to Performance
Awards:
(1) The
Performance Objectives shall be established by the Committee not later than the
earlier of (i) 90 days after the beginning of the applicable performance
period, or (ii) the time 25% of such performance period has
elapsed.
(2) The
Performance Objectives shall be objective and the achievement of such
Performance Objectives shall be substantially uncertain (within the meaning of
Section 162(m) of the Code) at the time the Performance Objectives are
established.
(3) The
amount of the Performance Award payable upon each level of achievement of the
Performance Objectives must be objectively determinable, except that the
Committee shall have the right to reduce (but not increase) the amount payable,
in its sole discretion.
(4)
Prior to payment of any Performance Award, the Committee shall certify in
writing, in a manner that satisfies the requirements of Section 162(m) of the
Code, that the Performance Objectives have been satisfied.
SECTION
14
|
Tax
Withholding
|
Each
award holder shall, no later than the date as of which an amount with respect to
an award first becomes includible in such person’s gross income for applicable
tax purposes, pay to the Company, or make arrangements satisfactory to the
Company regarding payment of, any federal, state, local or other taxes of any
kind required by law to be withheld with respect to the award. The
obligations of the Company under the Plan shall be conditional on such payment
or arrangements, and the Company (and, where applicable, any Subsidiaries),
shall, to the extent permitted by law, have the right to deduct the minimum
amount of any required tax withholdings from any payment of any kind otherwise
due to the award holder.
To the
extent permitted by the Committee, and subject to such terms and conditions as
the Committee may provide, an award holder may elect to have the minimum amount
of any required tax withholding with respect to any awards hereunder satisfied
by having the Company withhold shares of Stock otherwise deliverable to such
person with respect to the award. Alternatively, the Committee may
require that a portion of the shares of Stock or cash otherwise deliverable be
applied to satisfy the minimum withholding tax obligations with respect to the
award.
SECTION
15
|
Beneficiary
of Award Holder
|
15.1 The
Committee may provide the holder with the right to designate any person or
persons as such person’s beneficiary or beneficiaries (both primary and
contingent) to whom payment in respect of one or more of the award holder’s
awards under this Plan shall be paid in the event of the award holder’s
death. Each beneficiary designation shall become effective only when
filed in writing with the Company during the award holder’s lifetime on a form
provided by the Company. If an award holder is married, his or her
designation of beneficiary or beneficiaries other than his/her spouse or his/her
estate shall not be effective unless the beneficiary designation has been signed
by the spouse and notarized.
15.2 If
an award holder is not given the right to designate a beneficiary or fails to
designate a beneficiary in accordance with the provisions of Section 15.1, or if
all designated beneficiaries predecease the award holder, payment of the
holder’s awards shall be made to the holder’s estate.
SECTION
16
|
Amendments
and Termination
|
16.1 No
award shall be granted under the Plan after June 8, 2019, the day preceding the
tenth anniversary of the date of approval by the Company’s stockholders of the
Plan, unless the Plan has been re-approved by the Company’s stockholders prior
to such date.
No
Performance Award shall be granted after the Company’s annual meeting held in
2014, unless the material terms of the performance goals (within the meaning of
Section 162(m) of the Code) have been re-approved by the Company’s stockholders
within the five years prior to such grant.
16.2 The
Board may discontinue the Plan at any time and may amend it from time to
time. No amendment or discontinuation of the Plan shall adversely
affect any award previously granted without the award holder’s written
consent. Amendments may be made without stockholder approval except
as required to satisfy applicable laws or regulations or the requirements of any
stock exchange or market on which the Stock is listed or traded.
16.3 The
Committee may amend the terms of any award prospectively or retroactively,
subject to the limitations set forth in Section 4.1(7) hereof.
16.4 Notwithstanding
the foregoing provisions of this Section 16, the Committee shall have the right,
in its sole discretion, to amend the Plan and all outstanding awards without the
consent of stockholders or award holders to the extent the Committee determines
such amendment is necessary or appropriate to comply with Section 409A of the
Code.
16.5 Notwithstanding
any other provision of the Plan or of any award, in the event of a change in
control event (as defined under Section 409A of the Code) the Committee shall
have the right, in its sole discretion, to terminate the Plan and all
outstanding awards (or, to the extent permitted under Section 409A of the Code,
to terminate all awards subject to Section 409A of the Code) and distribute
amounts payable under such awards immediately prior to or within 12 months after
the occurrence of the change in control event.
SECTION
17
|
Change
of Control
|
17.1 The
Committee shall have the authority to determine the extent, if any, to which
outstanding awards will become vested upon a Change of Control. In
addition, to the extent permitted under Section 409A of the Code or with respect
to awards that are not subject to Section 409A of the Code, the Committee shall
have discretion to accelerate the payment date of awards in the event of a
Change of Control.
17.2 A
“Change of Control” means the happening of any of the following:
(1)
the acquisition by any person or group deemed a person under
Sections 3(a)(9) and 13(d)(3) of the Exchange Act (other than the Company and
its Subsidiaries as determined immediately prior to that date and/or any of its
or their employee benefit plans) of beneficial ownership, directly or
indirectly (with beneficial ownership determined as provided in Rule 13d-3, or
any successor rule, under the Exchange Act) of securities of the Company
representing more than 50% of the total combined voting power of all classes of
stock of the Company having the right under ordinary circumstances to vote at an
election of the Board;
(2) the
date on which a majority of the members of the Board shall consist of persons
other than Current Directors (which term shall mean any member of the Board on
the date of adoption of the Plan and any member of the Board whose nomination or
election has been approved by a majority of the Current Directors then on the
Board);
(3)
consummation of a merger or consolidation of the Company with
another corporation where (x) the stockholders of the Company immediately prior
to the merger or consolidation would not beneficially own, immediately after the
merger or consolidation, shares entitling such stockholders to a majority of all
votes (without consideration of the rights of any class of stock to elect
directors by a separate class vote) to which all stockholders of the corporation
issuing cash or securities in the merger or consolidation would be entitled in
the election of directors in the same proportions as their ownership,
immediately prior to such merger or consolidation, of voting securities of the
Company, or (y) where the members of the Company’s board of directors,
immediately prior to the merger or consolidation, would not, immediately after
the merger or consolidation, constitute a majority of the board of directors of
the corporation issuing cash or securities in the merger or
consolidation;
(4) the
sale or other disposition of all or substantially all of the assets of the
Company; or
(5) the
date of approval by the stockholders of the Company of the liquidation of the
Company.
18.1 All
awards granted under the Plan are intended to be exempt from the requirements of
Section 409A or, if not exempt, to satisfy the requirements of Section 409A, and
the provisions of the Plan and of any award granted under the Plan shall be
construed in a manner consistent therewith.
18.2 For
purposes of Section 409A of the Code, the “specified employees” of the Company
shall be determined in such manner as may be specified by resolution of the
Committee in accordance with Section 409A of the Code.
18.3 Notwithstanding
any provision of the Plan or any award to the contrary, any amounts payable
under the Plan on account of termination of employment to an award holder who is
a “specified employee” within the meaning of Section 409A which constitute
“deferred compensation” within the meaning of Section 409A and which are
otherwise scheduled to be paid during the first six months following the award
holder’s termination of employment (other than any payments that are permitted
under Section 409A to be paid within six months following termination of
employment of a specified employee) shall be suspended until the six-month
anniversary of the award holder’s termination of employment (or until the award
holder’s death, if earlier), at which time all payments that were suspended
shall be paid to the award holder in a lump sum.
18.4 A
termination of employment shall not be deemed to have occurred for purposes of
any award under this Plan providing for the payment of any amounts upon or
following a termination of employment unless such termination is also a
“separation from service” within the meaning of Section 409A.
SECTION
19
|
General
Provisions
|
19.1 Each
award under the Plan shall be subject to the requirement that, if at any time
the Committee shall determine that (i) the listing, registration or
qualification of the Stock subject or related thereto upon any securities
exchange or market or under any state or federal law, or (ii) the consent
or approval of any government regulatory body or (iii) an agreement by the
recipient of an award with respect to the disposition of Stock, is necessary or
desirable in order to satisfy any legal requirements, or the issuance, sale or
delivery of any shares of Stock is or may in the circumstances be unlawful under
the laws or regulations of any applicable jurisdiction, the right to exercise
such Stock Option or SAR shall be suspended, such award shall not be granted,
and/or the shares subject to such award will not be issued, sold or delivered,
in whole or in part, unless such listing, registration, qualification, consent,
approval or agreement shall have been effected or obtained free of any
conditions not acceptable to the Committee, and the Committee determines that
the issuance, sale or delivery of the shares is lawful. The
application of this Section shall not extend the term of any Stock Option or
other award. The Company shall have no obligation to effect any
registration or qualification of the Stock under federal or state laws or to
compensate the award holder for any loss caused by the implementation of this
Section 19.1.
19.2 Nothing
set forth in this Plan shall prevent the Board from adopting other or additional
compensation arrangements, including arrangements providing for the issuance of
Stock. Nothing in the Plan nor any award hereunder shall confer upon
any award holder any right to continued employment or service with the Company
or a Subsidiary, or interfere in any way with the right of any such company to
terminate such employment or service.
19.3 Determinations
by the Committee under the Plan relating to the form, amount, and terms and
conditions of awards need not be uniform, and may be made selectively among
persons who receive or are eligible to receive awards under the Plan, whether or
not such persons are similarly situated.
19.4 No
member of the Board or the Committee, nor any officer or employee of the Company
acting on behalf of the Board or the Committee, shall be personally liable for
any action, determination or interpretation taken or made with respect to the
Plan or any award hereunder, and all members of the Board or the Committee and
all officers or employees of the Company or any Subsidiary acting on their
behalf shall, to the extent permitted by law, be fully indemnified and protected
by the Company in respect of any such action, determination or
interpretation.
19.5 Although
the Company may endeavor to qualify an award for favorable tax treatment (e.g.
incentive stock options under Section 422 of the Code) or to avoid adverse tax
treatment (e.g. under Section 409A of the Code), the Company makes no
representation that the desired tax treatment will be available and expressly
disclaims any liability for the failure to maintain favorable or avoid
unfavorable tax treatment.
19.6
Neither the Plan nor any award shall create or be construed to create a trust or
separate fund of any kind or a fiduciary relationship between the Company or
Subsidiary and an award holder, and no award holder will, by participation in
the Plan, acquire any right in any specific Company property, including any
property the Company may set aside in connection with the Plan. To
the extent that any award holder acquires a right to receive payments from the
Company or any Subsidiary pursuant to an award, such right shall not be greater
than the right of an unsecured general creditor.
19.7
All provisions under the Plan calling for the delivery of Stock certificates may
be satisfied by recording the respective person as the owner of the shares on
the books of the Company, if permitted by applicable law.
19.8
The Plan and all awards hereunder shall be governed by the laws of the State of
Delaware without giving effect to conflict of laws principles. Any
dispute arising out of any award granted under the Plan may be resolved in any
state or federal court located within New York County, New York State,
U.S.A. Any award granted under the Plan is granted on condition that
the award holder accepts such venue and submits to the personal jurisdiction of
any such court. Similarly, the Company accepts such venue and submits
to such jurisdiction.
19.9 This
Plan became effective on June 9, 2009.
■
DELCATH SYSTEMS,
INC.
THIS PROXY IS SOLICITED ON BEHALF OF THE
BOARD OF DIRECTORS OF
DELCATH SYSTEMS,
INC.
FOR THE ANNUAL MEETING OF STOCKHOLDERS
TO BE HELD ON MAY 6, 2010
The
undersigned holder of common stock of DELCATH SYSTEMS, INC. (the "Company"),
hereby constitutes and appoints Eamonn P. Hobbs and Barbra Keck, and each of
them, as proxies (the proxies”) of the undersigned, with full power of
substitution in each, and authorizes each of them to represent and to vote all
of the undersigned's shares of common stock of the Company, according to the
number of votes and with all the powers the undersigned would possess if
personally present, at the Annual Meeting of Stockholders (the “Annual Meeting”)
of the Company, to be held at the Sheraton New York Hotel & Towers, 811
Seventh Avenue, New York, New York, on May 6, 2010 at 10:00 A.M., local time,
and at any adjournments and postponements thereof.
IMPORTANT: SIGNATURE REQUIRED ON THE
REVERSE SIDE
■
ANNUAL MEETING OF
STOCKHOLDERS OF
DELCATH
SYSTEMS,
INC.
May 6,
2010
NOTICE
OF INTERNET AVAILABILITY OF PROXY MATERIAL:
The Notice of Meeting, Proxy Statement,
Proxy Card and Annual Report on Form 10-K
for the fiscal year ended December 31,
2009 are available at -
https://materials.proxyvote.com/24661P
Please
mark, sign, date and
mail
your proxy card in the
envelope
provided as soon
as
possible.
Please
detach along perforated line and mail in the envelope provided.
■ 20230300000000000000
4 050610
THE
BOARD OF DIRECTORS RECOMMENDS A
VOTE “FOR” ALL LISTED NOMINEES IN PROPOSAL 1, “FOR” PROPOSAL 2
AND
“FOR” PROPOSAL 3.
PLEASE MARK, DATE, SIGN AND RETURN PROMPTLY IN THE ENCLOSED ENVELOPE.
PLEASE MARK YOUR VOTE IN BLUE OR BLACK INK AS SHOWN HERE x
Proposal
1. Election of Two
Directors:
NOMINEES:
o FOR THE
NOMINEES m Harold S.
Koplewicz, M.D.
m Robert B.
Ladd
o WITHHOLD
AUTHORITY
FOR THE
NOMINEES
o FOR ALL
EXCEPT
(See instruction
below)
|
|
To ratify the appointment of Ernst & Young, LLP as the
Company's independent registered public accounting firm for the year
ending December 31, 2010.
To amend Delcath’s 2009 Stock Incentive Plan to increase the total
number of shares of Delcath common stock reserved for issuance under the
plan from 2,000,000 to 4,200,000.
|
FOR
o
o
|
AGAINST
o
o
|
ABSTAIN
o
o
|
INSTRUCTIONS: |
To withhold authority to vote for any
individual nominee(s), mark “FOR ALL
EXCEPT” and fill in the circle next to each nominee you wish to
withhold, as shown here: ●
|
The proxies are
authorized to vote in their discretion upon such other matters as may
properly come before the Annual Meeting.
The undersigned
hereby acknowledges receipt of the Notice of Annual Meeting, the Proxy
Statement relating to the Annual Meeting and a copy of Delcath’s Annual
Report on Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended December 31, 2009. The
undersigned hereby revokes any proxy or proxies heretofore given with
respect to the Annual Meeting.
|
|
The
shares represented by this proxy will be voted in the manner directed.
In
the absence of any direction, the shares will be voted FOR each nominee
named in Proposal 1, FOR Proposal 2 and FOR Proposal 3 and in accordance
with the proxies’ discretion on such other matters as may properly come
before the Annual Meeting or any adjournment or postponement
thereof.
|
To change the
address on your account, please check the box at right and indicate your
new address in the address space above. Please note that changes to the
registered name(s) on the account may be submitted via this
method.
|
o |
|
Signature of Stockholder |
|
Date:
|
|
Signature of Stockholder |
|
Date: |
|
Note:
|
Please
sign exactly as your name or names appear on this proxy. When shares are
held jointly, each holder should sign. When signing as executor,
administrator, attorney, trustee or guardian, please give full
title as such. If the signer
is a corporation, please sign full corporate name by a duly authorized
officer, giving full title as such. If signer is a partnership, please
sign in partnership name by an authorized person.
|