def14a
UNITED STATES
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
Washington, D.C. 20549
SCHEDULE 14A
(Rule 14a-101)
SCHEDULE 14A INFORMATION
Proxy Statement Pursuant to Section 14(a) of the
Securities
Exchange Act of 1934 (Amendment No. )
Filed by the Registrant
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Filed by a Party other than the Registrant
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Check the appropriate box:
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Preliminary Proxy Statement
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Confidential, for Use of the Commission Only (as permitted by
Rule 14a-6(e)(2))
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Definitive Proxy Statement
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Definitive Additional Materials
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Soliciting Material Pursuant to
§240.14a-12
CVR Energy, 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):
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No fee required.
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Fee computed on table below per Exchange Act
Rules 14a-6(i)(1)
and 0-11.
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Title of each class of securities to which transaction applies:
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Aggregate number of securities to which transaction applies:
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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):
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Proposed maximum aggregate value of transaction:
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Fee paid previously with preliminary materials.
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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:
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Form, Schedule or Registration Statement No.:
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April 19, 2010
To the Stockholders of CVR Energy, Inc.:
You are cordially invited to attend the 2010 Annual Meeting of
Stockholders of CVR Energy, Inc., on Wednesday, May 19,
2010 at 10:00 a.m. (Central Time) at the Sugar Land
Marriott Town Square Hotel, 16090 City Walk, Sugar Land, TX
77479. The accompanying Notice of 2010 Annual Meeting of
Stockholders and Proxy Statement (the Proxy
Statement) describe the items to be considered and acted
upon by the stockholders at the meeting.
Whether or not you are able to attend, it is important that your
shares be represented at the meeting. Accordingly, we ask that
you please complete, sign, date and return the enclosed proxy
card in the envelope provided at your earliest convenience.
Alternatively, you can vote your proxy by telephone by following
the instructions on the enclosed proxy card. If you attend the
meeting, you may revoke your proxy, if you wish, and vote
personally.
Along with the attached Proxy Statement, we are also sending you
the CVR Energy 2009 Annual Report, which includes our 2009
Annual Report on
Form 10-K
and financial statements.
As the representation of stockholders at the meeting is very
important, we thank you in advance for your participation.
Sincerely yours,
John J. Lipinski
Chairman of the Board of Directors,
Chief Executive Officer and President
CVR
ENERGY, INC.
2277 Plaza Drive, Suite 500
Sugar Land, Texas 77479
(281) 207-3200
www.cvrenergy.com
NOTICE OF 2010 ANNUAL MEETING
OF STOCKHOLDERS
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the 2010 Annual Meeting (the
Annual Meeting) of Stockholders of CVR Energy, Inc.
(CVR Energy) will be held on Wednesday, May 19,
2010 at 10:00 a.m. (Central Time), at the Sugar Land
Marriott Town Square Hotel, 16090 City Walk, Sugar Land, TX
77479 to consider and vote upon the following matters:
1. To elect nine directors for terms of one year each, to
serve until their successors have been duly elected and
qualified;
2. To ratify the selection of KPMG LLP as CVR Energys
independent registered public accounting firm for the fiscal
year ending December 31, 2010; and
3. To transact such other business as may properly come
before the meeting or any adjournments or postponements thereof.
Only stockholders of record as of the close of business on
April 1, 2010 will be entitled to notice of, and to vote
at, the Annual Meeting and any adjournments or postponements
thereof. A list of stockholders entitled to vote at the meeting
will be available for inspection during normal business hours
beginning May 7, 2010 at CVR Energys offices at 2277
Plaza Drive, Suite 500, Sugar Land, Texas 77479. Whether
or not you plan to attend the meeting, please complete, sign,
date and return the enclosed proxy card in the envelope provided
to ensure that your shares of common stock are represented at
the meeting. You may also vote your shares by telephone by
following the instructions on the enclosed proxy card. If you
attend the meeting in person, you may vote your shares of common
stock at the meeting, even if you have previously sent in your
proxy.
Important Notice Regarding the Availability of Proxy
Materials for the Stockholder Meeting To Be Held on May 19,
2010
Our Proxy Statement and the CVR Energy 2009 Annual Report, which
includes our 2009 Annual Report on
Form 10-K
and financial statements, are available at
http://annualreport.cvrenergy.com.
By Order of the Board of Directors,
Edmund S. Gross
Senior Vice President, General Counsel
and Secretary
Sugar Land, Texas
April 19, 2010
If you
vote by telephone, you do not need to return your proxy
card.
CVR
ENERGY, INC.
2277 Plaza Drive, Suite 500
Sugar Land, Texas 77479
(281) 207-3200
www.cvrenergy.com
PROXY
STATEMENT
TABLE OF
CONTENTS
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PROXY
STATEMENT FOR CVR ENERGY, INC.
2010 ANNUAL MEETING OF STOCKHOLDERS
INFORMATION
ABOUT THE ANNUAL MEETING AND VOTING
Why did I
receive this proxy statement?
We are providing this proxy statement (Proxy
Statement) in connection with the solicitation by the
Board of Directors (Board) of CVR Energy, Inc.
(CVR Energy, the Company,
we, us or our) of proxies to
be voted at our 2010 Annual Meeting of Stockholders and at any
adjournment or postponement thereof (Annual Meeting).
This Proxy Statement describes the matters on which we would
like you to vote and provides information on those matters so
that you can make an informed decision.
The Notice of 2010 Annual Meeting, this Proxy Statement, the
form of proxy card and the voting instructions are being mailed
starting April 19, 2010.
What
proposals will be voted on at the Annual Meeting?
There are two proposals scheduled to be voted on at the Annual
Meeting:
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the election of nine directors; and
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the ratification of the selection of KPMG LLP (KPMG)
as CVR Energys independent registered public accounting
firm for 2010.
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What is
CVR Energys Boards voting recommendation?
Our Board recommends that you vote your shares FOR
each of the nominees of the Board, and FOR the
ratification of the selection of KPMG as CVR Energys
independent registered public accounting firm for 2010.
Who is
entitled to vote at the Annual Meeting?
Holders of CVR Energy common stock at the close of business on
April 1, 2010 (the Record Date) are entitled to
receive the Notice of 2010 Annual Meeting and to vote their
shares at the Annual Meeting. On that date, there were
86,329,237 shares of CVR Energy common stock outstanding.
CVR Energy common stock is our only class of voting stock issued
and outstanding.
How many
votes do I have?
You will have one vote for every share of CVR Energy common
stock that you owned at the close of business on the Record Date.
What is
the difference between holding shares as a stockholder of record
and as a beneficial owner?
If your shares are registered directly in your name with CVR
Energys transfer agent, American Stock
Transfer & Trust Company, you are considered the
stockholder of record with respect to those shares.
The Notice of 2010 Annual Meeting, this Proxy Statement, the
proxy card and our annual report for the year ended
December 31, 2009 (the 2009 Annual Report) have
been sent directly to you by American Stock Transfer &
Trust Company.
If your shares are held in a stock brokerage account or by a
bank or other nominee, you are considered the beneficial
owner with respect to those shares. These shares are
sometimes referred to as being held in street name.
The Notice of 2010 Annual Meeting, this Proxy Statement, the
proxy card and the 2009 Annual Report have been forwarded to you
by your broker, bank or other holder of record who is considered
the stockholder of record with respect to those shares. As the
beneficial owner, you have the right to direct your
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broker, bank or other nominee on how to vote your shares by
using the voting instruction card included in the mailing or by
following the instructions on the voting instruction card for
voting by telephone.
How do I
vote?
You may vote using any of the following methods:
By
mail
Be sure to complete, sign and date the proxy card or voting
instruction card and return it in the prepaid envelope. If you
are a stockholder of record and you return your signed proxy
card but do not indicate your voting preferences, the persons
named in the proxy card will vote the shares represented by that
proxy as recommended by our Board.
By
telephone
Instead of submitting your vote by mail on the enclosed proxy
card, you may be able to vote by telephone. Please note that
there are separate telephone arrangements depending on whether
you are a stockholder of record (that is, if you hold your stock
in your own name) or you are a beneficial owner and hold your
shares in street name (that is, if your stock is
held in the name of your broker, bank or other nominee).
If you are a stockholder of record, you may vote by telephone by
following the instructions provided on your proxy card. If you
are a beneficial owner but not the record owner since you hold
your shares in street name, you will need to contact
your broker, bank or other nominee to determine whether you will
be able to vote by telephone.
The telephone voting procedures are designed to authenticate
stockholders identities, to allow stockholders to give
their voting instructions and to confirm the stockholders
instructions have been recorded properly.
Whether or not you plan to attend the Annual Meeting, we urge
you to vote. Returning the proxy card or voting by telephone
will not affect your right to attend the Annual Meeting and vote
in person.
In
person at the Annual Meeting
All stockholders may vote in person by ballot at the Annual
Meeting. You may also be represented by another person at the
Annual Meeting by executing a proper proxy designating that
person. If you are a beneficial owner of shares but not the
record holder, you must obtain a legal proxy from your broker,
bank or other nominee and present that legal proxy to the
inspectors of election with your ballot to be able to vote at
the Annual Meeting.
What can
I do if I change my mind after I vote?
If you are a stockholder of record, you can revoke your proxy
before it is exercised by:
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written notice of revocation to the Companys Secretary at
CVR Energy, Inc., 2277 Plaza Drive, Suite 500, Sugar Land,
Texas 77479;
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timely delivery of a valid, later-dated proxy or a later-dated
vote by telephone; or
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attending the Annual Meeting and voting in person by ballot.
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If you are a beneficial owner of shares but not the record
holder, you may submit new voting instructions by contacting
your broker, bank or other nominee. You may also vote in person
at the Annual Meeting if you obtain a legal proxy as described
in the answer to the previous question. All shares that have
been properly voted and not revoked will be voted at the Annual
Meeting.
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How can I
attend the Annual Meeting?
You are entitled to attend the Annual Meeting only if you were a
stockholder of record as of the Record Date or you hold a valid
proxy for the Annual Meeting as described in the previous
questions. Since seating is limited, admission to the meeting
will be on a first-come, first-served basis. You should be
prepared to present photo identification for admittance. If you
are not a stockholder of record but hold shares as a beneficial
owner, you should provide proof of beneficial ownership as of
the Record Date, such as your most recent account statement
prior to April 1, 2010, a copy of the voting instruction
card provided by your broker, bank or other nominee, or other
similar evidence of ownership. You may contact us by telephone
at
(281) 207-3200
to obtain directions to vote in person at the Annual Meeting.
What
votes need to be present to hold the Annual Meeting?
Under our Amended and Restated By-Laws, the presence, in person
or by proxy, of the holders of a majority of the aggregate
voting power of the common stock issued and outstanding on
April 1, 2010 entitled to vote at the Annual Meeting will
constitute a quorum for the transaction of business at the
Annual Meeting. Abstentions and broker non-votes are
counted as present and entitled to vote for purposes of
determining whether a quorum exists.
What vote
is required to approve each proposal?
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Proposal 1: Elect Nine Directors
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The nine nominees for director who receive the most votes will
be elected. If you do not vote for a nominee, or you indicate
withhold authority to vote for any nominee on your
proxy card, your vote will not count either for or against the
nominee.
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Proposal 2: Ratify Selection of Independent Auditors
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The affirmative vote of a majority of the votes present and
entitled to vote at the Annual Meeting is required to ratify the
selection of KPMG as CVR Energys independent registered
public accounting firm for 2010. If you abstain from
voting, it has the same effect as if you voted
against this proposal.
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How are
votes counted?
In the election of directors, your vote may be cast
FOR all of the nominees or your vote may be
WITHHELD with respect to one or more of the
nominees. For other proposals, your vote may be cast
FOR or AGAINST or you may
ABSTAIN. If you ABSTAIN, it has the same
effect as a vote AGAINST. If you sign your proxy
card with no further instructions and you are a stockholder of
record, then your shares will be voted in accordance with the
recommendations of our Board. If you sign your proxy card with
no further instructions and you are a beneficial owner, then
please see the response to the question immediately below for a
description of how your shares will be voted.
What is
the effect of broker non-votes?
A broker non-vote occurs when a broker, bank or
other nominee holding shares for a beneficial owner does not
vote on a particular proposal because the nominee does not have
discretionary voting power with respect to that item and has not
received voting instructions from the beneficial owner. Under
current New York Stock Exchange (the NYSE) rules, a
broker, bank or other nominee may exercise discretionary voting
power for the ratification of the selection of KPMG. However,
the election of directors is a non-routine matter and the NYSE
does not permit a broker, bank or other nominee to exercise
discretionary voting power with regard to such elections.
Therefore, if you are a beneficial owner and do not provide your
broker, bank or other nominee with voting instructions on the
election of directors, then your vote will not count either for
or against the nominees.
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Who will
count the votes?
Representatives of our transfer agent, American Stock
Transfer & Trust Company, will tabulate the votes
and act as inspectors of election at the Annual Meeting.
Is voting
confidential?
We maintain a policy of keeping all the proxies and ballots
confidential. The inspectors of election will forward to
management any written comments that you make on the proxy card.
Who will
pay the costs of soliciting these proxies?
We will bear all costs of solicitation. Upon
request, we will reimburse banks, brokers and other nominees for
the expenses they incur in forwarding the proxy materials to you.
Is this
Proxy Statement the only way that proxies are being
solicited?
No. In addition to our mailing the proxy materials, members of
our Board, officers and employees may solicit proxies by
telephone, by fax or other electronic means of communication, or
in person. They will not receive any compensation for their
solicitation activities in addition to their regular
compensation. We have not engaged an outside solicitation firm.
Where can
I find the voting results?
Preliminary results of voting will be announced at the Annual
Meeting. We also will publish voting results in a current report
on
Form 8-K
that we will file with the Securities and Exchange Commission
(SEC) within four business days following the
meeting, with the day the meeting ends counted as the first day.
If on the date of this filing the inspectors of elections for
the Annual Meeting have not certified the voting results as
final, we will note in the filing that the results are
preliminary and publish the final results in a subsequent
Form 8-K
filing within four business days after the final voting results
are known.
Can a
stockholder communicate directly with our Board?
Stockholders and other interested parties may communicate with
members of our Board by writing to:
CVR Energy, Inc.
2277 Plaza Drive, Suite 500
Sugar Land, Texas 77479
Attention: Senior Vice President, General Counsel and Secretary
Stockholders and other interested parties may also send an
e-mail to
CVR Energys Senior Vice President, General Counsel and
Secretary at esgross@cvrenergy.com. Our General Counsel
will forward all appropriate communications directly to our
Board or to any individual director or directors, depending upon
the facts and circumstances outlined in the communication.
Why did I
receive only one set of proxy materials when there are several
stockholders at my address?
If you and other residents at your mailing address own shares in
street name, your broker, bank or other nominee may have sent
you a notice that your household will receive only one annual
report and proxy statement for each company in which you hold
shares through that broker, bank or nominee. This practice is
called householding. If you did not respond that you
did not want to participate in householding, you are deemed to
have consented to that process. If these procedures apply to
you, your broker, bank or other nominee will have sent one copy
of our 2009 Annual Report and Proxy Statement to your address.
You may revoke your consent to householding at any time by
contacting your broker, bank or other nominee.
If you did not receive an individual copy of our 2009 Annual
Report and Proxy Statement, we will send copies to you if you
contact us at 2277 Plaza Drive, Suite 500, Sugar Land,
Texas 77479,
(281) 207-3200,
Attention: Senior Vice President, General Counsel and Secretary.
If you and other residents at your address
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have been receiving multiple copies of our 2009 Annual Report
and Proxy Statement and desire to receive only a single copy of
these materials, you may contact your broker, bank or other
nominee or contact us at the above address or telephone number.
Whom
should I call if I have any questions?
If you have any questions about the Annual Meeting or your
ownership of CVR Energy common stock, please contact our
transfer agent at:
American Stock Transfer & Trust Company
59 Maiden Lane
Plaza Level
New York, NY 10038
Telephone:
(800) 937-5449
Website Address: www.amstock.com
INFORMATION
ABOUT THE ANNUAL REPORT
Will I
receive a copy of the 2009 Annual Report?
We have mailed you a copy of the 2009 Annual Report with this
Proxy Statement. The 2009 Annual Report includes our audited
financial statements, along with other financial information and
we urge you to read it carefully.
How can I
receive a copy of our
10-K?
You can obtain, free of charge, a copy of our 2009 Annual
Report on
Form 10-K
for the year ended December 31, 2009 (2009
Form 10-K),
by:
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accessing our Internet site at www.cvrenergy.com;
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accessing the Internet site at
http://annualreport.cvrenergy.com;
or
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writing to:
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CVR Energy, Inc.
2277 Plaza Drive, Suite 500
Sugar Land, Texas 77479
Attention: Vice President, Investor Relations
You can also obtain a copy of our 2009
Form 10-K
and other periodic filings with the SEC from the SECs
Electronic Data Gathering Analysis and Retrieval
(EDGAR) database at www.sec.gov.
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CORPORATE
GOVERNANCE
We believe that good corporate governance helps to ensure the
Company is managed for the long-term benefit of our
stockholders, and we periodically review and consider our
corporate governance policies and practices, the SECs
corporate governance rules and regulations, and the corporate
governance listing standards of the NYSE, the stock exchange on
which our common stock is traded.
Operation
and Meetings
The Board oversees the business of the Company, which is
conducted by the Companys employees and officers under the
direction of the chief executive officer of the Company. The
Board performs a number of specific functions, including:
(1) reviewing, approving and monitoring fundamental
financial and business strategies, risks and major corporate
actions; (2) selecting, evaluating and compensating the
chief executive officer and other executive officers of the
Company; and (3) reviewing the Companys compliance
with its public disclosure obligations. The Board appoints the
members of the four Board committees: the audit committee, the
compensation committee, the nominating and corporate governance
committee, and the conflicts committee. Members of the Board are
kept informed about our Companys business by various
documents sent to them before each meeting and oral reports made
to them during these meetings by members of the Companys
management. The full Board is also advised of actions taken by
the various committees of our Board by the chairpersons of those
committees. Directors have access to all of our books, records
and reports and members of management are available at all times
to answer their questions. Management also communicates with the
various members of our Board on a regular informal basis as is
needed to effectively oversee the activities of our Company.
During 2009, the Board held nine meetings and acted by consent
six times. Each then-incumbent director attended at least 75% of
the total meetings of the Board and the Board committees on
which such director served in 2009. In addition, while we do not
have a specific policy regarding attendance at the annual
meeting of stockholders, all director nominees are encouraged to
attend the Annual Meeting. In 2009, all of the directors
nominated for election attended our annual meeting of
stockholders.
Meetings
of Non-Management Directors and Executive Sessions
To promote open discussion among non-management directors, we
schedule regular executive sessions in which non-management
directors meet without management participation.
Non-management directors are all directors who are
not executive officers. All of our directors are non-management
directors except for Mr. John J. Lipinski, our president,
chief executive officer and chairman of the Board. We do not
have a lead independent director. The non-management directors
determine who presides at the executive sessions. Our
non-management directors met during three executive sessions in
2009 with Mr. George E. Matelich serving as chairman of
each of these executive sessions.
Board
Leadership Structure and Risk Oversight
The Board believes that Mr. Lipinskis service as both
chairman of the Board and chief executive officer is in the best
interest of the Company and its shareholders. Mr. Lipinski
possesses over 37 years of industry experience which,
coupled with his current in-depth knowledge of the issues,
opportunities and challenges facing the Company, provides the
focused attention, effective leadership and direction the Board
needs to ensure the most critical matters are addressed timely.
This also avoids any potential confusion or duplication of
efforts with clear accountability to the Board.
Our governance processes, including the Boards involvement
in developing and implementing strategy, active oversight of
risk, regular review of business results and thorough evaluation
of the chief executive officers performance and
compensation, provide rigorous Board oversight of the chief
executive officer as he fulfills his various responsibilities,
including his duties as chairman.
The Board considers oversight of CVR Energys risk
management efforts to be a responsibility of the entire Board.
The Boards role in risk oversight includes receiving
regular reports from members of senior
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management on areas of material risk to the Company, or to the
success of a particular project or endeavor under consideration,
including operational, financial, legal and regulatory,
strategic and reputational risks. The full Board (or the
appropriate committee, in the case of risks that are under the
purview of a particular committee) receives these reports from
the appropriate members of management to enable the Board (or
committee) to understand the Companys risk identification,
risk management, and risk mitigation strategies. When a report
is vetted at the committee level, the chairperson of that
committee subsequently reports on the matter to the full Board.
This enables the Board and its committees to coordinate the
Boards risk oversight role. The Board also believes that
risk management is an integral part of CVR Energys annual
strategic planning process, which addresses, among other things,
the risks and opportunities facing the Company. The audit
committee assists the Board with oversight of the Companys
material financial risk exposures, including without limitation,
liquidity, credit, operational risks and the Companys
material financial statement and financial reporting risks. The
compensation committee assists the Board with oversight of risks
associated with the Companys compensation policies and
practices. In each case, the Board or the applicable committee
oversees the steps Company management has taken to monitor and
control such exposures.
The chief executive officer, by leading Board meetings,
facilitates reporting by the audit committee and the
compensation committee to the Board of their respective
activities in risk oversight assistance to the Board. The chief
executive officers collaboration with the Board allows him
to gauge whether management is providing adequate information
for the Board to understand the interrelationships of our
various business and financial risks. He is available to the
Board to address any questions from directors regarding
executive managements ability to identify and mitigate
risks and weigh them against potential rewards.
Communications
with Directors
Stockholders and other interested parties wishing to communicate
with our Board may send a written communication addressed to:
CVR Energy, Inc.
2277 Plaza Drive, Suite 500
Sugar Land, Texas 77479
Attention: Senior Vice President, General Counsel and Secretary
Our General Counsel will forward all appropriate communications
directly to our Board or to any individual director or
directors, depending upon the facts and circumstances outlined
in the communication. Any stockholder or other interested party
who is interested in contacting only the non-management
directors as a group or the director who presides over the
meetings of the non-management directors may also send written
communications to the contact above and should state for whom
the communication is intended.
The
Controlled Company Exemption and Director
Independence
Controlled
Company Exemption
Our Board has determined that we are a controlled company under
the rules of the NYSE and, as a result, we qualify for and may
rely on, exemptions from certain director independence
requirements of the NYSE.
Under the rules of the NYSE, a listed company is a controlled
company when more than 50% of the voting power is held by an
individual, a group or another company. Our Board has determined
that we are a controlled company because Coffeyville Acquisition
LLC (CA) and Coffeyville Acquisition II LLC
(CA II) together own 64% of our outstanding common
stock. The Company, CA and CA II are parties to a stockholders
agreement (the CVR Energy Stockholders Agreement)
pursuant to which CA, which is controlled by certain affiliates
of Kelso & Company, L.P. (the Kelso Funds)
and CA II, which is controlled by certain affiliates of The
Goldman Sachs Group, Inc. (the Goldman Sachs Funds),
have agreed to the following:
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CA and CA II shall each designate two directors for election to
the Board and have agreed to vote for each others
designees;
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CA and CA II shall each vote for our chief executive officer as
the fifth director of the Board; and
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CA and CA II shall have other rights with respect to the
composition of certain committees of the Board.
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Thus, more than 50% of the voting power of the Company is held
by the Goldman Sachs Funds and the Kelso Funds, who through the
CVR Energy Stockholders Agreement vote together for five
directors and thus control the Board. Consequently, the Company
has availed itself of the controlled company exemption. For a
description of the CVR Energy Stockholders Agreement, please
refer to Certain Relationships and Related Party
Transactions Transactions with the Goldman Sachs
Funds and the Kelso Funds Stockholders
Agreement.
Director
Independence
Due to our status as a controlled company, we are relying on
exemptions from the NYSE rules that require that (a) our
Board be comprised of a majority of independent directors as
defined under the rules of the NYSE, (b) our compensation
committee be comprised solely of independent directors and
(c) our nominating and corporate governance committee be
comprised solely of independent directors.
The controlled company exemption does not modify the
independence requirements for the audit committee. The
Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002, as amended (the Sarbanes-Oxley
Act) and NYSE rules require that our audit committee be
composed entirely of independent directors. The members of the
audit committee are C. Scott Hobbs, Steve A. Nordaker and Mark
E. Tomkins. Our Board has affirmatively determined that
Messrs. Hobbs, Nordaker and Tomkins are independent
directors under the rules of the SEC and the NYSE.
Committees
Our Board has the authority to delegate the performance of
certain oversight and administrative functions to committees of
the Board. Our Board currently has an audit committee, a
compensation committee, a nominating and corporate governance
committee and a conflicts committee. In addition, from time to
time, special committees may be established under the direction
of our Board when necessary to address specific issues. Each
committee has adopted a charter which is reviewed annually by
that committee and changes, if any, are recommended to our Board
for approval. The charters for the audit committee, the
compensation committee and the nominating and corporate
governance committee are subject to certain NYSE rules and our
charters for those committees comply with such rules. Copies of
the audit committee charter, compensation committee charter and
nominating and corporate governance committee charter, as in
effect from time to time, are available free of charge on our
Internet site at www.cvrenergy.com. These charters are
also available in print to any stockholder who requests them by
writing to CVR Energy, Inc., at 2277 Plaza Drive,
Suite 500, Sugar Land, Texas 77479, Attention: Senior Vice
President, General Counsel and Secretary.
8
The following table shows the membership of each committee of
our Board as of December 31, 2009 and the number of
meetings held by each committee during 2009. As of the date of
this Proxy Statement, the membership of each committee of the
Board has not changed since December 31, 2009.
Committee
Membership as of December 31, 2009 and Meetings Held During
2009
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Nominating and
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Audit
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|
Compensation
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|
Corporate Governance
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Conflicts
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Director
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Committee
|
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Committee
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Committee
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Committee
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John J. Lipinski
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X
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C. Scott Hobbs
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X
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Scott L. Lebovitz
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Chair
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Regis B. Lippert
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X
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George E. Matelich
|
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Chair
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|
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|
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Steve A. Nordaker
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X
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X
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X
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Stanley de J. Osborne
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X
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Kenneth A. Pontarelli
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X
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Mark E. Tomkins
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Chair
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X
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Chair
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Number of 2009 Meetings
|
|
10
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4
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3
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0
|
Audit
Committee
Our Board has an audit committee comprised of Mark E. Tomkins,
C. Scott Hobbs and Steve A. Nordaker. Mr. Tomkins is
chairman of the audit committee. Our Board has determined that
Mr. Tomkins qualifies as an audit committee financial
expert, as defined by applicable rules of the Securities
and Exchange Commission. Our Board has also determined that each
member of the audit committee, including Mr. Tomkins, is
financially literate under the requirements of the
NYSE. Additionally, our Board has determined that
Messrs. Tomkins, Hobbs and Nordaker are independent under
current NYSE independence requirements and SEC rules. In
considering Mr. Tomkins independence, the Board
considered that Mr. Tomkins is currently a director of W.R.
Grace & Co. (W.R. Grace) and that CVR
Energy engages in business transactions with W.R. Grace in the
ordinary course of business. The Board determined that these
transactions were consistent with the SEC and NYSE independent
standards and did not require disclosure under Item 404 or
Regulation S-K
and did not constitute a material relationship between
Mr. Tomkins and the Company. Under current NYSE
independence requirements and SEC rules, our audit committee is
required to consist entirely of independent directors. No
committee member serves on more than two other public company
audit committees.
The audit committees responsibilities are to: review the
accounting and auditing principles and procedures of our
Company; assist the Board in monitoring our financial reporting
process, accounting functions and internal controls; oversee the
qualifications, independence, appointment, retention,
compensation and performance of our independent registered
public accounting firm; recommend to the Board the engagement of
our independent accountants; review with the independent
accountants plans and results of the auditing engagement;
oversee the performance of the Companys internal audit
function; and oversee whistle-blowing procedures and
certain other compliance matters. At each regularly scheduled
meeting, committee members meet privately with representatives
of KPMG, LLP, our independent accountants, the Companys
internal auditors and management of the Company.
Compensation
Committee
Our compensation committee is comprised of George E. Matelich,
Steve A. Nordaker, Kenneth A. Pontarelli and Mark E. Tomkins.
Mr. Matelich is the chairman of the compensation committee.
The principal responsibilities of the compensation committee are
to: establish policies and periodically determine matters
involving executive compensation; recommend changes in employee
benefit programs; grant or recommend the grant of stock options
and stock awards under the 2007 Long Term Incentive Plan
(LTIP); provide
9
counsel regarding key personnel selection; retain independent
compensation consultants; recommend to the Board the structure
of non-employee director compensation; and assist the Board in
assessing compensation risk including determinations regarding
the risk of employee compensation practices and policies. In
addition, the compensation committee reviews and discusses our
Compensation Discussion and Analysis with management and
produces a report on executive compensation for inclusion in our
annual Proxy Statement in compliance with applicable federal
securities laws.
The compensation committee has sole authority to retain and
terminate a compensation consultant to assist in the evaluation
of the chief executive officer, named executive officers and
other selected officers. During 2009, the Company retained
Longnecker & Associates (Longnecker) on
behalf of the compensation committee to assist the compensation
committee with its review of the executive officers
compensation levels and the mix of compensation as compared to
peer companies, companies of similar size and other relevant
market information. Longnecker compiled the information and
provided advice regarding the components and related mix
(short-term/long-term; cash/equity) of the executive
compensation programs of the Company, its Peer Group
(see page 28 of this Proxy Statement for further detail
regarding the Peer Group), companies of similar size and other
relevant market information. Although no specific target was
set, the focus of Longneckers recommendations was centered
on compensation levels at the median or 50th percentile of
the Peer Group.
Longnecker reported to the full committee and had direct access
to the committees members. Longnecker periodically
attended the committee meetings or by telephone, and may meet
with the committee in executive session without management
present. Longnecker does no other work for the Company or for
management except to provide consulting services related to
executive compensation levels, program design and non-employee
director compensation. The chief executive officer, while not a
member of the compensation committee, reviews information
provided by Longnecker, as well as other relevant market
information and actively provides guidance and recommendations
to the committee regarding the amount and form of the
compensation of the other executive officers and key employees.
Mr. Harry S. Nichols, Vice President, Human Resources, also
attends compensation committee meetings to present information
as requested and to provide insight as to standard practices
after reviewing Longneckers findings and recommendations.
Nominating
and Corporate Governance Committee
Our nominating and corporate governance committee is comprised
of Scott L. Lebovitz, John J. Lipinski, Regis B. Lippert and
Stanley de J. Osborne. Mr. Lebovitz is the chairman of the
nominating and corporate governance committee. The principal
duties of the nominating and corporate governance committee are
to recommend to the Board proposed nominees for election to the
Board by the stockholders at annual meetings and to develop and
make recommendations to the Board regarding corporate governance
matters and practices.
Conflicts
Committee
Our conflicts committee is comprised of Steve A. Nordaker and
Mark E. Tomkins. Mr. Tomkins is the chairman of the
conflicts committee. The principal duty of the conflicts
committee is to determine, in accordance with the Policies
Regarding CVR Partners, LP adopted by our Board, whether the
resolution of a conflict of interest between the Company and our
subsidiaries, on the one hand and CVR Partners, LP (the
Partnership), the Partnerships managing
general partner or any subsidiary of the Partnership, on the
other hand, is fair and reasonable to us.
Director
Qualifications
Our Corporate Governance Guidelines contain Board membership
criteria that apply to nominees recommended by the nominating
and corporate governance committee for a position on our Board.
Our Board seeks a diverse group of candidates who possess the
background, skills and expertise to make a significant
contribution to the Board and the Company. The nominating and
corporate governance committee identifies candidates through a
variety of means, including recommendations from members of the
committee and the
10
Board and suggestions from Company management, including the
chief executive officer. The nominating and corporate governance
committee also considers candidates recommended by stockholders.
At least annually, the nominating and corporate governance
committee reviews with the Board the background and
qualifications of each member of the Board, as well as an
assessment of the Boards composition in light of the
Boards needs and objectives after considering issues of
judgment, diversity, age, skills, background and experience. The
nominating and corporate governance committee reviews its
effectiveness in balancing these considerations when assessing
the composition of the Board. Qualified candidates for
membership on the Board are considered without regard to race,
color, religion, sex, ancestry, sexual orientation, national
origin or disability.
Identifying
and Evaluating Nominees for Directors
Our Board is responsible for selecting its own members and
delegates the screening process for new directors to the
nominating and corporate governance committee. This committee is
responsible for identifying, screening and recommending
candidates to the entire Board for Board membership.
Stockholders may propose nominees for consideration by this
committee by submitting names and supporting information to the
Companys general counsel. The Board will review the
nominating and corporate governance committees
recommendations of candidates for election to the Board. The
Board will nominate directors for election at each annual
meeting of stockholders. The Board is responsible for filling
any director vacancies that may occur between annual meetings of
stockholders.
The nominating and corporate governance committee utilizes a
number of methods for identifying and evaluating nominees for
Board membership. In the event our Board elects to increase the
number of its members or there is a vacancy on our Board, this
committee will consider various potential candidates for
director, who may come to the attention of this committee
through current Board members, professional search firms,
stockholders, or other persons. In reviewing director
candidates, this committee will review each candidates
qualifications for membership on the Board, consider the
enhanced independence, financial literacy and financial
expertise standards that may be required for audit committee
membership and assess the performance of current directors who
are proposed to be renominated to the Board. We may from time to
time engage a third party search firm to assist our Board and
the nominating and corporate governance committee in identifying
and recruiting candidates for Board membership.
Compensation
Committee Interlocks and Insider Participation
No member of the compensation committee is now, nor was during
2009, an officer or employee of the Company.
Our compensation committee is comprised of George E. Matelich,
Steve A. Nordaker, Kenneth A. Pontarelli and Mark E. Tomkins.
Mr. Matelich is a managing director of Kelso &
Company and Mr. Pontarelli is a partner managing director
in the Merchant Banking Division of Goldman, Sachs &
Co. For a description of the Companys transactions with
certain affiliates of Kelso & Company and certain
affiliates of Goldman, Sachs & Co., see Certain
Relationships and Related Party Transactions
Transactions with the Goldman Sachs Funds and the Kelso
Funds.
For a portion of 2009, John J. Lipinski, our chief executive
officer, was also a director of and served on the compensation
committee of INTERCAT, Inc., a privately held company of which
Regis B. Lippert, who serves as a director on our Board, is the
President, CEO, majority shareholder and a director.
Mr. Lipinski resigned this position in August, 2009. No
interlocking relationship exists between our Board or
compensation committee and the board of directors or
compensation committee of any other company.
Corporate
Governance Guidelines and Codes of Ethics
Our Corporate Governance Guidelines, as well as our Code of
Ethics, which applies to all of our directors, officers and
employees and our Principal Executive and Senior Financial
Officers Code of Ethics, which applies to our principal
executive and senior financial and accounting officers, are
available free of charge on our Internet site at
www.cvrenergy.com. Our Corporate Governance Guidelines,
Code of Ethics and
11
Principal Executive and Senior Financial Officers Code of
Ethics are also available in print to any stockholder who
requests them by writing to CVR Energy, Inc., at 2277 Plaza
Drive, Suite 500, Sugar Land, Texas 77479, Attention:
Senior Vice President, General Counsel and Secretary.
PROPOSAL 1 ELECTION
OF DIRECTORS
Nominees
for Election as Directors
A Board consisting of nine directors is proposed to be elected
to serve a one-year term or until their successors have been
elected and qualified. The nine nominees, together with their
ages, positions and biographies, are listed below. All of the
nominees except for Mr. John K. Rowan and Mr. Joseph
E. Sparano are currently directors. The Board has chosen not to
nominate Mr. Kenneth A. Pontarelli and Mr. Regis B.
Lippert for reelection to the Board this year.
Messrs. Pontarelli and Lippert have been valuable members
of our Board since September 2006 and June 2007, respectively,
and our Board thanks each of them for their valuable service.
The Board intends to appoint Mr. Rowan to replace
Mr. Pontarelli and to appoint Mr. Sparano to replace
Mr. Lippert, each effective May 19, 2010 in connection
with the Annual Meeting, and therefore, nominates each of
Messrs. Rowan and Sparano for election along with seven of
our current nine directors. Our Board is not aware that any
nominee named in this Proxy Statement is unable or unwilling to
accept nomination or election. If any nominee becomes unable to
accept nomination or election, the persons named in the proxy
card will vote your shares for the election of a substitute
nominee selected by the Board.
Vote
Required and Recommendation of Board
The nine nominees receiving the greatest number of votes duly
cast for election as directors will be elected. Abstentions will
be counted for purposes of determining whether a quorum is
present at the Annual Meeting, but will not be counted for
purposes of calculating a plurality. Therefore, abstentions will
have no impact as to the election of directors.
Under the terms of the CVR Energy Stockholders Agreement, CA and
CA II have agreed to vote their shares in a manner such that
each designates two directors to our Board. Additionally,
pursuant to the CVR Energy Stockholders Agreement, CA and CA II
have agreed to vote for the Companys chief executive
officer as a director. See Certain Relationships and
Related Party Transactions Transactions with the
Goldman Sachs Funds and the Kelso Funds Stockholders
Agreement below. The aggregate number of shares of common
stock owned by CA and CA II as of April 1, 2010 was
55,490,456, which was approximately 64% of our then outstanding
common stock. Of the nine nominees listed below, George E.
Matelich and Stanley de J. Osborne were designated by CA and
John K. Rowan and Scott L. Lebovitz were designated by CA II.
Pursuant to the terms of the CVR Energy Stockholders Agreement,
John J. Lipinski has been designated as a nominee by reason of
his position as chief executive officer of the Company.
Our Amended and Restated By-Laws provide that the number of
directors on the Board can be no fewer than three and no greater
than fifteen. The exact number of directors is to be determined
from time to time by resolution adopted by our Board. A
resolution was passed on September 24, 2008 setting the
size of the Board at nine members.
12
Our Board unanimously recommends a vote FOR the
election of the nine nominees listed below.
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|
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|
|
|
|
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First Elected
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Name
|
|
Age(1)
|
|
Position
|
|
Directorship
|
|
John J. Lipinski
|
|
|
59
|
|
|
Chairman of the Board, Chief Executive Officer and President
|
|
|
9/06
|
|
C. Scott Hobbs
|
|
|
56
|
|
|
Director
|
|
|
9/08
|
|
Scott L. Lebovitz
|
|
|
34
|
|
|
Director
|
|
|
9/06
|
|
George E. Matelich
|
|
|
53
|
|
|
Director
|
|
|
9/06
|
|
Steve A. Nordaker
|
|
|
63
|
|
|
Director
|
|
|
6/08
|
|
Stanley de J. Osborne
|
|
|
39
|
|
|
Director
|
|
|
9/06
|
|
John K. Rowan
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|
|
31
|
|
|
Director Nominee
|
|
|
|
|
Joseph E. Sparano
|
|
|
62
|
|
|
Director Nominee
|
|
|
|
|
Mark E. Tomkins
|
|
|
54
|
|
|
Director
|
|
|
1/07
|
|
|
|
|
(1) |
|
Ages are as of March 15, 2010. |
Principal
Occupations and Qualifications.
The Board has concluded that each of its members is qualified to
serve as a director due to the value of their experiences,
qualifications, attributes and skills as noted below:
John J. Lipinski has served as our chairman of the Board
since October 2007, our chief executive officer and president
and a member of our Board since September 2006, chief executive
officer and president of CA since June 2005 and chief executive
officer and president of CA II and Coffeyville
Acquisition III LLC (CA III) since October
2007. Since October 2007, Mr. Lipinski has also served as
the chief executive officer, president and a director of the
managing general partner of the Partnership. For a discussion of
the Partnership, see Certain Relationships and Related
Party Transactions Transactions with CVR Partners,
LP. Mr. Lipinski has over 37 years of experience
in the petroleum refining industry. He began his career with
Texaco Inc. In 1985, Mr. Lipinski joined The Coastal
Corporation, eventually serving as Vice President of Refining
with overall responsibility for Coastal Corporations
refining and petrochemical operations. Upon the merger of
Coastal with El Paso Corporation in 2001, Mr. Lipinski
was promoted to Executive Vice President of Refining and
Chemicals, where he was responsible for all refining,
petrochemical, nitrogen-based chemical processing and lubricant
operations, as well as the corporate engineering and
construction group. Mr. Lipinski left El Paso in 2002
and became an independent management consultant. In 2004, he
became a managing director and partner of Prudentia Energy, an
advisory and management firm. Mr. Lipinski graduated from
Stevens Institute of Technology with a Bachelor of Engineering
(Chemical) and received a Juris Doctor degree from Rutgers
University School of Law. Mr. Lipinskis over
37 years of experience in the petroleum refining industry
adds significant value to the Board. His in-depth knowledge of
the issues, opportunities and challenges facing the Company
provides the direction and focus the Board needs to ensure the
most critical matters are addressed.
C. Scott Hobbs has been a member of the Board since
September 2008. Mr. Hobbs has been the managing member of
Energy Capital Advisors, LLC, an energy industry consulting
firm, since 2006. Energy Capital Advisors provides consulting
and advisory services to state government, investment banks,
private equity firms and other investors evaluating major
projects, acquisitions and divestitures principally involving
oil and gas pipelines, processing plants, power plants and gas
distribution assets. Mr. Hobbs was the executive chairman
and a director of Optigas, Inc., a private midstream gathering
and processing natural gas company, from February 2005 until
March 2006 when Optigas was sold to a private equity firm
portfolio company. From January 2004 to February 2005,
Mr. Hobbs was president and chief operating officer of KFx,
Inc. (now Evergreen Energy), a publicly traded clean coal
technology company. From 1977 to 2001, Mr. Hobbs worked at
The Coastal Corporation, where he last served as executive vice
president and chief operating officer for its regulated gas
pipelines and related operations in the Rocky Mountain region.
He received a B.S. in Business Administration from Louisiana
State University and is a certified public accountant.
Mr. Hobbs currently
13
serves on the boards of directors of Buckeye GP LLC, the general
partner of Buckeye Partners, L.P., and American Oil &
Gas, Inc. Mr. Hobbs extensive experience in the
energy and pipeline industry enhances his skill at providing our
directors with meaningful information. In addition, his acute
understanding of our business helps generate critical
discussions, collaboration and strategic planning. He is the
newest member of our Board and brings a fresh perspective to
audit committee communication with the Finance Department and
internal and external auditors and to Board oversight and
understanding of our business strategies.
Scott L. Lebovitz has been a member of our Board since
September 2006 and a member of the board of directors of CA II
and CA III since October 2007. He was also a member of the board
of directors of CA from June 2005 until October 2007. He has
also been a member of the board of directors of the managing
general partner of the Partnership since October 2007.
Mr. Lebovitz is a managing director in the Merchant Banking
Division of Goldman, Sachs & Co. Mr. Lebovitz
joined Goldman, Sachs & Co. in 1997 and became a
managing director in 2007. He is a director of Energy Future
Holdings Corp. Mr. Lebovitz previously served as a director
of Ruths Chris Steakhouse, Inc. He received his B.S. in
Commerce from the University of Virginia.
Mr. Lebovitzs history with the company adds
significant value and his financial background provides a
balanced perspective as we have faced a volatile marketplace.
His long service as our director gives him invaluable insights
into our history and growth and a valuable perspective of the
strategic direction of our businesses.
George E. Matelich has been a member of our Board since
September 2006, a member of the board of directors of CA since
June 2005 and a member of the board of directors of CA III since
October 2007. He has also been a member of the board of
directors of the managing general partner of the Partnership
since October 2007. Mr. Matelich has been a managing
director of Kelso & Company since 1990.
Mr. Matelich has been affiliated with Kelso since 1985.
Mr. Matelich is a Certified Public Accountant and holds a
Certificate in Management Consulting. Mr. Matelich received
a B.A. in Business Administration from the University of Puget
Sound and an M.B.A. from the Stanford Graduate School of
Business. He is a director of Global Geophysical Services, Inc.,
Shelter Bay Energy Inc., Waste Services, Inc. and the American
Prairie Foundation. Mr. Matelich previously served as a
director of FairPoint Communications, Inc. and Optigas, Inc. He
is also a Trustee of the University of Puget Sound and a member
of the Stanford Graduate School of Business Advisory Council.
Mr. Matelichs long service as a director with us
gives him invaluable insights into our history and growth and a
valuable perspective of the strategic direction of our
businesses. Additionally, his experience with other public
companies provides depth of knowledge of business and strategic
considerations.
Steve A. Nordaker has been a member of our Board since
June 2008. He has served as senior vice president finance of
Energy Capital Group Holdings LLC, a development company
dedicated to building, owning and operating gasification and
IGCC units for the refining, petrochemical and fertilizer
industries since June 2004. Mr. Nordaker has also worked as
a financial consultant for various companies in the areas of
acquisitions, divestitures, restructuring and financial matters
since January 2002. From 1996 through 2001, he was a managing
director at J.P. Morgan Securities/JPMorgan Chase Bank in
the global chemicals group and global oil & gas group.
From 1992 to 1995, he was a managing director in the Chemical
Bank worldwide energy, refining and petrochemical group. From
1982 to 1992, Mr. Nordaker served in numerous banking
positions in the energy group at Texas Commerce Bank.
Mr. Nordaker was Manager of Projects for the Frantz
Company, an engineering consulting firm from 1977 through 1982
and worked as a Chemical Engineer for UOP, Inc. from 1968
through 1977. Mr. Nordaker received a B.S. in chemical
engineering from South Dakota School of Mines and Technology and
an M.B.A. from the University of Houston. Mr. Nordaker is a
director of Mallard Creek Polymers, Inc. and Energy Capital
Group Holdings LLC. Mr. Nordaker previously served as a
director of The Plaza Group. Mr. Nordakers extensive
and varied experiences in the energy sector in combination with
his financial services experience provides important insight and
strategic planning for the Board as the Company moves forward in
making critical decisions and long-term planning. His
experiences are helpful to the Board in evaluation of
diversification and finance related plans. His broad knowledge
of finance, lending and credit markets is valuable to the
Boards evaluation of liquidity and credit matters.
Stanley de J. Osborne has been a member of our Board
since September 2006, a member of the board of directors of CA
since June 2005 and a member of the board of directors of CA III
since October 2007. He has
14
also been a member of the board of directors of the managing
general partner of the Partnership since October 2007.
Mr. Osborne was a Vice President of Kelso &
Company from 2004 through 2007 and has been a managing director
since 2007. Mr. Osborne has been affiliated with Kelso
since 1998. Prior to joining Kelso, Mr. Osborne was an
Associate at Summit Partners. Previously, Mr. Osborne was
an Associate in the Private Equity Group and an Analyst in the
Financial Institutions Group at J.P. Morgan & Co.
He received a B.A. in Government from Dartmouth College.
Mr. Osborne is a director of Custom Building Products,
Inc., Global Geophysical Services, Inc., Shelter Bay Energy Inc.
and Traxys S.a.r.l. Mr. Osborne previously served as a
director of Optigas, Inc. His long service as our director gives
him invaluable insights into our history and growth and a
valuable perspective of the strategic direction of our
businesses.
John K. Rowan has been nominated to serve as a member of
our Board beginning in May 2010. Mr. Rowan has been a vice
president with Goldman, Sachs & Co. since 2007.
Mr. Rowan currently serves on the board of directors for
First Aviation Services, Inc. and Sprint Industrial Corp. He
also serves as a member of the board of directors and treasurer
for the Bronx Success Academy. Mr. Rowan earned a B.A. from
Columbia University in economics. We believe the addition of Mr.
Rowan to our Board will provide a fresh perspective and valuable
insight to our current and future business strategies.
Joseph E. Sparano has been nominated to serve as a member
of our Board beginning in May 2010. Mr. Sparano has over
40 years of experience in the petroleum and refining
industry. His career began with Exxon Company, USA in 1969,
where he served for over 10 years in various technical and
operations management positions. Next, from 1980 to 1990
Mr. Sparano served in executive roles with Union Pacific
Corporation, Champlin Petroleum, Union Pacific Resources Co.,
Ultramar/Union Pacific Resources Co. and Mercury Air Group
related to oil and gas project planning, the negotiation of
joint ventures, directing strategic acquisitions and
divestitures, and managing business units. From 1990 to 1995,
Mr. Sparano served as Chairman of the Board and Chief
Executive Officer of Pacific Refining Company, a joint venture
of The Coastal Corporation and Sinochem, a national oil company
of The Peoples Republic of China. From 1995 to 1996, he
was a strategic investment advisor for TransCanada Pipelines.
Mr. Sparano owned and operated his own consulting business
from 1996 to 2000. From 2000 to 2003, Mr. Sparano served as
President of the West Cost regional business unit and Vice
President of the Heavy Fuels Marketing segment for Tesoro
Petroleum. Most recently, Mr. Sparano served as President
of the Western States Petroleum Association (WSPA) from 2003 to
2009, where he was responsible for leading the advocacy efforts
and public representation of the largest western
U.S. energy and petroleum company trade association.
Effective January 1, 2010, Mr. Sparano is serving as
an executive advisor to the Chairman of the WSPA board of
directors, where he will continue to represent WSPA and assist
with the transitioning of duties to the new president until his
retirement in March of 2011. Mr. Sparano holds a B.S. in
chemical engineering from the Stevens Institute of Technology
and has graduate studies experience from both the Stevens
Institute of Technology and Texas Christian University.
Mr. Sparano previously served as a member of the Management
Board of Champlin Petroleum, as a director of Pacific Refining
Company, and as an ex-officio director of WSPA. We believe Mr.
Sparanos extensive experience in the petroleum and
refining industry will provide the Board with meaningful
information and a valuable perspective of the markets in which
we operate.
Mark E. Tomkins has been a member of our Board since
January 2007. He also was a member of the board of directors of
CA from January 2007 until October 2007. Mr. Tomkins has
served as the senior financial officer at several large
companies during the past eleven years. He was Senior Vice
President and Chief Financial Officer of Innovene, a petroleum
refining and chemical polymers business and a subsidiary of
British Petroleum, from May 2005 to January 2006, when Innovene
was sold to a strategic buyer. Since January 2006,
Mr. Tomkins has served as a consultant and also serves as a
board member on other unrelated boards. From January 2001 to May
2005, he was Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer
of Vulcan Materials Company, a publicly traded construction
materials and chemicals company. From August 1998 to January
2001, Mr. Tomkins was Senior Vice President and Chief
Financial Officer of Chemtura (formerly Great Lakes Chemical
Corporation), a publicly traded specialty chemicals company.
From July 1996 to August 1998, he worked at Honeywell
Corporation as Vice President of Finance and Business
Development for its polymers division and as Vice President of
Finance and Business Development for its electronic materials
division. From November 1990 to July 1996, Mr. Tomkins
worked at Monsanto Company in various financial
15
and accounting positions, including Chief Financial Officer of
the growth enterprises division from January 1995 to July 1996.
Prior to joining Monsanto, he worked at Cobra Corporation, as an
auditor in private practice and as an assistant professor of
accounting and finance. Mr. Tomkins received a B.S. degree
in business, with majors in Finance and Management, from Eastern
Illinois University and an M.B.A. from Eastern Illinois
University and is a Certified Public Accountant.
Mr. Tomkins is a director of W.R. Grace & Co. and
Elevance Renewable Sciences, Inc. Mr. Tomkins previously
served as a director of Renewable Chemicals Corporation.
Mr. Tomkins contributes to the Board his past and current
experiences as a director which provides invaluable insights
into various management, financial and governance matters. His
prior senior financial roles have contributed to his
effectiveness as our audit committee chair and as a member of
the compensation committee. His knowledge and experience has
provided the audit committee with valuable perspective in
managing its relationship with our independent auditors and
performance of its financial reporting oversight function.
NON-EMPLOYEE
DIRECTOR COMPENSATION FOR 2009
In 2009, Longnecker was engaged to provide a formal report and
analysis of the compensation paid to independent directors.
Their report was provided to the compensation committee and
management for consideration. They reviewed trends of our peer
companies, which include Terra Industries, Tesoro Corp., Holly
Corp., Frontier Oil Corp., and CF Industries Holdings, Inc., as
well as other relevant market information. This review consisted
(in part) of reviewing election fees, annual retainers, meeting
fees, and stock compensation levels provided to directors as
reported in the peer company proxy statements filed in 2009.
Longnecker also advised on other current practices related to
director compensation. Collectively, the analysis showed that
approximately 50% of total director compensation or more is
provided in equity to ensure a balanced pay for
governance. In addition, it showed there is an
increased differentiation in pay to recognize the growing
variance in time/responsibilities/risk for committee chairs
versus committee members and audit and compensation committees
versus other committees.
Based upon the review of the report and the proposed
considerations, the compensation committee recommended to the
Board an increase to a total of $120,000 in the target grant
date value of annual awards of restricted stock, beginning in
2009. In 2008, restricted stock was awarded at a $100,000 value.
Additionally, beginning in 2010, the compensation committee
approved an annual fee to be paid to independent directors of
$5,000 per audit committee member and $2,500 per compensation
committee member.
The following table provides compensation information for the
year ended December 31, 2009 for each non-management
director of our Board.
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Fees
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Earned or
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Stock
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Option
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All Other
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Name
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Paid in Cash
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Awards(1)(2)
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Awards(3)
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Compensation
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Total
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C. Scott Hobbs
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$
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60,000
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$
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120,003
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$
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180,003
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Regis B. Lippert
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$
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60,000
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$
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120,003
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$
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180,003
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Steve A. Nordaker
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$
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60,000
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$
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120,003
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$
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180,003
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Mark E. Tomkins
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$
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75,000
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$
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120,003
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$
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195,003
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Scott L. Lebovitz, George E. Matelich, Stanley de J. Osborne and
Kenneth A. Pontarelli
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(1) |
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Messrs. Hobbs, Lippert, Nordaker and Tomkins were each
awarded 18,321 shares of restricted stock on
December 18, 2009. These shares of restricted stock vested
immediately on December 18, 2009, subject to the ownership
requirement described below. The dollar amounts in the table
reflect the grant date fair value of the awards
(18,321 shares multiplied by $6.55 per share, rounded to
the nearest whole number) as well as the dollar amounts
recognized for financial statement reporting purposes for the
fiscal year ended December 31, 2009 in accordance with ASC
Topic 718. No forfeitures occurred during 2009 and all awards
are valued based on the closing market price of the
Companys common stock on the date of grant ($6.55 for 2009
awards). |
16
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(2) |
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The aggregate number of shares subject to vesting restrictions
that were outstanding at December 31, 2009 was
1,666 shares for Mr. Lippert and 4,166 shares for
Mr. Tomkins. |
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(3) |
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The following table reflects outstanding stock options held by
directors that were vested and that have not vested as of
December 31, 2009: |
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Number of
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Number of
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Options
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Options That
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Expiration
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Exercise
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Director
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Vested
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Have Not Vested
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Grant Date
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Date
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Price
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Mr. Lippert
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3,434
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1,716
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10/22/07
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10/22/17
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$
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19.00
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2,867
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1,433
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12/21/07
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12/21/17
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$
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24.73
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Mr. Tomkins
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3,434
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1,716
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10/22/07
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10/22/17
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$
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19.00
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2,867
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1,433
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12/21/07
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12/21/17
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$
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24.73
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Mr. Hobbs
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3,034
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6,066
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9/24/08
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9/24/18
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$
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11.01
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Mr. Nordaker
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1,450
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2,900
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6/10/08
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6/10/18
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$
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24.96
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Non-employee directors who do not work principally for entities
affiliated with us were entitled to receive an annual retainer
of $60,000 for 2009. Mr. Tomkins receives an additional
retainer of $15,000 ($20,000 for 2010) for serving as the audit
committee chairman. In addition, all directors are reimbursed
for travel expenses and other out-of-pocket costs incurred in
connection with their attendance at meetings. Annually, on the
second pay date in December of each year, the non-employee
directors are granted a formula-based award of restricted stock
to approximate a value of $120,000 ($100,000 in 2008). We
determined the number of shares by dividing $120,000 by the
closing stock price of $6.55 on December 18, 2009. Cash
compensation for the non-employee directors will remain the same
for 2010; provided, non-employee members of the audit committee
will also receive an additional $5,000 per year and non-employee
members of the compensation committee will also receive an
additional $2,500 per year. Messrs. Lebovitz, Matelich,
Osborne and Pontarelli received no compensation in respect of
their service as directors in 2009.
Options awarded generally vest in one-third annual increments
beginning on the first anniversary of the date of grant.
Pursuant to the annual formula grant described above, on
December 19, 2008, we also granted 24,155 restricted shares
of CVR Energy to Messrs. Hobbs, Lippert, Nordaker and
Tomkins. These shares of restricted stock vested immediately on
December 19, 2008. Each director receiving these shares
must maintain a two-thirds ownership of the shares throughout
their directorship in accordance with their director restricted
stock agreement.
None of our non-employee directors received perquisites in an
amount of at least $10,000.
SECURITIES
OWNERSHIP OF CERTAIN
BENEFICIAL OWNERS AND OFFICERS AND DIRECTORS
The following table presents information regarding beneficial
ownership of our common stock by:
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each of our current directors and nominees for director;
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each of our named executive officers as such term is defined
herein;
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each stockholder known by us to beneficially hold five percent
or more of our common stock; and
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all of our executive officers and directors as a group.
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Beneficial ownership is determined under the rules of the SEC
and generally includes voting or investment power with respect
to securities. Unless indicated below, to our knowledge, the
persons and entities named in the table have sole voting and
sole investment power with respect to all shares beneficially
owned by them, subject to community property laws where
applicable. Shares of common stock subject to options that are
currently exercisable or exercisable within 60 days of
April 1, 2010 are deemed to be outstanding and to be
beneficially owned by the person holding such options for the
purpose of computing the percentage ownership of that person but
are not treated as outstanding for the purpose of computing the
percentage
17
ownership of any other person. Except as otherwise indicated,
the business address for each of the beneficial owners listed in
the table is
c/o CVR
Energy, Inc., 2277 Plaza Drive, Suite 500, Sugar Land,
Texas 77479.
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Shares
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Beneficial Owner
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Beneficially Owned
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Name and Address
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Number
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Percent
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Coffeyville Acquisition LLC(1)
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31,433,360
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36.3
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%
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Kelso Investment Associates VII, L.P.(1)
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31,433,360
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36.3
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%
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KEP VI, LLC(1)
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31,433,360
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36.3
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%
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320 Park Avenue, 24th Floor
New York, New York 10022
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Coffeyville Acquisition II LLC(2)
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24,057,096
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27.8
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%
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The Goldman Sachs Group, Inc.(2)
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24,057,296
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27.8
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%
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200 West Street
New York, New York
10282-2198
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John J. Lipinski(3)
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247,471
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*
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Stanley A. Riemann(4)
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Edward A. Morgan(5)
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63,168
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*
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Edmund S. Gross(6)
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16,268
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*
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Robert W. Haugen(7)
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5,000
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*
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C. Scott Hobbs(8)
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45,510
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*
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Scott L. Lebovitz(2)
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24,057,296
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27.8
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%
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Regis B. Lippert(9)
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42,196
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*
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George E. Matelich(1)
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31,433,360
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36.3
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%
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Steve A. Nordaker(10)
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39,345
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*
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Stanley de J. Osborne(1)
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31,433,360
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36.3
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%
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Kenneth A. Pontarelli(2)
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24,057,296
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27.8
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%
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John K. Rowan(2)
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24,057,296
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27.8
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%
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Joseph E. Sparano
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Mark Tomkins(11)
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56,147
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*
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All directors and executive officers, as a group
(19 persons)(12)
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56,016,261
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64.7
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%
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* |
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Less than 1% of our outstanding common stock as of the record
date. |
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(1) |
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CA directly owns 31,433,360 shares of common stock. Kelso
Investment Associates VII, L.P., or KIA VII, a Delaware limited
partnership, owns a number of common units in CA that
corresponds to 24,557,883 shares of common stock, and KEP
VI, LLC, or KEP VI and together with KIA VII, the Kelso Funds, a
Delaware limited liability company, owns a number of common
units in CA that corresponds to 6,081,000 shares of common
stock. The Kelso Funds may be deemed to beneficially own
indirectly, in the aggregate, all of the common stock of the
Company owned by CA because the Kelso Funds control CA and have
the power to vote or dispose of the common stock of the Company
owned by CA. KIA VII and KEP VI, due to their common control,
could be deemed to beneficially own each of the others
shares but each disclaims such beneficial ownership.
Messrs. Nickell, Wall, Matelich, Goldberg, Bynum,
Wahrhaftig, Berney, Loverro, Connors, Osborne and Moore may be
deemed to share beneficial ownership of shares of common stock
owned of record or beneficially owned by KIA VII, KEP VI and CA
by virtue of their status as managing members of KEP VI and of
Kelso GP VII, LLC, a Delaware limited liability company, the
principal business of which is serving as the general partner of
Kelso GP VII, L.P., a Delaware limited partnership, the
principal business of which is serving as the general partner of
KIA VII. Each of Messrs. Nickell, Wall, Matelich, Goldberg,
Bynum, Wahrhaftig, Berney, Loverro, Connors, Osborne and Moore
(the Kelso Individuals) share investment and voting
power with respect to the ownership interests owned by KIA VII,
KEP VI and CA but disclaim beneficial ownership of such
interests. Mr. Collins may be deemed to share beneficial
ownership of shares of common stock owned of |
18
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record or beneficially owned by KEP VI and CA by virtue of his
status as a managing member of KEP VI. Mr. Collins shares
investment and voting power with the Kelso Individuals with
respect to ownership interests owned by KEP VI and CA but
disclaims beneficial ownership of such interests. |
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(2) |
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CA II directly owns 24,057,096 shares of common stock. GS
Capital Partners V Fund, L.P., GS Capital Partners V Offshore
Fund, L.P., GS Capital Partners V GmbH & Co. KG and GS
Capital Partners V Institutional, L.P. collectively, the
Goldman Sachs Funds, are members of CA II and own
common units of CA II. The Goldman Sachs Funds common
units in CA II correspond to 23,821,799 shares of common
stock. The Goldman Sachs Group, Inc. and Goldman,
Sachs & Co. may be deemed to beneficially own
indirectly, in the aggregate, all of the common stock owned by
CA II through the Goldman Sachs Funds because
(i) affiliates of Goldman, Sachs & Co. and The
Goldman Sachs Group, Inc. are the general partner, managing
general partner, managing partner, managing member or member of
the Goldman Sachs Funds and (ii) the Goldman Sachs Funds
control CA II and have the power to vote or dispose of the
common stock of the Company owned by CA II. Goldman,
Sachs & Co. is a direct and indirect wholly owned
subsidiary of The Goldman Sachs Group, Inc. Goldman,
Sachs & Co. is the investment manager of certain of
the Goldman Sachs Funds. Shares that may be deemed to be
beneficially owned by the Goldman Sachs Funds consist of:
(1) 12,543,608 shares of common stock that may be
deemed to be beneficially owned by GS Capital Partners V Fund,
L.P. and its general partner, GSCP V Advisors, L.L.C.,
(2) 6,479,505 shares of common stock that may be
deemed to be beneficially owned by GS Capital Partners V
Offshore Fund, L.P. and its general partner, GSCP V Offshore
Advisors, L.L.C., (3) 4,301,376 shares of common stock
that may be deemed to be beneficially owned by GS Capital
Partners V Institutional, L.P. and its general partner, GSCP V
Advisors, L.L.C., and (4) 497,310 shares of common
stock that may be deemed to be beneficially owned by GS Capital
Partners V GmbH & Co. KG and its general partner,
Goldman, Sachs Management GP GmbH. In addition, Goldman,
Sachs & Co. directly owns 200 shares of common
stock. The Goldman Sachs Group, Inc. may be deemed to
beneficially own indirectly the 200 shares of common stock
owned by Goldman, Sachs & Co. Mr. Scott L.
Lebovitz is a managing director of Goldman, Sachs &
Co. and Mr. John K. Rowan is a vice president of Goldman,
Sachs & Co. Mr. Lebovitz, Mr. Rowan, The
Goldman Sachs Group, Inc. and Goldman, Sachs & Co.
each disclaims beneficial ownership of the shares of common
stock owned directly or indirectly by the Goldman Sachs Funds,
except to the extent of their pecuniary interest therein, if any. |
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(3) |
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Mr. Lipinski owns 247,471 shares of common stock
directly. In addition, Mr. Lipinski owns
139,714 shares indirectly through his ownership of common
units in CA and CA II. Mr. Lipinski does not have the power
to vote or dispose of shares that correspond to his ownership of
common units in CA and CA II and thus does not have beneficial
ownership of such shares. Mr. Lipinski also owns
(i) profits interests in each of CA and CA II,
(ii) phantom points under each of the Phantom Unit Plans
and (iii) common units and override units in CA III. See
Compensation of Executive Officers Outstanding
Equity Awards at 2009 Fiscal Year-End and
Compensation of Executive Officers Equity
Awards Vested During Fiscal Year-Ended 2009. Such
interests do not give Mr. Lipinski beneficial ownership of
any shares of our common stock because they do not give
Mr. Lipinski the power to vote or dispose of any such
shares. |
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(4) |
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Mr. Riemann owns no shares of common stock directly.
Mr. Riemann owns 85,979 shares indirectly through his
ownership of common units in CA and CA II. Mr. Riemann does
not have the power to vote or dispose of shares that correspond
to his ownership of common units in CA and CA II and thus does
not have beneficial ownership of such shares. Mr. Riemann
also owns (i) profits interests in each of CA and CA II,
(ii) phantom points under each of the Phantom Unit Plans
and (iii) common units and override units in CA III. See
Compensation of Executive Officers Outstanding
Equity Awards at 2009 Fiscal Year-End and
Compensation of Executive Officers Equity
Awards Vested During Fiscal Year-Ended 2009. Such
interests do not give Mr. Riemann beneficial ownership of
any shares of the Companys common stock because they do
not give Mr. Riemann the power to vote or dispose of any
such shares. |
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(5) |
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Mr. Morgan was awarded 25,000 shares of non-vested
restricted stock in connection with joining the Company on
May 14, 2009. Under the terms of the restricted stock
agreement, Mr. Morgan has the right |
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to vote his shares of restricted stock after the date of grant.
However, the transfer restrictions on these shares will lapse in
one-third annual increments beginning on the first anniversary
of the date of grant. Mr. Morgan was awarded
38,168 shares of restricted stock on December 18,
2009. The transfer restrictions on these shares will lapse in
one-third annual increments beginning on the first anniversary
of the date of grant. Subject to vesting requirements,
Mr. Morgan is required to retain at least 50% of such
shares for a period equal to the lesser of (i) three years,
commencing with the date of the award, or (ii) as long as
Mr. Morgan remains an officer of the Company (or an
affiliate) at the level of Vice President or higher. See
Compensation of Executive Officers Outstanding
Equity Awards at 2009 Fiscal Year-End and
Compensation of Executive Officers Equity
Awards Vested During Fiscal Year-Ended 2009. Because
Mr. Morgan has the right to vote his non-vested shares of
restricted stock, he is deemed to have beneficial ownership of
such shares. |
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(6) |
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Mr. Gross owns 1,000 shares of common stock directly.
In addition, Mr. Gross was awarded 15,268 shares of
restricted stock on December 18, 2009. The transfer
restrictions on these shares will lapse in one-third annual
increments beginning on the first anniversary of the date of
grant. Subject to vesting requirements, Mr. Gross is
required to retain at least 50% of such shares for a period
equal to the lesser of (i) three years, commencing with the
date of the award, or (ii) as long as Mr. Gross
remains an officer of the Company (or an affiliate) at the level
of Vice President or higher. Because Mr. Gross has the
right to vote his non-vested shares of restricted stock, he is
deemed to have beneficial ownership of such shares.
Mr. Gross owns 6,447 shares indirectly through his
ownership of common units in CA and CA II. Mr. Gross does
not have the power to vote or dispose of shares that correspond
to his ownership of common units in CA and CA II and thus does
not have beneficial ownership of such shares. Mr. Gross
also owns (i) phantom points under each of the Phantom Unit
Plans and (ii) common units and override units in CA III.
See Compensation of Executive Officers
Outstanding Equity Awards at 2009 Fiscal Year-End and
Compensation of Executive Officers Equity
Awards Vested During Fiscal Year-Ended 2009. Such
interests do not give Mr. Gross beneficial ownership of any
shares of the Companys common stock because they do not
give Mr. Gross the power to vote or dispose of any such
shares. |
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(7) |
|
Mr. Haugen owns 5,000 shares of common stock directly.
Mr. Haugen owns 21,495 shares indirectly through his
ownership of common units in CA and CA II. Mr. Haugen does
not have the power to vote or dispose of shares that correspond
to his ownership of common units in CA and CA II and thus does
not have beneficial ownership of such shares. Mr. Haugen
also owns (i) profits interests in each of CA and CA II,
(ii) phantom points under each of the Phantom Unit Plans
and (iii) common units and override units in CA III. See
Compensation of Executive Officers Outstanding
Equity Awards at 2009 Fiscal Year-End and
Compensation of Executive Officers Equity
Awards Vested During Fiscal Year-Ended 2009. Such
interests do not give Mr. Haugen beneficial ownership of
any shares of the Companys common stock because they do
not give Mr. Haugen the power to vote or dispose of any
such shares. |
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(8) |
|
Mr. Hobbs was awarded options to purchase 9,100 shares
of common stock with an exercise price equal to the closing
price of CVR Energys common stock on the date of grant,
which was $11.01. The date of grant for these options was
September 24, 2008. Mr. Hobbs was also awarded
24,155 shares of restricted stock on December 19,
2008. These shares vested immediately; provided, each director
receiving these shares must maintain a two-thirds ownership of
the shares throughout their directorship. These options will
vest in one-third annual increments beginning on the first
anniversary of the date of grant. Mr. Hobbs was also
awarded 18,321 shares of restricted stock on
December 18, 2009. These shares vested immediately;
provided, each director receiving these shares is required to
retain at least 60% of such shares for a period equal to the
lesser of (i) three years, commencing with the date of the
award, or (ii) as long as such director remains on the
Board. Total shares of common stock subject to options that are
currently exercisable of 3,034 are deemed to be outstanding and
included in the total amount of shares beneficially owned by
Mr. Hobbs. |
|
(9) |
|
CVR Energys Board awarded Mr. Lippert options to
purchase 5,150 shares of common stock with an exercise
price equal to the initial public offering price of CVR
Energys common stock, which was $19.00 per share. The date
of grant for these options was October 22, 2007. These
options will vest in one-third annual increments beginning on
the first anniversary of the date of grant. In addition, in |
20
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connection with CVR Energys initial public offering, the
Companys Board awarded 5,000 shares of non-vested
restricted stock to Mr. Lippert. The date of grant for
these shares of restricted stock was October 24, 2007.
Under the terms of the restricted stock agreement,
Mr. Lippert has the right to vote his shares of restricted
stock after the date of grant. However, the transfer
restrictions on these shares will generally lapse in one-third
annual increments beginning on the first anniversary of the date
of grant. Additionally, the Companys Board awarded
Mr. Lippert options to purchase 4,300 shares of common
stock with an exercise price equal to the closing price of the
Companys common stock on the date of grant, which was
$24.73. The date of grant for these options was
December 21, 2007. These options will vest in one-third
annual increments beginning on the first anniversary of the date
of grant. Mr. Lippert was also awarded 24,155 shares
of restricted stock on December 19, 2008. These shares
vested immediately; provided, each director receiving these
shares must maintain a two-thirds ownership of the shares
throughout their directorship. Mr. Lippert sold 9,500 of
his shares in the open market on May 28, 2009.
Mr. Lippert was awarded 18,321 shares of restricted
stock on December 18, 2009, with 4,581 shares being
withheld for tax purposes, resulting in a net award of
13,740 shares. These shares vested immediately; provided,
each director receiving these shares is required to retain at
least 60% of such shares for a period equal to the lesser of
(i) three years, commencing with the date of the award, or
(ii) as long as such director remains on the Board.
Additionally, members of Mr. Lipperts immediate
family own 2,500 shares of our common stock directly.
Mr. Lippert disclaims beneficial ownership of shares of the
Companys common stock owned by members of his immediate
family. Because Mr. Lippert has the right to vote his
non-vested shares of restricted stock, he is deemed to have
beneficial ownership of such shares. Total shares of common
stock subject to options that are currently exercisable of 6,301
are deemed to be outstanding and included in the total amount of
shares beneficially owned by Mr. Lippert. |
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(10) |
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Mr. Nordaker was awarded options to purchase
4,350 shares of common stock with an exercise price equal
to the closing price of CVR Energys common stock on the
date of grant, which was $24.96. The date of grant for these
options was June 10, 2008. Mr. Nordaker was also
awarded 24,155 shares of restricted stock on
December 19, 2008. These shares vested immediately;
provided, each director receiving these shares must maintain a
two-thirds ownership of the shares throughout their
directorship. These options will generally vest in one-third
annual increments beginning on the first anniversary of the date
of grant. Mr. Nordaker was awarded 18,321 shares of
restricted stock on December 18, 2009, with
4,581 shares being withheld for tax purposes, resulting in
a net award of 13,740 shares. These shares vested
immediately; provided, each director receiving these shares is
required to retain at least 60% of such shares for a period
equal to the lesser of (i) three years, commencing with the
date of the award, or (ii) as long as such director remains
on the Board. Total shares of common stock subject to options
that are currently exercisable of 1,450 are deemed to be
outstanding and included in the total amount of shares
beneficially owned by Mr. Nordaker. |
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(11) |
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CVR Energys Board awarded Mr. Tomkins options to
purchase 5,150 shares of common stock with an exercise
price equal to the initial public offering price of CVR
Energys common stock, which was $19.00 per share. The date
of grant for these options was October 22, 2007. These
options will vest in one-third annual increments beginning on
the first anniversary of the date of grant. In connection with
CVR Energys initial public offering, the Companys
Board awarded 12,500 shares of non-vested restricted stock
to Mr. Tomkins. The date of grant for these shares of
restricted stock was October 24, 2007. Under the terms of
the restricted stock agreement, Mr. Tomkins has the right
to vote his shares of restricted stock after the date of grant.
However, the transfer restrictions on these shares will
generally lapse in one-third annual increments beginning on the
first anniversary of the date of grant. Additionally, the
Companys Board awarded Mr. Tomkins options to
purchase 4,300 shares of common stock with an exercise
price equal to the closing price of CVR Energys common
stock on the date of grant, which was $24.73. The date of grant
for these options was December 21, 2007. These options will
vest in one-third annual increments beginning on the first
anniversary of the date of grant. Mr. Tomkins was also
awarded 24,155 shares of restricted stock on
December 19, 2008. These shares vested immediately. Each
director receiving these shares must maintain a two-thirds
ownership of the shares throughout their directorship.
Mr. Tomkins transferred 4,167 shares of common stock
to an immediate family member on January 12, |
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2009. Mr. Tomkins was awarded 18,321 shares of
restricted stock on December 18, 2009, with
5,130 shares being withheld for tax purposes, resulting in
a net award of 13,191 shares. These shares vested
immediately; provided, each director receiving these shares is
required to retain at least 60% of such shares for a period
equal to the lesser of (i) three years, commencing with the
date of the award, or (ii) as long as such director remains
on the Board. Total shares of common stock subject to options
that are currently exercisable of 6,301 are deemed to be
outstanding and included in the total amount of shares
beneficially owned by Mr. Tomkins. Mr. Tomkins
disclaims beneficial ownership of shares of the Companys
common stock owned by members of his immediate family. Because
Mr. Tomkins has the right to vote his non-vested shares of
restricted stock, he is deemed to have beneficial ownership of
such shares. |
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(12) |
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The number of shares of common stock owned by all directors and
executive officers, as a group, reflects the sum of (1) all
shares of common stock directly owned by CA, with respect to
which Messrs. Matelich and Osborne may be deemed to share
beneficial ownership, (2) all shares of common stock
directly owned by CA II, with respect to which
Messrs. Rowan, Pontarelli and Lebovitz may be deemed to
share beneficial ownership, (3) the 200 shares owned
by Goldman, Sachs & Co. with respect to which
Messrs. Rowan, Pontarelli and Lebovitz may be deemed to
share beneficial ownership, (4) the 247,471 shares of
common stock owned directly by Mr. Lipinski, the
63,168 shares of common stock owned directly by
Mr. Morgan, the 16,268 shares of common stock owned
directly by Mr. Gross, the 5,000 shares of common
stock owned directly by Mr. Haugen, the 3,500 shares
of common stock owned directly by Mr. Wyatt E. Jernigan,
the 1,000 shares of common stock owned directly by
Mr. Kevan A. Vick and the 6,000 shares of common stock
owned directly by Mr. Christopher G. Swanberg, (5) the
45,510 shares owned by Mr. Hobbs, (6) the
39,345 shares owned by Mr. Nordaker, (7) the
51,980 shares owned by Mr. Tomkins and the
4,167 shares owned by members of Mr. Tomkins
family and (8) the 39,696 shares owned by
Mr. Lippert and the 2,500 shares owned by members of
Mr. Lipperts family. |
SECTION 16(a)
BENEFICIAL OWNERSHIP REPORTING COMPLIANCE
Section 16(a) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as
amended (the Exchange Act) requires our executive
officers and non-employee directors and each person who owns
more than 10% of our outstanding common stock, to file reports
of their stock ownership and changes in their ownership of our
common stock with the SEC and the NYSE. These same people must
also furnish us with copies of these reports and representations
made to us that no other reports were required. We have
performed a general review of such reports and amendments
thereto filed in 2009. Based on our review of these reports, to
our knowledge all of our executive officers and directors and
other persons who own more than 10% of our outstanding common
stock, have fully complied with the reporting requirements of
Section 16(a) during 2009.
22
EXECUTIVE
OFFICERS
The following table sets forth the names, positions and ages (as
of March 15, 2010) of each person who is an executive
officer of CVR Energy. We also indicate in the biographies below
which executive officers of CVR Energy hold similar positions
with the managing general partner of the Partnership. Senior
management of CVR Energy manages the Partnership pursuant to a
services agreement among us, the Partnership and the
Partnerships managing general partner.
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Name
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Age
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Position
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John J. Lipinski
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59
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Chairman of the Board of Directors, Chief Executive Officer and
President
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Stanley A. Riemann
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58
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Chief Operating Officer
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Edward A. Morgan
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40
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Chief Financial Officer and Treasurer
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Edmund S. Gross
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59
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Senior Vice President, General Counsel and Secretary
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Daniel J. Daly, Jr.
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64
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Executive Vice President, Strategy
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Robert W. Haugen
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51
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Executive Vice President, Refining Operations
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Wyatt E. Jernigan
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58
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Executive Vice President, Crude Oil Acquisition and Petroleum
Marketing
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Kevan A. Vick
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55
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Executive Vice President and Fertilizer General Manager
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Christopher G. Swanberg
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52
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Vice President, Environmental, Health and Safety
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Information
Concerning Executives Who Are Not Directors
Stanley A. Riemann has served as chief operating officer
of our Company since September 2006, chief operating officer of
CA since June 2005, chief operating officer of Coffeyville
Resources, LLC (CRLLC) since February 2004 and chief
operating officer of CA II and CA III since October 2007. Since
October 2007, Mr. Riemann has also served as the chief
operating officer of the managing general partner of the
Partnership. Prior to joining CRLLC in February 2004,
Mr. Riemann held various positions associated with the Crop
Production and Petroleum Energy Division of Farmland Industries,
Inc. (Farmland) for over 29 years, including,
most recently, Executive Vice President of Farmland and
President of Farmlands Energy and Crop Nutrient Division.
In this capacity, he was directly responsible for managing the
petroleum refining operation and all domestic fertilizer
operations, which included the Trinidad and Tobago nitrogen
fertilizer operations. His leadership also extended to managing
Farmlands interests in SF Phosphates in Rock Springs,
Wyoming and Farmland Hydro, L.P., a phosphate production
operation in Florida and managing all company-wide
transportation assets and services. On May 31, 2002,
Farmland filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection.
Mr. Riemann has served as a board member and board chairman
on several industry organizations including the Phosphate Potash
Institute, the Florida Phosphate Council and the International
Fertilizer Association. He currently serves on the Board of The
Fertilizer Institute. Mr. Riemann received a Bachelor of
Science degree from the University of Nebraska and an MBA from
Rockhurst University.
Edward A. Morgan has served as chief financial officer
and treasurer of our Company, CRLLC, CA, CAII and CAIII since
May, 2009. Mr. Morgan has also served as the chief
financial officer and treasurer of the managing general partner
of the Partnership. Prior to joining CVR Energy, Mr. Morgan
spent seven years with Brentwood, Tenn.-based Delek
U.S. Holdings, Inc., serving as the chief financial officer
for Deleks operating segments during the previous five
years. Mr. Morgan was named vice president in February
2005, and in April 2006, he was named chief financial officer of
Delek U.S. Holdings in connection with Deleks initial
public offering, which became effective in May 2006.
Mr. Morgan led a diverse organization at Delek, where he
was responsible for all finance, accounting and information
technology matters. Mr. Morgan received a Bachelor of
Science degree in accounting from Mississippi State University
and a Master of Accounting degree from the University of
Tennessee.
Edmund S. Gross has served as senior vice president,
general counsel and secretary of our Company since October 2007,
senior vice president, general counsel and secretary of CA II
and CA III since October 2007, vice president, general counsel
and secretary of our Company since September 2006, secretary of
CA since
23
June 2005 and general counsel and secretary of CRLLC since July
2004. Since October 2007, Mr. Gross has also served as the
senior vice president, general counsel and secretary of the
managing general partner of the Partnership. Prior to joining
CRLLC, Mr. Gross was Of Counsel at Stinson Morrison Hecker
LLP in Kansas City, Missouri from 2002 to 2004, was Senior
Corporate Counsel with Farmland from 1987 to 2002 and was an
associate and later a partner at Weeks, Thomas &
Lysaught, a law firm in Kansas City, Kansas, from 1980 to 1987.
Mr. Gross received a Bachelor of Arts degree in history
from Tulane University, a Juris Doctor from the University of
Kansas and an MBA from the University of Kansas.
Daniel J. Daly, Jr. has been our Executive Vice
President, Strategy since December 2007 and was our Senior Vice
President, Administration and Controls from September 2006
through December 2007 and our Vice President, Accounting and
Administration from June 2005 through August 2006. From December
2004 to June 2005 Mr. Daly was self-employed as a
consultant in mergers & acquisitions. From 1978 to
2001, Mr. Daly worked at Coastal Corporation, first as
Manager of Transportation and Supply Operations and then as
Controller, Refining Division and Vice President and Controller,
Refining and Marketing. Following the merger of Coastal with
El Paso in 2001, Mr. Daly served as Vice President and
Controller of Tosco Corporation from January 2001 to December
2001. Mr. Daly received a Bachelor of Science degree in
Commerce from St. Louis University.
Robert W. Haugen joined our business on June 24,
2005 and has served as executive vice president, refining
operations at our Company since September 2006 and as executive
vice president engineering & construction
at CRLLC since June 24, 2005. Since October 2007
Mr. Haugen has also served as executive vice president,
refining operations at CA and CA II. Mr. Haugen brings more
than 25 years of experience in the refining, petrochemical
and nitrogen fertilizer business to our Company. Prior to
joining us, Mr. Haugen was a managing director and Partner
of Prudentia Energy, an advisory and management firm focused on
mid-stream/downstream energy sectors, from January 2004 to June
2005. On leave from Prudentia, he served as the Senior Oil
Consultant to the Iraqi Reconstruction Management Office for the
U.S. Department of State. Prior to joining Prudentia
Energy, Mr. Haugen served in numerous engineering,
operations, marketing and management positions at the Howell
Corporation and at the Coastal Corporation. Upon the merger of
Coastal and El Paso in 2001, Mr. Haugen was named Vice
President and General Manager for the Coastal Corpus Christi
Refinery and later held the positions of Vice President of
Chemicals and Vice President of Engineering and Construction.
Mr. Haugen received a Bachelor of Science degree in
Chemical Engineering from the University of Texas.
Wyatt E. Jernigan has served as executive vice president,
crude oil acquisition and petroleum marketing at our Company
since September 2006 and as executive vice president
crude & feedstocks at CRLLC since June 24, 2005.
Since October 2007 Mr. Jernigan has also served as
executive vice president, crude oil acquisition and petroleum
marketing at CA and CA II. Mr. Jernigan has more than
30 years of experience in the areas of crude oil and
petroleum products related to trading, marketing, logistics and
business development. Most recently, Mr. Jernigan was a
managing director with Prudentia Energy, an advisory and
management firm focused on mid-stream/downstream energy sectors,
from January 2004 to June 2005. Most of his career was spent
with Coastal Corporation and El Paso, where he held several
positions in crude oil supply, petroleum marketing and asset
development, both domestic and international. Following the
merger between Coastal Corporation and El Paso in 2001,
Mr. Jernigan assumed the role of Managing Director for
Petroleum Markets Originations. Mr. Jernigan attended
Virginia Wesleyan College, majoring in Sociology and has
training in petroleum fundamentals from the University of Texas.
Kevan A. Vick has served as executive vice president and
fertilizer general manager at our Company since September 2006,
senior vice president at Coffeyville Resources Nitrogen
Fertilizers, LLC (CRNF) since February 27, 2004
and executive vice president and fertilizer general manager of
CA III since October 2007. Since October 2007, Mr. Vick has
also served as executive vice president and fertilizer general
manager of the managing general partner of the Partnership. He
has served on the board of directors of Farmland MissChem
Limited in Trinidad and SF Phosphates. He has nearly
30 years of experience in the Farmland organization and is
one of the most highly respected executives in the nitrogen
fertilizer industry, known for both his technical expertise and
his in-depth knowledge of the commercial marketplace. Prior to
joining CRNF, he was general manager of nitrogen manufacturing
at Farmland from January 2001 to February 2004. Mr. Vick
24
received a Bachelor of Science degree in chemical engineering
from the University of Kansas and is a licensed professional
engineer in Kansas, Oklahoma and Iowa.
Christopher G. Swanberg has served as vice president,
environmental, health and safety at our Company since September
2006, as vice president, environmental, health and safety at
CRLLC since June 2005 and as vice president, environmental,
health and safety at CA II and CA III since October 2007. Since
October 2007, Mr. Swanberg has also served as vice
president, environmental, health and safety of the managing
general partner of the Partnership. He has served in numerous
management positions in the petroleum refining industry such as
Manager, Environmental Affairs for the refining and marketing
division of Atlantic Richfield Company (ARCO) and Manager,
Regulatory and Legislative Affairs for Lyondell-Citgo Refining.
Mr. Swanbergs experience includes technical and
management assignments in project, facility and corporate staff
positions in all environmental, safety and health areas. Prior
to joining CRLLC, he was Vice President of Sage Environmental
Consulting, an environmental consulting firm focused on
petroleum refining and petrochemicals, from September 2002 to
June 2005. Mr. Swanberg received a Bachelor of Science
degree in Environmental Engineering Technology from Western
Kentucky University and an MBA from the University of Tulsa.
COMPENSATION
DISCUSSION AND ANALYSIS
Overview
Our compensation committee is comprised of George E. Matelich
(as chairperson), Kenneth A. Pontarelli, Steve A. Nordaker and
Mark E. Tomkins.
The executive compensation philosophy of the compensation
committee is threefold:
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To align the executive officers interest with that of the
stockholders and stakeholders, which provides long-term economic
benefits to the stockholders;
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To provide competitive financial incentives in the form of
salary, bonuses and benefits with the goal of retaining and
attracting talented and highly motivated executive
officers; and
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To maintain a compensation program whereby the executive
officers, through exceptional performance and equity ownership,
will have the opportunity to realize economic rewards
commensurate with appropriate gains of other equity holders and
stakeholders.
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The compensation committee reviews and makes recommendations to
the Board regarding our overall compensation strategy and
policies, with the full Board (excluding Mr. Lipinski with
respect to his compensation) having the final authority on
compensation matters. The Board may from time to time delegate
to the compensation committee the authority to take actions on
specific compensation matters or with respect to compensation
matters for certain employees or officers. In the past, there
has been no such delegation, but our Board may delegate to the
compensation committee, for example, in order to comply with
Section 16 of the Exchange Act or Section 162(m) of
the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended (the
Code), when those laws require actions by outside or
non-employee directors, as applicable.
Rule 16b-3
issued under Section 16 of the Exchange Act provides that
transactions between an issuer and its officers or directors
involving issuer securities may be exempt from
Section 16(b) of the Exchange Act if they meet certain
requirements, one of which is approval by a committee of the
board of directors of the issuer consisting of two or more
non-employee directors. Section 162(m) of the Code limits
deductions by publicly held corporations for compensation paid
to its covered employees (i.e., its chief executive
officer and next four highest compensated officers) to the
extent that the employees compensation for the taxable
year exceeds $1,000,000. This limit does not apply to
qualified performance-based compensation, which
requires, among other things, satisfaction of a performance goal
that is established by a committee of the board of directors
consisting of two or more outside directors. This limit also
does not apply until 2011 to certain of our plans that were in
effect at the time of our initial public offering.
25
Our compensation committee (1) develops, approves and
oversees policies relating to compensation of our chief
executive officer and other executive officers,
(2) discharges the Boards responsibility relating to
the establishment, amendment, modification, or termination of
the LTIP, the Coffeyville Resources, LLC Phantom Unit
Appreciation Plan (Plan I) (the Phantom Unit Plan I)
and the Coffeyville Resources, LLC Phantom Unit Appreciation
Plan (Plan II) (the Phantom Unit Plan II and
together with the Phantom Unit Plan I, the Phantom
Unit Plans), health and welfare plans, incentive plans,
defined contribution plans (401(k) plans) and any other benefit
plan, program or arrangement which we sponsor or maintain and
(3) discharges the responsibilities of the override unit
committee of the Board.
Specifically, the compensation committee reviews and makes
recommendations to the Board regarding annual and long-term
performance goals and objectives for the chief executive officer
and our other senior executives; reviews and makes
recommendations to the Board regarding the annual salary, bonus
and other incentives and benefits, direct and indirect, of the
chief executive officer and our senior executives; reviews and
authorizes the Company to enter into employment, severance or
other compensation agreements with the chief executive officer
and other senior executives; administers our executive incentive
plans, including the Phantom Unit Plans; establishes and
periodically reviews perquisites and fringe benefits policies;
reviews annually the implementation of our company-wide
incentive bonus program; oversees contributions to our 401(k)
plan; and performs such duties and responsibilities as may be
assigned by the Board to the compensation committee under the
terms of any executive compensation plan, incentive compensation
plan or equity-based plan and as may be assigned to the
compensation committee with respect to the issuance and
management of the override units in CA and CA II.
The compensation committee has regularly scheduled meetings
concurrent with the Board meetings and additionally meets at
other times as needed throughout the year. Frequently, issues
are discussed among the compensation committee via
teleconference. The chief executive officer, while not a member
of the compensation committee, reviews information provided by
Longnecker, as well as other relevant market information and
actively provides guidance and recommendations to the committee
regarding the amount and form of the compensation of the other
executive officers and key employees. Mr. Harry S. Nichols,
Vice President, Human Resources, also attends compensation
committee meetings to present information as requested and to
provide insight as to standard practices after reviewing
Longneckers findings and recommendations. The compensation
committee has sole authority to retain and terminate a
compensation consultant to assist in the evaluation of the chief
executive officer, named executive officers and other selected
officers. During 2009, the Company retained Longnecker on behalf
of the compensation committee to assist the compensation
committee with its review of the executive officers
compensation levels and the mix of compensation as compared to
peer companies, companies of similar size and other relevant
market information. Longnecker compiled the information and
provided advice regarding the components and related mix
(short-term/long-term; cash/equity) of the executive
compensation programs of the Company, its Peer Group
(see page 28 of this Proxy Statement for further detail
regarding the Peer Group) and other relevant market information.
Although no specific target was set, the focus of
Longneckers recommendations was centered on compensation
levels at the median or 50th percentile of the Peer Group.
Longnecker reported to the full committee and had direct access
to the committees members. Longnecker periodically
attended the committee meetings by telephone. Longnecker does no
other work for the Company or for management except to provide
consulting services related to executive compensation levels,
program design and non-employee director compensation.
The main objective of our executive compensation program is to
closely align compensation paid to executive officers with our
operating and financial performance on both a short-term and
long-term basis. Compensation is structured competitively in
order to attract, motivate and retain executive officers and key
employees and is considered crucial to our long-term success and
the long-term enhancement of stockholder value. In addition, our
compensation program is designed to ensure that the executive
officers objectives and rewards are directly correlated to
our long-term objectives and that their interests are aligned
with those of stockholders. A risk component of vesting has been
incorporated into compensation packages so that potential
26
compensation is attractive and incents the executive officers to
remain in our employ through successive rolling vesting periods.
To this end, the compensation committee believes that the most
critical component of compensation is equity compensation.
The compensation committee continually monitors current economic
conditions and considers the petroleum and fertilizer markets
along with other considerations in making compensation
decisions. In 2009, no significant changes were made to the
Companys overall executive compensation philosophy and
structure because the compensation committee believes that the
compensation programs are reasonable, balanced and designed to
attract, retain and motivate talented executives.
Through the committees review of the executive
officers compensation packages and employment agreements,
they determined it was prudent to amend the employment
agreements of certain executive officers to include a change in
control provision. The change in control provision was included
in the executive officers amended and restated employment
agreements, effective January 1, 2010. The committee
determined that a change in control provision was needed to
preserve our ability to compete for executive talent and to
provide our executives with change in control severance benefits
similar to those in place at other companies. See
Potential Payments Upon Termination or
Change-of-Control.
The following discusses in detail the foundation underlying our
executive compensation philosophy and also how the compensation
decisions are made. Qualitative information related to the most
important factors utilized in the analysis of these decisions is
described.
Elements
of Our Compensation Program
The three primary components of the compensation program are
salary, an annual cash discretionary bonus and equity awards.
Executive officers are also provided with benefits that are
generally available to our salaried employees.
While these three components are related, we view them as
separate and analyze them as such. The compensation committee
believes that equity compensation is the primary motivator in
attracting and retaining executive officers. Salary and cash
discretionary bonuses are viewed as secondary; however, the
compensation committee views a competitive level of salary and
cash bonus as critical to retaining talented individuals. The
compensation committees focus in 2009 was centered on cash
discretionary bonuses on a short-term basis, as the
committees view was that the executive officers had
previously been awarded under the original ownership structure,
competitive equity compensation to provide for long-term
competitive awards through June 2010.
Base
Salary
In setting base salaries, the committee fixes the base salary of
each of our executive officers at a level that is believed to
enable us to hire, motivate and retain our executive officers
and enhance their motivation in a highly competitive and dynamic
environment and to reward individual and Company performance. In
determining its recommendations for base salary levels, the
compensation committee takes into account the following:
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The Companys financial and operational performance for the
year.
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The previous years compensation level for each named
executive officer.
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Recommendations of the Companys chief executive officer,
based on individual responsibilities and performance, including
each officers commitment and ability to:
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strategically meet business challenges;
achieve financial results;
promote legal and ethical compliance;
lead their own business or business team for which
they are responsible; and
27
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diligence and effective response to immediate needs of our
volatile industry and business environment.
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Peer or market survey information for comparable public
companies.
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Each year we make compensation decisions using an approach that
considers several important factors in developing compensation
levels, rather than establishing compensation solely on a
formula-driven basis. The committee considers whether individual
base salaries reflect responsibility levels and are reasonable,
competitive and fair. In setting base salaries, the committee
reviewed published survey and Peer Group (defined below) data
prepared by Longnecker and considered the applicability of the
salary data in view of the individual positions within the
Company.
With respect to our Peer Group, management, through the chief
executive officer, provides the compensation committee with
information gathered through a detailed annual review of
executive compensation programs of other publicly and privately
held companies in our industry, which are similar to us in size
and operations (among other factors). In 2009, an independent
compensation consultant (Longnecker) was engaged to perform a
study including an analysis that management reviewed and then
provided to the compensation committee for its use in making
decisions regarding the salary, bonus and other compensation
amounts paid to named executive officers. Longnecker
participated in two meetings with the compensation committee, in
which they presented in detail their findings and
recommendations. The following independent refining companies,
which we view as members of our Peer Group were
included in the report and analysis: Frontier Oil Corporation,
Holly Corporation and Tesoro Corporation. The following
fertilizer businesses were included in the report and analysis:
CF Industries Holdings Inc. and Terra Industries, Inc. Averages
of these Peer Group salary levels were used over a number of
years to develop a range of salaries of similarly situated
executives of these companies and this range was used as a
factor in determining base salary (and overall cash
compensation) of the named executive officers. Management also
reviewed the differences in levels of compensation among the
named executive officers of this Peer Group and used these
differences as a factor in setting a different level of salary
and overall compensation for each of our named executive
officers based on their relative positions and levels of
responsibility.
Each of the named executive officers has an employment agreement
which sets forth their base salaries. Salaries are reviewed
annually by the compensation committee with periodic informal
reviews throughout the year. Adjustments, if any, are usually
made on January 1 of the year immediately following the review.
The compensation committee, with the assistance of Longnecker,
most recently reviewed the level of cash salary and bonus for
each of the executive officers beginning in July 2009 through
November 2009 in conjunction with their responsibilities and
expectations for 2009. They concluded their review and
consideration in November 2009. Individual performance, the
practices of our Peer Group of companies as reflected in the
analysis and report of Longnecker and changes in the named
executive officers status were considered. Among these
three factors, slightly more weight was given to the report and
findings of Longnecker. The compensation committee and the Board
approved an increase to the 2010 salary of Mr. Lipinski (to
$900,000 from $800,000). The compensation committee approved the
increase of 2010 salaries for Messrs. Morgan (to $315,000
from $275,000) and Gross (to $347,000 from $315,000). All salary
increases were effective January 1, 2010. These increases
in base salary are due to the efforts to continue to align the
total compensation of the named executive officers with
compensation paid by companies in our Peer Group and other
considerations set forth above.
Annual
Bonus
Information about total cash compensation paid by members of our
Peer Group is used in determining both the level of bonus award
and the ratio of salary to bonus. We believe that maintaining a
level of bonus and a ratio of fixed salary to bonus (which may
fluctuate) that is in line with those of our competitors is an
important factor in attracting and retaining executives. The
compensation committee also believes that a significant portion
of our executive officers compensation should be at risk.
That is, a portion of the executive officers overall
compensation would not be guaranteed and would be determined
based on individual and Company performance.
28
Our compensation program provides for greater potential bonus
awards as the authority and responsibility of an executive
increases. Our chief executive officer has the greatest
percentage of his compensation at risk in the form of an annual
bonus. Our named executive officers retain a significant
percentage of their compensation package at risk in the form of
annual bonuses.
Bonuses may be paid in an amount equal to the target percentage,
less than the target percentage or greater than the target
percentage (or not at all). The compensation committee has full
discretion to determine bonuses based on several factors,
including the individuals level of performance, the
individuals level of responsibilities, a peer group
assessment and the individuals total overall compensation
package. The performance determination takes into account
overall operational performance, financial performance, factors
affecting shareholder value, including growth initiatives, and
the individuals personal performance. The determination of
whether the target bonus amount should be paid is not based on
specific metrics, but rather a general assessment of how the
business performed as compared to the business plan developed
for the year. Due to the nature of the business, financial
performance alone may not dictate or be a fair indicator of the
performance of the executive officers. Conversely, financial
performance may exceed all expectations, but it could be due to
outside forces in the industry rather than true performance by
an executive that exceeds expectations. In order to take these
differing impacts and related results into consideration and to
assess the executive officers performance on their own
merits, the compensation committee makes an assessment of the
executive officers performance separate from the actual
financial performance of the Company, although such measurement
is not based on any specific metrics.
The compensation committee reviewed the individualized
performance and Company performance as compared to expectations
for the year ended December 31, 2009. Under their
employment agreements, the 2009 target bonuses were the
following percentages of salary for each of the following:
Mr. Lipinski (250%), Mr. Morgan (120%),
Mr. Riemann (200%), Mr. Haugen (120%), and
Mr. Gross (80%). The compensation committee approved the
target levels to be paid out for the 2009 bonuses with the
exception of Mr. Gross and Mr. Morgan, who both
received 125% of target. These increased levels were in
correlation with the findings and recommendations by Longnecker
based upon review of our Peer Group, and companies of similar
size and other relevant market information in order to balance
the overall 2009 total salary and bonus levels.
Each of the named executive officers employment agreements
provide that the executive will receive an annual cash
performance bonus with a target bonus equal to a specified
percentage of each executives base salary. Actual bonuses
are determined in the discretion of the compensation committee,
based upon such individual
and/or
Company performance criteria established by the compensation
committee for the relevant fiscal year. As a result of the
compensation committees review of peer company
compensation practices as included in the compensation
consultants report and its consideration of current
economic conditions, in November 2009 the compensation committee
concluded that target bonus percentages would remain the same
for all named executive officers in 2010, with the exception of
Mr. Gross, whose target bonus percentage increased from 80%
to 90% effective January 1, 2010. Mr. Gross
target bonus percentage fell below those of our peer companies
for his role and responsibilities. Target bonus percentages were
determined to be fair and comparable to other peer companies for
all other named executive officers.
Restricted
Stock and Other Equity
We use equity incentives to reward long-term performance. The
issuance of equity to executive officers is intended to generate
significant future value for each executive officer if the
Companys performance is outstanding and the value of the
Companys equity increases for all stockholders. The
compensation committee believes that our equity incentives
promote long-term retention of executives. The equity incentives
issued, including to our named executive officers, were
negotiated to a large degree at the time of the acquisition of
our business in June 2005 (with additional units that were not
originally allocated in June 2005 issued in December
2006) in order to bring our compensation package in line
with executives at private equity portfolio companies, based on
the private equity market practices at that time. All issuances
of override units and phantom points made through
December 31, 2009 (described below) were made at what the
board of directors of CA, CA II,
and/or CA
III, as applicable, determined to be their fair value on their
respective grant dates.
29
Override Units
The greatest share of total compensation to the chief executive
officer and other named executive officers (as well as selected
senior executives and key employees) is in the form of
historical equity. The types of equity awards that have been
granted to the named executive officers include common units and
override units consisting of operating units and value units in
CA and CA II and common and override units in CA III, the entity
that owns the managing general partner of the Partnership which
holds the nitrogen fertilizer business. Any financial
obligations related to such common units and override units
reside with the issuer of such units and not with CVR Energy.
Separately, CRLLC, a subsidiary of CVR Energy, issued phantom
points to certain members of management and any financial
obligations related to such phantom points are the obligations
of CVR Energy. The total number of such awards is detailed in
this Proxy Statement and was approved by the Board.
The limited liability company agreements of CA and CA II (the
LLC Agreements) provide the methodology for payouts
with respect to units in CA and CA II, respectively. In general
terms, the LLC Agreements provide for two classes of interests
in each of CA and CA II: (1) common units and
(2) profits interests referred to as override units (which
consist of both operating units and value units). Common units
were issued in exchange for a capital contribution determined by
the board of directors of CA or CA II, as applicable, whereas no
capital contributions are made in connection with the issuance
of override units. Each of the named executive officers has a
capital account under which his balance is increased or
decreased to reflect his allocable share of net income and gross
income of CA or CA II, as applicable, the capital that the named
executive officer contributed in exchange for his common units,
distributions paid to such named executive officer and his
allocable share of net loss and items of gross deduction. CA and
CA II may make distributions to their members to the extent that
the cash available to them is in excess of the business
reasonably anticipated needs. Distributions are generally made
to members capital accounts in proportion to the number of
units each member holds. All cash payable pursuant to the LLC
Agreements will be paid by CA and CA II, respectively, and will
not be paid by CVR Energy. Although CVR Energy is required to
recognize a compensation expense with respect to such awards,
CVR Energy also records a contribution to capital with respect
to these awards and as a result, there is no cash effect on CVR
Energy.
Phantom Plans
In addition to the grant of common units and override units in
CA and CA II, we also granted phantom points pursuant to the
Phantom Unit Plans. These plans operate in correlation with the
methodology established by the LLC Agreements.
CA III Profits Interest
The limited liability company agreement of CA III provides for
two classes of interests in CA III: (1) common units and
(2) profits interests, referred to as override units. Each
of the named executive officers has a capital account under
which his balance is increased or decreased to reflect his
allocable share of net income and gross income of CA III, the
capital that the named executive officer contributed,
distributions paid to such named executive officer and his
allocable share of net loss and items of gross deduction. CA III
may make distributions to its members to the extent that the
cash available to it is in excess of the business
reasonably anticipated needs. Distributions are generally made
to members capital accounts in proportion to the number of
units each member holds.
Generally, any decision related to granting equity awards to the
named executive officers is made annually by the compensation
committee at the time their total compensation package is
evaluated. Limited equity grants of interests were made by CA
III, the sole owner of the managing general partner of the
Partnership, in October 2007 and February 2008. Their timing was
in conjunction with the strategic alignment of the fertilizer
business shortly after the purchase of the managing general
partner interest by CA III.
Restricted Stock
We also established the LTIP in connection with our initial
public offering in October 2007. The compensation committee
concluded in the fourth quarter of 2009 that due to the prior
levels of historical
30
equity compensation awards of override units of CA and CA II,
that limited restricted stock awards, stock options or other
equity awards would be made in 2009 under the LTIP to the named
executive officers who had previously received override units,
until such time that full vesting occurs for the operating
override units in June 2010. The committee intended and believes
that the original issuances of these units were in fact
incentive commensurate over the five year vesting period. The
committee will revisit the need for equity awards to be issued
after June 2010 to ensure there remains an associated risk
inherent with unvested equity awards to provide the balance and
incentive that is commensurate with the stated philosophy of the
compensation committee.
Mr. Morgan and Mr. Gross received awards of restricted
stock pursuant to the LTIP in 2009. In connection with joining
the Company on May 14, 2009, Mr. Morgan was awarded
25,000 shares of non-vested restricted stock.
Mr. Morgan has the right to vote these shares immediately.
However, the shares are subject to transfer restrictions and
vesting requirements that lapse in one-third annual increments
beginning on the first anniversary of the date of grant. On
December 18, 2009, Mr. Morgan was granted
38,168 shares of restricted stock and Mr. Gross was
awarded 15,268 shares of restricted stock.
Messrs. Morgan and Gross have the right to vote these
shares immediately. However, the shares are subject to transfer
restrictions and vesting requirements that lapse in one-third
annual increments beginning on the first anniversary of the date
of grant. Subject to vesting requirements, Messrs. Morgan
and Gross are required to retain at least 50% of their
respective shares for a period equal to the lesser of
(i) three years, commencing with the date of the award, or
(ii) as long as such individual remains an officer of the
Company (or an affiliate) at the level of Vice President or
higher.
The compensation committee may elect to make restricted stock
grants, option grants or other equity grants under the LTIP
during 2010 in its discretion.
Perquisites
The Company pays for portions of medical insurance and life
insurance, as well as a medical physical every three years, for
the named executive officers. Two of the executive officers
involved in direct operations at our facilities receive use of a
company vehicle. Additionally, one named executive officer
receives corporate housing benefits. The total value of all
perquisites and personal benefits is less than $10,000 for each
named executive officer.
Other
Forms of Compensation
Each of our named executive officers has a provision in his
employment agreement, providing for certain severance benefits
in the event of termination without cause or a resignation with
good reason. These severance provisions are described in
Compensation of Executive Officers Employment
Agreements and Other Arrangements below. These severance
provisions were negotiated between the executive officers and
the Company. The compensation committee believes that the
severance provisions in the employment agreements are customary
for similar companies.
Compensation
Policies and Philosophy
Ours is a commodity business with high volatility and risk where
earnings are not only influenced by margins, but also by unique,
innovative and decisive actions and business practices on the
part of the executive team. The compensation committee routinely
reviews financial and operational performance compared to our
business plan, positive and negative industry factors and the
response of the senior management team in dealing with and
maximizing operational and financial performance in the face of
otherwise negative situations. Due to the nature of our
business, performance of an individual or the business as a
whole may be outstanding; however, our financial performance may
not depict this same level of achievement. The financial
performance of the Company is not necessarily reflective of
individual operational performance. These are some of the
factors used in setting executive compensation. Specific
performance levels or benchmarks are not necessarily used to
establish compensation; however, the compensation committee
takes into account all factors to make a subjective
determination of related compensation packages for the executive
officers.
31
The compensation committee has not adopted any formal or
informal policies or guidelines for allocating compensation
between long-term and current compensation, between cash and
non-cash compensation, or among different forms of compensation
other than its belief that the most crucial component is equity
compensation. The decision is strictly made on a subjective and
individual basis considering all relevant facts.
For compensation decisions, including decisions regarding the
grant of equity compensation relating to executive officers
(other than our chief executive officer and chief operating
officer), the compensation committee typically considers the
recommendations of our chief executive officer.
Section 162(m) of the Code limits deductions by publicly
held corporations for compensation paid to its covered
employees (i.e., its chief executive officer and next four
highest compensated officers) to the extent that the
employees compensation for the taxable year exceeds
$1,000,000. This limit does not apply to qualified
performance-based compensation, which requires, among
other things, satisfaction of a performance goal that is
established by a committee of the board of directors consisting
of two or more outside directors. This limit also does not apply
until 2011 to certain of our plans that were in effect at the
time of our initial public offering.
We believe that it is in our best interest to deduct
compensation paid to our executive officers. We will consider
the anticipated tax treatment to the Company and our executive
officers in the review and determination of the compensation
payments and incentives. No assurance, however, can be given
that the compensation will be fully deductible under
Section 162(m) of the Code.
Nitrogen
Fertilizer Limited Partnership
A number of our executive officers, including our chief
executive officer, chief operating officer, chief financial
officer, general counsel, executive vice president/general
manager for nitrogen fertilizer and vice president,
environmental, health and safety, serve as executive officers
for both the Company and the Partnership. These executive
officers receive all of their compensation and benefits from us,
including compensation related to services for the Partnership
and are not paid by the Partnership or its managing general
partner. However, the Partnership or the managing general
partner must reimburse us pursuant to a services agreement for
the time our executive officers spend working for the
Partnership. The percentage of each named executive
officers compensation that represents the services
provided to the Partnership on average in 2009 were
approximately as follows: John J. Lipinski (21%), Edward A.
Morgan (25%), James T. Rens (35%), Stanley A. Riemann (34%),
Edmund S. Gross (30%) and Robert W. Haugen (0%). These
percentages represent an average for the year and do not
represent the percentage as determined at the end of 2009.
We have entered into a services agreement with the Partnership
and its managing general partner in which we have agreed to
provide management services to the Partnership for the operation
of the nitrogen fertilizer business. Under this agreement the
Partnership, its managing general partner or CRNF, a subsidiary
of the Partnership, are required to pay us in 2009 (i) all
costs incurred by us in connection with the employment of our
employees, other than administrative personnel, who provide
services to the Partnership under the agreement on a full-time
basis, but excluding share-based compensation; (ii) a
prorated share of costs incurred by us in connection with the
employment of our employees, other than administrative
personnel, who provide services to the Partnership under the
agreement on a part-time basis, but excluding share-based
compensation and such prorated share must be determined by us on
a commercially reasonable basis, based on the percent of total
working time that such shared personnel are engaged in
performing services for the Partnership; (iii) a prorated
share of certain administrative costs; and (iv) various
other administrative costs in accordance with the terms of the
agreement. Either we or the managing general partner of the
Partnership may terminate the agreement upon at least
90 days notice. The agreement was amended effective
January 2010 and beginning in January 2010, the costs associated
with services performed by administrative personnel will be
determined based upon a prorata share of time spent determined
by us on a commercially reasonable basis.
32
Stock
Retention Policy
In general, our corporate governance guidelines require all of
the officers of the Company or any of its affiliates at a level
of vice president or higher who receive as compensation after
December 18, 2009 any share of our common stock (including
shares of restricted stock or restricted stock units awarded
pursuant to the LTIP, and any other securities into which such
restricted stock or restricted stock units are changed or for
which such restricted stock or restricted stock units are
exchanged) to retain at least 50% of such equity securities once
they become vested for a period equal to the lesser of
(i) three years, commencing with the date of the award, or
(ii) so long as such individual remains an officer of the
Company.
Our corporate governance guidelines also require all outside
directors who receive as compensation after December 18,
2009, any share of our common stock (including shares of
restricted stock or restricted stock units awarded pursuant to
the LTIP, and any other securities into which such restricted
stock or restricted stock units are changed or for which such
restricted stock or restricted stock units are exchanged) to
retain at least 60% of such equity securities once they become
vested for a period equal to the lesser of (i) three years,
commencing with the date of the award, or (ii) as long as
such outside director remains on the Board.
In addition, the common units and override units in CA, CA II
and CA III issued to our executive officers are subject to
transfer restrictions, although the executive officers may make
certain transfers of their units for estate planning purposes.
COMPENSATION
COMMITTEE REPORT
The compensation committee of the Board has reviewed and
discussed the Compensation Discussion and Analysis with
management. Based on this review and discussion, the
compensation committee recommended to the Board that the
Compensation Discussion and Analysis be included in this Proxy
Statement.
Compensation Committee
George E. Matelich, Chairperson
Steve A. Nordaker
Kenneth A. Pontarelli
Mark E. Tomkins
33
COMPENSATION
OF NAMED EXECUTIVE OFFICERS
Summary
Compensation Table
The following table sets forth certain information with respect
to compensation for the years ended December 31, 2009, 2008
and 2007 earned by our chief executive officer, our chief
financial officer and our three other most highly compensated
executive officers as of December 31, 2009. In this Proxy
Statement, we refer to these individuals as our named executive
officers.
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Stock
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All Other
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Name and Principal Position
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Year
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Salary
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Bonus(1)
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Awards(4)
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Compensation(5)
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Total
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John J. Lipinski
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2009
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$
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800,000
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$
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2,000,000
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$
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320,039
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(6)
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$
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3,120,039
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Chief Executive Officer
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2008
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$
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700,000
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$
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1,700,000
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$
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26,625
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$
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2,426,625
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2007
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$
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650,000
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$
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1,850,000
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$
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17,253
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$
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2,517,253
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Edward A. Morgan(8)
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2009
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$
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171,346
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$
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256,950
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$
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439,750
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$
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186,845
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(7)
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$
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1,054,891
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Chief Financial Officer
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Stanley A. Riemann
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2009
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$
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415,000
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$
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830,000
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$
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129,517
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(8)
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$
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1,374,517
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Chief Operating Officer
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2008
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$
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375,000
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$
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750,000
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$
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20,171
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$
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1,145,171
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2007
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$
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350,000
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$
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722,917
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(2)
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$
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236,867
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$
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1,309,784
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Edmund S. Gross
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2009
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$
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315,000
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$
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315,000
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$
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100,005
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$
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62,567
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(9)
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$
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792,572
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Executive Vice President
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2008
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$
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225,000
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$
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225,000
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$
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863,595
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$
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1,313,595
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and General Counsel
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2007
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$
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185,000
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$
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325,000
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(3)
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$
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16,186
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$
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526,186
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Robert W. Haugen
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2009
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$
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275,000
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$
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330,000
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$
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113,753
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(10)
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$
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718,753
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Executive Vice President,
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2008
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$
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275,000
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$
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330,000
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$
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57,871
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$
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662,871
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Refining Operations
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2007
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$
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275,000
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$
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230,000
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$
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75,123
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$
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580,123
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James T. Rens(11)
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2009
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$
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130,192
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$
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156,230
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$
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242,135
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(12)
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$
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528,557
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2008
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$
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300,000
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$
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200,000
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$
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5,439
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$
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505,439
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2007
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$
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250,000
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$
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400,000
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$
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13,289
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$
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663,289
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(1) |
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Bonuses are reported for the year in which they were earned,
though they may have been paid the following year. The
compensation committee reviewed various factors for each named
executive officer in determining the annual bonuses to be paid
for the 2008 year. Specific factors considered in
determining bonuses for the 2008 year included, among other
things, the 2007 financial reporting error and subsequent
restatement of the Companys 2007 audited financial
statements, progress towards successful negotiations of
litigation and insurance claims related to the flood of 2007,
successful continued negotiations of critical operational
agreements for the Company and operational achievements at the
fertilizer facility. Considering individual performance and
involvement by the executives with regard to the above
considerations, the compensation committee made the decision to
pay at less than target for our former chief financial officer
and more than target for our general counsel; otherwise, the
majority of the executives annual bonuses were at target
for 2008. |
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(2) |
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Includes a retention bonus in the amount of $122,917. |
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(3) |
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Includes a bonus in the amount of $125,000 for additional work
performed related to the flood of our facilities on
June 30, 2007. |
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(4) |
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Included in the Stock Awards column is the aggregate
grant date fair value of restricted stock awards made during the
respective fiscal years computed in accordance with ASC Topic
718. Messrs. Morgan and Gross both received restricted
stock awards in 2009. Mr. Morgan was granted 25,000
restricted shares effective May 14, 2009 as part of the
efforts to recruit him as Chief Financial Officer.
Messrs. Morgan and Gross were awarded 38,168 and
15,268 shares of restricted stock, respectively, effective
December 18, 2009. |
|
(5) |
|
The amounts shown include amounts representing the fair value on
the grant date, as applicable, in 2009, 2008 and 2007, computed
in accordance with FASB ASC Topic 718,
Compensation Stock of profits interests in
CA, CA II and CA III and grants of phantom points in the Phantom
Unit Plans for the years |
34
|
|
|
|
|
ended December 31, 2009, 2008, and 2007. These awards are
reported as All Other Compensation and not as
Stock Awards, because the awards are not grants of
equity interests in CVR Energy, but instead are awards of equity
interests in CA, CA II and CA III. The assumptions used in the
calculation are included in the footnotes to our audited
financial statements for the year ended December 31, 2009,
2008 and 2007 included in the Companys 2009 Annual Report
filed on March 12, 2010,
Form 10-K
filed on March 13, 2009 and
Form 10-K
/A dated May 8, 2008, respectively. The profits interests
in CA, CA II and CA III and the phantom points in the Phantom
Unit Plans are more fully described below under
Interests in CA and CA II,
Interests in CA III, and
Coffeyville Resources, LLC Phantom Unit
Appreciation Plan (Plan I) and Coffeyville Resources, LLC
Phantom Unit Appreciation Plan (Plan II). |
|
(6) |
|
Includes (a) a Company contribution under our 401(k) plan
in 2009, (b) the premiums paid by us on behalf of the
executive officer with respect to our executive life insurance
program in 2009, (c) the premiums paid by us on behalf of
the executive officer with respect to our basic life insurance
program and (d) the grant date fair value of profits
interests in CA I and CA II and phantom points from the Phantom
Unit Plans granted on November 9, 2009 in the amount of
$303,917. |
|
(7) |
|
Mr. Morgan commenced employment May 14, 2009, so he
earned only a portion of his 2009 base salary of $275,000 and
his annual cash bonus was similarly prorated. Includes
(a) signing bonus of $60,000 paid to Mr. Morgan as
part of the efforts to recruit him as Chief Financial Officer,
(b) relocation benefits, including an applicable tax gross
up, which total $121,726, (c) a Company contribution under
our 401(k) plan in 2009, (d) the premiums paid by us on
behalf of the executive officer with respect to our executive
life insurance program in 2009 and (e) the premiums paid by
us on behalf of the executive officer with respect to our basic
life insurance program. |
|
(8) |
|
Includes (a) a Company contribution under our 401(k) plan
in 2009, (b) the premiums paid by us on behalf of the
executive officer with respect to our executive life insurance
program in 2009, (c) the premiums paid by us on behalf of
the executive officer with respect to our basic life insurance
program and (d) the grant date fair value of profits
interests in CA I and CA II and phantom points from the Phantom
Unit Plans granted on November 9, 2009 in the amount of
$113,395. |
|
(9) |
|
Includes (a) a Company contribution under our 401(k) plan
in 2009, (b) the premiums paid by us on behalf of the
executive officer with respect to our executive life insurance
program in 2009, (c) the premiums paid by us on behalf of
the executive officer with respect to our basic life insurance
program and (d) the grant date fair value of phantom points
from the Phantom Unit Plans granted on November 9, 2009 in
the amount of $46,431. |
|
(10) |
|
Includes (a) a Company contribution under our 401(k) plan
in 2009, (b) the premiums paid by us on behalf of the
executive officer with respect to our executive life insurance
program in 2009, (c) the premiums paid by us on behalf of
the executive officer with respect to our basic life insurance
program, (d) tax gross up reimbursement by the
Company, (e) payment of certain housing benefits and
(f) the grant date fair value of profits interests in CA I
and CA II and phantom points from the Phantom Unit Plans granted
on November 9, 2009 in the amount of $65,046. |
|
(11) |
|
Mr. Rens ceased to serve as chief financial officer of the
Company on May 14, 2009. |
|
(12) |
|
Includes (a) the premiums paid by us on behalf of the
executive officer with respect to our executive life insurance
program in 2009, (b) the premiums paid by us on behalf of
the executive officer with respect to our basic life insurance
program, (c) severance under an employment agreement of
$203,077 and (d) the payout of unused vacation of $38,077. |
35
Grants of
Plan-Based Awards in 2009
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Number of
|
|
|
Grant Date
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Shares or
|
|
|
Fair Value of
|
|
Named Executive Officer
|
|
Grant Date
|
|
|
Units of Stock
|
|
|
Stock Awards(1)
|
|
|
John J. Lipinski
|
|
|
11/09/2009
|
|
|
|
3,796
|
(2)
|
|
$
|
25,433
|
|
|
|
|
11/09/2009
|
|
|
|
15,185
|
(3)
|
|
$
|
101,739
|
|
|
|
|
11/09/2009
|
|
|
|
3,796
|
(4)
|
|
$
|
25,433
|
|
|
|
|
11/09/2009
|
|
|
|
15,185
|
(5)
|
|
$
|
101,739
|
|
|
|
|
11/09/2009
|
|
|
|
35,387
|
(6)
|
|
$
|
9,432
|
|
|
|
|
11/09/2009
|
|
|
|
53,761
|
(7)
|
|
$
|
15,354
|
|
|
|
|
11/09/2009
|
|
|
|
35,387
|
(8)
|
|
$
|
9,432
|
|
|
|
|
11/09/2009
|
|
|
|
53,761
|
(9)
|
|
$
|
15,354
|
|
Edward A. Morgan
|
|
|
05/14/2009
|
|
|
|
25,000
|
(10)
|
|
$
|
189,750
|
|
|
|
|
12/18/2009
|
|
|
|
38,168
|
(10)
|
|
$
|
250,000
|
|
Stanley A. Riemann
|
|
|
11/09/2009
|
|
|
|
1,370
|
(2)
|
|
$
|
9,179
|
|
|
|
|
11/09/2009
|
|
|
|
5,482
|
(3)
|
|
$
|
36,729
|
|
|
|
|
11/09/2009
|
|
|
|
1,370
|
(4)
|
|
$
|
9,179
|
|
|
|
|
11/09/2009
|
|
|
|
5,482
|
(5)
|
|
$
|
36,729
|
|
|
|
|
11/09/2009
|
|
|
|
15,404
|
(6)
|
|
$
|
4,106
|
|
|
|
|
11/09/2009
|
|
|
|
23,402
|
(7)
|
|
$
|
6,684
|
|
|
|
|
11/09/2009
|
|
|
|
15,404
|
(8)
|
|
$
|
4,106
|
|
|
|
|
11/09/2009
|
|
|
|
23,402
|
(9)
|
|
$
|
6,684
|
|
Edmund S. Gross
|
|
|
11/09/2009
|
|
|
|
33,146
|
(6)
|
|
$
|
8,834
|
|
|
|
|
11/09/2009
|
|
|
|
50,355
|
(7)
|
|
$
|
14,381
|
|
|
|
|
11/09/2009
|
|
|
|
33,146
|
(8)
|
|
$
|
8,834
|
|
|
|
|
11/09/2009
|
|
|
|
50,355
|
(9)
|
|
$
|
14,381
|
|
|
|
|
12/18/2009
|
|
|
|
15,268
|
(10)
|
|
$
|
100,005
|
|
Robert W. Haugen
|
|
|
11/09/2009
|
|
|
|
704
|
(2)
|
|
$
|
4,717
|
|
|
|
|
11/09/2009
|
|
|
|
2,814
|
(3)
|
|
$
|
18,854
|
|
|
|
|
11/09/2009
|
|
|
|
704
|
(4)
|
|
$
|
4,717
|
|
|
|
|
11/09/2009
|
|
|
|
2,814
|
(5)
|
|
$
|
18,854
|
|
|
|
|
11/09/2009
|
|
|
|
12,781
|
(6)
|
|
$
|
3,406
|
|
|
|
|
11/09/2009
|
|
|
|
19,418
|
(7)
|
|
$
|
5,546
|
|
|
|
|
11/09/2009
|
|
|
|
12,781
|
(8)
|
|
$
|
3,406
|
|
|
|
|
11/09/2009
|
|
|
|
19,418
|
(9)
|
|
$
|
5,546
|
|
|
|
|
(1) |
|
The amounts shown include amounts representing the fair value on
grant date, computed in accordance with FASB ASC Topic 718,
Compensation Stock of profits interest in CA
and CA II, grants of phantom points in the Phantom Unit Plans,
and grants of restricted stock. The Companys expense is
calculated based on the grant date fair value and amortized
straight-line over the applicable vesting period. |
|
(2) |
|
Represents operating units in CA. |
|
(3) |
|
Represents value units in CA. |
|
(4) |
|
Represents operating units in CA II. |
|
(5) |
|
Represents value units in CA II. |
|
(6) |
|
Represents phantom service points under Phantom Unit Plan I. |
|
(7) |
|
Represents phantom performance points under Phantom Unit Plan I. |
|
(8) |
|
Represents phantom service points under Phantom Unit Plan II. |
|
(9) |
|
Represents phantom performance points under Phantom Unit Plan II. |
|
(10) |
|
Represents restricted stock issued. |
36
Employment
Agreements and Other Arrangements
Employment
Agreements
John J. Lipinski. On July 12, 2005, CRLLC
entered into an employment agreement with Mr. Lipinski, as
chief executive officer, which was subsequently assumed by CVR
Energy and amended and restated effective as of January 1,
2008. The agreement has a rolling term of three years so that at
the end of each month it automatically renews for one additional
month, unless otherwise terminated by CVR Energy or
Mr. Lipinski. Mr. Lipinskis employment agreement
was amended and restated effective January 1, 2010.
Mr. Lipinski receives an annual base salary of $800,000
($900,000 effective January 1, 2010). Mr. Lipinski is
eligible to receive a performance-based annual cash bonus with a
target payment equal to 250% of his annual base salary to be
based upon individual
and/or
Company performance criteria as established by the compensation
committee of our Board for each fiscal year. In addition,
Mr. Lipinskis agreement provides for certain
severance payments that may be due following the termination of
his employment under certain circumstances. These benefits are
described below under Potential Payments Upon
Termination or Change-of-Control.
Edward A. Morgan, Stanley A. Riemann, Edmund S. Gross and
Robert W. Haugen. On July 12, 2005, CRLLC
entered into employment agreements with each of
Messrs. Riemann, Gross and Haugen. The agreements were
subsequently assumed by CVR Energy and amended and restated
between the respective executives and CVR Energy effective as of
December 29, 2007. The agreements have a term of three
years and expire in December 2010, unless otherwise terminated
earlier by the parties. Each of these agreements was amended and
restated effective January 1, 2010. Mr. Morgan entered
into an employment agreement with CVR Energy effective
May 14, 2009, which was amended effective August 17,
2009. This employment agreement was further amended and restated
effective January 1, 2010. The agreements provide for an
annual base salary of $275,000 for Mr. Morgan ($315,000
effective January 1, 2010), $415,000 for Mr. Riemann
($415,000 effective January 1, 2010), $315,000 for
Mr. Gross ($347,000 effective January 1,
2010) and $275,000 for Mr. Haugen ($275,000 effective
January 1, 2010). Each executive officer is eligible to
receive a performance-based annual cash bonus to be based upon
individual
and/or
Company performance criteria as established by the compensation
committee of our Board for each fiscal year. The target annual
bonus percentages for these executive officers for 2010 are as
follows: Mr. Morgan (120%), Mr. Riemann (200%),
Mr. Gross (90%) and Mr. Haugen (120%). In addition,
these agreements provide for certain severance payments
following the termination of the executive officers
employment under certain circumstances. These benefits are
described below under Potential Payments Upon
Termination or Change-of-Control.
James T. Rens Separation Agreement. On
January 23, 2009 (the Effective Date),
Mr. Rens, the Company and CRLLC entered into a Separation
Agreement (the Separation Agreement). Under the
Separation Agreement, Mr. Rens employment ceased on
May 25, 2009, (such date herein referred to as the
Termination Date) (the period starting on the
Effective Date and ending on the Termination Date is referred to
as the Term). Pursuant to the Separation Agreement,
the Amended and Restated Employment Agreement entered into
between Mr. Rens and the Company dated December 29,
2007 terminated except for certain provisions relating to
confidential information, non-competition, and non-solicitation
of employees or customers. In that regard, the period during
which the non-competition restriction applies following
Mr. Rens termination was reduced to three months from
twelve months. During the Term, Mr. Rens continued as the
Companys chief financial officer and performed all such
duties as customarily performed by someone serving in the
position as chief financial officer, and assisted in the
transition of the duties and responsibilities of the chief
financial officer to a successor chief financial officer and
performed such other or additional duties as Mr. Rens and
the Board mutually agreed. For his service during the Term,
Mr. Rens was entitled to the following compensation and
benefits: (i) a base salary at an annual rate of $330,000,
(ii) a cash bonus based on a target bonus of 120% of
Mr. Rens base salary, pro-rated based upon the number
of days Mr. Rens was employed by the Company during the
2009 fiscal year prior to the Termination Date, with the actual
bonus to be based upon Mr. Rens
and/or the
Companys performance criteria established for the 2009
fiscal year by the compensation committee of the Board;
provided, however, that such bonus was not to be less than
$330,000, pro-rated based on the number of days Mr. Rens
was employed by the Company during the 2009 fiscal year prior to
the Termination Date and (iii) participation in health,
insurance, retirement, and other
37
employee benefit plans and programs of the Company as in effect
from time to time on the same basis as other senior executives
of the Company. Receipt of the foregoing compensation and
benefits by Mr. Rens was conditioned on Mr. Rens
executing a release of claims and such release becoming
effective and irrevocable no later than 30 days following
the Termination Date. The Company obtained this release and such
release became effective within the foregoing time period. For a
description of the severance benefits to which Mr. Rens was
entitled under the Separation Agreement, see
Potential Payments upon Termination or
Change-of-Control.
Interests
in Coffeyville Acquisition LLC and Coffeyville
Acquisition II LLC
The following is a summary of the material terms of the LLC
Agreements as they relate to the limited liability company
interests granted to our named executive officers pursuant to
those agreements as of December 31, 2009. The terms of the
LLC Agreements that relate to the common units and override
units granted to our named executive officers are identical to
each other.
General. The LLC Agreements provide for two
classes of interests in the respective limited liability
companies: (i) common units and (ii) profits
interests, referred to as override units (which consist of both
operating units and value units) (common units and override
units are collectively referred to as units). The
common units provide for voting rights and have rights with
respect to profits and losses of and distributions from, CA and
CA II, as applicable. Such voting rights cease, however, if the
executive officer holding common units ceases to provide
services to CA and CA II, as applicable, or one of its or their
subsidiaries. The common units were issued to our named
executive officers in the following amounts (as subsequently
adjusted) in exchange for capital contributions in the following
amounts: Mr. Lipinski (capital contribution of $650,000 in
exchange for 57,446 units), Mr. Riemann (capital
contribution of $400,000 in exchange for 35,352 units,
Mr. Gross (capital contribution of $30,000 in exchange for
2,651 units), Mr. Haugen (capital contribution of
$100,000 in exchange for 8,838 units) and Mr. Rens
(capital contribution of $250,000 in exchange for
22,095 units). These named executive officers were also
granted override units, which consist of operating units and
value units, in the following amounts: Mr. Lipinski (an
initial grant of 315,818 operating units and 631,637 value
units, a December 2006 grant of 72,492 operating units and
144,966 value units and a November 2009 grant of 7,592 operating
units and 30,370 value units), Mr. Riemann (an initial
grant of 140,185 operating units and 280,371 value units and a
November 2009 grant of 2,740 operating units and 10,964 value
units), Mr. Haugen (an initial grant of 71,965 operating
units and 143,931 value units and a November 2009 grant of 1,408
operating units and 5,628 value units), and Mr. Rens
(71,965 operating units and 143,931 value units of which 17,992
and 71,966, respectively, were forfeited in May 2009, upon his
termination from the Company). Override units have no voting
rights attached to them, but have rights with respect to profits
and losses of, and distributions from, CA or CA II, as
applicable. Our named executive officers were not required to
make any capital contribution with respect to the override
units; override units were issued only to certain members of
management who own common units and who agreed to provide
services to CA or CA II, as applicable.
If all of the shares of common stock of our Company held by CA
and CA II were sold at $6.86 per share, which was the price of
our common stock on December 31, 2009 and cash were
distributed to members pursuant to the limited liability company
agreements of CA and CA II, named executive officers would
receive a cash payment in respect of their override units in the
following approximate amounts: Mr. Lipinski
($8.288 million), Mr. Riemann ($3.679 million),
Mr. Haugen ($1.888 million) and Mr. Rens
($1.214 million). Messrs. Morgan and Gross do not have
any override units under these agreements.
During November 2009, distributions were made to the common unit
holders and operating unit holders of CA II in accordance with
the LLC Agreement of CA II. These distributions were generated
by the net proceeds received by CA II upon its sale of
7,376,264 shares of CVR common stock in November 2009.
Common unit distributions for the named executive officers were
as follows: Mr. Lipinski ($160,274), Mr. Riemann
($98,631), Mr. Gross ($7,396), Mr. Haugen ($24,658)
and Mr. Rens ($61,645). Operating override distributions
for the named executive officers were as follows:
Mr. Lipinski (to the trusts for the benefit of
Mr. Lipinskis family) ($827,114), Mr. Riemann
($367,139), Mr. Haugen ($188,473) and Mr. Rens
($141,353).
38
Forfeiture of Override Units Upon Termination of
Employment. If a named executive officer ceases
to provide services to CA or CA II, as applicable, or a
subsidiary due to a termination for cause (as such
term is defined in the LLC Agreements), the executive officer
generally will forfeit all of his override units. If the
executive officer ceases to provide services for any reason
other than cause before the fifth anniversary of the date of
grant of his operating units and provided that an event that is
an Exit Event (as such term is defined in the LLC
Agreements) has not yet occurred and there is no definitive
agreement in effect regarding a transaction that would
constitute an Exit Event, then (a) unless the termination
was due to the executive officers death or
disability (as that term is defined in the LLC
Agreements), in which case a different vesting schedule will
apply based on when the death or disability occurs, all value
units will be forfeited and (b) a percentage of the
operating units will be forfeited according to the following
schedule: if terminated before the second anniversary of the
date of grant, 100% of operating units are forfeited; if
terminated on or after the second anniversary of the date of
grant, but before the third anniversary of the date of grant,
75% of operating units are forfeited; if terminated on or after
the third anniversary of the date of grant, but before the
fourth anniversary of the date of grant, 50% of operating units
are forfeited; and if terminated on or after the fourth
anniversary of the date of grant, but before the fifth
anniversary of the date of grant, 25% of operating units are
forfeited.
Adjustments to Capital Accounts;
Distributions. Each of the named executive
officers has a capital account under which his balance is
increased or decreased, as applicable, to reflect his allocable
share of net income and gross income of CA or CA II, as
applicable, the capital that the executive officer contributed,
distributions paid to such executive officer and his allocable
share of net loss and items of gross deduction. Value units
owned by the named executive officers do not participate in
distributions under the LLC Agreements until the Current
Value is at least two times the Initial Price
(as these terms are defined in the LLC Agreements), with full
participation occurring when the Current Value is four times the
Initial Price and pro rata distributions when the Current Value
is between two and four times the Initial Price. CA and CA II
may make distributions to their members to the extent that the
cash available to them is in excess of the applicable
business reasonably anticipated needs. Distributions are
generally made to members capital accounts in proportion
to the number of units each member holds. Distributions in
respect of override units (both operating units and value
units), however, will be reduced until the total reductions in
proposed distributions in respect of the override units equals
the Benchmark Amount (i.e., $11.31 for override units granted on
July 25, 2005, $34.72 for Mr. Lipinskis later
grant in December 2006 and $33.8149 for override units
reallocated in November 2009 (although the override units
granted in November 2009 are subject to a
catch-up
provision so that after distributions have been reduced to
account for the $33.8149 Benchmark Amount, distributions
thereafter will be made first to the holders of such units so
that they will effectively have a Benchmark Amount of $11.31)).
The boards of directors of CA and CA II will determine the
Benchmark Amount with respect to each override unit
at the time of its grant. There is also a
catch-up
provision with respect to any value unit that was not previously
entitled to participate in a distribution because the Current
Value was not at least four times the Initial Price.
Other Provisions Relating to Units. The named
executive officers are subject to transfer restrictions on their
units, although they may make certain transfers of their units
for estate planning purposes.
Interests
in Coffeyville Acquisition III LLC
CA III, the sole owner of the managing general partner of the
Partnership, is owned by the Goldman Sachs Funds, the Kelso
Funds, our executive officers, Mr. Wesley Clark (a former
director), Magnetite Asset Investors III L.L.C. and other
members of our management. The following is a summary of the
material terms of the CA III limited liability company agreement
as they relate to the limited liability company interests held
by our executive officers.
General. The CA III limited liability company
agreement provides for two classes of interests in CA III:
(i) common units and (ii) profits interests, which are
referred to as override units.
The common units provide for voting rights and have rights with
respect to profits and losses of, and distributions from, CA
III. Such voting rights cease, however, if the executive officer
holding common units
39
ceases to provide services to CA III or one of its subsidiaries.
In October 2007, CVR Energys named executive officers made
the following capital contributions to CA III and received a
number of CA III common units equal to their pro rata portion of
all contributions: Mr. Lipinski ($68,146), Mr. Riemann
($16,360), Mr. Gross ($1,227), Mr. Haugen ($4,090) and
Mr. Rens ($10,225).
Override units have no voting rights attached to them, but have
rights with respect to profits and losses of, and distributions
from, CA III. The override units have the following terms:
|
|
|
|
|
Approximately 25% of all of the override units have been awarded
to members of our management team. These override units
automatically vested. These units will be owned by the members
of our management team even if they no longer perform services
for us or are no longer employed by us. The following named
executive officers received the following grants of this
category of override units: Mr. Lipinski (81,250),
Mr. Riemann (30,000), Mr. Gross (8,786),
Mr. Haugen (16,634) and Mr. Rens (16,634).
|
|
|
|
Approximately 75% of the override units have been awarded to
members of our management team responsible for the growth of the
nitrogen fertilizer business. Some portion of these units may be
awarded to members of management added in the future. These
units vest on a five-year schedule, with 33.3% vesting on the
third anniversary of the closing date of the Partnerships
initial public offering (if any such offering occurs), an
additional 33.4% vesting on the fourth anniversary of the
closing date of such an offering and the remaining 33.3% vesting
on the fifth anniversary of the closing date of such an
offering. Override units are entitled to distributions whether
or not they have vested. Management members will forfeit
unvested units if they are no longer employed by us; however, if
a management member has three full years of service with the
Partnership following the completion of an initial public
offering of the Partnership, such management member may retire
at age 62 and will be entitled to permanently retain all of
his or her units whether or not they have vested pursuant to the
vesting schedule described above. Units forfeited will be either
retired or reissued to others (with a
catch-up
payment provision); retired units will increase the unit values
of all other units on a pro rata basis. The following named
executive officers received the following grants of this
category of override units: Mr. Lipinski (219,378),
Mr. Riemann (75,000), Mr. Gross (22,500),
Mr. Haugen (13,125) and Mr. Rens (48,750). Upon
Mr. Rens termination date, 25% of the total grant of
all override units to him was forfeited. All remaining override
units not forfeited were immediately vested.
|
The override units granted to management are entitled to 15% of
all distributions made by CA III. All vested and unvested
override units are entitled to distributions. To the extent that
at any time not all override units have yet been granted, the
override units that have been granted will be entitled to the
full 15% of all distributions (e.g., if only 90% of the override
units have been granted, the holders of these 90% are entitled
to 15% of all distributions).
A portion of the override units may be granted in the future to
new members of management. A
catch-up
payment will be made to new members of management who receive
units at a time when the current unit value has increased from
the initial unit value.
The value of the common units and override units in CA III
depends on the ability of the Partnerships managing
general partner to make distributions. The managing general
partner will not receive any distributions from the Partnership
until the Partnerships aggregate adjusted operating
surplus through December 31, 2009 has been distributed.
Based on the Partnerships current projections, the
Partnership believes that the executive officers will not begin
to receive distributions on their common and override units
until after December 31, 2012.
Adjustments to Capital Accounts;
Distributions. Each of the executive officers has
a capital account under which his balance is increased or
decreased, as applicable, to reflect his allocable share of net
income and gross income of CA III, the capital that the
executive officer contributed, distributions paid to such
executive officer and his allocable share of net loss and items
of gross deduction. Override units owned by the executive
officers do not participate in distributions under the CA III
limited liability company agreement until the Current
Value is at least equal to the Initial Price
(as these terms are defined in the CA III limited
40
liability company agreement). CA III may make distributions to
its members to the extent that the cash available to it is in
excess of the business reasonably anticipated needs.
Distributions are generally made to members capital
accounts in proportion to the number of units each member holds.
Distributions in respect of override units, however, will be
reduced until the total reductions in proposed distributions in
respect of the override units equal the aggregate capital
contributions of all members.
Other Provisions Relating to CA III Units. The
executive officers are subject to transfer restrictions on their
CA III units, although they may make certain transfers of their
units for estate planning purposes.
Coffeyville
Resources, LLC Phantom Unit Appreciation Plan (Plan I) and
Coffeyville Resources, LLC Phantom Unit Appreciation Plan (Plan
II)
The following is a summary of the material terms of the Phantom
Unit Plans as they relate to our named executive officers.
Payments under the Phantom Unit Plan I are tied to distributions
made by CA and payments under the Phantom Unit Plan II are
tied to distributions made by CA II.
General. The Phantom Unit Plans are
administered by the compensation committees of the boards of
directors of CA and CA II, as applicable. The Phantom Unit Plans
provide for two classes of interests: phantom service points and
phantom performance points (collectively referred to as phantom
points). Holders of the phantom service points and phantom
performance points have the opportunity to receive a cash
payment when distributions are made pursuant to the LLC
Agreements in respect of operating units and value units,
respectively. The phantom points represent a contractual right
to receive a payment when payment is made in respect of certain
profits interests in CA and CA II, as applicable.
Phantom points that have been granted (and not since forfeited)
under each of the Phantom Unit Plans to our named executive
officers are as follows: Mr. Lipinski (1,403,958 phantom
service points and 1,422,332 phantom performance points,
representing approximately 14% of the total phantom points
awarded), Mr. Riemann (611,537 phantom service points and
619,535 phantom performance points, representing approximately
6% of the total phantom points awarded), Mr. Gross
(1,315,793 phantom service points and 1,333,002 phantom
performance points, representing approximately 13% of the total
phantom points awarded), Mr. Haugen (508,019 phantom
service points and 514,656 phantom performance points,
representing approximately 5% of the total phantom points
awarded) and Mr. Rens (371,428.5 phantom service points and
247,619 phantom performance points, representing approximately
3.1% of the total phantom points awarded).
If all of the shares of common stock of our Company held by CA
and CA II were sold at $6.86 per share, which was the closing
price of our common stock on December 31, 2009 and cash
were distributed to members pursuant to the LLC Agreements, our
named executive officers would receive cash payments in respect
of their phantom points in the following amounts:
Mr. Lipinski ($1.229 million), Mr. Riemann
($0.535 million), Mr. Gross ($1.152 million),
Mr. Haugen ($0.445 million) and Mr. Rens
($0.277 million). Mr. Morgan does not have any phantom
points awarded to him. The compensation committees of the boards
of directors of CA and CA II have authority to make additional
awards of phantom points under the Phantom Unit Plans.
Phantom Point Payments. Payments in respect of
phantom service points will be made within 30 days from the
date distributions are made pursuant to the LLC Agreements in
respect of operating units. Cash payments in respect of phantom
performance points will be made within 30 days from the
date distributions are made pursuant to the LLC Agreements in
respect of value units (i.e., not until the Current
Value is at least two times the Initial Price
(as such terms are defined in the LLC Agreements), with full
participation occurring when the Current Value is four times the
Initial Price and pro rata distributions when the Current Value
is between two and four times the Initial Price). There is also
a catch-up
provision with respect to phantom performance points for which
no cash payment was made because no distribution pursuant to the
LLC Agreements was made with respect to value units. During
November 2009, payments were made under the Phantom Unit
Plan II as follows: Mr. Lipinski ($122,872),
Mr. Riemann ($53,521), Mr. Gross ($115,156),
Mr. Haugen ($44,461) and Mr. Rens ($32,507). These
payments occurred due to distributions made pursuant to the CA
II LLC Agreement upon the sale of 7,376,264 shares of CVR
common stock in November 2009.
41
Other Provisions Relating to the Phantom
Points. The boards of directors of CA and CA II
may, at any time or from time to time, amend or terminate the
Phantom Unit Plans. If a participants employment is
terminated prior to an Exit Event (as such term is
defined in the LLC Agreements), all of the participants
phantom points are forfeited. In conjunction with Mr. Rens
entering into the Separation Agreement, phantom points
previously granted to Mr. Rens under the Phantom Unit Plans
were not forfeited but rather 75% of the phantom service points
became immediately vested and non-forfeitable as of the
Termination Date and 50% of the phantom performance points
became immediately vested and non-forfeitable for a period of
24 months following the Termination Date. See
Potential Payments Upon Termination or
Change-of-Control for further discussion of the Separation
Agreement.
Phantom points are generally non-transferable (except by will or
the laws of descent and distribution). If payment to a
participant in respect of his phantom points would result in the
application of the excise tax imposed under Section 4999 of
the Code, then the payment will be cut back only if
that reduction would be more beneficial to the participant on an
after-tax basis than if there were no reduction.
Outstanding
Equity Awards at 2009 Fiscal Year-End
In addition to equity awards granted by CVR Energy, this table
includes equity awards granted by CA, CA II and CAIII.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Equity Awards
|
|
|
|
Total Number of Shares
|
|
|
Number of Shares
|
|
|
Number of Shares
|
|
|
Market Value of
|
|
|
|
or Units of Stock
|
|
|
or Units of Stock
|
|
|
or Units of Stock
|
|
|
Shares or Units of
|
|
|
|
That Have Been
|
|
|
That Have
|
|
|
That Have Not
|
|
|
Stock That Have Not
|
|
Named Executive Officer
|
|
Awarded(1)
|
|
|
Vested
|
|
|
Vested (#)(2)(3)
|
|
|
Vested ($)(4)
|
|
|
John J. Lipinski
|
|
|
157,909.0
|
(5)
|
|
|
118,431.7
|
|
|
|
39,477.3
|
|
|
$
|
536,101
|
|
|
|
|
315,818.5
|
(6)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
315,818.5
|
|
|
$
|
1,670,680
|
|
|
|
|
36,246.0
|
(5)
|
|
|
18,123.0
|
|
|
|
18,123.0
|
|
|
$
|
29,359
|
|
|
|
|
72,483.0
|
(6)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
72,483.0
|
|
|
$
|
116,698
|
|
|
|
|
157,909.0
|
(7)
|
|
|
118,431.7
|
|
|
|
39,477.3
|
|
|
$
|
407,010
|
|
|
|
|
315,818.5
|
(8)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
315,818.5
|
|
|
$
|
1,882,278
|
|
|
|
|
36,246.0
|
(7)
|
|
|
18,123.0
|
|
|
|
18,123.0
|
|
|
$
|
21,385
|
|
|
|
|
72,483.0
|
(8)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
72,483.0
|
|
|
$
|
84,805
|
|
|
|
|
300,628.0
|
(9)
|
|
|
81,250.0
|
|
|
|
219,378.0
|
|
|
$
|
17,550
|
|
|
|
|
1,403,958.0
|
(10)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
1,403,958.0
|
|
|
$
|
317,189
|
|
|
|
|
1,422,332.0
|
(11)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
1,422,332.0
|
|
|
$
|
257,371
|
|
|
|
|
1,403,958.0
|
(12)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
1,403,958.0
|
|
|
$
|
241,270
|
|
|
|
|
1,422,332.0
|
(13)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
1,422,332.0
|
|
|
$
|
288,236
|
|
|
|
|
3,796.0
|
(14)
|
|
|
2,847.0
|
|
|
|
949.0
|
|
|
$
|
3,578
|
|
|
|
|
15,185.0
|
(15)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
15,185.0
|
|
|
$
|
57,096
|
|
|
|
|
3,796.0
|
(16)
|
|
|
2,847.0
|
|
|
|
949.0
|
|
|
$
|
3,160
|
|
|
|
|
15,185.0
|
(17)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
15,185.0
|
|
|
$
|
50,111
|
|
Edward A. Morgan
|
|
|
25,000.0
|
(18)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
25,000.0
|
|
|
$
|
171,500
|
|
|
|
|
38,168.0
|
(18)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
38,168.0
|
|
|
$
|
261,832
|
|
42
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Equity Awards
|
|
|
|
Total Number of Shares
|
|
|
Number of Shares
|
|
|
Number of Shares
|
|
|
Market Value of
|
|
|
|
or Units of Stock
|
|
|
or Units of Stock
|
|
|
or Units of Stock
|
|
|
Shares or Units of
|
|
|
|
That Have Been
|
|
|
That Have
|
|
|
That Have Not
|
|
|
Stock That Have Not
|
|
Named Executive Officer
|
|
Awarded(1)
|
|
|
Vested
|
|
|
Vested (#)(2)(3)
|
|
|
Vested ($)(4)
|
|
|
Stanley A. Riemann
|
|
|
70,092.5
|
(14)
|
|
|
52,569.4
|
|
|
|
17,523.1
|
|
|
$
|
237,964
|
|
|
|
|
140,185.5
|
(15)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
140,185.5
|
|
|
$
|
741,581
|
|
|
|
|
70,092.5
|
(16)
|
|
|
52,569.4
|
|
|
|
17,523.1
|
|
|
$
|
180,663
|
|
|
|
|
140,185.5
|
(17)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
140,185.5
|
|
|
$
|
835,506
|
|
|
|
|
105,000.0
|
(9)
|
|
|
30,000.0
|
|
|
|
75,000.0
|
|
|
$
|
6,000
|
|
|
|
|
611,537.0
|
(10)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
611,537.0
|
|
|
$
|
138,161
|
|
|
|
|
619,535.0
|
(11)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
619,535.0
|
|
|
$
|
112,105
|
|
|
|
|
611,537.0
|
(12)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
611,537.0
|
|
|
$
|
105,093
|
|
|
|
|
619,535.0
|
(13)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
619,535.0
|
|
|
$
|
125,549
|
|
|
|
|
1,370.0
|
(14)
|
|
|
1,027.5
|
|
|
|
342.5
|
|
|
$
|
1,291
|
|
|
|
|
5,482.0
|
(15)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
5,482.0
|
|
|
$
|
20,612
|
|
|
|
|
1,370.0
|
(16)
|
|
|
1,027.5
|
|
|
|
342.5
|
|
|
$
|
1,141
|
|
|
|
|
5,482.0
|
(17)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
5,482.0
|
|
|
$
|
18,091
|
|
Edmund S. Gross
|
|
|
31,286.0
|
(9)
|
|
|
8,786.0
|
|
|
|
22,500.0
|
|
|
$
|
1,800
|
|
|
|
|
1,315,793.0
|
(10)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
1,315,793.0
|
|
|
$
|
297,271
|
|
|
|
|
1,333,002.0
|
(11)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
1,333,002.0
|
|
|
$
|
241,207
|
|
|
|
|
1,315,793.0
|
(12)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
1,315,793.0
|
|
|
$
|
226,119
|
|
|
|
|
1,333,002.0
|
(13)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
1,333,002.0
|
|
|
$
|
270,133
|
|
|
|
|
15,268.0
|
(18)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
15,268.0
|
|
|
$
|
104,738
|
|
Robert W. Haugen
|
|
|
35,982.5
|
(14)
|
|
|
26,986.9
|
|
|
|
8,995.6
|
|
|
$
|
122,161
|
|
|
|
|
71,965.5
|
(15)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
71,965.5
|
|
|
$
|
380,697
|
|
|
|
|
35,982.5
|
(16)
|
|
|
26,986.9
|
|
|
|
8,995.6
|
|
|
$
|
92,745
|
|
|
|
|
71,965.5
|
(17)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
71,965.5
|
|
|
$
|
428,914
|
|
|
|
|
29,759.0
|
(9)
|
|
|
16,634.0
|
|
|
|
13,125.0
|
|
|
$
|
1,050
|
|
|
|
|
508,019.0
|
(10)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
508,019.0
|
|
|
$
|
114,774
|
|
|
|
|
514,656.0
|
(11)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
514,656.0
|
|
|
$
|
93,127
|
|
|
|
|
508,019.0
|
(12)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
508,019.0
|
|
|
$
|
87,303
|
|
|
|
|
514,656.0
|
(13)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
514,656.0
|
|
|
$
|
104,295
|
|
|
|
|
704.0
|
(14)
|
|
|
528.0
|
|
|
|
176.0
|
|
|
$
|
664
|
|
|
|
|
2,814.0
|
(15)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
2,814.0
|
|
|
$
|
10,581
|
|
|
|
|
704.0
|
(16)
|
|
|
528.0
|
|
|
|
176.0
|
|
|
$
|
586
|
|
|
|
|
2,814.0
|
(17)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
2,814.0
|
|
|
$
|
9,286
|
|
James T. Rens
|
|
|
35,982.5
|
(19)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
35,982.5
|
|
|
$
|
190,347
|
|
|
|
|
35,982.5
|
(19)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
35,982.5
|
|
|
$
|
214,456
|
|
|
|
|
247,619.0
|
(19)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
247,619.0
|
|
|
$
|
44,807
|
|
|
|
|
247,619.0
|
(19)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
247,619.0
|
|
|
$
|
50,180
|
|
|
|
|
26,986.5
|
(19)
|
|
|
26,986.5
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
$
|
|
|
|
|
|
26,986.5
|
(19)
|
|
|
26,986.5
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
$
|
|
|
|
|
|
49,038.0
|
(19)
|
|
|
49,038.0
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
$
|
|
|
|
|
|
371,428.5
|
(19)
|
|
|
371,428.5
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
$
|
|
|
|
|
|
371,428.5
|
(19)
|
|
|
371,428.5
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
$
|
|
|
43
|
|
|
(1) |
|
Represents the total awards (and not since forfeited) to the
named executive officer from the profits interests in CA, CA II
and CA III, as well as the phantom points granted pursuant to
the Phantom Unit Plans. |
|
(2) |
|
The profits interests in CA and CA II generally vest as follows:
operating units generally become non-forfeitable in 25% annual
increments beginning on the second anniversary of the original
grant date in June 2005 and value units are generally
forfeitable upon termination of employment. The profits
interests are more fully described above under
Interests in Coffeyville Acquisition LLC and
Coffeyville Acquisition II LLC. |
|
(3) |
|
The phantom points granted pursuant to the Phantom Unit Plans
are generally forfeitable upon termination of employment. The
phantom points are more fully described above under
Coffeyville Resources, LLC Phantom Unit
Appreciation Plan (Plan I) and Coffeyville Resources, LLC
Phantom Unit Appreciation Plan (Plan II). |
|
(4) |
|
The dollar amounts shown reflect (a) for restricted stock
awards, the closing market price of our common stock on
December 31, 2009 ($6.86 per share) and (b) for all
other awards, the fair value as of December 31, 2009, based
upon an independent third-party valuation using a
probability-weighted expected return method involving a
forward-looking analysis of possible future outcomes, the
estimation of ranges of future and present value under each
outcome, and the application of a probability factor to each
outcome in conjunction with the application of the current value
(December 31, 2009) of CVR Energys common stock
closing price on the NYSE with a Black-Scholes option pricing
model formula. Assumptions used in the calculation of these
amounts are included in footnote 3 to the Companys audited
financial statements for the year ended December 31, 2009
included in the Companys Annual Report on
Form 10-K
filed on March 12, 2010. |
|
(5) |
|
Represents operating units in CA. These operating units have
been transferred to trusts for the benefit of members of
Mr. Lipinskis family. |
|
(6) |
|
Represents value units in CA. These value units have been
transferred to trusts for the benefit of members of
Mr. Lipinskis family. |
|
(7) |
|
Represents operating units in CA II. These operating units have
been transferred to trusts for the benefit of members of
Mr. Lipinskis family. |
|
(8) |
|
Represents value units in CA II. These value units have been
transferred to trusts for the benefit of members of
Mr. Lipinskis family. |
|
(9) |
|
Represents profits interests in CA III. |
|
(10) |
|
Represents phantom service points under the Phantom Unit Plan I. |
|
(11) |
|
Represents phantom performance points under the Phantom Unit
Plan I. |
|
(12) |
|
Represents phantom service points under the Phantom Unit Plan II. |
|
(13) |
|
Represents phantom performance points under the Phantom Unit
Plan II. |
|
(14) |
|
Represents operating units in CA. |
|
(15) |
|
Represents value units in CA. |
|
(16) |
|
Represents operating units in CA II. |
|
(17) |
|
Represents value units in CA II. |
|
(18) |
|
Represents restricted stock awards. |
|
(19) |
|
Mr. Rens terminated his employment with the Company in May
2009. Under the terms of the LLC agreement, 25% of
Mr. Rens operating units in both CA and CA II
immediately vested and Mr. Rens forfeited the remaining 25%
of the operating units in CA and CA II. Additionally, 50% of
Mr. Rens value units in both CA and CA II were
immediately forfeited, as were 50% of Mr. Rens
phantom performance points. The remaining value units and
phantom performance points are non-forfeitable for a period of
24 months following Mr. Rens termination date.
Additional profits interest in CA III immediately vested upon
Mr. Rens termination. His remaining 25% profits
interest in CA III was forfeited. Also, 75% of
Mr. Rens phantom service points immediately vested in
both the Phantom Unit |
44
|
|
|
|
|
Plan I and Phantom Unit Plan II. The remaining 25% of the
phantom service points were forfeited. The vested units were
valued at the accelerated vesting date. |
The vesting schedules, if any, of the override units and phantom
points reflected in the table above are set forth in the
Interests in Coffeyville Acquisition LLC and
Coffeyville Acquisition II LLC,
Interests in Coffeyville Acquisition III
LLC, and Coffeyville Resources, LLC Phantom Unit
Appreciation Plan (Plan I) and Coffeyville Resources, LLC
Phantom Unit Appreciation Plan (Plan II), above.
Equity
Awards Vested During Fiscal Year-Ended 2009
No awards consisting of CVR Energy equity interests vested
during 2009. The table below reflects equity awards granted by
CA, CA II and CAIII that vested during 2009.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Equity Awards
|
|
|
|
Number of Shares
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
or Units Acquired
|
|
|
Value Realized
|
|
Named Executive Officer
|
|
on Vesting (#)(1)
|
|
|
on Vesting ($)(2)
|
|
|
John J. Lipinski(3)
|
|
|
39,477.2
|
(4)
|
|
$
|
563,340
|
|
|
|
|
9,061.5
|
(4)
|
|
$
|
14,680
|
|
|
|
|
39,477.2
|
(5)
|
|
$
|
563,340
|
|
|
|
|
9,061.5
|
(5)
|
|
$
|
10,693
|
|
|
|
|
2,847.0
|
(6)
|
|
$
|
19,075
|
|
|
|
|
2,847.0
|
(7)
|
|
$
|
19,075
|
|
Stanley A. Riemann(8)
|
|
|
17,523.2
|
(6)
|
|
$
|
250,056
|
|
|
|
|
17,523.2
|
(7)
|
|
$
|
250,056
|
|
|
|
|
1,027.5
|
(6)
|
|
$
|
6,884
|
|
|
|
|
1,027.5
|
(7)
|
|
$
|
6,884
|
|
Robert W. Haugen(9)
|
|
|
8,995.7
|
(6)
|
|
$
|
128,369
|
|
|
|
|
8,995.7
|
(7)
|
|
$
|
128,369
|
|
|
|
|
528.0
|
(6)
|
|
$
|
3,538
|
|
|
|
|
528.0
|
(7)
|
|
$
|
3,538
|
|
James T. Rens(10)
|
|
|
8,995.2
|
(11)
|
|
$
|
143,024
|
|
|
|
|
8,995.2
|
(11)
|
|
$
|
143,024
|
|
|
|
|
32,404.0
|
(11)
|
|
$
|
972
|
|
|
|
|
371,428.5
|
(11)
|
|
$
|
51,675
|
|
|
|
|
371,428.5
|
(11)
|
|
$
|
51,675
|
|
|
|
|
(1) |
|
The profits interests in CA and CA II generally vest as follows:
operating units generally become non-forfeitable in 25% annual
increments beginning on the second anniversary of the date of
grant and value units are generally forfeitable upon termination
of employment. The profits interests are more fully described
above under Interests in Coffeyville
Acquisition LLC and Coffeyville Acquisition II LLC. |
|
(2) |
|
The dollar amounts shown are based on a valuation determined for
purposes of FASB ASC 718, Compensation Stock
at the relevant vesting date of the respective override
units. |
|
(3) |
|
During November 2009, distributions were made to the operating
unit holders of CA II in accordance with the LLC Agreement of CA
II. These distributions were generated by the net proceeds
received by CA II upon its sale of shares of CVR common stock in
November 2009. Mr. Lipinski (to the trusts for the benefit
of Mr. Lipinskis family) received $827,114 from this
distribution. Payments in respect of phantom service points are
also made within 30 days from the date distributions are
made pursuant to the LLC Agreements in respect of operating
units. As such, Mr. Lipinski received a payment of $122,872
from the Phantom Unit Plan II. |
|
(4) |
|
Represents operating units in CA. These operating units have
been transferred to trusts for the benefit of members of
Mr. Lipinskis family. |
45
|
|
|
(5) |
|
Represents operating units in CA II. These operating units have
been transferred to trusts for the benefit of members of
Mr. Lipinskis family. |
|
(6) |
|
Represents operating units in CA. |
|
(7) |
|
Represents operating units in CA II. |
|
(8) |
|
During November 2009, distributions were made to the operating
unit holders of CA II in accordance with the LLC Agreement of CA
II. These distributions were generated by the net proceeds
received by CA II upon its sale of shares of CVR common stock in
November 2009. Mr. Riemann received $367,139 from this
distribution. Payments in respect of phantom service points are
also made within 30 days from the date distributions are
made pursuant to the LLC Agreements in respect of operating
units. As such, Mr. Riemann received a payment of $53,521
from the Phantom Unit Plan II. |
|
(9) |
|
During November 2009, distributions were made to the operating
unit holders of CA II in accordance with the LLC Agreement of CA
II. These distributions were generated by the net proceeds
received by CA II upon its sale of shares of CVR common stock in
November 2009. Mr. Haugen received $188,473 from this
distribution. Payments in respect of phantom service points are
also made within 30 days from the date distributions are
made pursuant to the LLC Agreements in respect of operating
units. As such, Mr. Haugen received a payment of $44,461
from the Phantom Unit Plan II. |
|
(10) |
|
During November 2009, distributions were made to the operating
unit holders of CA II in accordance with the LLC Agreement of CA
II. These distributions were generated by the net proceeds
received by CA II upon its sale of shares of CVR common stock in
November 2009. Mr. Rens received $141,353 from this
distribution. Payments in respect of phantom service points are
also made within 30 days from the date distributions are
made pursuant to the LLC Agreements in respect of operating
units. As such, Mr. Rens received a payment of $32,507 from
the Phantom Unit Plan II. |
|
(11) |
|
Mr. Rens terminated his employment with the Company in May
2009. Under the terms of the LLC agreement, 25% of
Mr. Rens operating units in both CA and CA II
immediately vested and Mr. Rens forfeited the remaining 25%
of the operating units in CA and CA II. Additional profits
interest in CA III immediately vested upon Mr. Rens
termination. His remaining 25% profits interest in CA III was
forfeited. Also, 75% of Mr. Rens phantom service
points immediately vested in both the Phantom Unit Plan I and
Phantom Unit Plan II. The remaining 25% of the phantom service
points were forfeited. The vested units were valued at the
accelerated vesting date. |
Potential
Payments Upon Termination or Change-of-Control
Under the terms of their respective employment agreements, the
named executive officers may be entitled to severance and other
benefits following the termination of their employment. These
benefits are summarized below.
The amounts of potential post-employment payments and benefits
in the narrative and table below assume that the triggering
event took place on December 31, 2009.
In the event of a termination of employment for any reason, a
named executive officer is entitled to any accrued amounts,
including base salary earned but unpaid through the date of
termination, any earned but unpaid annual bonus for completed
fiscal years, any unused accrued paid time off and any
unreimbursed expenses (Accrued Amounts). If
Mr. Lipinskis employment is terminated either by CVR
Energy without cause and other than for disability or by
Mr. Lipinski for good reason (as these terms are defined in
Mr. Lipinskis employment agreement), then in addition
to any Accrued Amounts, Mr. Lipinski is entitled to receive
as severance (a) salary continuation for 36 months and
(b) the continuation of medical benefits for 36 months
at active-employee rates or until such time as Mr. Lipinski
becomes eligible for medical benefits from a subsequent
employer. If Mr. Lipinskis employment is terminated
as a result of his disability, then in addition to any Accrued
Amounts and any payments to be made to Mr. Lipinski under
disability plan(s), Mr. Lipinski is entitled to
supplemental disability payments equal to, in the aggregate,
Mr. Lipinskis base salary as in effect immediately
before his disability (the estimated total amount of this
payment is set forth in the table below). Such supplemental
disability payments will be made in installments for a period of
36 months from the date of disability. As a condition to
receiving the above described severance payments and
46
benefits, Mr. Lipinski must (a) execute, deliver and
not revoke a general release of claims and (b) abide by
restrictive covenants as detailed below. If
Mr. Lipinskis employment is terminated at any time by
reason of his death, then Mr. Lipinskis beneficiary
(or his estate) will be paid any Accrued Amounts, and the base
salary Mr. Lipinski would have received had he remained
employed through the remaining term of his employment agreement.
Notwithstanding the foregoing, CVR Energy may, at its option,
purchase insurance to cover the obligations with respect to
either Mr. Lipinskis supplemental disability payments
or the payments due to Mr. Lipinskis beneficiary or
estate by reason of his death. Mr. Lipinski will be
required to cooperate in obtaining such insurance. If any
payments or distributions due to Mr. Lipinski would be
subject to the excise tax imposed under Section 4999 of the
Code, then such payments or distributions will be cut
back only if that reduction would be more beneficial to
him on an after-tax basis than if there was no reduction. The
estimated total amounts payable to Mr. Lipinski (or his
beneficiary or estate in the event of death) in the event of
termination of employment under the circumstances described
above are set forth in the table below. Mr. Lipinski would
solely be entitled to Accrued Amounts, if any, upon the
termination of employment by the Company for cause, by him
voluntarily without good reason, or by reason of his retirement.
The agreement requires Mr. Lipinski to abide by a perpetual
restrictive covenant relating to non-disclosure. The agreement
also includes covenants relating to non-solicitation and
non-competition during Mr. Lipinskis employment term,
and thereafter during the period he receives severance payments
or supplemental disability payments, as applicable, or for one
year following the end of the term (if no severance or
disability payments are payable).
Pursuant to their employment agreements, if the employment of
Messrs. Morgan, Riemann, Gross, or Haugen is terminated
either by CVR Energy without cause and other than for disability
or by the executive officer for good reason (as such terms are
defined in their respective employment agreements), then the
executive officer is entitled, in addition to any Accrued
Amounts, to receive as severance (a) salary continuation
for 12 months (18 months for Mr. Riemann) and
(b) the continuation of medical benefits for 12 months
(18 months for Mr. Riemann) at active-employee rates
or until such time as the executive officer becomes eligible for
medical benefits from a subsequent employer. The amount of these
payments is set forth in the table below. As a condition to
receiving the salary, the executives must (a) execute,
deliver and not revoke a general release of claims and
(b) abide by restrictive covenants as detailed below. The
agreements provide that if any payments or distributions due to
an executive officer would be subject to the excise tax imposed
under Section 4999 of the Code, then such payments or
distributions will be cut back only if that reduction would be
more beneficial to the executive officer on an after-tax basis
than if there were no reduction. These executive officers would
solely be entitled to Accrued Amounts, if any, upon the
termination of employment by the Company for cause, by him
voluntarily without good reason, or by reason of retirement,
death or disability.
The agreements require each of the executive officers to abide
by a perpetual restrictive covenant relating to non-disclosure.
The agreements also include covenants relating to
non-solicitation and non-competition during their employment
terms and for one year following the end of the terms; provided
Mr. Gross agreement does not include a covenant of
non-competition.
47
Below is a table setting forth the estimated aggregate value of
the payments and benefits discussed above for the executive
officers assuming a December 31, 2009 termination date
(and, where applicable, no offset due to eligibility to receive
medical benefits from a subsequent employer). The table assumes
that the executive officers termination was by CVR Energy
without cause or by the executive officers for good reason and
in the case of Mr. Lipinski also provides information
regarding termination in the event of disability or death.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Estimated
|
|
|
|
Total Severance
|
|
|
Dollar Value
|
|
Named Executive Officer
|
|
Payments
|
|
|
of Benefits
|
|
|
John J. Lipinski (severance if terminated without cause or
resignation for good reason)
|
|
$
|
2,400,000
|
|
|
$
|
29,539
|
|
John J. Lipinski (supplemental disability payments if terminated
due to disability)
|
|
$
|
2,400,000
|
|
|
$
|
|
|
John J. Lipinski (death)
|
|
$
|
2,400,000
|
|
|
$
|
|
|
Edward A. Morgan (severance if terminated without cause or
resignation for good reason)
|
|
$
|
275,000
|
|
|
$
|
14,111
|
|
Stanley A. Riemann (severance if terminated without cause or
resignation for good reason)
|
|
$
|
622,500
|
|
|
$
|
14,770
|
|
Edmund S. Gross (severance if terminated without cause or
resignation for good reason)
|
|
$
|
315,000
|
|
|
$
|
14,111
|
|
Robert W. Haugen (severance if terminated without cause or
resignation for good reason)
|
|
$
|
275,000
|
|
|
$
|
14,111
|
|
The employment agreements for the named executive officers were
amended and restated effective January 1, 2010. The amounts
of potential post-employment payments and benefits in the
narrative and table below assume that the triggering event took
place on January 1, 2010.
In the event of a termination of employment for any reason, a
named executive officer is entitled to any Accrued Amounts. If
Mr. Lipinskis employment is terminated either by CVR
Energy without cause and other than for disability or by
Mr. Lipinski for good reason (as these terms are defined in
Mr. Lipinskis employment agreement), then in addition
to any Accrued Amounts, Mr. Lipinski is entitled to receive
as severance (a) salary continuation for 36 months and
(b) the continuation of medical, dental, vision and life
insurance benefits (Welfare Benefits) for
36 months at active-employee rates or until such time as
Mr. Lipinski becomes eligible for Welfare Benefits from a
subsequent employer. Furthermore, if Mr. Lipinskis
employment is terminated for the foregoing reasons within the
one year period following a change in control (as defined in
Mr. Lipinskis employment agreement) or such
termination occurs in anticipation of a change in control, then
in addition to the foregoing payments and benefits,
Mr. Lipinski will be entitled to payment each month for a
36 month severance period of one-twelfth of his target
annual bonus for the year in which his employment is terminated.
If Mr. Lipinskis employment is terminated as a result
of his disability, then in addition to any Accrued Amounts and
any payments to be made to Mr. Lipinski under disability
plan(s), Mr. Lipinski is entitled to supplemental
disability payments equal to, in the aggregate,
Mr. Lipinskis base salary as in effect immediately
before his disability (the estimated total amount of this
payment is set forth in the table below). Such supplemental
disability payments will be made in installments for a period of
36 months from the date of disability. As a condition to
receiving the above described severance payments and benefits,
Mr. Lipinski must (a) execute, deliver and not revoke
a general release of claims and (b) abide by restrictive
covenants as detailed below.
If Mr. Lipinskis employment is terminated at any time
by reason of his death, then Mr. Lipinskis
beneficiary (or his estate) will be paid any Accrued Amounts,
and the base salary Mr. Lipinski would have received had he
remained employed through the remaining term of his employment
agreement. Notwithstanding the foregoing, CVR Energy may, at its
option, purchase insurance to cover the obligations with respect
to either Mr. Lipinskis supplemental disability
payments or the payments due to Mr. Lipinskis
beneficiary or estate by reason of his death. Mr. Lipinski
will be required to cooperate in obtaining such insurance. If
Mr. Lipinskis employment is terminated at any time by
reason of his retirement (defined as any
48
termination or resignation of employment for any reason (other
than by the Company for cause or by reason of death) following
the date Mr. Lipinski attains age 62), then in
addition to any Accrued Amounts, Mr. Lipinski is entitled
to the continuation of Welfare Benefits he would otherwise be
eligible to receive as an active employee for a period of
36 months following retirement or until such time as
Mr. Lipinski becomes eligible for Welfare Benefits from a
subsequent employer. Thereafter, Mr. Lipinski will be
eligible to continue to participate in the Companys
Welfare Benefit plans; provided, such continued participation
will be entirely at his expense and will cease at such time as
Mr. Lipinski becomes eligible for Welfare Benefits from a
subsequent employer. In addition, upon retirement,
Mr. Lipinski will be entitled to the use of an office at
the Companys headquarters and the use of the
Companys facilities and administrative support at the
Companys expense for 36 months and at his own expense
thereafter. If any payments or distributions due to
Mr. Lipinski would be subject to the excise tax imposed
under Section 4999 of the Code, then such payments or
distributions will be cut back only if that
reduction would be more beneficial to him on an after-tax basis
than if there was no reduction. The estimated total amounts
payable to Mr. Lipinski (or his beneficiary or estate in
the event of death) in the event of termination of employment
under the circumstances described above are set forth in the
table below. Mr. Lipinski would solely be entitled to
Accrued Amounts, if any, upon the termination of employment by
the Company for cause, or by him voluntarily without good reason.
Mr. Lipinskis employment agreement requires him to
abide by a perpetual restrictive covenant relating to
non-disclosure. The agreement also includes covenants relating
to non-solicitation and non-competition during
Mr. Lipinskis employment term, and thereafter during
the period he receives severance payments or supplemental
disability payments, as applicable, or for one year following
the end of the term (if no severance or disability payments are
payable).
Pursuant to their employment agreements, if the employment of
Messrs. Morgan, Riemann, Gross, or Haugen is terminated
either by CVR Energy without cause and other than for disability
or by the executive officer for good reason (as such terms are
defined in their respective employment agreements), then the
executive officer is entitled, in addition to any Accrued
Amounts, to receive as severance (a) salary continuation
for 12 months (18 months for Mr. Riemann)
following such termination and (b) the continuation of
Welfare Benefits for 12 months (18 months for
Mr. Riemann) at active-employee rates or until such time as
the executive officer becomes eligible for Welfare Benefits from
a subsequent employer. Furthermore, if the employment of
Messrs. Morgan, Riemann, Gross, or Haugen is terminated for
the foregoing reasons within the one year period following a
change in control (as defined in their respective employment
agreements) or such termination occurs in anticipation of a
change in control, then in addition to the foregoing payments
and benefits (i) the salary continuation of
Messrs. Morgan, Riemann and Gross will be extended to
24 months following termination, and (ii) each
executive officer will be entitled to payment each month for a
24 month (12 months for Mr. Haugen) severance
period of one-twelfth of his target annual bonus for the year in
which his employment is terminated. As a condition to receiving
the severance payments and benefits described above, the
executive must (a) execute, deliver and not revoke a
general release of claims and (b) abide by restrictive
covenants as detailed below. If the employment of
Messrs. Morgan, Riemann, Gross, or Haugen is terminated at
any time by reason of his retirement (defined as any termination
or resignation of employment for any reason (other than by the
Company for cause or by reason of death) following the date the
executive officer attains age 62), then in addition to any
Accrued Amounts, the executive officer is entitled to the
continuation of Welfare Benefits he would otherwise be eligible
to receive as an active employee for a period of 24 months
following retirement or until such time as the executive officer
becomes eligible for Welfare Benefits from a subsequent
employer. Thereafter, the executive officer will be eligible to
continue to participate in the Companys Welfare Benefit
plans; provided, such continued participation will be entirely
at his expense and will cease at such time as the executive
officer becomes eligible for Welfare Benefits from a subsequent
employer. In addition, upon retirement, Mr. Riemann will be
entitled to the use of the Companys facilities at his own
expense. The agreements provide that if any payments or
distributions due to an executive officer would be subject to
the excise tax imposed under Section 4999 of the Code, then
such payments or distributions will be cut back only if that
reduction would be more beneficial to the executive officer on
an after-tax basis than if there were no reduction. The
estimated total amounts payable to Messrs. Morgan, Riemann,
Gross and Haugen in the event of termination of employment under
the circumstances described above are set forth in the table
below. These executive officers would solely be entitled to
Accrued Amounts,
49
if any, upon the termination of employment by the Company for
cause, by such executive officer voluntarily without good
reason, or by reason of death or disability.
The agreements require each of the executive officers to abide
by a perpetual restrictive covenant relating to non-disclosure.
The agreements also include covenants relating to
non-solicitation and non-competition during their employment
terms and for one year following the end of the terms; provided
Mr. Gross agreement does not include a covenant of
non-competition.
Below is a table setting forth the estimated aggregate value of
the payments and benefits discussed above for the executive
officers assuming a January 1, 2010 termination date (and,
where applicable, no offset due to eligibility to receive
Welfare Benefits from a subsequent employer). The table assumes
that the executive officers termination was by CVR Energy
without cause, by the executive officers for good reason, by the
executive officer by virtue of retirement and in the case of
Mr. Lipinski also provides information regarding
termination in the event of disability or death.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Total Severance
|
|
|
Total Severance
|
|
|
Estimated
|
|
|
|
Payments
|
|
|
Payments
|
|
|
Dollar
|
|
|
|
without
|
|
|
with
|
|
|
Value of
|
|
Named Executive Officer
|
|
Change in Control
|
|
|
Change in Control
|
|
|
Benefits
|
|
|
John J. Lipinski (severance if terminated without cause or
resignation for good reason)
|
|
$
|
2,700,000
|
|
|
$
|
9,450,000
|
|
|
$
|
47,208
|
|
John J. Lipinski (supplemental disability payments if terminated
due to disability)
|
|
$
|
2,700,000
|
|
|
$
|
|
|
|
$
|
|
|
John J. Lipinski (death)
|
|
$
|
2,700,000
|
|
|
$
|
|
|
|
$
|
|
|
John J. Lipinski (retirement)
|
|
$
|
|
|
|
$
|
|
|
|
$
|
47,208
|
|
Edward A. Morgan (severance if terminated without cause or
resignation for good reason)
|
|
$
|
315,000
|
|
|
$
|
1,386,000
|
|
|
$
|
16,665
|
|
Edward A. Morgan (retirement)
|
|
$
|
|
|
|
$
|
|
|
|
$
|
33,330
|
|
Stanley A. Riemann (severance if terminated without cause or
resignation for good reason)
|
|
$
|
622,500
|
|
|
$
|
2,490,000
|
|
|
$
|
23,327
|
|
Stanley A. Riemann (retirement)
|
|
$
|
|
|
|
$
|
|
|
|
$
|
31,102
|
|
Edmund S. Gross (severance if terminated without cause or
resignation for good reason)
|
|
$
|
347,000
|
|
|
$
|
1,318,600
|
|
|
$
|
20,121
|
|
Edmund S. Gross (retirement)
|
|
$
|
|
|
|
$
|
|
|
|
$
|
40,242
|
|
Robert W. Haugen (severance if terminated without cause or
resignation for good reason)
|
|
$
|
275,000
|
|
|
$
|
605,000
|
|
|
$
|
18,504
|
|
Robert W. Haugen (retirement)
|
|
$
|
|
|
|
$
|
|
|
|
$
|
37,008
|
|
In connection with joining the Company on May 14, 2009,
Mr. Morgan was awarded 25,000 shares of non-vested
restricted stock. Mr. Morgan has the right to vote these
shares immediately. However, the shares are subject to transfer
restrictions and vesting requirements that lapse in one-third
annual increments beginning on the first anniversary of the date
of grant. Pursuant to the terms of the award agreement, the
shares become immediately vested in the event of the death or
disability of Mr. Morgan. On December 18, 2009,
Mr. Morgan was granted 38,168 shares of restricted
stock and Mr. Gross was awarded 15,268 shares of
restricted stock. Messrs. Morgan and Gross have the right
to vote these shares immediately. However, the shares are
subject to transfer restrictions and vesting requirements that
lapse in one-third annual increments beginning on the first
anniversary of the date of grant. Subject to vesting
requirements, Messrs. Morgan and Gross are required to
retain at least 50% of their respective shares for a period
equal to the lesser of (i) three years, commencing with the
date of the award, or (ii) as long as such individual
remains an officer of the Company (or an affiliate) at the level
of Vice President or higher. Pursuant to the terms of their
respective award agreements, the shares become immediately
vested in the event of such officers death, disability or
retirement, or in the event of any of the following:
(a) such officers employment is terminated other than
for cause within the one year period following a change in
control; (b) such officer resigns from employment for good
reason within the one year period following a change in control;
or (c) such officers employment is terminated in
50
anticipation of a change in control. The terms disability,
retirement, cause, good reason and change in control are all
defined in the LTIP.
On January 23, 2009, Mr. Rens, the Company and CRLLC
entered into the Separation Agreement. Pursuant to the
Separation Agreement, Mr. Rens employment ceased on
May 25, 2009. Pursuant to the Separation Agreement, the
Amended and Restated Employment Agreement entered into between
Mr. Rens and the Company dated December 29, 2007 (the
Employment Agreement) terminated except for certain
provisions relating to confidential information,
non-competition, and non-solicitation of employees or customers.
In that regard, the period during which the non-competition
restriction applies following Mr. Rens termination
was reduced to three months from twelve months.
As additional consideration for performance of his duties under
the Separation Agreement and subject to his compliance with the
restrictive covenants contained in the Employment Agreement and
the execution of an additional release of claims (which release
must become effective and irrevocable within 30 days
following the Termination Date), Mr. Rens was paid or
provided the following additional consideration (collectively,
the Separation Benefits): (i) payments equal to
$330,000; (ii) continuation of medical benefits on the same
terms that Mr. Rens would otherwise be eligible to receive
as an active employee of the Company for a period of
12 months following the Termination Date and, for
6 months thereafter, (and provided Mr. Rens has not
become eligible for medical benefits from a subsequent
employer), the Company will be required to reimburse
Mr. Rens for any difference between (a) the premium he
is required to pay for continued medical coverage under the
Companys plan, and (b) the amount that Mr. Rens
would have been required to pay for such coverage had he
continued to be an active employee of the Company; and
(iii) the phantom points previously granted to
Mr. Rens under the Phantom Unit Plans were not forfeited
but rather 75% of the phantom service points became immediately
vested and non-forfeitable as of the Termination Date and 50% of
the phantom performance points became immediately vested and
non-forfeitable for a period of 24 months following the
Termination Date, subject to satisfaction of the applicable
performance conditions in the applicable plan. In the event that
Mr. Rens breaches any provision of the Separation Agreement
(including the provisions of the Employment Agreement that
survive the execution of the Separation Agreement),
Mr. Rens will immediately return to the Company any portion
of the Separation Benefits that have been paid or provided to
Mr. Rens, and all phantom service points and phantom
performance points granted to Mr. Rens will be forfeited as
of the date of such breach.
In addition, also on January 23, 2009, CA, CA II and CA III
(collectively, the Acquisition Companies for
purposes of this paragraph) and Mr. Rens entered into an
LLC Unit Agreement, which provided for the treatment of the
operating units and value units in the Acquisition Companies
held by Mr. Rens upon the Termination Date. With respect to
operating units, upon the Termination Date a number of operating
units in the Acquisition Companies held by Mr. Rens became
vested such that in the aggregate 75% of such operating units
became vested and non-forfeitable as of the Termination Date.
With respect to value units, upon the Termination Date a number
of value units in the Acquisition Companies held by
Mr. Rens became vested such that in the aggregate 50% of
such value units vested and became non-forfeitable for a period
of 24 months following the Termination Date, subject to the
satisfaction of applicable performance conditions. Upon the
completion of such
24-month
period, if no exit event as specified in the relevant limited
liability company agreement of the respective Acquisition
Company has occurred (and no definitive agreement shall then be
in effect with respect to a transaction which if consummated
would result in an exit event), all value units will be
forfeited and of no further benefit to Mr. Rens. In the
event that Mr. Rens breaches any provision of the
Separation Agreement (including the provisions of the Employment
Agreement that survive the execution of the Separation
Agreement), all operating units and value units held by
Mr. Rens will be forfeited as of the date of such breach.
51
CERTAIN
RELATIONSHIPS AND RELATED PARTY TRANSACTIONS
This section describes related party transactions between the
Company and its directors, executive officers and 5%
stockholders that occurred during the year ended
December 31, 2009.
Transactions
with the Goldman Sachs Funds and the Kelso Funds
Stockholders
Agreement
In October 2007, we entered into the CVR Energy Stockholders
Agreement with CA and CA II. Pursuant to the agreement, for so
long as CA and CA II collectively beneficially own in the
aggregate an amount of our common stock that represents at least
40% of our outstanding common stock, CA and CA II each have the
right to designate two directors to our Board so long as that
party holds an amount of our common stock that represents 20% or
more of our outstanding common stock and one director to our
Board so long as that party holds an amount of our common stock
that represents less than 20% but more than 5% of our
outstanding common stock. If CA and CA II cease to collectively
beneficially own in the aggregate an amount of our common stock
that represents at least 40% of our outstanding common stock,
the foregoing rights become a nomination right and the parties
to the CVR Energy Stockholders Agreement are not obligated to
vote for each others nominee. In addition, the CVR Energy
Stockholders Agreement contains certain tag-along rights with
respect to certain transfers (other than underwritten offerings
to the public) of shares of common stock by the parties to the
CVR Energy Stockholders Agreement. For so long as CA and CA II
beneficially own in the aggregate at least 40% of our common
stock, (i) each such stockholder that has the right to
designate at least two directors and will have the right to have
at least one of its designated directors on any committee (other
than the audit committee and conflicts committee), to the extent
permitted by SEC or NYSE rules, (ii) directors designated
by the stockholders will be a majority of each such committee
(at least 50% in the case of the compensation committee and the
nominating and corporate governance committee) and
(iii) the chairman of each such committee will be a
director designated by such stockholder.
Registration
Rights Agreement
In October 2007, we entered into a registration rights agreement
with CA and CA II pursuant to which we may be required to
register the sale of our shares held by CA and CA II and
permitted transferees. Under the registration rights agreement,
the Goldman Sachs Funds and the Kelso Funds each have the right
to request that we register the sale of shares held by CA or CA
II, as applicable, on their behalf on three occasions, including
requiring us to make available shelf registration statements
permitting sales of shares into the market from time to time
over an extended period. In addition, the Goldman Sachs Funds
and the Kelso Funds have the ability to exercise certain
piggyback registration rights with respect to their own
securities if we elect to register any of our equity securities.
The registration rights agreement also includes provisions
dealing with holdback agreements, indemnification and
contribution and allocation of expenses. All of our shares held
by CA and CA II are entitled to these registration rights.
The Company paid approximately $538,000 for the year ended
December 31, 2009 in registration expenses relating to the
secondary offering that occurred in 2009 for the benefit of the
Goldman Sachs Funds in accordance with the Registration Rights
Agreement. These amounts included registration and filing fees,
printing fees, external accounting fees and external legal fees.
J.
Aron & Company
In June 2005, CA entered into commodity derivative contracts in
the form of three swap agreements for the period from
July 1, 2005 through June 30, 2010 with J.
Aron & Company (J. Aron), a subsidiary of
The Goldman Sachs Group, Inc. (the Cash Flow Swap).
These agreements were assigned to CRLLC, a subsidiary of the
Company, on June 24, 2005. The Cash Flow Swap represented
approximately 57% and 14% of crude oil capacity for the periods
January 1, 2009 through June 30, 2009 and July 1,
2009 through June 30, 2010, respectively. The Cash Flow
Swap resulted in unrealized losses of approximately
$40.9 million for the year ended December 31, 2009 and
realized losses of $14.3 million for the year ended
December 31, 2009. We terminated the Cash Flow Swap during
2009.
52
As a result of the flood and the temporary cessation of our
operations on June 30, 2007, we were required to enter into
several deferral agreements with J. Aron with respect to the
Cash Flow Swap on August 23, 2007. These deferral
agreements deferred to August 31, 2008 the payment of
approximately $123.7 million (plus accrued interest) which
we owed to J. Aron. In January and February 2009, we prepaid
$46.4 million of the deferred obligation, reducing the
total principal deferred obligation to $16.1 million. On
March 2, 2009, the remaining principal balance of
$16.1 million was paid in full, including accrued interest
of $0.5 million, resulting in the unconditional and
irrevocable release of any and all of our obligations under the
deferral agreements. In addition, J. Aron agreed to release the
Goldman Sachs Funds and the Kelso Funds from any and all of
their obligations to guarantee the deferral payment obligations.
Also in June 2005, CRLLC entered into three interest rate swap
agreements with J. Aron and another unrelated party who is a
lender under our long-term debt agreements. J. Aron holds half
of these agreements. The swap agreements converted CRLLCs
floating-rate bank debt into 4.195% fixed rate debt. The
notional amount under the agreement is $180 million for the
period March 31, 2009 through March 31, 2010. CRLLC
pays the 4.195% fixed rate and receives a floating rate based on
three month LIBOR rates, with payments calculated on the
$180 million notional amount. The notional amount does not
represent actual amounts exchanged by the parties but instead
represents the amount on which the contracts are based. The swap
is settled quarterly and marked to market at each reporting date
and all unrealized gains and losses are currently recognized in
income. Amounts totaling a net realized/unrealized loss of
$781,000 were recognized for the year ended December 31,
2009 for the interest rate swap with J. Aron.
Credit
Facilities
Goldman Sachs Credit Partners L.P., an affiliate of Goldman,
Sachs & Co., is one of the lenders under CRLLCs
credit facility. Goldman Sachs Credit Partners is also a joint
lead arranger and bookrunner under the credit facility. We paid
Goldman Sachs Credit Partners L.P. a fee of $900,000 in
connection with their service related to an amendment to our
credit facility that was completed on October 2, 2009. The
Company also paid a lender fee of approximately $7,000 to a
different subsidiary of the Goldman Sachs Funds in conjunction
with this amendment. In addition, we paid Goldman Sachs Credit
Partners L.P. a fee of $900,000 in connection with their service
related to an amendment to our credit facility that was
completed on March 12, 2010.
Bond
Offering
In April 2010, CRLLC and Coffeyville Finance Inc., both of which
are wholly-owned subsidiaries of the Company, closed the private
sale of $275 million aggregate principal amount of first
lien senior secured notes due 2015 and $225 million
aggregate principal amount of second lien senior secured notes
due 2017. Affiliates of Goldman, Sachs & Co. are
significant shareholders of the Company. Goldman,
Sachs & Co., is an underwriter for the offering and
received fees associated with the offering of approximately
$2 million.
Money
Market Account
CRLLC opened a highly liquid money market account with average
maturities of less than 90 days with the Goldman Sachs Fund
family in September 2008. As of December 31, 2009, the
balance in the account was approximately $723,000. This account
earned interest income of $74,000 in 2009.
Guarantees
During 2007, one of the Goldman Sachs Funds and one of the Kelso
Funds each guaranteed 50% of our payment obligations under the
Cash Flow Swap in the amount of $123.7 million, plus
accrued interest. On March 2, 2009, the remaining principal
balance was paid in full including accrued interest. As a
result, J. Aron agreed to release the Goldman Sachs Funds and
the Kelso Fund from any and all of their obligations to
guarantee the deferred payment obligations.
53
Purchases
From a Related Party
For 2009, Coffeyville Resources Refining & Marketing,
LLC, an indirect subsidiary of the Company, purchased
approximately $169,000 of FCC additives, a catalyst, from
INTERCAT, Inc. A director of the Company, Mr. Regis
Lippert, is also the President, CEO, majority shareholder and a
director of INTERCAT, Inc.
Related
Party Transaction Policy
Our Board has adopted a Related Party Transaction Policy, which
is designed to monitor and ensure the proper review, approval,
ratification and disclosure of related party transactions
involving us. This policy applies to any transaction,
arrangement or relationship (or any series of similar
transactions, arrangements or relationships) in which we were,
are or will be a participant and the amount involved exceeds
$120,000 and in which any related party had, has or will have a
direct or indirect material interest. The audit committee of our
Board must review, approve and ratify a related party
transaction if such transaction is consistent with the Related
Party Transaction Policy and is on terms, taken as a whole,
which the audit committee believes are no less favorable to us
than could be obtained in an arms-length transaction with an
unrelated third party, unless the audit committee otherwise
determines that the transaction is not in our best interests.
Any related party transaction or modification of such
transaction which our Board has approved or ratified by the
affirmative vote of a majority of directors, who do not have a
direct or indirect material interest in such transaction, does
not need to be approved or ratified by our audit committee. In
addition, related party transactions involving compensation will
be approved by our compensation committee in lieu of our audit
committee.
Our Board has also adopted Policies Regarding CVR Partners, LP,
which is designed to monitor and ensure the proper review,
approval, ratification and disclosure of transactions between
the Partnership and us. The policy applies to any transaction,
arrangement or relationship (or any series of similar
transactions, arrangements or relationships) between us or any
of our subsidiaries, on the one hand and the Partnership, its
managing general partner and any subsidiary of the Partnership,
on the other hand. According to the policy, all such
transactions must be fair and reasonable to us. If such
transaction is expected to involve a value, over the life of
such transaction, of less than $1 million, no special
procedures will be required. If such transaction is expected to
involve a value of more than $1 million but less than
$5 million, it is deemed to be fair and reasonable to us if
(i) such transaction is approved by the conflicts committee
of our Board, (ii) the terms of such transaction are no
less favorable to us than those generally being provided to or
available from unrelated third parties or (iii) such
transactions, taking into account the totality of any other such
transaction being entered into at that time between the parties
involved (including other transactions that may be particularly
favorable or advantageous to us), is equitable to the Company.
If such transaction is expected to involve a value, over the
life of such transaction, of $5 million or more, it is
deemed to be fair and reasonable to us if it has been approved
by the conflicts committee of our Board.
Transactions
with CVR Partners, LP
Background
In October 2007, prior to our initial public offering, we
created the Partnership. We transferred our nitrogen fertilizer
business to the Partnership. The Partnership initially had three
partners: a managing general partner, CVR GP, LLC, which we
owned; a special general partner, CVR Special GP, LLC, which we
owned; and a limited partner, CRLLC. We sold the managing
general partner for $10.6 million to CA III, a newly
created entity owned by the Goldman Sachs Funds, the Kelso
Funds, our executive officers, Magnetite Asset
Investors III L.L.C. and other members of our management.
In connection with the creation of the Partnership, CVR GP, LLC,
as the managing general partner, CRLLC, as the limited partner
and CVR Special GP, LLC, as a general partner, entered into a
limited partnership agreement which set forth the various rights
and responsibilities of the partners in the Partnership. In
addition, we entered into a number of intercompany agreements
with the Partnership and the managing general partner which
regulate certain business relations among us, the Partnership
and the managing general partner.
54
Contribution,
Conveyance and Assumption Agreement
In October 2007, the Partnership entered into a contribution,
conveyance and assumption agreement, or the contribution
agreement, with the Partnerships managing general partner,
CVR Special GP, LLC (our subsidiary that holds a general partner
interest in the Partnership) and CRLLC (our subsidiary that
holds a limited partner interest in the Partnership). Pursuant
to the contribution agreement, CRLLC transferred our subsidiary
that owns the fertilizer business to the Partnership in exchange
for (1) the issuance to CVR Special GP, LLC of 30,303,000
special GP units, representing a 99.9% general partner interest
in the Partnership, (2) the issuance to CRLLC of 30,333
special LP units, representing a 0.1% limited partner interest
in the Partnership, (3) the issuance to the managing
general partner of the managing general partner interest in the
Partnership and (4) the agreement by the Partnership,
contingent upon the Partnership consummating an initial public
or private offering, to reimburse us for capital expenditures we
incurred during the two year period prior to the sale of the
managing general partner to CA III, in connection with the
operations of the fertilizer plant. The Partnership assumed all
liabilities arising out of or related to the ownership of the
fertilizer business to the extent arising or accruing on and
after the date of transfer.
Feedstock
and Shared Services Agreement
In October 2007, we entered into a feedstock and shared services
agreement with the Partnership under which we and the
Partnership agreed to provide feedstock and other services to
each other. These feedstocks and services are utilized in the
respective production processes of our refinery and the
Partnerships nitrogen fertilizer plant. Feedstocks
provided under the agreement include, among others, hydrogen,
high-pressure steam, nitrogen, instrument air, oxygen and
natural gas. The agreement has an initial term of 20 years.
Coke
Supply Agreement
We entered into a coke supply agreement with the Partnership in
October 2007 pursuant to which we supply pet coke to the
Partnership. This agreement provides that we must deliver to the
Partnership during each calendar year an annual required amount
of pet coke equal to the lesser of (i) 100 percent of
the pet coke produced at our petroleum refinery or
(ii) 500,000 tons of pet coke. The Partnership is also
obligated to purchase this annual required amount. If during a
calendar month we produce more than 41,667 tons of pet coke,
then the Partnership has the option to purchase the excess at
the purchase price provided for in the agreement. If the
Partnership declines to exercise this option, we may sell the
excess to a third party. The agreement has an initial term of
20 years.
The price which the Partnership pays for the pet coke is based
on the lesser of a coke price derived from the price received by
the Partnership for UAN (subject to a UAN-based price ceiling
and floor) and a coke index price but in no event will the pet
coke price be less than zero. The Partnership also pays any
taxes associated with the sale, purchase, transportation,
delivery, storage or consumption of the pet coke. The
Partnership is entitled to offset any amount payable for the pet
coke against any amount due from us under the feedstock and
shared services agreement between the parties.
The Partnership may be obligated to provide security for its
payment obligations under the agreement if in our sole judgment
there is a material adverse change in the Partnerships
financial condition or liquidity position or in the
Partnerships ability to make payments. This security shall
not exceed an amount equal to 21 times the average daily dollar
value of pet coke purchased by the Partnership for the
90-day
period preceding the date on which we give notice to the
Partnership that we have deemed that a material adverse change
has occurred.
Raw
Water and Facilities Sharing Agreement
We entered into a raw water and facilities sharing agreement
with the Partnership in October 2007 which (i) provides for
the allocation of raw water resources between our refinery and
the Partnerships nitrogen fertilizer plant and
(ii) provides for the management of the water intake system
(consisting primarily of a water intake structure, water pumps,
meters and a short run of piping between the intake structure
and the origin of the separate pipes that transport the water to
each facility) which draws raw water from the Verdigris
55
River for both our facility and the Partnerships nitrogen
fertilizer plant. This agreement provides that a water
management team consisting of one representative from each party
to the agreement will manage the Verdigris River water intake
system. The water intake system is owned and operated by us. The
agreement provides that both companies have an undivided
one-half interest in the water rights which will allow the water
to be removed from the Verdigris River for use at our refinery
and the Partnerships nitrogen fertilizer plant.
The agreement provides that both the Partnerships nitrogen
fertilizer plant and our refinery are entitled to receive
sufficient amounts of water from the Verdigris River each day to
enable them to conduct their businesses at their appropriate
operational levels. However, if the amount of water available
from the Verdigris River is insufficient to satisfy the
operational requirements of both facilities, then such water
shall be allocated between the two facilities on a prorated
basis. This prorated basis will be determined by calculating the
percentage of water used by each facility over the two calendar
years prior to the shortage, making appropriate adjustments for
any operational outages involving either of the two facilities.
The term of the agreement is perpetual unless (1) the
agreement is terminated by either party upon three years
prior written notice or (2) the agreement is otherwise
terminated by the mutual written consent of the parties.
Cross-Easement
Agreement
We entered into a cross-easement agreement with the Partnership
in October 2007 so that both we and the Partnership can access
and utilize each others land in certain circumstances in
order to operate our respective businesses. The agreement grants
easements for the benefit of both parties and establishes
easements for operational facilities, pipelines, equipment,
access and water rights, among other easements. The intent of
the agreement is to structure easements which provide
flexibility for both parties to develop their respective
properties, without depriving either party of the benefits
associated with the continuous reasonable use of the other
partys property.
Lease
Agreement
We have entered into a five-year lease agreement with the
Partnership under which we lease certain office and laboratory
space to the Partnership. This agreement expires in October 2012.
Environmental
Agreement
We entered into an environmental agreement with the Partnership
in October 2007 which provides for certain indemnification and
access rights in connection with environmental matters affecting
our refinery and the Partnerships nitrogen fertilizer
plant. Generally, both we and the Partnership agreed to
indemnify and defend each other and each others affiliates
against liabilities associated with certain hazardous materials
and violations of environmental laws that are a result of or
caused by the indemnifying partys actions or business
operations. This obligation extends to indemnification for
liabilities arising out of off-site disposal of certain
hazardous materials. Indemnification obligations of the parties
will be reduced by applicable amounts recovered by an
indemnified party from third parties or from insurance coverage.
To the extent that one partys property experiences
environmental contamination due to the activities of the other
party and the contamination is known at the time the agreement
was entered into, the contaminating party is required to
implement all government-mandated environmental activities
relating to the contamination, or else indemnify the
property-owning party for expenses incurred in connection with
implementing such measures.
To the extent that liability arises from environmental
contamination that is caused by us but is also commingled with
environmental contamination caused by the Partnership, we may
elect in our sole discretion and at our own cost and expense to
perform government-mandated environmental activities relating to
such liability, subject to certain conditions and provided that
we will not waive any rights to indemnification or compensation
otherwise provided for in the agreement.
56
The agreement also addresses situations in which a partys
responsibility to implement such government-mandated
environmental activities as described above may be hindered by
the property-owning partys creation of capital
improvements on the property. If a contaminating party bears
such responsibility but the property-owning party desires to
implement a planned and approved capital improvement project on
its property, the parties must meet and attempt to develop a
soil management plan together. If the parties are unable to
agree on a soil management plan 30 days after receiving
notice, the property-owning party may proceed with its own
commercially reasonable soil management plan. The contaminating
party is responsible for the costs of disposing of hazardous
materials pursuant to such plan.
If the property-owning party needs to do work that is not a
planned and approved capital improvement project but is
necessary to protect the environment, health, or the integrity
of the property, other procedures will be implemented. If the
contaminating party still bears responsibility to implement
government-mandated environmental activities relating to the
property and the property-owning party discovers contamination
caused by the other party during work on the capital improvement
project, the property-owning party will give the contaminating
party prompt notice after discovery of the contamination and
will allow the contaminating party to inspect the property. If
the contaminating party accepts responsibility for the
contamination, it may proceed with government-mandated
environmental activities relating to the contamination and it
will be responsible for the costs of disposing of hazardous
materials relating to the contamination. If the contaminating
party does not accept responsibility for such contamination or
fails to diligently proceed with government-mandated
environmental activities related to the contamination, then the
contaminating party must indemnify and reimburse the
property-owning party upon the property-owning partys
demand for costs and expenses incurred by the property-owning
party in proceeding with such government-mandated environmental
activities.
Omnibus
Agreement
We entered into an omnibus agreement with the managing general
partner and the Partnership in October 2007. The following
discussion describes the material terms of the omnibus agreement.
Under the omnibus agreement the Partnership has agreed not to
and will cause its controlled affiliates not to, engage in,
whether by acquisition or otherwise, (i) the ownership or
operation within the United States of any refinery with
processing capacity greater than 20,000 barrels per day
whose primary business is producing transportation fuels or
(ii) the ownership or operation outside the United States
of any refinery, regardless of its processing capacity or
primary business, or a refinery restricted business, in either
case, for so long as we continue to own at least 50% of the
Partnerships outstanding units. The restrictions will not
apply to:
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any refinery restricted business acquired as part of a business
or package of assets if a majority of the value of the total
assets or business acquired is not attributable to a refinery
restricted business, as determined in good faith by the managing
general partners board of directors; however, if at any
time the Partnership completes such an acquisition, the
Partnership must, within 365 days of the closing of the
transaction, offer to sell the refinery-related assets to us for
their fair market value plus any additional tax or other similar
costs that would be required to transfer the refinery-related
assets to us separately from the acquired business or package of
assets;
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engaging in any refinery restricted business subject to the
offer to us described in the immediately preceding bullet point
pending our determination whether to accept such offer and
pending the closing of any offers we accept;
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engaging in any refinery restricted business if we have
previously advised the Partnership that our Board has elected
not to cause us to acquire or seek to acquire such
business; or
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acquiring up to 9.9% of any class of securities of any publicly
traded company that engages in any refinery restricted business.
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Under the omnibus agreement, we have agreed not to and will
cause our controlled affiliates other than the Partnership not
to, engage in, whether by acquisition or otherwise, the
production, transportation or distribution, on a wholesale
basis, of fertilizer in the contiguous United States, or a
fertilizer restricted
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business, for so long as we and certain of our affiliates
continue to own at least 50% of the Partnerships
outstanding units. The restrictions do not apply to:
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any fertilizer restricted business acquired as part of a
business or package of assets if a majority of the value of the
total assets or business acquired is not attributable to a
fertilizer restricted business, as determined in good faith by
our Board, as applicable; however, if at any time we complete
such an acquisition, we must, within 365 days of the
closing of the transaction, offer to sell the fertilizer-related
assets to the Partnership for their fair market value plus any
additional tax or other similar costs that would be required to
transfer the fertilizer-related assets to the Partnership
separately from the acquired business or package of assets;
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engaging in any fertilizer restricted business subject to the
offer to the Partnership described in the immediately preceding
bullet point pending the Partnerships determination
whether to accept such offer and pending the closing of any
offers the Partnership accepts;
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engaging in any fertilizer restricted business if the
Partnership has previously advised us that it has elected not to
acquire such business; or
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acquiring up to 9.9% of any class of securities of any publicly
traded company that engages in any fertilizer restricted
business.
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Under the omnibus agreement we have also agreed that the
Partnership has a preferential right to acquire any assets or
group of assets that do not constitute (i) assets used in a
refinery restricted business or (ii) assets used in a
fertilizer restricted business. In determining whether to cause
the Partnership to exercise any preferential right under the
omnibus agreement, the managing general partner will be
permitted to act in its sole discretion, without any fiduciary
obligation to the Partnership or the unitholders whatsoever
(including us). These obligations will continue until such time
as we and certain of our affiliates cease to own at least 50% of
the Partnerships outstanding units.
Services
Agreement
We entered into a services agreement with the Partnership and
the managing general partner of the Partnership in October 2007
pursuant to which we provide certain management and other
services to the Partnership and the managing general partner of
the Partnership. Under this agreement, the managing general
partner of the Partnership engaged us to conduct the day-to-day
business operations of the Partnership. We provide the
Partnership with the following services under the agreement,
among others:
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services by our employees in capacities equivalent to the
capacities of corporate executive officers, except that those
who serve in such capacities under the agreement shall serve the
Partnership on a shared, part-time basis only, unless we and the
Partnership agree otherwise;
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administrative and professional services, including legal,
accounting services, human resources, insurance, tax, credit,
finance, government affairs and regulatory affairs;
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management of the property of the Partnership and the property
of the Partnerships operating subsidiary in the ordinary
course of business;
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recommendations on capital raising activities to the board of
directors of the managing general partner of the Partnership,
including the issuance of debt or equity interests, the entry
into credit facilities and other capital market transactions;
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managing or overseeing litigation and administrative or
regulatory proceedings and establishing appropriate insurance
policies for the Partnership and providing safety and
environmental advice;
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recommending the payment of distributions; and
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managing or providing advice for other projects, including
acquisitions, as may be agreed by us and the managing general
partner of the Partnership from time to time.
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As payment for services provided under the agreement, the
Partnership, the managing general partner of the Partnership, or
CRNF, the Partnerships operating subsidiary, must pay us
(i) all costs incurred by us in connection with the
employment of our employees, other than administrative
personnel, who provide services to the Partnership under the
agreement on a full-time basis, but excluding share-based
compensation; (ii) a prorated share of costs incurred by us
in connection with the employment of our employees, other than
administrative personnel, who provide services to the
Partnership under the agreement on a part-time basis, but
excluding share-based compensation and such prorated share shall
be determined by us on a commercially reasonable basis, based on
the percent of total working time that such shared personnel are
engaged in performing services for the Partnership; (iii) a
prorated share of certain administrative costs, including
payroll, office costs, services by outside vendors, other sales,
general and administrative costs and depreciation and
amortization; and (iv) various other administrative costs
in accordance with the terms of the agreement, including travel,
insurance, legal and audit services, government and public
relations and bank charges. The Partnership must pay us within
15 days for invoices we submit under the agreement.
The Partnership and its managing general partner are not
required to pay any compensation, salaries, bonuses or benefits
to any of our employees who provide services to the Partnership
or its managing general partner on a full-time or part-time
basis; we will continue to pay their compensation. However,
personnel performing the actual day-to-day business and
operations at the nitrogen fertilizer plant level will be
employed directly by the Partnership and its subsidiaries and
the Partnership will bear all personnel costs for these
employees.
For the year ended December 31, 2009, the total amount paid
or payable to us pursuant to the services agreement was
$12.1 million.
Registration
Rights Agreement
We entered into a registration rights agreement with the
Partnership in October 2007 pursuant to which the Partnership
may be required to register the sale of our units (as well as
any common units issuable upon conversion of units held by us).
Under the registration rights agreement, following the
Partnerships initial public offering, if any, we will have
the right to request that the Partnership register the sale of
units held by us (and the common units issuable upon conversion
of units held by us) on our behalf on three occasions including
requiring the Partnership to make available shelf registration
statements permitting sales of common units into the market from
time to time over an extended period. In addition, we have the
ability to exercise certain piggyback registration rights with
respect to our own securities if the Partnership elects to
register any of its equity interests. Our piggyback registration
rights will not apply to the Partnerships initial public
offering, if any. The registration rights agreement also
includes provisions dealing with holdback agreements,
indemnification and contribution and allocation of expenses. All
of the Partnerships units held by us will be entitled to
these registration rights.
Limited
Partnership Agreement
In October 2007, the managing general partner, the special
general partner and the limited partner entered into a limited
partnership agreement which governs the relations among the
parties. The following description of certain terms of the
limited partnership agreement is qualified by reference to the
terms of the actual partnership agreement, which has been
incorporated by reference as an exhibit to our annual report on
Form 10-K.
Description
of Partnership Interests
The partnership agreement provides that initially the
Partnership has three types of partnership interests:
(1) special GP units, representing special general partner
interests, which are owned by the special general partner,
(2) special LP units, representing a limited partner
interest, which are owned by CRLLC and (3) a managing
general partner interest which has associated incentive
distribution rights, or IDRs, which are held by the managing
general partner.
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Special units. The special units include
special GP units and special LP units. We indirectly own all
30,303,000 special GP units and all 30,333 special LP units. The
special GP units are special general partner interests giving
the holder thereof specified joint management rights (which we
refer to as special GP rights), including rights with respect to
the appointment, termination and compensation of the chief
executive officer and the chief financial officer of the
managing general partner and entitling the holder to participate
in Partnership distributions and allocations of income and loss.
Special LP units have identical voting and distribution rights
as the special GP units, but represent limited partner interests
in the Partnership and do not give the holder thereof the
special GP rights.
In accordance with the partnership agreement, the special units
are entitled to payment of a set target distribution of $0.4313
per unit ($13.1 million in the aggregate for all our
special units each quarter), or $1.7252 per unit on an
annualized basis ($52.3 million in the aggregate for all
our special units annually), prior to the payment of any
quarterly distribution in respect of the IDRs. We are permitted
to sell the special units at any time without the consent of the
managing general partner, subject to compliance with applicable
securities laws, but upon any sale of special GP units to an
unrelated third party the special GP rights will no longer apply
to such units.
Managing general partner interest. The
managing general partner interest, which is held solely by the
managing general partner, entitles the holder to manage (subject
to our special GP rights) the business and operations of the
Partnership, but does not entitle the holder to participate in
Partnership distributions or allocations except in respect of
associated incentive distribution rights, or IDRs. IDRs
represent the right to receive an increasing percentage of
quarterly distributions of available cash from operating surplus
after the target distribution ($0.4313 per unit per quarter) has
been paid and following distribution of the aggregate adjusted
operating surplus generated by the Partnership during the period
from its formation through December 31, 2009 to the special
units and/or
the common and subordinated units (if issued). In addition,
there can be no distributions paid on the managing general
partners IDRs for so long as the Partnership or its
subsidiaries are guarantors under our credit facility. The IDRs
are not transferable apart from the general partner interest.
The managing general partner can be sold without the consent of
other partners in the Partnership.
Provisions
Regarding an Initial Offering by the Partnership
Under the partnership agreement and related agreements, the
managing general partner has the sole discretion to cause the
Partnership to undertake an initial private or public offering,
subject to our joint management rights (as holder of the special
GP rights, described below) if the offering involves the
issuance of more than $200 million of the
Partnerships interests (exclusive of the
underwriters overallotment option, if any).
The partnership agreement prohibits the Partnerships
managing general partner from causing the Partnership to
undertake or consummate an initial offering unless the board of
directors of the managing general partner determines, after
consultation with us, that the Partnership will likely be able
to earn and pay the minimum quarterly distribution (which is
currently set at $0.375 per unit) on all units for each of the
two consecutive, nonoverlapping four-quarter periods following
the initial offering. If the managing general partner determines
that the Partnership is not likely to be able to earn and pay
the minimum quarterly distribution for such periods, the
managing general partner may, in its sole discretion and
effective upon closing of the initial offering, reduce the
minimum quarterly distribution to an amount it determines to be
appropriate and likely to be earned and paid during such periods.
In accordance with the Contribution, Conveyance, and Assumption
Agreement by and between the Partnership and the partners, dated
as of October 24, 2007, since an initial private or public
offering of the Partnership was not consummated by
October 24, 2009, the managing general partner of the
Partnership can require the Company to purchase the managing
general partner interest. This put right expires on the earlier
of (1) October 24, 2012 or (2) the closing of the
Partnerships initial private or public offering. If the
Partnerships initial private or public offering is not
consummated by October 24, 2012, the Company has the right
to require the managing general partner to sell the managing
general partner interest to the Company.
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This call right expires on the closing of the Partnerships
initial private or public offering. In the event of an exercise
of a put right or a call right, the purchase price will be the
fair market value of the managing general partner interest at
the time of the purchase determined by an independent investment
banking firm selected by the Company and the managing general
partner.
Management
of the Partnership
The managing general partner manages the Partnerships
operations and activities, subject to our joint management
rights, as specified in the partnership agreement. Among other
things, the managing general partner has sole authority to
effect an initial public or private offering of the Partnership,
including the right to determine the timing, size (subject to
our consent rights for any initial offering in excess of
$200 million, exclusive of the underwriters
overallotment option, if any) and underwriters or initial
purchasers, if any, for any initial offering. The
Partnerships managing general partner is wholly-owned by
an entity controlled by the Goldman Sachs Funds, the Kelso Funds
and certain members of our senior management team. The
operations of the managing general partner, in its capacity as
the managing general partner of the Partnership, are managed by
its board of directors. As of December 31, 2009, the board
of directors of the managing general partner consisted of John
J. Lipinski, Scott L. Lebovitz, George E. Matelich, Stanley de
J. Osborne, Kenneth A. Pontarelli and two independent directors.
Actions by the managing general partner that are made in its
individual capacity will be made by the sole member of the
managing general partner and not by its board of directors. The
managing general partner is not elected by the unitholders or us
and is not subject to re-election on a regular basis in the
future. The officers of the managing general partner will manage
the day-to-day affairs of the Partnerships business.
The special general partner, which we own, has special
management rights. The special management rights will terminate
if we cease to own 15% of more of all units of the Partnership.
Our management rights include:
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appointment rights and consent rights for the termination of
employment and compensation of the chief executive officer and
chief financial officer of the managing general partner, not to
be exercised unreasonably (our approval for appointment of an
officer is deemed given if the officer is an executive officer
of CVR Energy);
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the right to appoint two directors to the board of directors of
the managing general partner and one such director to any
committee thereof (subject to certain exceptions);
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consent rights over any merger by the Partnership into another
entity where:
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for so long as we own 50% or more of all units of the
Partnership immediately prior to the merger, less than 60% of
the equity interests of the resulting entity are owned by the
pre-merger unitholders of the Partnership;
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for so long as we own 25% or more of all units of the
Partnership immediately prior to the merger, less than 50% of
the equity interests of the resulting entity are owned by the
pre-merger unitholders of the Partnership; and
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for so long as we own more than 15% of all of the units of the
Partnership immediately prior to the merger, less than 40% of
the equity interests of the resulting entity are owned by the
pre-merger unitholders of the Partnership;
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consent rights over any fundamental change in the conduct of the
Partnerships business;
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consent rights over any purchase or sale, exchange or other
transfer of assets or entities with a purchase/sale price equal
to 50% or more of the Partnerships asset value; and
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consent rights over any incurrence of indebtedness or issuance
of Partnership interests with rights to distribution or in
liquidation ranking prior or senior to our units, in either case
in excess of $125 million ($200 million in the case of
the Partnerships initial public or private offering,
exclusive
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of the underwriters overallotment option, if any),
increased by 80% of the purchase price for assets or entities
whose purchase was approved by us as described in the
immediately preceding bullet point.
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Cash
Distributions by the Partnership
Available Cash. The partnership agreement
requires the Partnership to make quarterly distributions of 100%
of its available cash. Available cash generally
means, for each fiscal quarter, all cash on hand at the end of
the quarter
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less the amount of cash reserves established by the managing
general partner to:
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provide for the proper conduct of the Partnerships
business (including the satisfaction of obligations in respect
of pre-paid fertilizer contracts, future capital expenditures,
anticipated future credit needs and the payment of expenses and
fees, including payments to the managing general partner);
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comply with applicable law or any loan agreement, security
agreement, mortgage, debt instrument or other agreement or
obligation to which the Partnership or any of its subsidiaries
is a party or by which the Partnership is bound or its assets
are subject; and
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provide funds for distributions in respect of any one or more of
the next eight quarters, provided, however, that following an
initial public offering of the Partnership, the managing general
partner may not establish cash reserves pursuant to this clause
if the effect of such reserves would be that the Partnership
would be unable to distribute the minimum quarterly distribution
on all common units and any cumulative common unit arrearages
thereon with respect to any such quarter;
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plus all cash on hand on the date of determination of available
cash for the quarter resulting from working capital borrowings
made after the end of the quarter. Working capital borrowings
are generally borrowings that are used solely for working
capital purposes or to make distributions to partners.
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Cash distributions will be made within 45 days after the
end of each quarter. The amount of distributions paid by the
Partnership and the decision to make any distribution will be
determined by the managing general partner, taking into
consideration the terms of the partnership agreement.
Prior to the earlier to occur of (i) such time as the
limitations described below in Non-IDR surplus
amount no longer apply, after which time available cash
from operating surplus could be distributed in respect of the
IDRs, assuming each unit has received at least the first target
distribution, as described below and (ii) an initial
offering by the Partnership, after which there will be limited
partners to whom available cash could be distributed, all
available cash is distributed to us, as holder of the special
units.
Operating Surplus and Capital Surplus. All
cash distributed by the Partnership will be characterized either
as operating surplus or capital surplus. The Partnership will
distribute available cash from operating surplus differently
than available cash from capital surplus.
Definition of Operating Surplus. Operating
surplus for any period generally consists of:
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$60 million (as described below); plus
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all of the Partnerships cash receipts after formation
(reset to the date of the Partnerships initial offering if
an initial offering occurs), excluding cash from interim
capital transactions (as described below); plus
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working capital borrowings made after the end of a quarter but
before the date of determination of operating surplus for the
quarter; plus
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cash distributions paid on equity interests issued by the
Partnership to finance all or any portion of the construction,
expansion or improvement of the Partnerships facilities
during the period from such financing until the earlier to occur
of the date the capital asset is put into service or the date it
is abandoned or disposed of; plus
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cash distributions paid on equity interests issued by the
Partnership to pay the construction period interest on debt
incurred, or to pay construction period distributions on equity
issued, to finance the construction, expansion and improvement
projects referred to above; less
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all of the Partnerships operating expenditures
(as defined below) after formation (reset to the date of closing
of the Partnerships initial offering if an initial
offering occurs); less
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the amount of cash reserves established by the managing general
partner to provide funds for future operating expenditures
(which does not include expansion capital expenditures).
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If a working capital borrowing, which increases operating
surplus, is not repaid during the twelve-month period following
the borrowing, it will be deemed repaid at the end of such
period, thus decreasing operating surplus at such time. When
such working capital borrowing is in fact repaid, it will not be
treated as a reduction in operating surplus because operating
surplus will have been previously reduced by the deemed
repayment.
As described above, operating surplus does not reflect actual
cash on hand that is available for distribution to unitholders.
For example, it includes a provision that will enable the
Partnership, if it chooses, to distribute as operating surplus
up to $60 million of cash from non-operating sources such
as asset sales, issuances of securities and long-term borrowings
that would otherwise be distributed as capital surplus. In
addition, the effect of including, as described above, certain
cash distributions on equity interests in operating surplus
would be to increase operating surplus by the amount of any such
cash distributions. As a result, the Partnership may also
distribute as operating surplus up to the amount of any such
cash distributions it receives from non-operating sources.
Operating expenditures generally means all of the
Partnerships expenditures, including its expenses, taxes,
reimbursements or payments of expenses to its managing general
partner, repayment of working capital borrowings, debt service
payments and capital expenditures, provided that operating
expenditures will not include:
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repayments of working capital borrowings, if such working
capital borrowings were outstanding for twelve months, not
repaid, but deemed repaid, thus decreasing operating surplus at
such time;
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payments (including prepayments) of principal of and premium on
indebtedness, other than working capital borrowings;
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expansion capital expenditures;
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investment capital expenditures;
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payment of transaction expenses relating to interim
capital transactions; or
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distributions to partners.
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Where capital expenditures are made in part for expansion and in
part for other purposes, the managing general partner shall
determine the allocation between the amounts paid for each.
Interim capital transactions means the following
transactions if they occur prior to liquidation of the
Partnership: (a) borrowings, refinancings or refundings of
indebtedness (other than working capital borrowings and other
than for items purchased on open account or for a deferred
purchase price in the ordinary course of business);
(b) sales of equity interests and debt securities; and
(c) sales or other voluntary or involuntary dispositions of
any assets other than (i) sales or other dispositions of
inventory, accounts receivable and other assets in the ordinary
course of business and (ii) sales or other dispositions of
assets as part of normal retirements or replacements of assets.
Maintenance capital expenditures reduce operating surplus, but
expansion capital expenditures and investment capital
expenditures do not. Maintenance capital expenditures represent
capital expenditures to replace partially or fully depreciated
assets to maintain the Partnerships operating capacity (or
productivity) or capital base. Maintenance capital expenditures
include expenditures required to maintain equipment reliability,
plant integrity and safety and to address environmental laws and
regulations. Maintenance capital expenditures
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will also include interest (and related fees) on debt incurred
and distributions on equity issued to finance all or any portion
of the construction, improvement or development of a replacement
asset that is paid during the period that begins when the
Partnership enters into a binding commitment or commences
constructing or developing a replacement asset and ending on the
earlier to occur of the date any such replacement asset
commences commercial service or the date it is abandoned or
disposed of.
Expansion capital expenditures include expenditures to acquire
or construct assets to grow the Partnerships business and
to expand fertilizer production capacity. Expansion capital
expenditures will also include interest (and related fees) on
debt incurred and distributions on equity issued to finance all
or any portion of the construction of such a capital improvement
during the period that commences when the Partnership enters
into a binding obligation to commence construction of a capital
improvement and ending on the date such capital improvement
commences commercial service or the date that it is abandoned or
disposed of.
Investment capital expenditures are those capital expenditures
that are neither maintenance capital expenditures nor expansion
capital expenditures. Investment capital expenditures largely
will consist of capital expenditures made for investment
purposes. Examples of investment capital expenditures include
traditional capital expenditures for investment purposes, such
as purchases of securities, as well as other capital
expenditures that might be made in lieu of such traditional
investment capital expenditures, such as the acquisition of a
capital asset for investment purposes or development of
facilities that are in excess of the maintenance of the
Partnerships existing operating capacity or productivity,
but which are not expected to expand for the long-term the
Partnerships operating capacity or asset base.
As described above, none of the Partnerships investment
capital expenditures or expansion capital expenditures will be
subtracted from operating surplus. Because investment capital
expenditures and expansion capital expenditures include interest
payments (and related fees) on debt incurred and distributions
on equity issued to finance all of the portion of the
construction, replacement or improvement of a capital asset
during the period that begins when the Partnership enters into a
binding obligation to commence construction of a capital
improvement and ending on the earlier to occur of the date any
such capital asset commences commercial service or the date that
it is abandoned or disposed of, such interest payments and
equity distributions are also not subtracted from operating
surplus.
The officers and directors of the managing general partner will
determine how to allocate a capital expenditure for the
acquisition or expansion of the Partnerships assets
between maintenance capital expenditures and expansion capital
expenditures.
Definition of Capital Surplus. Capital
surplus will generally be generated only by:
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borrowings other than working capital borrowings;
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sales of debt securities and equity interests; and
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sales or other dispositions of assets for cash, other than
inventory, accounts receivable and other current assets sold in
the ordinary course of business or as part of the normal
retirement or replacement of assets.
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Distributions from Operating Surplus. The
Partnerships distribution structure with respect to
operating surplus will change based upon the occurrence of three
events: (1) distribution by the Partnership of the non-IDR
surplus amount (as defined below), together with a release of
the guarantees by the Partnership and its subsidiaries of our
credit facility, (2) occurrence of an initial offering by
the Partnership (following which all or a portion of our
interest will be converted into subordinated units and the
minimum quarterly distribution could be reduced) and
(3) expiration (or early termination) of the subordination
period.
Minimum Quarterly Distributions. The minimum
quarterly distribution, or MQD, represents the set quarterly
distribution amount that the common units, if issued, will be
entitled to prior to the payment of any quarterly distribution
on the subordinated units. The amount of the MQD was initially
set in the Partnerships partnership agreement at $0.375
per unit, or $1.50 per unit on an annualized basis. The
partnership agreement prohibits the managing general partner
from causing the Partnership to undertake or consummate an
initial offering unless the board of directors of the managing
general partner, after consultation with us, concludes
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that the Partnership will be likely to be able to earn and pay
the MQD on all units for each of the two consecutive,
nonoverlapping four-quarter periods following the initial
offering. If the managing general partner determines that the
Partnership is not likely to be able to earn and pay the MQD for
such periods, the managing general partner may, in its sole
discretion and effective upon closing of the initial offering,
reduce the MQD to an amount it determines to be appropriate and
likely to be earned and paid during such periods. If the
Partnership were to distribute $0.375 per unit on the number of
units we own, we would receive a quarterly distribution of
$11.4 million in the aggregate. The MQD for any period of
less than a full calendar quarter (e.g., the periods before and
after the closing of an initial offering by the Partnership)
will be adjusted based on the actual length of the periods.
Target Distributions. The Partnerships
partnership agreement provides for target distribution
levels. After the limitations described below in
Non-IDR surplus amount no longer apply,
the managing general partners IDRs will entitle it to
receive increasing percentages of any incremental quarterly cash
distributed by the Partnership as the target distribution levels
for each quarter are exceeded. There are three target
distribution levels set in the partnership agreement: $0.4313,
$0.4688 and $0.5625, representing 115%, 125% and 150%,
respectively, of the initial MQD amount. The target distribution
levels for any period of less than a full calendar quarter
(e.g., the periods before and after the closing of an initial
offering by the Partnership) will be adjusted based on the
actual length of the periods. The target distribution levels
will not be adjusted in connection with any reduction of the MQD
in connection with the Partnerships initial offering
unless we otherwise agree with the managing general partner.
The following table illustrates the percentage allocations of
available cash from operating surplus between the unitholders
and the Partnerships managing general partner up to and
above the various target distribution levels. The amounts set
forth under marginal percentage interest in
distributions are the percentage interests of the
Partnerships managing general partner and the unitholders
in any available cash from operating surplus the Partnership
distributes up to and including the corresponding amount in the
column total quarterly distribution, until the
available cash from operating surplus the Partnership
distributes reaches the next target distribution level, if any.
The percentage interests shown for the unitholders and managing
general partner for the minimum quarterly distribution are also
applicable to quarterly distribution amounts that are less than
the minimum quarterly distribution. The percentage interests set
forth below for the managing general partner represent
distributions in respect of the IDRs.
Marginal
Percentage Interest in Distributions
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Total Quarterly
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Distribution Target
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Managing General
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Amount
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Special Units(1)
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Partner
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Minimum Quarterly Distribution
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$0.375
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100%
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0%
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First Target Distribution
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Up to $0.4313
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100%
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0%
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Second Target Distribution
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Above $0.4313 and
up to $0.4688
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87%
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13%
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Third Target Distribution
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Above $0.4688 and
up to $0.5625
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77%
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23%
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Thereafter
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Above $0.5625
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52%
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48%
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Non-IDR surplus amount. There will be no
distributions paid on the IDRs until the aggregate
adjusted operating surplus (as described below)
generated by the Partnership during the period from its
formation through December 31, 2009, or the non-IDR surplus
amount, has been distributed in respect of the special units,
or, following an initial public offering of the Partnership, the
common units, GP units and subordinated GP units (if any are
issued). In addition, there will be no distributions paid on the
IDRs for so long as the Partnership or its subsidiaries are
guarantors under our credit facility.
Definition of Adjusted Operating
Surplus. Adjusted operating surplus is intended
to reflect the cash generated from operations during a
particular period and therefore excludes the $60 million
basket included
65
as a component of operating surplus, net increases in working
capital borrowings and net drawdowns of reserves of cash
generated in prior periods. Adjusted operating surplus for any
period generally means:
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operating surplus generated with respect to that period (which
does not include the $60 million basket described in the
first bullet point of the definition of operating surplus
above); less
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any net increase in working capital borrowings with respect to
that period; less
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any net reduction in cash reserves for operating expenditures
with respect to that period not relating to an operating
expenditure made with respect to that period; plus
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any net decrease in working capital borrowings with respect to
that period; plus
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any net increase in cash reserves for operating expenditures
with respect to that period to the extent required by any debt
instrument for the repayment of principal, interest or premium.
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If the Partnership consummates an initial offering, cash
received by the Partnership or its subsidiaries in respect of
accounts receivable existing as of the closing of such an
offering will be deemed to not be operating surplus and thus
will be disregarded when calculating adjusted operating surplus.
Distributions Prior to the Partnerships Initial
Offering (if any). Prior to the
Partnerships initial offering (if any), quarterly
distributions of available cash from operating surplus (as
described below) will be paid solely in respect of the special
units until the non-IDR surplus amount has been distributed.
After the limitations described in Non-IDR
surplus amount no longer apply and prior to the
Partnerships initial offering (if any), quarterly
distributions of available cash from operating surplus will be
paid in the following manner: (1) First, to the
special units, until each special unit has received a total
quarterly distribution equal to $0.4313 (the first target
distribution), (2) Second, (i) 13% to the
managing general partner interest (in respect of the IDRs) and
(ii) 87% to the special units until each special unit has
received a total quarterly amount equal to $0.4688 (the second
target distribution), (3) Third, (i) 23% to the
managing general partner interest (in respect of the IDRs) and
(ii) 77% to the special units, until each special unit has
received a total quarterly amount equal to $0.5625 (the third
target distribution) and (4) Thereafter,
(i) 48% to the managing general partner interest (in
respect of the IDRs) and (ii) 52% to the special units.
Distributions from Capital Surplus. Capital
surplus is generally generated only by borrowings other than
working capital borrowings, sales of debt securities and equity
interests and sales or other dispositions of assets for cash,
other than inventory, accounts receivable and the other current
assets sold in the ordinary course of business or as part of
normal retirements or replacements of assets.
The Partnership will make distributions of available cash from
capital surplus, if any, in the following manner:
(1) First, to all unitholders, pro rata, until the
minimum quarterly distribution is reduced to zero, as described
below, (2) Second, to the common unitholders, if
any, pro rata, until the Partnership distributes for each common
unit an amount of available cash from capital surplus equal to
any unpaid arrearages in payment of the minimum quarterly
distribution on the common units and (3) Thereafter,
the Partnership will make all distributions of available cash
from capital surplus as if they were from operating surplus. The
preceding discussion is based on the assumptions that the
Partnership does not issue additional classes of equity
interests.
The partnership agreement will treat a distribution of capital
surplus as the repayment of the consideration for the issuance
of a unit by the Partnership, which is a return of capital. Each
time a distribution of capital surplus is made, the minimum
quarterly distribution and the target distribution levels will
be reduced in the same proportion as the distribution had in
relation to the fair market value of the common units prior to
the announcement of the distribution. Because distributions of
capital surplus will reduce the minimum quarterly distribution,
after any of these distributions are made, it may be easier for
the managing general partner to receive incentive distributions
and for the subordinated units to convert into common units.
However, any distribution of capital surplus before the minimum
quarterly distribution is reduced to zero cannot be applied to
the payment of the minimum quarterly distribution or any
arrearages.
66
Once the Partnership reduces the minimum quarterly distribution
and the target distribution levels to zero, the Partnership will
then make all future distributions from operating surplus, with
52% being paid to the unitholders, pro rata and 48% to the
Partnerships managing general partner.
Voting
Rights
The partnership agreement provides that various matters require
the approval of a unit majority. A unit majority
requires (1) prior to the initial offering, the approval of
a majority of the special units; (2) during the
subordination period, the approval of a majority of the common
units, excluding those common units held by the managing general
partner and its affiliates (which will include us until such
time as we cease to be an affiliate of the managing general
partner) and a majority of the subordinated units, voting as
separate classes; and (3) after the subordination period,
the approval of a majority of the common units. In voting their
units, the Partnerships general partners and their
affiliates will have no fiduciary duty or obligation whatsoever
to the Partnership or the limited partners, including any duty
to act in good faith or in the best interests of the Partnership
and its limited partners.
The following is a summary of the vote requirements specified
for certain matters under the partnership agreement:
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Issuance of additional units: no approval
right.
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Amendment of the partnership
agreement: certain amendments may be made by the
managing general partner without the approval of the
unitholders. Other amendments generally require the approval of
a unit majority.
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Merger of the Partnership or the sale of all or substantially
all of the Partnerships assets: unit
majority in certain circumstances. In addition, the holder of
special GP rights has joint management rights with respect to
some mergers.
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Dissolution of the Partnership: unit majority.
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Continuation of the Partnership upon
dissolution: unit majority.
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Withdrawal of the managing general
partner: under most circumstances, a unit
majority is required for the withdrawal of the managing general
partner prior to June 30, 2017 in a manner which would
cause a dissolution of the Partnership.
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Removal of the managing general partner: not
less than 80% of the outstanding units, voting as a single
class, including units held by the managing general partner and
its affiliates (i) for cause prior to October 26, 2012
or (ii) with or without cause (as defined in the
partnership agreement) on or after October 26, 2012.
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Transfer of the managing general partners general
partner interest: the managing general partner
may transfer all, but not less than all, of its managing general
partner interest in the Partnership without a vote of any
unitholders and without our approval, to an affiliate or to
another person (other than an individual) in connection with its
merger or consolidation with or into, or sale of all or
substantially all of its assets to, such person. The approval of
a majority of the outstanding units, excluding units held by the
managing general partner and its affiliates, voting as a class
and our approval, is required in other circumstances for a
transfer of the managing general partner interest to a third
party prior to October 26, 2017.
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Transfer of ownership interests in the managing general
partner: no approval required at any time.
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Limited
Call Right
If at any time the managing general partner and its affiliates
own more than 80% of the then-issued and outstanding limited
partner interests of any class, the managing general partner
will have the right, which it may assign in whole or in part to
any of its affiliates or to the Partnership, to acquire all, but
not less than all, of the limited partner interests of the class
held by unaffiliated persons, as of a record date to be selected
by
67
the managing general partner, on at least 10 but not more than
60 days notice. The purchase price in the event of
such an acquisition will be the greater of (1) the highest
price paid by the managing general partner or any of its
affiliates for any limited partner interests of the class
purchased within the 90 days preceding the date on which
the managing general partner first mails notice of its election
to purchase those limited partner interests and (2) the
average of the daily closing prices of the limited partner
interests over the 20 trading days preceding the date three days
before notice of exercise of the call right is first mailed. At
any time following the Partnerships initial offering, if
any, if we fail to hold at least 20% of the units of the
Partnership our common GP units will be deemed to be part of the
same class of partnership interests as the common LP units for
purposes of this provision. This provision will make it easier
for the managing general partner to take the Partnership private
in its discretion.
Conflicts
of Interest
Under the partnership agreement the managing general partner
will not be in breach of its obligations under the partnership
agreement or its duties to the Partnership or its unitholders
(including us) if the resolution of a conflict of interest is
either (1) approved by the conflicts committee of the board
of directors of the managing general partner, although the
managing general partner is not obligated to seek such approval,
(2) approved by the vote of a majority of the outstanding
common units, excluding any common units owned by the managing
general partner or any of its affiliates (including us so long
as we remain an affiliate), although the managing general
partner is not obligated to seek such approval, (3) on
terms no less favorable to the Partnership than those generally
being provided to or available from unrelated third parties; or
(4) fair and reasonable to the Partnership, taking into
account the totality of the relationships between the parties
involved, including other transactions that may be particularly
favorable or advantageous to the Partnership.
In addition to the provisions described above, the partnership
agreement contains provisions that restrict the remedies
available to the Partnerships unitholders for actions that
might otherwise constitute breaches of fiduciary duty. For
example:
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|
The partnership agreement permits the managing general partner
to make a number of decisions in its individual capacity, as
opposed to its capacity as managing general partner, thereby
entitling the managing general partner to consider only the
interests and factors that it desires and imposes no duty or
obligation on the managing general partner to give any
consideration to any interest of, or factors affecting, the
common unitholders.
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|
The partnership agreement provides that the managing general
partner shall not have any liability to the Partnership or its
unitholders (including us) for decisions made in its capacity as
managing general partner so long as it acted in good faith,
meaning it believed that the decision was in the best interests
of the Partnership.
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The partnership agreement generally provides that affiliated
transactions and resolutions of conflicts of interest not
approved by the conflicts committee of the board of directors of
the managing general partner and not involving a vote of
unitholders must be on terms no less favorable to the
Partnership than those generally being provided to or available
from unrelated third parties or be fair and
reasonable to the Partnership, as determined by the
managing general partner in good faith and that, in determining
whether a transaction or resolution is fair and
reasonable, the managing general partner may consider the
totality of the relationships between the parties involved,
including other transactions that may be particularly
advantageous or beneficial to the Partnership.
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The partnership agreement provides that the managing general
partner and its officers and directors will not be liable for
monetary damages to the Partnership or its partners for any acts
or omissions unless there has been a final and non-appealable
judgment entered by a court of competent jurisdiction
determining that the general partner or its officers or
directors acted in bad faith or engaged in fraud or willful
misconduct, or, in the case of a criminal matter, acted with
knowledge that the conduct was criminal.
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68
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The partnership agreement provides that in resolving conflicts
of interest, it will be presumed that in making its decision,
the managing general partner or its conflicts committee acted in
good faith and in any proceeding brought by or on behalf of any
partner or the partnership, the person bringing or prosecuting
such proceeding will have the burden of overcoming such
presumption.
|
The partnership agreement contains various provisions modifying
and restricting the fiduciary duties that might otherwise be
owed by the managing general partner. The Partnership has
adopted these provisions to allow the Partnerships general
partners or their affiliates to engage in transactions with the
Partnership that would otherwise be prohibited by state law
fiduciary standards and to take into account the interests of
other parties in addition to the Partnerships interests
when resolving conflicts of interest. Without such
modifications, such transactions could result in violations of
the Partnerships general partners state law
fiduciary duty standards.
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Fiduciary duties are generally considered to include an
obligation to act in good faith and with due care and loyalty.
The duty of care, in the absence of a provision in a partnership
agreement providing otherwise, would generally require a general
partner to act for the partnership in the same manner as a
prudent person would act on his own behalf. The duty of loyalty,
in the absence of a provision in a partnership agreement
providing otherwise, would generally prohibit a general partner
of a Delaware limited partnership from taking any action or
engaging in any transaction where a conflict of interest is
present.
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The partnership agreement contains provisions that waive or
consent to conduct by the Partnerships general partners
and their affiliates that might otherwise raise issues as to
compliance with fiduciary duties or applicable law. For example,
the partnership agreement provides that when either of the
general partners is acting in its capacity as a general partner,
as opposed to in its individual capacity, it must act in
good faith and will not be subject to any other
standard under applicable law. In addition, when either of the
general partners is acting in its individual capacity, as
opposed to in its capacity as a general partner, it may act
without any fiduciary obligation to the Partnership or the
unitholders whatsoever. These standards reduce the obligations
to which the Partnerships general partners would otherwise
be held.
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The partnership agreement generally provides that affiliated
transactions and resolutions of conflicts of interest not
involving a vote of unitholders and that are not approved by the
conflicts committee of the board of directors of the
Partnerships managing general partner must be (1) on
terms no less favorable to the Partnership than those generally
being provided to or available from unrelated third parties or
(2) fair and reasonable to the Partnership,
taking into account the totality of the relationships between
the parties involved (including other transactions that may be
particularly favorable or advantageous to the Partnership).
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If the Partnerships managing general partner does not seek
approval from the conflicts committee of its board of directors
or the common unitholders and its board of directors determines
that the resolution or course of action taken with respect to
the conflict of interest satisfies either of the standards set
forth in the bullet point above, then it will be presumed that,
in making its decision, the board of directors of the managing
general partner, which may include board members affected by the
conflict of interest, acted in good faith and in any proceeding
brought by or on behalf of any partner or the partnership, the
person bringing or prosecuting such proceeding will have the
burden of overcoming such presumption. These standards reduce
the obligations to which the Partnerships managing general
partner would otherwise be held.
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In addition to the other more specific provisions limiting the
obligations of the Partnerships general partners, the
partnership agreement further provides that the
Partnerships general partners and their officers and
directors will not be liable for monetary damages to the
Partnership or its partners for errors of judgment or for any
acts or omissions unless there has been a final and
non-appealable judgment by a court of competent jurisdiction
determining that the general partner or its officers and
directors acted in bad faith or engaged in fraud or willful
misconduct, or, in the case of a criminal matter, acted with
knowledge that such persons conduct was unlawful.
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69
AUDIT
COMMITTEE REPORT
The audit committee consists of the following members of the
Board: Messrs. Mark E. Tomkins (chairman), C. Scott Hobbs
and Steve A. Nordaker. Our Board has determined that
Mr. Tomkins qualifies as an audit committee financial
expert. Additionally, our Board has determined that each
member of the audit committee, including Mr. Tomkins, is
financially literate under the requirements of the
NYSE. Our Board has also determined that all three members of
the audit committee are independent under current NYSE
independence requirements and SEC rules. The audit committee
operates under a written charter adopted by our Board. A copy of
this charter is available at www.cvrenergy.com and is
available in print to any stockholder who requests it by writing
to CVR Energy, Inc., at 2277 Plaza Drive, Suite 500, Sugar
Land, Texas 77479, Attention: Senior Vice President, General
Counsel and Secretary.
Management is responsible for the preparation, presentation and
integrity of our financial statements, accounting and financial
reporting principles and the establishment and effectiveness of
internal controls and procedures designed to assure compliance
with accounting standards and applicable laws and regulations.
The Companys independent registered public accounting
firm, KPMG LLP (KPMG), is responsible for performing
an independent audit of the Companys consolidated
financial statements in accordance with the standards of the
Public Company Accounting Oversight Board (United States);
expressing an opinion, based on their audit, as to whether the
financial statements fairly present, in all material respects,
the financial position, results of operation and cash flows of
the Company in conformity with generally accepted accounting
principles; and auditing managements assessment of the
effectiveness of internal control over financial reporting. The
audit committees responsibility is to monitor and oversee
these processes. However, none of the members of the audit
committee is professionally engaged in the practice of
accounting or auditing nor are any of the members of the audit
committee experts in those fields. The audit committee relies
without independent verification on the information provided to
it and on the representations made by management and the
independent auditors.
The audit committee of the Board met ten times during 2009. The
audit committee meetings were designed, among other things, to
facilitate and encourage communication among the audit
committee, management, the internal auditors and KPMG. The audit
committee discussed with the Companys internal auditors
and KPMG the overall scope and plans for their respective
audits. The audit committee met with KPMG, with and without
management present, to discuss the results of its examination
and evaluation of the Companys internal controls.
The audit committee has reviewed and discussed the audited
consolidated financial statements contained in the
Companys Annual Report on
Form 10-K
for the year ended December 31, 2009 with management and
KPMG. The audit committee also discussed with KPMG matters
required to be discussed with audit committees under generally
accepted auditing standards, including, among other things,
matters related to the conduct of the audit of the
Companys consolidated financial statements and the matters
required to be discussed by Statement on Auditing Standards
No. 61 (Communication with Audit Committees), as amended,
supplemented or superseded, as adopted by the Public Company
Accounting Oversight Board. KPMG gave us its opinion, and
management represented, that the Company prepared its
consolidated financial statements in accordance with generally
accepted accounting principles.
The audit committee has received the written disclosures and the
letter from the independent accountant required by applicable
requirements of the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board
regarding the independent accountants communications with
the audit committee concerning independence and has discussed
with the independent accountant the independent
accountants independence.
When determining KPMGs independence, we considered whether
its provision of services to the Company beyond those rendered
in connection with its audit of the Companys consolidated
financial statements and reviews of the Companys
consolidated financial statements included in the Companys
Quarterly Reports on
Form 10-Q
was compatible with maintaining its independence. The audit
committee also reviewed, among other things, the audit and
non-audit services performed by and the amount of fees paid for
such services to, KPMG.
70
Based upon the review and discussions referred to above, we
recommended to the Board and the Board has approved, that the
Companys audited financial statements be included in the
2009
Form 10-K.
The audit committee also approved the engagement of KPMG as the
Companys independent auditors for 2010.
The audit committee has been advised by KPMG that neither it nor
any of its members has any financial interest, direct or
indirect, in any capacity in the Company or its subsidiaries.
This report is respectively submitted by the audit committee.
Audit Committee
Mark E. Tomkins, Chairman
C. Scott Hobbs
Steve A. Nordaker
PROPOSAL 2
RATIFICATION OF SELECTION OF INDEPENDENT
REGISTERED PUBLIC ACCOUNTING FIRM
The audit committee approved the engagement of KPMG as the
Companys independent registered public accounting firm for
2010 to examine the Companys consolidated financial
statements for the fiscal year ending December 31, 2010.
Although ratification is not required by our Amended and
Restated Certificate of Incorporation, our Amended and Restated
By-Laws, Delaware law or otherwise, the audit committee and our
Board are requesting that stockholders ratify this appointment
as a means of soliciting the opinions of stockholders and as a
matter of good corporate practice.
Votes
Required and Recommendation of the Board
The affirmative vote of a majority of the shares present in
person or by proxy and entitled to vote on the proposal is
required to ratify the selection of KPMG. An abstention is
treated as being present and entitled to vote on the matter and,
therefore, has the effect of a vote against this proposal. Under
NYSE regulations, a broker, bank or other nominee may exercise
discretionary voting power for the ratification of the
appointment of the Companys independent auditor.
If the stockholders do not ratify the selection, the audit
committee will consider any information submitted by the
stockholders in connection with the selection of the independent
auditor for 2010. Even if the selection is ratified, the audit
committee, in its discretion, may direct the appointment of a
different independent registered public accounting firm at any
time during the year if the audit committee believes such a
change would be in the best interest of the Company and its
stockholders.
We expect that a representative of KPMG will be present at the
Annual Meeting. This representative will have an opportunity to
make a statement and will be available to respond to appropriate
questions.
FEES PAID
TO THE INDEPENDENT REGISTERED PUBLIC ACCOUNTING FIRM
For the years ended December 31, 2009 and 2008,
professional services were performed by KPMG for the Company.
The following is a description of such services and the fees
billed by KPMG in relation thereto.
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Type of Fees
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2009
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2008
|
|
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Audit Fees(1)
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|
$
|
1,860,000
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$
|
3,711,000
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Audit-Related Fees(2)
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|
$
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94,000
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$
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Tax Fees(3)
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|
$
|
212,000
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$
|
269,000
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All Other Fees
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$
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$
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Total Fees Billed
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$
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2,166,000
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$
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3,980,000
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71
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(1) |
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Audit Fees consist of fees for the audit of the Companys
consolidated annual financial statements filed with the SEC as
well as consents, comfort letters, the review of documents filed
with the SEC, the audit of its internal control over financial
reporting and reviews of the financial statements included in
quarterly reports on
Form 10-Q. |
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(2) |
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Audit-Related Fees consist of a subsidiary financial statement
audit and agreed upon procedures performed for statutory
reporting. |
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(3) |
|
Tax Fees consist of fees for income tax consulting, including
tax compliance, preparation and review of corporate tax returns
and other general tax consultation. |
The audit committee has considered whether the non-audit
services provided by KPMG, including the services rendered in
connection with income tax calculations were compatible with
maintaining KPMGs independence and has determined that the
nature and substance of the limited non-audit services did not
impair the status of KPMG as the Companys independent
registered public accounting firm.
Audit
Committees Pre-Approval Policies and Procedures
Our audit committee charter, among other things, requires the
audit committee to approve in advance all audit and permitted
non-audit services provided by our independent registered public
accounting firm and also requires the audit committee to
establish periodically and to approve in advance the fee levels
for all services performed by the independent auditor. The audit
committee has also authorized any audit committee member to
pre-approve audit, audit-related, tax and other non-audit
services up to $100,000, provided that the committee member
shall timely report to the full committee each specific service
pre-approved by them with copies of all supporting documentation.
STOCKHOLDER
PROPOSALS
You may submit proposals for consideration at future annual
meetings. For a stockholder proposal to be considered for
inclusion in our proxy statement for the annual meeting for
2011, in general, the Secretary must receive the written
proposal at the address below no later than December 20,
2010. Such proposals must meet the requirements set forth in our
by-laws. Such proposals also must comply with SEC regulations
under
Rule 14a-8
regarding the inclusion of stockholder proposals in
company-sponsored proxy materials.
For a stockholder proposal that is intended to be presented at
an annual meeting but not presented to us for inclusion in our
proxy statement under
Rule 14a-8,
in general, the stockholder must give notice to the Secretary no
later than December 20, 2010 and meet the requirements set
forth in our by-laws. However, if the date of our annual meeting
for 2011 is held more than 30 days before or after
May 19, 2011, then the stockholders notice, in order
to be considered timely, must be received by the Secretary not
later than the later of the close of business on
January 19, 2011 or the tenth day following the day on
which notice of the date of the 2011 annual meeting was mailed
or public disclosure of such date was made.
Stockholders can suggest director candidates for consideration
by writing to the attention of the General Counsel at the
address below. Stockholders should provide the candidates
name, biographical data, qualifications and the candidates
written consent to being named as a nominee in our Proxy
Statement and to serve as a director, if elected. Stockholders
should also include the information that would be required to be
disclosed in the solicitation of proxies for election of
directors under the federal securities laws. The nominating and
corporate governance committee may require any nominee to
furnish any other information, within reason, that may be needed
to determine the eligibility of the candidate. See
Corporate Governance Director
Qualifications above.
To nominate an individual for election at our annual meeting for
2011, the stockholder must give timely notice to the Secretary
in accordance with our by-laws, which, in general, require that
the notice be received by the Secretary no later than
December 20, 2010, unless the date of the stockholder
meeting is moved more than 30 days before or after
May 19, 2011, then the nomination must be must be received
by the Secretary not later than the later of the close of
business on January 19, 2011 or the tenth day following the
day on which notice of the date of the 2011 annual meeting was
mailed or public disclosure of such date was made.
72
If the number of directors to be elected at the 2011 annual
meeting will be increased and there is no public announcement
naming the nominees for the additional directorships prior to
January 9, 2011, a stockholders notice will be
considered timely with respect to the nominees for the
additional directorships if it is received by the Secretary not
later than the close of business on the tenth day after the day
on which such public announcement is first made.
Proponents must submit stockholder proposals and recommendations
for nomination as a director in writing to the following address:
CVR Energy, Inc.
2277 Plaza Drive, Suite 500
Sugar Land, Texas 77479
Attention: Senior Vice President, General Counsel and Secretary
The Senior Vice President, General Counsel and Secretary will
forward the proposals and recommendations to the nominating and
corporate governance committee for consideration.
INCORPORATION
BY REFERENCE
To the extent that this Proxy Statement is incorporated by
reference into any other filing by CVR Energy, Inc. under the
Securities Act of 1933, as amended, or the Exchange Act, the
sections of this Proxy Statement entitled Compensation
Committee Report, and Audit Committee Report
(to the extent permitted by the rules of the SEC) will not be
deemed incorporated unless specifically provided otherwise in
such filing. Information contained on or connected to our
website is not incorporated by reference into this Proxy
Statement and should not be considered part of this Proxy
Statement or any other filing that we make with the SEC.
OTHER
MATTERS
We do not know of any other matters that will be considered at
the Annual Meeting. However, if any other proper business should
come before the meeting, the persons named in the proxy card
will have discretionary authority to vote according to their
best judgment to the extent permitted by applicable law.
For the Board of Directors,
Edmund S. Gross
Senior Vice President, General Counsel and
Secretary
April 19, 2010
73
ANNUAL MEETING OF STOCKHOLDERS OF
CVR Energy, Inc.
May 19, 2010
NOTICE OF INTERNET AVAILABILITY OF PROXY MATERIAL:
Our Proxy Statement and the CVR Energy 2009 Annual Report, which includes our 2009 Annual Report on Form 10-K
and financial statements, are available at http://annualreport.cvrenergy.com.
Please sign, date and mail
your proxy card in the
envelope provided as soon
as possible.
ê Please detach along perforated line and mail in the envelope provided. ê
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20930000000000000000 3
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051910 |
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THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS RECOMMENDS A VOTE FOR THE ELECTION OF DIRECTORS AND FOR PROPOSAL 2.
PLEASE SIGN, DATE AND RETURN PROMPTLY IN THE ENCLOSED ENVELOPE. PLEASE MARK YOUR VOTE IN BLUE OR BLACK INK AS SHOWN HERE x
1. |
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To elect nine directors for terms of one year each, to
serve until their successors have been duly elected and
qualified. |
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NOMINEES: |
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FOR ALL NOMINEES
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John J. Lipinski
C. Scott Hobbs |
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WITHHOLD AUTHORITY
FOR ALL NOMINEES
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¡
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Scott L. Lebovitz
George E. Matelich |
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FOR ALL EXCEPT
(See instructions below)
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¡
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Steve A. Nordaker
Stanley de J. Osborne |
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John K. Rowan |
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Joseph E. Sparano |
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Mark E. Tomkins |
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INSTRUCTIONS: |
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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: l |
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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 not be submitted via
this method. |
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FOR |
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AGAINST |
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2.
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To ratify the selection of KPMG LLP as the Companys
independent registered public accounting firm for 2010.
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Signature of Stockholder
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Date:
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Signature of Stockholder
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Date:
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Note: |
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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 duly
authorized officer, giving full title as such. If signer is a partnership, please sign in
partnership name by authorized person. |
ANNUAL MEETING OF STOCKHOLDERS OF
CVR Energy, Inc.
May 19, 2010
PROXY VOTING INSTRUCTIONS
TELEPHONE - Call toll-free 1-800-PROXIES (1-800-776-9437) in
the United States or 1-718-921-8500 from foreign countries from any
touch-tone telephone and follow the instructions. Have your proxy
card available when you call and use the Company Number and
Account Number shown on your proxy card.
Vote by phone until 11:59 PM EST the day before the meeting.
MAIL - Sign, date and mail your proxy card in the envelope provided as soon as possible.
IN PERSON - You may vote your shares in person by attending the Annual Meeting.
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COMPANY NUMBER
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ACCOUNT NUMBER
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NOTICE OF INTERNET AVAILABILITY OF PROXY MATERIAL:
Our Proxy Statement and the CVR Energy 2009 Annual Report, which includes our 2009 Annual Report on Form 10-K
and financial statements, are available at http://annualreport.cvrenergy.com.
ê Please detach along perforated line and mail in the envelope provided IF you are not voting via telephone. ê
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20930000000000000000 3
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051910 |
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THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS RECOMMENDS A VOTE FOR THE ELECTION OF DIRECTORS AND FOR PROPOSAL 2.
PLEASE SIGN, DATE AND RETURN PROMPTLY IN THE ENCLOSED ENVELOPE. PLEASE MARK YOUR VOTE IN BLUE OR BLACK INK AS SHOWN HERE x
1. |
|
To elect nine directors for terms of one year each, to serve until their
successors have been duly elected and qualified. |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
NOMINEES: |
o
|
|
FOR ALL NOMINEES
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¡
¡
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|
John J. Lipinski
C. Scott Hobbs |
o
|
|
WITHHOLD AUTHORITY
FOR ALL NOMINEES
|
|
¡
¡
|
|
Scott L. Lebovitz
George E. Matelich |
o
|
|
FOR ALL EXCEPT
(See instructions below)
|
|
¡
¡
|
|
Steve A. Nordaker
Stanley de J. Osborne |
|
|
|
|
¡
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John K. Rowan |
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¡
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Joseph E. Sparano |
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¡
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Mark E. Tomkins |
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INSTRUCTIONS: |
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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:l |
|
|
|
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 not be submitted via
this method.
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FOR |
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AGAINST |
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ABSTAIN |
2.
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To ratify the selection of KPMG LLP as the Companys
independent registered public accounting firm for 2010.
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o
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Signature of Stockholder
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Date:
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Signature of Stockholder
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Date:
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Note: |
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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 duly
authorized officer, giving full title as such. If signer is a partnership, please sign in
partnership name by authorized person. |
CVR ENERGY, INC.
The undersigned hereby appoints Stanley A. Riemann, Edmund S. Gross, Edward Morgan
and Susan M. Ball and each or any of his/her attorneys and agents, with full power of substitution
to vote as Proxy for the undersigned as herein stated at the Annual Meeting of Stockholders of
CVR Energy, Inc. (the Company) to be held at the Marriott Town Square Hotel, 16090 City Walk,
Sugar Land, TX 77479 on Wednesday, May 19, 2010 at 10:00 a.m. (Central Time), and at any
adjournments or postponements thereof, according to the number of votes the undersigned would
be entitled to vote if personally present, on the proposals set forth on the reverse hereof and in
accordance with their discretion on any other matters that may properly come before the meeting
or any adjournments or postponements thereof. The undersigned hereby acknowledges receipt of
the Annual Report on Form 10-K dated March 12, 2010, Notice of 2010 Annual Meeting of
Stockholders, dated April 19, 2010 and Proxy Statement, dated April 19, 2010. If this proxy is
returned without direction being given, this proxy will be voted FOR Proposals One and Two.
(Continued and to be signed on the reverse side)