Apple's bankrupt sapphire supplier petitions to pay $3.7M in bonuses
The bonuses are necessary, GT said in a filing Monday, because its stock has tanked since the company went into Chapter 11 on Oct. 6. Previously, major parts of bonuses were paid in stock grants. "The grant of equity incentive awards during these bankruptcy cases would be likely to result in no value to the senior management employees," GT's lawyers said.
GT wants to set up a cash incentive plan for nine senior executives and an additional 28 employees that would distribute a total of $3.7 million if the plan's targets were met. The senior executives would get the bulk of that money, $2.3 million, or about 62% of the total.
Those senior executives were not named in the filing, but would probably include the seven listed on GT's management team page, and include CEO Tom Gutierrez and COO Dan Squiller.
For those nine upper-level executives, bonuses would be calculated using a formula with several components, including sales of the sapphire-growing furnaces the company owns in the Mesa, Ariz. factory where production never reached either the volume or the material quality required by Apple, GT's partner in the doomed project. Some of the proceeds from the sale of those furnaces will go to Apple to repay its $439 million loan to GT.
The more furnaces GT sells from that factory, the larger the bonuses paid to the executives.
The other 28 employees in the plan are crucial to the survival of GT, the motion said, and if the deal is approved will be given retention bonuses of between $10,990 and $125,000 each. GT said those employees include engineers and R&D staff.
"GTAT is facing challenges with respect to retaining and motivating its current workforce," the company's lawyers argued. "Indeed, GTAT has already lost 25 valued employees as a result of voluntary attrition since the [bankruptcy filing], and believes that, without a thoughtful retention plan for such key non-insiders, it may continue to lose valuable talent to the detriment of GTAT's operations."
GT has another bonus plan in place that would pay 173 additional employees a total of $1.95 million in the first quarter of 2016 if individual performance targets have been met.
Although GT's creditors have yet to respond to the newest incentive plan, GT expects them to oppose it, and asked for an expedited hearing next month. The federal bankruptcy court judge overseeing the case set that hearing for Jan. 23.
It would not be surprising if creditors are leery of paying GT's executives more money from the company's dwindling coffers. They might also bring up the fact that five of the company's senior executives sold more than $10 million worth of their stock grants in the months leading up to GT's implosion. The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) is currently investigating those trades.
Last year, GT and Apple struck a deal under which Apple would provide a $578 million interest-free loan so that GT could purchase equipment to produce large quantities of sapphire.
The deal triggered speculation that Apple would use the sapphire as touch display covers for its iPhone, particularly the then-anticipated larger-screen model. While that didn't come to pass -- the iPhone 6 and 6 Plus use Corning's Gorilla Glass 3 instead -- the mid- and top-tier Apple Watch lines are to use sapphire as their face-covering crystals.
But this fall, GT collapsed because of cost overruns and production issues at the Arizona sapphire factory. In earlier court filings, GT blamed Apple's onerous contract and meddling for its downfall.