Oracle Pay Package Could Give Hurd $250 Mil.
By wchung | 15 Jun, 2026
In a March 3, 2010 file photo them Hewlett-Packard Company Chairman and Chief Executive Officer Mark Hurd speaks at the dedication ceremony of HP's customer service and technical support center in Conway, Ark. (AP Photo/Danny Johnston/file)
Oracle plans to pay newly appointed President Mark Hurd a base salary of $950,000 a year. The company also says the former Hewlett-Packard Co. CEO, who was ousted by that company last month, is eligible for a fiscal 2011 bonus of $5 million.
In a filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission on Wednesday, Oracle Corp., based in Redwood City, Calif., added that Hurd’s bonus will not exceed $10 million.
But the biggest part of Hurd’s pay package will be the 10 million stock options Oracle plans to give him. The company said Hurd’s options will carry an exercise price equal to the market value of the shares on the date they are granted. While the filing did not offer a specific date, Oracle shares closed Tuesday at $24.26, which would value 10 million shares at $242.6 million.
Still, Hurd’s future at Oracle was complicated Tuesday when Hewlett-Packard sued Hurd to keep him out of his new job. HP is worried Hurd will use his knowledge of the company to give Oracle an unfair advantage.
Lawsuits of that kind often end with a court ordering an executive to avoid certain parts of their employers’ businesses.
NEW YORK (AP)
Recent Articles
- Newsom Says Trump Sending Agents to Homes of Friends, Family
- North Korea Touts Industrial ‘Miracles’ as Output Exceeds Targets
- Global EV Registrations Rose 3% in May
- China's Industrial Output Grew Faster in May but Retail Sales and Investment Slowed
- Asia Markets Temperate in Assessing Likely Delayed Impact of Iran Deal
- Japan's Auto Shops Unlikely to See Quick Relief from US-Iran Deal
- Hermanos Coreanos, Clarkson Crowned, Jung Hoo Lee Sets Record
- California Congressman Dave Min Presses Trump on “Pay-To-Play” Pardons
- China's Heavy Truck Electrification to Hit Diesel Demand
- Trump Push into Highly Dangerous Plutonium Unlikely to Fix US Nuclear Fuel Crunch
