Dear Shareholder:
We are writing to ask for your critical support for the proposals to be voted on at Evercores 2024 Annual Meeting of Stockholders and to
express our appreciation for your independent analysis in conducting your evaluation. Our Board continues to unanimously recommend you cast your vote FOR all proposals, and we would like to draw your attention specifically to Proposal
No. 4, our proposal to increase the number of shares available under our equity incentive plan by 6.0 million shares. We are requesting additional shares because we do not have enough shares remaining manage and grow our business
over the next approximately two to three years consistent with our strategy. The additional shares are necessary in order to continue providing a significant portion of our incentive compensation in the form of equity (which aligns the interests
of our employees and stockholders) and to recruiting and retain talented professionals (a key tenet of our growth strategy).
We last
sought authorization for additional shares under our equity plan in 2022, when we requested 6.5 million shares that we anticipated would last approximately two years. At that time, Glass Lewis (GL) recommended in favor of our plan.
Following shareholder approval, we proceeded to execute on our equity compensation program as described in our 2022 proxy statement, successfully managing the potential dilution of the increased shares through our share repurchases and achieving a
negative net burn rate over the past three years of -3.5%. Our equity compensation program enabled the execution of our long-term strategy, permitting us to continue recruiting, promoting and retaining
talented Senior Managing Directors and aligning their interests with those of our shareholders. This has contributed meaningfully to our strong financial performance and the achievement of a 5-year total
stockholder return as of December 31, 2023 of 172%, which outpaces our peers, the S&P500 and the S&P500 Financials (as discussed in more detail in our proxy materials).
However, despite our success and the execution of our equity plan as communicated to our shareholders, in its report this year (the GL
Report), GL has reversed course and recommended a vote against our equity plan proposal. In its report, GL neglects to provide any qualitative assessment of our equity plan, its connection with our financial results, and the impact of our
share repurchases on its quantitative analysis. Instead, it makes a recommendation based on rigid quantitative factors are predicated on several omissions, inconsistencies, and inappropriate analytic assumptions and methodologies that either create
or overstate the magnitude and significance of the supposed failures. For instance, this year Evercores equity plan proposal is quantitatively compared to an opaque group of 27 financial services companies with an average market
capitalization of approximately $37 billion nearly five times our size. Recognizing that Evercore has a significantly smaller market capitalization than these companies, GL also compared us to financial services peer groups
with an average market capitalization of $2.5 billion and $13.2 billion. In these comparisons, our proposal passed the cost to enterprise value-based tests relative to our peers; however, these results were disregarded in favor of the
$37 billion peer group results without explanation as to why the larger sized peer group is more appropriate. Regardless of size, however, the use of such a broad group of peers, which are likely to have materially different compensation and
operational models, has a significant impact on tests that assess the relative cost of our plan, as explained in more detail below..
In
addition to the flaws with its analysis, which we have discussed in greater detail in Attachment A, the GL Report does not explain why it changed its recommendation from 2022 or of the significant implications for us and our shareholders if
their recommendation is followed. If our proposal fails, we will not have access to additional shares and we would be required to take one or more actions that our Board believes are not in the best interests of shareholders:
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Replace the compensation paid to our employees in equity with cash, thereby decreasing their long-term alignment
with investors and reducing cash available to distribute to shareholders; |
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Reduce the proportion of client-facing and revenue-generating employees that receive equity compensation,
limiting the scope of our employee base that is aligned with shareholders and similarly reducing cash available to distribute to shareholders; or |