2010 Notice & Proxy Statement
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UNITED STATES

SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION

Washington, D.C. 20549

 

SCHEDULE 14A

 

Proxy Statement Pursuant to Section 14(a)

of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934

(Amendment No.     )

 

x    Filed by the Registrant  

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   Preliminary Proxy Statement          

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   Definitive Proxy Statement          

¨

   Definitive Additional Materials          

¨

   Soliciting Material Pursuant to §240.14a-12          

 

S&T Bancorp, Inc.

(Name of Registrant as Specified In Its Charter)

 

 

 

(Name of Person(s) Filing Proxy Statement, if other than the Registrant)

 

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LOGO

S&T Bancorp, Inc.

800 Philadelphia Street

Indiana, Pennsylvania 15701

NOTICE OF ANNUAL MEETING OF SHAREHOLDERS

April 19, 2010

To the Shareholders of

S&T Bancorp, Inc.:

Notice is hereby given that the Annual Meeting of Shareholders of S&T Bancorp, Inc. (“S&T”) will be held on April 19, 2010, at 10:00 a.m., Eastern Time, at the S&T Training and Support Center, located at 355 North Fifth Street, Indiana, Pennsylvania 15701, for the purpose of considering and voting on the following matters:

 

  1. The election of thirteen directors to serve a one-year term until the next annual meeting of shareholders and until their respective successors are elected and qualified;

 

  2. To ratify the selection of KPMG LLP as an independent registered public accounting firm for the fiscal year 2010;

 

  3. To approve a non-binding, advisory proposal on the compensation of S&T’s executive officers; and

 

  4. The transaction of such other business as may properly come before the meeting or any adjournment thereof.

Only shareholders of record at the close of business on February 24, 2010 are entitled to notice of and to vote at such meeting or any adjournment thereof.

By Order of the Board of Directors,

 

LOGO

Ernest J. Draganza

Secretary

Indiana, Pennsylvania

March 19, 2010

IMPORTANT

YOUR VOTE IS IMPORTANT. IN ORDER TO ASSURE YOUR REPRESENTATION AT THE ANNUAL MEETING, PLEASE MARK, SIGN, DATE AND RETURN THE ENCLOSED PROXY AS SOON AS POSSIBLE IN THE ENCLOSED ENVELOPE. NO POSTAGE IS REQUIRED FOR MAILING IN THE UNITED STATES.

THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS UNANIMOUSLY RECOMMENDS THAT THE SHAREHOLDERS VOTE FOR THE ELECTION AS DIRECTORS OF THE NOMINEES NAMED IN THIS PROXY STATEMENT, FOR THE RATIFICATION OF THE SELECTION OF KPMG LLP AS AN INDEPENDENT REGISTERED ACCOUNTING FIRM FOR FISCAL YEAR 2010, AND FOR THE NON-BINDING ADVISORY PROPOSAL ON THE COMPENSATION OF S&T’S EXECUTIVE OFFICERS.


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IMPORTANT NOTICE REGARDING THE AVAILABILITY OF

PROXY MATERIALS FOR THE 2010 ANNUAL MEETING OF SHAREHOLDERS

TO BE HELD ON APRIL 19, 2010

S&T’s Proxy Statement for the 2010 Annual Meeting of Shareholders, and S&T’s Annual Report on Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended December 31, 2009, are available at http://materials.proxyvote.com/783859.

IMPORTANT NOTICE REGARDING DELIVERY OF SECURITY HOLDER DOCUMENTS

The Securities and Exchange Commission (the “SEC”) has adopted rules that permit companies and intermediaries (e.g., brokers) to satisfy the delivery requirements for proxy statements and annual reports with respect to two or more shareholders sharing the same address by delivering a single proxy statement addressed to those shareholders. This process is commonly referred to as “householding.”

S&T has implemented “householding” in an effort to reduce the number of duplicate mailings to the same address. This process benefits both shareholders and S&T, because it eliminates unnecessary mailings delivered to your home and helps to reduce S&T’s expenses. “Householding” is not being used, however, if S&T has received contrary instructions from one or more of the shareholders sharing an address. If your household has received only one annual report and one proxy statement, S&T will deliver promptly a separate copy of the annual report and the proxy statement to any shareholder who contacts S&T’s transfer agent, American Stock Transfer & Trust Company (“AST”), by calling their toll-free number, 1-800-937-5449, or by mail to the attention of the Shareholder Relations Department at 59 Maiden Lane, Plaza Level, New York, New York 10038. You can also notify S&T that you would like to receive separate copies of S&T’s annual report and proxy statement in the future by calling AST. Even if your household has received only one annual report and one proxy statement, S&T will continue to send a separate proxy card for each shareholder residing at your address. Please note, however, that if you also hold shares of S&T in “street name” (e.g., in a brokerage account or retirement plan account) you may continue to receive duplicate mailings.

Each proxy card should be signed, dated and returned in the enclosed self-addressed envelope. If your household has received multiple copies of S&T’s annual report and proxy statement, you can request the delivery of single copies in the future by calling AST, as instructed above, or your broker, if you hold the shares in “street name.”


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S&T BANCORP, INC.

2010 PROXY STATEMENT

TABLE OF CONTENTS

 

     Page

INTRODUCTION

   1

MEETING INFORMATION

   1

BENEFICIAL OWNERS OF S&T COMMON STOCK

   2

BENEFICIAL OWNERSHIP OF S&T COMMON STOCK BY DIRECTORS AND OFFICERS

   3

PROPOSAL 1: ELECTION OF DIRECTORS

   5

CORPORATE GOVERNANCE

   9

DIRECTOR COMPENSATION

   15

PROPOSAL 2: RATIFICATION OF THE SELECTION OF INDEPENDENT REGISTERED PUBLIC ACCOUNTING FIRM FOR FISCAL YEAR 2010

   17

PROPOSAL 3: ADVISORY VOTE ON S&T’S EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION

   19

EXECUTIVE OFFICERS OF THE REGISTRANT

   21

COMPENSATION DISCUSSION AND ANALYSIS

   22

COMPENSATION AND BENEFITS COMMITTEE REPORT

   33

EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION

   35

RELATED PERSON TRANSACTIONS

   44

REPORT OF THE AUDIT COMMITTEE

   46

SHAREHOLDER PROPOSALS

   47

OTHER MATTERS

   47


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S&T BANCORP, INC.

PROXY STATEMENT FOR

ANNUAL MEETING OF SHAREHOLDERS

TO BE HELD APRIL 19, 2010

INTRODUCTION

This Proxy Statement is being furnished to shareholders of S&T Bancorp, Inc. (“S&T”) in connection with the solicitation of proxies by the Board of Directors of S&T (the “S&T Board”) for use at the Annual Meeting of Shareholders, and any adjournments thereof, to be held at the time and place set forth in the accompanying notice (“Annual Meeting”). This Proxy Statement is being mailed to shareholders on or about March 19, 2010. At the Annual Meeting, shareholders of S&T will be asked to elect thirteen directors of S&T to serve a one-year term, to approve the ratification of the selection of KPMG LLP as an independent registered public accounting firm for the fiscal year 2010, and to approve a non-binding, advisory proposal on the compensation of S&T’s executive officers.

All shareholders are urged to read this Proxy Statement carefully and in its entirety.

 

MEETING INFORMATION

Date, Place and Time

The Annual Meeting will be held on April 19, 2010, at 10:00 a.m., Eastern Time, at the S&T Training and Support Center, located at 355 North Fifth Street, Indiana, Pennsylvania.

Record Date, Voting Rights

The securities that can be voted at the Annual Meeting consist of shares of common stock of S&T, par value $2.50 per share (“Common Stock”), with each share entitling its owner to one vote on all matters. Only holders of the Common Stock at the close of business on February 24, 2010 (the “Record Date”) will be entitled to notice of and to vote at the Annual Meeting. There were 3,167 record holders of the Common Stock and 27,755,374 shares of Common Stock outstanding as of the Record Date.

A quorum is required for the transaction of business at the Annual Meeting. A “quorum” is the presence at the meeting, in person or represented by proxy, of the holders of the majority of the outstanding shares of Common Stock. Abstentions are counted for purposes of determining the presence or the absence of a quorum, but are not considered a vote cast under Pennsylvania law. Abstentions will not affect the outcome of a vote on a particular matter. Shares held by brokers in street name and for which the beneficial owners do not vote on a particular proposal because the brokers do not have discretionary voting power and have not received instructions from the beneficial owners to vote on that item are called “broker non-votes.” Broker non-votes are counted to determine if a quorum is present, but are not considered a vote cast under Pennsylvania law. Broker non-votes will not affect the outcome of a vote on a particular matter.

The director nominees will be elected by a plurality of the votes cast at the Annual Meeting, which means that the thirteen nominees receiving the most votes will be elected. A withheld vote on any nominee will not affect the voting results. Both the ratification of the selection of KPMG LLP as an independent registered accounting firm for fiscal year 2010 and the non-binding advisory proposal on the compensation of S&T’s executive officers require the affirmative vote of a majority of the votes cast at the Annual Meeting on the item to be approved.

Voting and Revocation of Proxies

If the appropriate enclosed form of proxy is properly executed and returned to S&T in time to be voted at the Annual Meeting, the shares represented thereby will be voted in accordance with the instructions marked

 

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thereon. Executed but unmarked proxies will be voted “FOR” the director nominees proposed by the S&T Board, which are presented in this Proxy Statement, “FOR” the ratification of the selection of KPMG LLP as an independent registered accounting firm for fiscal year 2010, and “FOR” the non-binding advisory proposal on the compensation of S&T’s executive officers. Except for procedural matters incident to the conduct of the Annual Meeting, S&T does not know of any matters other than those described in the Notice of Annual Meeting that are to come before the Annual Meeting. If any other matters are properly brought before the Annual Meeting, the persons named in the accompanying proxy will vote the shares represented by the proxies in their discretion on such matters as recommended by a majority of the S&T Board.

The presence of a shareholder at the Annual Meeting will not automatically revoke such shareholder’s proxy. However, a shareholder may revoke a proxy at any time prior to its exercise by filing with the Secretary of S&T a written notice of revocation, by delivering to S&T a duly executed proxy bearing a later date or by attending the Annual Meeting and voting in person.

Solicitation of Proxies

The cost of soliciting proxies in the form enclosed herewith will be borne by S&T. In addition to the solicitation of proxies by mail, S&T has engaged The Altman Group to help solicit proxies for the Annual Meeting, and will pay The Altman Group $6,000, plus its out-of-pocket expenses, for the solicitation of proxies. S&T may also solicit proxies personally or by telephone, through its directors, officers and regular employees. S&T also will request persons, firms and corporations holding shares of Common Stock in their names or in the name of their nominees, which are beneficially owned by others, to send proxy material to and obtain proxies from the beneficial owners and will reimburse the holders for their reasonable expenses in so doing.

Internet Availability of Proxy Materials

S&T’s Proxy Statement for the 2010 Annual Meeting of Shareholders, and S&T’s Annual Report on Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended December 31, 2009, are available at http://materials.proxyvote.com/783859.

BENEFICIAL OWNERS OF S&T COMMON STOCK

Under Section 13(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended (the “Exchange Act”), a beneficial owner of a security is any person who directly or indirectly has or shares voting power or investment power over such security. Such beneficial owner under this definition need not enjoy the economic benefit of such securities. The following are the only shareholders known to S&T to be deemed to be a beneficial owner of 5% or more of Common Stock as of December 31, 2009:

 

Title of Class

  

Name and Address of Beneficial Owner

   Amount and Nature
of Beneficial Ownership
    Percent
of
Class
 

Common Stock

  

S&T Bank, Wealth Management Group

800 Philadelphia Street, Indiana, PA 15701

   1,593,297 (1)    5.74

Common Stock

  

BlackRock Inc.

40 East 52nd Street

New York, NY 10022

   2,319,943 (2)    8.37

 

(1) According to its Schedule 13G filed with the SEC on February 11, 2010, S&T’s Wealth Management Group (“WMG”) has sole voting power for 1,399,677 of these shares and no voting power for 193,620 of these shares held in customer accounts. It is the intention of management to vote the shares for which it has sole voting power “FOR” the director nominees named in this Proxy Statement and any other matters to be acted upon at the Annual Meeting. The percentage of ownership is calculated as of the filing date of the Schedule 13G.

 

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(2) According to its Schedule 13G filed with the SEC on January 29, 2010, BlackRock, Inc. has sole dispositive power and sole voting power for 2,319,943 of these shares. The percentage of ownership is calculated as of the filing date of the Schedule 13G.

S&T is not aware of any other person who beneficially owns more than 5% of any class of securities of S&T other than those listed above.

BENEFICIAL OWNERSHIP OF S&T COMMON STOCK BY DIRECTORS AND OFFICERS

The following table sets forth, as of February 24, 2010, the amount and percentage of Common Stock beneficially owned by each director, each nominee for director and each of the Named Executive Officers (as defined below) of S&T, as well as the directors and executive officers of S&T as a group. Unless otherwise indicated, all persons listed below have sole voting and investment power of all shares of Common Stock. The business address of each of S&T’s directors and officers is 800 Philadelphia Street, Indiana, Pennsylvania 15701.

 

Name

   Shares of Common Stock
Beneficially Owned(1)
   Percent
Owned
 

David G. Antolik

   31,218    *   

John N. Brenzia2

   10,469    *   

Thomas A. Brice2

   141,963    *   

Todd D. Brice

   105,615    *   

John J. Delaney2

   78,644    *   

Michael J. Donnelly2

   35,336    *   

William J. Gatti

   37,994    *   

Jeffrey D. Grube2

   33,227    *   

Edward C. Hauck

   46,049    *   

Frank W. Jones2

   39,885    *   

Joseph A. Kirk2

   73,156    *   

David L. Krieger2

   37,378    *   

James V. Milano

   7,771    *   

James C. Miller2

   129,547    *   

Alan Papernick2

   35,604    *   

Robert Rebich, Jr. 2

   131,285    *   

Charles A. Spadafora

   59,678    *   

Christine J. Toretti2

   165,738    *   

Charles G. Urtin2

   18,242    *   

Gregor T. Young, IV

   45,967    *   

All current directors and executive officers as a group (25 persons)

   1,447,423    5.11

 

(1) May include shares held by spouse, other family members, as trustee or through a corporation. Includes shares issuable upon the exercise of nonstatutory stock options exercisable within 60 days of February 24, 2010: Mr. David Antolik, 23,250; Mr. Thomas Brice, 20,500 shares; Mr. Todd Brice, 45,000 shares; Mr. Delaney, 20,500 shares; Mr. Donnelly, 15,500 shares; Mr. Gatti, 20,500 shares; Mr. Grube, 20,500 shares; Mr. Hauck, 27,000 shares; Mr. Jones, 20,500 shares; Mr. Kirk, 20,500 shares; Mr. Krieger, 27,000 shares; Mr. Miller, 70,000 shares; Mr. Papernick, 7,500 shares; Mr. Spadafora, 15,500 shares; Ms. Toretti, 20,500 shares; Mr. Young, 45,000; and all other executive officers as a group, 127,000 shares. Mr. Thomas Brice disclaims beneficial ownership of 49,796 shares that are directly owned by his spouse. Mr. Todd Brice disclaims beneficial ownership of 4,776 that are held for his daughters. Mr. Miller disclaims beneficial ownership of 17,760 shares that are directly owned by his spouse. Mr. Papernick disclaims beneficial ownership of 23,985 shares held in trust for his grandchildren with his spouse as trustee. Mr. Polley disclaims beneficial ownership of 99 shares that are directly owned by his spouse.

 

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(2) Nominee for election to the S&T Board.
 * Less than 1% of the outstanding Common Stock.

Section 16(a) Beneficial Ownership Reporting Compliance

Section 16(a) of the Exchange Act requires S&T’s directors and executive officers, and persons who own more than 10% of S&T’s stock, to report to the SEC certain of their transactions with respect to S&T’s Common Stock. The SEC reporting rules require that changes in beneficial ownership generally be reported on Form 4 within two business days after the date on which the change occurs. A Form 3 to report stock holdings in S&T must be filed within ten days of when a director, executive officer or person who owns more than 10% of S&T’s stock becomes subject to Section 16(a) of the Exchange Act.

Officers, Directors and greater than ten percent shareholders are required by SEC regulation to furnish us with copies of all Section 16(a) forms they file. To our knowledge, based solely on a review of the copies of such reports furnished to us and written representations that no other reports were required, during the fiscal year ended December 31, 2009, all Section 16(a) filing requirements applicable to our officers, Directors and greater than ten percent beneficial owners were filed in a timely manner, with the exception of the following:

Director Alan Papernick did not timely file Form 4 for shares purchased indirectly for his grandchildren. Mr. Papernick disclaims beneficial ownership of these shares. Director Emeritus Ruth Grant did not timely file a Form 4 for shares sold from a charitable trust. Executive Officer Michelle Petrovsky did not timely file a Form 4 for shares sold as a result of redistribution in the Thrift Plan for Employees of S&T Bank. Each of these late filings was inadvertent, and the required filings have since been made.

 

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PROPOSAL 1—ELECTION OF DIRECTORS

General

The By-laws of S&T provide that the number of directors constituting the S&T Board will consist of not less than 12 nor more than 25, with the exact number to be fixed and determined from time to time by resolution of a majority of the S&T Board. Currently, the S&T Board has fixed the number of directors at 17. The S&T Board has determined that the following eleven directors are independent under the NASDAQ listing standards: Mr. Brenzia, Mr. Delaney, Mr. Donnelly, Mr. Grube, Mr. Jones, Mr. Kirk, Mr. Milano, Mr. Papernick, Mr. Rebich, Mr. Spadafora and Ms. Toretti.

At the 2008 annual meeting, amendments were approved and adopted by S&T’s shareholders to Article Nine of S&T’s Articles of Incorporation and Sections 206 and 207 of S&T’s By-laws to declassify the S&T Board, remove the class designations for each of the director’s terms and institute annual voting for each director to serve a one-year term. Annual elections are being phased in as current terms of directors expire. The four Class 3 directors will serve the remainder of their three-year terms until the 201l annual meeting, and annual elections will begin for those directors upon expiration of their terms. All directors will be elected annually beginning at the 2011 annual meeting. Unless otherwise instructed, the proxy holders will vote the proxies received by them for the nominees named below.

The nominees were each recommended to the Board by our Nominating and Corporate Governance Committee (the “Nominating Committee”). All of the nominees have indicated their willingness to serve, if elected, but if any should be unable or unwilling to serve, proxies may be voted for a substitute nominee designated by the S&T Board. There are no family relationships between or among any of our directors, executive officers or persons nominated or chosen to become a director or executive officer, except that Thomas Brice, a nominee for director, is the father of Todd Brice, the current President and Chief Executive Officer.

Set forth below is a brief description of the principal occupation and business experience of each of our nominees for director and our continuing directors whose terms will expire at the 2011 annual meeting of shareholders, as well as the summary of our views as to the qualifications of each nominee and continuing director to serve on the S&T Board and each board committee of which he or she is a member. Our views are informed not only by the current and prior employment and educational background of our directors, but also by the S&T Board’s experience in working with their fellow directors. Each director has served on the S&T Board for at least two years, and certain nominees and continuing directors have twenty or more years of experience on the S&T Board. Accordingly, the S&T Board has had significant experience with the incumbent directors and has had the opportunity to assess the contributions that the directors have made to the board as well as their industry knowledge, judgment and leadership capabilities.

Director Nominees to be Elected at the 2010 Annual Meeting:

John N. Brenzia, 68, has served as a director of S&T since 2008 and is a member of the Audit Committee and the Nominating and Corporate Governance Committee. Mr. Brenzia has been Vice President & Chief Financial Officer of Irwin Car and Equipment since 2003. Mr. Brenzia, who joined our board following our acquisition of IBT Bancorp in 2008, has deep experience in finance and banking relationships. Mr. Brenzia served on the board of IBT Bancorp and was a member of its audit committee, and such experience as a director of a similar regional financial institution provides valuable insight to the board. In addition, his service as a director on the S&T Board assists with integration efforts in connection with the acquisition of IBT Bancorp. Mr. Brenzia’s career serving in various management positions, specifically in the finance and treasury divisions, and in the manufacturing industry, provide the board with expertise regarding credit, contract administration, analysis of financial statements, operations and lending and borrowing practices. His management expertise, and experience in treasury and finance divisions, and his service on the audit committee of IBT Bancorp, qualifies him to serve on our Audit Committee, and his broad experiences as a director of IBT Bancorp provides a strong background to serve on our Nominating and Corporate Governance Committee.

 

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Thomas A. Brice, 69, has served as a director of S&T since 1980. Mr. Brice has been Vice President of Douds, Inc., a retail interior furnishings business, since 1964. We believe that Mr. Brice’s 46 years of experience in the local retail industry provides valuable insight to the S&T Board, particularly regarding consumer credit and risk exposure. Additionally, Mr. Brice’s deep experience with consumer and customer relations, and marketing and labor relations issues, provides the S&T Board with the important perspective of its corporate retail borrowers.

John J. Delaney, 68, has served as a director of S&T since 1987 and is a member of the Compensation and Benefits Committee and the Nominating and Corporate Governance Committee. Mr. Delaney has been the President of Delaney Chevrolet, Buick, Honda, Hyundai, Subaru since 1971 and President of Riehle Chevrolet, Inc. since 1983. We believe that Mr. Delaney’s nearly 40 years of experience in the retail auto industry provides the Board with important experience regarding consumer lending and loan risk management. Mr. Delaney’s extensive board experience during his career, including his service as a director of the board of the Indiana Chamber of Commerce, the Indiana Industrial Development Authority and the Indiana County Airport Authority Board, affords him valuable insight into the local business community. His management experience and board service, along with his deep experience as a long-standing member of the S&T Board, also qualifies him to serve on our Compensation and Benefits Committee and our Nominating and Corporate Governance Committee. We also believe that his experience operating a series of auto dealerships also provides the Compensation and Benefits Committee with experience regarding motivating our executive team through our various compensation plans and policies.

Michael J. Donnelly, 52, has served as a director of S&T since 2001 and is a member of the Compensation and Benefits Committee and the Nominating and Corporate Governance Committee. Mr. Donnelly has been President of Indiana Printing and Publishing Company, Inc since 1993. We believe that Mr. Donnelly’s deep experience in managing and operating a local business provides the S&T Board with valuable insight into the issues addressing our local corporate and consumer borrowers. His experience in developing appropriate compensation for the executives and senior management of his company qualifies him to serve on our Compensation and Benefits Committee, and his experience on our board, as well as his management experience with a large publicly traded corporation, provides him with a solid background for service on our Nominating and Corporate Governance Committee.

Jeffrey D. Grube, 56, has served as a director of S&T since 1997 and is a member of the Audit Committee and the Nominating and Corporate Governance Committee. Mr. Grube has served as President of B.F.G. Manufacturing Service, Inc. since 1990. Mr. Grube’s career as an executive in the manufacturing industry includes financial and engineering experience. His extensive experience working with small and medium-sized businesses provides the S&T Board with valuable experience regarding potential borrowers and customers, customer relations, lending issues and credit risk. Mr. Grube also served as a director on the board of a privately held company that supplies compliance products to lending solutions. Mr. Grube’s executive and board experience in the manufacturing sector, and experience with financial institutions, allows him to bring relevant insight regarding regulatory and financial compliance issues to our Audit Committee and Nominating and Corporate Governance Committee.

Frank W. Jones, 65, has served as a director of S&T since 1997 and is a member of the Audit Committee and the Nominating and Corporate Governance Committee. Mr. Jones is an attorney and has been practicing independently in Allegheny County since 1970. Mr. Jones joined the S&T Board following the acquisition of People’s Bank of Unity, a regional financial institution, where he served on the board of directors. Mr. Jones assisted the S&T Board with integration and strategic issues following the acquisition. Mr. Jones’ legal practice, which focuses on estate administration and estate litigation, allows him to provide valuable insight to the S&T Board specifically with respect to our Wealth Management Group, including on such issues as customer acquisition, marketing, strategic considerations, compliance and legal risk. We believe that Mr. Jones’ experience as a director of a similar bank to S&T, together with his legal experience as it relates to one of our core businesses and his 13 years of experience on the S&T Board, qualifies him to serve as a director and serve on our Audit Committee and Nominating and Corporate Governance Committee.

 

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Joseph A. Kirk, 70, has served as director of S&T since 1993 and is a member of the Audit Committee and the Compensation and Benefits Committee. Mr. Kirk has been President of Beaver Meadow Creamery, Inc. since 1975 and has served as chief executive officer and chairman of the board since 1992. Mr. Kirk’s experience leading Beaver Meadow, and his career in manufacturing provides valuable insight to the S&T Board regarding their corporate customer base, lending issues and credit risk. We also believe that his experience as chief executive officer also provides the Compensation and Benefits Committee with insight and perspective regarding motivating our executive team through our various compensation plans and policies, and his experience with Beaver Meadow’s financial matters adds broad experience to our Audit Committee.

David L. Krieger, 66, has served as a director of S&T since 2007. Mr. Krieger is retired but was formerly Senior Executive Vice President and Commercial Lending Group Manager of S&T and S&T Bank. We believe that Mr. Krieger’s 24 years of experience at S&T, including leading our commercial lending group, adds valuable experience to the S&T Board. Mr. Krieger has deep knowledge of our lending practices and our customer base, and his commercial lending experience, both at S&T and at his prior employer, provide the S&T Board with significant operational insights regarding credit risk.

James C. Miller, 64, has been Chairman of S&T and S&T Bank since 2004 and a director since 1993. Mr. Miller is retired but was formerly Chief Executive Officer of S&T and S&T Bank from 1998 until 2008 and President of S&T and S&T Bank from 1993 until 2005. We believe that Mr. Miller’s career of banking experience, including 39 years with S&T or an affiliate bank and his service as our former chief executive officer, provide him with a unique perspective of our business, including our markets, customer base, senior management, key employees, potential customers, and operations and finances, qualifies him to serve on the S&T Board.

Alan Papernick, 72, has been a director of S&T since 1997 and is a member of the Compensation and Benefits Committee. Mr. Papernick is an attorney and has been affiliated with the firm of Papernick and Gefsky, LLC and its predecessor, Papernick & Gefsky, P.C. since 1970. Mr. Papernick’s wide-ranging practice and breadth of experience has been of particular value in assisting the S&T Board with evaluating business issues. Also, as the owner of multiple real estate interests in our geographic market, Mr. Papernick brings insightful real estate experience to the S&T Board, and assists the Board with evaluating credit risk and lending opportunities with regard to real estate developers and other consumer and commercial borrowers purchasing or leasing real estate interests. Mr. Papernick’s deep legal experience, specifically in our market, brings valuable experience to the Compensation and Benefits Committee, particularly regarding structuring executive compensation policies and reviewing executive compensation and benefit agreements.

Robert Rebich, Jr., 68, has been a director of S&T since 2008 and is a member of the Audit Committee and the Compensation and Benefits Committee. Mr. Rebich has been President of Amax Corporation, a property management firm, since 1996. Mr. Rebich joined the S&T Board following our acquisition of IBT Bancorp, and has provided the S&T Board with valuable transitional and strategic insights, in addition to advising on integration and operational issues. We believe that Mr. Rebich’s experience in founding and operating a precision manufacturing company, in addition to his experience as a director of IBT Bancorp, provides the S&T Board with instrumental insight into commercial lending opportunities and risk that are critical to our business. His experience with respect to the financial aspects of operating his manufacturing company provides valuable perspective and expertise to our Audit Committee, and his management and prior board experience with a similar financial institution adds significant value to our Compensation and Benefits Committee, including advising on executive compensation policies and enhancing shareholder value.

Christine J. Toretti, 53, has been a director of S&T since 1984. Ms. Toretti has been Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of S. W. Jack Drilling Company since 1990, a partner in C&N Company, a gas driller and production company since 1971 and the President of The Jack Company since 1988. Ms. Toretti’s deep industrial and energy experience provides the S&T Board with a strategic outlook regarding lending and other commercial opportunities in these sectors, and her experience of leading a family business allows her to offer the S&T Board valuable management perspective and credit risk assessment with respect to our industrial and oil and gas borrowers.

 

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Charles G. Urtin, 63, has been Vice Chairman of S&T and S&T Bank since 2008. Mr. Urtin is retired but was formerly President and Chief Executive Officer of IBT Bancorp, Inc. and Irwin Bank. We believe that Mr. Urtin’s 40 years of banking experience, including serving as chief executive officer of IBT Bancorp and Irwin Bank, provides the S&T Board with valuable industry, strategic, financial and operational insight, and his long-standing presence as a leader of a regional bank operating in our geographic market assists the S&T Board with customer acquisition, credit risk analysis and loan portfolio management. Mr. Urtin has assisted the S&T Board with transition and integration issues following our acquisition of IBT Bancorp in 2008.

Continuing Directors Whose Terms Will Expire at the 2011 Annual Meeting:

Todd D. Brice, 47, has been a director of S&T since 2005. Mr. Brice has been President and Chief Executive Officer of S&T and S&T Bank since 2008 and was formerly President and Chief Operating Officer of S&T and S&T Bank from 2004 until 2008 and Executive Vice President of Commercial Lending at S&T and S&T Bank from 2002 until 2004. With 25 years of banking experience, including seven years of senior management experience at S&T, we believe that Mr. Brice’s deep industry knowledge and his expertise in our operations, commercial lending and corporate strategy provides the S&T Board with significant insight across a broad range of issues critical to our business. As our chief executive officer, Mr. Brice provides unique insight to the S&T Board regarding our day-to-day operations, customer information, competitive intelligence, general trends in national and local banking and issues regarding our financial results.

William J. Gatti, 68, has been a director of S&T since 1993. Mr. Gatti is retired but is the founder and has served as the chief executive officer of Gatti LTC Pharmacy, a long term care provider, and was the founder and former chief executive officer and chairman of Millennium Pharmacy Systems, Inc., a long term care provider, from 2003 until 2008. He was also the owner and operator of Gatti Retail Pharmacy as well as Gatti Medical Supply, a medical distribution company. We believe that Mr. Gatti’s experience in the medical industry offers valuable perspective and significant expertise to the S&T Board, and provides the S&T Board with a strategic outlook and management experience into operations, and lending opportunities in the medical and medical care industries.

James V. Milano, 50, has been a director of S&T since 2006 and is a member of the Audit Committee and the Nominating and Corporate Governance Committee. Mr. Milano is a Certified Public Accountant and independent consultant. Mr. Milano was Chief Financial Officer of NEP Supershooters L.P. from 2001 to 2005. In total, Mr. Milano has 28 years of experience in public accounting, private industry and independent consulting on accounting and financial matters, including accounting, mergers and acquisitions advisory, capital markets and business management and process improvement. We believe that Mr. Milano’s background in accounting and finance, as well as his operating experience, brings a valuable perspective to the S&T Board both with respect to accounting and financial and strategic aspects of S&T’s business and to the Audit Committee on which he serves as “audit committee financial expert.”

Charles A. Spadafora, 68, has been a director of S&T since 1987 and is a member of the Compensation and Benefits Committee. Mr. Spadafora has been President of Colonial Motor Mart since 1975, President of Colonial Toyota since 1989, and President of Indiana Colonial Nissan d/b/a Mark Arbuckle Nissan since 2008. Mr. Spadafora has over 40 years of business experience in both small and large enterprises, with extensive business experience and involvement as a community leader in a large portion of the markets in which S&T operates. We believe Mr. Spadafora’s over 20 years of service as a director of S&T and his decades of extensive involvement in communities which we serve provides the S&T Board with valuable perspective on the issues facing S&T and insight into the markets we serve, and assists our Compensation and Benefits Committee in developing our compensation policies and practices in order to secure talented employees, management and directors.

Board Recommendation

THE S&T BOARD RECOMMENDS A VOTE “FOR” EACH OF THE NOMINEES.

 

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CORPORATE GOVERNANCE

Director Independence

The S&T Board determines annually that a majority of directors serving on the S&T Board are independent as defined in the NASDAQ listing standards. In 2009, the S&T Board also considered all direct and indirect transactions described in “Transactions with Related Parties” and “Compensation Committee Interlocks and Insider Participation” in determining whether the director is independent. There were no other related party transactions other than those described in the aforementioned sections of this Proxy Statement. The Nominating Committee has the delegated responsibility to evaluate each director’s qualifications for independence for the S&T Board and for the committees of the S&T Board. Following review of the objective measures, the Nominating Committee and S&T Board also consider on a subjective basis each director’s personal and/or business relationships, regardless of dollar amount.

On March 15, 2010, the S&T Board determined the following eleven directors are independent under the NASDAQ listing rules: Mr. Brenzia, Mr. Delaney, Mr. Donnelly, Mr. Grube, Mr. Jones, Mr. Kirk, Mr. Milano, Mr. Papernick, Mr. Rebich, Mr. Spadafora and Ms. Toretti. As discussed below, all members of the Compensation Committee and the Nominating Committee are independent under this NASDAQ rule. In addition, the S&T Board determined that each of the members of the Audit Committee are independent under applicable SEC and NASDAQ rules.

Board and Committee Meetings

The S&T Board has implemented a formal policy that strongly encourages director attendance at the annual meeting of shareholders. In 2009, all of S&T’s directors attended the annual meeting of shareholders, except for Directors Milano and Rebich, who were unable to attend due to personal reasons that were unavoidable and for good cause. Independent members of the S&T Board meet at least twice per year in regularly scheduled executive sessions with an independent committee chairperson presiding over all executive sessions on a rotating basis.

During 2009, the S&T Board held 17 board meetings, with the following number of meetings held by the S&T Board committees: Audit, nine; Compensation and Benefits, five; Nominating and Corporate Governance, six; and Wealth Management Group Oversight, four. All directors attended at least 75% of the total number of meetings of the S&T Board and committees.

Board Structure; Separate Roles of Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

There are currently 17 directors comprising the S&T’s Board. The S&T Board has established four Board Committees: Audit, Compensation and Benefits, Nominating and Corporate Governance, and Wealth Management Group Oversight. Directors also serve on a rotating basis on our Loan Committee.

We have a separate chairman of our Board of Directors, a non-executive position, and a Chief Executive Officer.

The S&T Board believes that, as part of our efforts to embrace and adopt good corporate governance practices, different individuals should hold the positions of Chairman of the Board and Chief Executive Officer to aid in the Board’s oversight of management. We believe that by having a separate Chairman and CEO, we are better able to protect shareholder interests by providing independent oversight of the officers.

The duties of non-executive Chairman of the Board include:

 

   

presiding over all meetings of the S&T Board;

 

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preparing the agenda for S&T Board meetings with the Corporate Secretary and in consultation with the CEO and other members of the S&T Board;

 

   

assigning tasks to the appropriate committees of the S&T Board;

 

   

ensuring the information flows openly between senior management and the S&T Board; and

 

   

presiding over all meetings of shareholders.

We believe that the S&T Board, the Board Committees as presently constituted and the leadership structure of the S&T Board enables the S&T Board to fulfill its role in overseeing and monitoring the management and operations of S&T and protecting the interests of S&T and its shareholders.

The S&T Board’s Role in Risk Oversight

Role of the S&T Board

Our Board of Directors is in the process of implementing an enterprise-wide approach to risk management, designed to support the achievement of organizational objectives, including strategic objectives, to improve long-term organizational performance and enhance shareholder value. A fundamental part of risk management is not only understanding the risks a company faces in its current and future activities and what steps management is taking to manage those risks, but also understanding what level of risk is appropriate for a regional full-service financial institution, particularly as a result of recent legislative and regulatory changes and our participation in the TARP Capital Purchase Program.

Currently, our Board administers its risk oversight function directly, through the Audit Committee, the Compensation and Benefits Committee (the “Compensation Committee”), the Risk Management Committee and through director participation in the Loan Committee.

The Audit Committee regularly discusses with our Chief Risk Officer (the “CRO”) our major risk exposures, their potential impact on S&T, and the steps we take to manage them. Pursuant to the terms of our Audit Committee charter, the CRO is accountable to both the Audit Committee and our Chief Executive Officer. The Audit Committee reviews and approves the appointment, replacement or dismissal of the CRO, and discusses the organizational structure and staffing regarding risk management, internal controls and regulatory compliance. The Audit Committee has engaged an independent consulting firm to provide a comprehensive approach to assisting the CRO in further developing an effective enterprise risk management process and environment that links corporate strategy and risk management.

The CRO regularly meets with management, including the Chief Executive Officer, to discuss various primary areas of risk for the Company, including credit matters and risks related to our loan portfolio; liquidity and market risks; capital requirements and ratios and related financial risk; legal, regulatory and compliance risks; and operational and strategic risks. As necessary, the Audit Committee meets with the CRO to discuss and analyze risks to S&T without management present. The CRO also makes a presentation to the full Board of Directors at each Board meeting on risk-related matters.

The Audit Committee also is responsible for monitoring our compliance risk with respect to regulatory and legal matters, and also focuses on financial risk, including internal controls. The Audit Committee annually reviews and evaluates our internal audit function and meets with our Chief Audit Executive to review and assess internal audit risks including executive sessions without management present.

Our Risk Management Committee, which is comprised of members of our senior management, including the Chief Risk Officer, President and CEO, Chief Financial Officer, Chief Operating Officer, Chief Credit Officer, Chief Audit Executive, Chief Compliance Officer and Chief Lending Officer meets regularly to assess and manage our risk exposure and the necessary actions undertaken to manage and mitigate such risks. The Audit Committee reviews the minutes of the Risk Management Committee meetings.

 

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The Compensation Committee is responsible for assessing and mitigating risks associated with S&T’s compensation practices, both with respect to S&T’s Named Executive Officers and its employees generally. The Compensation Committee reviews the incentive compensation arrangements for S&T’s Named Executive Officers with the CRO and S&T’s other senior risk officers to ensure that the compensation arrangements do not encourage the Named Executive Officers to take unnecessary and excessive risks that threaten the value of S&T. The Compensation Committee meets at least semi-annually to discuss and evaluate the risk posed to S&T by its employee compensation plans.

Our Loan Committee is comprised of nine directors, the Chief Lending Officer and the Chief Credit Officer. Directors serve on the Loan Committee on a rotating basis so that all directors serve from time to time on the Loan Committee. Participation on the Loan Committee enables directors to assess and monitor the risk associated with credits being brought into S&T Bank’s loan portfolio on the front end. The Loan Committee meets on a monthly basis and reviews all loans and loan participations proposed to be entered into by S&T Bank in excess of $5 million, outstanding six rated or substandard credits in excess of $2 million and credit relationships with overall exposure in excess of $24 million.

Employee Compensation Policies and Managing Risk

We believe our approach to goal setting, setting of targets with payouts at multiple levels of performance, and evaluation of performance results assist in mitigating excessive risk-taking that could harm our value or reward poor judgment by our executives. We believe that several features of our compensation policies and programs reflect sound risk management practices, such as basing incentive awards on the achievement of a predetermined earnings per share goal, an audited number, and the granting of restricted stock subject to a one or two year vesting that serves the additional purpose of encouraging senior officers to make decisions currently that promote long-term growth and retention combined with stock ownership guidelines. All awards granted under the 2010 incentive plans will be subject to Compensation Committee review and approval based upon corporate and/or individual performance. The incentive plan for senior management, as described in the Compensation Discussion and Analysis section below, contains a “Shareholder Protection Feature,” which provides that awards will not be made unless S&T maintains well capitalized capital ratio requirements, as established by applicable regulatory authorities. We believe we have allocated our compensation among base salary and short and long-term compensation target opportunities in such a way as to not encourage excessive risk-taking. The Compensation Committee also reviews compensation and benefits plans affecting employees in addition to those applicable to executive officers, and engaged Buck Consultants LLC (“Buck”), an independent consultant, to evaluate and review all S&T employee incentive compensation plans and policies to ensure that such plans and policies do not motivate any employee, including executive officers, to conduct inappropriate or unnecessary risk-taking and do not encourage behavior focused on short-term results rather than long-term value creation. Buck’s report conclusions confirmed that such policies and plans do not lead to excessive risk-taking. The S&T Board determined that it is not reasonably likely that S&T’s compensation and benefit plans would have a material adverse effect on the Company.

Audit Committee

The members of the Audit Committee are John Brenzia, Jeffrey Grube, Frank Jones, Joseph Kirk, James Milano and Robert Rebich, Jr. All members meet the independence standards for audit committees established by the SEC and NASDAQ. A written charter approved by the S&T Board governs the committee and includes the provisions required by the NASDAQ listing standards. A copy of the charter is included on S&T’s website www.stbancorp.com, under Corporate Governance. The Audit Committee has provided information regarding the functions performed by the Audit Committee and its membership in the “Report of the Audit Committee,” included in this Proxy Statement on page 46.

James Milano has been designated by the S&T Board as S&T’s “audit committee financial expert.” The S&T Board has determined that Mr. Milano meets the qualifications of an audit committee financial expert under

 

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SEC regulations adopted under the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002. Mr. Milano is a CPA with 20 years of public accounting experience, including managing partner of Datemasch Milano & Associates and four years of experience serving as CFO of NEP Supershooters L.P. He has a BS in business administration and an MS in taxation. This experience and education gives Mr. Milano an understanding of U.S. generally accepted accounting principles and financial statements; the ability to assess general applications of such principles in connection with accounting for estimates, accruals and reserves; experience preparing, auditing, analyzing or evaluating financial statements presenting a breadth and level of complexity of accounting issues that are comparable to S&T’s financial statements; an understanding of internal control over financial reporting; and an understanding of audit committee functions.

Compensation and Benefits Committee

The members of the Compensation Committee are John Delaney, Michael Donnelly, Joseph Kirk, Alan Papernick, Robert Rebich, Jr., and Charles Spadafora. The Compensation Committee’s function is to recommend to the S&T Board action on executive compensation and compensation and benefit changes brought to it by management. A written charter approved by the S&T Board governs the committee. A copy of the charter is included on S&T’s website www.stbancorp.com, under Corporate Governance. The Compensation Committee is comprised entirely of independent board members, as defined by NASDAQ listing standards.

The Compensation Committee is responsible for our stated compensation strategies, goals and purposes; ensuring that there is a strong link between the economic interests of management and shareholders; ensuring that members of management are rewarded appropriately for their contributions to company growth and profitability; and that the executive compensation strategy supports organization objectives and shareholder interests. The Compensation Committee must provide clear direction to management to ensure that its policies and procedures are carried out in a manner that achieves balance and is consistent with safety and soundness. It approves any material exceptions or adjustments to the incentive compensation arrangements established for senior executives, and carefully considers and monitors the effects of any approved exceptions or adjustments. It receives and reviews, on an annual or more frequent basis, an assessment by management, with appropriate input from risk-management personnel, of the effectiveness of the design and operation of the organization’s incentive compensation system in providing appropriate risk-taking incentives. It also reviews periodic reports of incentive compensation awards and payments relative to risk outcomes on a backward-looking basis. It ensures that the incentive compensation arrangements for the Company do not encourage employees to take risks that are beyond our ability to manage effectively. It also performs other related duties as defined in its written charter.

The process, policies and specific determinations of the Compensation Committee with respect to compensation of our named executive officers for fiscal 2009 are described in greater detail in the “Compensation Discussion and Analysis” section of this Proxy Statement.

Additionally, because S&T is participating in the Troubled Asset Relief Program (“TARP”) Capital Purchase Program (“CPP”) established by the U.S. Department of Treasury (“U.S. Treasury”) under the Emergency Economic Stabilization Act of 2008 (“EESA”), the Compensation Committee has additional responsibilities under the EESA, as amended by the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 (the “ARRA”). Those additional responsibilities include the following:

 

   

discussing, evaluating and reviewing with S&T’s senior risk officers, at least every six months, the compensation plans for S&T’s Named Executive Officers to ensure that such compensation arrangements do not encourage the Named Executive Officers to take unnecessary risks that threaten the value of S&T;

 

   

discussing, evaluating and reviewing with S&T’s senior risk officers, at least every six months, all of S&T’s employee compensation plans in light of the risks posed to S&T by such plans and how to limit such risks;

 

   

discussing, evaluating and reviewing, at least every six months, all of S&T’s employee compensation plans to ensure that the plans do not encourage the manipulation of S&T’s reported earnings to enhance the compensation of any employee; and

 

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annually certifying its completion of its reviews of S&T’s compensation plans and providing disclosure regarding (i) how the Named Executive Officer compensation plans do no encourage unnecessary and excessive risks, (ii) the risks posed by S&T’s employee compensation plans and how such risks were limited, and (iii) how S&T has ensured the its employee plans do not encourage the manipulation of earnings to enhance the compensation of any employees.

The Compensation and Benefits Committee Report is on page 33 of this Proxy Statement.

Nominating and Corporate Governance Committee

The members of the Nominating Committee are John Brenzia, John Delaney, Michael Donnelly, Jeffrey Grube, Frank Jones and James Milano. The Nominating Committee was formed in 2003, and the functions of this committee are to assist the S&T Board in reviewing the qualifications and independence of the members of the S&T Board and its various committees on a periodic basis as well as the composition of the S&T Board as a whole; to oversee the evaluation of the performance of the S&T Board and its committees as a whole; to select director nominees for election by shareholders; and to provide guidance to the S&T Board on corporate governance issues. In addition, the Nominating Committee reviews all transactions with related parties, as further described on page 44 of this Proxy Statement. A written charter approved by the S&T Board governs the committee. A copy of the charter is included on S&T’s website www.stbancorp.com, under Corporate Governance. The committee is comprised entirely of independent board members, as defined by NASDAQ listing standards.

The Nominating Committee has adopted, and the S&T Board has ratified, a corporate policy for identifying and evaluating candidates for membership on the S&T Board. The Nominating Committee identifies potential candidates based on suggestions from directors, officers of S&T and S&T shareholders. The Nominating Committee will consider shareholder nominations for directors in accordance with the procedure set forth in Section 202 of S&T’s By-laws and applicable law. The procedure provides that a notice relating to the nomination must be timely given in writing to the Secretary of S&T prior to the meeting. To be timely, the notice must be delivered not earlier than the close of business on the 120th day, nor later than the close of business on the 60th day, immediately preceding the meeting. Such notice must be accompanied by the nominee’s written consent to be named in the applicable proxy statement and contain information relating to the business experience and background and the nominee’s holdings of Common Stock and information with respect to the nominating shareholder. There are no differences in the manner in which the Nominating Committee evaluates candidates for membership on the S&T Board based on whether such candidate is recommended by a shareholder, the Nominating Committee, or by any other source.

The Nominating Committee takes into account all factors and criteria it considers appropriate, which includes but is not limited to: high personal and professional integrity; sound judgment and exceptional ability; business experience; area of residence in relationship to S&T’s geographic market; other directorship experience that would be beneficial to the S&T Board and management of S&T; diversity of experience relative to that of other S&T directors; diversity of age, gender, minority status, level and type of education; whether the candidate will be effective in serving the long-term interests of S&T’s shareholders; whether the candidate has sufficient time and energy to devote to the affairs of S&T; whether the candidate possesses a willingness to challenge and stimulate management and the ability to work as part of a team; whether the candidate meets the independence requirements of the NASDAQ listing standards; whether the candidate is free from conflicts of interest with S&T; and any other factors related to the ability and willingness of a new director to serve, or an existing director to continue his or her service.

The Nominating Committee may engage a third party search firm to assist it in identifying director candidates, but the Nominating Committee did not do so in 2009. S&T did not receive any timely shareholder nominations for director for consideration for this Annual Meeting. Accordingly, S&T has not rejected or refused such candidates.

 

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Shareholder Communications with Directors

Shareholders who desire to communicate with the S&T Board or a specific director should send any communication, in writing, to S&T Bancorp, Inc., 800 Philadelphia Street, Indiana, Pennsylvania 15701, ATTN: Corporate Secretary. Any such communication should state the number of shares beneficially owned by the shareholder. S&T’s Corporate Secretary will initially review all communications received in accordance with the Shareholders Communication Policy adopted by the S&T Board. The Corporate Secretary will relay all such communications to the appropriate director or directors on a periodic basis unless the Corporate Secretary determines that the communication does not relate to the business or affairs of S&T or the functioning or constitution of the S&T Board or any of its committees; relates to routine or insignificant matters that do not warrant the attention of the S&T Board; is an advertisement or other commercial solicitation or communication; is frivolous or offensive; or is otherwise not appropriate for delivery to directors. The director or directors who receive any such communication will have discretion to determine whether the subject matter of the communication should be brought to the attention of the full S&T Board or one or more of its committees and whether any response to the person sending the communication is appropriate. Any such response will be made through S&T’s management and only in accordance with S&T’s policies and procedures, applicable laws and regulations relating to the disclosure of information.

Code of Conduct and Ethics

The S&T Board has adopted a Code of Conduct for directors, officers and employees, which is posted on S&T’s website www.stbancorp.com, under Corporate Governance. The Code of Conduct addresses the professional, honest and candid conduct of each director, officer and employee; conflicts of interest, disclosure process, compliance with laws, rules and regulations (including insider trading laws); corporate opportunities, confidentiality, fair dealing, protection and proper use of company assets; and encourages the reporting of any illegal or unethical behavior. A waiver for an executive officer or director of S&T may be made only by the S&T Board and must be promptly disclosed as required by SEC or NASDAQ rules. S&T will disclose any such waivers, as well as any amendments to the Code of Conduct, on S&T’s website. Shareholders may obtain a printed copy of the Code of Conduct by contacting the Secretary at the address previously provided.

Compensation Committee Interlocks and Insider Participation

The members of the Compensation Committee during 2009 were John Delaney, Michael Donnelly, Joseph Kirk, Alan Papernick, Robert Rebich, Jr. and Charles Spadafora.

During 2009, S&T Bank made payments of $170,899 for the purchase of printing services and promotional items from companies owned or controlled by Director Donnelly. In addition, S&T Bank may make extensions of credit to members of the Compensation Committee in the ordinary course of business and on the same terms as available to other non-related parties. See “Transactions with Related Parties.”

No member of the Compensation Committee was at any time during fiscal 2009 an officer or employee of our company or any of our subsidiaries and no member has ever served as an executive officer of S&T. None of our executive officers serves or, during fiscal 2009, served as a member of the Board of Directors or the Compensation Committee of any entity that has one or more executive officers serving as a member of our Board of Directors or Compensation Committee.

 

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DIRECTOR COMPENSATION

The Nominating Committee annually reviews the S&T director compensation. S&T’s director compensation is designed to align the board of directors with its shareholders and to attract, motivate, and retain high performing members critical to our company’s success.

The following table provides information concerning compensation paid by S&T Bank to its non-employee directors during 2009.

Director Compensation Table for Fiscal Year 2009

 

Name

   Fees
Earned or
Paid in
Cash ($)
   Stock
Awards ($)(1)(2)
   Option
Awards
($)
   Non-Equity
Incentive Plan
Compensation
($)
   Changes in
Pension Value
and
Nonqualified
Deferred
Compensation
Earnings ($)
   All Other
Compensation
($)
   Total ($)

John N. Brenzia

   41,300    20,000    0    0    0    0    61,300

Thomas A. Brice

   36,300    20,000    0    0    0    0    56,300

John J. Delaney

   41,600    20,000    0    0    0    0    61,600

Michael J. Donnelly

   40,800    20,000    0    0    0    0    60,800

William J. Gatti

   34,200    20,000    0    0    0    0    54,200

Jeffrey D. Grube

   46,900    20,000    0    0    0    0    66,900

Frank W. Jones

   49,800    20,000    0    0    0    0    69,800

Joseph A. Kirk

   59,445    20,000    0    0    0    0    79,445

David L. Krieger

   41,100    20,000    0    0    0    0    61,100

James V. Milano

   53,400    20,000    0    0    0    0    73,400

James C. Miller

   50,100    20,000    0    0    0    0    70,100

Alan Papernick

   42,400    20,000    0    0    0    0    62,400

Robert Rebich, Jr.

   32,700    20,000    0    0    0    0    52,700

Charles A. Spadafora

   37,700    20,000    0    0    0    0    57,700

Christine J. Toretti

   28,200    20,000    0    0    0    0    48,200

Charles G. Urtin

   35,800    20,000    0    0    0    0    55,800

 

(1) The S&T Board awarded 1,075 restricted shares of Common Stock to each director on the S&T Board on April 20, 2009, with such shares vesting in full on April 20, 2010. The fair market value of the Common Stock granted on April 20, 2009 was $18.61 per share. This column includes the value of these stock awards, all of which were issued under the 2003 Plan.
(2) As of December 31, 2009, each director had restricted stock awards of 1,075 shares. Also, each director had the following number of outstanding options to purchase the indicated number of shares of Common Stock: John Brenzia, 0 shares; Thomas Brice, 20,500 shares; John Delaney, 20,500 shares; Michael Donnelly, 15,500 shares; William Gatti, 20,500 shares; Jeffrey Grube, 20,500 shares; Frank Jones, 20,500 shares; Joseph Kirk, 20,500 shares; David Krieger, 27,000 shares; James Milano, 0 shares; James Miller, 70,000 shares; Alan Papernick, 7,500 shares; Robert Rebich, 0 shares; Charles Spadafora, 15,500 shares; Christine Toretti, 20,500 shares; and Charles Urtin, 0 shares.

 

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Directors Compensation

Employee members of the S&T Board receive no additional compensation for participation on the S&T Board. Non-employee Directors receive compensation for attending board and committee meetings, or training sessions, in the amounts described below.

 

Directors

    

Annual Cash Retainer

   $ 12,500

Stock Award(1)

     20,000

Board Meeting Attendance Fee

     1,000

Board Meeting Fee (phone)

     500

Board Committee Fee

     800

Board Committee Fee (phone)

     500

Training/Seminar Fee (on-site)

     800

Training/Seminar Fee (off-site)

     1,000

Committee Chairperson Retainer Fee

    

Audit

   $ 10,000

Nominating and Corporate Governance

     5,000

Compensation and Benefits

     5,000

Wealth Management Group Oversight

     1,000

 

(1) The number of shares granted is based on the fair market value of the common stock on the date of grant. The S&T Board awarded 1,075 restricted shares of Common Stock on April 20, 2009 with 100% vesting on April 20, 2010. The fair market value of Common Stock on April 20, 2009 was $18.61 per share.

S&T Bank has a loan committee comprised of directors who serve on a rotating basis. The directors are compensated in the amount of $800 per meeting attended. The Audit Committee Financial Expert receives a retainer fee of $7,500.

 

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PROPOSAL 2: RATIFICATION OF THE SELECTION OF INDEPENDENT REGISTERED

PUBLIC ACCOUNTING FIRM FOR FISCAL YEAR 2010

The Audit Committee of the S&T Board appointed the firm of KPMG LLP, independent registered public accounting firm, to audit and report on S&T’s financial statements for the fiscal year ending December 31, 2010. Action by shareholders is not required by law in the appointment of independent accountants. However, the S&T Board considers this selection to be an important issue and therefore is submitting the selection of KPMG LLP for ratification by the shareholders. If the shareholders do not ratify this selection, the selection will be reconsidered by the Audit Committee.

KPMG LLP has no direct or indirect financial interest in S&T or in any of its subsidiaries, nor has it had any connection with S&T or any of its subsidiaries in the capacity of promoter, underwriter, voting trustee, director, officer or employee. Representatives of KPMG LLP will be present at the Annual Meeting and will be afforded an opportunity to make a statement if they desire to do so. It also is expected they will be available to respond to appropriate questions.

Fees Paid to Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm

During the fiscal years ended December 31, 2009 and December 31, 2008, KPMG LLP served as S&T’s independent registered public accounting firm (“Independent Accountants”).

Fees for professional services provided by our Independent Accountants in each of the last two fiscal years, in each of the following categories are:

 

     2009    2008

Audit Fees

   $ 597,046    $ 809,165

Audit-Related Fees

     297,770      —  

Tax Fees

     43,186      44,500

All Other Fees

     2,500      127,100
             
   $ 940,502    $ 980,765
             

“Audit Fees” includes fees for audit services associated with the annual audit, the reviews of S&T’s quarterly reports on Form 10-Q, accounting consultations and SEC registration statements.

“Audit-Related Fees” includes fees related to an investigation as a result of a commercial loan customer misappropriating construction funds and a review of credit governance policies and procedures.

“Tax Fees” includes fees related to the preparation of federal and state income tax returns in 2009 and a transition cost recovery solutions study related to the IBT merger in 2008.

“Other Fees” include fees related to an International Financial Reporting Standards presentation conducted by KPMG for members of our senior management in 2009 and an engagement for assessing the adequacy and effectiveness of S&T’s internal audit function in 2008.

All 2008 and 2009 fees were paid to KPMG LLP, except that S&T paid $27,900 to Ernst & Young LLP for Audit Related Fees in 2008.

Pre-Approval Policies and Procedures

The Audit Committee is responsible for the approval of all services performed by the Independent Accountants. All services provided by the Independent Accountants in 2009 were pre-approved by the Audit Committee. The Audit Committee is required to pre-approve all audit and non-audit services performed by the

 

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Independent Accountants to assure that the provision of such services does not impair the Independent Accountant’s independence. In addition, any proposed services exceeding pre-approved cost levels will require specific pre-approval by the Audit Committee. The Audit Committee may delegate pre-approval authority to one or more of its members. The member or members to whom such authority is delegated will report any pre-approval decisions to the Audit Committee at its next scheduled meeting. The Audit Committee does not delegate its responsibilities to pre-approve services performed by the Independent Accountants to management.

Board Recommendation

THE S&T BOARD RECOMMENDS A VOTE “FOR” THE RATIFICATION OF THE

SELECTION OF KPMG LLP AS AN INDEPENDENT REGISTERED PUBLIC ACCOUNTING FIRM FOR FISCAL YEAR 2010.

 

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PROPOSAL 3: ADVISORY VOTE ON S&T’S EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION

Background of the Proposal

On January 16, 2009, S&T sold a series of its preferred stock and common stock purchase warrants to the U.S. Treasury under the TARP CPP created under the EESA. On February 17, 2009, the President of the United States signed into law ARRA. The ARRA contains a requirement that those financial institutions, like S&T, which have sold preferred stock and issued warrants to the U.S. Treasury under the CPP, permit a separate and non-binding shareholder vote to approve the compensation of such financial institution’s executive officers. The U.S. Treasury and the SEC issued guidance that requires participants in the CPP to submit to shareholders annually for their approval the executive compensation arrangements as described in the Compensation Discussion and Analysis and the tabular disclosure regarding named executive officer compensation (together with the accompanying narrative disclosure) in their proxy statements.

Executive Compensation

S&T believes that its compensation policies and procedures, which are reviewed and approved by the Compensation Committee, encourage a culture of pay for performance and are strongly aligned with the long- term interests of shareholders. Like most companies in the financial services sector, the ongoing financial downturn has had a significant negative impact on the price of S&T’s Common Stock. Consistent with the objective of aligning the compensation of S&T’s executive officers with the annual and long-term performance of S&T and the interests of S&T’s shareholders, these factors were reflected in the compensation of the chief executive officer, chief financial officer and the three other most highly-compensated executive officers of S&T (collectively, the “Named Executive Officers”) for 2009, and in a number of executive compensation-related actions that have been taken by S&T and the Compensation Committee with respect to 2010.

One of the main objectives of S&T’s executive compensation program is to align a significant portion of each executive officer’s total compensation with the annual and long-term performance of S&T and the interests of S&T’s shareholders. Effective January 1, 2010, the Compensation Committee commenced the administration of the 2010 Management Incentive Plan (the “2010 MIP”) for senior officers, defined as senior vice president and higher, as an annual incentive award to more closely align the interests of shareholders and senior management by making a greater percentage of senior management’s total compensation dependent on the annual performance of S&T and the achievement of individual departmental goals. The 2010 MIP replaced the previous management incentive plan, under which awards were fully payable in cash, which the Compensation Committee suspended in 2009 in response to the challenging economic environment. Senior management did not earn a short- or long-term bonus in 2009.

Further, the Compensation Committee believes that stock ownership by management and stock-based performance compensation arrangements are beneficial in aligning management and shareholders’ interests and serves as an executive retention tool through vesting requirements. The 2010 MIP continues to provide such an incentive through its granting of restricted stock. In addition, the Compensation Committee has established additional guidelines that limit senior management to selling only 25% of the vested restricted shares of Common Stock for current tax liabilities, until the officer achieves the stock ownership guidelines. The 2010 MIP and stock ownership guidelines are more fully described in the “Compensation Discussion and Analysis” in this Proxy Statement.

S&T and the Compensation Committee remain committed to the compensation philosophy, policies and objectives outlined under “Compensation Discussion and Analysis.” Named Executive Officer compensation for 2009 reflects the effectiveness of S&T’s executive compensation program in fulfilling its objectives during times of economic difficulty and more challenging financial performance. The Compensation Committee will continue to review all elements of the executive compensation program and take any steps it deems necessary to continue to fulfill the objectives of the program.

 

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Shareholders are encouraged to carefully review the “Compensation Discussion and Analysis” and “Executive Compensation” sections of this Proxy Statement for a detailed discussion of S&T’s executive compensation program.

As required by the ARRA and the guidance provided by the SEC, the S&T Board has authorized a shareholder vote on S&T’s executive compensation plans, programs and arrangements as reflected in the Compensation Discussion and Analysis, the disclosures regarding named executive officer compensation provided in the various tables included in this Proxy Statement, the accompanying narrative disclosures and the other compensation information provided in this Proxy Statement. This proposal, commonly known as a “Say on Pay” proposal, gives S&T’s shareholders the opportunity to endorse or not endorse S&T’s executive pay program and policies through the following non-binding resolution:

“RESOLVED, that the holders of the common stock of S&T approve the compensation of S&T’s executives named in the Summary Compensation Table of S&T’s Proxy Statement for the 2010 Annual Meeting of Shareholders, including the Compensation Discussion and Analysis, the Executive Compensation tables and the related disclosure contained in the Proxy Statement.”

Vote Required; Effect

Approval of S&T’s executive compensation policies and procedures would require that the number of votes cast in favor of the proposal exceed the number of votes cast against it. Abstentions and broker non-votes will not be counted as votes cast and therefore will not affect the determination as to whether S&T’s executive compensation policies and procedures are approved. Because this shareholder vote is advisory, it will not be binding upon the S&T Board. However, the Compensation Committee will take into account the outcome of the vote when considering future executive compensation arrangements.

Board Recommendation

THE S&T BOARD UNANIMOUSLY RECOMMENDS A VOTE “FOR” APPROVAL OF THIS ADVISORY PROPOSAL ON EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION. UNLESS MARKED TO THE CONTRARY, PROXIES RECEIVED BY S&T WILL BE VOTED “FOR” THIS PROPOSAL.

 

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EXECUTIVE OFFICERS OF THE REGISTRANT

As of March 19, 2010, the executive officers of S&T are:

 

Name

   Age   

Principal Occupation During Past 5 Years

   Officer of
Corporation
Since

Todd D. Brice

   47    President and Chief Executive Officer of S&T and S&T Bank, since April 2008; President and Chief Operating Officer of S&T and S&T Bank from August 2004 to April 2008; Executive Vice President of Commercial Lending at S&T and S&T Bank from December 2002 to August 2004    2002

Mark Kochvar

   49    Senior Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer since February 2010; Executive Vice President, Treasury and Investments since January 2008; Senior Vice President, Treasury and Investments, January 2001 to December 2007    2008

David G. Antolik

   43    Senior Executive Vice President, Chief Lending Officer, since January 2008; Executive Vice President, Commercial Lending, August 2004 to December 2007; Senior Vice President, Commercial Lending, January 2002 to August 2004    2004

Ernest J. Draganza

   45    Executive Vice President and Chief Risk Officer since February 2010; Senior Vice President, Risk Management Officer, January 2006 to January 2010; Vice President, Risk Management Officer, January 2004 to December 2005    2010

Edward C. Hauck

   57    Senior Executive Vice President and Chief Operating Officer, since April 2008; Senior Executive Vice President and Retail Banking and Support Services Group Manager, August 2004 to April 2008    1991

Thomas E. Kiral

   49    Executive Vice President and Managing Director of S&T Insurance Group, since June 2001    2001

Michelle Petrovsky

   43    Executive Vice President, Commercial Lending, since January 2008; Senior Vice President, Commercial Lending, January 2004 to December 2007    2008

Malcolm E. Polley

   47    President and Chief Investment Officer, Stewart Capital Advisors, LLC, since August 2005; Chairman & President, Stewart Capital Mutual Funds, since November 2006; Executive Vice President and Chief Investment Officer of S&T and S&T Bank, since January 2006; Senior Vice President, Chief Investment Officer, January 2003 to December 2005    2006

David P. Ruddock

   48    Executive Vice President, Information Technology and Operations, since January 2004    2004

 

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COMPENSATION DISCUSSION AND ANALYSIS

Compensation Approval Process

Executive compensation decisions are made by the six-member Compensation Committee of the S&T Board. Each member of the Compensation Committee is a non-employee director and qualifies as an independent director under the NASDAQ listing standards. The Compensation Committee independently decides the compensation that S&T will pay the chief executive officer. For the remaining executive officers, the chief executive officer makes recommendations to the Compensation Committee, which reviews, approves or adjusts the recommendations. The Compensation Committee meets in an executive session to discuss and finalize its decisions regarding the chief executive officer’s compensation. The S&T Board reviews all decisions relating to the compensation of executive officers, except for decisions about awards under the S&T Bancorp, Inc. 2003 Incentive Stock Plan (the “2003 Plan”) and the S&T 2010 Management Incentive Plan (the “2010 MIP”), which are made solely by the Compensation Committee. The Compensation Committee may delegate to its chairperson such power and authority as the Compensation Committee deems to be appropriate, except such powers and authorities required by law or regulation to be exercised by the whole Compensation Committee or a subcommittee of at least two members.

The Compensation Committee operates under a written charter approved by the S&T Board, which it reviews, modifies as necessary and reaffirms on an annual basis.

Compensation Philosophy

The Compensation Committee considers overall corporate performance as well as individual initiative and achievements when reviewing and approving all compensation decisions relating to the chief executive officer, chief financial officer and the three other executive officers named in the Summary Compensation Table (collectively, the “Named Executive Officers”). The policy of the Compensation Committee is to provide compensation that is competitive within the banking industry of financial institutions of similar size and product offerings, to attract and retain qualified executives; is integrated with S&T’s corporate performance goals, the primary goal being earnings growth; rewards exceptional individual performance within the assigned area of operational responsibility; and, importantly, aligns the interests of senior management with the interests of S&T’s shareholders. The Compensation Committee also believes that compensation should recognize short- and long-term performance and include both cash and equity components. To meet the objectives of its policy, the Compensation Committee has established a compensation program for senior management, including the Named Executive Officers, which includes the following elements:

 

   

Salaries;

 

   

Incentive awards; and

 

   

Certain other benefits.

Compensation Program

The Compensation Committee reviews the compensation programs established by peer banks for executives having similar responsibilities to S&T’s executives to establish competitive benchmarks for S&T’s compensation program. The peer banks are similar in size and scope to S&T, and operate both inside and outside S&T’s geographic market. While subject to change based on market and other relevant qualitative factors, the Compensation Committee includes the following peer banks in its comparison: BancFirst Corporation; City Holding Company; Community Bank System, Inc.; F.N.B. Corporation; First Commonwealth Financial Corporation; First Financial Bancorp; Harleysville National Corporation; National Penn Bancshares, Inc.; Park National Corporation; Republic Bancorp, Inc.; Sandy Spring Bancorp, Inc.; and WesBanco, Inc. (collectively, the “Peer Banks”). In addition, the Compensation Committee considers general industry peer group information contained in the SNL Financial Comparison Report.

 

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In November 2009, the Compensation Committee engaged Buck Consultants, LLC (“Buck”) to serve as an independent advisor to the Compensation Committee and to provide consultative services and assistance to S&T’s Chief Risk Officer with regard to evaluating its compensation programs for compliance with the Troubled Asset Relief Program (“TARP”) Standards for Compensation and Governance – Interim Final Rule (as issued by the Department of the Treasury on June 15, 2009, as amended, and applicable to entities that have received financial assistance under TARP). Buck presented its findings and recommendations to the chief executive officer, the chief financial officer and the Compensation Committee in a written report on December 14, 2009. Buck’s overall assessment was that S&T’s compensation programs comply with the aforementioned TARP standards and suggested process enhancements for the design and ongoing administration of S&T’s compensation programs. The Compensation Committee accepted, and S&T is in process of implementing, the recommendations.

In addition, the Compensation Committee engaged Buck to review and assess management’s proposals for the 2010 MIP for senior officers, defined as senior vice president and higher, and the S&T Bank 2010 Employee Incentive Plan (“2010 EIP”) for employees below senior vice president. The engagement was also intended to assist the Compensation Committee in its overall consideration of the 2010 compensation program for S&T’s executive officers. S&T and the Compensation Committee will consider Buck’s recommendations when finalizing the terms of these incentive plans.

Salaries

The purpose of base salary is to provide competitive and fair base compensation that recognizes the executives’ roles, responsibilities, contributions, experiences and performance. Base salary represents a fixed and guaranteed element of compensation that reflects executives’ long-term performance and market pay level for the role. Base salaries are targeted to be competitive with the practices of the Peer Banks. The Compensation Committee sets each executive’s individual pay annually to reflect individual experiences, expertise, performance and contributions in the role.

The Compensation Committee reviews and approves the salary of Mr. Brice, the president and chief executive officer, annually in December. The Compensation Committee compared Mr. Brice’s salary and performance against the Peer Banks, and approved a salary for 2009 of $425,000, which was a 13.3% increase from his 2008 salary, due to the effects of inflation and to his effective leadership in his new role as chief executive officer during a challenging economic environment, including his role in the successful integration of IBT into S&T. Mr. Brice’s 2009 salary was in approximately the 60th percentile of 2008 salaries for chief executive officers of the Peer Banks. Mr. Brice’s 2010 salary continues to be $425,000 and is in approximately the 43rd percentile of the 2009 salaries for chief executive officers of the Peer Banks.

The salaries for the other Named Executive Officers are reviewed by Mr. Brice, the president and chief executive officer, on an annual basis in December. In December 2009, the Compensation Committee decided to continue the 2009 salaries for the other Named Executive Officers into 2010 with no increase. However, in March 2010, due to the restructuring of responsibilities amongst senior management, the Compensation Committee decided to increase the salaries of Mr. Hauck from $300,000 to $315,000 and Mr. Antolik from $265,000 to $280,000.

In 2009, the salary for Mr. Rout, the chief financial officer, chief administrative officer and secretary during 2009, was $325,000, which was an 8.3% increase from his 2008 salary due to the effects of inflation and to his leadership over his respective area of responsibility during a successful year and during a challenging economic environment, including his role in the integration of IBT into S&T. Mr. Rout’s 2009 salary was the highest of chief financial officers at the Peer Banks. In 2010, Mr. Rout’s salary remained at $325,000. On January 22, 2010, Mr. Rout tendered his resignation, effective February 5, 2010, to pursue another employment opportunity. Mr. Rout’s decision was not based on any disagreement with S&T’s operations, accounting principles or practices, or financial statement disclosures. Effective February 25, 2010, the S&T Board appointed Mark

 

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Kochvar as senior executive vice president and chief financial officer. Mr. Kochvar has served as S&T’s executive vice president and treasurer since 2008 and was senior vice president, treasury and investments, from 2001 to 2007. Mr. Kochvar’s annual salary in 2010 is $250,000.

In 2009, the salary for Mr. Hauck, the chief operating officer and retail banking support services group manager, was $300,000, which was a 9.1% increase from his 2008 salary due to the effects of inflation and to his leadership over his respective areas of responsibility during a successful year and during a challenging economic environment, including his role in the integration of IBT into S&T. Mr. Hauck’s 2009 salary was in approximately the 40th percentile of similarly situated officers at the Peer Banks. In 2010, Mr. Hauck’s salary is $315,000.

In 2009, the salary for Mr. Antolik, the chief lending officer, was $265,000, which was a 10.4% increase from his 2008 salary, due to the effects of inflation and to his leadership over the commercial lending area during a successful year following the retirement of the former chief lending officer on December 31, 2007. Mr. Antolik’s 2009 salary was in the 75th percentile of similarly situated officers at the Peer Banks. In 2010, Mr. Antolik’s salary is $280,000.

In 2009, the salary for Mr. Young, the investment management and trust services group manager, was $225,000, which was a 5.6% increase from his 2008 salary, due to the effects of inflation and to his leadership over S&T’s wealth management services area during a successful year, including his role in the integration of IBT into S&T. Mr. Young’s 2009 salary was in the 54th percentile of similarly situated officers at the Peer Banks. In 2010, Mr. Young’s salary remained at $225,000. On November 16, 2009, the S&T Board announced that Mr. Young tendered his resignation, effective February 28, 2010, to pursue other employment opportunities. Malcolm E. Polley is serving as the acting head of the investment management and trust services group until the S&T Board selects a permanent replacement. Mr. Polley is executive vice president and chief investment officer in wealth management services at S&T and president of Stewart Capital Advisors, LLC, a subsidiary of S&T Bank.

Incentive Awards

No incentive awards were paid to our Named Executive Officers during 2009. S&T suspended the management incentive program due to the challenging economic environment. The 2010 MIP, as described below, replaced the 2009 management incentive program.

Effective as of January 1, 2010, the Compensation Committee commenced the administration of the 2010 MIP for senior officers, defined as senior vice president and higher, as an annual incentive award to more closely align the interests of shareholders and senior management by making a greater percentage of senior management’s total compensation dependent on the annual performance of S&T and the achievement of individual departmental goals. The stated objective of the 2010 MIP is to provide senior management with an annual incentive opportunity designed to: (i) create focus on specific planned performance goals, (ii) deliver a portion of a competitive pay package in a form that is not fixed but varies in relation to the performance of S&T, and (iii) serve as a vehicle for recruitment and retention.

 

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The 2010 MIP award is based on the achievement of a predetermined earnings per share (EPS) goal that the Compensation Committee approved for 2010 (the “Incentive Year”). This goal was established at the beginning of the Incentive Year and is an outcome of the annual planning and budgeting process. Depending upon the EPS actually achieved, the award will equal a percentage of each senior officer’s base salary. The performance Threshold, Target, and Maximums at each level for the Incentive Year are as follows:

 

     Threshold     Target     Maximum  

Grade

   EPS
$1.15 - $1.19
    EPS
$1.20 - $1.24
    EPS
$1.25 or higher
 

Senior vice president and executive vice president

   16   18   20

Senior executive vice presidents

   18   20   25

Chief executive officer

   20   25   30

The payout amounts are fixed at each range of performance. For example, Mr. Brice, the chief executive officer, would earn a 2010 MIP award of $106,250 if EPS falls anywhere within the range of $1.20 and $1.24. The chief executive officer’s bonus opportunity is based solely on EPS achievement. For all other participants, 50% of the award opportunity will be based on EPS achievement and 50% will be based on specific pre-determined individual performance goals, including quantitative and qualitative goals aligned with S&T’s strategic plan.

The 2010 MIP awards are payable 50% in cash and 50% in restricted stock, subject to a one-year vesting schedule, pursuant to the 2003 Plan, for all plan participants, except for the five most highly-compensated employees for whom TARP restrictions apply in which amounts are fully payable in long-term restricted shares subject to a two-year vesting schedule and certain transferability restrictions. These restrictions are discussed below under the section entitled “Emergency Economic Stabilization Act of 2008 and American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009.” To the extent any other legislative or regulatory developments arise that require additional restrictions, payouts under the 2010 MIP will be adjusted in order to comply with any such requirements. In addition, to the extent that 2010 MIP participants who are subject to the prohibition of the payment or accrual of any bonus payment under the TARP requirements (other than the exception for restricted stock as described above) would no longer be subject to such requirements, the form and timing of the bonus payments may be adjusted, but only as permitted under the TARP rules and as determined by the Compensation Committee.

The 2010 MIP participants who are not subject to the TARP restrictions will receive their cash awards in the calendar year following the Incentive Year after release of final EPS figures pursuant to S&T’s filing of a Form 10-K covering the Incentive Year. A participant must be employed by S&T as of the payment date in order to receive an award. The restricted stock award will vest upon completion of one year of service following the Incentive Year.

For years prior to 2009, actual EPS results were substantially higher than 2010 projected results. Maximum incentive targets under the previous plans were at higher levels than maximums under the 2010 MIP as well. Management believes, however, that it is important to re-establish an incentive plan to recognize and reward key contributors and to engage employees with a singular focus on improving profitability. The emphasis for 2010 is to push S&T back toward past profitability levels using a plan with an appropriately challenging range of performance expectations and moderate opportunities reflective of the absolute contribution represented by the performance targets. To put performance trends and expectations in context, it should be noted that S&T has performed well relative to its peers based on net return on equity (ROE) and return on assets (ROA) results. Management views the 2010 MIP as a progressive step toward returning to an incentive plan structure for senior officers and recognizes the need to consider more expansive financial performance measures in the future.

The Compensation Committee believes that stock ownership by management and stock-based performance compensation arrangements are beneficial in aligning management and shareholders’ interests and serves as an

 

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executive retention tool through vesting requirements. The 2010 MIP continues to provide such a long-term incentive through its payout of restricted stock. In addition, the Compensation Committee has established additional guidelines that limit senior management to selling only 25% of the vested restricted shares of common stock for current tax liabilities, until the officer achieves the stock ownership guidelines, as described below.

Prior Long-Term Incentive Awards

The Compensation Committee, pursuant to its authority under the 2003 Plan, adopted the S&T Bank Incentive Program for Senior Management (the “Incentive Program”), a performance-based incentive plan whereby senior management would earn an incentive award based upon the achievement of predetermined incremental earnings per share goals for the following year. Depending upon the level of earnings per share goal achieved, the award, at the discretion of the Compensation Committee, would equal a percentage of the executive’s salary and be delivered in the form of restricted shares of S&T common stock. The Incentive Program was considered an important long-term element in S&T’s compensation program. As described above, the Incentive Program was suspended in 2009 in response to the challenging economic environment. No awards, therefore, were earned or paid for 2009 performance. The Incentive Program has been discontinued for 2010 and the Compensation Committee is evaluating methods to grant awards based on long-term performance goals. In the interim, while the annual incentive award structure under the 2010 MIP (as discussed above) rewards achievement of short-term objectives, it serves the additional purpose of encouraging the executives to make decisions currently that promote long-term growth and retention.

Certain Other Benefits

S&T provides other benefits, or perquisites, to the Named Executive Officers that are comparable to the other benefits provided at the Peer Banks viewed as a whole. The Compensation Committee believes that perquisites should be limited in scope and value. The primary perquisites for an executive are the payment of the initiation fees and dues for golf or social memberships at a private club, company contributions to a qualified defined contribution plan and a nonqualified deferred compensation plan, a company car or car allowance and company paid life insurance premiums.

S&T considers a social or country club to be an appropriate venue to entertain customers and to participate in various community functions. S&T pays for senior management to belong to one or more private clubs, since this level of management has significant customer contact and involvement in the community. Expenses of a personal nature or related to a spouse are not paid by S&T.

S&T Bank maintains the Thrift Plan for Employees of S&T Bank (the “Thrift Plan”), which is a qualified defined contribution plan. All employees may participate in the Thrift Plan with elective salary deferrals, or 401(k) contributions. During 2009, S&T Bank made matching contributions equal to 100% of the first 1% of the employees’ eligible compensation and 50% of the next 5% of the employees’ eligible compensation, up to a maximum of 3.5% of the employees’ eligible compensation. S&T considers the matching contributions to the Thrift Plan as an important incentive for employees to contribute toward their own retirement savings. In 2009, S&T made the following matching contributions to the Thrift Plan for each Named Executive Officer: Mr. Brice, $8,250; Mr. Rout, $8,575; Mr. Hauck, $8,575; Mr. Antolik, $8,575; and Mr. Young, $7,700.

In prior years, S&T Bank made a year-end profit sharing contribution to the Thrift Plan based on the performance of S&T, compared to earnings per share goals. The Named Executive Officers, along with all other employees, received an equal percentage of their eligible compensation, up to federal qualified plan limits, as a year-end profit sharing contribution. S&T did not make a year-end profit sharing contribution for 2009 in response to the challenging economic environment.

The Compensation Committee also administers the S&T Bank 2010 EIP, a cash incentive plan for all employees under the level of senior vice president, whereby these employees earn a cash award based on EPS ranges set for the year. The 2010 EIP replaces the cash incentive plan that was suspended in 2009. The award is

 

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based on the achievement of a predetermined EPS goal that the Compensation Committee approves for the Incentive Year, prior to the beginning of the Incentive Year. Depending upon the EPS actually achieved, the award will equal a percentage of each participant’s base salary. S&T expects to pay approximately $736,000 to its employees for this award in March 2011.

S&T Bank established the S&T Bancorp, Inc. Supplemental Savings and Make-Up Plan (the “Nonqualified Plan”) in 1995 in order to provide certain management employees, including executives, the ability to make up for certain benefits that would normally be provided under S&T Bank’s qualified plans except for federal tax laws setting annual compensation limits for qualified plans and additional limitations related to highly-compensated employees. The Nonqualified Plan was amended for compliance with Section 409A of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended (the “Code”), and the regulations and other guidance promulgated thereunder (“Section 409A”) in December 2008. S&T Bank makes employer contributions to this plan that cannot be made to the qualified plans due to the aforementioned limits. During 2009, S&T contributed to the Nonqualified Plan for Mr. Brice $7,008; Mr. Rout $4,791; Mr. Hauck $3,629; Mr. Antolik, $2,292; and Mr. Young, $1,458.

S&T’s executives frequently drive vehicles on company business. Therefore, S&T provides either a company car or a car allowance to executives. Executives are responsible for reporting the amount of personal use of company cars to S&T, so that the taxable income from such use can be reported in the executives’ compensation. Executives who do not have a company car receive an annual car allowance of $7,200 that is fully taxable compensation.

Other benefits generally provided to all officers and full-time employees include a qualified defined benefit plan and the S&T Bank Welfare Benefit Plan. The latter has provisions for medical reimbursement, dental coverage, vision care coverage, long-term disability income, a health reimbursement account and life insurance. Relocation benefits also are reimbursed but are individually negotiated when they occur. If S&T hires or initiates a transfer of an employee with special skills and requires a relocation of more than 35 miles, the employee is eligible for reimbursement of the costs of house hunting trips, closing on the sale of the old home and the purchase of the new home, temporary living quarters and moving household goods and furniture. In these circumstances, except as required to comply with TARP, S&T will also gross up taxable relocation reimbursements for federal taxes.

Stock Ownership Guidelines

The Compensation Committee continues to believe that stock ownership in S&T is important to align shareholder and management interests. On December 17, 2007, the Compensation Committee adopted stock ownership guidelines for certain executives beginning on January 1, 2008. Under the guidelines, Messrs. Brice, Rout, Hauck and Antolik are recommended to own Common Stock having a market value equal to at least three times their base salary; executive vice presidents, including Mr. Young, are recommended to own at least two times base salary; and senior vice presidents at least one times base salary. Currently, the Named Executive Officers do not meet the ownership guidelines, due to the adverse market environment for financial institution stocks, which has also affected the price of the Common Stock. The guidelines do not establish a deadline for compliance with the stock ownership requirements; however, as noted earlier, the executives are limited to selling 25% of vested shares of restricted stock until meeting these guidelines. Messrs. Rout and Young each resigned their positions with S&T in February 2010.

In addition to stock options and unvested restricted shares, Mr. Brice directly or indirectly owns 105,615 shares of Common Stock.

Employment Agreements

S&T does not provide employment agreements for any of the Named Executive Officers. S&T believes in a policy of “at will” employment arrangements.

 

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Change in Control

In designing compensation arrangements for senior management, the Compensation Committee understands that the hiring and retention of quality senior management talent could be hindered if S&T offers no protection against the possible loss of compensation or position through a change in control. Further, S&T believes that it is important to reduce the conflict of interest that senior management could experience in a change of control situation. In accordance with its general philosophy that senior management’s interests be aligned with shareholders’ interests, effective January 1, 2007, S&T entered into change in control agreements with selected officers in senior management, including all the Named Executive Officers. On December 31, 2008, S&T restated these change in control agreements to comply with the requirements of Section 409A. The primary terms and compensation payments contemplated by agreements remain unchanged. The agreements provide for the following:

 

   

In the case of the president and chief executive, he will receive a lump sum payment of 300% of his base salary if: (1) his employment is involuntarily terminated without cause within six months preceding a change in control; (2) his employment is involuntarily terminated without cause within three years following a “change in control” (as defined below); or (3) he voluntarily terminates his employment for “good reason” (as defined below) within three years following a change in control;

 

   

In the case of any other Named Executive Officer, he will receive a lump sum payment of 200% of his base salary if: (1) his employment is involuntarily terminated without cause within six months preceding a change in control; (2) his employment is involuntarily terminated without cause within two years following a “change in control” (as defined below); or (3) he voluntarily terminates his employment for “good reason” (as defined below) within two years following a change in control;

The agreements define “good reason” as the occurrence of any of the following (without the executive’s consent) after a change in control:

 

   

A material diminution of the executive’s duties, authority or responsibility, or any material change in the geographic location at which the executive must perform services (in this case, a material change means any location more than forty (40) land-miles from the location prior to the change in control);

 

   

S&T’s failure to continue to provide the executive with benefits substantially similar to those enjoyed by the executive under any of S&T’s pension, life insurance, medical, health and accident, disability or other welfare plans, but not including any incentive or equity-based compensation plans, in which the executive was participating at the time of the change in control, unless the nature of the change in benefit levels is consistent with changes to benefits levels provided to employees at the same or equivalent level or title as the executive; or the failure by S&T to provide the executive with the number of paid vacation days to which the executive is entitled to on the basis of years of service with S&T in accordance with S&T’s normal vacation policy in effect at the time of a change in control;

 

   

Any failure by any successor of S&T to adhere to the terms of the agreement;

 

   

A reduction of more than ten percent in the executive’s annual base salary by S&T;

An executive may not terminate his or her employment for Good Reason more than six months after the initial existence of the conditions constituting Good Reason.

A “change in control” is defined in the agreements as the occurrence of any of the following:

 

   

Any person, other than a pension, profit-sharing or other employee benefit plan established by S&T or S&T Bank, is or becomes the “beneficial owner” (as defined in Rule 13d-3 under the Exchange Act), directly or indirectly, of securities of S&T representing 25% or more of the combined voting power of S&T’s then outstanding securities;

 

   

During any period of two consecutive years, individuals who at the beginning of such period constitute the S&T Board cease for any reason to constitute at least a majority thereof, unless the election of each

 

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director who was not a director at the beginning of such period has been approved in advance by directors representing at least a majority of the directors then in office who were directors at the beginning of the period;

 

   

The shareholders of S&T approve a merger or consolidation of S&T with any other corporation, other than a merger or consolidation which would result in the voting securities of S&T outstanding immediately prior thereto continuing to represent at least 50% of the total voting power represented by the voting securities of S&T or the surviving entity outstanding immediately after such merger or consolidation;

 

   

The S&T shareholders or the S&T Board or S&T Bank approve a plan of complete liquidation or an agreement for the sale of or disposition of all or substantially all of the S&T’s or S&T Bank’s assets;

 

   

Any person shall have commenced a tender or exchange offer to purchase shares of Common Stock such that upon consummation of such offer such person would own or control 25% or more of the outstanding shares of Common Stock;

 

   

Any person shall have filed an application or notice with any federal or state regulatory agency for clearance or approval to (i) merge or consolidate, or enter into any similar transaction, with S&T or S&T Bank, (ii) purchase, lease or otherwise acquire all or substantially all of the assets of S&T or S&T Bank or (iii) purchase or otherwise acquire (including by way of merger, consolidation, share exchange or any similar transaction) securities representing 25% or more of the voting power of S&T or S&T Bank; or

 

   

Any other event that constitutes a change in control of a nature that would be required to be reported in response to Item 6(e) of Schedule 14A of Regulation 14A promulgated under the Exchange Act or any successor provision.

The agreements specifically exclude public stock offerings by S&T and convertible debt offerings by S&T from the definition of “change in control.”

Payments under the agreements will be made no later than ten business days after the date of termination, subject to a six-month delay for compliance with Section 409A, if necessary. (See “Tax Considerations” below). Each agreement provides that if the executive’s employment is terminated, without cause, within the three or two years of a change in control, as applicable for that particular executive, he will receive life insurance, health, disability and other welfare benefits substantially similar in all respects to those which the executive was receiving immediately prior to the triggering event. These additional benefits will continue for three years for the president and chief executive officer and for two years for the other Named Executive Officers. Each agreement provides that, in the event any benefit received by a Named Executive in connection with a change in control or in connection with the termination of the Named Executive’s employment (whether pursuant to the agreement or any other plan, arrangement or agreement) (collectively, the “Total Benefits”) would be subject to the excise tax imposed under Section 4999 of the Code (the golden parachute excise tax), then the Total Benefits will be reduced to the extent necessary so that no portion of the Total Benefits is subject to such excise tax. The Compensation Committee believes that the agreement provides reasonable protection to the individual members on the senior management team and thereby aligns senior management’s interest with S&T’s shareholders.

In addition, any change in control payments may be limited under the EESA and the ARRA. See “Legislative and Regulatory Considerations” below.

Tax Considerations

The Compensation Committee believes that it has structured the compensation program to comply with Code Sections 162(m) and 409A. Section 162(m) of the Code generally denies a deduction to any publicly held corporation for compensation paid to its chief executive officer and its three other highest paid executive officers (other than the chief financial officer) to the extent that any such individual’s compensation exceeds $1 million.

 

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“Qualified Performance-based compensation” (as defined for purposes of Section 162(m)) is not taken into account for purposes of calculating the $1 million compensation limit, provided certain disclosure, shareholder approval and other requirements are met. The Compensation Committee is monitoring the effects of S&T’s compensation programs with regard to Section 162(m). To date, S&T has not suffered a loss of compensation deduction as a result of the $1 million limitation, and the Compensation Committee intends to take actions to minimize S&T’s exposure to nondeductible compensation expense under Section 162(m) of the Code. While keeping this goal in mind, however, the Compensation Committee reserves the right to maintain flexibility with respect to S&T’s executive compensation programs, including the awarding of compensation that may not be deductible when it believes that such payments are appropriate and in the best interests of the shareholders.

The EESA added new Section 162(m)(5) to the Code to create a reduced deduction limit of $500,000 for institutions participating in certain TARP programs. Section 162(m)(5) differs from the general provisions of Section 162(m) described above in several ways, including (but not limited to) (i) applying to the chief executive officer, chief financial officer and the three highest compensated officers (other than the chief executive officer and chief financial officer) and (ii) counting a covered executive’s performance-based compensation and commissions toward the $500,000 deduction limit. As explained below, S&T received assistance under TARP on January 16, 2009. As a condition of receiving this assistance, S&T has agreed not to take any deduction in excess of the reduced limit under Section 162(m)(5) of the Code. The Compensation Committee is monitoring the effects of S&T’s compensation programs under Section 162(m)(5) and may take future action as necessary to minimize S&T’s exposure to nondeductible compensation payments under Section 162(m)(5).

Section 409A is a relatively recent provision of the Code. If an executive is entitled to nonqualified deferred compensation benefits that are subject to Section 409A of the Code, and such benefits do not comply with Section 409A of the Code, the executive would be subject to adverse tax treatment, including accelerated income recognition (in the first year that benefits are no longer subject to a substantial risk of forfeiture) and a 20% penalty tax pursuant to Section 409A of the Code. Compensation and benefit arrangements were required to be amended to comply with Section 409A of the Code as of January 1, 2009. S&T adopted Section 409A compliance amendments prior to January 1, 2009 (as required) and will continue to monitor its existing and future plans and arrangements for continued compliance with Section 409A of the Code.

Legislative and Regulatory Considerations

Recent legislation and regulation likely will be a determining factor in the future regarding the compensation of our Named Executive Officers. Consequently, our executive compensation program may undergo significant change and prior actions of the Compensation Committee may not be predictive of future action. One consequence of the new legislation will be that the Compensation Committee will have less flexibility with future compensation decisions regarding the Named Executive Officers.

Emergency Economic Stabilization Act of 2008 and American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009

On January 16, 2009, S&T sold a series of its preferred stock and common stock purchase warrants to the U.S. Treasury under TARP CPP created under the EESA. As a result of this transaction, S&T became subject to certain executive compensation requirements under TARP CPP, the EESA, and U.S. Treasury regulations. On February 17, 2009, the President of the United States signed into law the ARRA. The ARRA provides for expanded restrictions on executive compensation for participants in the TARP CPP. The ARRA amends the executive compensation and corporate governance provisions of EESA.

Key features of the EESA, as revised by ARRA, are:

 

   

A prohibition of the payment or accrual of any “bonus, retention award, or incentive compensation” to the five most highly-compensated employees for as long as any TARP CPP related obligations are outstanding (the “Bonus Prohibition”).

 

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“Long-term” restricted stock is excluded from ARRA’s Bonus Prohibition, but only to the extent the value of the stock does not exceed one-third of the total amount of annual compensation of the employee receiving the stock, the stock does not vest until the recipient completes two years of service (subject to acceleration on death, disability or change in control) and the stock becomes transferable following vesting as to 25% of the shares upon repayment of 25% of the TARP CPP assistance, as to 50% of the shares upon repayment of 50% of the TARP CPP assistance, as to 75% of the shares upon repayment of 75% of the TARP CPP assistance and the balance upon repayment of 100% of the TARP CPP assistance.

 

   

Prohibition on any payment to any SEO (i.e., S&T’s Named Executive Officers) or any of the next five most highly-compensated employees upon a change in control or upon termination of employment for any reason for as long as any TARP CPP obligations remain outstanding (collectively, “Golden Parachute Payment.”).

 

   

Recovery of any bonus or other incentive payment made on the basis of materially inaccurate financial or other performance criteria that is paid to the next 20 most highly-compensated employees in addition to the SEOs (the “Clawback”).

 

   

A requirement that the chief executive officer and chief financial officer provide a written certification in S&T’s annual filings with the SEC of compliance with the executive compensation restrictions under ARRA.

 

   

Implementation of a company-wide policy regarding excessive or luxury expenditures.

 

   

The U.S. Treasury will review bonuses, retention awards, and other compensation paid to the SEOs and the next 20 most highly-compensated employees of each company receiving TARP CPP assistance before ARRA was enacted, and to “seek to negotiate” with the TARP CPP recipient and affected employees for reimbursement if it finds any such payments were inconsistent with the TARP CPP or otherwise in conflict with the public interest.

 

   

Limits on tax deduction for compensation paid to the chief executive officer, chief financial officer or any of the three most highly-compensated executive officers of $500,000 annually.

 

   

Prohibition on payment of tax gross-ups to any SEO or any of the next 20 most highly-compensated employees in addition to the SEOs.

The Compensation Committee has considered these new limits on executive compensation and has conformed S&T’s executive compensation program to comply with these limits.

In addition, at least every six months, the Compensation Committee must discuss, evaluate, and review with the TARP recipient’s senior risk officer the compensation arrangements to ensure that: (i) the SEO compensation plans do not encourage the SEOs to take unnecessary and excessive risks that threaten the value of the TARP recipient, (ii) the employee compensation plans do not pose unnecessary risks to the TARP recipient, and (iii) the employee compensation plans do not encourage the manipulation of reported earnings of the TARP recipient to enhance the compensation of any of the TARP recipient’s employees. The Compensation Committee must provide certifications to this effect within its Compensation Benefits Committee Report.

Letter Agreements with SEOs and other Highly-Compensated Employees

At the time S&T received its TARP CPP assistance and prior to ARRA, the SEOs agreed in writing to restrictions on their compensation resulting from S&T’s participation in the TARP CPP. These amendments, among other things: (1) prohibit S&T from paying any “excess parachute payments” within the meaning of Section 280G(b) of the Code during any CPP covered period beyond the amount allowed under the EESA; (2) subjects any bonus and incentive compensation paid during a CPP covered period to recovery or clawback if the payments were based on materially inaccurate financial statements or any other materially inaccurate

 

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performance metric criteria (as noted above); and (3) noted that each compensation, bonus, incentive, change-in-control and other benefit plan is amended to the extent necessary to give effect to provisions (1) and (2).

In late 2009, following the enactment of ARRA and issuance of regulations thereunder, the SEOs, as well as certain other S&T employees who were, or may be, in the top twenty most highly-compensated employees, agreed in writing to the restrictions on their compensation imposed by EESA as amended by ARRA. The SEOs and other employees who executed these agreements have contractually agreed to (1) the Bonus Prohibition, (2) the prohibition on Golden Parachute Payments, and (3) the Clawback, in each case to the extent applicable to them pursuant to EESA and ARRA. The agreements also provided that each of S&T’s compensation plans was deemed to be amended by the agreement to impose, to the extent required by EESA and ARRA, such restrictions.

Compensation Consulting and Advisory Services Fees

Prior to 2009, S&T utilized Towers Watson as its adviser to the Committee on executive compensation issues. In November 2009, S&T’s Compensation Committee engaged Buck to serve as an independent advisor to the Compensation Committee and to assist S&T’s Chief Risk Officer in conducting an assessment of compensation programs throughout the organization including a risks assessment pursuant to TARP requirements. In addition, the Compensation Committee engaged Buck to evaluate management and employee incentive plans in preparation for implementation for 2010 and to provide S&T ongoing advisory support on executive compensation and other employee incentive compensation programs. The following shows the consulting fees paid by S&T to advisers to the Compensation Committee of the Board for the calendar year 2009:

 

Compensation Consultant

 

Consulting fees for determining and
recommending the amount or form of
executive compensation

 

Additional services provided by
Compensation Consultant

Buck Consultants

  $20,000   $144,501

Additional services provided by Buck Consultants include: actuarial services for S&T’s qualified defined benefit plan and Non-qualified Plan and benefit plan design and consulting for S&T’s pension and welfare benefit plans. These additional services relate to a service relationship that precedes Buck’s engagement as a Compensation Consultant to the Committee. The decision to engage Buck for these other services was made, or recommended, by management without Compensation Committee or Board approval.

 

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COMPENSATION AND BENEFITS COMMITTEE REPORT

We, the Compensation and Benefits Committee (the “Compensation Committee”) of the Board of Directors of S&T Bancorp, Inc. (“S&T”), have reviewed and discussed the Compensation Discussion and Analysis included in this Proxy Statement with S&T’s management, and, based on such review and discussion, have recommended to the Board of Directors that the Compensation Discussion and Analysis be included in this Proxy Statement and S&T’s Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2009.

Further, the Compensation Committee certifies that:

(1) It has reviewed with senior risk officers the SEO compensation plans and has made all reasonable efforts to ensure that these plans do not encourage SEOs to take unnecessary and excessive risks that threaten the value of S&T;

(2) It has reviewed with senior risk officers the employee compensation plans and has made all reasonable efforts to limit any unnecessary risks these plans pose to S&T; and

(3) It has reviewed the employee compensation plans to eliminate any features of these plans that would encourage the manipulation of reported earnings of S&T to enhance the compensation of any employee.

Review of Risk Associated With Compensation Plans

In accordance with the foregoing certifications by the Compensation Committee, the Compensation Committee reviewed the SEO incentive compensation arrangements with S&T’s Chief Risk Officer and personnel acting in a similar capacity, to ensure that the SEO incentive compensation arrangements do not encourage SEOs to take unnecessary and excessive risks that threaten the value of the institution. On December 14, 2009, the Committee met with the Chief Executive Officer, Chief Financial Officer, Chief Risk Officer and other select members of senior management to, among other things:

 

  (1) Discuss with the bank’s senior risk officers the long term and short term risks that the bank faces that could threaten the value of the Company;

 

  (2) Identify the features of the Company’s incentive compensation arrangements that could lead SEOs to take such risks or focus on short-term results and how to limit those features; and

 

  (3) Review the employee compensation plans and eliminate features in those plans that could encourage manipulation of reported earnings.

In 2009, S&T suspended its incentive compensation plans for SEO’s due to the challenging economic environment. S&T has developed and implemented the 2010 Management Incentive Plan (“2010 MIP”), which seeks to align the interests of shareholders and senior management by making a greater percentage of senior management’s total compensation dependent on the annual performance of S&T and the achievement of individual departmental goals. The stated objective of the 2010 MIP is to provide senior management with an annual incentive opportunity designed to: (i) create focus on specific planned performance goals, (ii) deliver a portion of a competitive pay package in a form that is not fixed but varies in relation to the performance of S&T, and (iii) serve as a vehicle for recruitment and retention.

The 2010 MIP award is based on the achievement of a predetermined earnings per share (EPS) goal that the Compensation Committee approves for 2010 (the “Incentive Year”). This goal was established at the beginning of the Incentive Year and is an outcome of the annual planning and budgeting process. Depending upon the EPS actually achieved, the award will equal a percentage of each senior officer’s base salary. The 2010 MIP awards are payable 50% in cash and 50% in restricted stock, subject to a one-year vesting schedule, pursuant to the 2003 Plan, for all plan participants, except for the five most highly-compensated employees for whom TARP

 

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restrictions apply in which amounts are fully payable in long-term restricted shares subject to a two-year vesting schedule and certain transferability restrictions.

The Compensation Committee also administers the S&T Bank 2010 Employee Incentive Plan (“2010 EIP”), a cash incentive plan for all employees under the level of senior vice president, whereby these employees earn a cash award based on EPS ranges set for the year. This plan was suspended during 2009 and no payments were made. S&T has implemented the 2010 EIP to replace the suspended 2009 EIP. Awards issued under the 2010 EIP are based on the achievement of a predetermined earnings per share goal that the Compensation Committee approves, prior to the beginning of the year in which the payment can be earned.

It was noted by the Compensation Committee that the primary financial component for incentive compensation under the 2010 MIP and the 2010 EIP is S&T’s earnings per share, which is an audited number, and that credit quality has the most significant effect on earnings per share in this environment. The S&T Board regularly receives reports about key credit measures and the steps undertaken by management to address credit risk. In addition, S&T has adopted compensation practices, as discussed in this proxy statement, that discourage excessive or unnecessary risk-taking, such as requiring executive officers to acquire and hold substantial ownership positions in company stock and granting restricted stock awards that vest over a one or two-year period.

Compensation and Benefits Committee:

Alan Papernick (Chairman);

John Delaney;

Michael Donnelly;

Joseph Kirk;

Robert Rebich, Jr.; and

Charles Spadafora

 

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EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION

Summary Compensation Table for Fiscal Year 2009

The following table provides information concerning remuneration of the Named Executive Officers during 2009.

 

Name and Principal Position

  Year   Salary ($)   Bonus
($)(1)
  Stock
Awards
($)(2)
  Option
Awards
($)(3)
  Change in
Pension
Value ($)(4)
  All Other
Compensation
($)(7)
  Total ($)

Todd D. Brice

President, Chief Executive Officer

  2009
2008
2007
  425,000
375,000
300,000
  0
10,933
105,000
  0
9,897
70,168
  0
0
0
  113,400
138,100
56,600
  47,117
62,466
49,181
  585,517
596,396
580,949

Robert E. Rout(5)

Senior Executive Vice President Chief Financial Officer, Chief Administrative Officer and Secretary

  2009
2008
2007
  325,000
296,538
250,000
  0
56,873
87,500
  0
7,918
58,469
  0
0
0
  155,300
151,000
63,400
  33,983
46,897
38,994
  514,283
559,226
498,363

Edward C. Hauck

Senior Executive Vice President and Chief Operating Officer

  2009
2008
2007
  300,000
275,000
232,000
  0
52,134
79,250
  0
7,269
54,264
  0
0
0
  196,900
210,800
62,700
  26,953
37,873
32,395
  523,853
583,076
460,609

David G. Antolik

Senior Executive Vice President

  2009
2008
2007
  265,000
240,000
196,500
  0
45,499
66,500
  0
6,328
46,769
  0
0
0
  50,700
53,900
17,300
  22,858
34,489
29,225
  338,558
380,216
356,294

Gregor T. Young, IV(6)

Executive Vice President

  2009
2008
2007
  225,000
213,000
205,000
  10
36,653
72,750
  0
5,614
47,942
  0
0
0
  43,400
45,600
24,000
  19,009
33,219
32,671
  287,419
334,086
382,363

 

(1) This column includes the management incentive bonus earned for 2007 and paid on January 10, 2008 and earned for 2008 and paid on February 5, 2009. No management incentive bonuses were earned during fiscal 2009. The 2010 Management Incentive Plan replaced this management incentive plan that S&T suspended for 2009 in response to the challenging economic environment. See “Incentive Awards” in the “Compensation Discussion and Analysis” on page 24.
(2) This column includes the fair market value of Common Stock granted on December 15, 2008 and December 17, 2007, under the 2003 Plan. No awards were granted during 2009. The amounts are based upon the fair market value of the stock on the date of the grant.
(3) There were no option awards in 2007, 2008 and 2009. While not reflected in this column, S&T recognized FAS 123R expense for options awards granted prior to 2007, which was based upon the fair market value of the option on the date of the grant, and expensed over the requisite service period.
(4) This column shows the aggregate year-to-year change in the actuarial present value of the Named Executive Officer’s accrued pension benefit under all qualified and non-qualified defined benefit plans based on the assumptions used for FAS 87 “Employers’ Accounting for Pensions” accounting purposes at each measurement date. As such, the change reflects changes in value due to an increase or decrease in the FAS 87 discount rate as well as changes due to the accrual of plan benefits.
(5) Mr. Rout resigned as Chief Financial Officer effective as of February 5, 2010.
(6) Mr. Young resigned as Executive Vice President effective as of February 28, 2010.
(7) The compensation represented by the amounts for 2007, 2008 and 2009 as set forth in the All Other Compensation column for the Named Executive Officers is detailed in the following table.

 

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All Other Compensation

 

Name

  Year   Company
Contributions
to Qualified
Defined
Contribution
Plan(a)
  Company
Contributions
to
Nonqualified
Defined
Contribution
Plan(b)
  Company
Car or Car
Allowance(c)
  Country
Club
Dues(d)
  Company
Paid Life
Insurance
Premiums(e)
  Restricted
Stock
Dividends(f)
  All Other
Compensation

Todd D. Brice

  2009   $ 8,250   $ 7,008   $ 17,412   $ 10,753   $ 1,531   $ 2,163   $ 47,117
  2008     14,650     16,053     16,437     10,753     1,531     3,042     62,466
  2007     18,000     8,000     11,937     9,533     1,531     180     49,181

Robert E. Rout

  2009     8,575     4,791     9,042     5,393     4,389     1,793     33,983
  2008     15,869     9,095     9,676     5,393     4,329     2,535     46,897
  2007     18,000     3,760     9,066     4,373     3,615     180     38,994

Edward C. Hauck

  2009     8,575     3,629     7,200     1,498     4,389     1,662     26,953
  2008     17,210     5,611     7,200     1,498     4,002     2,352     37,873
  2007     18,000     1,927     7,704     1,248     3,336     180     32,395

David G. Antolik

  2009     8,575     2,292     8,165     1,498     894     1,434     22,858
  2008     14,950     4,974     10,236     1,498     804     2,027     34,489
  2007     17,318     0     9,891     1,248     648     120     29,225

Gregor T. Young, IV

  2009     7,700     1,458     5,107     1,573     1,726     1,445     19,009
  2008     14,075     2,909     10,957     1,573     1,627     2,078     33,219
  2007     18,000     782     10,825     1,323     1,561     180     32,671

 

(a) Contributions by S&T Bank to the Thrift Plan, which is a qualified defined contribution plan. In 2007, S&T Bank made matching contributions equal to 50% of the employee’s 401(k) contributions, up to 3% of the employee’s eligible compensation. In 2008 and 2009, S&T Bank made matching contributions equal to 100% of the first 1% of the employee’s eligible compensation and 50% of the next 5% of the employee’s eligible compensation, up to 3.5% of the employee’s eligible compensation. In 2007 and 2008, S&T Bank also made a year-end profit sharing contribution equal to 5% and 3%, respectively, of the employee’s eligible compensation. In 2007, 2008 and 2009, the employee’s eligible compensation was $225,000, $230,000 and $245,000, respectively.
(b) Contributions by S&T Bank to the Nonqualified Plan that was established in order that certain management employees, including the Named Executive Officers, not lose benefits that would normally have accrued in qualified plans except for federal tax laws setting annual compensation limits for qualified plans and additional limitations related to highly-compensated employees.
(c) This column represents the aggregate incremental cost to S&T for providing a car to the Named Executive Officer. The cost includes the expense of depreciation, insurance, registration fees, maintenance and fuel (calculated by multiplying the actual miles for 2007, 2008 and 2009 by an average cost per mile, assuming an estimated $2.76, $3.15 and $2.33 per gallon, respectively). Mr. Hauck’s company car amount in 2007 includes $5,954 of personal car allowance and $1,750 for the incremental cost to S&T for providing a car to him. Mr. Hauck did not have a company car amount in 2008 and 2009, only a personal car allowance.
(d) Membership dues paid to country clubs and social clubs. Expenses of a personal nature or related to a spouse are not paid by S&T.
(e) This column includes the excess premiums reported as taxable compensation on the Named Executive Officer’s W-2 for life insurance at three times salary. This insurance benefit is provided to all full time employees on a nondiscriminatory basis.
(f) Dividends on unvested restricted Common Stock, which are reported as taxable compensation on the Named Executive Officer’s W-2.

 

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Grants of Plan-Based Awards for Fiscal Year 2009

There were no plan-based grants awarded to the Named Executive Officers during 2009.

Effect of ARRA. The U.S. Treasury issued rules to implement new standards for executive compensation for CPP participants, including a prohibition on most types of incentive compensation other than certain grants of restricted stock. These new standards preclude the grant of stock options to the Named Executive Officers during the period S&T has outstanding obligations to the U.S. Treasury under CPP. ARRA permits grants of “long-term” restricted stock, but only to the extent the value of the stock does not exceed one-third of the total amount of annual compensation of the employee receiving the stock, and the stock is subject to certain vesting and transferability restrictions as described above under the heading “Emergency Economic Stabilization Act of 2008 and American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009.” S&T likely will continue to make grants of restricted stock in future years. However, the extent of S&T’s use of restricted stock grants, and the changes that S&T will make to the terms of the grants in order to comply with ARRA, are subject to U.S. Treasury rules and regulations.

 

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Outstanding Equity Awards at 2009 Fiscal Year-End

The following table sets forth information regarding the number of unexercised stock options and the number and value of unvested shares of restricted stock outstanding on December 31, 2009 for our Named Executive Officers.

 

     Option Awards    Stock Awards

Name

   Number of
Securities
Underlying
Unexercised
Options (#)
Exercisable
   Number of
Securities
Underlying
Options (#)
Unexercisable(1)
   Option
Exercise
Price ($)
   Option
Expiration
Date
   Number of
Shares or
Units of
Stock That
Have Not
Vested (#)(2)
   Market
Value of
Shares or
Units of
Stock That
Have Not
Vested ($)

Todd D. Brice

                 

Granted 12/17/2001

   10,000    0    24.40    12/17/2011      

Granted 12/15/2003

   10,000    0    29.97    12/15/2013      

Granted 12/20/2004

   12,500    0    37.08    12/20/2014      

Granted 12/19/2005

   9,375    3,125    37.86    12/19/2015      

Granted 12/17/2007

               1,839    31,281

Granted 12/15/2008

               305    5,188

Robert E. Rout

                 

Granted 12/15/2003

   10,000    0    29.97    12/15/2013      

Granted 12/20/2004

   11,000    0    37.08    12/20/2014      

Granted 12/19/2005

   8,250    2,750    37.86    12/19/2015      

Granted 12/17/2007

               1,533    26,076

Granted 12/15/2008

               244    4,150

Edward C. Hauck

                 

Granted 12/15/2003

   5,000    0    29.97    12/15/2013      

Granted 12/20/2004

   11,000    0    37.08    12/20/2014      

Granted 12/19/2005

   8,250    2,750    37.86    12/19/2015      

Granted 12/17/2007

               1,422    24,188

Granted 12/15/2008

               224    3,810

David G. Antolik

                 

Granted 12/15/2003

   3,250    0    29.97    12/15/2013      

Granted 12/20/2004

   10,000    0    37.08    12/20/2014      

Granted 12/19/2005

   7,500    2,500    37.86    12/19/2015      

Granted 12/17/2007

               1,226    20,854

Granted 12/15/2008

               195    3,317

Gregor T. Young, IV

                 

Granted 12/17/2001

   15,000    0    24.40    12/17/2011      

Granted 12/15/2003

   10,000    0    29.97    12/15/2013      

Granted 12/20/2004

   10,000    0    37.08    12/20/2014      

Granted 12/19/2005

   7,500    2,500    37.86    12/19/2015      

Granted 12/17/2007

               1,257    21,382

Granted 12/15/2008

               173    2,943

 

(1) Options granted on December 19, 2005 vest 25% each January 1, which commenced on January 1, 2007.
(2) The S&T Board awarded the restricted shares of Common Stock on December 17, 2007 with 25% vesting each year, beginning on January 1, 2009, and on December 15, 2008 with 25% vesting each year, beginning on January 1, 2010. The fair market value of Common Stock on December 31, 2009 was $17.01 per share.

 

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Option Exercises and Stock Vested in Fiscal Year 2009

The following table sets forth information regarding the number and value of stock options exercised and restricted stock vested during 2009 for our Named Executive Officers.

 

Name

   Option Awards    Stock Awards
   Number of
Shares
Acquired on
Exercise (#)
   Value
Realized on
Exercise ($)
   Number of
Shares
Acquired on
Vesting (#)
   Value
Realized on
Vesting ($)(1)

Todd D. Brice

   0    $ 0    614    $ 21,644

Robert E. Rout

   0      0    511      18,013

Edward C. Hauck

   0      0    475      16,744

David G. Antolik

   0      0    409      14,417

Gregor T. Young, IV

   0      0    419      14,770

 

(1) S&T Bancorp Restricted Stock Grant of 2007 vested 25% on January 1, 2009 and will be fully vested as of January 1, 2012. The value realized on vesting is based on the average of the high and low price of S&T Bancorp, Inc. stock on December 31, 2008, which was $35.25.

Pension Benefits

The following table sets forth information relating to pension benefits for 2009 for our Named Executive Officers.

 

Name

 

Plan Name

  Number of years
of Credited
Service (#)
  Present Value of
Accumulated
Benefit ($)
  Payments
During Last
Fiscal Year ($)

Todd D. Brice

  Employees’ Retirement Plan of S&T Bank S&T Bancorp, Inc. Supplemental Savings and Make-up Plan   25

25

  364,300

239,800

  —  

Robert E. Rout

  Employees’ Retirement Plan of S&T Bank S&T Bancorp, Inc. Supplemental Savings and Make-up Plan   19

19

  536,900

234,000

  —  

Edward C. Hauck

  Employees’ Retirement Plan of S&T Bank S&T Bancorp, Inc. Supplemental Savings and Make-up Plan   35

35

  938,000

303,000

  —  

David G. Antolik

  Employees’ Retirement Plan of S&T Bank S&T Bancorp, Inc. Supplemental Savings and Make-up Plan   20

20

  212,600

34,600

  —  

Gregor T. Young, IV

  Employees’ Retirement Plan of S&T Bank S&T Bancorp, Inc. Supplemental Savings and Make-up Plan   10

10

  199,700

30,900

  —  

The present values shown above are based on benefits earned as of December 31, 2009 under the terms of the Employees’ Retirement Plan of S&T Bank and the S&T Bancorp, Inc. Supplemental Savings and Make-up Plan as summarized below. Present values are determined in accordance with the assumptions used for purposes of measuring S&T Bank’s pension obligations under SFAS No. 87 as of December 31, 2009, including a discount rate of 6.25%, with the exception that benefit payments are assumed to commence at age 62, the earliest age at which unreduced benefits are payable. Messrs. Rout and Hauck were eligible to retire as of December 31, 2009 and receive 79.17% and 75.83% of their benefits, respectively, based on the reduction for early retirement described below.

 

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Employees’ Retirement Plan of S&T Bank

The Employees’ Retirement Plan of S&T Bank (the “Retirement Plan”) is a defined benefit pension plan that covers substantially all employees. The Retirement Plan provides benefits that are based on years of service and compensation. Benefits payable under the Retirement Plan at normal retirement, age 65, are determined under the following formula.

1.0% of Average Final Compensation up to Covered Compensation, times Benefit Service

Plus

1.5% of Average Final Compensation in excess of Covered Compensation, times Benefit Service

For purposes of determining the normal retirement benefit, the terms used above have the following meanings:

 

   

Average Final Compensation is the average compensation received during the highest 5 consecutive years out of the last 10 years prior to retirement or termination of employment. Compensation generally means total cash remuneration determined before reductions for employee contributions for 401(k) or other pre-tax benefits, but does not include amounts deferred under the S&T Bancorp, Inc. Supplemental Savings and Make-up Plan. Compensation is limited each year as required by Federal law (limit was $245,000 for 2009).

 

   

Covered Compensation is the average of the Social Security taxable wage bases in effect for each year in the 35-year period ending with the calendar year in which a participant retires or terminates employment.

 

   

Benefit Service generally means an employee’s period of employment with S&T Bank after attainment of age 21.

Participants’ benefits under the Retirement Plan are 100% vested after completion of five years of service. Participants who terminate employment prior to age 55 with a vested benefit are entitled to receive their full accrued benefit at normal retirement, age 65, or upon election, can receive actuarially reduced benefits as early as age 55. Participants who terminate employment after age 55 with at least 10 years of service are eligible to receive early retirement benefits under the Retirement Plan. Early retirement benefits are reduced 5/12 of 1% for each month by which the date benefit payments commence precedes age 62.

Accrued benefits under the Retirement Plan are payable in the form of a ten-year certain and life annuity that provides equal monthly payments for the participant’s life with a minimum of 120 monthly payments guaranteed. Married participants must receive their benefit in the form of a 50% joint and survivor annuity with 120 monthly payments guaranteed unless their spouse consents to a different form of a payment. A 50% joint and survivor annuity provides a reduced monthly payment for the participant’s life with 50% of the payment continuing for the spouse’s life following the participant’s death. Various optional annuity forms of payment are available under the Retirement Plan. All forms of payment are actuarially equivalent in value.

S&T Bancorp, Inc. Supplemental Savings and Make-up Plan

As noted above under the definition of Average Final Compensation for the Retirement Plan, compensation deferred under the S&T Bancorp, Inc. Supplemental Savings and Make-up Plan (the “Nonqualified Plan”) is not included as eligible compensation and includable compensation is limited as a result of maximums imposed by law. The Nonqualified Plan restores benefits that are not payable by the Retirement Plan as a result of the executive’s election to defer compensation or as a result of the compensation limit. The provisions described above for the Retirement Plan apply to this plan as well, with the exception that upon termination or retirement participants automatically receive their benefit in the form of an actuarially equivalent lump sum, which is credited to their account under this plan and paid out in accordance with their distribution election.

 

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Nonqualified Deferred Compensation

The following table provides information with respect to the Nonqualified Plan and the Named Executive Officers. The amounts shown include compensation earned and deferred in prior years, and earnings on, or distributions of, such amounts.

 

Name

   Executive
Contributions
in last FY ($)
   Registrant
Contributions
in last FY ($)(1)
   Aggregate
Earnings in
last FY ($)
   Aggregate
Withdrawals/
Distributions ($)
   Aggregate
Balance at
Last FYE ($)

Todd D. Brice

   14,015    7,008    19,735    0    102,925

Robert E. Rout

   36,656    4,791    70,008    0    320,502

Edward C. Hauck

   5,894    3,629    13,637    0    68,811

David G. Antolik

   3,930    2,292    12,079    0    58,913

Gregor T. Young, IV

   41,215    1,458    97,091    0    415,293

 

(1) The amounts set forth in this column have been included in the “All Other Compensation” column of the Summary Compensation Table.

The Nonqualified Plan offers certain management employees, including the Named Executive Officers, the opportunity to continue to defer income on a tax deferred basis that exceeds annual contribution or compensation limits for qualified plans. In addition, the Nonqualified Plan can be used by highly-compensated employees who are limited to the salary deferral limit to the Thrift Plan. The employee may elect to defer a percentage of compensation from each payroll under the Supplemental Savings provision. The employee may also elect to contribute at the same deferral rate as for the Thrift Plan after reaching a contribution or compensation limit under the Make-up provision.

S&T Bank makes employer matching and year end profit sharing contributions to the Nonqualified Plan that cannot be made to the qualified plans due to the aforementioned limits. The match is 3.5% of the deferral amount, except the match on deferrals under the Make-up provision, which are matched 100% of the first 1% of the employee’s eligible compensation and 50% of the next 5% of the employee’s eligible compensation, up to 3.5% of the employee’s eligible compensation. The year end profit sharing bonus is at the same percentage as for the Thrift Plan and applies to eligible compensation that exceeds the compensation limit for qualified plans.

The employee deferrals and employer contributions are invested equally in two large capitalization mutual funds in a Rabbi Trust. Effective December 1, 2009, however, the participants may elect the allocation percentages for employee deferrals and employer contributions into the two large capitalization mutual funds and a money market mutual fund. The Thrift Plan Committee at S&T Bank determines the investment vehicles in the Rabbi Trust, which currently are Vanguard 500 Index Fund, Selected American Shares D and Federated Prime Obligations Fund.

As described earlier, distributions from the Nonqualified Plan are in accordance with the participant’s distribution election. The Nonqualified Plan is subject to the provisions of Section 409A of the Code.

Termination of Employment and Change-in-Control Arrangements

The Named Executive Officers would receive payments from S&T in connection with a termination from employment. The amount of the payment would vary, depending upon whether the termination was due to resignation, retirement, severance, good cause or change in control of S&T. In the event of death, the Named Executive Officer’s beneficiary, heirs or estate would be entitled to certain payments.

Importantly, provisions of EESA and ARRA, which became effective on February 17, 2009, limit or eliminate S&T’s ability to pay any severance or change in control payments to the Named Executive Officers, among others. However, SEC regulations require S&T to report compensation in the table below that would have been paid had the termination event occurred on the last day of S&T’s fiscal year. The discussion and figures

 

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below are limited by such new restrictions only to the extent applicable to S&T on December 31, 2009. Importantly, provisions of EESA and ARRA are not reflected in the discussion or table below.

Resignation. There are no employment agreements between S&T and any of the Named Executive Officers; therefore, in the event of resignation, the Named Executive Officer would receive salary payments and participate in S&T’s benefit plans through the date of separation from employment. There would be no additional payments. The Named Executive Officer would forfeit any unexercised nonstatutory stock options under the 1992 Plan immediately following the date of separation from employment. Nonstatutory stock options under the 2003 Plan would be forfeited if not exercised within one month of separation from service.

Retirement. Upon retirement, the Named Executive Officers would receive pension benefits as described above in “Employees’ Retirement Plan of S&T Bank” and the “S&T Bancorp, Inc. Supplemental Savings and Make-up Plan.” Married participants must receive their benefit in the form of a 50% joint and survivor annuity with 120 monthly payments guaranteed unless their spouse consents to a different form of a payment. Various optional annuity forms of payment are available under the Retirement Plan. All forms of payment are actuarially equivalent in value.

 

     The Retirement Plan    The Nonqualified
Plan, Lump Sum
Benefit as of
1/1/2010(3)
     Date
Payable(1)
   Annual
Benefit(2)
  

Todd D. Brice

   age 65    $ 74,200    $ 115,400

Robert E. Rout

   1/1/2010      45,600      220,000

Edward C. Hauck

   1/1/2010      79,500      286,300

David G. Antolik

   age 65      55,500      15,500

Gregor T. Young, IV

   age 65      27,100      16,800

 

(1) Messrs. Rout and Hauck were eligible to retire and receive 79.17% and 75.83%, respectively, of their benefits payable on January 1, 2010 as described in “The Employees’ Retirement Plan of S&T Bank” above. Messrs. Young, Brice and Antolik were not eligible for early retirement as of December 31, 2009, and are presented at what their respective benefit would be upon retirement at age 65 if they had terminated employment on December 31, 2009. Mr. Rout resigned as Chief Financial Officer effective as of February 5, 2010.
(2) The Named Executive Officers are married participants and must receive their benefit in the form of a 50% joint and survivor annuity with 120 monthly payments guaranteed unless their spouse consents to a different form of a payment. The annual benefits shown in this column are payable for the participant’s life with a minimum of 120 monthly payments guaranteed. After 120 monthly payments have been made, 50% of the amount shown continues for the spouse’s life following the participant’s death. If the Named Executive Officer became deceased prior to retiring, the Named Executive Officer’s surviving spouse would receive the amount shown for ten years commencing as of the date shown, reducing to 50% of the amount shown after ten years and continuing for the remainder of her lifetime.
(3) The Named Executive Officer receives a lump sum payment upon retirement or termination as described above in the “S&T Bancorp, Inc. Supplemental Savings and Make-up Plan.” The lump sum payment is determined as the present value of a ten-year certain and life annuity based on an interest rate of 8.0% and a mortality table specified by the terms of the plan, and is deposited into the Named Executive Officer’s Nonqualified Plan deferred compensation account. Currently, the Named Executive Officers have elected to receive a lump sum distribution at age 70, but may change their elections to an earlier date, for the amount of their payments accrued prior to January 1, 2005. The Named Executive Officers individually elected a time and form of payment for payments accrued after December 31, 2004, as allowed by the Nonqualified Plan and permitted by Section 409A.

The Named Executive Officers continue to hold any unexercised nonstatutory stock options granted under the 1992 Stock Plan for the earlier of five years or the normal expiration date of the option. Nonstatutory stock

 

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options granted under the 2003 Stock Plan are held until the normal expiration date of the option. Unvested options continue to vest according to the original vesting schedule for the grant.

Severance, constructive termination and change in control. As described in the “Compensation Discussion and Analysis,” during 2009, S&T had change in control agreements in effect with each of the Named Executive Officers. The agreement for Mr. Brice provided that if he was terminated: (i) without cause within six months preceding a change in control; (ii) within three years following the occurrence of certain “changes in control” of S&T or of S&T Bank that were not pre-approved by the S&T Board; or (iii) if he voluntarily terminated his employment with S&T under certain specified circumstances following a change in control (for “good reason”), Mr. Brice would be entitled to receive a lump sum cash payment based on 300 percent of his salary immediately preceding the change in control and to receive certain continuing S&T employee benefits for three years. Each agreement for the other Named Executive officers provide that if the executive was terminated: (i) without cause within six months preceding a change in control; (ii) within two years following the occurrence of certain “changes in control” of S&T or of S&T Bank that were not pre-approved by the S&T Board; or (iii) if the executive voluntarily terminated his employment with S&T under certain specified circumstances following a change in control (for “good reason”), the Named Executive Officer would be entitled to receive a lump sum cash payment based on 200 percent of his salary immediately preceding the change in control and to receive certain continuing S&T employee benefits for two years. The definition of “change in control,” as used in the change in control agreements, is fully described on page 28 of this Proxy Statement under the section “Change in Control.” In addition, unvested nonstatutory stock options would immediately vest and become exercisable, under the 1992 Plan and the 2003 Plan.

The following table provides the payments that each Named Executive Officer would have received in connection with severance, constructive termination or upon a change in control of S&T at December 31, 2009:

 

Name

   Multiple
of Salary
   Lump Sum
Payment
   Value of Vesting
Nonstatutory
Stock Options(1)
   Value of
Welfare
Benefits(2)
   Total Value of
Payments(3)

Todd D. Brice

   3X    $ 1,275,000    $ 0    $ 49,743    $ 1,324,743

Robert E. Rout(4)

   2X      650,000      0      33,162      683,162

Edward C. Hauck

   2X      600,000      0      25,890      625,890

David G. Antolik

   2X      530,000      0      13,466      543,466

Gregor T. Young, IV(5)

   2X      450,000      0      32,434      482,434

 

(1) The unvested nonstatutory options were not in the money as of December 31, 2009; therefore, the Named Executive Officer would have realized no value resulting from the vesting.
(2) The value of welfare benefits for 12 months is comprised of health benefits at the COBRA premium rate and of life insurance, accidental death and disability insurance and long-term disability insurance at the current premiums paid by S&T. The amount in column 2 represents the aggregate value of the welfare benefits received for two or three years, as applicable and in accordance with the terms of the executive’s change in control/severance agreement.
(3) As discussed above, EESA, as amended by ARRA, generally prohibits the payment of severance or change in control payments to Named Executive Officers and each of the Named Executive Officers has executed an agreement acknowledging such restriction. Accordingly, because of these restrictions, these amounts would not have been actually paid in connection with a severance, constructive termination or change in control as of December 31, 2009.
(4) Mr. Rout resigned as Chief Financial Officer effective as of February 5, 2010.
(5) Mr. Young resigned as Executive Vice President effective as of February 28, 2010.

Death. Upon the death of a Named Executive Officer, except for what is described above for termination due to retirement, there are no payments above the life and accidental death and dismemberment insurance proceeds through the S&T Bank Welfare Benefit Plan. The heirs or estate of the Named Executive Officer will receive any unexercised nonstatutory stock options for the remaining term of the option. Unvested options continue to vest according to the original vesting schedule for the grant.

 

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RELATED PERSON TRANSACTIONS

Transactions with Related Parties

S&T Bank has made, and expects to make in the future, extensions of credit in the ordinary course of business to certain directors and officers. These loans are made on substantially the same terms, including interest rates, collateral and repayment terms, as those prevailing at the same time for comparable transactions with others. Such loans do not involve more than normal risk of collectability or present unfavorable features.

On January 31, 1992, S&T Bank entered into a limited partnership arrangement with RCL Partners, Inc. for the construction of 30 apartments in Indiana, Pennsylvania targeted for senior citizens. The total investment by S&T Bank in 1992 was $1,761,766 and entitled S&T Bank to certain tax credits, tax depreciation benefits and a share of cash flows under the Code Section 42 program. Messrs. Delaney (and affiliated parties) and Gatti (and affiliated parties), each a member of the S&T Board, each hold a one-third interest in RCL Partners, Inc.

During 2009, S&T Bank made payments of $145,861 to Ms. Toretti (and affiliated parties), a member of the S&T Board, for the lease of operations, branch and administrative facilities. On October 1, 1986, S&T Bank entered into an agreement to lease, from Ms. Toretti and Michael Toretti as trustees under an irrevocable trust, a building and land used as S&T Bank’s North Fourth Street branch and operations center. The terms of the agreement provide for payment of $10,000 per month for the first five years and options to renew for four five-year terms with rent for each option term to be the rent from the previous term, plus 5%. On October 1, 2006, S&T Bank exercised its fourth renewal option at $12,155 per month. Additionally, in September 2006, S&T Bank exercised an extension agreement beginning October 1, 2011 providing for four five-year terms at the same terms and conditions of the original lease.

During 2009, S&T Bank made payments of $138,108 to a company owned by Mr. Thomas A. Brice for the purchase of furniture and other furnishings for the headquarters, branch offices and operational centers. In addition, Mr. Thomas A. Brice’s son, Todd D. Brice, is a director and is employed by S&T and S&T Bank as president and chief executive officer . Todd Brice earned $425,000 in salary and bonuses in 2009, as disclosed in the Summary Compensation Table on page 35.

On May 4, 2001, S&T Insurance Group, LLC, and Attorneys Abstract Company, Inc. entered into an agreement to form S&T Settlement Services, LLC (“STSS”), with respective ownership interests of 55% and 45%. STSS is a title insurance agency serving commercial customers. S&T Bank owns a 100% interest in S&T Insurance Group, LLC; Mr. Papernick owns 66.67% of the stock of Attorneys Abstract Company, Inc., which received $70,809 in 2009 from its interest in STSS. In addition, Director Papernick has a son who has a material interest in the law firm Papernick & Gefsky, LLC, which provided services to S&T Bank and received payments of $6,396 during 2009.

Director Gatti has a son who has material interest in TREK Development Group, which is typically the general partner or co-general partner, project developer, consultant and syndicator for Code Section 42 Low Income Housing projects in which S&T Bank invests as limited partner. Multiple projects received a total of $969,853 of developer fees in 2009.

See also “Compensation Committee Interlocks and Insider Participation” on page 14.

Review, Approval or Ratification of Transactions with Related Persons

S&T has a written policy for the review, approval or ratification of transactions with Related Persons and Related Parties (collectively, the “Related Parties”). On an annual basis, each director and executive officer must submit a Director and Executive Officers’ Questionnaire (the “Questionnaire”) for the purpose of assisting in the administration of this policy. The Questionnaire requests the identification of the Related Parties.

Any person nominated to stand for election as a director must submit a Questionnaire no later than the date of his or her nomination. Any person who is appointed as a director or an executive officer must submit a

 

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Questionnaire prior to such person’s appointment as a director or executive officer, except in the case of an executive officer where due to the circumstances it is not practicable to submit the Questionnaire in advance, in which case the Questionnaire must be submitted as soon as reasonably practicable following the appointment.

Directors and executive officers are expected to notify the CRO of any updates to the list of Related Parties. The CRO disseminates a Related Party master list as appropriate within S&T. The recipients of the master list utilize the information contained therein in connection with their respective business units, departments and areas of responsibility to effectuate this policy.

The S&T Board has determined that the Nominating Committee is best suited to review and approve Related Party Transactions.

At each calendar year’s first regularly scheduled Nominating Committee meeting, management recommends Related Party Transactions to be entered into by S&T for that calendar year, including the proposed aggregate value of such transactions if applicable. In addition, the Nominating Committee reviews any previously approved or ratified Related Party Transactions that remain ongoing. Based on all relevant facts and circumstances, taking into consideration S&T’s contractual obligations, the Nominating Committee determines if it is in the best interests of S&T and its shareholders to approve or disapprove such proposed transactions or to continue, modify or terminate ongoing Related Party Transactions.

At each subsequently scheduled meeting, management updates the Committee as to any material change regarding approved Related Party Transactions.

In the event management recommends any further Related Party Transactions subsequent to the first calendar year meeting, such transactions may be presented to the Committee for approval or preliminarily entered into by management subject to consultation with the Committee Chairperson, and ratification by the Committee at the next scheduled meeting; provided that if ratification shall not be forthcoming, management will make all reasonable efforts to cancel or annul such transaction.

The Nominating Committee has reviewed the types of Related Party Transactions described below and determined that each of the following Related Party Transactions will be deemed to be pre-approved by the Committee:

 

  1. Any compensation paid to executive officers provided S&T’s Compensation Committee approved or recommended that the S&T Board approve such compensation.

 

  2. Any compensation paid to a director if the compensation is required to be reported in S&T’s proxy statement under Item 402 of the SEC’s compensation disclosure requirements.

 

  3. Any transaction where the Related Party’s interest arises solely from ownership of Common Stock and all shareholders received the same benefit on a pro rata basis (e.g., dividends).

 

  4. Any transaction with a Related Party involving the rendering of services as a common or contract carrier, or public utility, at rates or charges fixed in conformity with law or governmental authority.

 

  5. Any transaction with a Related Party involving services as a bank depositary of funds, transfer agent, registrar, trustee under a trust indenture, or similar services.

 

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REPORT OF THE AUDIT COMMITTEE

The Audit Committee oversees S&T’s financial reporting process on behalf of the S&T Board. Management has the primary responsibility for the financial statements and the reporting process, including the systems of internal controls. In fulfilling its oversight responsibilities, the Audit Committee reviewed the audited financial statements in the Annual Report with management including a discussion of the quality, not just the acceptability, of the accounting principles, the reasonableness of significant judgments, and the clarity of the disclosures in the financial statements.

The Audit Committee reviewed with the independent registered public accounting firm (“Independent Auditor”), who is responsible for expressing an opinion on the conformity of those audited financial statements with generally accepted accounting principles, their judgment as to the quality, not just the acceptability, of S&T’s accounting principles and such other matters as are required to be discussed with the committee under generally accepted auditing standards or as are required by Statement on Auditing Standards No. 114 (“Communication with Audit Committees”). The Audit Committee has received the written disclosures and the letter from the Independent Auditor required by Independence Standards Board Standard No. 1 (“Independence Discussions with Audit Committees”), and has discussed with the Independent Auditor the auditor’s independence. The Audit Committee has considered the compatibility of non-audit services with the auditor’s independence.

The Audit Committee discussed with S&T’s internal auditors and Independent Auditor the overall scope and plans for their respective audits. The Audit Committee met with the internal auditors and Independent Auditor to discuss the results of their examinations, their evaluations of S&T’s internal controls and the overall quality of S&T’s financial reporting.

In reliance on the reviews and discussions referred to above, the Audit Committee recommended to the S&T Board, and the S&T Board has approved, that the audited financial statements be included in the Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2009, for filing with the SEC.

Submitted by the Audit Committee of the S&T Bancorp, Inc. Board of Directors:

Joseph Kirk (Chairperson); John Brenzia; Jeffrey Grube; Frank Jones; James Milano; and Robert Rebich, Jr.

In accordance with and to the extent permitted by applicable law or regulation, the information contained in the Report of the Audit Committee and the Audit Committee Charter shall not be incorporated by reference into any future filing under the Securities Act of 1933, as amended, or the Exchange Act, and shall not be deemed to be soliciting material or to be filed with the SEC under the Exchange Act.

 

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SHAREHOLDER PROPOSALS

Any proposal that a shareholder of S&T intends to present at the 2011 S&T Annual Meeting of Shareholders must be received in writing by the Secretary of S&T at S&T’s Administrative Office (its principal executive offices), 800 Philadelphia Street, Indiana, Pennsylvania, on or before November 19, 2010. If such proposal is in compliance with all of the requirements of Rule 14a-8 under the Exchange Act, the proposal will be considered for inclusion in S&T’s proxy statement and proxy form relating to such meeting.

Notice to S&T of a shareholder director nomination submitted otherwise than pursuant to Rule 14a-8 must be submitted in writing by the Secretary of S&T at S&T’s Administrative Office (its principal executive offices), 800 Philadelphia Street, Indiana, Pennsylvania, not earlier than the close of business on the 120th day, nor later than the close of business on the 60th day, immediately preceding the date of the Annual Meeting, and the persons named in the proxies solicited by S&T’s Board for its 2011 Annual Meeting of Shareholders may exercise discretionary voting power with respect to any such proposal as to which S&T does not receive a timely notice. Such proposals should be submitted by means that permit proof of the date of delivery, such as certified mail, return receipt requested.

OTHER MATTERS

Management knows of no other matters to be brought before the Annual Meeting. In accordance with the S&T By-laws, no persons other than the Company’s nominees may be nominated for director election or elected at the Annual Meeting. However, should any other matter requiring a vote of the shareholders properly come before the meeting, the persons named in the enclosed proxy will vote the shares represented by the proxies on such matter as determined by a majority of the S&T Board. Discretionary authority to vote on such matters is conferred by such proxies upon the persons voting them.

 

By Order of the Board of Directors,

LOGO

Ernest J. Draganza

Secretary

WE HAVE MAILED TO EACH PERSON BEING SOLICITED BY THE PROXY STATEMENT A COPY OF OUR ANNUAL REPORT ON FORM 10-K FOR THE YEAR ENDED DECEMBER 31, 2009 (AS FILED WITH THE SEC, INCLUDING THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS THERETO). WE WILL PROVIDE WITHOUT CHARGE TO EACH PERSON BEING SOLICITED BY THE PROXY STATEMENT, UPON THE WRITTEN REQUEST OF SUCH PERSON, ADDITIONAL COPIES OF OUR FORM 10-K. PLEASE DIRECT ALL SUCH REQUESTS TO: SECRETARY OF S&T, 800 PHILADELPHIA STREET, INDIANA, PENNSYLVANIA 15701. IN ADDITION, THE FORM 10-K AND EXHIBITS ARE AVAILABLE ON THE INTERNET AT WWW.STBANCORP.COM. THE FORM 10-K IS NOT PART OF THESE SOLICITATION MATERIALS.

March 19, 2010

 

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REVOCABLE PROXY

S&T BANCORP, INC.

ANNUAL MEETING OF SHAREHOLDERS

April 19, 2010

THIS PROXY IS SOLICITED BY THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS

The undersigned hereby appoints James B. George and Dr. Paul B. Johnston or either of them, or any successors, with full powers of substitution, to act as attorneys and proxies for the undersigned to vote all shares of the common stock of S&T Bancorp, Inc. (“S&T”), par value $2.50 per share (“S&T Common Stock”), which the undersigned is entitled to vote at the Annual Meeting of Shareholders (the “Meeting”), to be held at the S&T Training and Support Center, located at 355 North Fifth Street, Indiana, Pennsylvania, on April 19, 2010, at 10:00 a.m., Eastern Time, and at any and all adjournments thereof, as indicated on the reverse hereof.

Should the undersigned be present and elect to vote at the Meeting or at any adjournment thereof and after notification to the Secretary of S&T at the Meeting of the shareholder’s decision to terminate this proxy, then the power of said attorneys and proxies shall be deemed terminated and of no further force and effect.

The undersigned acknowledges receipt from S&T prior to execution of this proxy of the Notice of Meeting and the Proxy Statement. The undersigned hereby revokes any and all proxies heretofore given with respect to the undersigned’s shares of S&T Common Stock.

(Continued and to be signed on the reverse side)

 

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ANNUAL MEETING OF SHAREHOLDERS OF

S&T BANCORP, INC.

April 19, 2010

IMPORTANT NOTICE REGARDING THE AVAILABILITY OF PROXY MATERIALS FOR THE 2010 ANNUAL MEETING OF SHAREHOLDERS TO BE HELD ON APRIL 19, 2010

S&T’s Proxy Statement for the 2010 Annual Meeting of Shareholders

and S&T’s Annual Report on Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended December 31, 2009

are available at http://materials.proxyvote.com/783859.

Please sign, date and mail your proxy card in the envelope provided as soon as possible.

i  Please detach along perforated line and mail in the envelope provided.  i

 

¢    21330300000000000000 1

               041910

 

THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS RECOMMENDS A VOTE “FOR” ITEMS 1, 2 AND 3.

PLEASE SIGN, DATE AND RETURN PROMPTLY IN THE ENCLOSED ENVELOPE. PLEASE MARK YOUR VOTE IN BLUE OR BLACK INK AS SHOWN HERE  x

 

1. ELECTION OF DIRECTORS TO SERVE TERMS EXPIRING IN 2011.

 

 

¨    FOR ALL NOMINEES

 

¨    WITHHOLD AUTHORITY

          FOR ALL NOMINEES

 

¨    FOR ALL EXCEPT

          (See instructions below)

  

NOMINEES:

O    John N. Brenzia

O    Thomas A. Brice

O    John J. Delaney

O    Michael J. Donnelly

O     Jeffrey D. Grube

O    Frank W. Jones

O    Joseph A. Kirk

O    David L. Krieger

O    James C. Miller

O    Alan Papernick

O    Robert Rebich, Jr.

O    Christine J. Toretti

O    Charles G. Urtin

 

INSTRUCTIONS:

 

 

To withhold authority to vote for any individual nominee(s), mark “FOR ALL EXCEPT” and fill in the circle next to each nominee you wish to withhold, as shown here:  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.    ¨

 

    FOR   AGAINST    ABSTAIN

2. 

  TO RATIFY THE SELECTION OF KPMG LLP AS INDEPENDENT REGISTERED PUBLIC ACCOUNTING FIRM FOR THE FISCAL YEAR 2010.  

¨ 

 

¨ 

   ¨
3.   TO APPROVE THE NON-BINDING, ADVISORY PROPOSAL ON THE COMPENSATION OF S&T BANCORP INC.’S EXECUTIVE OFFICERS.  

¨ 

 

¨ 

  

¨ 

TO TRANSACT SUCH OTHER BUSINESS AS MAY PROPERLY COME BEFORE THE MEETING OR ANY ADJOURNMENT THEREOF.

Only shareholders of record as of the close of business on February 24, 2010 are entitled to notice of and to vote at such meeting or any adjournment thereof.

THIS PROXY WILL BE VOTED AS DIRECTED, BUT IF NO INSTRUCTIONS ARE SPECIFIED, THIS PROXY WILL BE VOTED FOR THE NOMINEES LISTED IN PROPOSAL 1, AND FOR PROPOSALS 2 AND 3. IF ANY OTHER BUSINESS IS PRESENTED AT THE MEETING, INCLUDING MATTERS RELATING TO THE CONDUCT OF THE MEETING, THIS PROXY WILL BE VOTED BY THOSE NAMED IN THIS PROXY IN ACCORDANCE WITH THE DETERMINATION OF A MAJORITY OF THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS. AT THE PRESENT TIME, THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS KNOWS OF NO OTHER BUSINESS TO BE PRESENTED AT THE MEETING.


Signature of Shareholder        Date:        Signature of Shareholder        Date:     
    Note:   Please sign exactly as your name or names appear on this Proxy. When shares are held jointly, each holder should sign. When signing as executor, administrator, attorney, trustee or guardian, please give full title as such. If the signer is a corporation, please sign full corporate name by duly authorized officer, giving full title as such. If signer is a partnership, please sign in partnership name by authorized person.
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