DEFA14A

UNITED STATES

SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION

Washington, D.C. 20549

SCHEDULE l4A

PROXY STATEMENT PURSUANT TO SECTION 14(A) OF THE SECURITIES

EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934

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ATLAS AIR WORLDWIDE HOLDINGS, INC.

(Name of Registrant As Specified In Its Charter)

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May 16, 2013
Adam R. Kokas
SVP, GC, CHRO and
Secretary
Spencer Schwartz
SVP and CFO


Dear Stockholders,
The proxy advisory firms ISS and Glass Lewis have recently recommended to their
clients that they vote against our proposal to approve, on an advisory basis, the
compensation of our named executive officers.  As we explain, we
strongly disagree
with their recommendations and urge you to vote in favor of the advisory proposal to
approve the compensation of our executives.
Sincerely,
The AAWW Compensation Committee
Frederick McCorkle, Chairman
Eugene I. Davis
Carol B. Hallett


3
OUR MANAGEMENT IS FOCUSED ON CONTINUING TO BUILD A STRONGER
COMPANY THAT DELIVERS INTRINSIC VALUE FOR OUR STOCKHOLDERS
October 2009 –
announced
plans to commence CMI
passenger charter service     
for SonAir
September 2011 –
placed two 747-8F
aircraft with Panalpina
January 2012 –
arranged Ex-Im
guaranteed       
financing  for   
remaining six          
747-8F aircraft
September 2012 –
placed two 747-8F
aircraft with DHL
July 2010 –
commenced CMI
Dreamlifter service for Boeing
May
2011
U.S.
Military
passenger
service commenced
December 2011 –
delivery completed for
first three 747-8F
aircraft placed with
British Airways
March 2012 –
began 767 CMI
service for DHL
July
2007
Atlas
creates express
network with DHL
September 2006 –
announced major order for
Boeing’s new 747-8
Freighter
February 2011 –
secured financing for
first three 747-8F
aircraft
January 2012 –
received military 
approval for 767-300
airlift service
February 2013 –
announced 747-
400F ACMI for new
customer Chapman
Freeborn;
implemented stock
repurchase program
March 2013 –
acquired first 777F
for Titan Dry
Leasing platform
June 2012 –
began
747-400F ACMI for
new customer
Etihad Cargo


4
WE HAD MANY MAJOR ACHIEVEMENTS IN 2012
In Fiscal 2012, we:
Grew our revenues 18% to $1.65 billion.
Achieved pretax income of $205 million, reflecting the second-best operating results in our history.
Our reported operating income and margin increased to $226 million and 14% in 2012 from $151
million and 11% in 2011.
Our free cash flow* increased to $209 million in 2012 from $78 million in 2011.
Secured
Ex-Im
Bank
financing
at
extremely
attractive
terms
for
up
to
six
of
our
747-8F aircraft.
Secured attractive placement with customers for the four 747-8F aircraft deliveries that occurred in
2012.
Developed and implemented a comprehensive, long-term strategic plan to provide new earnings
streams and create competitive advantages.
Obtained Civil Aviation Review Board approval from the U.S. military to perform AMC B767
passenger service.
Executed
a
start-up
plan
for
B767-200
express
cargo
operations
for
DHL.
Delivered numerous customer service quality metrics at or close to maximum levels.
Received IATA Operational Safety Audit re-certification for cargo and passenger operations without
any negative findings.
*Information related to this non-GAAP financial measure, including reconciliation to the corresponding GAAP financial measure, is set forth in Exhibit 99 of our Form 8-K, furnished to the SEC on
February 13, 2013.


5
HEADWINDS IN 2012
These numerous accomplishments were achieved despite the following
headwinds:
Continued sluggish global economic conditions.
Muted “peak”
season.
Commercial charter volumes and rates materially impacted by:
-
Increased air cargo capacity.
-
Softer demand.
-
Significantly reduced military flying levels.


6
WE PAY FOR PERFORMANCE
We believe that ISS’s policy of basing its say on pay recommendation on an analysis of CEO pay
compared to 1 and 3 year TSR fails to acknowledge the contributions of all of our executive officers to
the long-term prospects of the company.
The chart appearing below on the left is based on our 2012 Summary Compensation Table and
shows the percentage of our total compensation (as reflected in such table) that consisted of fixed
compensation and variable or performance-based compensation (long-term performance units are
assumed to be earned at the target level for purposes of our Summary Compensation Table). The
chart appearing below on the right is based on the same information, except the percentages valuing
long-term performance units granted in 2012 are assumed to be earned at the maximum level.  For
purposes of these charts, we have taken the percentages applicable to our five NEOs.
A significant portion of our compensation is performance based.


7
ANNUAL INCENTIVE PLAN TARGET SETTING
Financial targets reward superior performance; financial targets used to determine annual
cash bonus were adjusted upward each year.


8
AAWW 2012 STOCK PERFORMANCE
Percent Change
Dow Jones Transportation Average Index: ALK, CHRW, CNW, CSX, DAL, EXPD, FDX, GMT, JBHT, JBLU, KEX, KSU, LSTR, LUV, MATX, NSC, R, LUV, UAL, UNP, UPS


9
A substantial majority (over 67%) of our shareholders voting on our 2012 Say-on-Pay
proposal voted in favor of that proposal notwithstanding a recommendation against it by
ISS.  We believe that our shareholders support our compensation practices because:
They
recognize
our
compensation
best
practices
and
excellent
pay
for
performance results.
We manage our business for the long-term and for future growth.
As previously indicated, AAWW’s financial performance for the year was solid
and
filled
with
numerous
financial
and
operational
achievements,
despite
a
challenging macro-economic and freight environment. This strong performance
was reflected in a 15% increase in our share price performance.
We grew our revenues in 2012 by 18% to $1.65 billion.
We achieved pretax income of $205 million, reflecting the second-best operating
results in our history.
Our reported operating income and margin increased to $226 million and 14% in
2012 from $151 million and 11% in 2011.
Our free cash flow
*
increased to $209 million in 2012 from $78 million in 2011.
STRONG SHAREHOLDER SUPPORT FOR OUR COMPENSATION PRACTICES
*Information related to this non-GAAP financial measure, including reconciliation to the corresponding GAAP financial measure, is set forth in Exhibit 99 of our Form 8-K, furnished to the
SEC on February 13, 2013.


10
WE ARE RESPONSIVE TO OUR SHAREHOLDERS
Prior to our 2012 annual meeting, we reached out to holders of approximately 85%
of outstanding shares to discuss their views on our executive compensation
program. We held conversations and/or exchanged emails with stockholders
holding approximately 82% of our outstanding shares. The AAWW Compensation
Committee
considered
the
feedback
from
stockholders
and
made
the
following
changes to our compensation program beginning in 2013:
Reduced the weighting of the individual management business objective
metric in the annual cash incentive plan from 40% to 30%.
Revised the financial performance metric in the annual cash incentive plan
from one based on pretax income to one based on earnings per common
share.
Changed the earnings before taxes performance metric used for long-term
incentive awards to one based on earnings before interest, taxes,
depreciation and amortization (EBITDA).


11
AAWW MAINTAINS A TOP OF CLASS MANAGEMENT TEAM IN A
COMPETITIVE MARKETPLACE
Our
executives’
skills
are
valuable
to
us
and
they
are
highly
transferrable
and
desirable
to
our
competitors,
as
well
as
to
companies
in
other
industries.
We
have
designed
our
compensation
policy
so
that
we
maintain
our
current
executive
team
and
remain
an
attractive
employer
as
we
invest
in
our
future
growth,
continue
to
execute
our
strategic
transformation
and
endure
challenging economic environments. 
KEY COMPONENTS OF OUR COMPENSATION POLICY INCLUDE:
Benchmarking
our
executives’
compensation
at
competitive
levels
We
target
base
salary,
performance-based
annual
incentive
cash
compensation
and
performance-
based
and
time-based
equity
compensation
between
the
50
th
and
75
th
percentiles
of
our
compensation
peers
for
our
CEO
and
at
the
75
th
percentile
for
our
other
senior
executives.
This
is
nationwide
data
even
though
AAWW
executives
are
based
in
one
of
the
highest
cost
locations
in
the
country.
While
ISS
criticizes
the
Company
for
using
peers
“with
significantly
higher
revenue
than”
AAWW,
ISS’
report
on
our
executive
compensation
fails
to
consider
that
the
information
on
our
peers
is
scaled
to
provide
an
“apples-
to-apples”
comparison of compensation in the markets in which we compete for executive talent.
Reward
strong
individual
performance
by
aligning
incentive-based
compensation
to
individuals’
annual
performance
objectives
We incentivize management’s long-term investment in the company by rewarding what they can control, and
decline to reward risky behavior targeted at artificially inflating stockholder return at the expense of our future
growth. 
Our Annual incentive program performance targets include personal metrics that are specifically tailored to each
individual’s job responsibilities to incentivize the achievement of  job specific goals.


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Robust performance of our high quality, experience executive team.
Productivity and commitment of our lean management team.
High proportion of incentive compensation that is only paid if earned by
superior performance.
Express Board policy to provide strong incentives to retain current
management team.
-
Significant competition for high-performing talent.
WHERE DID ISS GET IT WRONG?
BENCHMARKING
We target to 50
th
to 75
th
percentile because of:
Management team has successfully executed numerous strategic
initiatives notwithstanding challenging market conditions.
Over 60% of compensation is performance-based (assuming a
maximum payout of long-term equity awards.
-
AAWW executives are based in one of the highest cost locations in the            
country.


13
WHERE DID ISS GET IT WRONG?
EXPRESSES CONCERN WITH SUCCESSIVE ABOVE-TARGET PAYOUTS
ISS: Concerned that goals under the long-term incentive plan are “not
particularly rigorous.”
Long term incentive payouts are determined based on operating
performance (measured by average growth in earnings before taxes
(EBT) and return on invested capital (ROIC)) compared against a peer
group
of
approximately
20
similar
“asset
heavy”
companies.
The
only
way to earn above-target payouts is to outperform the peer group. 
We believe that objectively comparing performance to a set of 20
peer companies, by its nature, is certainly a rigorous process.
AAWW
achieved
top
quartile
ROIC
and
56-75
th
percentile
EBT
growth
from      
2010-2012 as compared to the peer group.
What did ISS get wrong? 
While some of these peers have larger revenue bases than AAWW,
this group of peers is used only for performance comparisons and is
not used to benchmark AAWW compensation levels.


14
ISS:  The service quality metric under the company’s annual incentive plan is
“relatively more subjective.”
60% of the annual incentive payout is based on objective metrics
(50% financial performance and 10% service quality (20% in the
case
of
our
operating
personnel)).This
was
increased
to
70%
in
2013
based on shareholder feedback. The financial metric was changed
from adjusted pre-tax income to adjusted earnings per share in 2013
to continue to ensure alignment of management and shareholder
interests.
The service quality metrics are measured against AAWW’s ability to
meet or exceed aggressive service level agreements (SLAs)
specified
in
contracts
with
our
key
customers.
AAWW
either
meets
or
exceeds these standards or it doesn’t.
As permitted under the SEC rules, AAWW does not
provide the reliability targets in its proxy statement as it
has determined that such disclosure would result in
competitive harm.
WHERE DID ISS GET IT WRONG?
EXPRESSES CONCERN WITH SUCCESSIVE ABOVE-TARGET PAYOUTS
What did ISS get wrong?


15
What did ISS get wrong?
Individual business objectives (IBOs) consist of many detailed, job
specific goals that are specifically tailored to incentivize executives to
drive achievement of the business plan and financial goals approved
by the Board. IBOs are described in detail on page 31 of the Proxy
Statement.
We establish challenging targets which represent a high level of
operating
performance.
2012
financial
targets
represent
a
meaningful
increase
over
the
targets
for
2011.
WHERE DID ISS GET IT WRONG?
EXPRESSES CONCERN WITH SUCCESSIVE ABOVE-TARGET PAYOUTS


16
AAWW MAINTAINS COMPENSATION BEST PRACTICES
We offer no excise tax gross ups or
modified gross ups.
We believe these gross ups are antithetical
to fair compensation practices. 
Payments in event of change of control
do not exceed 3x for all executives.
We believe change of control payments at
this level protect our executives, yet are not
prohibitive to a potential strategic partner.   
No share recycling.
Policy of not reusing shares forfeited for tax
withholding or cancelled awards.
Minimum stock ownership requirements
are in place for officers and directors,
and we provide robust disclosure on
such compliance.
We believe our directors and officers act in
our stockholders’
best interests when they
themselves are stockholders.  There is 100%
compliance with the stock ownership
requirements, and actual ownership levels far
exceed the minimum requirements in most
instances.
Substantial levels of variable
compensation.
As indicated on page 6, a majority of our
compensation is “at risk”
whether earned on
a target basis or at the maximum level.


1Q13 HIGHLIGHTS
Reflected
business mix, productivity gains,         
efficiency initiatives
Adjusted
EPS
-
$0.22*
Street
consensus
-
$0.14
Full-year
outlook
affirmed
Adjusted EPS ~ $4.80*
Operating revenue up 5%
Operating income up 10%
ACMI Direct Contribution up 65%
Free cash flow of $42 million*
*Information related to these non-GAAP financial measures, including reconciliations to the corresponding GAAP
financial measures, is contained on page 21 of our Form 10-Q for the quarterly period ended March 31, 2013, filed with
the SEC on May 2, 2013 and in Exhibit 99 of our Form 8-K, furnished to the SEC on May 2, 2013.
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