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.

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Shareholder Engagement
Shareholder Engagement
Proxy Season 2014
Proxy Season 2014


Executive Summary
2
We seek shareholder feedback and welcome your thoughts on corporate governance
and executive compensation
Following our 2013 annual meeting, we reached out to holders of nearly 80% of shares,
and made significant changes to our compensation program following this engagement
We have performed well in an environment of global uncertainty and are
ready to capitalize on market improvements
We continue to execute a strategic plan that enables us to grow over the long
term and deliver value to our investors
A significant portion of our compensation is performance-based.
We use objective metrics in our annual bonus program, our RSUs vest over 4 years,
and PSUs pay out zero to twice target based on absolute company performance
Alignment of executive compensation with company performance drives a highly
engaged and tenured executive team
This has resulted in a strong operating and financial performance over the 2009-2013
period
We have a strong level of independent oversight of our compensation program and
adherence to corporate governance best practices
We
have
made
recent
enhancements
to
our
practices,
including
the
adoption
of
majority voting
for
Directors
in
uncontested
elections
and
appointment
of
a
new
independent Chairman
in
2014
Shareholder
Outreach and
Responsiveness
Business
Performance
Pay Program Aimed
at Aligning Pay
with Performance
Effective
Compensation
Program
Commitment to
Best Practices


We value our shareholders’
input and continue to solicit feedback
In
2013,
we
reached
out
to
holders
of
almost
80%
of
our
outstanding
shares
to
discuss
executive
compensation
and
other
issues
of
importance
to
shareholders,
and
met with holders of about 55% of our outstanding shares
We made changes to our compensation program in 2013 and early 2014 in response to
feedback given by shareholders during these meetings (See slides #4 and #5 for a
detailed description of changes)
We continue to engage extensively with our investors to solicit their points of view and
consider further improvement
We are committed to linking pay and performance, as we believe this is a key driver in
aligning company, executive and shareholder interests
Shareholder Outreach and Responsiveness
3


Compensation Program Changes in Response
to Shareholder Feedback
4
©2012 Atlas Air Worldwide Holdings, Inc.
Area of Focus
What We Heard from Investors
How We Responded in 2013-14
CEO Compensation
Benchmarking
CEO’s pay should be  targeted at median
For all future CEO pay decisions, total direct compensation targeted at
median of peers
CEO
LTI
plan
target
award
reduced
by
100
percentage
points,
from
475%
to 375% of base salary
CEO Annual Bonus  Payout
Consider negative discretion to reflect
special circumstances in addition to
operating performance
The Compensation Committee used downward discretion to reduce the
bonus payout in 2013 by an additional $673,000 (an additional 65
percentage points), to 80% of target (performance against stated
objectives would have resulted in CEO bonus at 145% of target)
This is 40% below prior year payout all based on special circumstances of
this year
Annual Bonus
Performance Metrics
Objective performance criteria should
have greater weighting in annual
incentive program
Decreased weighting of individual strategic metrics for all participants to 30%
in 2013
Further decreased individual performance metrics for the CEO to 20% in
2014
Peer Group
Compensation benchmark group
includes peers with  significantly larger
revenues, requiring regression, and
certain companies in automotive industry
For 2014 compensation decisions, the Committee revised the peer group to
consist of 20 companies in industries similar to ours, with median revenue
size
approximately
equal
to
AAWW
revenues
(including
revenues
of
Polar)


Compensation Program Changes in Response
to Shareholder Feedback (cont’d)
5
©2012 Atlas Air Worldwide Holdings, Inc.
Area of Focus
What We Heard from Investors
How We Responded in 2013-14
Multiple Peer Groups
Use of separate peer groups for
benchmarking pay and measuring
performance is confusing
We used a single new representative and relevant peer group to benchmark
2014 compensation
We moved in 2014 to absolute metrics to measure performance for LTI plan
awards
Metrics used in AIP and LTI plan should
be more relevant to value enhancement
In 2013, AIP metric moved to Adjusted EPS to better diversify from LTI plan
metrics and to incentivize and reward tax planning efforts of management
In 2013, LTI plan EBT metric changed to EBITDA as a better indicator of cash
flow and more relevant measure of underlying profit potential while keeping
ROIC
In 2014, LTI plan metrics changed from relative to absolute measure
Clawback
Lack of compensation clawback policy
New AIP clawback policy adopted beginning in 2014
Change-in-Control/Double
Trigger
Single-trigger vesting upon change of
control not considered ‘best practice’
LTI awards granted beginning in 2014 have double triggers
Majority Voting Standard
A majority voting standard would
strengthen the director election process
Incentive Plans
Performance Metrics
Amendment to our By-Laws establishes a majority voting standard in
uncontested
director
elections
beginning
with
our
Annual
Meeting
in
2015


~70% of AAWW block hours
Provide outsourced cargo aircraft solutions,
including provision of an aircraft, crew,
maintenance and insurance, including DHL
Express and Qantas, among others
Most competitors are private companies
~10-15% of AAWW block hours
Provide cargo and passenger aircraft charters to
customers, including brokers, cruise-ship operators,
freight forwarders, direct shippers and airlines
Large, fragmented, competitive market; is a component
of many freight companies’
business
~10-15% of AAWW block hours
Provide cargo and passenger aircraft charter
services for the U.S. military
Mostly small, domestic competitors; private
companies, many of which have recently
experienced bankruptcy
Significantly growing part of our business
Revenue not tied to block hours
Provide cargo and passenger aircraft and engine
leasing solutions
We are a leading global provider of outsourced aircraft and aviation
operating services, managing and operating the world’s largest fleet of
Boeing 747 freighters through several diverse business segments
A Diverse Service Provider with
Solid Business Performance
6
ACMI
(Aircraft, Crew, Maintenance, and Insurance)
Commercial
Charter
AMC (Air Mobility Command)
Charter Services
Dry
Leasing


Underlying Core Strength and Growth
7
Resilient Business Model
Modern fleet: New 747-8Fs
Higher
ACMI
and
CMI
volume
Added
AMC and Commercial Charter
Pax
flying
Added 777Fs
for Dry Leasing
Expanding
767
platform
Added
Passenger
flying
Operating efficiencies
Meaningful earnings
Return of capital
Executing our plan
Increasing contribution
from business investments


LOGO

 

Majority of pay performance-based

Our community to pay for performance is evidence by the substantial portion of executive compensation being linked to both individual and company performance

2013 target compensation CEO Pay

Base salary 15%

Long-term incentive program 71%

Annual Incentive 14%

2013 Target Compensation Average NEO (non-CEO)

Base Salary 19%

Long-Term Incentive Program 65%

Annual Incentive 16%

Information derived from Atlas Air proxy statement dated May 13, 2014

8


Atlas Air is a unique company in the public markets
It is not appropriate to compare Atlas Air directly with passenger
airlines, door-to-door freight delivery providers or leasing companies
(many of these companies are our customers),
Most direct competitors are private companies with different capital
structures and executive compensation arrangements, much of which is
undisclosed
There are 5 primary competitors in our core ACMI business
All are private companies; several closely held or private equity
owned
2 recently came out of bankruptcy
We offer a complex number of services on a truly global scale
300+ cities, 100+ countries last year
Most customers outside the U.S.
Running a safe, secure, compliant airline with large complex assets
Lean management team and challenging business requires broad
skillsets and deep experience
Our Unique Comparator Considerations
9
A Unique Company
with Limited Number
of Direct Peers
Global Scale;
Business
Complexity;
Competition for
Business and
Talent


Completely Revamped Peer Group for 2014
10
We now use one peer group
consisting of 20 companies in
industries similar to ours, with median
revenue size approximately equal to
AAWW revenues (including Polar
revenues) to benchmark
compensation
Regression of revenues is no longer
necessary
PSU performance is now measured
using absolute metrics, eliminating the
need for a second peer group.
We had previously used two carefully
structured groups of comparator
companies to benchmark
compensation:
Before …
2014 and Beyond …
Towers Watson Aerospace/Defense
Automotive and Transportation
Industries database for Base Salary,
Annual Incentive Compensation and
Long-Term Incentive Compensation
Specially constructed peer group for
PSU performance purposes
Many shareholders found the use of two
peer groups confusing and felt that use
of the Towers Watson database was
inappropriate as it contained peers with
significantly larger revenues (requiring
revenue regression) and certain
companies in the automotive industry


Our Revised CEO Benchmarking Practice
In response to shareholder feedback, all future CEO pay
decisions will be targeted at the median of benchmarking
peer
group,
rather
than
between
the
50
th
75
th
percentile
11
Base Salary
Bonus
Equity (50% RSU / 50% PSU)
Targeted at
median
of
benchmarking
peer group 2014
and beyond


Effective Compensation Policies
and Procedures
12
Substantial levels of variable
compensation
No excise tax gross-ups
Long-term performance metrics aligned
with company value creation
Payments in the event of change of control
do not exceed 3x for all executives
No share recycling
Minimum stock ownership requirements
are in place for officers and directors
Prohibition of hedging and pledging
AAWW shares
Do not provide excessive perquisites
Independent Oversight of Pay
Sound Compensation Practices
Independent Chairman of the Board
Independent Compensation Committee
Independent Compensation Consultant


Annually elected directors
Majority voting for uncontested Director elections; adopted new voting
standard, effective at our 2015 annual meeting
Strong independent Chairman role; appointed a new Chairman, Frederick
McCorkle as of May 2014
Separate CEO and Chairman positions
All board committees are 100% independent
All directors are independent (except our CEO)
No poison pill in place
Ongoing dialogue with shareholders
Continued Commitment to Corporate
Governance Best Practices
13
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
*Recent Changes


As of our annual meeting of shareholders, our Board will consist
of seven
directors, one of whom is our CEO.  We have a talented group of directors
who bring differing perspectives and backgrounds to the boardroom
Given the diversity of our operations, it is important to bring experience from
all areas key to understanding our business
Experienced and Well-Rounded Board
Leadership
14
Mergers and
Acquisitions
Strategic
Planning
Finance and
Capital Structure
Civil and
Governmental
Aviation
Legal, Regulatory
and
Government Affairs
Corporate
Governance
International
Operations
Transportation
and Security
Accounting
International
and
National Trade
Military
Affairs
Procurement
and
Distribution
Atlas Air’s Board of Directors’
Expertise


Appendix
15


2009 –
2013 Performance Metrics
($ Millions Ex BHs, EPS, Stock
Price, ROIC)
2009
2013
CAGR
Block Hours
108,969
158,937
9.9%
Operating Revenues
1,061.5
1,656.9
11.8%
Adjusted Pretax Income
118.5
142.3
4.7%
Adjusted EPS
3.40
3.78
2.7%
Free Cash Flow
172.2
273.1
12.2%
Stock Price per Share
18.90
41.15
21.5%
Four-Year ROIC
59.8%
16
Free Cash Flow = Cash Flows from Operations – Base Capex – Capitalized Interest
ROIC = Net Operating Profit After Tax/Average Invested Capital


Business Investments
Driving Business Resilience
17
Business Investments:
ACMI 747-8Fs, AMC and Commercial Charter Passenger Operations,
CMI Operations, 767 platform, 777Fs for Dry Leasing
Established Business:
Primarily due to significant declines in AMC and Commercial Charter        
Cargo Operations
Challenging Airfreight Environment
$0
$50
$100
$150
$200
$250
$300
$350
$400
2011
2012
2013
Direct Contribution
($ Millions)


Business
Segments
% of 2013     
Block Hours
(1)
Description
ACMI
(2)
CMI
(3)
73
Offers aircraft that are crewed, maintained,
and insured by Atlas for lease on a long-term
basis
Customers assume fuel, demand
and yield risk
Provides outsourced CMI operating solutions
for passenger and freighter operations
Air Mobility
Command
(AMC) Charter
11
AMC Charter provides full planeload
cargo and passenger charter flights to       
the U.S. military
Cost-plus business
Commercial
Charter
16
Commercial Charter segment provides
full planeload cargo and passenger     
charter services to charter brokers, freight
forwarders, direct shippers, and airlines
Dry Leasing
--
Provides aircraft and engine dry leasing
solutions to third parties
Other Services
--
Selected by the U.S. government to train
pilots who fly the President on Air Force One
Core Business Segments
Note:
(1)  Excludes ferry block hours
(2)  Aircraft, Crew, Maintenance, Insurance.
(3)  Crew, Maintenance, Insurance
18


747-8F Financings in Place
2012 record-low
fixed-rate coupons of:
19
In aggregate:
$200+ million in cash from deliveries
Under 3% coupon
IRR in excess of 30%
2013 and 2014
fixed-rate coupons of:
1.83%
2.67%
2.02%,
1.73%,
1.56%,
and
1.48%


Capital Allocation Strategy
Committed to creating, enhancing,
returning value
to our stockholders
Repurchased 1,723,577 shares,
6.5% of outstanding stock,               
in
2013
Current
authorization
to   
repurchase up to $60 million
Cash prioritization:
Balance sheet maintenance
Business investment
Share repurchases
20


Deliver superior service quality
to our customers
Expand our ACMI and CMI business
Maximize our AMC and Commercial
Charter business opportunities
Achieve Continuous Improvement
savings and efficiencies
Develop Titan (dry leasing)    
platform
Execute share repurchase program
2014 Operational Goals and Objectives
21
In other
words…
Drive Value
for Stockholders