f11_k.htm
UNITED
STATES
SECURITIES
AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
WASHINGTON,
DC 20549
Annual
Report Pursuant to Section 15(d) of the
Securities
Exchange Act of 1934
FORM
11-K
þ
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ANNUAL
REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 15(d) OF THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF
1934
For
the fiscal year ended December 31, 2008
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OR
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¨
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TRANSITION
REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 15(d) OF THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF
1934
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Commission file
number 001-07349
A.
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Full
title of the Plan and the address of the Plan, if different from that of
the issuer named below:
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BALL
CORPORATION
SALARY
CONVERSION AND EMPLOYEE STOCK OWNERSHIP PLAN
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B.
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Name
of issuer of the securities held pursuant to the Plan and the address of
its principal executive office:
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BALL
CORPORATION
10
LONGS PEAK DRIVE
BROOMFIELD,
COLORADO
80021-2510
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BALL
CORPORATION
Salary Conversion and
Employee Stock Ownership Plan
Index to Financial
Statements and Supplemental Schedule
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Page
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Independent
Auditor’s Report
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1
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Financial
Statements:
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Statements
of Net Assets Available for Benefits at December 31, 2008, and
2007
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3
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Statement
of Changes in Net Assets Available for Benefits for the Year Ended
December 31, 2008
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4
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Notes
to Financial Statements
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5
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Supplemental
Schedule:
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Schedule
H, Line 4i–Schedule of Assets (Held at End of Year) at December 31,
2008
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13
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Note:
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Certain
supplemental schedules have been omitted because they are not
applicable.
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BALL
CORPORATION
Salary Conversion and
Employee Stock Ownership Plan
Report of Independent
Registered Public Accounting Firm
To the
Participants and Administrator of the
Ball
Corporation Salary Conversion and Employee Stock Ownership Plan
Broomfield,
Colorado
We have
audited the accompanying statements of net assets available for benefits of the
Ball Corporation Salary Conversion and Employee Stock Ownership Plan as of
December 31, 2008 and 2007, and the related statement of changes in net assets
available for benefits for the year ended December 31, 2008. These
financial statements are the responsibility of the Plan’s management. Our
responsibility is to express an opinion on these financial statements based on
our audits.
We
conducted our audits in accordance with the standards of the Public Company
Accounting Oversight Board (United States). Those standards require
that we plan and perform the audit to obtain reasonable assurance about whether
the financial statements are free of material misstatement. The Plan
is not required to have nor were we engaged to perform an audit of its internal
control over financial reporting. Our audits included consideration
of internal control over financial reporting as a basis for designing audit
procedures that are appropriate in the circumstances, but not for the purpose of
expressing an opinion on the effectiveness of the Plan’s internal control over
financial reporting. Accordingly, we express no such
opinion. An audit includes examining, on a test basis, evidence
supporting the amounts and disclosures in the financial statements. An audit
also includes assessing the accounting principles used and significant estimates
made by management, as well as evaluating the overall financial statement
presentation. We believe that our audits provide a reasonable basis
for our opinion.
The
financial statements of the Plan as of December 31, 2007 were audited by other
auditors. As permitted by 29 CFR 2520.103-8 of the Department of Labor's Rules
and Regulations for Reporting and Disclosure under the Employee Retirement
Income Security Act of 1974 (“ERISA”), the Plan administrator instructed the
other auditors not to perform and they did not perform, any auditing procedures
with respect to the information certified by the Trustee. Their report, dated
September 3, 2008, indicated that (a) because of the significance of the
information that they did not audit, they were unable to, and did not, express
an opinion on the financial statements taken as a whole and (b) the form and
content of the information included in the financial statements other than that
derived from the information certified by the Trustee, were presented in
compliance with the Department of Labor's Rules and Regulations for Reporting
and Disclosure under ERISA. As described in Note 10, due to changes
in the accounting for Company Stock within the Plan, the Plan has elected to
file in accordance with the standards of the Public Company Accounting Oversight
Board (United States). Accordingly, our present opinion on the 2007
financial statements, as presented herein, is different from that expressed in
the previous auditor’s report.
In our
opinion, the financial statements referred to above present fairly, in all
material respects, the net assets available for benefits of the Ball Corporation
Salary Conversion and Employee Stock Ownership Plan as of December 31, 2008 and
2007, and the changes in net assets available for benefits for the year ended
December 31, 2008 in conformity with United States generally accepted accounting
principles.
Our
audits were made for the purpose of forming an opinion on the basic financial
statements taken as a whole. The accompanying supplemental
information is presented for purposes of additional analysis and is not a
required part of the basic financial statements but is supplementary
information, required by the Department of Labor’s Rules and Regulations for
Reporting and Disclosure under the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of
1974. This supplemental information is the responsibility of the
Plan’s management. The supplemental information has been subjected to
the auditing procedures applied in the audits of the basic financial statements
and, in our opinion, is presented fairly, in all material respects, in relation
to the basic financial statements taken as a whole.
/s/ Clifton Gunderson
LLP
Clifton
Gunderson LLP
Denver,
Colorado
June 26,
2009
BALL
CORPORATION
Salary Conversion and
Employee Stock Ownership Plan
Statements of Net Assets
Available for Benefits
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December 31,
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2008
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2007
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Assets
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Investments,
at fair value (Note 3):
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Mutual
funds
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$ |
625,884,353 |
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$ |
849,278,622 |
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Ball
Corporation common stock
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238,808,324 |
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263,054,295 |
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Investment
contracts
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132,043,351 |
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128,508,567 |
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Participant
loans
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21,314,785 |
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21,920,907 |
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Total
investments
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1,018,050,813 |
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1,262,762,391 |
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Contributions
receivable:
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Participant
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– |
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174,870 |
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Employer
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8,784,265 |
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8,984,714 |
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Net
assets available for benefits at fair value
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1,026,835,078 |
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1,271,921,975 |
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Adjustment
from fair value to contract value for fully benefit-responsive investment
contracts
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1,066,674 |
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(1,162,775 |
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Net
assets available for benefits
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$ |
1,027,901,752 |
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$ |
1,270,759,200 |
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See
accompanying notes to the financial statements.
BALL
CORPORATION
Salary Conversion and
Employee Stock Ownership Plan
Statement of Changes in Net
Assets Available for Benefits
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For
the year ended December 31, 2008
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Additions
to (Deductions from) Net Assets:
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Contributions:
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Participant
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$ |
55,828,995 |
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Employer,
net of forfeitures
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31,045,005 |
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Rollovers
and Other Additions
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2,717,982 |
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Total
contributions
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89,591,982 |
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Investment
income:
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Dividends
and interest
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32,007,230 |
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Interest
on participant loans
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1,718,918 |
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Net
(depreciation)/appreciation in fair value of investments
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(274,449,108 |
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Total
investment (loss)/ income
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(240,722,960 |
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Distributions
to participants
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(91,651,861 |
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Administrative
expenses and other
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(74,609 |
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Decrease
in net assets
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(242,857,448 |
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Net
assets available for benefits:
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Beginning
of year
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1,270,759,200 |
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End
of year
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$ |
1,027,901,752 |
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See
accompanying notes to the financial statements.
BALL
CORPORATION
Salary Conversion and
Employee Stock Ownership Plan
Notes to Financial
Statements
Note 1–Description of
the Plan
The Ball
Corporation Salary Conversion and Employee Stock Ownership Plan (the “Plan”) is
a defined contribution Plan established on September 1,
1983. The Plan was amended and restated on July 1, 1989, under
the rules of Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended (“IRC”), Section 401(k),
to add an employee stock ownership (the “ESOP”) feature which was qualified
under IRC Sections 401(a) and 4975(e)(7). There is no active
ESOP feature currently in the Plan. Participants should refer to the
Summary Plan Description for more complete information. The Plan is
subject to the provisions of the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of
1974, as amended (“ERISA”).
Participation
Essentially
all U.S. salaried and U.S. hourly employees of Ball Corporation and
participating subsidiaries (the “Company”) are eligible to participate in the
Plan. Eligibility to participate in the Plan begins with the first
day of employment. An eligible employee hired on or after
January 1, 2005, who does not make an election about his or her
participation in the Plan, is automatically enrolled 30 days after his or
her hire date.
Employee
Contributions
The Plan
allows eligible participants to contribute a portion of their salaries or wages
to the Plan on a before-tax basis within limits defined by the
Plan. Such limits vary among certain employee
classifications. In all cases, the maximum contribution for a
participant may not exceed the annual maximum limits established under IRC
Section 402(g). All income earned from invested contributions
accumulates tax deferred until withdrawal.
The Plan
provides for the automatic enrollment of a 3 percent pretax deferral of
eligible pay for newly hired employees, unless the employee affirmatively elects
to make no pretax contributions or elects to make pretax contributions of a
different amount.
Effective
January 1, 2007, the Plan was amended to provide an automatic one-step
increase whereby the automatic deferral percentage of 3 percent for an
employee automatically enrolled in the Plan on or after January 1, 2007, is
automatically increased 1 percent each January 1st,
beginning in the calendar year following the calendar year of automatic
enrollment until the deferral percentage equals
6 percent. Employees may opt-out of the automatic increases at
any time.
Participants
may change the level of their contribution or suspend contributions entirely at
any time. The Plan also permits rollovers, which represent funds that
participants transfer into the Plan from previous eligible Plans.
Company Matching
Contributions
The
Company generally makes a matching contribution each pay period that is based on
the percentage of eligible pay that the participant contributes. The
Company matching contribution differs depending on the employee group in which
the participant belongs up to a maximum of 4.5 percent of eligible
pay. The Plan includes matching provisions in accordance with the
provisions of the applicable union contracts. However, certain
employee groups (if they had worked 1,000 hours and were employed on the last
day of the year) that were merged into the Plan in October 2007 received an
annual matching contribution after the end of 2007 that depended on plant
performance and ranged from 1/2 percent of eligible pay to
BALL
CORPORATION
Salary Conversion and
Employee Stock Ownership Plan
Notes to Financial
Statements (Cont.)
3 percent
of eligible pay. Starting in 2008, most of these employee groups will
receive their Company matching contribution, which will no longer depend on
plant performance, on a payroll period basis.
For
certain employee groups, Company matching contributions are invested
automatically in the Ball Corporation Common Stock Fund. For
remaining employee groups, Company matching contributions are invested according
to participant elections. Participants whose Company matching
contributions are automatically invested in the Ball Corporation Common Stock
Fund may immediately diversify this investment.
Effective
January 1, 1996, the Plan was amended to allow employees in the Company’s
aerospace division who are not participants in the Ball Corporation EVA
Incentive Compensation Plan to receive an additional match under the
Plan. This amendment allows up to a maximum of 4 percent of the
employee’s pay if the EVA performance factor of Ball Aerospace &
Technologies Corp. (“BATC”) achieved is between 1.0 percent and
2.0 percent (inclusive) in accordance with conditions of the BATC
Performance Sharing Match Program. The additional match is invested
in accordance with participant elections. An additional match in the
amount of $8,288,978 was made for 2008, and was funded in 2009, and an
additional match in the amount of $8,550,468 was made for 2007, and funded in
2008. In addition, other receivables in the amounts of $495,287 and
$609,115 were recorded for 2008 and 2007, respectively.
The
Company makes additional contributions for some employee
groups. Generally, this contribution is made each pay period and is
based on the eligible hours worked by the employee during the pay
period. Additional contributions are invested in accordance with
participant elections.
Vesting
Participants
are always fully vested in their own contributions and related
earnings. With the exception of certain employee groups, participants
are also always fully vested in Company matching contributions and any
additional Company contributions, including related earnings. Certain
employee groups vest ratably in Company contributions over a maximum of 6
years. Participants should refer to the summary plan documents for
further information. As of and for the years ended December 31, 2008
and 2007, there was no significant forfeiture activity.
Distribution of
Benefits
Distributions
to employees are normally made upon termination of employment and upon
submission of a request. A request for distribution may be directed
to the recordkeeper via written request, voice response system, internet site,
or directly with the recordkeeper in accordance with Plan
provisions.
At any
time, a participant with an approved immediate and critical financial need may
request a hardship withdrawal in an amount no greater than is necessary to
satisfy such financial hardship.
Participant
Loans
Loans are
interest bearing at 1 percent above the published prime rate and are limited to
the lesser of $50,000, reduced by the highest outstanding loan balance in the
prior 12-month period, or 50 percent of a participant’s eligible account
balance. Participant loans at December 31, 2008, had interest
rates ranging from 4 percent to 10.5 percent and maturity dates
ranging from 2009 to 2036.
BALL
CORPORATION
Salary Conversion and
Employee Stock Ownership Plan
Notes to Financial
Statements (Cont.)
Participant
Accounts
Each
participant’s account is credited with the participant’s contribution; the
Company’s matching contribution and discretionary contribution, if applicable,
and an allocation of Plan earnings and losses. Plan earnings and
losses are allocated to individuals’ accounts based on each participant’s
account balance in their respective investment options selected.
Voting
Rights
Each
participant receives voting rights on his/her shares of Ball Corporation common
stock.
Company Stock
Dividends
Participants
have the option to either reinvest dividends paid on the Ball Corporation common
stock or to receive the dividends in cash.
Note 2–Summary of
Significant Accounting Policies
Basis of
Accounting
The Plan
financial statements are prepared on the accrual basis of
accounting.
Valuation of
Investments
The
Plan’s investments are stated at fair value. Quoted market prices are
used to value investments when available, including Ball Corporation common
stock. Shares of mutual funds are valued at the net asset value of
shares held by the Plan at year end. Participant loans are recorded
at cost, which approximates fair value.
The fair
value of the investment contracts is calculated by discounting the related cash
flows based on current yields of similar instruments with comparable
durations. The individual assets of the synthetic investment
contracts are valued at the fair value of the underlying assets. The
fair value of the wrapper contract for the synthetic investment contracts is
determined using the market approach discounting methodology, which incorporates
the difference between current market level rates for contract level wrapper
fees and the wrapper fee being charged. The difference is calculated
as a dollar value as discounted by the prevailing interpolated swap rate as of
period end. The Plan’s interests in common collective trusts are
included in the Investment Contract Fund. The fair value is based on
the fair value of the common collective trust’s underlying investments as based
on information reported by the investment advisor using the audited financial
statements of the common collective trust at year end. (Note
3)
As
described in Financial Accounting Standards Board Staff Position, FSP AAG INV-1
and SOP 94-4-1, “Reporting of Fully Benefit-Responsive Investment Contracts
Held by Certain Investment Companies Subject to the AICPA Investment Company
Guide and Defined-Contribution Health and Welfare and Pension Plans” (the
“FSP”), investment contracts held by a defined contribution Plan are required to
be reported at fair value. However, contract value is the relevant
measurement attribute for that portion of the net assets available for benefits
of a defined contribution Plan attributable to fully benefit-responsive
investment contracts because contract value is the amount participants would
receive if they were to initiate permitted transactions under the terms of the
Plan. As required by the FSP, the statement of net
BALL
CORPORATION
Salary Conversion and
Employee Stock Ownership Plan
Notes to Financial
Statements (Cont.)
assets
available for benefits presents the fair value of the investment contracts as
well as the adjustment of the fully benefit-responsive investment contracts from
fair value to contract value. The statement of changes in net assets
available for benefits is prepared on a contract value basis.
Income
Recognition
The net
appreciation (depreciation) in the fair value of investments (net realized and
unrealized gains and losses) is reflected in the accompanying statements of
changes in net assets available for benefits. Interest income is
recorded on the accrual basis. Dividends are recorded on the
ex-dividend date. Investment transactions are recorded on the date of
purchase or sale (trade date).
Distributions
Distributions
to participants are recorded when paid.
Expenses of the
Plan
Certain
costs and expenses incurred in establishing, amending and administering the
Plan, including the fees and expenses of the trustees, are paid by the
Company. The Plan pays for annual compliance testing and certain loan
transaction fees that are charged to the related participants’
accounts.
Estimates
The
preparation of financial statements in accordance with accounting principles
generally accepted in the United States of America requires the Plan’s
management to use estimates and assumptions that affect the reported amounts of
assets and liabilities, and changes therein, and the disclosure of contingent
assets and liabilities. Actual results could differ from those
estimates.
Note 3 - Fair Value
Measurements
The Plan
adopted Statement of Financial Accounting Standards (SFAS) No. 157 effective
January 1, 2008, for financial assets and liabilities and for nonfinancial
assets and liabilities measured on a recurring basis. SFAS
No. 157 establishes a framework for measuring value and expands disclosures
about fair value measurements. Although it does not require any new
fair value measurements, the statement emphasizes that fair value is a
market-based measurement, not an entity-specific measurement, and should be
determined based on the assumptions that market participants would use in
pricing the asset or liability. As defined in SFAS No. 157, fair
value is the price that would be received to sell an asset or be paid to
transfer a liability in an orderly transaction between market participants at
the measurement date (exit price). The adoption of SFAS No. 157 did not
have a material impact on the Plan’s financial
statements.
The
statement establishes a fair value hierarchy that prioritizes the inputs used to
measure fair value using the following definitions (from highest to lowest
priority):
●
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Level 1
– Unadjusted quoted prices in active markets that are accessible at the
measurement date for identical, unrestricted assets or
liabilities.
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●
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Level 2
– Observable inputs other than quoted prices included within Level 1 that
are observable for the asset or liability, either directly or indirectly,
including quoted prices for similar assets and liabilities in active
markets; quoted prices for identical or similar assets and liabilities in
markets
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BALL
CORPORATION
Salary Conversion and
Employee Stock Ownership Plan
Notes to Financial
Statements (Cont.)
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that
are not active; or other inputs that are observable or can be corroborated
by observable market data by correlation or other
means.
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●
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Level 3
– Prices or valuation techniques requiring inputs that are both
significant to the fair value measurement and
unobservable.
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Following
is a description of the valuation methodologies used for assets measured at fair
value.
Mutual
funds: Valued at the net asset value (NAV) of shares held by
the Plan at year end.
Ball Common Stock:
Valued at the closing price reported on the active market on which the
individual security is traded.
Participant
loans: Valued at amortized cost, which approximates fair
value.
Investment
contracts: Valued at fair value by discounting the related
cash flows based on current yields of similar instruments with comparable
durations considering the credit-worthiness of the issuer.
The
preceding methods described may produce a fair value calculation that may not be
indicative of net realizable value or reflective of future fair
values. Furthermore, although the Plan believes its valuation methods
are appropriate and consistent with other market participants, the use of
different methodologies or assumptions to determine the fair value of certain
financial instruments could result in a different fair value measurement at the
reporting date.
The
Plan’s assessment of the significance of a particular input to the fair value
measurement requires judgment and may affect the valuation of the fair value of
assets and liabilities and their placement within the fair value hierarchy
levels. The levels assigned to the Plan’s investments as of
December 31, 2008, are summarized in the table below:
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Level
1
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Level
2
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Total
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|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Mutual
funds
|
|
$ |
625,884,353 |
|
|
$ |
– |
|
|
$ |
625,884,353 |
|
Ball
common stock
|
|
|
238,808,324 |
|
|
|
– |
|
|
|
238,808,324 |
|
Investment
contracts
|
|
|
– |
|
|
|
132,043,351 |
|
|
|
132,043,351 |
|
Participant
loans
|
|
|
– |
|
|
|
21,314,785 |
|
|
|
21,314,785 |
|
Total
investments at fair value
|
|
$ |
864,692,677 |
|
|
$ |
153,358,136 |
|
|
$ |
1,018,050,813 |
|
Note 4–Investments
All funds
are managed by the trustee of the Plan. The assets are maintained
under the ERISA guidelines and guidelines provided by the Company.
The
following investments individually represent 5 percent or more of the
Plan’s net assets available for benefits.
BALL
CORPORATION
Salary Conversion and
Employee Stock Ownership Plan
Notes to Financial
Statements (Cont.)
|
|
December 31,
|
|
|
December 31,
|
|
|
|
2008
|
|
|
2007
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Vanguard
500 Index Fund
|
|
$ |
99,317,967 |
|
|
$ |
168,222,901 |
|
Vanguard International
Growth Fund
|
|
|
*33,084,541 |
|
|
|
67,620,261 |
|
Vanguard
Prime Money Market Fund
|
|
|
107,958,183 |
|
|
|
85,357,114 |
|
Vanguard
Total Bond Market Index
|
|
|
54,287,488 |
|
|
|
*39,473,192 |
|
Vanguard
Wellington Investment Fund
|
|
|
117,438,664 |
|
|
|
155,012,371 |
|
Vanguard
Windsor II Fund
|
|
|
*45,788,835 |
|
|
|
82,991,292 |
|
Ball
Corporation Common Stock
|
|
|
238,808,324 |
|
|
|
263,054,295 |
|
*
|
Not
greater than 5 percent for respective year
end.
|
For the
period stated below, the Plan’s investments (including gains and losses on
investments bought and sold, as well as held during the year) appreciated
(depreciated) in value as follows:
|
|
December 31,
2008
|
|
|
|
|
|
Mutual
Funds
|
|
$ |
(255,768,988 |
) |
Ball
Corporation Common Stock
|
|
|
(18,680,120 |
) |
|
|
$ |
(274,449,108 |
) |
Note 5–Investment
Contracts
The Ball
Corporation Investment Contract Fund contains various benefit-responsive
investment contracts with various banks and insurance companies (“Issuers”) in
the form of Guaranteed Investment Contracts (“GICs”) and Synthetic Guaranteed
Investment Contracts (“SICs”). The Issuers of the GICs maintain the
contributions in a general account. The account is credited with
earnings on the underlying investments and charged for participant withdrawals
and administrative expenses. The Issuers are contractually obligated
to repay the principal and a specified interest rate that is guaranteed to the
Plan.
The SICs
are wrapper contracts paired with underlying investments of high quality,
intermediate term, fixed income securities. The Plan purchases
wrapper contracts from financial services institutions. The SICs
credit stated interest rates for specified periods of
time. Investment gains and losses are amortized over the expected
duration through the calculation of the interest rate applicable to the Plan on
a prospective basis. SICs provide for a variable crediting rate,
which typically resets at least quarterly, and the issuer of the wrapper
contract provides assurance that future adjustments to the crediting rate cannot
result in a crediting rate less than zero percent. The crediting rate
is primarily based on the current yield to maturity of the covered investments,
plus or minus amortization of the difference between the market value and
contract value of the covered investments over the duration of the covered
investments at the time of computation. The crediting rate is most
impacted by the change in the annual effective yield to maturity of the
underlying securities, but is also affected by the differential between the
contract value and the market value of the covered investments. This
difference is amortized over the duration of the covered
investments.
BALL
CORPORATION
Salary Conversion and
Employee Stock Ownership Plan
Notes to Financial
Statements (Cont.)
Certain
events limit the ability of the Plan to transact at contract value with the
Issuer. Such events include the
following: (1) amendments to the Plan documents (including
complete or partial Plan termination or merger with another Plan),
(2) changes to Plan’s prohibition on competing investment options or
deletion of equity wash provisions, (3) bankruptcy of the Plan sponsor or
other Plan sponsor events (for example, divestitures or spin-offs of a
subsidiary) that cause a significant withdrawal from the Plan, or (4) the
failure of the trust to qualify for exemption from federal income taxes or any
required prohibited transaction exemption under ERISA. The Plan
administrator does not believe that the occurrence of any such value event,
which would limit the Plan’s ability to transact at contract value with
participants, is probable.
The GICs
do not permit the insurance companies to terminate the agreements prior to the
scheduled maturity dates without additional termination
charges. However, the SICs generally impose conditions on both the
Plan and the issuer. If an event of default occurs and is not cured,
the non-defaulting party may terminate the contract. The following
may cause the Plan to be in default: a breach of material obligation under the
contract; a material misrepresentation or a material amendment to the Plan
agreement. The issuer may be in default if it breaches a material
obligation under the investment contract, makes a material misrepresentation,
has a decline in its long term credit rating below a threshold set forth in the
contract, is acquired or reorganized and the successor issuer does not satisfy
the investment or credit guidelines applicable to issuers.
If, in
the event of default of an issuer and the Plan were unable to obtain a
replacement investment contract, the Plan may experience losses if the value of
the Plan’s assets no longer covered by the contract is below contract
value. The Plan may seek to add additional issuers over time to
diversify the Plan’s exposure to such risk, but there is no assurance the Plan
will be able to do so. The combination of the default of an issuer
and an inability to obtain a replacement agreement could render the Plan unable
to achieve its objective of maintaining a stable contract value. The
terms of an investment contract generally provide for settlement of payments
only upon termination of the contract or total liquidation of the covered
investments. Contract termination may also occur by either party upon
election and notice.
As
described in Note 2, because the SICs and GICs are fully
benefit-responsive, contract value is the relevant measurement attribute for
that portion of the net assets available for benefits attributable to the
guaranteed investment contract. Contract value, as reported to the
Plan by the Issuers, represents contributions made under the contract, plus
earnings, less participant withdrawals and administrative
expenses. Participants may ordinarily direct the withdrawal or
transfer of all or a portion of their investment at contract value.
There are
no reserves against contract value for credit risk of the contract issuer or
otherwise. The crediting interest rate is based on a formula agreed
upon with the issuer. Such interest rates are reviewed periodically
for resetting.
The
average yield based on actual earnings and interest rates credited to
participants was 3.65 percent in 2008.
Note 6–Plan
Termination
Although
the Company has not expressed any intent to terminate the Plan, it may do so at
any time. In the event of termination of the Plan, all participants
would become 100 percent vested in their accounts and the assets of the
Plan, after payment of any expenses, would be distributed to the participants in
proportion to their respective account balances.
BALL
CORPORATION
Salary Conversion and
Employee Stock Ownership Plan
Notes to Financial
Statements (Cont.)
Note 7–Federal Income
Tax Status
The
Internal Revenue Service informed the Company by a letter dated May 6,
2003, that the Plan and related trust were designed in accordance with the
applicable provisions of the IRC. Thus, contributions to the Plan and
earnings thereon are not taxable until distributed to the
participant. No provision for income taxes has been included in the
Plan’s financial statements. The Plan has since been amended but the
Company believes the Plan is designed and being operated in compliance with the
applicable provisions of the IRC.
Note 8–Party-In-Interest
Transactions
Plan
assets include investments in funds managed by Vanguard Fiduciary Trust Company
(“Vanguard”). Vanguard is the Plan’s trustee/custodian and, as such,
transactions with the trustee/custodian qualify as party-in-interest
transactions. In addition, the Plan holds shares of Ball Corporation
common stock, the Plan sponsor, which also qualifies as a party-in-interest.
These transactions
are covered by an exemption from the prohibited transaction provisions of ERISA
and the IRC.
Note 9–Concentrations,
Risks and Uncertainties
The Plan
has a significant concentration of Ball Corporation common stock. A
change in the value of the Company stock can cause the value of the Plan’s net
assets to change significantly due to this concentration.
The Plan
provides for various investments in common stock, mutual funds and investment
contracts, which, in general, are exposed to various risks, such as significant
world events, interest rates, credit risk and overall market volatility
risk. Through its direct investments, the Plan invests in securities
with contractual cash flows, such as asset backed securities, collateralized
mortgage obligations and commercial mortgage backed securities, including
securities backed by subprime mortgage loans. The value, liquidity
and related income of those securities are sensitive to changes in economic
conditions, including real estate value, delinquencies or defaults, or both, and
may be adversely affected by shifts in the market’s perception of the Issuers
and changes in interest rates. Due to the level of risk associated
with certain investments, it is reasonably possible that changes in the values
of the investments will occur in the near term.
Note 10–11-K
Filing
As a
result of changes in the accounting for Ball Corporation common stock held by
the Plan, the Company has elected to file Form 11-K for reporting period ending
December 31, 2008. Form 11-K was not filed for the reporting
period ending December 31, 2007, due to Ball Corporation selling Ball
common stock to participants, who elected to purchase it in the
Plan. Currently, the Administrator of the Plan accounts for the Ball
common stock as a Unitized Common Stock Fund, therefore, the Company will file
Form 11-K on an annual basis beginning with calendar year 2008.
BALL
CORPORATION
Salary Conversion and
Employee Stock Ownership Plan
Schedule H, Line 4i–Schedule
of Assets (Held at End of Year)
At
December 31, 2008
Identity
of Issue/Description
|
|
Current
Value
|
|
|
|
|
|
Mutual
Funds:
|
|
|
|
Morgan
Stanley Institutional–International Equity Portfolio
|
|
$ |
15,446,551 |
|
TRP
Growth Stock Fund
|
|
|
22,434,853 |
|
Vanguard
500 Index Fund(1)
|
|
|
99,317,967 |
|
Vanguard
Explorer Fund(1)
|
|
|
23,295,596 |
|
Vanguard
International Growth Fund(1)
|
|
|
33,084,541 |
|
Vanguard
Mid-Cap Index Fund(1)
|
|
|
4,185,222 |
|
Vanguard
Prime Money Market Fund(1)
|
|
|
107,958,183 |
|
Vanguard
Small-Cap Index Inv(1)
|
|
|
21,546,175 |
|
Vanguard
Target Retirement 2010(1)
|
|
|
10,338,174 |
|
Vanguard
Target Retirement 2015(1)
|
|
|
17,102,348 |
|
Vanguard
Target Retirement 2020(1)
|
|
|
15,323,304 |
|
Vanguard
Target Retirement 2025(1)
|
|
|
12,768,263 |
|
Vanguard
Target Retirement 2030(1)
|
|
|
8,286,722 |
|
Vanguard
Target Retirement 2035(1)
|
|
|
5,740,216 |
|
Vanguard
Target Retirement 2040(1)
|
|
|
3,821,813 |
|
Vanguard
Target Retirement 2045(1)
|
|
|
2,415,297 |
|
Vanguard
Target Retirement Income(1)
|
|
|
5,304,141 |
|
Vanguard
Total Bond Market Index Fund(1)
|
|
|
54,287,488 |
|
Vanguard
Wellington Investment Fund(1)
|
|
|
117,438,664 |
|
Vanguard
Windsor II Fund(1)
|
|
|
45,788,835 |
|
Total
mutual funds
|
|
|
625,884,353 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Ball
Corporation Common Stock(1)
|
|
|
238,808,324 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Synthetic
Investment Contracts–Vanguard Fiduciary Trust Company(1)(2):
|
|
|
|
|
AIG
Financial Products 599271
|
|
|
|
|
Total
contract at contract value
|
|
|
15,955,082 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
IXIS
Corporation & Investment Bank 1348-02
|
|
|
|
|
Total
contract at contract value
|
|
|
31,414,149 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
JPMorgan
Chase Bank - MGTABALL
|
|
|
|
|
Total
contract at contract value
|
|
|
25,457,069 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Rabobank
- BLL050201
|
|
|
|
|
Total
contract at contract value
|
|
|
28,900,321 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
State
Street Bank - 104043
|
|
|
|
|
Total
contract at contract value
|
|
|
23,225,161 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
New
York Life – GA7026
|
|
|
|
|
Total
contract at contract value
|
|
|
3,590,258 |
|
BALL
CORPORATION
Salary Conversion and
Employee Stock Ownership Plan
Schedule H, Line 4i–Schedule
of Assets (Held at End of Year)
At
December 31, 2008
Total
synthetic investment contracts
|
|
|
128,542,040 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Guaranteed
Investment Contracts–Vanguard Fiduciary Trust Company(1)(2):
|
|
|
|
|
Massachusetts
Mutual (35119)
|
|
|
3,624,830 |
|
Principal
Life Insurance Company (4-45677-03)
|
|
|
1,233,222 |
|
Total
guaranteed investment contracts
|
|
|
4,858,052 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Total
investment contracts before net receivables/payables
|
|
|
133,400,092 |
|
Net
receivables/payables
|
|
|
(290,067 |
) |
Total
investment contracts
|
|
|
133,110,025 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Participant
Loans (4% to 10.5%, maturity dates range
from 2008 to 2036)(1)
|
|
|
21,314,785 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Total
assets held (at end of year)
|
|
$ |
1,019,117,487 |
|
(1)
|
Identified
party-in-interest.
|
(2)
|
Represents
contract value for this investment.
|
See
accompanying independent auditor’s report.
SIGNATURES
The Plan. Pursuant
to the requirements of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, the Ball Corporation
Employee Benefits Administration Committee, which Committee administers the
employee Plans, duly caused this annual report to be signed on its behalf by the
undersigned hereunto duly authorized.
|
BALL
CORPORATION SALARY CONVERSION AND EMPLOYEE STOCK OWNERSHIP
PLAN
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
By:
|
/s/
Raymond J. Seabrook
|
|
|
Name:
|
Raymond
J. Seabrook
|
Date:
June 26, 2009
|
|
Title:
|
Executive
Vice President and Chief Financial
Officer
|
Ball
Corporation
Form
11-K
June 26,
2009
EXHIBIT
INDEX
|
|
|
|
Exhibit Number
|
|
Description
|
|
|
|
Exhibit
23
|
|
Consent
of Clifton Gunderson LLP, Independent Registered Public Accounting
Firm
|