A shareholder rebellion over
excessive executive pay has gathered pace with Weir Group, Shire,
Standard Chartered and Reckitt Benckiser all targeted by investors.
At the annual meeting of engineering firm Weir Group, a proposed pay policy was rejected by 72% of shareholders.
it will discuss alternative options with shareholders.
At drugs maker Shire, 49% of investors voted against a 25% pay increase for chief executive Flemming Ornskov.
Every three years shareholders receive a chance to vote on the way the formula for executive pay is constructed.
That vote is binding, so the board needs a majority of shareholders to vote in favour.
So, in the case of Weir, the board of directors will have to come up with a new plan.
Votes
between these three-year cycles are not binding, but can create
embarrassment for the boss and the board of directors, as in the case of
Shire.
Shire rejection
Fund manager Hermes advised shareholders to vote against Shire's remuneration plan at the annual meeting in Dublin.
"We
do not support the increase in salary of 25% for the CEO (chief
executive), particularly given that his overall bonus potential is more
than 10 times his basic salary and his total remuneration was over $21m
last year," said Hans-Christoph Hirt, co-head of Hermes equity
ownership.
"We believe that an incremental approach to salary
rises is more appropriate and should reflect shareholder value creation
over the longer term," he added.
Meanwhile, Royal London Asset
Management said on Thursday it would vote against the 2015 remuneration
reports at Standard Chartered and Reckitt Benckiser, the owner of
Dettol, Scholl and Nurofen.
'Not embarrassed'
Earlier, WPP chief executive Sir Martin Sorrell was forced to defend his pay package, worth up to £70m.
He said his pay was based on the performance of WPP, the world's largest advertising group.
Sir
Martin told BBC Radio 4's Today programme: "I'm not embarrassed about
the growth of the company from two people in one room in Lincoln's Inn
Fields in 1985 to 190,000 people in 112 countries and a leadership
position in our industry, which I think is important."
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'Out of hand'
Last month 59% of BP shareholders voted against a 20% pay rise for chief executive Bob Dudley, that would have netted him £14m.
The
vote against the increase was non-binding, but BP's chairman said at
the annual meeting that the sentiment would be reflected in future pay
deals.
That was a "remarkable" moment according to Stefan Stern, a
director at the High Pay Centre, a think tank which monitors executive
salaries.
"I do think there is a feeling that things have been getting out of hand," he said.
"Shareholders have signed off on pay structures they didn't understand and now we're seeing buyer's remorse," he added.
'Not fit'
Last week a group
that includes some of Britain's most high-profile bosses said that
executive pay in the UK is "not fit for purpose" and needs reform.
The
Executive Remuneration Working Group said there was "widespread
scepticism and loss of public confidence" over executive pay.
Sainsbury's chairman David Tyler and Legal & General chief executive Nigel Wilson worked on the interim report.
Also
last week, Anglo American said it would be "mindful" of concerns about
executive pay after more than two fifths of investors voted against a
remuneration deal that included £3.4m for chief executive Mark Cutifani.
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