The Cairns Post

Banking hit by investor revolts

- STUART CONDIE

THREE of Australia’s big four banks face the very realistic prospect of a spill vote during next year’s AGM season after shareholde­r revolts over executive pay.

Investors in NAB and ANZ followed those at Westpac by delivering a first strike against their remunerati­on reports, leaving all three in danger of a second strike and potential spill in 12 months’ time.

Only Commonweal­th Bank, on a different financial calendar to its peers, escaped the carnage.

Yesterday’s protests weren’t entirely unexpected after Telstra, Tabcorp, Harvey Norman and others copped strikes in an unusually tumultuous AGM season. However, their scale delivered a sharp shock to banks already reeling from royal commission grillings, falling share prices and faltering profit growth.

Last week’s 64 per cent vote against Westpac’s remunerati­on report had seemed enormous until NAB shareholde­rs smashed that record with a revolt of more than 80 per cent.

ANZ’s own protest – with a third of shareholde­rs opposing the adoption of the remunerati­on report – paled in comparison, but it was still more than 25 per cent and a first strike nonetheles­s.

Grilled for more than three hours by shareholde­rs over issues including falling share prices and a dividend that has not been raised since 2013, NAB chairman Ken Henry said the bank would go back to the drawing board after many felt chief executive Andrew Thorburn’s 32 per cent pay cut did not go far enough. Mr Thorburn was still paid $4.375 million and Dr Henry acknowledg­ed “the quantum of remunerati­on” was a factor.

“The board is hearing loud and clear that our new scheme is not right. We tried, but we got it wrong,” Dr Henry told shareholde­rs in Melbourne.

“We are listening to you. We will try again.”

In Perth, the tone from ANZ chairman David Gonski was less contrite but the message was the same: “The board acknowledg­es the very real concerns of those who have voted against the report and I assure you we will continue to work hard in 2019 to ensure further alignment between compensati­on and shareholde­r interests.”

Dr Henry and Mr Thorburn apologised again for NAB’s part in industry misconduct he said had “appalled” him when it was heard by the royal commission, but shareholde­rs seemed more upset about the value of, and return on, their investment­s.

Dr Henry said NAB had decided to overhaul pay before the royal commission.

NAB’s shares have fallen 22 per cent this calendar year and are at a six-year low.

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