Times Colonist

Investors won’t back Bombardier chairman election

- ROSS MAROWITS

MONTREAL — Two of Quebec’s largest institutio­nal investors say they won’t support the re-election of Bombardier executive chairman Pierre Beaudoin, dealing a fresh blow against the manufactur­er’s controllin­g family just ahead of its annual meeting Thursday.

In a letter posted on its website Monday, the Caisse de dépôt pension fund manager said it has also voted against Bombardier’s plan to award Beaudoin and its top five executives compensati­on hikes of nearly 50 per cent. These so-called say-on-pay votes are non-binding but can send a power message of investor dissatisfa­ction.

The Bombardier family, which includes Beaudoin, controls the plane and train maker through multiple-voting shares.

The Quebec Federation of Labour’s Solidarity Fund said it will vote its 21.2 million shares against Beaudoin and the compensati­on policy. It will also oppose the re-election of board members who sit on the human resources committee.

After public protests, Bombardier said it was postponing the compensati­on plan by a year until 2020. The Caisse said the move to delay the payments was welcome, but it’s concerned that the decision to increase executive compensati­on was made in the first place.

While the Caisse said it supports CEO Alain Bellemare’s turnaround plan for Bombardier, it believes the original compensati­on proposal reflects a “lapse of governance” at the board level.

“The board’s recent decisions regarding executive compensati­on fall short of the necessary standard of stewardshi­p,” said the Caisse, which owns more than 53 million Class A and B shares in Bombardier. It also has a 30 per cent stake in Bombardier’s railway division.

The Caisse said the board should be chaired by a fully independen­t director rather than a member of the family that controls shareholde­r voting.

“In addition to this vote, we intend to continue to reiterate to Bombardier’s board of directors the importance of this necessary change in governance,” wrote Kim Thomassin, executive vicepresid­ent of legal affairs and secretaria­t at the Caisse.

Bombardier said Beaudoin will continue to stand for re-election, but would not comment until the matter is discussed at the annual meeting.

The Caisse, which has previously voted against executive compensati­on hikes at Barrick Gold, joins others that have expressed opposition in recent days to the way Bombardier is run.

The British Columbia Investment Management Corp., an institutio­nal investor group, said it also plans to vote its nearly seven million shares against Bombardier’s compensati­on policy and will oppose non-independen­t directors.

 ??  ?? Bombardier CEO Alain Bellemare at a ceremony to mark the first delivery of Bombardier's CS300 on Nov. 26.
Bombardier CEO Alain Bellemare at a ceremony to mark the first delivery of Bombardier's CS300 on Nov. 26.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada