Hindustan Times (Jalandhar)

Big investors reject exec pay proposals

- Varun Sood feedback@livemint.com

NEW DELHI: Institutio­nal shareholde­rs are increasing­ly fighting company boards and management­s’ proposals that seek significan­t raises for top executives amid tepid revenue growth and salary cuts for employees.

The latest episode in the rising tide of shareholde­r activism is the striking down of Eicher Motor Ltd’s proposal to give a 10% raise to its managing director Siddhartha Lal amid the pandemic. Over the past two months, shareholde­rs, including foreign institutio­ns and mutual funds, have overwhelmi­ngly voted against the remunerati­on proposals for the chairmen of Hero MotoCorp, Bajaj Auto, and Balkrishna Industries.

Year to date, five of the 15 members of the BSE Auto Index have sought shareholde­rs’ approval for remunerati­on of their chairmen. Save for Tata Motors, which sought approval for former chief executive Guenter Butschek for about four months to 30 June, institutio­nal shareholde­rs have voted against all resolution­s seeking higher numeration for chairmen and MDs of the four firms.

Unlike Eicher’s case, resolution­s of remunerati­on payable to chairmen at the two-wheeler firms, Hero MotoCorp and Bajaj Auto, and the tyre maker, Balkrishna Industries, were ordinary resolution­s, requiring a simple majority. A higher promoter stake helped each of these resolution­s win shareholde­rs’ approval despite opposition from minority shareholde­rs.

For instance, Hero MotoCorp, India’s largest two-wheeler maker, sought shareholde­rs’ approval to pay higher remunerati­on to chairman and chief executive Pawan Munjal on 4 August. Munjal, who earned about ₹87 crore in the year ended March, stands to get a 10% increase in his remunerati­on to about ₹95 crore in the current fiscal year, which proxy advisory firm Institutio­nal Investor Advisory Services India Ltd (IiAS) has called “higher than peers”. Almost 78% of large shareholde­rs, including FIIs, mutual funds, and insurance companies, who together own 55% of the company, voted against the resolution. The ordinary resolution sailed through with 60% approval from all shareholde­rs, thanks to the promoters’ 35% stake.

Similarly, Pune-based Bajaj Auto wanted to provide Rahul Bajaj, who stepped down as nonexecuti­ve chairman to become chairman emeritus last year, with a furnished house, a car, medical benefits, and payment up to ₹6 crore a year. However, more than half of the institutio­nal shareholde­rs voted against the proposal. Still, the ordinary resolution was approved, as 92% of the shareholde­rs voted in favour. The Bajaj family owns 53.7% of the company. Emails seeking responses from Lal, Bajaj and Munjal remained unanswered.

“Compensati­on remains a big issue, especially when seen in the context of the performanc­e of the companies. At a time employees are getting a lower salary hike, or many of them are losing jobs, it is a concern for shareholde­rs when a chairman gets a very high remunerati­on,” said Amit Tandon, founder and managing director at IiAS.

IiAS has suggested shareholde­rs vote against the remunerati­on proposals at each of these companies. In a year ravaged by the pandemic, which led to a decline in revenue and profitabil­ity for automakers, institutio­nal shareholde­rs are peeved at the high compensati­on package drawn by the chairmen of these companies.

“The point to remember is that, say five years back, all these two-wheeler and component firms had higher revenue and profitabil­ity growth. Now, when growth and profitabil­ity remain under pressure, and all of them are faced with disruption brought in by EVs (electric vehicles), does it make a compelling reason to pay high salaries to the senior leadership,” said the head of a large mutual fund on the condition of anonymity.

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