Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai)

Big investors reject exec pay proposals

Shareholde­rs increasing­ly vote against significan­t raises for top execs

- Varun Sood

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 Ltd, Bajaj Auto Ltd, and Balkrishna Industries Ltd.

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 June 30, institutio­nal shareholde­rs have voted against all resolution­s seeking higher numeration for chairmen and managing directors of the four companies.

However, 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 August 4. 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 non-executive 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.

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