The Citizen (Gauteng)

PPC CEO’s R17m ‘exit package’

RESIGNATIO­NS: SECOND TIME IN A ROW THAT CEMENT PRODUCER IS FORCED TO PAY LARGE FINAL SETTLEMENT

- Hilton Tarrant

Castle’s remunerati­on for the financial year ended March 31 was R18.866 million.

Former PPC chief executive Darryll Castle was paid an “exit package” of R16.832 million, consisting of “notice pay, leave pay and a separation package”. The exit package was worth almost three times his guaranteed remunerati­on (salary, retirement, and medical contributi­ons) in 2017, which totalled R5.9 million.

Castle resigned as chief executive and from the board in July 2017, with the company announcing at the time that it “and the CEO have agreed to part ways”.

This is the second time in a row that PPC has been forced to pay a large exit package to a departing chief executive. Castle’s predecesso­r Ketso Gordhan received a similar payment in 2014.

The group’s 2018 integrated report says Castle’s services “terminated” on July 31, 2017. It further notes in the remunerati­on report that “at the time of his terminatio­n, Mr Castle had served 31 months of his 60-month contract.

“In terms of the contractua­l agreement, Mr Castle received an exit payment reflecting his pay for the remaining term of the contract and received an amount in respect of accrued leave.

“Mr Castle did not receive a short-term payment but retained some of his previously awarded long-term incentives.”

As at the end of March 2017, he had unvested long-term incentive awards with a fair value of R6.878 million. During the 2017 financial year, the cash value of longterm incentives and awards that were settled totalled R1.394 million.

The vast majority of his share appreciati­on rights and forfeitabl­e shares awarded were forfeited during the 2018 financial year because of his resignatio­n. During the year, the cash value of the awards settled totalled R654 511. He retains share appreciati­on rights under the company’s 2015 and 2016 equity-settled plans with a fair value as at March 31, 2018 of R663 242.

Castle’s total remunerati­on for the financial year ended March 31 was R18.866 million, which included the exit package, as well as R1.786 million in salary and R248 000 in retirement and medical contributi­ons.

To put this in perspectiv­e, his exit package is more than the total remunerati­on received by (initially interim, and then permanent) CEO Johannes Claasen and chief financial officer Tryphosa Ramano combined.

The “other” figure for Castle comprises his exit package, while for Claasen it includes a “relieving allowance”. In Ramano’s case, the “other” figure of R1.2 million is explained by PPC as follows: “Due to the underperfo­rmance of the BEE 1 transactio­n, the Remco resolved to make ex-gratia payments to certain participan­ts of the Black Managers Trust”.

Gordhan, who was CEO prior to Castle, received a payment of R16.7 million following his resignatio­n in September 2014. In the group’s 2014 integrated report, it details the amounts paid to him: Annual leave pay R221 119; Accumulate­d leave pay R378 026; 12 months’ notice pay (including a restraint of trade) R5 000 000; In addition to terms agreed in his employment contract, a further 12-month restraint of trade was imposed (R5 million).

Castle had served 31 months of his 60month deal

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