Western Mail

Menzies loses vote to cancel preference shares

-

AIRPORT services and support firm John Menzies has been taken to task by shareholde­rs after they voted down plans to cancel preference shares and nearly a fifth rebelled against pay proposals.

The group revealed that 63.6% of votes cast by its preference shareholde­rs at a general meeting supported the resolution to cancel preference shares – with 36.4% of votes cast against it.

As it was a special resolution, John Menzies needed support from at least 75% of votes.

It comes after insurance giant Aviva was forced to u-turn on plans last year to cancel £450mof preference shares after a backlash from investors and politician­s.

Results of John Menzies’s meeting also revealed that 17% of wider investor votes were cast against its new pay plans for top bosses, although they received enough support to get the green light.

Just under 15% of votes were made against its plans for a one-off share award for its executive chairman Philipp Joeinig, who was appointed in July.

John Menzies had already been sent back to the drawing board on the proposals after 23% of investors voted against them following the AGM in May.

The group said it was “disappoint­ed” in the preference share vote, which means the current plans will have to be scrapped.

It pledged to undertake a “detailed review of any feedback received on this resolution to ensure it fully understand­s the reasons behind the voting result”.

It added: “The board takes seriously its responsibi­lities to represent the interests of shareholde­rs and to uphold the highest standards of corporate governance and is open to constructi­ve dialogue with shareholde­rs and shareholde­r bodies.

“Accordingl­y, it will continue to engage with preference shareholde­rs over the coming months in respect of the votes received against this resolution.”

The group has 1.4 million preference shares in issue, against 84.4 million ordinary shares.

It had previously said it no longer considered it appropriat­e to maintain them, as they carry rights which require it to seek consent from their holders in certain circumstan­ces.

Its preference shares also carry a 9% dividend payout rate, which it has said is “significan­tly in excess of the interest currently paid by the company on its borrowings”.

The vote follows a tough past year for John Menzies, which warned over profits in July amid poor trading across the business.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom