The Guardian Australia

Harrods doubles MD’s pay to £2.3m despite collecting £6m in furlough support

- Sarah Butler

Harrods more than doubled the pay of its managing director, Michael Ward, last year to £2.3m, even as the company collected almost £6m in government support under the furlough scheme.

Ward, understood to be the highestpai­d director at the upmarket department store in Knightsbri­dge, west London, increased his package from £1m the previous year after Harrods returned to profit as pandemic restrictio­ns eased.

Harrods Limited, the company that operates the London store, made a pretax profit of £51m in the year to the end of January 2022 after a loss of £68m a year earlier. Sales soared by 35% to £582m on the easing of lockdown restrictio­ns and the return of internatio­nal travellers, including those from the Middle East.

The department store said it had benefited from furlough payments of £5.8m in the 12 months to 29 January, although that was considerab­ly lower than the £23.5m in the prior year. The reduction in support came as high street lockdowns reduced and the number of staff at Harrods Limited fell by more than 400 to 3,511.

The retailer also increased internal royalty payments from £23.2m to £33.5m. The payments cover interest on a loan from Harrods’ owners, the Qatar Investment Authority sovereign wealth fund, which has a property portfolio in London that includes the Shard skyscraper and parts of the Olympic Village in Stratford. No dividend payments were made in the year.

The accounts reveal Harrods has a £620m loan that matures in October next year after securing an 18-month extension. Ward told the Times, which first reported Harrods’ profit figures, that he was comfortabl­e the retailer had sufficient cashflow to cover higher interest rates.

Ward told the Sunday Times the business was on track to bounce back this year to the sales of about £870m achieved pre-pandemic.

A spokespers­on for Harrods said it was “extremely grateful to have received support from the government” as its store closed for 10 weeks between January and April 2021.

It said the highest-paid director’s salary increase reflected a “substantia­l pay reduction in 2020” as well as taking into account that “Harrods outperform­ed its targets and prediction­s, and significan­tly outperform­ed the wider luxury industry”.

 ?? Photograph: Carl Court/AFP/Getty Images ?? Harrods department store in London.
Photograph: Carl Court/AFP/Getty Images Harrods department store in London.

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