The Borneo Post

Telstra seeks to head off pay protest with apology to shareholde­rs

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SYDNEY: Australia’s largest telecom firm, Telstra Corp Ltd, wrote an apology to shareholde­rs yesterday to head off a vote against executive pay at its annual meeting, after a tumultuous year where profit fell and shares hovered near all-time lows.

Telstra has struggled for growth as competitio­n and technology hammer its mainstay businesses, pounding its share price and pushing it to its weakest annual profit in six years in August.

The company has already cut executives’ bonuses by nearly a third, which it re- iterated in the letter, sent out days before shareholde­rs vote on pay structures at the company’s annual general meeting in Sydney on Oct 16.

Telstra is keen to avoid a protest vote because if more than a quarter of shareholde­rs disapprove of the pay packets in consecutiv­e years it triggers a vote to spill the board under Australian law.

“We know that a number of you are disappoint­ed with this year’s remunerati­on outcome,” Telstra Chairman John Mullen wrote in a note address to shareholde­rs and released to the Australian Securities Exchange on Thursday.

“We perhaps did not provide enough transparen­cy around some of the metrics that we adopted to measure management performanc­e and the reasons as to why these were chosen. For this we apologise,” he wrote.

Only 9 per cent of shareholde­rs voted against the executives’ remunerati­on last year, however Telstra is bracing for a stronger vote this time after large proxy advisor CGI Glass Lewis recommende­d shareholde­rs oppose it.

CGI Glass Lewis found the pay structure placed overly heavy reliance on customer satisfacti­on metrics and meeting earnings targets, however lacklustre.

Telstra Chief Executive Officer, Andy Penn, was entitled to a salary of A$2.4 million (US$1.7 million) in cash, plus bonuses worth just over A$2 million in cash and shares for the 2018 financial year, according to the annual report.

Telstra dominates Australia’s mobile telephone and broadband markets, but its business has been upended by a new government broadband network.

In response Telstra has unveiled a plan to slash 8,000 jobs – a quarter of its workforce – as well as flagging asset sales.

Telstra shares have shed 10.8 per cent for the year to date and almost halved since Penn took charge in May 2015.

On Thursday Telstra shares fell 1.4 per cent in a plunging broader market, which dropped 2 per cent. — Reuters

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