The Philippine Star

Aboitizes make twice more than the Zobels, paid a fifth of Ayala’s

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The Aboitizes, long described as the Ayalas of Cebu, may have eclipsed the Ayala Corp. in market capitaliza­tion and profitabil­ity, but their holding company Aboitiz Equity Ventures still trail the Ayala Corp. when it comes to the intricate art of executive remunerati­on.

The Aboitiz holding company cleared P23.9 billion profit last year, as against the P10.6 billion made by the Zobel holding company.

Despite spinning twice more money, AEV chief executive Erramon Aboitiz and four top executives last year took home P71.95 million in combined compensati­on, one-fifth of the P398-million pay check of Ayala chairman and CEO Jaime Augusto Zobel and his team.

The Aboitiz salary scale is even more modest than that of another Spanish-Filipino holding firm, A. Soriano Corp., even though the latter has been reduced to a ghost of its 20th-century glory.

For 2012, Anscor rewarded its chairman and chief executive Andres Soriano III and four other top officers P84.59 million on the back of P1.49 billion profit, mainly passive income from investment­s.

Even in the boardroom, the Aboitizes behave more like Cebuanos in doling out perks to their directors, who happen to be part of the extended Aboitiz-Moraza clan.

For example, chairman and second cousin Jon Ramon Aboitiz gets P150,000 for every board meeting, which is held every month, while directors receive P100,000 each. There are no year-end bonuses for board members and there are not even stock options for its officers.

Over at Ayala Corp., each director is entitled to P1.2 million in annual retainer fee, in addition to P200,000 for every board meeting. And Ayala’s stock options for its directors and officers are, to quote the company slogan, pioneering the future with their industry-leading package.

Take for example John Philip Orbeta, who heads Ayala’s support services group including human resources, corporate communicat­ions and communicat­ions technology department­s. The 51-year-old ex-Watson Wyatt executive already has accumulate­d 376,914 common shares through options since joining the management committee in 2005.

As of yesterday’s prices, Orbeta’s pile was already worth a retirement-inducing P235 million.

Soriano sails on

And speaking of Andres Soriano III, the former San Miguel chief executive has ditched his award-winning and beloved Alegre despite the 21-meter performanc­e yacht having been built only in 2008.

Instead, Soriano has acquired a newer and sleeker version from the same Mills Design of Ireland, and is also naming his new maritime joy Alegre.

The new Alegre will be competing next month in Capri at the start of the sailing season in the Mediterran­ean, with the Swiss watch Rolex as the main sponsor.

P-Noy uncles need help

For the nth time, the P-Noy uncles and aunts running the Central Azucarera de Tarlac have postponed the holding of annual stockholde­rs’ meeting for their failure to find independen­t directors to serve the financiall­y-challenged refinery.

From the original Jan. 29, the annual meeting has had to be postponed to Feb. 26, then to April 12 and May 10 and now to June 25.

Reason? For the continuing failure, according to regulatory filings, to find replacemen­ts for independen­t directors George Weber-Hoehl and Renato Padilla.

The scarcity of suitable nominees comes despite the installati­on of P-Noy’s eldest sister, Ma. Elena Cruz, as treasurer to help sort out the refinery’s finances.

P-Noy uncle, former Tarlac congressma­n Jose Cojuangco Jr., was elected as chairman and president after long-time chief executive, elder brother Pedro Cojuangco, passed away in 2011.

Cory Aquino-era environmen­t secretary Fulgencio Factoran Jr., who had served as independen­t director of the Hacienda Luisita-based refinery for a number of years, has a short, swift advice on how to turn sugar mill around.

The Cojuangcos should seriously consider allowing their cousins, the Lopas, to manage the refinery, according to Factoran.

Another but more pride-swallowing alternativ­e, he said, is to sell out to the tandem of cousin Eduardo Cojuangco Jr. and San Miguel president Ramon Ang.

“They have more business sense,” Factoran said.

Money talks

• Cebu Pacific has secured landing rights in Melbourne’s second airport, Avalon, with the Gokongwei airline planning to launch a service in time for the fourth-quarter peak travel season.

• The high-end Singapore restaurant chain, Crystal Jade, is opening a branch in The Fort today, after the roaring success of its more affordable brand, the breathless­ly named Crystal Jade La Mian Xiao Long Bao, at Greenhills.

Instead of dim sum and noodles, the Fort branch, also owned by franchise partners Mike Muñoz and Edward Hwang, will serve lobster dishes at a pocket-biting P6,500 a kilo and bird’s nest soup at tongue-scalding P1,780 per person.

• Economist Bernardo Villegas, who rose to fame during the late Marcos years railing against crony capitalism only to resurrect post-EDSA as nominee director of the Romualdez-controlled Benguet Corp., is leading a business delegation to the United States this week along with Benguet chief executive Benjamin Philip Romualdez to drum up investment­s into the Philippine­s.

Heard through the grapevine

A Taiwanese firm, Medtecs Internatio­nal, has gathered enough cojones to sue the top Philippine Navy brass right in their home base in Taguig for alleged infringeme­nt of its trademark camouflage textile.

E-mail: cocktales_tv5@yahoo.com

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