The Citizen (KZN)

Nedbank bosses cash in

COINING IT: DEPARTING CEO MIKE BROWN GOT NEARLY R100M LAST YEAR

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The bank’s top seven executives were paid a total of R396.8m last year.

Nedbank CEO Mike Brown, who will be leaving the position at the end of May, was paid a total of R92.5 million last year, a 176.4% increase on the year before.

Practicall­y half of this was from the combinatio­n of his guaranteed package (R10.1 million), his total short-term incentive (bonuses) at R18.275 million, and his long-term incentive award at a face value of R18 million. In total, these amounted to R46.4 million.

The various machinatio­ns of share price movements for its long-term incentive schemes, plus dividends, mean Brown was paid a “single-figure” remunerati­on of R92.5 million.

Nedbank says the following caused the sizeable increase in pay: “the share price appreciati­on of 67% from the award in 2021 to the end of last year, an overall vesting outcome on the 2021 LTI [long-term incentive] award of 124.8% compared with 0% in 2022; and a 100% MSS [matched share scheme] match, compared with 0% in 2022.”

In aggregate, the top seven execs – as per Nedbank’s disclosure – were paid a total of R396.8 million last year.

On average, that is 146% higher than the amount they were paid in 2022. With the traditiona­l top three – CEO, CFO and the COO – the average increase was about 180%, nearly triple what they earned in 2022 – practicall­y all driven by the performanc­e of the share price in last year.

However, this is not the share price over a single year. Rather it is the “variance of the share price at award over the share price at vesting and is valued on the actual number of shares vested”.

Nedbank says the total single-figure remunerati­on is “the sum of guaranteed pay, total short-term incentives, single-figure long-term incentives, single-figure match and dividends”.

This remunerati­on follows the awarding of R400 million of pay to Standard Bank’s top brass for last year.

Nedbank notes that it received a “pleasing shareholde­r remunerati­on voting outcome” last year, with 90.4% in favour of the implementa­tion report and 74.8% in favour of the policy.

It says Brown, the “outgoing CEO, will remain employed with the bank in an advisory role until 31 August when he retires”.

“This will allow for an orderly transition period for Jason Quinn, who joins Nedbank on 22 May.

“Mike’s annual GP [guaranteed package] will accordingl­y be reduced by 25% from 31 May.”

It says he “will be eligible for a pro-rated STI [short-term incentive] award in March 2025, considerin­g the partial period of employment in the 2024 financial year”.

“He will not be eligible for an LTI award in March next year. Mike will be eligible for good-leaver status in respect of previously awarded, but unvested, LTI and STI awards that will continue to vest over their remaining life.

“Mike has agreed to sign a restraint of trade agreement, which will be effective until 31 May 2026, in return for which an LTI award at 50% of his 2024 March annual award will be made in August 2024.”

As is the precedent in the market, Quinn will be commensura­tely remunerate­d for the value of Absa shares he forfeited after his departure from that bank.

He will be Nedbank’s CEO from 1 June.

 ?? Picture: Bloomberg ?? TAKING HOME MILLIONS. Mike Brown has signed a restraint of trade agreement in return for a long-term incentive award at 50% of his 2024 March annual award.
Picture: Bloomberg TAKING HOME MILLIONS. Mike Brown has signed a restraint of trade agreement in return for a long-term incentive award at 50% of his 2024 March annual award.

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