Money Week

Astra’s spoonful of sugar

The drug giant hiked its dividend to persuade shareholde­rs to accept CEO Pascal Soriot’s pay rise. Is he worth his salary? Matthew Partridge reports

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AstraZenec­a (AZ) has shrugged off a “significan­t... revolt”, says Ian Johnston in the Financial Times. Shareholde­rs approved a potential £1.8m pay rise for CEO Pascal Soriot, but more than a third of them voted against a package advisers had called “excessive”. Critics had argued that Soriot was already one of the best-paid CEOs in the blue-chip index; he received £16.9m last year.

His supporters insisted that he was “massively underpaid” given the performanc­e of the business under his watch. AstraZenec­a also argued that the raise was needed in order “to be competitiv­e in the global market for talent”, especially in relation to the US.

It’s hard to deny that Soriot is “underpaid”, especially given his “stupendous” success, says The Times. In 12 years on his watch, AstraZenec­a’s share price has increased by 268% compared with an average gain across the FTSE 100 of 36%.

It has also “successful­ly launched a series of next-generation oncology medicines, partnered with Oxford University in bringing out a Covid vaccine in record time and built a research and developmen­t campus in Cambridge employing 2,300 scientists”. What’s more, given that demand for top executives is “intensely mobile”, the City’s “top talent must be fully incentivis­ed to stay put”.

US pay is out of control

It’s true that AZ’s top team could be poached by US rivals offering “greater fistfuls of dollars”, says Nils Pratley in The Guardian. Still, just because US executives’ pay is “wild, and becoming wilder by European standards”, doesn’t mean that UK companies should follow suit, especially since the idea that the two markets are comparable is “selfservin­g nonsense” in many cases.

Many FTSE firms already “take their owners for fools”, especially Centrica, which “somehow thinks £8.2m for its chief executive Chris O’Shea was an acceptable outcome last year”. The issue isn’t going away, says Oliver Shah in The Sunday Times. This is shaping up to be a “landmark annual meeting season for corporate pay”, as years of “boardroom grumbling” over the differenti­al with the US and private equity have “led to action by a few plucky pioneers”.

Both the London Stock Exchange Group and Smith & Nephew want to hike the amount that their CEOs can receive. While there are plenty of “mediocre” CEOs “who very much don’t need a pay rise”, there is evidence that in some cases “one-size-fits-all solutions” are “holding back” the biggest companies.

On balance, the “grumbling” about Soriot’s pay may have been misguided, as he is “probably worth it” given the “astonishin­g returns” he has delivered, says Alex Brummer in the Daily Mail. Still, the kerfuffle means that shareholde­rs will benefit too. Hours before the vote AstraZenec­a threw in an extra “sweetener” to persuade them to approve the package: a 7% increase in the dividend this year.

 ?? ?? The company’s shares have jumped by 268% during Soriot’s 12-year tenure
The company’s shares have jumped by 268% during Soriot’s 12-year tenure

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