Scottish Daily Mail

BOOHOO RAPPED OVER FAT CAT PAY BUT FOUNDER SURVIVES

- By Matt Oliver

FASHION giant Boohoo is set to join an official ‘list of shame’ after investors rebelled over fat cat pay.

Under a controvers­ial bonus scheme worth £150m, co-founders Mahmud Kamani and Carol Kane could be handed £50m each if the firm’s market cap reaches £7.5bn by 2023. It currently stands at £4.1bn.

But the plan, introduced without shareholde­r consent last year, triggered a revolt at Boohoo’s annual general meeting yesterday, with 20.2pc of votes opposing the remunerati­on report. It means Boohoo joins the Investment Associatio­n’s list of shame which records revolts that win more than 20pc support.

A string of rebellions at AGMs this year has triggered talk of a ‘shareholde­r spring’, with household names getting caught up.

Supermarke­t Morrisons and Premier Inn owner Whitbread have suffered big rebellions over executive bonuses. Yet yesterday’s result will have come as a relief for bosses at Boohoo, amid fears the rebellion was set to be even bigger.

Kane (pictured) also saw off a bid to oust her over the treatment of workers at its factories.

A report uncovered ‘excessive’ hours, life-threatenin­g conditions and illegally low pay in Leicester. It prompted critics to demand Kane be kicked off the board for failing to prevent the scandal, with shareholde­r advisory service Glass Lewis saying she contribute­d to ‘inadequate governance practices’.

On the eve of the vote, the Business & Human Rights Resource Centre, Labour Behind The Label and Share Action claimed Boohoo did little to improve the situation.

But the motion to remove Kane won just 12pc support, after the Kamani family, who control 26pc of voting rights, and Jupiter Asset Management, which has a 9.8pc stake, stood by her.

Boohoo chief executive John Lyttle was ‘delighted’ by the result. He said: ‘Carol plays an integral role in establishi­ng the identities that sit behind each of the brands and as a co-founder her drive, enthusiasm and unwavering support for our agenda for change will be crucial.’

Boohoo said independen­t reviews by judge Sir Brian Leveson confirmed ‘substantia­l action’. Shares fell 1.6pc, or 5.2p, to 326.5p.

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