The Mail on Sunday

Unrest over rises in pay for bosses at Domino’s

- By Harriet Dennys

DOMINO’S Pizza Group faces a shareholde­r revolt at its annual meeting on Thursday after two City advisers panned its executive pay.

Both Glass Lewis and ISS have now red-flagged the chain’s plans to give chief executive Dominic Paul and finance chief Neil Smith ‘significan­t’ pay rises.

Paul, who was hired last May after running Costa Coffee, is paid a base salary of £750,000 – more than 40 per cent higher than that of retired boss David Wild.

Smith, who joined last April, receives a base salary of £430,000 – almost a third on top of that received by David Bauernfein­d, who died in 2019 while snorkellin­g in Mauritius.

ISS said the fees were ‘exceptiona­lly high’ for a FTSE 250 firm. Glass Lewis said it viewed high fixed pay rises with ‘scepticism’ as the remunerati­on ‘may serve as a crutch when performanc­e has fallen below expectatio­ns’.

Domino’s said it needed to pay more to attract ‘higher calibre talent’. Paul was paid 73.4 per cent of his maximum bonus last year, taking his total pay to £1.08 million.

The fee for new chairman Matt Shattock is 109 per cent higher than previously at £480,000.

For three months of last year directors gave 20 per cent of their pay to their employee hardship fund. Last year, 7 per cent of shareholde­rs voted against Domino’s remunerati­on report.

Other l i sted firms expecting s hareholder unrest over pay include Foxtons and British American Tobacco. Power giant Drax faces criticism for a lack of women on its board.

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