The Mail on Sunday

Clarksons on list of shame after investors stage EIGHTH revolt

- By Francesca Washtell Patrick Tooher AND

SHIPPING broker Clarksons notched up its eighth shareholde­r rebellion in a row after investors were left aghast by the chief executive’s £12 million pay packet last year.

Andi Case, who has run the company since 2008, received a bonus of £10.4 million. It made him one of the highest paid bosses of any firm listed in London

More than 40 per cent of votes cast by investors at Clarksons’s annual meeting opposed the firm’s pay scheme.

Almost the same amount voted against the re-election of board director Tim Miller, who oversees the pay committee. Clarksons said it appreciate­d the support from ‘most’ investors and will engage with them ‘over the year ahead’. Miller told the Mail on Sunday that under Case’s tenure the firm’s value has grown ‘over 1,800 per cent’ and that it has to offer generous pay to retain talented staff. Andrew Speke, spokesman for the High Pay Centre think-tank, said it was ‘a huge rebellion by any standards’. The revolt will put Clarksons on the official ‘list of shame’ register run by trade body the Investment Associatio­n which lists firms where more than a fifth of shareholde­rs voted against executive pay. Investors have taken aim at a series of companies this year. Last week two-thirds of shareholde­rs at online trading group Plus 500 pushed back against the company’s pay policy. Medical devices maker Smith & Nephew faced a 43 per cent revolt earlier this month.

Pharmaceut­icals giant Astrazenec­a and educationa­l publisher Pearson have also been targeted by investors.

Wealth manager St James’s Place (SJP) faces a hostile reception at its annual meeting this week over the way it is run.

The FTSE100 company continues to reel from setting aside £426million to cover the likely cost of compensati­ng tens of thousands of clients for annual financial reviews they never received.

Shares in SJP have fallen by almost 60 per cent in the last year, threatenin­g its place in the bluechip index of leading companies.

Investment adviser PIRC is urging shareholde­rs to vote against the re-election of SJP’s chairman Paul Manduca.

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