The Scottish Mail on Sunday

Soriot set to become the £150million man

AstraZenec­a chief’s huge payday provokes investor revolt despite stellar record at UK drugs giant

- By Calum Muirhead

ASTRAZENEC­A’S chief executive is in line to become the FTSE 100’s first £150million boss.

The drugs giant is asking its shareholde­rs to approve a performanc­e-based pay policy that could hand Pascal Soriot rewards of up to £18.7million this year.

That would take his total earnings to £153 million since he took over in 2012. To date, the businessma­n has been paid more than £135million.

Soriot, 64, is widely hailed for reviving the fortunes of one of Britain’s biggest drug companies and providing millions with a life-saving Covid-19 vaccine.

He also fought off an unwanted takeover bid from US rival Pfizer. However, some investors are bridling at the size of his pay and bonus package.

The French-Australian executive faces a battle to win the support of investors for his bumper earnings.

Two influentia­l shareholde­r advisory groups, Glass Lewis and ISS, are urging investors to vote against pay plan at the annual meeting this week, branding it ‘excessive’. Under the proposal, Soriot (pictured) could earn a bonus worth up to 300 per cent of his nearly £1.5million base salary plus performanc­e-related share awards worth up to 850 per cent of base pay. This is an increase on the previous pay deal , which permitted a 250 per cent bonus and awards worth 650 per cent of his base salary.

AstraZenec­a has argued that the increase is ‘necessary to increase the competitiv­eness’ of the business compared with its rivals in the US and Europe.

Soriot has complained in the past about being underpaid compared with other global pharmaceut­ical bosses.

But Glass Lewis says there is an ‘absence of compelling evidence’ that the AstraZenec­a boss is underpaid.

Emma Walmsley, chief executive of UK rival GSK, was paid £12.7 million last year compared with Soriot’s £16.9million. Albert Bourla, head of Pfizer, took home £17 million. Europe’s largest drugs group, Danish firm Novo Nordisk, maker of weight-loss drug Ozempic, paid its boss Lars Fruergaard Jørgensen £7.8 million. One of the top earners worldwide in the drug sector is David Ricks, boss of Eli Lilly, who was paid £21million in 2023.

Leading business figures in the City, including Julia Hoggett, head of the London Stock Exchange Group, are pushing for executives to receive higher salaries. Hoggett called for a ‘constructi­ve discussion’ around executive pay, saying that Britain needed to attract top talent and discourage firms from decamping overseas.

Soriot’s pay has stirred controvers­y with shareholde­rs in the past. Nearly 40 per cent of votes cast at AstraZenec­a’s 2021 shareholde­r meeting were against its pay plan, which is set every three years.

Companies where more than 20 per cent of shareholde­rs vote against bosses’ pay are put onto a ‘list of shame’, which is compiled by trade body, The Investment Associatio­n.

‘Given the concern that’s previously been expressed about the extreme levels of executive pay at AstraZenec­a, it’s disappoint­ing that the company has opted to give its chief executive an even higher pay package,’ said Andrew Speke of think-tank, the High Pay Centre.

He added that no chief executive ‘deserves to be paid over 500 times the typical UK worker’.

AstraZenec­a investors may be minded to reward Soriot for his stellar record at the drugs giant.

He has had one of the most successful careers in British corporate history, spearheadi­ng the developmen­t of one of the first Covid-19 vaccines and repelling Pfizer’s hostile takeover bid in 2014.

Under his leadership, AstraZenec­a’s market value has more than tripled to £164 billion, putting it ahead of HSBC and second only to Shell on the London Stock Exchange.

Astra now has a market value higher than its one-time suitor Pfizer, at £120billion.

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