Robust Microsoft greets shareholders
BELLEVUE, Wash. — Microsoft’s changing of the guard held the spotlight at the company’s shareholders meeting Wednesday.
Chief Executive Satya Nadella and Chairman John Thompson oversaw a largely scripted affair touting the company’s progress in cloud computing and hopes for the Windows 10 operating system.
Steve Ballmer — used to spending his time on stage during his 14 years as chief executive — was seated in the second row, firmly in his new role as the company’s largest individual shareholder and National Basketball Association team owner. Bill Gates was absent because of illness, Thompson told a shareholder after the meeting. And many of the questions from the audience involved issues of diversity and access to technology, rather than Microsoft’s no-longer stagnant share price.
Investors have largely bought into Microsoft’s pivot in strategy under its new leadership, sentiment typified by a shareholder who took to the microphone to thank the board for “reinventing Microsoft” before asking a question. The company’s shares hit a 14-year peak last month.
Nadella on Wednesday reiterated his view that Microsoft should follow consumers beyond the company’s Windows flagship, emphasizing mobile devices and cloud computing.
Microsoft during Nadella’s nearly 10-month tenure has taken steps some observers said were unlikely to have occurred under Ballmer’s leadership, including allowing free versions of its Office suite on devices made by competitors and permitting developers to have access to portions of the code behind a key software development platform.
“We’re making smart and disciplined decisions,” Nadella said. “And most importantly, we’re taking bold action to step forward.”
Members of Microsoft’s board directors were each elected with the support of more than 92 percent of votes. A shareholder proposal to increase the ability of investors to nominate board candidates, which Microsoft’s board opposed, was easily defeated.
The company received something of a rebuke on executive pay, however.
Shareholder advisory firm Institutional Shareholder Services had recommended last month that investors reject Microsoft’s pay package because of the size of a long-term stock grant to Nadella. Institutional Shareholder Services pegged his total compensation last year at $90.8 million.
Microsoft said its pay plan was supported by 72 percent of votes.
The referendum on pay, required by the Dodd-Frank financial reform act, is symbolic and typically a rubber stamp affair. More than 95 percent of voters approved or abstained on Microsoft’s prior pay package, and technology firms last year saw their compensation approved by an average of 88 percent of votes, according to technology compensation consulting firm Radford, a unit of Aon Hewitt.
Thompson, in a letter to shareholders, said the payment was designed to align Nadella’s interest with Microsoft and its investors.