Morrisons defends pay policy after investors reject bonus for chief executive

Business

Morrisons has defended increased executive rewards as profits tumbled during the coronavirus crisis last year, following a massive investor revolt.

Just over 70% of votes cast at the supermarket chain’s annual general meeting (AGM) rejected the remuneration report for its last financial year.

In advance of the virtual meeting, Sky News reported that several investor advisory groups had recommended shareholders vote against on the grounds that the way the company calculated chief executive David Potts’ pay package meant it was not damaged by a halving of annual profits to £201m.

David Potts is the CEO of Morrisons
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David Potts had said the profit fall was a ‘badge of honour’ for the chain after its hard work in feeding the nation

The performance was blamed at the time on the cost of handling the COVID-19 crisis.

Mr Potts took home £4.2m in the year to 31 January compared to just under £4m in the previous 12 months.

But while investors may have seen the package – including an annual bonus of £1.7m – as a reward for failure, Morrisons remained unrepentant in its response to the non-binding vote.

Morrisons said its remuneration committee felt that, having been instructed to feed the nation, management should not be penalised for the £290m bill it faced from the crisis.

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It also pointed out that the CEO had waived a basic salary increase for a sixth straight year.

The company said that it was a matter of “sincere regret” to the committee that it had not been able to convince a majority of shareholders, or the proxy voting agencies, that exercising discretion was the right course of action.

But it added: “The committee looks forward to re-engaging with shareholders, listening to their views, and once again making the case for why discretion was used in a genuinely exceptional year which produced a genuinely exceptional performance from the executive leadership.”

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