focusIR May 2024 Investor Webinar: Blue Whale, Kavango, Taseko Mines & CQS Natural Resources. Catch up with the webinar here.

Less Ads, More Data, More Tools Register for FREE
Stephen Yiu, FM at WS Blue Whale, discusses Nvidia, Visa/Mastercard, Lam Research & Allied Materials
Stephen Yiu, FM at WS Blue Whale, discusses Nvidia, Visa/Mastercard, Lam Research & Allied MaterialsView Video
Ben Turney, CEO at Kavango Resources, explains the company's progress from exploration to mining
Ben Turney, CEO at Kavango Resources, explains the company's progress from exploration to miningView Video

Latest Share Chat

Ocado pay policy opposed by 19% of votes cast at annual meeting

Mon, 29th Apr 2024 17:13

LONDON, April 29 (Reuters) - Some 19% of votes cast at Ocado's annual shareholder meeting on Monday opposed the online grocer and technology group's proposed new pay policy that could see boss Tim Steiner pick up a bonus share award of up to 15 million pounds ($19 million).

The FTSE 100 group, which sells its robotic technology to retailers around the world and also has an online supermarket joint venture with Marks & Spencer, put forward a new remuneration policy and performance share plan as its previous scheme comes to an end this year.

Some advisory groups had urged investors to vote against the new policy and plan, saying the changes could lead to excessive payouts.

High executive pay in Britain has long been contentious, particularly where pay for ordinary workers has risen more slowly.

According to a stock market filing from Ocado, 19.43% of votes cast at the meeting opposed the remuneration policy and 19.38% of votes cast opposed the group's 2024 performance share plan. Resolutions on both still passed comfortably, however.

The plan could see Steiner, Ocado's chief executive, awarded shares worth up to 14.8 million pounds, or 1,800% of his annual base salary of 824,570 pounds, from 2027 if the group's share price hits 29.69 pounds.

Ocado shares closed at 357 pence on Monday.

The proposed payout reflects Steiner's "unique position as a founder and his longer-term focus and strategic vision," Ocado said in its annual report published in February.

Founded by three former Goldman Sachs bankers, including Steiner, in 2000, Ocado has divided opinion like few other stocks.

Some view it as the future of grocery shopping, while others see it as a costly and complicated venture that will never make sustained profits.

The stock hit a record high during the pandemic, which triggered a boom in online spending, but has tumbled since and is down 29% year-on-year.

Last year, 30% of votes cast at Ocado's annual meeting opposed the directors' pay report and there was similar opposition at 2020's meeting against a pay report which included a 58.7 million pound package for Steiner.

Related Shares

More News
13 May 2024 09:41

LONDON BROKER RATINGS: BAE Systems and Mondi cut to 'neutral'

(Alliance News) - The following London-listed shares received analyst recommendations Monday morning and on Friday:

9 May 2024 09:53

LONDON BROKER RATINGS: NatWest target raised, other lenders backed

(Alliance News) - The following London-listed shares received analyst recommendations Thursday morning and Wednesday:

7 May 2024 09:51

LONDON BROKER RATINGS: AstraZeneca target raised; Antofagasta lowered

(Alliance News) - The following London-listed shares received analyst recommendations Tuesday morning and Friday:

2 May 2024 17:06

FTSE 100 boosted by strong earnings from Shell, StanChart

StanChart jumps after posting a 5.5% rise in pretax profit *

2 May 2024 08:00

Ocado, Lidl and M&S are UK's fastest growing grocers, says NIQ

LONDON, May 2 (Reuters) - Online supermarket Ocado , discounter Lidl and upmarket food seller Marks & Spencer were Britain's fastest growing gro...

Login to your account

Don't have an account? Click here to register.

Quickpicks are a member only feature

Login to your account

Don't have an account? Click here to register.