14 May 2010
Sarah Wilson
The Say on Pay continues to play out at US annual meetings this year – both in terms of management and shareholder proposals. Here are a few highlights prepared by Allie Monaco of ProxyGovernance:
Shareholders continue to push the issue, although the number of shareholder proposals has declined. Just over 50 shareholder-sponsored say on pay proposals have made it to the ballot in the first five months of 2010; average support for proposals voted to date is 43% of votes cast for and against. In 2009, 80 shareholder say on pay proposals came to a vote, receiving average support of 45%.
In a rather unexpected move, Norges Bank Investment Management, which runs the Norwegian Government Global Pension Fund, announced last week it had revised its voting policies and will now vote against say-on-pay shareholder proposals. The fund contends that boards and management are “more qualified” than shareholders to set pay, and that “the best way to control remuneration is to elect board members who are capable of representing investor interests and being held accountable for unacceptable practices.”