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Anglo shareholders revolt over executive pay

London - Anglo American [JSE:AGL] survived a shareholder revolt on executive pay at the mining company’s annual general meeting after two corporate-governance advisers recommended rejecting the award.

At the meeting in London on Thursday, about 58% of preliminary votes were for the pay award. The company is expected to release the full results by Friday.

Institutional Shareholder Services last week recommended that shareholders reject the company’s remuneration report, while ShareSoc said CEO Mark Cutifani’s proposed pay was too high and should be denied. Another adviser, Glass Lewis, recommended that shareholders should vote for the remuneration report.

“Post a challenging 2015 as earnings have been hit, dividends cut, and poor equity performance, growing shareholder opposition to remuneration packages in the sector are a sign of the times,” Investec said in a note to investors on Friday.

Turnaround plan

Anglo was the worst performer in the FTSE 100 Index last year, losing 75% of its value. The century-old producer is now trying to engineer a turnaround by selling more than half its mines and exiting the iron-ore and coal business to focus on its best assets - diamonds, platinum and copper.

The London-based firm has rebounded this year, more than doubling in value.

ISS said last week that the company’s remuneration committee had maintained its long-term stock awards as a proportion of salary, despite a steep drop in the share price last year. That meant a share price rebound would lead to considerable gains.

Shareholder Legal & General Group, which holds 2.9% of Anglo’s stock, said on Thursday that it voted against the pay award, echoing ISS’s concerns.

“These grants are made as a multiple of salary and have the effect of awarding a higher number of shares, which could lead to windfall gains in the future,” Legal & General said. “This is not in line with best practice and is stated in our voting policy.”

Cutifani’s total compensation fell 8.3% last year to £3.4m. The company said his bonus was reduced by 40% and his variable pay was a fifth of the maximum he could have earned. Anglo said it will consult more with shareholders in the coming 12 months before a vote in 2017 on remuneration policy for the next three years.

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