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GBR | May 10, 2021

AstraZeneca plan to beef up CEO Soriot’s pay packet faces scrutiny at AGM

/ Our Today

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Pascal Soriot, chief executive officer of pharmaceutical company AstraZeneca. (File Photo: REUTERS/Brenda Goh)

LONDON (Reuters)

A number of investor advisory groups have called on AstraZeneca shareholders to oppose plans to increase Chief Executive Pascal Soriot’s pay package when the COVID-19 vaccine maker holds its annual meeting tomorrow (May 11).

AstraZeneca developed one of the first vaccines to tackle the novel coronavirus but the Anglo-Swedish company has suffered a series of setbacks, with disputes over supplies to the European Union and concerns over the risk of rare blood clots.

Frenchman Soriot, who has been in charge of AstraZeneca since 2012, received a total pay package worth £15.4 million (US$21.7 million) last year. Most of that comprised bonuses and long-term share awards on top of a base salary of £1.3 million.

Under the new proposals, Soriot’s maximum annual bonus will increase to 250 per cent of base salary from 200 per cent, and he will be entitled to long-term share awards worth up to 650 per cent of his salary, an increase from the current 550 per cent.

Investor advisory groups ISS, Glass Lewis and PIRC all recommended that shareholders vote against the increases on the grounds that the potential rewards were excessive.

“The board wants to ensure that our remuneration policy keeps driving a performance in line with the ambitious expectations of our shareholders and other stakeholders.”

AstraZeneca spokesman

AstraZeneca said the company’s strong performance in recent years justified the rewards.

“This has resulted in AstraZeneca delivering a Total Shareholder Return of close to 300 per cent over the last eight years, significantly ahead of our global pharmaceutical and FTSE 100 peers (at 183 per cent and 44 per cent TSR respectively),” a company spokesman said.

“The board wants to ensure that our remuneration policy keeps driving a performance in line with the ambitious expectations of our shareholders and other stakeholders,” he added.

Chairman Leif Johansson will also be standing for re-election at the annual general meeting (AGM).

Johansson acknowledged in a letter to shareholders that he might be expected to stand down after nine years in the role but said the board had asked him to stay on to help oversee the completion of the planned takeover of US group Alexion Pharmaceuticals Inc.

AstraZeneca agreed to buy Alexion last December for US$39 billion in its largest ever deal, diversifying away from its fast-growing cancer business in a bet on rare-disease and immunology drugs.

Shareholders will vote on the Alexion deal in a separate meeting on Tuesday.

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