http://www.guardian.co.u...ing-continues-pendragon
Shareholder Spring - Shareholders Revolt
The shareholder spring continued to blossom on Thursday when the remuneration report of car dealership Pendragon was voted down – the third to be rejected by shareholders this year – and media group Trinity Mirror scraped through a protest vote over pay.
In a sign that there is no let-up in the current wave of shareholder activism, other companies endured revolts on Thursday, including media group Mecom and gaming company Sportech.
The focus will now turn to Centrica, the owner of British Gas, which is preparing for a rebellion at its annual meeting on Friday, and then materials science company Cookson and online gambling group 888, which hold annual meetings next week.
Advisory body Pirc has recommended voting against every member of the Cookson board and the Association of British Insurers (ABI), whose members represent a significant group of institutional investors, has issued a "red-top" alert – which warns members of serious concerns – at Cookson and 888.
Pendragon had also been the subject of an ABI alert to investors, while Pirc had recommended voting against the pay deals. That helped trigger the hefty defeat of the remuneration report: 67% of Pendragon investors voted against, causing the firm to withdraw its attempts to increase the potential bonus for directors from 100% of their salaries to 150%.
At Trinity Mirror – where chief executive Sly Bailey had already become a victim of the shareholder spring after resigning last week – 46% of investors voted against the remuneration report while the level of protest rose to 54% if deliberate abstentions were included.
Almost a quarter of shareholders voted against the publisher's long-term incentive plan, and Jane Lighting, the former chief executive of Channel 5, who heads the remuneration committee, failed to win the backing of one in five of shareholders. Just under 15% of investors failed to back Bailey, whose £14m pay deals over 10 years have infuriated investors amid a slump in the company's market value from more than £1bn to £80m. The backlash came despite her promise to leave by the end of the year.
Pendragon's remuneration report is the third to be voted down this year. The small gold-exploration company Central Rand Gold suffered a 75% revolt against its pay policy last month while insurance company Aviva had its report voted down last week, sparking the resignation of chief executive Andrew Moss on Tuesday.
Greedy when others are fearful. Very fearful when others are greedy - to paraphrase Warren Buffett