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Please note that tax, investment, pension and ISA rules can change and the information and any views contained in this article may now be inaccurate.
Shareholders rally to block excessive pay packages

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Please note that tax, investment, pension and ISA rules can change and the information and any views contained in this article may now be inaccurate.
Shareholders are increasingly blocking excessive pay packages with the latest example being Royal Mail (RMG) where 70.2% voted against the directors’ remuneration package.
New chief executive Rico Back is being paid a £640,000 annual salary, which is 16.8% higher than his predecessor Moya Greene who stepped down as CEO on 1 June and leaves the company in September. Greene has also been awarded a £900,000 termination bonus.
Royal Mail non-executive director Orna Ni-Chionna says the firm does not feel it is appropriate to cut the salary for a ‘very demanding role,’ flagging Back’s pension entitlement is lower than Greene’s and that both individuals essentially have the same combined base salary, pension entitlements and benefits.
In May, 58.5% of shareholders voted against directors’ pay at British satellite telecoms firm Inmarsat (ISAT).
Other high-profile spats include 52% of shareholders at gold miner Centamin (CEY) voting against higher pay at its AGM in March.
Self-storage provider Safestore (SAFE) suffered a rebellion four months ago with nearly half of shareholders revolting against £14m in share awards for its chief executive and finance director. (LMJ)
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