Vince Cable Set To Climb Down On Shareholder Powers Plans

Cable To Climb Down On Greed Curb

Business Secretary Vince Cable is set to climb down on radical plans to give shareholders more power to curb excessive executive pay.

Bosses are likely to be spared an annual binding vote on their pay, which had been a flagship idea in a paper on tackling boardroom greed, in favour of a poll every three years, according to the Sunday Times (£).

The expected climbdown comes despite numerous rebellions over remuneration reports in recent weeks, in a move dubbed the shareholder spring.

Cable is set to climb down on radical plans to give shareholders more power to curb excessive executive pay

Currently, shareholder votes are advisory, which means companies can ignore them.

But they have still proved effective at exerting pressure on companies, with Aviva's Andrew Moss among the bosses who have been ousted in recent months.

It had been feared that a binding annual vote would make investors less inclined to protest in case they destabilised management teams and would add to bureaucracy.

Mr Cable told the newspaper: "The shareholder spring has been very effective in holding shareholders to account.

"But if investors have to do that every year with every company on the stock exchange, they could get tied up in bureaucracy."

A spokesman for the Department of Business, Innovation & Skills confirmed that a three year remuneration policy was being considered but said no decision had been made.

A final package, which may also include measures to strengthen the current backwards-looking advisory votes, is expected in weeks.

Meanwhile, shareholders could stage another rebellion on Wednesday when advertising giant WPP faces a vote over Sir Martin Sorrell's near-£13 million compensation package.

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