EuropeanIssuers' position relating to shareholders' vote on executive remuneration "say on pay"

23 May 2013

EuropeanIssuers published its position paper on the European Company Law and Corporate Governance Action Plan. The EC intends to propose in 2013 an initiative aimed at granting shareholders the right to vote on remuneration policy and/or the remuneration report.

EuropeanIssuers may support the introduction of a shareholders’ vote on executive remunerations, provided the proposed regime remains flexible to accommodate the diversity of national regimes and corporate law principles. Some Member States have already adopted diverging systems: binding vote, consultative vote, or a combination of a binding and a consultative vote, either annual or on a less frequent basis (every two or three years), either on a remuneration report describing detailed remuneration or on the basis of a remuneration policy report.

To this end, EuropeanIssuers´ members emphasise that the vote should be “ex ante”, non-binding (advisory) and limited to remuneration policy. Moreover, it should only take place in case of a change in the remuneration policy.

Remuneration Policy versus Remuneration Report

EuropeanIssuers is convinced it is crucial to remain the well-established principle of separation of powers within companies unaffected. The Board of Directors and the Supervisory Board respectively, should remain responsible for determining the remuneration of executive directors, based on proposals made by the remuneration committee. The reasons for that are:

Therefore, a vote should only be on the remuneration policy.

Advisory versus binding vote

There are various arguments behind EuropeanIssuers’ decision to support the advisory (non-binding) vote:

Therefore, EuropeanIssuers would only support an advisory (non-binding vote).

Ex-ante versus ex-post vote

This issue is interrelated with the debate around the vote on remuneration policy versus remuneration report, as the remuneration policy relates to the future while the remuneration report according to EU recommendations is retrospective. Nevertheless, EuropeanIssuers would like to draw attention to the timeline and the potential unintended consequences resulting from the dangerous introduction of the vote on both future remuneration policy and the retrospective remuneration report.

Therefore, EuropeanIssuers believes that a vote on remuneration should only be ex ante.

Press release

Position paper


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