Thursday, July 21, 2011

Cable & Wireless shareholders rebel over executive incentive scheme

Nearly 40% of votes are withheld or cast against CWW's plan after a tumultuous year of profit warnings and departures

Shareholders have rounded on Cable & Wireless Worldwide, with nearly 40% of votes withheld or cast against its executive incentive plan as disquiet grew over a company that has issued three profits warnings in a year.

In a further poll at CWW's annual meeting, just under 27% abstained or voted against the remuneration report, which saw the chairman and chief executive collect £780,000 each in salary and benefits in the last financial year, during a period in which the company's share price has more than halved.

Trouble at CWW culminated in the resignation this year of its chief executive, Jim Marsh, whose departure was preceded by finance director Tim Weller. In an upbeat trading statement in February, the board had rejected Weller's advice to lower profit guidance, only to shock the market with a profit warning two weeks later.

Chairman John Pluthero replaced Marsh immediately after his resignation last month. Pluthero was chief executive of Cable & Wireless before it split into two separately listed companies in January last year. He has been replaced as chairman by John Barton, previously the board's senior independent director.

Barton said he was "not thrilled" at the rebellion against the company's new incentive plan. At the meeting in London, he told shareholders: "It has been a difficult year for you our shareholders and I would like to apologise for that. Since floating the company our share price has halved, our CFO and CEO have resigned, our reputation in the City has been damaged and we have become the whipping boy of the financial press."

Pluthero, who received a pay rise to £675,000 a year following his change of role, and could collect up to £2m from the incentive plan if the share price begins to rebound, conceded that "we could have done better".

When shareholders criticised the board for turning to Pluthero instead of looking for a chief executive from outside the company, he revealed: "It was an unwritten part of the demerger plan that should anything go wrong I would step in as chief executive."

Cable & Wireless introduced a £220m private equity style incentive plan in 2006 which saw Pluthero collect £10m after a major redundancy programme led to significant earnings growth. The group was split into two separately listed entities: CWW, which holds the UK business and some international networks, and Cable & Wireless Communications, primarily focused on the Caribbean.


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James Ball, Charles Arthur 22 Jul, 2011


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Source: http://www.guardian.co.uk/business/2011/jul/21/cable-wireless-worldwide-shareholder-remuneration
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