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Executive compensation: investor preferences during say-on-pay votes and the role of proxy voting advisers

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  23 November 2023

Suren Gomtsian*
Affiliation:
London School of Economics, London, UK
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Abstract

Shareholder say-on-pay voting allows institutional investors to influence the incentives of managers and, consequently, corporate behaviour. Surprisingly, the preferences of investors on executive compensation have been largely overlooked in the ongoing debates on the role of say-on-pay in corporate governance and the impact of shareholder stewardship on sustainable corporate behaviour. The analysis of investor disclosed explanations of say-on-pay votes in the FTSE 100 companies during 2013–2021 shows that institutional investors rely repeatedly on several dominant themes aimed at improving the incentives of corporate managers and controlling managerial rent extraction. But shareholder interests remain the core focus of say-on-pay votes, with only few investors demanding that companies reward executive directors for protecting the interests of a broader range of affected stakeholders. Additionally, most investors can be grouped into several clusters formed around the voting recommendations of proxy advisers. A group of UK-based institutional investors stands out by taking a more individualistic and diverse approach to the stewardship of executive compensation. These findings highlight the role of local investors in the oversight of executive pay, the growing influence of proxy advisers along with the increasing share of foreign institutional investors, and the influence of best practice governance codes in driving investor stewardship preferences.

Information

Type
Research Article
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution and reproduction, provided the original article is properly cited.
Copyright
Copyright © The Author(s), 2023. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of The Society of Legal Scholars
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Table 1. Sample summary

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Figure 1. FTSE 100 companies with high shareholder rebellion against say-on-pay proposals

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Table 2. Principal components analysis results

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Figure 2. Institutional investors say-on-pay clusters in FTSE 100 companies, 2013–2021Note: The figure shows the correlation matrix of institutional investors based on the similarity of their voting records on say-on-pay proposals. The analysis covers the voting records of 198 institutional investors (actual voters) and the recommendations of three proxy advice service providers (additional voters). Each square denotes a pair of two voters. Colour coding is used to illustrate the extent of similar voting. The darker the colour is, the more similar the pair votes. Lighter colours, by contrast, show weak or no correlation between the voting records. Voting records that are negatively correlated at 1 per cent significance level are in orange colours.

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Figure 3. The preferences of institutional investors during say-on-pay votes

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Figure 4. The dominant topics of investors say-on-pay engagement over time

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Figure 5. Determinants of investor votes on the quantum of pay

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Figure 6. Determinants of investor votes on the structure of pay

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Figure 7. ESG-related explanations in investor say-on-pay votes