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IoD slams Rolls-Royce CEO's £960,000 bonus after company reported earnings plunge

Warren East was handed the pay-out after underlying pretax profit fell 49 per cent to £813m in 2016, with only a “modest” improvement forecast this year

David Hellier
Wednesday 15 March 2017 09:19 GMT
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Mr East was awarded 55 per cent of the maximum possible bonus after London-based Rolls still beat key profit and cash targets, according to its annual report published on 9 March
Mr East was awarded 55 per cent of the maximum possible bonus after London-based Rolls still beat key profit and cash targets, according to its annual report published on 9 March (Getty)

Rolls-Royce’s decision to award Warren East, its CEO, a bonus of £916,000 even after the aero-engine maker’s full-year earnings plunged was ill advised, according to the Institute of Directors, which represents UK business leaders.

Mr East was handed the pay-out after underlying pretax profit fell 49 per cent to £813m in 2016, with only a “modest” improvement forecast this year. While the CEO has cut 700 middle-management posts since taking over in 2015, he has yet to detail plans for restructuring weaker parts of the group.

“Bonuses need to be linked to performance and at Rolls-Royce it has been a difficult 12 months,” Oliver Parry, the IoD’s head of corporate governance, said in an interview. “The idea that the CEO is receiving a bonus after two profit warnings doesn’t sit very well with investors.”

Rolls-Royce also posted a £4bn net loss, including a £4.4bn non-cash adjustment to its currency hedge book following the slump in the pound, and £671m in charges to settle historic bribery charges.

Mr East was awarded 55 per cent of the maximum possible bonus after London-based Rolls still beat key profit and cash targets, according to its annual report published on 9 March. Employees across the group also qualified for what will be the first such premium for three years.

Rolls-Royce reiterated in an emailed statement that 2016’s underlying earnings had beaten analyst estimates, adding that its remuneration committee “scaled back” executive bonuses by ignoring the positive impact of one-time items such as foreign-exchange benefits, in light of the fact that shareholder returns were down over the year as a whole.

Rolls will also defer salary increases for 8,000 managers and executives until September, with no backdated payments, it said in a message to staff revealed by Bloomberg on 28 February. Mr East, who received a total pay package worth £2.1m for 2016, will get a 2 per cent raise.

The company will hold an “annual general meeting for employees” in Derby, its biggest manufacturing base, in May, the same month as its actual AGM, to strengthen links with workers, Ian Davis, Rolls’s chairman, said in the annual report.

He said Rolls was partly responding to Prime Minister May’s proposals for worker representation on boards, binding shareholder votes on remuneration, and the publication of the ratio between pay for executives and workers.

“It’s good that they’re planning this staff meeting, but it’s a shame they might be spending a lot of the time then discussing this pay package,” said Stefan Stern, director of the High Pay Centre, which lobbies for restraint in awards to UK executives.

Bloomberg

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