Business

JD Sports red-carded by top investors over boss’s pay

The prospect of a full-scale investor revolt at JD Sports Fashion grew on Friday when another leading adviser warned shareholders over bonuses awarded to its bosses despite refusing to repay government support.

Sky News has learnt that the Investment Association’s influential IVIS service has ‘red-topped’ JD Sports over votes on bonus payments and its future remuneration policy.

The alert adds IVIS to recommendations from other proxy advisers, including Glass Lewis, which have told investors they should oppose the board of Britain’s biggest sports goods retailer.

City sources said that IVIS had told IA members that they would need to be “satisfied that these [bonus] payments are commensurate with the experience of other stakeholders”.

Peter Cowgill, JD Sports’ executive chairman, received a £5m pay package for last year, even after seeing his base salary steeply reduced during the early part of the COVID-19 pandemic.

The company received more than £60m under the Treasury’s furlough scheme and £38m in business rates relief, both sums of money that it has declined to repay despite the decision of other large retailers to do so.

IVIS has also warned JD Sports shareholders about the “hybrid” approach it plans to use for its long-term incentive plan, with awards being made partly in cash.

More from Business

The voting service described this as “not in line with best practice”, according to one person who has seen the advice.

JD Sports, which holds its annual meeting on July 1, did not respond to a request for comment on Friday.

The IA declined to comment on the IVIS red-tops.

Articles You May Like

Trump says US airstrikes have ‘killed many’ ISIS terrorists
New York’s largest solar farm is a go with $950 million in funding
Nintendo posts profit miss as it slashes Switch forecast again ahead of console’s successor
Trump says 25% tariffs on Mexico and Canada may not include oil: ‘Oil is going to have nothing to do with it as far as I’m concerned’
We’re on Fed watch and tracking a parabolic move higher in one of our struggling stocks