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Mumbai:
Vodafone chief executive Arun Sarin saw his pay package
rise nearly 20 per cent in the last financial year as
he achieved many of the mobile phone group''s internal
performance targets.
Sarin
received £1.27 million in salary and £1.93
million in share awards taking the pay package to over
£3.2m, up 18 per cent from last year, figures published
in the group''s annual report showed. He also received
£2.89m in shares from a long-term incentive programme.
Executive
bonuses for the next financial year will be based on Vodafone
achieving earnings-per-share growth of between 5 and 8
per cent, down from 5 to 10 per cent a year ago.
Vodafone
beat market forecasts last month after announcing operating
profit would be potentially flat in the coming financial
year while it forecast that 2008 sales would exceed some
estimates because of higher growth in emerging markets.
The
shares have risen 40 per cent in the past 12 months as
investors have increasingly come round to the board''s
strategy that has emerging markets as its growth engine
while mature markets come under price and regulatory pressures.
Vodafone
caused consternation among some shareholders last year
by proposing changes to its pay policy, potentially linking
directors'' bonuses to four performance measures: revenues,
earnings before interest and tax, free cash flow and "customer
delight", an independently defined measure of customer
satisfaction.
The
group said the lowering of the target again for 2007-08
matched changing market conditions.
Meanwhile,
Efficient Capital Structures, an activist investment group
backed by former Marconi executive John Mayo, has successfully
requisitioned four proposals to be put to the group''s
annual meeting next month, the annual report showed.
ECS
wants the group to restructure its balance sheet and create
a tracking stock in its investment in Verizon Wireless
to create shareholder value, but Vodafone has urged shareholders
to reject the proposals.
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