Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai)

Voting for Pravin Rao’s salary increase

- Varun Sood

Infosys Ltd’s promoters continue to be unhappy with some decisions made by the board of India’s second-largest software services company. A majority of the promoters did not vote for a resolution seeking a salary increase for chief operating officer UB Pravin Rao.

According to filings by Infosys with stock exchanges, only 24% of promoter votes were cast in favour of the resolution seeking a 35% rise in Rao’s compensati­on to ₹12.5 crore. The remaining abstained. It mirrored the promoters’ voting 12 months ago on a resolution seeking a two-year extension and a revised compensati­on of $11 million for chief executive Vishal Sikka.

The latest show of promoter disenchant­ment, according to people familiar with the developmen­t, suggests that the truce reached between the founders and the company’s board after an open confrontat­ion in February may only have resulted in an uneasy and temporary calm.

The resolution was one of three Infosys sought to pass through electronic voting or postal ballots by 31 March. The remaining two resolution­s, including an amendment to its articles of associatio­n, allowing Infosys to consider a share buyback, and appointmen­t of DN Prahlad as independen­t director received approval from promoters and other shareholde­rs.

Infosys founder NR Narayana Murthy clarified that the decision of some of the founders not to vote in favour of the proposed salary increase for Rao was because of their belief in compassion­ate capitalism.

“This abstention has nothing to do with Pravin,” Murthy said in an e-mailed response to a questionna­ire from Mint. “I have lots of affection for Pravin. Let me state you the facts. I believe in striving towards reducing difference­s in compensati­on and equity in a corporatio­n. I have always felt that every senior management person of an Indian corporatio­n has to show self-restraint in his or her compensati­on and perquisite­s. This is necessary if we have to make compassion­ate capitalism acceptable to a majority of Indians who are poor. Without compassion­ate capitalism, this country cannot create jobs and solve the problem of poverty. Further, giving nearly 60% to 70% increase in compensati­on for a top-level person (even including performanc­e-based variable pay) when the compensati­on for most of the employees was increased by just 6% to 8% is, in my opinion, not proper.”

“Finally, given the current poor governance standards at Infosys, let us also remember that these targets for variable pay may not be adhered to if the board wants to favour a top management person,” said Murthy.

Still, the proposal to increase Rao’s salary found majority shareholde­r support as 75% of institutio­nal investors voted in favour of the proposal, even though 67% of non-institutio­nal investors voted against. Institutio­nal investors, which include foreign institutio­nal investors and insurance companies, hold 59% of shares in Infosys while non-institutio­nal investors, which include retail shareholde­rs, hold 28.1%.

Five of the seven original co-founders, Murthy, Nandan Nilekani, SD Shibulal, Kris Gopalakris­hnan and K Dinesh are categorise­d as promoters of the company, and the founders together hold a 12.75% stake. None of the founders are on the board of Infosys.

“No previous resolution in the history of the company has received such a low approval,” said Murthy.

In April last year, Nilekani and Sudha Murthy, Narayana Murthy’s wife and chairperso­n of the Infosys Foundation in India approved Sikka’s reappointm­ent until 2021 and a higher salary, as other founders abstained. A simi lar voting result this time sug gests that both Nilekani and Sudha Murthy voted in favour of Rao, too.

Gopalakris­hnan declined to offer a comment while emails sent to Nilekani and other founders went unanswered. An Infosys spokespers­on declined to comment on how the five promot ers voted.

“More than 50% of the public and small institutio­ns voting against the increase in COO’S sal ary is unpreceden­ted and as far as I recall never happened in the his tory of Infosys,” said Venkatra man Balakrishn­an, a former chief financial officier at Infosys “It is a vote of no-confidence on the practices followed by the cur rent board to excessivel­y com pensate senior management without any direct linkage to shareholde­r wealth creation.”

 ?? MINT/FILE ?? Infosys founder Narayana Murthy: Raising concerns
MINT/FILE Infosys founder Narayana Murthy: Raising concerns

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