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Wizz Air Chief’s $137 Million Bonus Faces Shareholder Test

Wizz Air Chief’s $137 Million Bonus Faces Shareholder Test

Wizz Air Holdings Plc faces an investor showdown Tuesday over plans to pay its founder 100 million pounds ($137 million) if he can turn the discount carrier into another Ryanair Holdings Plc.

Proxy advisory firms have recommended that shareholders block the mammoth incentive plan, which would require Chief Executive Officer Jozsef Varadi to raise Budapest-based Wizz’s market value to almost 12 billion pounds over the next five years -- a jump of about 2.5 times from the current stock price.

In the lead-in to the shareholder vote starting at 3 p.m. in Geneva, advisory services have registered their opposition.

Wizz Air Chief’s $137 Million Bonus Faces Shareholder Test

Institutional Shareholder Services said “no compelling explanation has been provided to justify the quantum.” The Institutional Voting Information Service coded the plan red, its category of strongest concern, calling out the size of the payout, its link to absolute share-price growth, and a lack of adjustments should Varadi be fired. Glass Lewis cited the potential for “excessive payouts based largely on market forces.”

Fast-growing Wizz, already the biggest discounter in Eastern Europe, seeks to use the coronavirus crisis as a springboard toward capturing a bigger share of the continent’s leisure-travel market. Varadi’s pay package, dubbed the Value Creation Plan, would exceed the $112 million share award granted in 2019 to Michael O’Leary, CEO of Ryanair, on which the Hungarian company models itself.

Wizz has relied on its relatively strong balance sheet to expand into markets such as Italy, the U.K. and the Middle East as more established airlines have faltered. At the same time, Varadi has received at least three approaches from other carriers, a company director has said.

While losing Varadi, 55, at such a critical moment would be a setback, ISS questioned whether he really needs tying down at such expense.

“As a founder and large shareholder, the CEO is arguably already sufficiently aligned with shareholder interests,” it said. “As such, shareholder support for the proposed VCP and remuneration policy is not considered warranted.”

Shares of Wizz traded 2.7% higher at 4,746 pence as of 1:57 p.m. in London, where the firm is listed. The stock is up 4% this year after adding almost 17% in 2020.

©2021 Bloomberg L.P.