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CEOs Ditching Dividends Should Consider Their Pay, Investors Say

CEOs Ditching Dividends Should Consider Their Pay, Investors Say

(Bloomberg) -- Company chiefs halting dividends to cope with coronavirus chaos and cutting salaries for rank-and-file staff should think about making sacrifices themselves, according to Britain’s biggest money managers.

The U.K. Investment Association, whose members run more than 7.7 trillion pounds ($9.5 trillion), told the country’s 350 biggest publicly traded firms that bosses’ compensation should reflect any cuts made to shareholder returns.

The group of investors includes money-management giants BlackRock Inc., Standard Life Aberdeen Plc and Schroders Plc. Companies that have cut dividends to conserve cash as the virus and its associated lockdowns ravage economies range from jet-engine maker Rolls-Royce Holdings Plc to retailer Marks & Spencer Group Plc. Regulators have also forced a dividend halt on Britain’s big banks.

“If companies are canceling dividend payments or making changes to their workforce pay, IA members will support boards and remuneration committees that demonstrate how this should be reflected on their approach to executive pay,” Andrew Ninian, the association’s director of stewardship and corporate governance, said in a letter to the chairmen of companies in the FTSE 350 Index.

Investors ranging from mom-and-pop savers to the biggest pension funds rely on dividends to accumulate income and cover expenses. Outrage over the dividend cut forced on HSBC Holdings Plc has prompted the bank’s sizable Hong Kong retail investor base to demand an extraordinary general meeting.

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Dividends had been growing in the U.K. before the coronavirus roiled markets. The amount returned to investors doubled in the last decade, and U.K. firms paid out a record 110.5 billion pounds to shareholders in 2019, according to analysis from Link Asset Services.

While the Investment Association’s members expect companies to take a prudent approach, “shareholders would be concerned if companies unnecessarily reduced or rebased the dividend level,” Ninian wrote. “Ultimately, shareholders will expect companies to be transparent about their approach to dividends, particularly if they are seeking additional capital.”

The Bank of England had also called on banks to scrap cash bonuses, but few of them have unveiled plans to cut variable compensation. Some financial executives are choosing to donate their pay: three top executives at Barclays Plc said Tuesday that for six months, they would donate a third of their salaries to coronavirus-related charities, following similar moves at Nationwide Building Society and the British TSB arm of Banco de Sabadell SA.

©2020 Bloomberg L.P.