Categories: Business

Wiese gallops through last AGM

A virtual event during which shareholders were obliged to send through written questions ensured Shoprite’s 2020 annual general meeting (AGM) would be a tame affair, particularly compared to the thrills and spills of the 2019 AGM.

At last year’s long-drawn-out meeting activist shareholders challenged the 40-year dominance of group chair Christo Wiese in dramatic fashion.

This year’s AGM would actually have been an extremely brief affair if one of the shareholders in attendance hadn’t implored Wiese to slow down and allow more time for questions.

Such is the contrived nature of written-questions-only virtual AGMs that time is needed for the written questions to be sent through – and then be spotted by someone on the Shoprite end of things. Wiese’s five seconds wasn’t enough time.

The company secretary managed to halt the galloping Wiese after the 13th resolution had been voted on – it was now 10 minutes after the start of the meeting and Shoprite was heading for a Covid AGM speed record.

It wasn’t that Wiese wanted to avoid questions but rather that he, like most of us, is still adapting to the Covid regime.

Even with the stilted written questioning, it was a comparatively speedy 32-minute affair, rather reminiscent of the pre-Steinhoff Whitey Basson days.

Appropriate enough perhaps given that this was the 40th and last time Wiese would be chairing a Shoprite AGM; next year he will be sitting in as an ‘ordinary’ director.

In response to a question about auditor rotation, shareholders were told that the Shoprite audit is “very complex” and there is no wish to change auditors before the 2023 deadline.

A selection process has begun and will be complete in 2022, after which the new audit firm will spend a year shadowing PwC before taking over.

Keeping mum on ‘sensitive’ remuneration issues

Remuneration committee chair Joseph Rock responded to a number of criticisms about the lack of detail in the remuneration report by stating that the board did not want to share sensitive details with Shoprite’s competitors.

Rock did however undertake to provide more details about the performance targets and achievements attached to the vesting of extremely valuable incentives “going forward”.

A hefty 64.5% of ordinary shareholders – that is holders of the non-Wiese-controlled shares – voted against the remuneration implementation report.

Wiese seemed disappointed that his attempts to make the group more diverse were not more enthusiastically welcomed.

“As far as the board is concerned it is clear that the new [chair] indicates our commitment to diversity,” said Wiese, referring to recently-appointed Wendy Lucas-Bull, who assumed the role after Monday’s AGM.

The board is looking at other changes, said Wiese, but thought it would be prudent, given the very difficult year, to wait before implementing them.

“Some long-serving directors have indicated they won’t serve a full-term due to their own circumstances and because they want to create opportunities to bring new personalities and faces to our board,” said Wiese.

“We’ve always been committed to reflecting the diversity in this country with all the limitations one has in this regard.”

This article first appeared on Moneyweb and was republished with permission.

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By Ann Crotty
Read more on these topics: business news