October 20, 2009 20:03 PM
Most Companies Yet To Disclose Remuneration Levels, Says Ernst & Young
KUALA LUMPUR, Oct 20 (Bernama) -- Most Malaysian companies have yet to disclose the remuneration level of their executive directors and relate it with performance, according to an international public accounting firm.
Ernst & Young Malaysia, in its 2009 executive and board remuneration report, said though the level of disclosure on remuneration of executive directors increased, there was still a lack of information on the correlation between level of remuneration and company's performance.
Ernst & Young's performance and reward leader for the Far East, Dharma Chandran, said majority of the companies that were assessed did not report on performance measures.
"They tell you what they paid the executives last year and how much they paid remuneration (but) they did not say much in terms of what kind of performance measures that they used, whether revenue, profit or economic values as benchmark," he told a media briefing here Tuesday.
The report was made based on analysis of information in the annual reports of the top 100 companies on Bursa Malaysia's Main Market with the financial years ended 2008 and 2007.
According to the report, only 23 per cent of companies disclosed remuneration details for all individual directors as recommended in the Malaysian Code of Corporate Governance.
Though there was still lack of disclosure, Dharma said the increasing weighting towards variable pay indicated that Malaysian companies were responding to international trends and reviewing their strategies to ensure alignment with their business strategy and shareholder value creation.
However, there was a need for long-term incentives for these executive directors to create long-term values and keep real talent in the company, he said.
Dharma said most Malaysian companies offered short-term incentives based on company's performance rather than long-term incentives to these directors.
"For the remuneration to be balanced, a mixed of short-term and long-term incentives could drive better future for the company," he said.
Short-term incentives are usually in the form of annual bonuses while long-term incentives can be equity- or cash-based programme with a vesting period of more than one year.
Moving forward, total remuneration levels are expected to remain stagnant or assumed downward trend this year as Malaysian companies are still feeling the effects of a weak global economy, the report said.
-- BERNAMA
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