The Remuneration Committee sets and monitors executive remuneration for the company, in line with the executive remuneration policy. This policy has as its objectives to:
The company aims to be the leading gold mining company in the medium term and the leading mining company in the long term. In order to achieve this, the company must be in a position to attract the best talent available in the industry and its remuneration package must therefore be comparable to those of the leading mining companies globally. The remuneration policy is devised to support this business strategy.
In particular the Remuneration Committee is responsible for:
The following principles are applied to give effect to the remuneration policy and to determine executive remuneration:
During 2009, the key remuneration decisions taken were as follows:
As a result of the benchmarking exercise mentioned above, adjustments in excess of South African inflationary increases were made to close the gap between the basic salaries of EVPs and the comparator group median. The outcome of this review, as it affects EVP basic salaries, is explained further in this report.
In addition, PricewaterhouseCoopers was engaged to assess specifically, the company’s compliance with King III from a remuneration perspective. Some steps will be taken in 2010 to align with the King III requirements in part, but work on this will be ongoing through 2010 to ensure compliance by 2011.
At the annual general meeting of shareholders to be held on 7 May 2010, shareholders will be asked to approve the policy as outlined in this report and that the board of directors be authorised to do all such acts as may be necessary to implement the remuneration policy for 2010 as summarised herein.
For full details on the Remuneration Committee, refer to Directors' report.
Executive remuneration takes into account remuneration paid to members of the Executive Committee. For Full details on the Executive Committee, refer Board and management.
Executive directors’ remuneration and the remuneration paid to the other members of the Executive Committee currently comprise the following elements:
Each component is described in more detail below:
A safety multiplier was also applied so that the safety record could be taken into account when determining the extent to which performance targets are achieved.
The weighting of the respective contribution of company and individual targets at the executive management level is 60% company and 40% individual.
The bonus paid comprises two separate parts:
The BSP awards vest over a two-year period and vesting is subject to the individual being in the employ of the group at the date of vesting. In respect of the BSP awards granted after 1 January 2008, 40% of the awards vest on the first anniversary from the date of grant and the remaining 60% of awards vest on the second anniversary from the date of grant. Provided that the individual has not exercised any BSP awards during the vesting period, he or she will be eligible to receive an additional 20% in BSP awards on the third anniversary from the date of grant.
The maximum bonus achievable under the BSP (expressed as a percentage of basic salary) is shown in the table below. For these purposes, basic salary includes offshore payments:
| Position | Maximum bonus | On target bonus | On target cash bonus | On target BSP award face value at date of grant |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Chief Executive Officer | 160% | 80% | 40% | 40% |
| Executive directors | 140% | 70% | 35% | 35% |
| Executive management | 120% | 60% | 30% | 30% |
| Other management | 100% | 50% | 25% | 25% |
In respect of 2009, the performance targets imposed on BSP awards (cash bonus and share awards) were achieved at a level of 79.66%. The payments made under the BSP in respect of the 2009 financial year to executive management are disclosed in this Remuneration Report.
In respect of the 2010 BSP awards, the performance targets to be satisfied will be based on the targets summarised above and no changes to the maximum bonuses or on-target bonuses are proposed.
Cash payments, equal in value to the dividends which would have been paid had actual shares been issued during the vesting period, were made when the BSP awards granted in 2006 vested during 2009.
Long-Term Incentive Plan (LTIP): The objective of the LTIP is to align the interests of the executive management with those of the company and the shareholders over the medium to long term.
Under the LTIP, executive management are granted a right to receive shares in the company, subject to performance conditions being achieved, over the specified performance period and continued employment with the group.
The performance targets used for the vesting of the LTIP awards are determined annually by the Remuneration Committee and link directly to the company’s strategy. The LTIP awards are granted with a three-year vesting period. For awards granted in 2009, the company targets were based on measures including:
LTIP awards will vest on the following basis for the 2009 and 2010 awards:
In this context, partial vesting means that 50% of the weighted target is achieved (except in the case of TSR where partial vesting means a 40% achievement of target) while full vesting results in a 100% achievement.
The value of awards which may be granted under the LTIP by reference to the face value of the awards as at the date of grant and expressed as a percentage of basic salary, is shown in the table below. In this context, “face value” means the value of the award at the current share price (i.e. share price x number of shares under award) and “expected value” means the future value of the award taking into account the probability of the performance targets being achieved – an estimated probability of 60% has been applied for this purpose. In this context, basic salary includes offshore payments:
| Position | Maximum face value | Maximum expected value |
|---|---|---|
| Chief Executive Officer | 120% | 72% |
| Executive directors | 100% | 60% |
| Executive management | 80% | 48% |
| Other management | 80% | 48% |
The LTIP awards granted in respect of the 2010 financial year to executive management are disclosed in this Remuneration Report under the Share Incentive Scheme section.
In respect of the LTIP awards granted in 2007 which vested during 2010, 56% of the award vested following the testing of the performance conditions. Further details are disclosed herein.
In respect of the LTIP awards granted in 2010, the performance targets to be satisfied will be based on the targets summarised above and no changes to the maximum face value or maximum expected value of awards are proposed.
At the discretion of the Remuneration Committee, a cash payment, equal in value to the dividends which would have been paid had actual shares been issued during the vesting period, will be made to employees to whom LTIP awards were granted, to the extent that these LTIP awards vest after the performance conditions have been tested.
Service contracts of executive directors are reviewed annually. Mark Cutifani, as Chief Executive Officer, has a 12-month notice period while the notice period for the Chief Financial Officer, Srinivasan Venkatakrishnan, is nine months. Executive Vice Presidents have a six-month notice period while Senior Vice Presidents and Vice Presidents have three-month notice periods. The contracts also provide for a payment of 24 months’ salary in the case of the Chief Executive Officer; 18 months in the case of the Chief Financial Officer and 12 months in the case of other executive management in the event of a material change in role, responsibilities or remuneration, including loss of employment, following a new shareholder assuming control of the company.
At the annual general meeting of shareholders to be held on 7 May 2010, shareholders will be asked to consider an increase to the fees payable to non-executive directors. The resolutions for consideration will be included in the notice of meeting which will be sent to shareholders together with the abridged annual report.
The reason for proposing an increase in non-executive directors’ remuneration is to ensure that the fees paid remain competitive in order to enable the company to attract and retain persons of the calibre required to make meaningful contributions to the company, given its global spread and growth aspirations and having regard to the appropriate capability, skills and experience required. A recent benchmarking exercise undertaken by PricewaterhouseCoopers has indicated that the current levels of nonexecutive fees remain well below the lower quartile of the comparator group, particularly when considering market practice outside South Africa and taking into account the fact that several non-executive directors are based internationally. The requirement of competing in the global market, and compliance with increasing onerous and complex international governance and regulatory requirements, requires flexibility to attract non-executives of international standing. The above proposal falls short of recognising the global responsibility that the directors share for the governance of the group with business in diverse jurisdictions, but it seeks to better reflect market practice in the director’s region of residence.
In arriving at the proposal to increase non-executive directors’ remuneration, the Chief Executive Officer, in consultation with the Chairman and Executive Vice President – Human Resources of the company, directed PricewaterhouseCoopers to review nonexecutive directors’ fees for comparable international South African companies and international companies. The results of the review indicated that the remuneration paid to the non-executive directors of the company was, with respect to the South African comparator group, at the upper quartile and with respect to the international comparator group, below the lower quartile. The proposals are based on adjusting the fee levels for non-executive directors to the median of the applicable market – using South African market data for the resident non-executive directors, and market data from North America, the UK and Australia for nonresident directors outside Africa. The fees for non-resident non-executive directors residing in Africa have been set to a similar level to those non-executive directors resident in South Africa.
The Remuneration Committee, having taken due consideration of the review, recommend for approval by the shareholders, the remuneration for the Chairman, while the Chairman, together with the Chief Executive Officer and the Chief Financial Officer, recommend for approval by the shareholders, the remuneration for the non-executive directors. Prior to these proposed changes, the remuneration of the non-executive directors has been unchanged since the annual general meeting held in May 2009.
In light of all of these factors, the proposed revised remuneration structure is considered to be fair and reasonable and in the best interests of the company.
The proposals to be made regarding non-executive directors’ remuneration are detailed below:
| Board | Current fee per annum | Increased fee per annum | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1.1 | Chairman | $180,000 | R1,520,300 |
| 1.2 | Deputy chairman | R600,000 | R650,000 |
| 1.3 | South African resident directors | R250,000 | R270,000 |
| 1.4 | Non-South African resident directors who are resident in Africa | $25,000 | $33,750 |
| 1.5 | Non-South African resident directors who are resident in jurisdictions other than Africa | $40,000 | $60,000 |
The remuneration payable will be in proportion to the period during which office is held.
Each non-executive director will be entitled to an allowance for each board meeting attended by such director in addition to the six scheduled board meetings per annum, as follows:
| Board | Current fee per annum | Increased fee per annum | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2.1 | Chairman | $9,000 | R78,000 |
| 2.2 | Deputy chairman | R30,000 | R32,400 |
| 2.3 | South African resident directors | R12,500 | R16,000 |
| 2.4 | Non-South African resident directors who are resident in Africa | $1,250 | $2,000 |
| 2.5 | Non-South African resident directors who are resident in jurisdictions other than Africa | $2,000 | $3,000 |
The fee paid to each non-executive director in respect of membership of a committee of the board is to be increased with effect from 1 June 2010 on the basis set out below. The fees payable in respect of “other committees” pertain to the following committees which meet on a quarterly basis:
| Board committee | Current fee per annum | Increased fee per annum | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Audit and Corporate Governance Committee | |||
| 3.1 | Chairman South African resident | R150,000 | R160,000 |
| 3.2 | Member South African resident | R125,000 | R135,000 |
| 3.3 | Member Non-South African resident who is resident in Africa (1) | R125,000 | $16,875 |
| 3.4 | Member Non-South African resident who is resident in jurisdictions other than Africa | R125,000 | $25,315 |
| Other committees | |||
| 3.5 | Chairman South African resident | R120,000 | R130,000 |
| 3.6 | Chairman Non-South African resident who is resident in Africa (1) | R120,000 | $16,250 |
| 3.7 | Chairman Non-South African resident who is resident in jurisdictions other than Africa | R120,000 | $25,000 |
| 3.8 | Member South African resident | R100,000 | R110,000 |
| 3.9 | Member Non-South African resident who is resident in Africa (1) | R100,000 | $13,750 |
| 3.10 | Member Non-South African resident who is resident in jurisdictions other than Africa | R100,000 | $20,000 |
(1) Non-South Africans who are resident in Africa will receive the $ equivalent of the South African resident fees, converted at a rate of R8/$.
Each non-executive director will be entitled to an allowance for each ad hoc committee meeting attended. Ad hoc committees are those committees which meet on an as needs basis, namely the Party Political Donations Committee, the Nominations Committee and any special purpose committee established by the board.
| Board | Current fee per annum | Increased fee per annum | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2.3 | South African resident | R15,000 | R16,200 |
| 2.4 | Non-South African resident who are resident in Africa (1) | R15,000 | $2,025 |
| 2.5 | Non-South African resident who are resident in jurisdictions other than Africa | R15,000 | $3,000 |
(1) Non-South Africans who are resident in Africa will receive the $ equivalent of the South African resident fees, converted at a rate of R8/$.
The travel allowance, as detailed below, remains unchanged from that approved by shareholders at the annual general meeting held on 15 May 2009.
5.1 $10,000 per board meeting for the chairman, when based internationally;
5.2 $6,000 per board meeting for non-South African resident directors who are resident in Africa; and
5.3 $8,000 per board meeting for non-South African resident directors who are resident in jurisdictions other than Africa.
Below are the schedules detailing the remuneration paid or payable to non-executive and executive management for services rendered during the 2009 financial year.
The following table details fees and allowances paid to non-executive directors:
| All figures stated to the nearest R000 (1) | Appointed with effect from(2) | Resigned/ retired with effect from (2) | Directors fees (3) | Com-mittee fees | Travel (4) | Total | Directors’ fees (3) | Com-mittee fees | Travel (4) | Total |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2009 | 2009 | 2009 | 2008 | |||||||
| RP Edey (Chairman) | 1,626 | 318 | 314 | 2,258 | 1,274 | 266 | 219 | 1,759 | ||
| Dr TJ Motlatsi (Deputy chair) | 560 | 273 | | 833 | 360 | 160 | | 520 | ||
| FB Arisman | 315 | 303 | 208 | 826 | 212 | 275 | 170 | 657 | ||
| RE Bannerman | 15 May 09 | 121 | 68 | 88 | 277 | 212 | 100 | 219 | 531 | |
| Mrs E le R Bradley | 6 May 08 | | | | | 45 | 42 | | 87 | |
| JH Mensah | 15 May 09 | 121 | 100 | 38 | 259 | 212 | 175 | 170 | 557 | |
| WA Nairn | 227 | 288 | | 515 | 135 | 160 | | 295 | ||
| Prof LW Nkuhlu (5) | See note(5) | 240 | 260 | | 500 | 135 | 225 | | 360 | |
| SM Pityana | 227 | 393 | | 620 | 135 | 279 | | 414 | ||
| SR Thompson | 28 July 08 | | | | | 117 | 133 | 40 | 290 | |
| Total non-executive directors | 3,437 | 2,003 | 648 | 6,088 | 2,837 | 1,815 | 818 | 5,470 | ||
Rounding may result in computational differences.
(1) Where directors' compensation is in dollars, the amounts reflected are the actual South African rand values paid, calculated using the R:$ rate of exchange at the time of payment.
(2) Fees are disclosed only for the period from or to which, office is held.
(3) At the annual general meeting of shareholders held on 15 May 2009, shareholders approved an increase in directors fees with effect from 1 June 2009
| For six meetings | Additional per meeting | Travel (4) | |
| – Chairman | $180,000 | $9,000 | $10,000 |
| – Deputy chairman | R600,000 | R30,000 | - |
| – South African resident directors | R250,000 | R12,500 | - |
| – Non-South African directors | |||
| – Living in Africa | $25,000 | $1,250 | $6,000 |
| – Living other than in Africa | $40,000 | $2,000 | $8,000 |
The fees payable in respect of committees were approved by the board.
(4) A travel allowance per board meeting is paid to non-executive directors who travel internationally to attend board meetings. In addition, AngloGold Ashanti is liable for the payment of all travel costs and accommodation.
(5) Prof. Nkuhlu resigned from the board with effect from 5 May 2009 and rejoined the board on 1 June 2009.
Executive directors do not receive payment of directors' fees or committee fees.
Non-executive directors are not eligible to participate in the Share Incentive Scheme.
Executive director and executive management remuneration is made up as follows:
| All figures in R000 | Appointed with effect from (1) | Resigned/ retired with effect from (1) | Salary | Perfor-mance related payments (2) | Pension scheme contri-butions | Other benefits (3) | En-cashed leave (4) | Sub total | Pre-tax gains on share options exercised (5) | Total |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2009 | ||||||||||
| Executive directors remuneration | ||||||||||
| M Cutifani | Full year | 10,807 | 7,627 | 1,913 | 634 | | 20,981 | | 20,981 | |
| S Venkatakrishnan | Full year | 6,552 | 4,297 | 1,199 | 1,948 | | 13,996 | 2,621 | 16,617 | |
| 17,359 | 11,924 | 3,112 | 2,582 | | 34,977 | 2,621 | 37,598 | |||
| Executive management remuneration | ||||||||||
| Representing 10 executive managers | Full year | 37,635 | 17,002 | 4,510 | 10,135 | 394 | 69,676 | 20,370 | 90,046 | |
| Total executive directors, and executive management remuneration 2009 | 54,994 | 28,926 | 7,622 | 12,717 | 394 | 104,653 | 22,991 | 127,644 | ||
| 2008 | ||||||||||
| Executive directors remuneration | ||||||||||
| M Cutifani | Full year | 9,513 | 5,877 | 1,477 | 24 | | 16,891 | | 16,891 | |
| S Venkatakrishnan | Full year | 5,585 | 3,613 | 1,004 | – | | 10,202 | 1,837 | 12,039 | |
| 15,098 | 9,490 | 2,481 | 24 | | 27,093 | 1,837 | 28,930 | |||
| Executive managements remuneration 2008 | ||||||||||
| Representing 11 executive managers | 31,771 | 14,541 | 5,135 | 1,194 | 496 | 53,137 | 1,584 | 54,721 | ||
| Total executive directors, and executive management remuneration 2008 | 46,869 | 24,031 | 7,616 | 1,218 | 496 | 80,230 | 3,421 | 83,651 |
Rounding of figures may result in computational discrepancies.
(1) Salaries are disclosed only for the period from or to which office was held.
(2) In order to more accurately disclose remuneration received/receivable by executive directors and executive management, the tables above include the performance related payments calculated on the year's financial results.
(3) Includes health care, retention payments and personal travel.
(4) In 2005, AngloGold Ashanti altered its policy regarding the number of leave days that may be accrued. As a result, surplus leave days accrued are compulsorily encashed.
(5) Mr Venkatakrishnan applied all of the proceeds after tax from the sale of his share options to acquire 5,130 ordinary shares (2008: 4,569) in AngloGold Ashanti. Of the 92,452 share options exercised by the executive management, the proceeds from the sale of 48,595 options were used to acquire 16,911 ordinary shares in AngloGold Ashanti (2008: of the 15,563 options exercised, proceeds from the sale of 12,963 shares were used to acquire 2,304 ordinary shares in AngloGold Ashanti).
Details of the options and rights to subscribe for ordinary shares in the company granted to, and exercised by, executive directors, as well as executive management and other managers on an aggregate basis during the year to 31 December 2009 and subsequent to year-end are set out in the table below.
| M Cutifani | Venkat (1) | Executive management (2) | Other management | Total scheme | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Granted and outstanding at 1 January 2009 | |||||
| Number(3) | 39,440 | 62,027 | 433,488 | 2,906,841 | 3,441,796 |
| Granted during the year | |||||
| Number | 60,687 | 36,029 | 172,020 | 932,379 | 1,201,115 |
| Exercise during the year | |||||
| Number | | 8,564 | 92,452 | 1,030,900 | 1,131,916 |
| Pre-tax gain at date of exercise (value) - R | | 2,620,858 | 20,369,930 | 169,444,948 | 192,435,736 |
| Lapsed during the year | |||||
| Number | | 7,308 | 27,123 | 248,880 | 283,311 |
| Held at 31 December 2009 | |||||
| Number | 100,127 | 82,184 | 485,933 | 2,559,440 | 3,227,684(4) |
| Subsequent to year-end - to 31 January 2010 | |||||
| Granted | |||||
| Number | | | | | |
| Exercised | |||||
| Number | | | | 33,282 | 33,282 |
| Pre-tax gain at date of exercise (value) - R | | | | 8,502,546 | 8,502,546 |
| Lapsed | |||||
| Number | | | | 6,662 | 6,662 |
| Held at 31 January 2010 | |||||
| Number | 100,127 | 82,184 | 485,933 | 2,519,496 | 3,187,740 |
| Latest expiry date | 16 Feb 2019 | 16 Feb 2019 | 16 Feb 2019 | 16 Feb 2019 | 16 Feb 2019 |
(1) Mr Venkatakrishnan (Venkat) applied all of the proceeds after tax from the sale of his share options to acquire 5,130 ordinary shares (2008: 4,569) in AngloGold Ashanti.
(2) Of the 92,452 options exercised by the executive management, the proceeds from the sale of 48,595 options were used to acquire 16,911 ordinary shares in the company.
(3) As a result of the change in status, the following movements to opening balances were made:
– From executive management status to other managers – 17,099 options/awards.
(4) Of the 3,227,684 options/awards granted and outstanding at 31 December 2009, 983,094 options/awards are fully vested.
(5) Awards granted to executive directors and executive management in February 2010 are as follows:
| BSP | LTIP | |
|---|---|---|
| M Cutifani | 27,146 | 50,548 |
| Venkat | 15,074 | 25,543 |
| Total executive management | 102,164 | 167,609 |
For full details of the AngloGold Share Incentive Scheme, including the number of shares used in the scheme and dilution to shareholders in this regard, refer to the Directors’ Report.
ANGLOGOLD ASHANTI Annual Financial Statements 2009