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Tadeu Marroco: Why tobacco giant CEO’s pay is set to triple to £18m

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It’s not always the case that bosses of big businesses getting paid big money hits the right notes in the public eye. There have been times that public limited companies - those on stock exchanges, beholden to shareholders as well as a board - have been criticised when trying to up payment terms for the decision-makers at the top.

That seems to go extra when it’s a bank or other finance-driven entity, or an organisation which operates in an area which perhaps straddles social goodwill.

So, when British American Tobacco (BAT) - as the name suggests, a cigarette producer which owns several major brand names - puts forward plans for the CEO to become one of the highest paid bosses in the FTSE 100, with the possibility to earn up to £18.2m a year, it may raise some eyebrows.

Or, to be more blunt, may require some big explaining.

BAT certainly think their plan is worthwhile, but trebling the salary of Tadeu Marroco - CEO since mid-2023 - will invoke questions from several stakeholders. Importantly to note, the £18.2m is only a total possible payout if targets are hit, with Mr Marroco’s guaranteed pay set at £1.8m across salary, pensions and benefits. He earned £6m in total last year, say the Financial Times.

Increasing CEO pay is not a new thing for London Stock Exchange-listed companies, who for a long time have had to watch similar businesses in the US pay considerably more.

Last year Lord Michael Spencer called for CEOs to be paid similarly to “top-rate footballers”, saying that sporting stars getting huge money was acceptable but that bank or energy bosses earning £20m a year was “materially less than their peer groups in America” but saw outsiders fuming it was “an outrage”.

Many have cited this pay gap as a possible reason for a talent drain Stateside, while on a broader view, valuation gaps of the companies themselves have seen many London-listed companies become targets for takeovers by private equity groups or overseas corporations.

Last year the London Stock Exchange Group gave CEO David Schwimmer a double pay deal to a possible maximum of over £13m. But the former bosses of Reckitt Benckiser, InterContinental Hotels Group and Smith & Nephew all departed for different reasons regarding pay, including to US-listed companies.

So, to stop that prospect happening, BAT regard it as worthwhile raising Mr Marroco’s potential pay.

 (AFP via Getty Images)
(AFP via Getty Images)

“The increasingly competitive global market for senior talent has resulted in upwards pressure on pay. With many US-based candidates we observe that pay disparities are particularly evident with incentive opportunities, which tend to be far above typical UK levels,” BAT said this week in a report.


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