Remuneration
Remuneration report
This remuneration report describes the remuneration policy and the remuneration system for the CPH Board of Directors and Group Executive Board and the remuneration paid thereto. This report has been compiled in compliance with the Swiss Code of Obligations (CO), the Directive on Information relating to Corporate Governance of the SIX Swiss Exchange (DCG) and the principles of the Swiss Code of Best Practice for Corporate Governance issued by Economiesuisse.
1 Principles of remuneration policy and the remuneration system
The CPH Group is an attractive employer with well-qualified and high-performing personnel who are remunerated in line with market levels. CPH views such remuneration as a combination of a fixed and a variable salary component. The amount of each individual’s overall remuneration and the components thereof are set by regularly reappraising the current classification of each function and the remuneration paid and comparing these remuneration amounts to market rates. This approach ensures that the remuneration awarded to each individual is in line with market rates and is appropriate to the duties and tasks, the performance delivered and the results achieved by the individual concerned.
2 Remuneration processes
The role of the Annual General Meeting
The Annual General Meeting (AGM) elects the members of the Personnel & Compensation Committee individually to serve for a one-year period.
In accordance with the legal provisions for companies whose shares are listed on the stock exchange (CO Article 732ff) and the Articles of Incorporation of CPH Chemie + Papier Holding AG, the AGM approves the maximum aggregate remuneration payable to the Board of Directors in toto for the period until the next AGM. In accordance with the same provisions, the AGM also approves the maximum aggregate fixed and variable remuneration payable to the Group Executive Board in toto for the business year following the AGM concerned.
The proposals for the maximum aggregate remuneration payable to the Board of Directors and the Group Executive Board are prepared by the Personnel & Compensation Committee, verified by the Board of Directors and submitted to the AGM for approval. If a proposal is rejected, a new proposal may be submitted by the Board of Directors. If it does so and this second proposal is also rejected, either an Extraordinary General Meeting may be convened within three months or the Board of Directors may submit the remunerations concerned to the next AGM for retrospective approval.
Since the maximum aggregate remuneration payable to the Board of Directors and the Group Executive Board are prospectively resolved, the AGM will also conduct an annual non-binding consultative referendum on the remuneration report.
The role of the Board of Directors
The Board of Directors resolves a remuneration policy based on the Articles of Incorporation which pays due and full regard to the company’s culture and strategic objectives. The Board of Directors also determines the basic framework and design of the remuneration system for its members and the members of the Group Executive Board.
The Board of Directors proposes new Board members to the AGM, appoints the Group CEO and the further Group Executive Board members and specifies their terms and conditions of employment.
The Board of Directors resolves which maximum aggregate remuneration amounts payable to the Board of Directors and the Group Executive Board should be submitted to each AGM for approval.
In determining individual remuneration amounts, the Board of Directors abides by the resolutions of the AGM and by the relevant statutory and regulatory provisions regarding the division of authorities between itself and the Personnel & Compensation Committee. Within this framework, the Board of Directors bears ultimate responsibility for determining the remuneration payable to itself, the Group CEO and the further members of the Group Executive Board.
The Board of Directors compiles an annual remuneration report for submission to the AGM. The Board of Directors is also responsible for ensuring transparency in the remuneration awarded to its own members and the members of the Group Executive Board.
The role of the Personnel & Compensation Committee
For details of the composition of the Personnel & Compensation Committee, please see the corporate governance report. The Personnel & Compensation Committee is responsible in particular for:
- devising the guidelines for the CPH Group’s remuneration policy (in particular the remuneration principles for the Board of Directors and the Group Executive Board) on behalf of the Board of Directors
- submitting proposals for the remuneration of the Board of Directors and the Group Executive Board to the full Board of Directors
- assessing the performance of the Group CEO and the further Group Executive Board members and their achievement of their annual targets, and submitting corresponding proposals for their fixed and variable compensation to the full Board of Directors
- monitoring the implementation of the CPH Group’s personnel and remuneration policies along with groupwide salary developments
The Personnel & Compensation Committee generally meets three times (and at least twice) a year. The committee held three half-day meetings in 2023.
Every meeting of the Personnel & Compensation Committee is preceded by an agenda that is communicated to each member of the Board of Directors. The Committee also informs the other Board members at the next Board meeting of the topics it has discussed and the background to any proposals or recommendations submitted.
Any proposed changes to the remuneration of the Board of Directors, the Group CEO or further Group Executive Board members are submitted to the Board of Directors for approval by its Personnel & Compensation Committee, with due reference to the market comparisons conducted.
Market comparisons
The structure and amounts of the remuneration paid for certain functions are externally benchmarked every three years.
The latest such benchmark analysis of the remuneration paid for the various functions on the Board of Directors was conducted in the 2022 business year by a specialist outside company. The benchmark was performed against Swiss-based internationally active industrial companies of comparable size, corresponding to Group 1 for the Group Executive Board. Its findings were channelled into the corresponding remuneration from the 2023 AGM onwards.
The remuneration paid to the members of the Group Executive Board and the Divisional Managements was also analyzed by an external company in 2022. For the remuneration of the Group Executive Board, three benchmark groups were created. Group I consisted of Swiss-based internationally active industrial companies of comparable size (such as Huber + Suhner, Feintool, Burckhardt Compression, Aluflexpack and Vifor). Group II consisted of Swiss-based industrial companies active in Switzerland in comparable industrial sectors, i.e. chemistry, paper and packaging (such as Ems, Dottikon, Vetropack and Gurit). Group III comprised international subsidiaries (including those of companies in Groups I and II) based in China, Germany, the USA, Brazil and Bosnia and Herzegovina. The findings of these analyses in terms of the structure and the amounts of the remuneration paid were channelled into remunerations for 2023.
3 Remuneration system
Remuneration system for the Board of Directors
The remuneration paid to members of the Board of Directors consists of a fixed monetary sum whose amount depends on the function held (chairman, deputy chairman, technical committee chair or member). Members’ work on either of the Board’s two technical committees is additionally remunerated via meeting attendance fees. Board members are further awarded a flat daily allowance for any work beyond their normal meeting activities.
The remuneration awarded to members of the Board of Directors is basically paid in monetary form, though every member may elect to receive up to 20 % thereof in the form of CPH shares from 2024. Should they choose to do so, the share price for share allocation purposes is the arithmetic mean of the closing prices of the CPH Chemie + Papier Holding AG share for the 15 consecutive calendar days immediately before and immediately after the publication of the annual results. Such shares carry voting and dividend rights from the moment of their award, but are subject to a three-year vesting period thereafter. During this vesting period the number of shares awarded is not subject to any further performance or results criteria or vesting conditions. But their value will vary depending on the share’s stockmarket price trends.
After this three-year vesting period, the shares awarded are at the recipient’s free and full disposal.
To ensure that they remain independent in their exercising of their supervisory duties, the members of the Board of Directors are not awarded any remuneration in variable compensation form. The members of the Board of Directors are also not insured under any CPH occupational pension scheme.
The remuneration awarded to the members of the Board of Directors is determined on the basis of comparisons with published data for comparable Swiss industrial companies whose shares are also listed on the SIX Swiss Exchange. The corresponding proposal is then submitted by the Personnel & Compensation Committee to the full Board of Directors.
Remuneration system for the Group Executive Board
The remuneration awarded to the members of CPH’s Group Executive Board consists of fixed compensation, variable compensation (STI), share-based remuneration (LTI), contributions to the occupational pension scheme and social security institutions and further remuneration components.
Fixed compensation:
The basic fixed compensation of each Group Executive Board member is awarded in full in monetary form.
Variable compensation (STI):
Individual performance influences the total remuneration awarded to all personnel, including management members. On the basis of this principle, in addition to their fixed compensation, the members of the Group Executive Board also receive variable compensation in the form of a short-term incentive or STI, which is paid in monetary form with the amount awarded based on the achievement of specified targets.
60 % of the variable compensation is based on the achievement of quantitative targets set for the financial metrics of EBIT, operating cash flow and net working capital (each weighted equally), with the remaining 40 % based on the achievement of clearly defined performance targets in the fields of customers & market, innovation, processes, leadership & personnel and sustainability (underpinned by quantitative and qualitative goals). These non-financial targets help ensure the further sustainable development and the long-term appreciation in the value of the CPH Group and its constituent divisions.
The Heads of Divisions’ performance in financial metrics terms is based two-thirds on the results of their division and one-third on Group results.
For each Group Executive Board member, a target STI variable compensation is agreed which is paid if the targets concerned are achieved in full. The actual variable compensation paid is based on the degrees to which such targets are met, with the maximum STI compensation payable amounting to 150 % of the target set. The gradations between the bottom and top variable compensation payment limits of 0 % and 150 % may be linear or stepped for each individual target: the details are determined in the annual target-setting process, which is used to determine the degrees of target achievement and thus to determine the variable compensation payable.
The maximum STI variable compensation payable is 100 % of fixed basic compensation for the Group CEO and 50 % of fixed basic compensation for the further Group Executive Board members.
The targets for all target areas are prescribed by the Board of Directors for all Group Executive Board members (with financial targets derived directly from agreed budget parameters). The Group CEO and the further Group Executive Board members may make target proposals, and the Group CEO may make proposals for the remuneration of the further Group Executive Board members. The latter have their achievement of their annual targets assessed by the Group CEO, who submits their resulting recommendations to the Personnel & Compensation Committee, while the Group CEO’s performance is assessed by the Chairman of the Board. All such assessments are discussed by the Personnel & Compensation Committee, which then submits a report to the full Board on the degrees to which each Group Executive Board member has achieved the targets set, together with recommendations on the individual STI variable compensations to be paid.
Group Executive Board members joining or leaving the company during a business year have their STI variable compensation entitlement for the year concerned calculated on a corresponding pro rata basis.
Share-based variable remuneration (LTI):
The members of the Group Executive Board are further offered the long-term incentive (LTI) of share-based variable remuneration in the form of a restricted stock plan. From the 2023 business year onwards, the number of shares assigned thereunder is based on performance and results and calculated on the basis of the target LTI award and the degree of achievement of the STI targets set. The award price of such shares is the arithmetic mean of the closing prices of the CPH Chemie + Papier Holding AG share for the 15 consecutive calendar days immediately before and immediately after the publication of the annual results for the business year concerned.
The shares are bindingly awarded immediately after their award price has been set. Such shares carry voting and dividend rights from the moment of their award, but are subject to a three-year vesting period thereafter. During this vesting period the number of shares awarded is not subject to any further performance or results criteria or vesting conditions. But their value will vary depending on the share’s stockmarket price trends.
The shares of each annual tranche awarded are entirely at their holder’s disposal after the conclusion of their three-year vesting period, which is designed to ensure that all the members of the Group Executive Board maintain a minimal shareholding in the company.
The number of shares to be awarded to each Group Executive Board member is determined on the basis of their individual target LTI award and their actual degree of target achievement. The shares required for such awards are acquired by CPH Chemie + Papier Holding AG on the equities market. The shares are awarded in annual tranches, immediately after their award price has been set following publication of the corresponding annual results.
Group Executive Board members joining or leaving the company during a business year have their LTI variable compensation entitlement for the year concerned calculated on a corresponding pro rata basis.
The above restricted stock plan was extended by analogy to the members of the CPH Group’s three Divisional Executive Boards in the 2023 business year.
Occupational pension scheme:
An occupational pension scheme is maintained for the CPH Group under which all the Group’s Swiss-based employees are insured, including the members of the Group Executive Board. There is no additional occupational pension scheme for Group Executive Board members.
Further remuneration:
The further remuneration awarded consists of the private use of company cars and any long-service awards.
Any new members of the Group Executive Board who are appointed and assume their duties after the AGM has approved the maximum aggregate Group Executive Board remuneration for the business year concerned may – under Article 23 of the Articles of Incorporation of CPH Chemie + Papier Holding AG – be paid an additional amount totalling (for all such new members) no more than 40 % of this maximum aggregate amount.
The Group CEO has a contractual notice period of twelve months, while the further Group Executive Board members have a contractual notice period of six months. There are no contractual agreements for severance payments.
4 Remuneration paid to members of the Board of Directors and the Group Executive Board
The amounts shown are the remuneration paid for the year concerned, regardless of when such payment was made, i.e. they are presented on an accrual basis. The remuneration is shown in net form, i.e. the employee’s and the employer’s occupational pension scheme and social security contributions are separately shown. The shares assigned to members of the Group Executive Board are shown at actual market value.
Notes on the remuneration paid to the Board of Directors
A maximum aggregate remuneration of the Board of Directors of CHF 0.9 million was approved for the period between the 2022 and the 2023 Annual General Meetings by the Annual General Meeting of 17 March 2022. At an actual aggregate remuneration for the period of CHF 0.9 million, this maximum was duly observed.
The remuneration shown for 2023 was slightly above its prior-year level, because the maximum aggregate remuneration between AGMs was increased to CHF 1.0 million from the 2023 AGM onwards on the basis of the benchmark analyses conducted. The composition of the Board of Directors and thus also the number of Board members saw no changes in 2023.
No remuneration was paid to any former members of the Board of Directors.
Remuneration paid to members of the Board of Directors (audited)
1 From 2023, the employee share of social security contributions will be paid to members of the Board of Directors who are not subject to Swiss social security.
Notes on the remuneration paid to the Group Executive Board
A maximum annual aggregate remuneration of the Group Executive Board of CHF 4.0 million was approved for the 2023 business year by the Annual General Meeting of 14 March 2023. Actual aggregate remuneration of the Group Executive Board for 2023 was lower than this maximum by CHF 0.5 million.
The fixed compensation and the total remuneration paid to the Group Executive Board for 2023 were below their prior-year levels. This was partly because the compensation amounts paid were adjusted on the basis of benchmark analyses from the 2023 business year onwards. It was also because certain Group Executive Board functions had been doubly occupied at times in the previous year owing to personnel changes: the Group CFO position from January to March 2022 and the Head of Packaging position from February to April 2022.
The variable compensation shown for 2022 has been adjusted to reflect the payments actually made. This is not new remuneration, but the same remuneration as was shown in the 2022 Annual Report. That remuneration could only be shown on the basis of the provisions made (on an accrual basis), however, whereas the table below shows the final amounts paid.
No remuneration was paid to any former Group Executive Board members.
Remuneration paid to members of the Group Executive Board (audited)
5 Transactions with members of the Board of Directors, members of the Group Executive Board and related parties (audited)
No loans were made to any current or former members of the Board of Directors or the Group Executive Board or any parties related to the same, and no such loans are outstanding.
No remuneration was paid to any parties related to members of the Board of Directors or the Group Executive Board (with the exception of those shown under Note 31, ‘Transactions with related parties’ of the Notes to the consolidated financial statements). No transactions were conducted on non-market terms with any natural persons or legal entities related to any Board of Directors or Group Executive Board members.
6 Shares held (audited)
Board of Directors
1 including related parties, insofar as under significant influence
Group Executive Board
1 including related parties, insofar as under significant influence
7 External mandates held by members of the Board of Directors and the Group Executive Board (audited)
The table below shows all the external mandates held by the members of the Board of Directors and the Group Executive Board at the end of 2023 in comparable functions at other companies with a business purpose. Details of the professional backgrounds, other activities and vested interests of all members of the Board of Directors and the Group Executive Board are provided in the Corporate Governance section.