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Tech Mahindra’s Vineet Nayyar pockets record $29 mn pay packet

By Anuradha Verma

  • 11 Jul 2016
Tech Mahindra’s Vineet Nayyar pockets record $29 mn pay packet
Other | Credit: Reuters

Tech Mahindra Ltd has set an employee compensation record with a total remuneration of Rs 179.5 crore ($29 million) last financial year to Vineet Nayyar, a 77-year-old former IAS officer who switched to the corporate world three decades ago.

Nayyar, who retired from executive role last August but remains on the board of India's fifth-largest software services firm as vice chairman, drew bulk of the record compensation (Rs 177.8 crore) from the value of stock option. His salary and company's contribution to provident fund was at a modest under Rs 2 crore.

In the process, he surpassed the previously known highest compensation to an executive by an Indian firm. In the year ended March 31, 2015, Tech Mahindra itself paid a whopping Rs 165.5 crore to CP Gurnani, its managing director and CEO. Nayyar himself was paid a not too modest figure of Rs 119.9 crore in FY2014-15. Both received a large chunk of this compensation through value of stock options.

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The same year, Bharti Group's Akhil Gupta, had also drawn large compensation, as he exercised stock options worth Rs 87 crore.

Prior to FY2014-15, the highest paid executives of Indian public companies pocketed around Rs 60-67 crore in any given year. Sun TV's husband-wife duo Marans, JSPL's Naveen Jindal etc had pocketed such sums.

There is no uniform disclosure practice for the value of ESOPs being granted or exercised. Several top bankers bag a good chunk of their pay packets through such stock options. However, since last year some firms started clearly quantifying the value of such stock options exercised in their annual report.

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According to Kris Lakshmikanth, founder and CEO of executive search firm Headhunters India, it is now mandatory for listed companies to provide cost to company (CTC) information for directors.

He said a majority (70%) of the NIFTY 50 companies have provided this information and this percentage will only increase in the future.

The disclosures also shine a fresh light on how the top bosses of Indian IT behemoths are being rewarded.

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“Most software and e-commerce companies' directors and chief executives' salary can be compared to investment bankers’ today,” said Lakshmikanth.

An email query sent to Tech Mahindra on its disclosure policy related to the value of stock options to directors, did not elicit any response.

Meanwhile, Tech Mahindra CEO Gurnani got a relatively modest pay packet (see infographic).

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However, he was just a tad behind Infosys CEO Vishal Sikka. Sikka, who took over as chief executive of IT services major Infosys in August 2014, went home with a 10-fold hike in pay packet. Bulk of Sikka's compensation was bonus incentives.

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All of these executives earned a puny, however, compared to Nikesh Arora. The electrical engineer from IIT BHU who was hand-picked by SoftBank CEO Masayoshi Son as his future successor at the Japanese telecom and internet giant, earned $73 million (around Rs 490 crore or 8.04 billion yen) in the financial year ended March 2016. However, this was much less compared with the mammoth $137.7 million remuneration he received in the previous financial year (including a joining bonus).

Though Arora’s pay package decreased in the last financial year, he remained one of the highest-paid corporate executives in the world. Arora recently quit SoftBank.

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