Why Nestle India’s shareholders rejected higher royalty payment to parent

On Friday, 57.17% of shareholders rejected the Nestle India board’s decision to raise the royalty payout from 4.5% to 5.25% of net sales over the next five years, according to voting records published on the BSE on Saturday.

About 71% of larger investors, who own nearly 21% of the company’s stake, voted against the resolution.  

Nestle S.A. and Maggi Enterprises hold 34.28% and 28.48% of Nestle India, respectively, giving the promoters a combined stake of 62.76%. The remaining 16% is held by non-institutional and retail investors.

According to filings reviewed by Mint, two of the largest money managers in Europe opposed the decision of the board of Nestle India. 

“The performance of the company does not sufficiently demonstrate the benefits of the royalty payments over the years, which have grown at a rate higher than the company’s revenues and net profit,” said Legal & General Investment Management (LGIM), UK’s largest fund manager, managing $1.5 trillion of assets. 

Nordea Asset Management, the investment arm of the Nordic region’s largest bank, having $400 billion in assets under management, also opposed the resolution. “Based on the level of expenses incurred by the parent entity on marketing, research and development costs, there is lack of a compelling justification for the increase in royalty from the current arrangement,” it said.

“We do not support the proposal as it does not protect or enhance long-term shareholder value creation,” said Nordea.

“This proposal is not in shareholders’ best interests,” reasoned British Columbia Investment Management Corp. (BCI), a large Canadian pension fund that manages $200 billion in assets, when it voted against the proposal.

The California Public Employees’ Retirement System (CalPERS), which has about $500 billion in assets under management (AUM), and the City of New York Group Trust, with about $200 billion of AUM, were the two other large investors that rejected the resolution.

An email sent to Nestle India seeking comment went unanswered. 

The royalty row

The proposed royalty fee was to be effective 1 July. Under the new plan, the Indian arm of the Swiss food company had agreed to pay an annual 0.15% increase in royalty payments, for the next five years. This would have implied Nestle India paying 5.25% of revenue in royalty payments to the parent firm by 2029. Nestle India had come up with this royalty increase after a recommendation from consultant McKinsey &Compay. 

At least one proxy advisory firm had recommended that investors reject the proposed resolution as it reasoned that companies cap royalty payments as a percentage of profits instead of revenue.

“We are unable to support the resolution,” Institutional Investor Advisory Services (IiAS) said in a note dated 7 May. 

“Nestlé India’s revenue growth has outpaced the revenue growth in other geographies over a five-year period (4.6% growth in Nestlé India’s revenue versus 0.03%growth for other geographies). Further, Nestlé SA’s R&D spending has remained relatively constant over the past decade (CAGR of 0.2%); India’s royalty payments contribute to >4.5% of overall R&D spending albeit a 2.1% contribution to global sales,” IiAS said.

“Similarly, Nestlé SA’s marketing and administration expenses have also contracted at a CAGR of 1.2% over a ten-year period. The proposed maximum rate of 5.25% is also higher than royalty payments by other MNCs in India.” 

“In Indian currency, Nestlé India’s revenue has grown at a CAGR of 11.5% over the last five-year period. Assuming a growth rate of 12%, the aggregate license fees for next five years comes to ~Rs. 60.9 bn at the exiting rate of 4.5% of net sales and ~Rs. 67.0 bn at the revised rates resulting in an increased payout of Rs. 6.1 bn over the five-year period.” 

“Since the increasing revenue compensates the group by way of sales linked royalty, we do not approve of a further increase in royalty rates as increased royalty payments will exceed revenue growth. Further, as a good practice, the company should have capped the royalty payments as a percentage of profits,” said IiAS. 

Nestle India’s shares gained as much as 3.01% intraday on the BSE in Saturday’s special trading session following the news. The shares ended at 2,518.95 apiece, up 1.28% from Friday’s close.

Nestle India, which follows a January-December financial year, reported a 13.2% increase in revenue to 19,247.5 crore. The company’s profit jumped 25% to 2,998.6 crore.

The company, which currently gives 4.5% of its revenue to its Swiss parent, ended with 16,997.9 crore in revenue last year. This implies Nestle SA got 765 crore in royalty payments in 2023.

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Published: 18 May 2024, 05:22 PM IST