FD salaries up 12%

FTSE-100 finance directors have seen their salaries rise by an average of 12% over the past 12 months with more FDs than ever now earning total pay packages worth over £1m per year.

Written by Damian Wild

Link: Click here for the full report

The average basic salary for FDs has risen to £350,000, plus £225,000 in short-term, performance-related bonuses and other perks worth £30,000, according to this year's FD salary survey carried out by Accountancy Age's sister title Financial Director.

Seven FDs are in the million-pound bracket: Man Group's Peter Clarke (£1.73m); Vodafone's Ken Hydon (£1.33m); GSK's John Coombe (£1.33m); Diageo's Nick Rose (£1.26m); BP's John Buchanan (£1.15m); Reckitt Benckiser's Colin Day (£1.14m); and Unilever's Rudy Markham (£1.09m).

Two other FDs were within a whisker of the seven-figure mark: Amvescap's Robert McCullough - the UK's first million-pound FD two years ago - on £987,000 and Tesco's Andrew Higginson's on £974,000. Friends Provident FD Martin Jackson enjoyed the biggest rise of the year. His package jumped 69% to £365,000. But spare a thought for Sage's Paul Harrison. With a total pay package of £192,000, he was the lowest earning FD in the FTSE-100.

Enjoyed this article? Help spread the word:

Comments

Reader comments for this story

White papers

Related jobs

Spotlight

Profile: Ian Powell, chairman of PwC

Being number one isn't enough for PwC chairman Ian Powell....

Credit crunch special: guiding business through the storm

The downturn is hurting and recession looms. Will accountants be...

Beat the credit crunch with Young Professional

Latest issue features a guide to advancement during economic uncertainty,...

Find your next job

Find your next job
Salary Checker

Newsletters

Sign up here for the very latest news delivered to your inbox. Choose from the following options:

Search white papers

Search white papers

Have your say

Will the 2012 London Olympics provide a boost to business?
Yes, such a high profile event can't fail but to help the economy
No, any gains won't match the amont of money spent on the event

Job of the week

More finance jobs...

Your next job