Sports Direct under fire over 拢11m 'owed to Mike Ashley's brother'

Image source, Getty Images

Image caption, Sports Direct founder Mike Ashley says the company owes his brother 拢11m

Sports Direct shareholders have criticised the retailer's decision to ask investors to approve an 拢11m payment to the brother of founder Mike Ashley.

Royal London Asset Management said the retailer had given "no evidence or detail explaining why" the sum was owed to John Ashley.

It would vote against the payment as it was a "consequence of poor governance".

The fund manager has a 0.18% stake in Sports Direct worth about 拢3.7m.

Ashley Hamilton Claxton, Royal London's head of responsible investment, said: "If appropriate governance measures were in place at Sports Direct in the first place, there would have been a clear and transparent process for paying John Ashley what he was due and there would be no need to review his compensation after the fact.

"Investors need to see a plausible reason as to why John Ashley is owed money, not how much he is owed."

Paul Lee, head of corporate governance at Aberdeen Standard Investments, added: "It's really difficult to see how it's in our clients' interest to support the proposal.

"This is a back payment from 10 years ago, for which our clients get no new benefit."

John Ashley, Mike's elder brother, departed as the retailer's IT chief in 2015 to join a company that held a contract with Sports Direct.

An internal Sports Direct investigation was conducted this year by its legal advisors RPC and accountants Smith & Williamson.

It concluded that John Ashley had been underpaid for his work since the company listed on the stock market in 2007 and was owed 拢11m in bonuses and performance-related share awards.

Image source, Getty Images

The founder's brother was denied the payments "because of concerns at the time about public relations", the company said.

Mike Ashley, who is Sports Direct's chief executive and owns a 60% stake in the company, will abstain from the vote - as will the retailer's board. However, that directors supported the resolution.

Mike Ashley said John Ashley would have been paid the sum "if he were not my brother".

He added: "I fully expect that independent shareholders will vote against this proposal due to the passage of time involved, although in my opinion, technically the money is owed and therefore should be paid."

The internal review, examined "total amounts paid in money and in kind to John Ashley, which had been called into question given his position as brother of Mike Ashley".

The vote will be held at a shareholder meeting on 13 December.

Sports Direct chairman Keith Hellawell came under further pressure when John Ashley left as it raised more questions about the retailer's corporate governance standards.

Shares in Sports Direct closed 0.5% lower at 379.7p, valuing Mike Ashley's stake in the company at about 拢1.2bn.

The stock has risen more than a third since the retailer floated a decade ago - but had been worth more than 900p in 2014.