- Apple shareholders on Tuesday voted to approve compensation for executives.
- Apple shareholders also reelected the company's board of directors.
- Cook told shareholders that Apple had acquired nearly 100 companies in the last six years.
Apple shareholders on Tuesday voted to re-elect the company's board of directors and approve 2020 pay for executives, including CEO Tim Cook.
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The vote was nonbinding and advisory. Apple shareholders also voted down a shareholder proposal opposed by Apple that would compel the company to reduce executive pay compared with median Apple employee pay.
The votes, which were expected, are another sign that Apple's shareholders are satisfied with the company's management and CEO. Apple, valued at more than $2.1 trillion, recently reported a quarter with $111.4 billion in revenue and sales growth in every product category, even during a pandemic year.
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Apple's board strongly supported Cook's pay package in a filing, citing a 867% return to shareholders, including dividends, from when he took over as Apple CEO in 2011 through September 2020.
Apple's proxy also included information about an equity package announced last year that could net CEO Tim Cook 1 million new shares if the company hits certain goals. However, that equity package was not granted until Sept. 27, 2020, which was the first day of Apple's 2021 fiscal year. So this year's shareholder vote on executive compensation did not actually cover that grant.
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Cook also said that Apple planned to increase the company's dividend. Dividends totaled over $14 billion in the last four quarters, he said. The company paid a dividend of 20.5 cents per share in the last two quarters.
Covid-19 and Apple's success as a business during a pandemic year was major theme of Cook's remarks to shareholders. Last year, Cook said the pandemic was the most challenging environment Apple's ever faced.
"A year later, you have to pause, and say wow," he said.
Cook said in a question-and-answer session that while Apple had adapted well to remote work — Apple employees have been working from home since March — the company still "can't wait until we can gather together in the office again," suggesting that Apple will still be office focused after the pandemic, in comparison to rival tech companies that have announced plans to shift to a remote work model.
He said that one advantage of working from an office was serendipitous interactions between employees.
Cook also talked about Apple's acquisitions strategy. He said that Apple has acquired 100 companies over the last six years. Ultimately, Apple acquires a company every three to four weeks, Cook said, mostly aimed at acquiring technology and talent.
In response to a shareholder question about whether Apple faces regulatory challenges around its control of the iPhone App Store, Cook said that Apple doesn't have a monopoly. "While scrutiny is always fair, accusations like these fall apart on a reasonable examination of the facts," he said.
Correction: This year's shareholder vote on executive compensation did not encompass the new restricted stock unit (RSU) award granted to Tim Cook on the first day of Apple's 2021 fiscal year. An earlier version of this story also misstated Apple's revenue for the last quarter, which was $111.4 billion.