Standard Bank Group’s seven most senior executives received combined remuneration of more than R497 million for the year ended 31 December 2025, with group chief executive Sim Tshabalala alone accounting for R106 million of that figure — a package underpinned by long-term incentive awards tied to a three-year performance cycle that concluded at year-end.
Tshabalala’s package comprised a fixed annual salary of R11.6 million, employer retirement contributions of R358,000 and benefits and allowances of R242,000, with the bulk of his total — more than R94 million — derived from short- and long-term incentive awards, including R67 million in long-term incentives that will vest in March 2026. These awards were granted under the bank’s Performance Reward Plan in March 2023 and were subject to performance conditions measured across the three-year period ending 31 December 2025.
Of the total remuneration in excess of R500 million paid to the bank’s eight most senior executives — a figure that includes David Hodnett, CE of Standard Bank South Africa — fixed remuneration accounted for just R68 million, with short-term incentives totalling R169 million and long-term incentives exceeding R270 million. The structure reflects a deliberate design in which the majority of executive pay is deferred, performance-linked and equity-settled, aligning payouts with sustained shareholder returns rather than single-year results.
Chief financial officer Arno Daehnke received R79 million for the period, up from R68.3 million in 2024, including a fixed salary of R8.3 million, retirement contributions of R833,000, and short-term incentives of R24.2 million, with the remainder in long-term awards. Chief operating officer Margaret Nienaber took home R72.2 million, an increase of nearly R10 million on the R62.5 million she earned in 2024. Her fixed salary stood at R7.8 million. Both Tshabalala and Daehnke are expected to retire by the end of 2027. The bank’s five divisional chief executives — Funeka Montjane of Personal and Private Banking, Bill Blackie of Business and Commercial Banking, Luvuyo Masinda of Corporate and Investment Banking, Yuresh Maharaj of Insurance and Asset Management, and Nienaber as COO — account for the remainder of the disclosed executive pay bill.
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The disclosures come amid broader regulatory pressure on pay transparency in the corporate sector. The Companies Amendment Act, signed into law in July 2024 and referenced in Standard Bank’s 2025 Annual Financial Statements, requires all public and state-owned companies to disclose executive, director and general staff remuneration — a measure designed to give shareholders and the public a clearer picture of internal pay gaps and improve accountability. Standard Bank reported that total staff salaries and wages for 2025 amounted to R51 billion, up from R48.3 billion the prior year, with the bank’s minimum guaranteed package raised to R258,390 per annum from R244,920 with effect from 1 March 2025.
The ratio between Tshabalala’s package and the bank’s new minimum salary — approximately 411 to one — illustrates the scale of the gap that the Companies Amendment Act is intended to make visible. At the base of Standard Bank’s workforce, entry-level permanent staff earn just over R21,500 per month under the revised minimums. The contrast is not unique to Standard Bank: Absa chief executive Kenny Fihla received a R98.5 million buyout award upon joining from Standard Bank, while FirstRand’s chief executive earned R933,000 per month in 2024. Across South Africa’s four major listed banks, the pattern of top-heavy executive remuneration driven by multi-year incentive plans is consistent — and the new disclosure requirements are likely to sharpen public and investor scrutiny of those structures going forward.
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