Unilever 2002 Annual Report Download - page 141

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Unilever Annual Report & Accounts and Form 20-F 2002
138 Control of Unilever
Share capital
NV’s issued share capital on 31 December 2002 was made
up of:
291 503 709 split into 571 575 900 ordinary shares
of 0.51 each
1 089 072 split into 2 400 ordinary shares numbered
1to 2 400, known as special shares
130 854 115 split into several classes of cumulative
preference shares.
PLC’s issued share capital on 31 December 2002 was made
up of:
£40 760 420 split into 2 911 458 580 ordinary shares
of 1.4p each
£100 000 of deferred stock.
For NV share capital, the euro amounts quoted in this
document are representations in euros on the basis of
Article 67c of Book 2 of the Civil Code in the Netherlands,
rounded to two decimal places, of underlying amounts in
Dutch guilders, which have not been converted into euros
in NV’s Articles of Association or in the Equalisation
Agreement. Until conversion formally takes place by
amendment of the Articles of Association, the entitlements
to dividends and voting rights are based on the underlying
Dutch guilder amounts.
Unity of management
In order to ensure unity of management, NV and PLC have
the same directors. We achieve this through our nomination
procedure. Only the holders of NV’s special shares can
nominate candidates for election to the NV Board, and only
the holders of PLC’s deferred stock can nominate candidates
for election to the PLC Board. The current directors, who
have agreed to act on the recommendations of the
Nomination Committee, can ensure that both NV and PLC
shareholders are presented with the same candidates for
election as directors, because the joint holders of both the
special shares and the deferred stock are NV Elma and
United Holdings Limited, which are subsidiaries of NV
and PLC.
NV and PLC both act as directors of NV Elma and of
United Holdings Limited. The Chairmen of NV and PLC
are additional directors of United Holdings Limited.
Equalisation Agreement
To ensure that NV and PLC operate for all practical purposes
as a single company, we have an Equalisation Agreement.
Under the Equalisation Agreement NV and PLC adopt the
same financial periods and accounting policies. Neither
company can issue or reduce capital without the consent
of the other. If one company had losses, or was unable to
pay its preference dividends, we would make up the loss or
shortfall out of:
the current profits of the other company (after it has paid
its own preference shareholders)
•then its own free reserves
•then the free reserves of the other company.
If either company could not pay its ordinary dividends, we
would follow the same procedure, except that the current
profits of the other company would only be used after it
had paid its own ordinary shareholders and if the directors
thought it appropriate.
So far NV and PLC have always been able to pay their own
dividends, so we have never had to follow this procedure.
If we did, the payment from one company to the other
would be subject to any United Kingdom and Netherlands
tax and exchange control laws applicable at that time.
The Equalisation Agreement also makes the position of the
shareholders of both companies, as far as possible, the same
as if they held shares in a single company. To make this
possible we compare the ordinary share capital of the two
companies in units: a unit made up of 5.445 nominal of
NV’s ordinary capital carries the same weight as a unit made
up of £1 nominal of PLC’s ordinary capital. For every unit
(5.445) you have of NV you have the same rights and
benefits as the owner of a unit (£1) of PLC. NV’s ordinary
shares currently each have a nominal value of 0.51,
and PLC’s share capital is divided into ordinary shares of
1.4p each. This means that a 5.445 unit of NV is made
up of 10.7 NV ordinary shares of 0.51 each and a £1 unit
of PLC is made up of 71.4 PLC ordinary shares of 1.4p each.
Consequently, one NV ordinary share equates to
6.67 ordinary shares of PLC.
When we pay ordinary dividends we use this formula.
On the same day NV and PLC allocate funds for the dividend
from their parts of our current profits and free reserves.
We pay the same amount on each NV share as on 6.67 PLC
shares calculated at the relevant exchange rate. For interim
dividends this exchange rate is the average rate for the
quarter before we declare the dividend. For final dividends
it is the average rate for the year. In arriving at the equalised
amount we include any tax payable by the company in
respect of the dividend, but calculate it before any tax
deductible by the company from the dividend.
In principle, issues of bonus shares and rights offerings
can only be made in ordinary shares. Again we would
ensure that shareholders of NV and PLC received shares
in equal proportions, using the ratio of 5.445 NV nominal
share capital to £1 PLC nominal share capital. The
subscription price for one new NV share would have to be
the same, at the prevailing exchange rate, as the price for
6.67 new PLC shares.
Under the Equalisation Agreement (as amended in 1981)
the two companies are permitted to pay different dividends
in the following exceptional circumstances:
if the average annual sterling/euro exchange rate changed
so substantially from one year to the next that to pay
equal dividends at the current exchange rates, either
NV or PLC would have to pay a dividend that was
unreasonable (ie, substantially larger or smaller in its own
currency than the dividend it paid in the previous year).