BUMBLE INC CLASS A (BMBL)
Sector: Communication
2026 Annual Meeting Analysis
BUMBLE INC CLASS A · Meeting: June 4, 2026
Directors FOR
1
Directors AGAINST
2
Say on Pay
AGAINST
Auditor
FOR
Director Elections
Election of Three Class II Director Nominees
Against Analysis
Ms. Atchison has served since October 2020, meaning her full tenure overlaps the period during which Bumble's stock fell roughly 76% over three years while the company's own peer group fell only 38% — a gap of nearly 38 percentage points, well above the 20-point threshold that triggers a no vote for directors overseeing a stock with negative absolute returns; the 5-year check shows BMBL underperforming peers by 14.3pp (below the 20pp threshold), which would normally be a mitigant, but given the catastrophic absolute returns (-92.8% over 5 years) and that the 5-year peer gap is close to the threshold, the overall record does not provide meaningful relief.
Ms. Griffin has served since February 2021, fully spanning the three-year underperformance window; Bumble's stock lost about 76% over three years while the company-disclosed peer group fell roughly 38%, a gap of 37.6 percentage points that exceeds the 20-point policy trigger for companies with negative absolute stock returns; while the 5-year peer gap of 14.3pp falls just below the 20pp mitigant threshold, the absolute 5-year loss of nearly 93% represents severe and sustained value destruction that does not support downgrading the vote to FOR.
For Analysis
Ms. Hsiao joined the board in October 2023, which is within the 24-month new-director exemption under our policy, so she is not held accountable for underperformance that largely predates her service; she brings relevant technology and AI product expertise that is directly applicable to Bumble's strategic transformation.
Two of the three Class II nominees — Atchison and Griffin — warrant AGAINST votes due to their full tenure overlap with a severe three-year period in which Bumble's stock underperformed its own disclosed peer group by 37.6 percentage points; Hsiao is exempt as a director who joined within the past 24 months.
Say on Pay
✗ AGAINSTCEO
Whitney Wolfe Herd
Total Comp
$7,617,828
Prior Support
97.6%%
The core problem with Bumble's 2025 compensation program is that the long-term equity awards — which account for the largest share of total compensation — are entirely time-based restricted stock units with no performance conditions whatsoever, meaning executives receive the full value of these awards simply by staying employed regardless of how the stock or business performs; this violates a fundamental policy requirement that incentive pay must have meaningful performance conditions, otherwise it is just fixed pay in disguise. At the same time, the company's stock has fallen roughly 76% over three years while its own peer group fell only about 38%, a gap that represents significant underperformance of shareholder returns, making above-benchmark incentive awards — including a $9 million RSU grant to the CEO — unjustified under the pay-for-performance alignment standard. Prior-year support was 97.6%, so there is no prior-vote remediation concern, but the structural absence of performance-based long-term equity is a clear policy trigger for a no vote independent of that history.
Auditor Ratification
✓ FORAuditor
Ernst & Young LLP
Tenure
N/A
Audit Fees
$4,372,000
Non-Audit Fees
$479,000
Non-audit fees (tax services of $479,000) represent approximately 11% of audit fees ($4,372,000), well below the 50% threshold that would raise independence concerns; auditor tenure is not disclosed so no tenure trigger can be applied; Ernst & Young is a Big 4 firm appropriate for a company of Bumble's size and complexity.
Overall Assessment
Bumble's 2026 annual meeting presents significant governance concerns: two of three director nominees warrant AGAINST votes due to sustained stock underperformance versus the company's own peers during their full board tenures, and the executive compensation program warrants an AGAINST vote because long-term equity awards carry no performance conditions, effectively converting variable pay into guaranteed pay at a time when shareholders have suffered severe losses. The auditor ratification is straightforward and passes all policy screens.
Compensation Peer Group
18 companies disclosed in 2026 proxy filing