HERTZ GLOBAL HLDGS INC (HTZ)
Sector: Industrials
2026 Annual Meeting Analysis
HERTZ GLOBAL HLDGS INC · Meeting: May 28, 2026
Directors FOR
1
Directors AGAINST
1
Say on Pay
FOR
Auditor
FOR
Director Elections
Election of Two Director Nominees to the Company's Board of Directors
Against Analysis
Ms. Vougessis has served on the board since September 2021, meaning her tenure fully overlaps the 3-year underperformance period during which Hertz stock fell 55.4% while the company-disclosed peer group median rose 52.4% — a gap of 107.8 percentage points, far exceeding the 20-point trigger threshold for companies with negative absolute returns. The 5-year TSR check (HTZ -74.1% vs peer median +49.0%, a gap of 123.1pp) also triggers, so there is no mitigating longer-term track record to downgrade the vote to FOR.
For Analysis
Ms. Clark Dougherty joined the board in August 2024, which is less than 24 months before the meeting date, making her exempt from the TSR underperformance trigger under policy; she brings relevant legal, governance, and mobility-sector experience from senior roles at Eaton, Polaris, and General Motors.
Two Class II directors are up for election. Lucy Clark Dougherty joined in August 2024 and is exempt from the TSR trigger as a director with less than 24 months of tenure; she receives a FOR. Evangeline Vougessis has served since September 2021 and her full tenure overlaps a period of severe underperformance relative to the company-disclosed peer group, with no 5-year mitigant available, warranting an AGAINST vote.
Say on Pay
✓ FORCEO
Wayne “Gil” West
Total Comp
$4,524,371
Prior Support
N/A
The CEO's total reported compensation of approximately $4.5 million is modest for a large-cap industrial/transportation company of Hertz's scale, and the pay structure is appropriately weighted toward variable pay — the CEO's annual incentive target alone is 150% of base salary, and the majority of his sign-on equity is tied to specific stock price hurdles ($10–$20 90-day VWAP) that had not been met as of year-end 2025, meaning performance-based awards are not paying out despite poor stock performance. The annual incentive payout of 133.5% was driven primarily by operational metrics (cost efficiency, utilization, customer satisfaction) rather than financial profitability — Adjusted EBITDA came in negative and the EBITDA component paid zero — and while this represents above-target incentive pay in a loss year, the overall CEO pay level is sufficiently below benchmark to avoid a pay-for-performance misalignment flag. The plan also includes a meaningful clawback policy and caps long-term payouts at 100% of target when total shareholder return is negative, which is a sound structural safeguard.
Auditor Ratification
✓ FORAuditor
Ernst & Young LLP
Tenure
7 yrs
Audit Fees
$15,000,000
Non-Audit Fees
$1,000,000
EY has audited Hertz since 2019 (approximately 7 years), well below the 25-year tenure threshold; non-audit fees of $1 million represent only about 7% of audit fees of $15 million, far below the 50% independence-concern threshold; EY is a Big 4 firm appropriate for a company of Hertz's size and complexity, and no material restatements attributable to audit failure were identified.
Overall Assessment
The 2026 Hertz annual meeting presents three standard proposals; the key governance concern is severe 3-year stock price underperformance relative to the company's own peer group, which warrants an AGAINST vote on incumbent director Evangeline Vougessis while newly joined director Lucy Clark Dougherty is exempt from the TSR trigger. The auditor ratification and Say on Pay proposals both pass policy screens and receive FOR votes, with CEO pay notably modest in absolute terms and the long-term equity program structured so that most performance-based awards require stock price recovery before paying out.
Compensation Peer Group
18 companies disclosed in 2026 proxy filing