Sector: Energy
KOSMOS ENERGY LTD · Meeting: May 28, 2026
Directors FOR
1
Directors AGAINST
1
Say on Pay
FOR
Auditor
FOR
To elect two Class I directors to a three-year term to serve until the 2029 annual stockholders meeting
Against Analysis
Mr. Inglis has served as Chairman and CEO since 2014, giving him full overlap with the severe 3-year underperformance period; Kosmos' stock fell 65% over three years while the energy sector ETF (XLE) gained nearly 45%, a gap of about 110 percentage points that far exceeds the 30-point threshold that triggers an against vote, and the 5-year record (-1.1% vs sector) provides no meaningful mitigation.
For Analysis
Ms. Moræus Hanssen joined the board in 2023, which is within the 24-month new-director exemption window, so she is not held accountable for underperformance that predates her tenure; she brings strong oil and gas executive experience and qualifies as an audit committee financial expert.
Of the two Class I nominees, Mr. Inglis receives an AGAINST vote because his decade-plus tenure fully overlaps with severe 3-year TSR underperformance (Kosmos -65% vs. XLE +45%, a ~110pp gap well above the 30pp trigger threshold), and no 5-year mitigant applies. Ms. Moræus Hanssen receives a FOR vote as she joined in 2023 and is exempt from the TSR trigger under the 24-month new-director rule.
CEO
Andrew G. Inglis
Total Comp
$4,976,958
Prior Support
95%%
The CEO's total compensation of approximately $5.0 million for 2025 is substantially lower than recent years ($8.6M in 2024, $9.7M in 2023), driven primarily by the committee's decision to pay zero cash bonuses despite a formulaic ~85% payout result — an act of genuine negative discretion that directly reflects poor financial performance including a net loss of ~$700M and production below targets. The pay mix is heavily weighted toward at-risk equity (approximately 75% of total compensation), the company maintains meaningful clawback policies covering both financial restatements and misconduct, and prior-year shareholder support was 95%, indicating no unresolved shareholder concern; while stock performance has been poor, the compensation structure itself is working as intended by reducing payouts when results disappoint.
Auditor
Ernst & Young LLP
Tenure
23 yrs
Audit Fees
$2,438,488
Non-Audit Fees
$592,035
Ernst & Young has served as Kosmos' auditor since 2003 (approximately 23 years), which is below the 25-year tenure threshold that would trigger a negative vote; non-audit fees of roughly $592,000 represent about 24% of audit fees, well below the 50% independence-concern threshold; no material restatements are disclosed; EY is a Big 4 firm appropriate for a $1.6 billion company.
The 2026 Kosmos Energy annual meeting presents four proposals; the key contested item is the director election, where Chairman and CEO Andrew Inglis receives an AGAINST vote due to severe 3-year TSR underperformance of approximately 110 percentage points below the energy sector ETF (XLE) during his tenure, while co-nominee Maria Moræus Hanssen receives a FOR vote under the new-director exemption. The Say on Pay vote earns a FOR on the strength of zero cash bonuses paid despite formulaic eligibility, a heavily performance-weighted pay structure, and 95% prior-year shareholder support; the auditor ratification also receives a FOR as EY's tenure and fee structure are both within acceptable bounds.