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NAB chief executive Andrew Thorburn to score huge exit payment

He came under withering fire during the royal commission. Now NAB chief executive Andrew Thorburn is getting a golden handshake.

NAB heads resign from posts following royal commission

The banking royal commission saved its toughest criticism for NAB and its bigwigs — but outgoing CEO Andrew Thorburn is still set to score a massive payout.

Mr Thorburn sensationally quit his post earlier this month alongside chair Ken Henry after both men were shamed by commissioner Kenneth Hayne’s scathing final report.

But despite revelations of the bank’s appalling behaviour — and the fact Mr Hayne remained unconvinced both NAB leaders had learnt from their mistakes — Mr Thorburn will receive more than $1 million when he steps down at the end of the month.

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Today, the banking giant confirmed Mr Thorburn would receive a payment of $1,041,449, in lieu of 26 weeks’ notice, which is in line with his contract.

He will also be eligible for any outstanding leave — but despite that generous golden handshake, it has also been revealed he will forfeit “all unvested deferred awards”.

It means he’ll be walking away from more than 883,000 performance rights — worth an astounding $21.7 million.

In the year to September 2018, Mr Thorburn was paid $4.3 million.

According to the Australian Financial Review, acting CEO Phil Chronican, who will take Mr Thorburn’s place on March 1 until a permanent replacement is found, will be paid far less at $150,000 per month, or $1.8 million a year.

Both Mr Thorburn and Dr Henry had been under intense scrutiny after Commissioner Hayne wrote in his final report he was not confident they had learnt any lessons from the landmark inquiry into the banking sector.

NAB CEO Andrew Thorburn stepped down earlier this month. Picture: Jay Town
NAB CEO Andrew Thorburn stepped down earlier this month. Picture: Jay Town

“More particularly, I was not persuaded that NAB is willing to accept the necessary responsibility for deciding, for itself, what is the right thing to do, and then having its staff act accordingly,” he wrote.

“Overall, my fear — that there may be a wide gap between the public face NAB seeks to show and what it does in practice — remains.”

NAB has also revealed Dr Henry will be barred from participating in the recruitment of Mr Thorburn’s replacement after his initial involvement in the selection process drew sharp criticism.

Instead, a CEO selection panel fronted by director Ann Sherry, and a chairman selection committee, headed up by NAB director David Armstrong, will take over.

There has been widespread speculation former NSW premier and current NAB consumer bank boss Mike Baird is a frontrunner for the position.

Former NSW premier Mike Baird has been tipped as a likely replacement for Mr Thorburn. Picture: John Grainger
Former NSW premier Mike Baird has been tipped as a likely replacement for Mr Thorburn. Picture: John Grainger

Mr Thorburn, who served as chief executive since August 2014, released a brief statement earlier this month explaining he had decided to step down after conversations with the chairman.

“I acknowledge that the bank has sustained damage as a result of its past practices and comments in the royal commission’s final report about them,” he said.

“AS CEO, I understand accountability.”

Mr Thorburn was also rocked last year by allegations an employee he considered a friend had been involved in a multimillion-dollar fraud against the lender.

He also copped criticism after taking two months’ leave over Christmas, with many accusing him of lacking the nerve to face the then-pending findings of the royal commission.

“I’ve got a marriage, I’ve got children I’ve got elderly parents: they’re the people who I want to spend some time with,” Mr Thorburn said at the time.

“I think that it is important for mental and physical health to lead in a sustainable and long-term way; I want to role model to people inside the company that that’s OK to do.”

Continue the conversation @carey_alexis | alexis.carey@news.com.au

Originally published as NAB chief executive Andrew Thorburn to score huge exit payment

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Original URL: https://www.adelaidenow.com.au/business/companies/nab-chief-executive-andrew-thorburn-to-score-huge-exit-payment/news-story/42f78d326dfafde793c4523f18d88eb2