These terms and conditions govern your use of the website alphaminr.com and its related services.
These Terms and Conditions (“Terms”) are a binding contract between you and Alphaminr, (“Alphaminr”, “we”, “us” and “service”). You must agree to and accept the Terms. These Terms include the provisions in this document as well as those in the Privacy Policy. These terms may be modified at any time.
Your subscription will be on a month to month basis and automatically renew every month. You may terminate your subscription at any time through your account.
We will provide you with advance notice of any change in fees.
You represent that you are of legal age to form a binding contract. You are responsible for any
activity associated with your account. The account can be logged in at only one computer at a
time.
The Services are intended for your own individual use. You shall only use the Services in a
manner that complies with all laws. You may not use any automated software, spider or system to
scrape data from Alphaminr.
Alphaminr is not a financial advisor and does not provide financial advice of any kind. The service is provided “As is”. The materials and information accessible through the Service are solely for informational purposes. While we strive to provide good information and data, we make no guarantee or warranty as to its accuracy.
TO THE EXTENT PERMITTED BY APPLICABLE LAW, UNDER NO CIRCUMSTANCES SHALL ALPHAMINR BE LIABLE TO YOU FOR DAMAGES OF ANY KIND, INCLUDING DAMAGES FOR INVESTMENT LOSSES, LOSS OF DATA, OR ACCURACY OF DATA, OR FOR ANY AMOUNT, IN THE AGGREGATE, IN EXCESS OF THE GREATER OF (1) FIFTY DOLLARS OR (2) THE AMOUNTS PAID BY YOU TO ALPHAMINR IN THE SIX MONTH PERIOD PRECEDING THIS APPLICABLE CLAIM. SOME STATES DO NOT ALLOW THE EXCLUSION OR LIMITATION OF INCIDENTAL OR CONSEQUENTIAL OR CERTAIN OTHER DAMAGES, SO THE ABOVE LIMITATION AND EXCLUSIONS MAY NOT APPLY TO YOU.
If any provision of these Terms is found to be invalid under any applicable law, such provision shall not affect the validity or enforceability of the remaining provisions herein.
This privacy policy describes how we (“Alphaminr”) collect, use, share and protect your personal information when we provide our service (“Service”). This Privacy Policy explains how information is collected about you either directly or indirectly. By using our service, you acknowledge the terms of this Privacy Notice. If you do not agree to the terms of this Privacy Policy, please do not use our Service. You should contact us if you have questions about it. We may modify this Privacy Policy periodically.
When you register for our Service, we collect information from you such as your name, email address and credit card information.
Like many other websites we use “cookies”, which are small text files that are stored on your computer or other device that record your preferences and actions, including how you use the website. You can set your browser or device to refuse all cookies or to alert you when a cookie is being sent. If you delete your cookies, if you opt-out from cookies, some Services may not function properly. We collect information when you use our Service. This includes which pages you visit.
We use Google Analytics and we use Stripe for payment processing. We will not share the information we collect with third parties for promotional purposes. We may share personal information with law enforcement as required or permitted by law.
☑
|
Filed by the Registrant
|
☐
|
Filed by a party other than the Registrant
|
CHECK THE APPROPRIATE BOX:
|
|
☐
|
Preliminary Proxy Statement
|
☐
|
Confidential, for Use of the Commission Only (as permitted by Rule 14a-6(e)(2))
|
☑
|
Definitive Proxy Statement
|
☐
|
Definitive Additional Materials
|
☐
|
Soliciting Material under §240.14a-12
|
PAYMENT OF FILING FEE (CHECK ALL BOXES THAT APPLY):
|
|
☑
|
No fee required
|
☐
|
Fee paid previously with preliminary materials
|
☐
|
Fee computed on table in exhibit required by Item 25(b) per Exchange Act Rules 14a-6(i)(1) and 0-11
|
![]() |
2025 PROXY STATEMENT | 1
|
2 | 2025 PROXY STATEMENT
|
![]() |
LETTER FROM OUR CHAIR AND CHIEF EXECUTIVE OFFICER
|
![]() |
2025 PROXY STATEMENT | 3
|
4 | 2025 PROXY STATEMENT
|
![]() |
LETTER FROM OUR INDEPENDENT LEAD DIRECTOR
|
![]() |
2025 PROXY STATEMENT | 5
|
TIME AND DATE
9:00 a.m. CDT on May 21, 2025
Venue
Virtual Annual Meeting
www.proxydocs.com/MDLZ
Record Date
March 12, 2025
|
![]()
905 West Fulton Market, Suite 200
Chicago, IL 60607
|
ITEMS OF BUSINESS:
|
|
1.
|
To elect as directors the 10 director nominees named in the Proxy Statement (“Proxy Statement”);
|
2.
|
To approve, on an advisory basis, the Company’s executive compensation;
|
3.
|
To approve the Global Employee Stock Purchase Matching Plan;
|
4.
|
To ratify the selection of PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP as the independent registered public
accountants for the fiscal year ending December 31, 2025;
|
5.
|
To vote on five shareholder proposals if properly presented at the meeting; and
|
6.
|
To transact any other business properly presented at the meeting.
|
6 | 2025 PROXY STATEMENT
|
![]() |
NOTICE OF 2025 ANNUAL MEETING OF SHAREHOLDERS
|
HOW TO VOTE
Your vote is important. We
encourage you to review the proxy
materials and vote your shares as
soon as possible, even if you plan to
attend the Annual Meeting online. If
you are voting via the Internet, with
your mobile phone or by telephone,
be sure to have your Proxy Card or
Voting Instruction Form (“VIF’) in
hand and follow the instructions. You
can vote any of four ways:
|
![]()
VIA THE
INTERNET
Visit the website listed
on your Notice of
Internet Availability of
Proxy Materials,
Proxy Card or VIF.
|
![]()
WITH YOUR
MOBILE DEVICE
Scan the QR barcode
on your Notice of
Internet Availability of
Proxy Materials,
Proxy Card or VIF.
|
![]()
BY TELEPHONE
Call the telephone
number on your
Notice of Internet
Availability of Proxy
Materials, Proxy Card
or VIF.
|
![]()
BY MAIL
If you received paper
copies of your Proxy
Materials, mark, sign,
date and return the
Proxy Card in the
envelope provided.
|
||
![]() |
2025 PROXY STATEMENT | 7
|
NOTICE OF 2025 ANNUAL MEETING OF SHAREHOLDERS
|
8 | 2025 PROXY STATEMENT
|
![]() |
![]() |
2025 PROXY STATEMENT | 9
|
TABLE OF CONTENTS
|
10 | 2025 PROXY STATEMENT
|
![]() |
![]() |
2025 ANNUAL MEETING OF SHAREHOLDERS
|
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
||||
9:00 a.m. CDT
on Wednesday,
May 21, 2025.
|
The Annual Meeting will
be a virtual meeting of
shareholders
conducted
via webcast.
|
Record Date
March 12,
2025.
|
Each outstanding share
of Class A Common
Stock (“Common Stock”)
is entitled to one vote
on each matter to be
voted upon at the
Annual Meeting.
|
Shareholders must register to attend the
meeting, vote and submit questions by
visiting
www.proxydocs.com/MDLZ
and using the control number shown on
their Notice of Internet Availability of Proxy
Materials, Proxy Card or VIF.
|
![]() |
HOW TO VOTE IN ADVANCE OF THE MEETING
|
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
VIA THE
INTERNET
Visit the website listed on
your Notice of Internet
Availability of Proxy
Materials, Proxy Card or VIF.
|
WITH YOUR
MOBILE DEVICE
Scan the QR barcode on
your Notice of Internet
Availability of Proxy Materials,
Proxy Card or VIF.
|
BY TELEPHONE
Call the telephone number on
your Notice of Internet
Availability of Proxy Materials,
Proxy Card or VIF.
|
BY MAIL
If you received paper copies of
your Proxy Materials, mark, sign,
date and return the Proxy Card
in the envelope provided.
|
![]() |
2025 PROXY STATEMENT | 11
|
PROXY STATEMENT SUMMARY
Items of Business
|
![]() |
ITEMS OF BUSINESS
|
Item
|
|
Voting Choices
|
Board’s Voting
Recommendation
|
More
Information
|
Company Proposals:
|
||||
Item 1.
|
Election of 10 director nominees named in the Proxy Statement
|
With respect
to each nominee:
For
Against
Abstain
|
FOR
All Nominees
![]() |
Page
18
|
Item 2.
|
Advisory vote to approve executive compensation
|
For
Against
Abstain
|
FOR
![]() |
Page
102
|
Item 3.
|
Approve the Global Employee Stock Purchase Matching Plan
|
For
Against
Abstain
|
FOR
![]() |
Page
103
|
Item 4.
|
Ratification of the selection of PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP as
independent registered public accountants for the fiscal year
ending December 31, 2025
|
For
Against
Abstain
|
FOR
![]() |
Page
110
|
Shareholder Proposals:
|
||||
Item 5.
|
Assessment of the company’s supplier & partner code of
conduct due diligence process
|
For
Against
Abstain
|
AGAINST
![]() |
Page
113
|
Item 6.
|
Report on flexible plastic packaging
|
For
Against
Abstain
|
AGAINST
![]() |
Page
116
|
Item 7.
|
Climate lobbying report
|
For
Against
Abstain
|
AGAINST
![]() |
Page
119
|
Item 8.
|
Third-party report assessing effectiveness of implementation of
human rights policy
|
For
Against
Abstain
|
AGAINST
![]() |
Page
122
|
Item 9.
|
Report on recycled content claims
|
For
Against
Abstain
|
AGAINST
![]() |
Page
125
|
Transact any other business properly presented at the meeting.
|
||||
12 | 2025 PROXY STATEMENT
|
![]() |
PROXY STATEMENT SUMMARY
About Mondelēz International
|
![]() |
ABOUT MONDELĒZ INTERNATIONAL
|
n
|
Biscuits &
Baked Snacks
|
n
|
Chocolate
|
n
|
Gum & Candy
|
n
|
Cheese & Grocery
|
n
|
Beverages
|
n
|
Asia, Middle East
and Africa
|
n
|
Europe
|
n
|
North America
|
n
|
Latin America
|
![]() |
DIRECTOR NOMINEES
|
![]() |
2025 PROXY STATEMENT | 13
|
PROXY STATEMENT SUMMARY
Director Nominees
|
![]()
Ertharin Cousin
Founder, President and Chief
Executive Officer, Food Systems
For The Future Institute and
Former Executive Director of the
United Nations World Food
Program
Director since 2022
Age: 67
INDEPENDENT
|
![]()
Cees ‘t Hart
Former Chief Executive Officer,
Carlsberg Group
Director since 2023
Age: 66
INDEPENDENT
|
![]()
Nancy McKinstry
Chief Executive Officer and
Chair of the Executive Board,
Wolters Kluwer
Director Nominee
Age: 66
INDEPENDENT
|
![]()
Brian J. McNamara
Chief Executive Officer,
Haleon plc
Director since 2024
Age: 58
INDEPENDENT
|
![]()
Jorge S. Mesquita
Former Chief Executive Officer,
BlueTriton Brands, Inc.
Director since 2012
Age: 63
INDEPENDENT
|
![]()
Jane Hamilton Nielsen
Former
C
hief Operating Officer,
Ralph Lauren Corporation
Director since 2021
Age: 60
INDEPENDENT
|
![]()
Paula A. Price
Former Executive Vice President
and Chief Financial Officer,
Macy’s, Inc.,
Director since 2024
Age: 63
INDEPENDENT
|
![]()
Patrick T. Siewert
Senior Advisor,
The Carlyle Group, Inc. and Head
of Consumer, Media, and Retail,
The Carlyle Group Asia, Retired
Director since 2012
Lead Director since 2022
Age: 69
INDEPENDENT
|
![]()
Michael A. Todman
Former Vice Chairman,
Whirlpool Corporation
Director since 2020
Age: 67
INDEPENDENT
|
![]()
Dirk Van de Put
Chair and Chief Executive
Officer,
Mondelēz International, Inc.
Director since 2017
Age: 64
|
14 | 2025 PROXY STATEMENT
|
![]() |
PROXY STATEMENT SUMMARY
Our Governance Framework
|
![]() |
OUR GOVERNANCE FRAMEWORK
|
Key Practice or Policy
|
Benefits
|
Independent Lead Director.
Our independent Lead Director has
broad and substantive duties and responsibilities that have
considerable overlap with those typically performed by an
independent Board Chair, including:
•
Engages in planning and approval of meeting schedules
and agendas;
•
Presides over regular executive sessions of
independent directors;
•
Provides input into the design of the annual Board, committee
and individual director self-and peer-evaluation process;
•
Serves as an alternate member of all Board committees;
•
Conducts the annual Board and individual director self and
peer-evaluation process in coordination with the Governance,
Membership and Sustainability Committee (the “Governance
Committee”); and
•
Consults with major shareholders.
|
A highly effective and engaged independent Lead Director:
•
Provides independent Board leadership and oversight, including
with respect to business matters and risk management activities;
•
Enhances independent directors’ input and investors’ perspectives
on agendas and discussions;
•
Fosters candid discussion during regular executive sessions of the
independent directors;
•
Facilitates effective communication and interaction between the
Board and management;
•
Serves as a liaison between the independent directors and the
Chair and CEO; and
•
Provides feedback to management regarding Board concerns and
information needs.
|
Majority Independent Board.
•
At least 80% of our directors must meet the independence
requirements prescribed by Nasdaq listing standards.
•
The Corporate Governance Guidelines (the “Guidelines”)
provide that currently the Chair and CEO should be the only
member of management to serve as a director.
|
•
Provides independent Board oversight of management on behalf
of shareholders.
•
Board composed entirely of independent directors, with the
exception of the CEO.
•
Committees composed entirely of and chaired by
independent directors.
|
Tenure and Retirement Policies
. Non-employee directors have
a term limit of 15 years and will not be nominated for election to
the Board after their 75th birthday.
|
Promotes ongoing Board evolution and refreshment.
|
Annual Election of Directors.
Shareholders elect directors
annually by majority vote in uncontested elections.
|
Strengthens Board, committee and individual director accountability.
|
Proxy Access.
Shareholders that own 3% or more of our
outstanding Common Stock continuously for at least three
years may nominate up to two director nominees to our
Proxy Statement.
|
Strengthens Board accountability and encourages engagement with
shareholders regarding Board composition.
|
Special Meeting of Shareholders.
The holders of at least 20% of
the voting power of our outstanding Common Stock may call a
special meeting of shareholders.
|
Strengthens Board accountability and encourages engagement with
shareholders regarding important matters.
|
![]() |
2025 PROXY STATEMENT | 15
|
PROXY STATEMENT SUMMARY
Our Governance Framework
|
Key Practice or Policy
|
Benefits
|
Regular Shareholder Engagement.
•
We regularly engage with shareholders to seek their input on
emerging issues, address their questions and understand
their perspectives.
•
The independent Lead Director is available for consultation with
our major shareholders.
|
•
Following our 2024 Annual Meeting of Shareholders, we reached
out to shareholders representing nearly 52% of our outstanding
shares, and engaged with 16 different shareholders that
collectively represent approximately 25% of our outstanding
shares. The independent Lead Director met with shareholders
representing approximately 13% of our outstanding shares.
•
This practice provides open channels of communication with our
shareholders and helps promote regular consideration of and
response to feedback on the Company’s strategy, corporate
governance, compensation and environmental, social and
governance (“ESG”) practices.
|
Annual Board and Committee Self-Assessments.
•
Annual Board, committee and director self and
peer assessments.
•
The results of these self and peer assessments are used in
planning Board and committee meetings and agendas, fostering
director accountability and committee effectiveness, analyzing
Board composition and making director recruitment and
governance decisions.
|
•
Promotes continuous process improvement of the Board
and committees.
•
Provides an opportunity to discuss individual directors’
contributions and performance and to solicit their views on
improving Board and committee performance.
•
Provides a disciplined mechanism for director input into the Board’s
evolution and succession planning process.
|
Tenure and Retirement Policies.
•
Non-employee directors have a term limit of 15 years.
•
Non-employee directors will not be nominated for election to the
Board after their 75th birthday.
|
•
Promotes ongoing evolution and refreshment.
•
Average tenure for current non-employee directors is
approximately five years.
|
Stock Ownership Requirements.
Directors must own shares of
our Common Stock in an amount equal to five times the annual
Board cash retainer within five years of joining the Board.
|
Aligns directors’ and shareholders’ long-term interests.
|
Anti-Hedging Policy.
Our Insider Trading Policy prohibits
employees and directors from engaging in transactions involving
derivative securities, short-selling or hedging transactions that
create an actual or potential bet against Mondelēz International,
Inc. or one of its subsidiaries.
|
Eliminates the opportunity to benefit from a decrease in our
stock price.
|
16 | 2025 PROXY STATEMENT
|
![]() |
PROXY STATEMENT SUMMARY
Executive Compensation
|
![]() |
EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION
|
Pay
Element
|
Vehicle
|
2024
Performance Measures &
Key Characteristics
(1)
|
|
|
2024
Objectives
|
Base Salary
|
Cash
|
Fixed cash paid regularly
|
|
|
Attract and retain world-class
business leaders by offering
market-competitive salaries
based on role, responsibilities,
experience, individual
performance and
internal equity
|
Annual
Incentive
Plan
|
100%
At-risk cash
|
80% Financial Measures:
•
Organic Volume Growth (15%)
•
Organic Net Revenue Growth (15%)
•
Adjusted Gross Profit Growth (35%)
•
Adjusted Operating Income Growth (15%)
•
Free Cash Flow (20%)
|
![]() |
30pp
Market
Share
Overlay
|
Reward and motivate annual
achievements of critical
financial goals and strategic
objectives across four
priorities: growth, execution,
culture and sustainability
|
|
|
20% Strategic Progress Indicator Goals
(2)
|
|
||
Long-Term
Incentive
Program
|
75% Performance
Share Units
3-year cliff vesting
|
•
25% Organic Net Revenue Growth
•
25% Adjusted EPS Growth
•
50% Annualized Relative Total Shareholder Return (“TSR”)
•
Cap payout for the TSR metric at target if absolute TSR is
negative at the end of the performance period
•
Above median performance (55
th
percentile) required to
achieve target payout for the Relative TSR metric
|
Reward long-term
performance for delivering
sustained long-term
growth and creating
shareholder value
|
||
|
25% Stock Options
3-year ratable vesting
|
Stock Price
|
|
|
|
![]() |
2025 PROXY STATEMENT | 17
|
PROXY STATEMENT SUMMARY
Executive Compensation
|
CEO
|
Other NEOs
|
|
![]() |
![]() |
18 | 2025 PROXY STATEMENT
|
![]() |
![]() |
HOW WE BUILD AN EXPERIENCED AND QUALIFIED BOARD
|
Relevant Qualifications, Knowledge
and Experience
The Board believes all directors should
possess certain attributes, including
integrity, sound business judgment and
strategic vision, as these characteristics
are necessary to establish a competent,
ethical and well-functioning board that best
represents shareholders’ interests.
|
Consistent with our Guidelines, when evaluating the suitability of an individual for nomination to
our Board, the Governance Committee considers:
•
the candidate’s general understanding of the varied disciplines relevant to the success of a
large, publicly traded company in today’s global business environment;
•
the candidate’s understanding of the Company’s global businesses and markets;
•
the candidate’s professional experience and educational background;
•
other factors that promote diverse views, knowledge, experience and backgrounds;
•
whether the candidate meets various independence requirements, including whether his or
her service on boards and board committees of other organizations is consistent with our
conflicts of interest policy; and
•
whether the candidate can devote sufficient time and effort to fulfill a director’s responsibilities
to the Company given his or her other commitments.
|
Individual Director Self-Assessments
The Board believes that directors should
not expect to be renominated automatically
and that directors’ qualifications and
performance should be evaluated annually.
|
The annual Board and director self-assessment processes are important determinants in a
director’s renomination and tenure. Annually, all incumbent director nominees complete
questionnaires to update and confirm their background, qualifications and skills, and to identify
any potential conflicts of interest. The Governance Committee, in coordination with the
independent Lead Director, assesses the experience, qualifications, attributes, skills and
contributions of each director. The Governance Committee also considers each individual in the
context of the Board composition as a whole, with the objective of recruiting and recommending
a slate of director nominees who can best sustain the Company’s success and represent our
shareholders’ interests through the exercise of sound judgment and informed decision-making.
|
Board Refreshment Through Director
Tenure and Age Limits
The Board believes it is helpful to have
a balance of long-term members with
in-depth knowledge of our business and
new members who bring valuable skills
and fresh perspectives.
|
Our Guidelines provide that non-employee directors have a term limit of 15 years. In addition,
non-employee directors will not be nominated for re-election to the Board after they reach age
75. The current Board composition reflects the Board’s commitment to ongoing refreshment
and the importance of maintaining a balance of tenure and experience.
|
![]() |
2025 PROXY STATEMENT | 19
|
ITEM 1. ELECTION OF DIRECTORS
How We Build an Experienced and Qualified Board
|
The Board Values Diverse Views and
Experiences
|
When assembling the pool of candidates from which Directors are selected, the Governance
Committee considers diverse views, knowledge, experience and backgrounds which contribute
to more informed and effective decision-making. As part of the search process for new
Directors, the Governance Committee seeks out women and ethnically diverse candidates to
include in the pool from which Director nominees are chosen, with the ultimate decision on all
Board nominations being based on the contributions that the selected nominees will bring to
the Board. The Governance Committee assesses the effectiveness of these efforts in its
annual assessment.
|
Key Competencies
|
Relevant Experience
|
|
![]()
INDUSTRY
EXPERIENCE
|
Industry Experience is vital to reviewing and understanding
strategy, and the connections between strategy and the
potential acquisition of businesses that offer
complementary products or services.
|
•
Food and beverage
•
Consumer products
•
Global food strategies
|
![]()
SIGNIFICANT
OPERATING
EXPERIENCE
|
Significant Operating Experience as a current or former
executive of a large global company or other large
organization gives a director specific insight and expertise
that will foster active participation in the development and
implementation of the Company’s operating plan and
business strategy.
|
•
CEO/COO
•
Manufacturing operations
•
Retail operations
•
Technology/information technology strategy
|
![]()
LEADERSHIP
EXPERIENCE
|
Leadership Experience gives a director the ability to
motivate, manage and identify and develop leadership
qualities in others and promotes strong critical thinking and
verbal communication skills, as well as diverse views and
thought processes.
|
•
CEO/COO or other leadership positions at
complex organizations
•
M&A/alliances/partnerships
•
Strategic planning
•
Talent assessment and people development/
compensation
|
![]()
SUBSTANTIAL
GLOBAL BUSINESS
AND OTHER
INTERNATIONAL
EXPERIENCE
|
Substantial Global Business and Other International
Experience are important given the Company’s
global presence.
|
•
Developed markets
•
Emerging markets
•
Government affairs/regulatory compliance
|
![]()
ACCOUNTING
AND FINANCIAL
EXPERTISE
|
Accounting and Financial Expertise enables a director to
analyze financial statements, capital structure and complex
financial transactions, and oversee accounting and
financial reporting processes.
|
•
CFO
•
M&A/alliances/partnerships
•
Financial acumen/capital markets
•
Cost management
|
20 | 2025 PROXY STATEMENT
|
![]() |
ITEM 1. ELECTION OF DIRECTORS
How We Build an Experienced and Qualified Board
|
Key Competencies
|
Relevant Experience
|
|
![]()
PRODUCT
RESEARCH,
DEVELOPMENT
AND MARKETING
EXPERIENCE
|
Product Research, Development and Marketing Experience
in the food and beverage sector or a complementary
industry contributes to a director’s ability to oversee efforts
to identify and develop new food and beverage products
and implement marketing strategies that will
improve performance.
|
•
Consumer insights and analytics
•
Research & development
•
Innovation
•
New media/digital technology/
digital commerce
|
![]()
PUBLIC
COMPANY BOARD
AND CORPORATE
GOVERNANCE
EXPERIENCE
|
Public Company Board and Corporate Governance
Experience at a large publicly traded company provides a
director with a solid understanding of the extensive and
complex oversight responsibilities of public company
boards and furthers the goals of greater transparency,
accountability and protection of shareholders’ interests.
|
•
CEO/COO/other governance
leadership positions
•
Government affairs/regulatory compliance
•
Public company board service
•
Corporate governance knowledge
•
Risk oversight
|
![]() |
DIRECTOR SKILLS UPDATE
|
Director Nominee Skills & Experience
|
Cousin
|
‘t Hart*
|
McKinstry
|
McNamara
|
Mesquita
|
Nielsen*
|
Price*
|
Siewert*
|
Todman
|
Van de Put
|
Industry Experience
|
|
![]() |
|
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
Significant Operating Experience
|
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
Leadership Experience
|
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
Substantial Global Business and Other International Experience
|
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
Accounting and Financial Expertise
|
|
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
|
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
Product Research, Development and Marketing Experience
|
|
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
|
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
Public Company Board and Corporate Governance Experience
|
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]()
Deep Proficiency
A person who has developed in-depth knowledge of or deeper
competency in a particular area, including extensive experience in
company governance or executive leadership roles.
*
Denotes Audit Committee Financial Expert
|
![]()
Proficiency
Experience or competence in skill area, including through serving
as a member of a relevant board committee at Mondelēz or
another company or serving as an executive officer of a
public company.
|
![]() |
2025 PROXY STATEMENT | 21
|
ITEM 1. ELECTION OF DIRECTORS
Director Skills Update
|
![]() |
SHAREHOLDER RECOMMENDATIONS FOR
DIRECTOR CANDIDATES
|
22 | 2025 PROXY STATEMENT
|
![]() |
ITEM 1. ELECTION OF DIRECTORS
Shareholders Elect Directors Annually
|
![]() |
SHAREHOLDERS ELECT DIRECTORS ANNUALLY
|
![]() |
2025 PROXY STATEMENT | 23
|
ITEM 1. ELECTION OF DIRECTORS
Director Nominees for Election at the Annual Meeting
|
![]() |
DIRECTOR NOMINEES FOR ELECTION AT THE
ANNUAL MEETING
|
![]() |
Ertharin Cousin
Founder, President and
Chief Executive Officer,
Food Systems for the
Future Institute and Former
Executive Director of the
United Nations World Food
Program
INDEPENDENT
|
DIRECTOR SINCE:
January 2022
Age: 67
|
DIRECTOR SKILLS:
![]() |
BOARD COMMITTEES:
•
Governance
•
People and
Compensation
|
PROFESSIONAL BACKGROUND:
Since September 2019, Ms. Cousin has served as Founder, President and Chief Executive Officer of Food Systems
for the Future Institute, a nonprofit organization to catalyze, enable and scale market‑driven agtech, foodtech and
food innovations, and also as Visiting Scholar, Spogli Institute for the Study of International Relations, Center for
Food and Environment at Stanford University. She has served as Distinguished Fellow of The Chicago Council on
Global Affairs, a global affairs think tank, since 2017. Ms. Cousin previously served as Payne Distinguished Lecturer
and Visiting Fellow at Stanford University’s Spogli Institute from 2017 to 2019. From 2012 to 2017, Ms. Cousin
served as Executive Director of the United Nations World Food Program, the food‑assistance branch of the United
Nations. She was Ambassador and Permanent Representative to the United Nations Food and Agriculture Agencies
on behalf of the U.S. Department of State from 2009 to 2012.
Ms. Cousin previously served in a variety of executive roles between 1987 and 2009, including Founding President
and Chief Executive Officer of The Polk Street Group, a management services company; Executive Vice President
and Chief Operating Officer of America’s Second Harvest; Senior Vice President, Public Affairs for Albertsons
Companies; White House Liaison and Special Advisor to the Secretary for the 2016 Olympics for the U.S.
Department of State; and Assistant Attorney General for The State of Illinois.
|
||||
DIRECTOR QUALIFICATIONS:
•
Ms. Cousin has more than 40 years of national and international nonprofit, government and corporate leadership
experience, including leading the world’s largest humanitarian organization, the United Nations World Food
Program, in Rome.
•
As U.S. Ambassador to the U.N. Agencies for Food and Agriculture in Rome, she represented U.S. interests in
global leader discussions regarding humanitarian and development activities, and she served as the U.S.
Representative for all food-, agriculture- and nutrition‑related issues.
•
As Executive Vice President and Chief Operating Officer, Ms. Cousin led the national operations of the largest U.S.
hunger relief organization, America’s Second Harvest (now Feeding America). She also has corporate leadership
experience from serving as a member of Albertsons Companies, Inc.’s executive leadership team.
•
Ms. Cousin has public company executive, board and corporate governance experience. She is a director of Bayer
AG and Borealis Foods.
|
||||
24 | 2025 PROXY STATEMENT
|
![]() |
ITEM 1. ELECTION OF DIRECTORS
Director Nominees for Election at the Annual Meeting
|
![]() |
Cees ‘t Hart
Former Chief
Executive Officer,
Carlsberg Group
INDEPENDENT
|
DIRECTOR SINCE:
July 2023
Age: 66
|
DIRECTOR SKILLS:
![]() |
BOARD COMMITTEES:
•
Incoming Chair,
Finance
•
Audit
|
PROFESSIONAL BACKGROUND:
Mr. ‘t Hart served as Chief Executive Officer of Carlsberg Group, a brewing company, from 2015 to August 2023.
Prior to joining Carlsberg, Mr. ‘t Hart was CEO of the Dutch dairy company Royal FrieslandCampina, a position
which he had held since 2008. Prior to Royal FrieslandCampina, he spent 25 years with Unilever, holding positions
across Eastern and Western Europe, and Asia. His last position at Unilever was as a member of the Europe
Executive Board.
|
||||
DIRECTOR QUALIFICATIONS:
•
During his 38-year career, Mr. ‘t Hart has gained valuable experience in executive leadership, operations
management, cost management and strategic planning.
•
Mr ‘t Hart was the main architect behind Carlsberg’s successful program to restore robust sales and profitability in
its core markets and its strategic move into China.
•
Mr. ‘t Hart has extensive public company board and global corporate governance experience. He is a member of
the Supervisory Board of Randstad. Mr. ‘t Hart is a former member of the Supervisory Board of KLM and a former
member of the Board of AFKLM.
|
||||
![]() |
2025 PROXY STATEMENT | 25
|
ITEM 1. ELECTION OF DIRECTORS
Director Nominees for Election at the Annual Meeting
|
![]() |
Nancy McKinstry
Chief Executive Officer and
Chair of the Executive Board,
Wolters Kluwer
INDEPENDENT
|
Age: 66
|
DIRECTOR SKILLS:
![]() |
|
PROFESSIONAL BACKGROUND:
Ms. McKinstry has served as Chief Executive Officer and Chair of the Executive Board of Wolters Kluwer N.V., a
global information, software and services provider, since September 2003, and as a member of its Executive Board
since June 2001. She previously served in leadership positions including CEO of Wolters Kluwer’s operations in
North America and product management positions with CCH INCORPORATED, part of Wolters Kluwer’s Tax &
Accounting division. Ms. McKinstry began her career with Booz & Company (formerly Booz Allen Hamilton), an
international management-consulting firm, where she focused on assignments in the media and technology
industries. She has announced her retirement from Wolters Kluwer effective February 2026.
|
||||
DIRECTOR QUALIFICATIONS:
•
As the Chief Executive Officer and Chair of the Executive Board of Wolters Kluwer N.V., Ms. McKinstry contributes
global perspectives and management experience, including an understanding of key issues facing a
multinational business.
•
Ms. McKinstry has valuable experience in operations, product management, tax, accounting, risk and compliance
and the media and technology industries.
•
Ms. McKinstry has repeatedly been included in leading lists of business media as one of the most powerful women
in business. She is among Fortune International’s Most Powerful Women in Business list, and was included in the
list of HBR’s Best-Performing CEOs in the World for 2019.
•
Ms. McKinstry has extensive public company board and global corporate governance experience. She is a member
of the boards of Accenture plc and Abbott Laboratories.
|
||||
26 | 2025 PROXY STATEMENT
|
![]() |
ITEM 1. ELECTION OF DIRECTORS
Director Nominees for Election at the Annual Meeting
|
![]() |
Brian J. McNamara
Chief Executive Officer,
Haleon plc
INDEPENDENT
|
DIRECTOR SINCE:
February 2024
Age: 58
|
DIRECTOR SKILLS:
![]() |
BOARD COMMITTEES:
•
Governance
•
People and
Compensation
|
PROFESSIONAL BACKGROUND:
Mr. McNamara has served as Chief Executive Officer of Haleon plc (formerly GSK ConsumerHealthcare), a global
consumer healthcare company, since May 2022. Mr. McNamara joined GlaxoSmithKline plc, a global
pharmaceutical and biotechnology company, in 2015 and served in various capacities, including Chief Executive
Officer Designate, Haleon, from July 2021 to May 2022, Chief Executive Officer, GSK Consumer Healthcare, from
October 2016 to May 2021 and Head of Europe and Americas, GSK Consumer Healthcare, from March 2015 to
September 2016. Prior to that, he worked for 28 years in a variety of leadership positions for several global
consumer products providers, including Novartis AG and The Procter & Gamble Company.
|
||||
DIRECTOR QUALIFICATIONS:
•
During his 36-year career, Mr. McNamara has gained valuable experience in executive leadership and global
operations management. He has a strong track record of building and marketing global brands, including driving
strong, profitable growth and brand innovation.
•
Mr. McNamara brings strong consumer products industry knowledge and marketing experience from his work at
GSK Consumer Healthcare, Novartis AG and The Procter & Gamble Company. He brings a global perspective to the
Board, having lived and worked in Europe and the Americas.
•
Mr. McNamara has public company board and corporate governance experience. He is a director of Haleon plc.
|
||||
![]() |
2025 PROXY STATEMENT | 27
|
ITEM 1. ELECTION OF DIRECTORS
Director Nominees for Election at the Annual Meeting
|
![]() |
Jorge S. Mesquita
Former Chief
Executive Officer,
BlueTriton Brands, Inc.
INDEPENDENT
|
DIRECTOR SINCE:
May 2012
Age: 63
|
DIRECTOR SKILLS:
![]() |
BOARD COMMITTEES:
•
Audit
•
Finance
|
PROFESSIONAL BACKGROUND:
Mr. Mesquita served as Chief Executive Officer of BlueTriton Brands, a beverage company that offers regional
spring water and national purified water brands, from July 2021 to March 2022. Prior to that, he was Executive Vice
President and Worldwide Chairman, Consumer of Johnson & Johnson, a global healthcare products company, from
2014 until 2019. He also served on J&J’s Executive Committee and led the Consumer Group Operating Committee.
Mr. Mesquita was an advisor to Cinven, a UK private equity firm, from 2020 to 2021.
Mr. Mesquita was employed by Procter & Gamble, a global marketer of consumer products, in various marketing and
leadership capacities for 29 years from 1984 to 2013. During his tenure at P&G, he served as Group President – New
Business Creation and Innovation from 2012 until 2013; Group President – Special Assignment from January 2012
until March 2012; Group President, Global Fabric Care from 2007 to 2011; President, Global Home Care from 2001
to 2007; and President of Commercial Products and President of P&G Professional from 2006 to 2007.
|
||||
DIRECTOR QUALIFICATIONS:
•
Mr. Mesquita brings extensive experience leading major global company business units. In these roles, he has a
strong track record of building and marketing global brands, including the reinvention of key brands, leading strategic
business transformations and driving strong, profitable growth.
•
As CEO of BlueTriton Brands, he embarked on growth and innovation initiatives. As Procter & Gamble’s Group
President, New Business Creation and Innovation, Mr. Mesquita redesigned the business development organization
and worked across the company with technology, marketing and finance leaders to develop groundbreaking
innovation capabilities.
•
Mr. Mesquita was born and raised in Mozambique, Africa. He has lived and worked in several countries, including
Venezuela, Mexico, Brazil and the United States. He is fluent in Portuguese, Spanish and English.
•
Mr. Mesquita has public company board and corporate governance experience. He is a director of Humana Inc.
|
||||
28 | 2025 PROXY STATEMENT
|
![]() |
ITEM 1. ELECTION OF DIRECTORS
Director Nominees for Election at the Annual Meeting
|
![]() |
Jane Hamilton Nielsen
Former Chief Operating
Officer,
Ralph Lauren Corporation
INDEPENDENT
|
DIRECTOR SINCE:
May 2021
Age: 60
|
DIRECTOR SKILLS:
![]() |
BOARD COMMITTEES:
•
Incoming Chair, Audit
•
Finance
|
PROFESSIONAL BACKGROUND:
Ms. Nielsen served as Chief Operating Officer of Ralph Lauren Corporation, a global leader in the design, marketing
and distribution of premium lifestyle products, from June 2023 until March 2025. She led Ralph Lauren’s global
technology, business development, integrated business and inventory planning, logistics and real estate operations.
She also served as Ralph Lauren’s Chief Financial Officer and Chief Operating Officer from 2016 until May 2023,
and Chief Financial Officer from 2016 until 2019. Ms. Nielsen previously served as Chief Financial Officer of Coach,
Inc., a leading design house of modern luxury accessories and lifestyle collections, from 2011 to 2016. Prior to that,
Ms. Nielsen spent 15 years at PepsiCo, Inc. and Pepsi Bottling Group, a global food and beverage corporation, in
various senior financial roles, including Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer of PepsiCo Beverages
Americas and the Global Nutrition Group. She has experience in the areas of mergers & integration, investor
relations and strategic planning.
|
||||
DIRECTOR QUALIFICATIONS:
•
Ms. Nielsen has extensive financial experience gained during her service as Chief Operating Officer and Chief
Financial Officer at Ralph Lauren, as Chief Financial Officer at Coach and in her 15 years at PepsiCo’s
financial organization.
•
Ms. Nielsen brings to the Board a global perspective and many years of experience in the food and consumer
products industries. Throughout her tenure at Ralph Lauren, Ms. Nielsen has driven operational efficiency, digital
transformation and investment in omni-channel capability. She worked on numerous acquisitions and integrations
while at PepsiCo, including the acquisition of Quaker Oats.
•
Ms. Nielsen has public company board and corporate governance experience. She is a former director of
Pinnacle Foods Inc.
|
||||
![]() |
2025 PROXY STATEMENT | 29
|
ITEM 1. ELECTION OF DIRECTORS
Director Nominees for Election at the Annual Meeting
|
![]() |
Paula A. Price
Former Executive Vice
President and Chief
Financial Officer of
Macy’s, Inc.
INDEPENDENT
|
DIRECTOR SINCE:
May 2024
Age: 63
|
DIRECTOR SKILLS
:
![]() |
BOARD COMMITTEES:
•
Audit
•
Finance
|
PROFESSIONAL BACKGROUND:
Ms. Price served as Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer of Macy’s, Inc., an omni-channel retailer of
merchandise, including apparel and accessories, cosmetics and other goods, from July 2018 to May 2020. Ms. Price
was a full-time senior lecturer at Harvard Business School in the accounting and management unit from July 2014 to
June 2018. Prior to that, she was Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer of Ahold USA, a retailer that
operated more than 700 supermarkets in the United States under the Stop & Shop, Giant and Martin’s names, as
well as the Peapod online grocery delivery service, from May 2009 to January 2014. Ms. Price has more than 30
years of financial and operational experience and previously held senior management positions at CVS Caremark,
JPMorgan Chase, Diageo and Kraft Foods.
|
||||
DIRECTOR QUALIFICATIONS:
•
Ms. Price has extensive financial experience gained during her service as Chief Financial Officer at Macy’s, and as
Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer of Ahold USA. Ms. Price is a certified public accountant; she
began her career at Arthur Andersen & Co.
•
Ms. Price brings to the Board many years of experience in the food and consumer products industry. Throughout her
tenure at Ahold USA, Ms. Price was responsible for finance and accounting, strategic planning, real estate
development and construction and information technology.
•
Ms. Price has public company board and corporate governance experience. She is a director of Accenture plc,
Bristol Myers Squibb and Warner Bros. Discovery, Inc., and a former director of DaVita Inc., Dollar General
Corporation and Western Digital Corporation.
|
||||
30 | 2025 PROXY STATEMENT
|
![]() |
ITEM 1. ELECTION OF DIRECTORS
Director Nominees for Election at the Annual Meeting
|
![]() |
Patrick T. Siewert
Senior Advisor,
The Carlyle Group, Inc. and
Head of Consumer, Media,
and Retail, The Carlyle
Group Asia, Retired
INDEPENDENT
|
DIRECTOR SINCE:
October 2012
LEAD DIRECTOR
SINCE:
May 2022
Age: 69
|
DIRECTOR SKILLS:
![]() |
BOARD COMMITTEES:
•
Incoming Chair,
Governance
•
Serves as an alternate
member of such Board
committees as
designated by the Board
|
PROFESSIONAL BACKGROUND:
Mr. Siewert has served as Senior Advisor for The Carlyle Group, Inc., a global alternative asset management firm,
since July 2023. Mr. Siewert joined The Carlyle Group in 2007 and served as Partner & Managing Director, Head of
Consumer, Media, and Retail Asia until June 2023. He also has served as Chairman, Asia, Restaurant Brands
International since May 2024.
From 2001 to 2007, Mr. Siewert held a variety of roles with The Coca-Cola Company, a global beverage company,
including Group President and Chief Operating Officer, Asia, and was a member of the Global Executive Committee.
From 1974 to 2001, he held a variety of roles with Eastman Kodak Company, a technology company focused on
imaging products and services, including Chief Operating Officer, Consumer Imaging and Senior Vice President and
President of the Kodak Professional Division.
|
||||
DIRECTOR QUALIFICATIONS:
•
While working at Coca-Cola, Eastman Kodak and Carlyle, Mr. Siewert developed extensive knowledge in the food
and beverage and consumer products industries, especially insights into consumer trends and routes-to-market.
•
Mr. Siewert has led business operations in the Americas, Europe, Africa, the Middle East and Asia. He currently
focuses on investments and operations in Asian markets and select global opportunities.
•
Mr. Siewert has extensive public company board and corporate governance experience. He is a member of the
Board of Directors of Avery Dennison Corporation.
|
||||
![]() |
2025 PROXY STATEMENT | 31
|
ITEM 1. ELECTION OF DIRECTORS
Director Nominees for Election at the Annual Meeting
|
![]() |
Michael A. Todman
Former Vice Chairman,
Whirlpool Corporation
INDEPENDENT
|
DIRECTOR SINCE:
May 2020
Age: 67
|
DIRECTOR SKILLS:
![]() |
BOARD COMMITTEES:
•
Governance
•
Chair, People and
Compensation
|
PROFESSIONAL BACKGROUND:
Mr. Todman served as Vice Chairman of Whirlpool Corporation, a global home appliance company, from November
2014 until his retirement in December 2015 and as a member of Whirlpool’s Board of Directors for nine years. Prior
to that, Mr. Todman was President, Whirlpool International, from 2009 to 2014 and President, Whirlpool North
America, from 2007 to 2009. Mr. Todman joined Whirlpool in 1993 and served in various capacities, including
management, operations, sales and marketing positions in North America and Europe.
Before joining Whirlpool, Mr. Todman served in a variety of roles of increasing responsibility with Wang Laboratories,
Inc., a manufacturer of computer systems, from 1983 to 1993, and PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP, a multinational
professional services firm, from 1979 to 1983.
|
||||
DIRECTOR QUALIFICATIONS:
•
Mr. Todman has broad leadership experience, including leading a $10 billion international business unit at Whirlpool.
•
Mr. Todman brings strong industry knowledge and marketing experience. He has extensive consumer experience
from Whirlpool and as a director of Newell Brands and Brown-Forman.
•
Mr. Todman has comprehensive knowledge of emerging markets and has led strategic growth initiatives for
emerging markets in Asia.
•
Mr. Todman has extensive public company board and corporate governance experience. He is a director of
Brown-Forman, Carrier Global Corporation and Prudential, and a former director of Newell Brands and Whirlpool.
|
||||
32 | 2025 PROXY STATEMENT
|
![]() |
ITEM 1. ELECTION OF DIRECTORS
Director Nominees for Election at the Annual Meeting
|
![]() |
Dirk Van de Put
Chair and Chief Executive Officer,
Mondelēz International, Inc.
|
DIRECTOR SINCE:
November 2017
CHAIR SINCE:
April 2018
Age: 64
|
DIRECTOR SKILLS:
![]() |
PROFESSIONAL BACKGROUND:
Mr. Van de Put became Chief Executive Officer of Mondelēz International and joined the Company’s Board of
Directors in November 2017. He became Chair in April 2018. Mr. Van de Put served as President and Chief
Executive Officer of McCain Foods Limited, a multinational frozen food provider, from 2011 to 2017, and served as
its Chief Operating Officer from 2010 to 2011.
Mr. Van de Put was President and Chief Executive Officer, Global Over-the-Counter, Consumer Health Division of
Novartis AG, a global healthcare company, from 2009 to 2010. From 1998 to 2009, he held a variety of roles with
Groupe Danone SA, a multinational provider of packaged water, dairy and baby food products, including Executive
Vice President, Fresh Dairy and Waters, Americas, and Executive Vice President, Fresh Dairy and Waters,
Latin America.
From 1997 to 1998, Mr. Van de Put served as President, Coca-Cola Caribbean, and as Vice President, Value Chain
Management, Coca-Cola Brazil. From 1986 to 1997, he held a variety of roles with Mars, Incorporated, a global
manufacturer of confectionery, pet food and other food products and a provider of animal care services, including
General Manager and President, Southern Cone Region, Mars South America and Vice President, Marketing,
Latin America.
|
|||
DIRECTOR QUALIFICATIONS:
•
Mr. Van de Put is a seasoned global Chief Executive Officer with experience and expertise in all critical business and
commercial operations in both emerging and developed markets. He brings a global perspective to the Board,
having lived and worked on three different continents.
•
Mr. Van de Put has extensive leadership experience, including 30 years of experience in the food and consumer
packaged goods industry.
•
Mr. Van de Put is fluent in English, Dutch, French, Spanish and Portuguese.
•
Mr. Van de Put has public company board and corporate governance experience. He is a director of AB Inbev SA/
NV and a former director of Keurig Dr Pepper Inc. and Mattel, Inc.
|
|||
![]() |
2025 PROXY STATEMENT | 33
|
![]() |
GOVERNANCE GUIDELINES
|
Key Practice or Policy
|
Benefits
|
Independent Lead Director. Our independent Lead Director has
broad and substantive duties and responsibilities that have
considerable overlap with those typically performed by an
independent Board Chair, including:
•
Engages in planning and approval of meeting schedules
and agendas;
•
Presides over regular executive sessions of independent directors;
•
Provides input into the design of the annual Board, committee and
individual director self-evaluation process;
•
Serves as an alternate member of all Board committees;
•
Conducts the annual Board and individual director self-evaluation
process in coordination with the Governance Committee; and
•
Consults with major shareholders.
|
A highly effective and engaged independent Lead Director:
•
Provides independent Board leadership and oversight, including
with respect to business matters and risk management activities;
•
Enhances independent directors’ input and investors’ perspectives
on agendas and discussions;
•
Fosters candid discussion during regular executive sessions of the
independent directors;
•
Facilitates effective communication and interaction between the
Board and management;
•
Serves as a liaison between the independent directors and the
Chair and CEO; and
•
Provides feedback to management regarding Board concerns and
information needs.
|
Majority Independent Board.
•
At least 80% of our directors must meet the independence
requirements prescribed by Nasdaq listing standards.
•
The Guidelines provide that currently the Chair and CEO should be
the only member of management to serve as a director.
|
•
Provides independent Board oversight of management on behalf of
shareholders.
•
Board composed entirely of independent directors, with the
exception of the CEO.
•
Committees composed entirely of and chaired by
independent directors.
|
Regular Executive Sessions of Independent Directors. At each
in‑person Board meeting, the independent directors meet in
executive session without any members of management present.
The independent Lead Director chairs these sessions.
|
Allows the Board to discuss substantive issues, including matters
concerning management, without management present.
|
Annual Board and Committee Self‑Assessments.
•
Annual Board, committee and director self‑assessments include
candid, one‑on‑one conversations between the independent Lead
Director and each director, in coordination with the
Governance Committee.
•
The results of these self‑assessments are used in planning Board
and committee meetings and agendas, fostering director
accountability and committee effectiveness, analyzing Board
composition and making director recruitment and
governance decisions.
|
•
Promotes continuous process improvement of the Board
and committees.
•
Provides an opportunity to discuss individual directors’ contributions
and performance and to solicit their views on improving Board and
committee performance.
•
Provides a disciplined mechanism for director input into the Board’s
evolution and succession planning process.
|
34 | 2025 PROXY STATEMENT
|
![]() |
CORPORATE GOVERNANCE
Governance Guidelines
|
Key Practice or Policy
|
Benefits
|
Tenure and Retirement Policies.
•
Non‑employee directors have a term limit of 15 years.
•
Non‑employee directors will not be nominated for election to the
Board after their 75th birthday.
|
•
Promotes ongoing evolution and refreshment.
•
Average tenure for current non‑employee directors is approximately
five years.
|
Ongoing Director Succession Planning. The Guidelines provide that
the Governance Committee seeks out women and ethnically diverse
candidates to include in the pool from which director nominees are
chosen, with the ultimate decision on all Board nominations being
based on the contributions that the selected nominees will bring to
the Board.
|
Maintaining a diverse Board with varying backgrounds, skills and
expertise promotes inclusion in decision‑making and oversight.
|
Limitations on Other Board Service.
•
Directors should not serve on more than three public company
boards in addition to our Board.
•
Directors who also serve as CEO at another public company
should not serve on more than two public company boards in
addition to our Board.
|
•
Helps affirm that directors have sufficient time to fulfill their fiduciary
duties to the Company.
•
All directors comply with this policy.
|
Annual Election of Directors. Shareholders elect directors annually
by majority vote in uncontested elections.
|
Strengthens Board, committee and individual director accountability.
|
Proxy Access. Shareholders that own 3% or more of our outstanding
Common Stock continuously for at least three years may nominate
up to two director nominees to our Proxy Statement.
|
Strengthens Board accountability and encourages engagement with
shareholders regarding Board composition.
|
Special Meeting of Shareholders. The holders of at least 20% of the
voting power of the outstanding Common Stock may call a special
meeting of shareholders.
|
Strengthens Board accountability and encourages engagement with
shareholders regarding important matters.
|
Regular Shareholder Engagement.
•
We regularly engage with shareholders to seek their input on
emerging issues, address their questions and understand
their perspectives.
•
The independent Lead Director is available for consultation with
our major shareholders.
|
•
Following our 2024 Annual Meeting of Shareholders, we reached
out to shareholders representing nearly 52% of our outstanding
shares, and engaged with 16 different shareholders that collectively
represent approximately 25% of our outstanding shares. The
independent Lead Director met with shareholders representing
approximately 13% of our outstanding shares.
•
This practice provides open channels of communication with our
shareholders and helps promote regular consideration of and
response to feedback on the Company’s strategy, corporate
governance, compensation and ESG.
|
Stock Ownership Requirements. Directors must own shares of our
Common Stock in an amount equal to five times the annual Board
cash retainer within five years of joining the Board.
|
Aligns directors’ and shareholders’ long‑term interests.
|
Annual CEO Evaluation and Board Oversight of Executive
Compensation.
•
Annually, the People and Compensation Committee sets goals for
and evaluates the Chair and CEO’s performance. The People and
Compensation Committee seeks input from the other directors
before deciding on a performance rating and
compensation actions.
•
The People and Compensation Committee also oversees our
executive compensation program.
|
•
Company’s executive compensation program aligns with our
business strategy and reflects the strength of ongoing shareholder
feedback.
•
Enhances management accountability.
•
Promotes long‑term shareholder returns.
|
Board Oversight of Strategy and Risk Management.
•
The Board reviews the Company’s strategic plan periodically and
holds at least one meeting per year primarily dedicated to strategy.
•
The Board also has ultimate responsibility for risk oversight and
exercises its risk oversight responsibility at both the Board and
committee level.
|
•
Enhances management accountability as the Company’s goals and
executive compensation design are tied to a number of metrics
critical to achieving the strategic plan and promoting long‑term
shareholder returns.
•
At Board meetings held throughout the year, the Board and
management track progress against the strategic plan’s goals,
consider impacts due to changing circumstances in the industry
and the economic environment, and monitor strategic and
operational risks.
|
![]() |
2025 PROXY STATEMENT | 35
|
CORPORATE GOVERNANCE
Director Onboarding and Education
|
![]() |
DIRECTOR ONBOARDING AND EDUCATION
|
36 | 2025 PROXY STATEMENT
|
![]() |
CORPORATE GOVERNANCE
Director Onboarding and Education
|
![]() |
2025 PROXY STATEMENT | 37
|
CORPORATE GOVERNANCE
Director Onboarding and Education
|
![]() |
DIRECTOR INDEPENDENCE
|
38 | 2025 PROXY STATEMENT
|
![]() |
CORPORATE GOVERNANCE
Board Oversight of Strategy
|
![]() |
BOARD OVERSIGHT OF STRATEGY
|
![]() |
BOARD OVERSIGHT OF RISK MANAGEMENT
|
![]() |
2025 PROXY STATEMENT | 39
|
CORPORATE GOVERNANCE
Board Oversight of Risk Management
|
•
Strategy
•
Operations
•
Revenue growth management and pricing strategy
•
Commodity cost pressures and volatility, including cocoa
•
Transformation change management and supply chain excellence
•
Environmental and social sustainability
|
•
Food safety
•
Well-being
•
Human Capital Management, including talent management,
succession planning and culture and employee engagement
•
Geopolitical tensions
•
Enterprise digital transformation
|
40 | 2025 PROXY STATEMENT
|
![]() |
CORPORATE GOVERNANCE
Board Oversight of Risk Management
|
![]() |
BOARD OVERSIGHT OF HUMAN CAPITAL MANAGEMENT
AND CORPORATE CULTURE
|
![]() |
2025 PROXY STATEMENT | 41
|
CORPORATE GOVERNANCE
Board Oversight of Human Capital Management and Corporate Culture
|
![]() |
MEETING ATTENDANCE
|
42 | 2025 PROXY STATEMENT
|
![]() |
CORPORATE GOVERNANCE
Insider Trading Policy
|
![]() |
INSIDER TRADING POLICY
|
![]() |
CODES OF CONDUCT
|
![]() |
2025 PROXY STATEMENT | 43
|
CORPORATE GOVERNANCE
Review of Transactions with Related Persons
|
![]() |
REVIEW OF TRANSACTIONS WITH RELATED PERSONS
|
44 | 2025 PROXY STATEMENT
|
![]() |
CORPORATE GOVERNANCE
Shareholder Outreach And Communication with the Board
|
![]() |
SHAREHOLDER OUTREACH AND COMMUNICATION WITH
THE BOARD
|
REACHED OUT
to shareholders representing
|
SPOKE
with
16
different
shareholders representing
|
Independent Lead Director
led meetings with shareholders
representing
|
|||||
![]() |
~
52%
|
![]() |
~
25%
|
![]() |
~
13%
|
||
OF OUR OUTSTANDING SHARES
|
OF OUR OUTSTANDING SHARES
|
OF OUR OUTSTANDING SHARES
|
|||||
![]() |
2025 PROXY STATEMENT | 45
|
![]() |
COMMITTEE MEMBERSHIP
|
As of March 12, 2025
|
||||||||
|
Audit
Committee
|
Finance
Committee
|
Governance,
Membership and
Sustainability
Committee
|
People and
Compensation
Committee
|
||||
Charles E. Bunch*
|
![]() |
![]() |
||||||
Ertharin Cousin
|
![]() |
![]() |
||||||
Cees ‘t Hart
|
![]() |
![]() |
||||||
Brian J. McNamara
|
![]() |
![]() |
||||||
Jorge S. Mesquita
|
![]() |
![]() |
||||||
Anindita Mukherjee*
|
![]() |
![]() |
||||||
Jane Hamilton Nielsen
|
![]() |
![]() |
||||||
Paula A. Price
|
![]() |
![]() |
||||||
Patrick T. Siewert
|
![]() |
+
|
+
|
+
|
||||
Michael A. Todman
|
![]() |
![]() |
||||||
Total Number of Committee Meetings
During 2024
|
9
|
3
|
6
|
7
|
![]() |
Member
|
![]() |
Chair
|
46 | 2025 PROXY STATEMENT
|
![]() |
BOARD COMMITTEES AND MEMBERSHIP
Audit Committee
|
![]() |
AUDIT COMMITTEE
|
![]() |
RESPONSIBILITIES
|
![]() |
2025 PROXY STATEMENT | 47
|
BOARD COMMITTEES AND MEMBERSHIP
Responsibilities
|
AUDIT COMMITTEE REPORT FOR THE YEAR ENDED DECEMBER 31, 2024
Management has primary responsibility for Mondelēz International’s financial statements and the reporting
process, including the systems of internal control over financial reporting. Our role as the Audit Committee of the
Mondelēz International Board of Directors is to oversee Mondelēz International’s accounting and financial
reporting processes and audits of its financial statements. We also emphasize the Board’s commitment to
compliance and ethical conduct throughout the organization. In addition, in 2024 we assisted the Board in its
oversight of:
•
Mondelēz International’s compliance with legal and regulatory requirements;
•
Mondelēz International’s independent registered public accountant’s qualifications, independence
and performance;
•
The performance of Mondelēz International’s internal auditor and the internal audit function; and
•
Mondelēz International’s risk assessment and risk management guidelines and policies.
Our duties include overseeing Mondelēz International’s management, the internal audit department, and
PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP, Mondelēz International’s independent registered public accountants, in their
performance of the functions listed below, for which they are responsible.
Management responsibilities include:
•
Preparing Mondelēz International’s consolidated financial statements in accordance with accounting principles
generally accepted in the United States of America (“U.S. GAAP”);
•
Assessing and establishing effective financial reporting systems and internal controls and procedures; and
•
Reporting on the effectiveness of Mondelēz International’s internal control over financial reporting.
Internal Audit Department responsibilities include:
•
Assessing management’s system of internal controls and procedures; and
•
Reporting on the effectiveness of that system.
Independent Registered Public Accountants responsibilities include:
•
Auditing Mondelēz International’s financial statements;
•
Issuing an opinion about whether the financial statements conform with U.S. GAAP; and
•
Annually auditing the effectiveness of Mondelēz International’s internal control over financial reporting.
Periodically, we meet both independently and collectively with management, the internal auditor and/or the
independent registered public accountants to, among other things:
•
Discuss the quality of Mondelēz International’s accounting and financial reporting processes and the adequacy
and effectiveness of its internal controls and procedures;
•
Review significant audit findings prepared by each of the independent registered public accountants and
internal audit department, together with management’s responses;
•
Review the overall scope and plans for the audits by the internal audit department and the independent
registered public accountants;
•
Review matters related to the conduct of the independent registered public accountant’s audit;
•
Review any critical audit matter identified in the independent registered public accountant’s report;
•
Review critical accounting policies, the implementation of new accounting standards and the significant
estimates and judgments management used in preparing the financial statements and their appropriateness for
Mondelēz International’s business and current circumstances; and
•
Review M
ondelēz International’s earnings releases and its use of non-GAAP financial measures.
|
||
48 | 2025 PROXY STATEMENT
|
![]() |
BOARD COMMITTEES AND MEMBERSHIP
Responsibilities
|
In addition to the activities outlined above, in 2024 we reviewed with management, among other things:
•
The Company’s ESG reporting and disclosures in its SEC filings and the evolving ESG regulatory landscape,
including increased regulatory focus on climate change;
•
Guidelines and policies with respect to Mondelēz International’s overall risk assessment and risk management,
including our ERM process and specific risks identified in that process, including commodity and foreign
exchange risks;
•
Mondelēz International’s information technology and cybersecurity risk management and business continuity
planning, including briefings by the Company’s Chief Information Officer on information security matters
and discussions on cybersecurity, including if applicable, deployment or use of artificial intelligence tools with
the Company’s Chief Information Security Officer and the internal audit department;
•
Health, safety, environmental and compliance matters;
•
Significant legal and regulatory matters;
•
The U.S. and non-U.S. tax regulatory environment; and
•
External ratings related to the performance of our duties of oversight.
Before Mondelēz International filed its Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2024, with
the SEC, we also:
•
Reviewed and discussed the audited financial statements with management and the independent registered
public accountants;
•
Discussed with the independent registered public accountants the items the independent registered public
accountants are required to communicate to the Audit Committee in accordance with the applicable
requirements of the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board and the SEC;
•
Received from the independent registered public accountants the written disclosures and the letter required by
applicable requirements of the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board regarding the independent
registered public accountants’ communications with us concerning independence; and
•
Disc
ussed with the independent registered public accountants their independence from Mondelēz International,
including reviewing non-audit services and fees to assure compliance with (i) regulations prohibiting the
independent registered public accountants from performing specified services that could impair their
independence, and (ii) Mondelēz International’s and the Audit Committee’s policies.
Based upon the review and discussions described in this report and without other independent verification, and
subject to the limitations of our role and responsibilities outlined in this report and in our written charter, we
recommended to the Board, and the Board approved, that the audited consolidated financial statements be
included in Mondelēz International’s Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2024, which
was filed with the SEC on February 5, 2025.
Audit Committee:
Patrick T. Siewert, Chair
Cees ‘t Hart
Jorge S. Mesquita
Jane Hamilton Nielsen
Paula A. Price
|
||
![]() |
2025 PROXY STATEMENT | 49
|
BOARD COMMITTEES AND MEMBERSHIP
Responsibilities
|
2024
|
2023
|
|
Audit Fees
|
$15,470,000
|
$15,230,000
|
Audit-Related Fees
|
960,000
|
1,068,000
|
Tax Fees
|
72,000
|
45,000
|
All Other Fees
|
8,000
|
104,000
|
Total
|
$16,510,000
|
$16,447,000
|
![]() |
FINANCE COMMITTEE
|
50 | 2025 PROXY STATEMENT
|
![]() |
BOARD COMMITTEES AND MEMBERSHIP
Governance, Membership and Sustainability Committee
|
![]() |
GOVERNANCE, MEMBERSHIP AND
SUSTAINABILITY COMMITTEE
|
![]() |
2025 PROXY STATEMENT | 51
|
BOARD COMMITTEES AND MEMBERSHIP
Governance, Membership and Sustainability Committee
|
52 | 2025 PROXY STATEMENT
|
![]() |
BOARD COMMITTEES AND MEMBERSHIP
People and Compensation Committee
|
![]() |
PEOPLE AND COMPENSATION COMMITTEE
|
![]() |
2025 PROXY STATEMENT | 53
|
BOARD COMMITTEES AND MEMBERSHIP
People and Compensation Committee
|
54 | 2025 PROXY STATEMENT
|
![]() |
![]() |
OUR STRATEGIC FOCUS AREAS
|
Ingredients
|
Climate
|
Packaging
|
Social Impact
|
Workplace
Culture
|
Consumer
Well-Being
|
Colleague Well-
Being
|
||||||
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
||||||
Develop
signature
sourcing
programs
across key raw
materials,
including
cocoa, wheat
and palm oil, to
help build
greater end-to-
end resilience
in these supply
chains.
|
Help combat
climate change
through
science-based
targets, using
natural
resources end-
to-end more
efficiently and
renewably.
|
Aim for
reducing and
evolving
packaging and
improving
systems to
support our
vision of a
more circular
pack economy
.
|
Promote human
rights across
our value chain
and help to
enable
empowered
and inclusive
communities.
|
Build a winning
growth culture
championing
culture and
employee
engagement for
our colleagues
and the
communities
our business
touches.
|
Aim to empower
consumers with
contemporary
well-being options
and choices,
Mindful Snacking
habits and portion
control.
|
Build a culture
that focuses on
the safety,
physical and
mental well-being
of our
colleagues.
|
![]() |
2025 PROXY STATEMENT | 55
|
OUR DISTINCTIVE APPROACH TO ENVIRONMENTAL AND SOCIAL ISSUES
Board Oversight and Governance of ESG
|
![]() |
BOARD OVERSIGHT AND GOVERNANCE OF ESG
|
56 | 2025 PROXY STATEMENT
|
![]() |
OUR DISTINCTIVE APPROACH TO ENVIRONMENTAL AND SOCIAL ISSUES
Our Goals
|
![]() |
OUR GOALS
|
![]() |
ESG REPORTING
|
![]() |
2025 PROXY STATEMENT | 57
|
![]() |
REVIEW OF NON-EMPLOYEE DIRECTOR COMPENSATION
|
![]() |
SUMMARY OF
2024
COMPENSATION ELEMENTS
|
Annual Compensation Elements
|
Amount ($)
|
![]() |
Annual Cash Retainer
|
115,000
|
|
Value of Annual Equity Retainer
|
200,000
|
|
Additional Cash Compensation
|
||
Lead Director Retainer
|
50,000
|
|
Audit Committee Chair Retainer
|
35,000
|
|
PCC Chair Retainer
|
25,000
|
|
Governance Committee Chair Retainer
|
20,000
|
|
Finance Committee Chair Retainer
|
20,000
|
![]() |
PLAN LIMITS ON NON-EMPLOYEE DIRECTOR GRANTS
|
58 | 2025 PROXY STATEMENT
|
![]() |
COMPENSATION OF NON-EMPLOYEE DIRECTORS
Cash Compensation – Board, Independent Lead Director and Committee Chair Retainers
|
![]() |
CASH COMPENSATION – BOARD, INDEPENDENT LEAD
DIRECTOR AND COMMITTEE CHAIR RETAINERS
|
![]() |
EQUITY COMPENSATION – ANNUAL EQUITY GRANT
|
![]() |
DIRECTOR STOCK OWNERSHIP GUIDELINES
|
Key Provisions
|
Explanation of Key Provisions
|
Ownership expectation
|
•
Amount equal to 5 times the annual Board cash retainer.
|
Time to meet expectation
|
•
5 years after joining the Board as a director.
|
Shares counted toward
ownership
|
•
Common Stock, including sole ownership, DSUs and accounts over which the director has direct or
indirect ownership or control.
|
Holding expectation
|
•
The Company does not release the shares underlying DSUs until six months after the director ends his or
her service as a director. The Company does not require that shares be held after distribution/issuance.
|
![]() |
COMPANY MATCH FOR DIRECTOR CHARITABLE
CONTRIBUTIONS
|
![]() |
2025 PROXY STATEMENT | 59
|
COMPENSATION OF NON-EMPLOYEE DIRECTORS
2024 Non-Employee Director Compensation
|
![]() |
2024
NON-EMPLOYEE DIRECTOR COMPENSATION
|
Name
|
Fees Earned or
Paid in Cash
(1)
($)
|
Stock Awards
(2)
($)
|
All Other
Compensation
(3)
($)
|
Total
($)
|
Booth, Lewis
(4)
|
53,036
|
—
|
—
|
53,036
|
Bunch, Charles
|
133,750
|
200,057
|
15,000
|
348,807
|
Cousin, Ertharin
|
113,750
|
200,057
|
—
|
313,807
|
´t Hart, Cees
|
113,750
|
200,057
|
—
|
313,807
|
McNamara, Brian
(5)
|
104,382
|
263,432
|
—
|
367,814
|
Mesquita, Jorge
|
113,750
|
200,057
|
—
|
313,807
|
Mukherjee, Anindita
|
113,750
|
200,057
|
—
|
313,807
|
Nielsen, Jane
|
133,750
|
200,057
|
—
|
333,807
|
Price, Paula
(6)
|
70,137
|
200,057
|
15,000
|
285,194
|
Siewert, Patrick
|
180,000
|
200,057
|
5,000
|
385,057
|
Todman, Michael
|
138,750
|
200,057
|
—
|
338,807
|
![]() |
2024
NON-EMPLOYEE DIRECTOR EQUITY AWARDS
|
Name
|
All Stock Awards:
Number of Stocks or Units
Granted in 2024
(#)
|
All Stock Awards:
Grant Date Fair Value of Stock or
Units Granted in 2024
(1)
($)
|
Outstanding
Stock Awards as of
December 31, 2024
(2)
(#)
|
Bunch, Charles
|
2,849
|
200,057
|
32,828
|
Cousin, Ertharin
|
2,849
|
200,057
|
10,039
|
´t Hart, Cees
|
2,849
|
200,057
|
5,322
|
McNamara, Brian
|
3,677
|
263,432
|
3,731
|
Mesquita, Jorge
|
2,849
|
200,057
|
53,735
|
Mukherjee, Anindita
|
2,849
|
200,057
|
6,689
|
Nielsen, Jane
|
2,849
|
200,057
|
12,066
|
Price, Paula
|
2,849
|
200,057
|
2,887
|
Siewert, Patrick
|
2,849
|
200,057
|
53,506
|
Todman, Michael
|
2,849
|
200,057
|
15,985
|
60 | 2025 PROXY STATEMENT
|
![]() |
COMPENSATION
DISCUSSION AND
ANALYSIS (CD&A)
|
TABLE OF CONTENTS
|
|
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
||||
Dirk Van de Put
Chair & CEO
|
Luca Zaramella
Executive Vice
President (“EVP”) &
Chief Financial
Officer
|
Vinzenz Gruber
EVP & President,
Europe
|
Gustavo Valle
EVP & President,
North America
|
Stephanie Lilak
EVP & Chief People
Officer
|
![]() |
EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
|
![]() |
|
![]() |
|
![]() |
|
![]() |
Accelerating growth while
reshaping our portfolio to
deliver 90% of revenue in
chocolate, biscuits and
baked snacks.
|
|
Advancing operational,
commercial and supply chain
excellence while investing
more than $1 billion in artificial
intelligence, machine learning
and cloud technologies to
become the digital commerce
snacks leader.
|
|
Strengthening our local-first
operating model to further
empower employees, promote
a winning growth culture and
continue to build a team of deep
and engaged talent.
|
|
Helping to drive positive change
at scale across the Company’s
sustainability priorities (as
outlined in our annual Snacking
Made Right report) – to create
long-term value for both the
business and its stakeholders.
|
![]() |
2025 PROXY STATEMENT | 61
|
COMPENSATION DISCUSSION AND ANALYSIS (CD&A)
Executive Summary
|
Net Revenues
|
|
|
Cash Flow
|
|
Reported Net Revenues
Growth
|
Organic Net Revenues Growth
(Non‑GAAP)
|
|
Reported Net Cash Provided by
Operating Activities
|
Free Cash Flow (Non‑GAAP)
|
1.2%
|
4.3%
|
|
$4.9B
|
$3.5B
|
|
|
|
|
|
Gross Profit
|
|
|
EPS
(2)
|
|
Reported Gross Profit Dollars
Growth
|
Adjusted Gross Profit Dollars
Growth @ Constant Currency
(Non‑GAAP)
|
|
Reported Diluted EPS Growth
|
Adjusted EPS Growth @
Constant Currency
(Non‑GAAP)
|
3.6%
|
5.1%
|
|
(5.5)%
|
13.0%
|
Annualized TSR
|
1-YEAR
|
3-YEAR
|
5-YEAR
|
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
Mondelēz International
|
![]() |
Performance Peer Group Median
|
![]() |
S&P 500
|
62 | 2025 PROXY STATEMENT
|
![]() |
COMPENSATION DISCUSSION AND ANALYSIS (CD&A)
Executive Summary
|
Pay
Element
|
Vehicle
|
2024
Performance Measures &
Key Characteristics
(1)
|
|
|
2024
Objectives
|
Base Salary
|
Cash
|
Fixed cash paid regularly
|
|
|
Attract and retain world-class
business leaders by offering
market-competitive salaries
based on role, responsibilities,
experience, individual
performance and internal
equity
|
Annual
Incentive
Plan (“AIP”)
|
100%
At-risk cash
|
80% Financial Measures:
•
Organic Volume Growth (15%)
•
Organic Net Revenue Growth (15%)
•
Adjusted Gross Profit Growth (35%)
•
Adjusted Operating Income Growth (15%)
•
Free Cash Flow (20%)
|
![]() |
30pp
Market
Share
Overlay
|
Reward and motivate annual
achievements of critical
financial goals and strategic
objectives across four
priorities: growth, execution,
culture and sustainability
|
|
|
20% Strategic Progress Indicator
(“SPI”) Goals
(2)
|
|
|
|
Long-Term
Incentive
(“LTI”)
Program
|
75% Performance
Share Units (“PSUs”)
3-year cliff vesting
|
•
25% Organic Net Revenue Growth
•
25% Adjusted EPS Growth
•
50% Annualized Relative TSR
•
Cap payout for the TSR metric at target if absolute TSR is
negative at the end of the performance period
•
Above median performance (55
th
percentile) required to
achieve target payout for the Relative TSR metric
|
Reward long-term performance
for delivering sustained long-
term growth and creating
shareholder value
|
||
|
25% Stock Options
3-year ratable vesting
|
Stock Price
|
|
|
|
![]() |
2025 PROXY STATEMENT | 63
|
COMPENSATION DISCUSSION AND ANALYSIS (CD&A)
Executive Summary
|
Principle
|
How We Accomplish
|
Attract, retain and motivate
talented executives and develop
world-class business leaders
|
•
Align our executive pay packages with comparable positions at companies in our Compensation
Survey Peer Group, taking into account tenure, experience, performance and complexity of scope
|
Align executive pay and
performance
|
•
Make a significant portion of our executives’ compensation dependent on achieving robust financial
and strategic goals which are set at the beginning of performance cycles
|
Put pay at risk by heavily
weighting the mix of fixed and
variable compensation toward
variable components
|
•
92%
of our CEO’s target compensation and on average
82%
of the other NEOs’ target compensation is
at risk
|
Align our executives’ and
shareholders’ interests to
promote sustained and superior
long-term shareholder returns
|
•
78%
of our CEO’s target compensation and on average
63%
of the other NEOs’ target compensation is
in equity-based grants, comprising of PSUs and stock options
•
For PSUs, require above median performance (55
th
percentile) with positive returns to achieve target
payout for the Relative TSR metric
•
Maintain stock ownership policy that requires ownership at or above peer benchmark levels (CEO must
hold shares equal to 8 times salary and other NEOs must hold shares equal to 4 times salary)
|
REACHED OUT
to shareholders representing
|
SPOKE
with
16
different
shareholders representing
|
Independent Lead Director
led meetings with shareholders
representing
|
|||||
![]() |
~
52%
|
![]() |
~
25%
|
![]() |
~
13%
|
||
OF OUR OUTSTANDING SHARES
|
OF OUR OUTSTANDING SHARES
|
OF OUR OUTSTANDING SHARES
|
|||||
64 | 2025 PROXY STATEMENT
|
![]() |
COMPENSATION DISCUSSION AND ANALYSIS (CD&A)
Executive Summary
|
WHAT WE DO
|
WHAT WE DON’T DO
|
|
Require significant stock ownership
![]()
For PSUs, require above median performance (55
th
percentile) to achieve
![]()
target payout for the Relative TSR metric. Also, cap payout for the TSR metric
at target if absolute TSR is negative at the end of the performance period
Clawback policies require or permit “clawbacks” of time-based equity awards,
![]()
performance-based equity awards and cash compensation upon certain
financial restatements and upon significant misconduct that could damage the
Company’s reputation
Conduct an annual compensation risk assessment
![]()
Offer limited executive perquisites
![]()
Pay severance and vest equity only upon a “double trigger” in the event of a
![]()
change in control (“CIC”)
Benchmark executive compensation and our performance compared to
![]()
relevant comparators
Provide for a significant majority of compensation that is based on objective,
![]()
quantifiable pre-established performance goals
Retain an independent compensation consultant to advise the PCC
![]() |
No re-pricing or exchanging
![]()
underwater stock options
No dividends paid to executives before
![]()
PSUs vest
No separate, enhanced health and
![]()
welfare plans for NEOs
No guaranteed increases to
![]()
base salaries
No hedging, pledging or short sales of
![]()
our Common Stock
No tax gross-ups to NEOs for
![]()
executive perquisites or in the event of
a change in control
No incentives to produce short-term
![]()
results to the detriment of long-term
goals and results
No incentives to pursue excessively
![]()
risky business strategies
|
|
![]() |
COMPENSATION PROGRAM
|
CEO
|
Other NEOs
|
|
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
2025 PROXY STATEMENT | 65
|
COMPENSATION DISCUSSION AND ANALYSIS (CD&A)
Compensation Program
|
Name
|
2023 base salary
|
2024 base salary
|
% increase
|
Mr. Van de Put
|
$1,550,000
|
$1,550,000
|
0.0%
|
Mr. Zaramella
(1)
|
$950,000
|
$1,100,000
|
15.8%
|
Mr. Gruber
|
CHF
753,500
|
CHF
767,065
|
1.8%
|
Mr. Valle
|
$750,000
|
$815,000
|
8.7%
|
Ms. Lilak
(2)
|
New Hire
|
$675,000
|
N/A
|
66 | 2025 PROXY STATEMENT
|
![]() |
COMPENSATION DISCUSSION AND ANALYSIS (CD&A)
Compensation Program
|
Name
|
Target opportunity as a % of salary
|
Mr. Van de Put
|
200%
|
Mr. Zaramella
|
125%
|
Mr. Gruber
|
100%
|
Mr. Valle
|
100%
|
Ms. Lilak
|
90%
|
![]() |
2025 PROXY STATEMENT | 67
|
COMPENSATION DISCUSSION AND ANALYSIS (CD&A)
Compensation Program
|
Performance Measures
(1)
|
Alignment with Strategy
|
Organic Volume Growth
|
Incentivizes balanced, high-quality, top-line growth and improved margin leverage through higher
capacity utilization
|
Organic Net Revenue Growth
|
Focuses on high-quality revenue growth through market share, volume gains and
price-mix optimization
|
Adjusted Gross Profit Growth
|
Measures the Company’s ability to manage and balance trade-offs among volume, mix, pricing and
costs and enables investment to drive earnings and Free Cash Flow through investing in people
and brands
|
Adjusted Operating
Income Growth
|
Demonstrates if our business is operating successfully by capturing all operating costs
|
Free Cash Flow
|
Key metric that influences our ability to invest for future growth, drive operational excellence and return
cash to shareholders
|
Market Share Overlay
|
Incentivizes market share growth and leadership positions across our key markets
|
68 | 2025 PROXY STATEMENT
|
![]() |
COMPENSATION DISCUSSION AND ANALYSIS (CD&A)
Compensation Program
|
Performance
Measures
(1)
|
Threshold
|
Target
|
Maximum
|
Weighting
|
Results
|
||||||||
Organic
Volume Growth
|
![]() |
15%
|
60%
|
||||||||||
Organic Net
Revenue
Growth
|
![]() |
15%
|
70%
|
||||||||||
Adjusted Gross
Profit Growth
|
![]() |
35%
|
89%
|
||||||||||
Adjusted
Operating
Income Growth
|
![]() |
15%
|
113%
|
||||||||||
Free Cash Flow
|
![]() |
20%
|
105%
|
||||||||||
Market Share
Change
(pp vs. prior year)
|
![]() |
Preliminary
Corporate
Financial
Rating
|
Adjustment
for Market
Share
Overlay
(2)
|
FINAL
CORPORATE
FINANCIAL
RATING
|
|||||||||
89%
|
-
|
15pp
|
=
|
74%
|
|
|
Performance Rating
(1)
|
|
Performance Measures
(1)
|
Weighting
|
Europe (Gruber)
|
North America (Valle)
|
Organic Volume Growth
|
15%
|
56%
|
70%
|
Organic Net Revenue Growth
|
15%
|
123%
|
75%
|
Adjusted Gross Profit Growth
|
35%
|
150%
|
13%
|
Adjusted Operating Income Growth
|
15%
|
136%
|
15%
|
Free Cash Flow
|
20%
|
57%
|
51%
|
Market Share Overlay
|
-/+30pp
|
(30)pp
|
(30)pp
|
Region Performance Rating
|
|
81%
|
9%
|
Final Blended Rating
|
|
80%
|
22%
|
![]() |
2025 PROXY STATEMENT | 69
|
COMPENSATION DISCUSSION AND ANALYSIS (CD&A)
Compensation Program
|
SPI Goals
|
|
Assessment
(1)
|
Annual Progress
|
Snacks Leadership
(50% of SPI)
Drive global leadership in snacking by
accelerating growth in multiple
snacking categories
|
![]() |
•
Priority & Total Snacks Share Change:
Maintained overall share year-
over-year, but missed our three-year goals due to slower acquisition
activity
|
|
Sustainability,
Mindful
Snacking &
Colleagues
(50% of SPI)
|
Sustainability:
Drive
towards reducing
environmental impact
through more sustainably
sourced cocoa and wheat,
packaging recyclability and
reducing carbon footprint
|
![]() |
•
Sustainably Sourced Cocoa:
Achieved about 90% sustainably sourced
cocoa via our Cocoa Life Program, on track to deliver our long-term goal
•
Carbon Footprint Reduction:
Strong progress towards our end-to-end
carbon-reduction goal
•
Recyclable Packaging:
Approximately 96% conversion to recycling
packaging and accelerated virgin plastic reduction
|
|
Mindful Snacking:
Evolve
our products and portfolio to
help consumers
snack mindfully
|
![]() |
•
Mindful Portions:
Strong progress towards our long-term goals
•
Nutrients:
Exceeded annual expectations; also met all 2025 International
Food & Beverage Alliance Pledges and 2025 Sodium Pledge
|
|
Colleagues:
Build a
winning growth, ownership
and inclusive culture that
promotes colleague
engagement, development
and wellbeing
|
![]() |
•
Employee Engagement:
Achieved top quartile employee engagement
relative to benchmark companies
•
Depth of Talent:
Continued strong improvement in our bench strength,
with robust strategic talent review process focused to develop
internal talent
•
Inclusive Culture:
Continued progress year-over-year towards our long-
term goals of fostering an inclusive environment
|
SPI Rating
|
105%
|
||
|
Final SPI Rating
|
Corporate
|
105%
|
Europe
|
105%
|
North America
|
88%
|
70 | 2025 PROXY STATEMENT
|
![]() |
COMPENSATION DISCUSSION AND ANALYSIS (CD&A)
Compensation Program
|
Name
|
Target
Incentive
|
Financial
Performance
Rating
|
Strategic
SPI Rating
|
Total Incentive
Payment
|
Total
Incentive Payment
as % of Target
|
||||
Mr. Van de Put
|
$3,100,000
|
74%
|
105%
|
$2,480,000
|
80%
|
||||
Mr. Zaramella
|
$1,375,000
|
74%
|
105%
|
$1,100,000
|
80%
|
||||
Mr. Gruber
|
CHF
767,065
|
80%
|
105%
|
CHF
652,005
|
85%
|
||||
Mr. Valle
|
$815,000
|
22%
|
88%
|
$285,250
|
35%
|
||||
Ms. Lilak
(1)
|
$584,262
|
74%
|
105%
|
$467,410
|
80%
|
Vehicle
|
Weight
|
Structure
|
Purpose
|
2024
Performance
Measures
(1)
|
PSUs
|
75%
|
•
Number of shares earned may range from 0% to
200% of the target number of PSUs granted based on
the final business performance rating for the 3-year
performance cycle
•
3-year cliff vesting
•
Cap payout for the TSR metric at target if absolute
TSR is negative at the end of the performance period
•
Above median performance (55
th
percentile) required
to achieve target payout for the Relative TSR metric
|
•
Aligns long-term interests
•
Pay for performance
•
Retention
•
Stock ownership
|
•
25% Organic Net
Revenue Growth
•
25% Adjusted EPS
Growth
•
50% Annualized Relative
TSR
|
Stock
Options
|
25%
|
•
3-year ratable vesting
•
10-year term
|
•
Aligns long-term interests
by linking value entirely
to stock price
appreciation
•
Retention
•
Stock ownership
|
Stock Price
|
![]() |
2025 PROXY STATEMENT | 71
|
COMPENSATION DISCUSSION AND ANALYSIS (CD&A)
Compensation Program
|
Annual Equity Grants
(1)
|
|||||
PSUs
|
Stock Options
|
||||
Name
|
#
|
$
(2)
|
|
#
|
$
(2)
|
Mr. Van de Put
(3)
|
172,300
|
12,600,000
|
|
287,160
|
4,200,000
|
Mr. Zaramella
|
57,950
|
4,237,500
|
|
96,580
|
1,412,500
|
Mr. Gruber
|
30,770
|
2,250,000
|
|
51,280
|
750,000
|
Mr. Valle
|
30,770
|
2,250,000
|
|
51,280
|
750,000
|
Ms. Lilak
|
15,390
|
1,125,000
|
25,640
|
375,000
|
Measures
(1)
|
Weighting
|
Alignment with Strategy
|
|
Organic Net Revenue Growth
(2)
|
25%
|
Incentivize growth over the long term; also a key objective of our growth-oriented strategy
|
|
Adjusted EPS Growth
|
25%
|
Overall measure of performance and primary driver of shareholder value creation and return
on capital
|
|
Annualized Relative TSR
|
50%
|
Directly link awards to shareholder value creation and performance versus peers
|
72 | 2025 PROXY STATEMENT
|
![]() |
COMPENSATION DISCUSSION AND ANALYSIS (CD&A)
Compensation Program
|
Metric Achievement:
|
Below Threshold
|
Threshold
|
Target
|
Max
|
Shares Earned (as a percentage of target):
|
0%
|
50%
|
100%
|
200%
|
Metrics
(1)
|
Threshold
|
Target
|
Max
|
Organic Net Revenue Growth
|
1.3pp below target
|
Greater than 4.8%
|
1.3pp above target
|
Adjusted EPS Growth
(2)
|
1.6pp below target
|
Greater than 7%
|
2.5pp above target
|
Annualized Relative TSR
(3)
|
25
th
percentile
|
55
th
percentile
|
90
th
percentile
|
![]() |
2025 PROXY STATEMENT | 73
|
COMPENSATION DISCUSSION AND ANALYSIS (CD&A)
Compensation Program
|
|
2022-2024 Performance
Cycle Results
|
||||||
Key Performance Measures
(1)
|
Weighting
|
Threshold
|
Target
|
Max
|
Actual
|
|
Payout
Percentage
|
Organic Net Revenue Growth
|
25%
|
2.7%
|
4.0%
|
5.3%
|
10.5%
|
|
200%
|
Adjusted EPS Growth
|
25%
|
5.4%
|
7.0%
|
9.5%
|
14.6%
|
|
200%
|
Annualized Relative TSR
(2)
|
50%
|
25
th
percentile
|
55
th
percentile
|
90
th
percentile
|
27
th
percentile
|
|
53%
|
Final Business Performance Rating
|
|
127%
|
Name
|
Shares Earned
|
Mr. Van de Put
|
176,810
|
Mr. Zaramella
|
58,941
|
Mr. Gruber
|
41,263
|
Mr. Valle
|
30,950
|
Ms. Lilak
(1)
|
1,829
|
74 | 2025 PROXY STATEMENT
|
![]() |
COMPENSATION DISCUSSION AND ANALYSIS (CD&A)
Compensation Program
|
![]() |
2025 PROXY STATEMENT | 75
|
COMPENSATION DISCUSSION AND ANALYSIS (CD&A)
Compensation Program
|
76 | 2025 PROXY STATEMENT
|
![]() |
COMPENSATION DISCUSSION AND ANALYSIS (CD&A)
Compensation Determination Process
|
![]() |
COMPENSATION DETERMINATION PROCESS
|
How the Peer Group Was Chosen
|
Compensation Survey Peer Group
(1)
|
How We Use the Peer Group
|
•
Comparable size (0.5x-2.5x) based on net
revenue and market capitalization
•
Considerable global presence with sales
and operations outside the United States
•
Primarily consumer facing
•
Market-leading brands
•
Incorporated in the United States
•
Non-controlled company structure
|
•
3M Company
•
The Coca-Cola Company
•
Colgate-Palmolive Company
•
The Estee Lauder Companies Inc.
(2)
•
General Mills Inc.
•
Johnson & Johnson
•
Kellanova
(3)
•
The Kraft Heinz Company
•
Kimberly-Clark Corporation
•
McDonald’s Corporation
•
Nike, Inc.
•
PepsiCo, Inc.
•
Philip Morris International, Inc.
•
The Procter & Gamble Company
•
Starbucks Corporation
|
•
Benchmark total direct compensation (at
target levels), including base salary and
annual and LTI awards
•
Evaluate share utilization by reviewing
overhang and annual run rate
•
Benchmark share ownership guidelines
•
Assess the competitiveness of total
direct compensation awarded to
senior executives
•
Compare pay-for-performance alignment
•
Benchmark annual and LTI plan design
|
![]() |
2025 PROXY STATEMENT | 77
|
COMPENSATION DISCUSSION AND ANALYSIS (CD&A)
Compensation Determination Process
|
How the Peer Group Was Chosen
|
Performance Peer Group
(1)
|
How We Use the Peer Group
|
•
Industry competitor
•
Fast-moving consumer goods companies
and primarily focused on food and non-
alcoholic beverages
|
•
Campbell Soup Company
•
The Coca-Cola Company
•
Colgate-Palmolive Company
•
Danone
•
General Mills Inc.
•
The Hershey Company
•
The Kraft Heinz Company
•
Nestlé S.A.
•
PepsiCo, Inc.
•
The Procter & Gamble Company
•
Unilever PLC
|
•
Compare annualized TSR to assess our
results against the TSR performance
measure for PSUs
|
78 | 2025 PROXY STATEMENT
|
![]() |
COMPENSATION DISCUSSION AND ANALYSIS (CD&A)
Compensation Determination Process
|
![]() |
2025 PROXY STATEMENT | 79
|
COMPENSATION DISCUSSION AND ANALYSIS (CD&A)
Compensation Governance
|
![]() |
COMPENSATION GOVERNANCE
|
80 | 2025 PROXY STATEMENT
|
![]() |
COMPENSATION DISCUSSION AND ANALYSIS (CD&A)
Compensation Governance
|
Key Provisions
|
Explanation of Key Provisions
|
Ownership expectation
|
•
CEO: 8 times salary
•
Other NEOs: 4 times salary
|
Time to meet expectation
|
•
5 years from employment date or 3 years following a promotion
|
Shares counted toward
ownership
|
•
Common Stock, including shares owned outright, direct purchase plan shares, unvested DSUs and
accounts over which the executive has direct or indirect ownership or control
•
Excludes unexercised Mondelēz International stock options and unvested PSUs
|
Additional holding
requirements
|
•
Until an NEO satisfies our stock ownership requirements, the NEO must hold 100% of all shares acquired
under our equity program (including stock after the restrictions have lapsed, shares acquired upon exercise
of a stock option and shares awarded for PSUs), net of shares withheld for taxes or payment of
exercise price
|
![]() |
2025 PROXY STATEMENT | 81
|
COMPENSATION DISCUSSION AND ANALYSIS (CD&A)
Compensation Governance
|
82 | 2025 PROXY STATEMENT
|
![]() |
![]() |
2024
SUMMARY COMPENSATION TABLE
|
Name and Principal
Position
|
Year
|
Salary
(1)
($)
|
Bonus
(2)
($)
|
Stock
Awards
(3)
($)
|
Option
Awards
(4)
($)
|
Non-Equity
Incentive Plan
Compensation
Annual
Incentive
Awards
(5)
($)
|
Change in
Pension
Value
(6)
($)
|
All Other
Compensation
(7)
($)
|
Total
Compensation
($)
|
Van de Put, Dirk
Chair & CEO
|
2024
|
1,550,000
|
—
|
12,931,115
|
4,382,062
|
2,480,000
|
—
|
961,546
|
22,304,723
|
2023
|
1,550,000
|
—
|
10,625,963
|
3,501,056
|
4,417,500
|
—
|
923,656
|
21,018,175
|
|
2022
|
1,537,671
|
—
|
8,613,541
|
2,607,905
|
4,446,950
|
—
|
719,609
|
17,925,677
|
|
Zaramella, Luca
EVP & Chief Financial Officer
|
2024
|
1,062,500
|
—
|
4,349,148
|
1,473,811
|
1,100,000
|
—
|
502,436
|
8,487,895
|
2023
|
932,500
|
—
|
3,935,694
|
1,296,743
|
1,567,500
|
—
|
242,445
|
7,974,882
|
|
2022
|
872,603
|
—
|
2,871,387
|
869,302
|
1,461,680
|
—
|
178,200
|
6,253,171
|
|
Gruber, Vinzenz
(1)
EVP & President, Europe
|
2024
|
867,944
|
—
|
2,309,289
|
782,533
|
740,776
|
1,041,945
|
21,062
|
5,763,549
|
2023
|
834,670
|
—
|
3,148,281
|
1,037,340
|
1,115,920
|
2,606,772
|
20,643
|
8,763,626
|
|
2022
|
790,555
|
—
|
2,010,156
|
608,534
|
478,449
|
—
|
17,406
|
3,905,100
|
|
Valle, Gustavo
EVP & President, North America
|
2024
|
798,750
|
—
|
2,309,289
|
782,533
|
285,250
|
—
|
196,246
|
4,372,068
|
2023
|
742,500
|
—
|
1,810,776
|
596,504
|
1,132,500
|
—
|
184,134
|
4,466,414
|
|
2022
|
702,740
|
—
|
1,507,772
|
456,456
|
1,038,003
|
—
|
164,272
|
3,869,243
|
|
Lilak, Stephanie
EVP & Chief People Officer
|
2024
|
649,039
|
1,250,000
|
2,718,924
|
391,266
|
467,410
|
—
|
450,828
|
5,927,467
|
![]() |
2025 PROXY STATEMENT | 83
|
EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION TABLES
2024
Summary Compensation Table
|
D. Van de Put
($)
|
L. Zaramella
($)
|
V. Gruber
($)
|
G. Valle
($)
|
S. Lilak
($)
|
|
Personal use of company aircraft
(a)
|
389,231
|
52,233
|
—
|
—
|
—
|
Car allowance
|
23,333
|
15,000
|
21,062
|
15,000
|
22,500
|
Financial counseling allowance
(b)
|
10,000
|
6,299
|
—
|
5,050
|
7,500
|
Employer contributions on defined contribution plans
(c)
|
537,075
|
236,700
|
—
|
173,813
|
53,740
|
Relocation expenses
(d)
|
—
|
—
|
—
|
—
|
275,348
|
Tax gross-up on relocation expenses
(d)
|
—
|
—
|
—
|
—
|
91,740
|
Tax equalization payment
(e)
|
—
|
190,160
|
—
|
2,383
|
—
|
Tax preparation expenses
(f)
|
1,907
|
2,044
|
—
|
—
|
—
|
Total All Other Compensation
|
961,546
|
502,436
|
21,062
|
196,246
|
450,828
|
84 | 2025 PROXY STATEMENT
|
![]() |
EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION TABLES
2024
Grants of Plan‑Based Awards
|
![]() |
2024
GRANTS OF PLAN-BASED AWARDS
|
Estimated Future Payouts
Under Non-Equity Incentive
Plan Awards
(1)
|
Estimated Future Payouts
Under Equity Incentive
Plan Awards
(2)
|
All Other
Stock
Awards:
Number
of
Shares
of Stock
or
Units
(3)
(#)
|
All Other
Option
Awards:
Number
of
Securities
Underlying
Options
(#)
|
Exercise
Price
of
Option
Awards
(4)
($/Share)
|
Grant
Date Fair
Value of
Stock
and
Option
Awards
(5)
($)
|
||||||||
Name
|
Grant
Date
|
Grant Type
|
Threshold
($)
|
Target
($)
|
Maximum
($)
|
Threshold
(#)
|
Target
(#)
|
Maximum
(#)
|
|||||
Van de Put,
Dirk
|
—
|
AIP
|
1,550,000
|
3,100,000
|
6,200,000
|
—
|
—
|
—
|
—
|
—
|
—
|
—
|
|
02/27/2024
|
Performance
Share Units
|
—
|
—
|
—
|
86,150
|
172,300
|
344,600
|
—
|
—
|
—
|
12,931,115
|
||
02/27/2024
|
Stock Options
|
—
|
—
|
—
|
—
|
—
|
—
|
—
|
287,160
|
73.13
|
4,382,062
|
||
Zaramella,
Luca
|
—
|
AIP
|
687,500
|
1,375,000
|
2,750,000
|
—
|
—
|
—
|
—
|
—
|
—
|
—
|
|
02/27/2024
|
Performance
Share Units
|
—
|
—
|
—
|
28,975
|
57,950
|
115,900
|
—
|
—
|
—
|
4,349,148
|
||
02/27/2024
|
Stock Options
|
—
|
—
|
—
|
—
|
—
|
—
|
—
|
96,580
|
73.13
|
1,473,811
|
||
Gruber,
Vinzenz
|
—
|
AIP
|
435,751
|
871,501
|
1,743,002
|
—
|
—
|
—
|
—
|
—
|
—
|
—
|
|
02/27/2024
|
Performance
Share Units
|
—
|
—
|
—
|
15,385
|
30,770
|
61,540
|
—
|
—
|
—
|
2,309,289
|
||
02/27/2024
|
Stock Options
|
—
|
—
|
—
|
—
|
—
|
—
|
—
|
51,280
|
73.13
|
782,533
|
||
Valle,
Gustavo
|
—
|
AIP
|
407,500
|
815,000
|
1,630,000
|
—
|
—
|
—
|
—
|
—
|
—
|
—
|
|
02/27/2024
|
Performance
Share Units
|
—
|
—
|
—
|
15,385
|
30,770
|
61,540
|
—
|
—
|
—
|
2,309,289
|
||
02/27/2024
|
Stock Options
|
—
|
—
|
—
|
—
|
—
|
—
|
—
|
51,280
|
73.13
|
782,533
|
||
Lilak,
Stephanie
|
—
|
AIP
|
292,131
|
584,262
|
1,168,524
|
—
|
—
|
—
|
—
|
—
|
—
|
—
|
|
02/27/2024
|
Performance
Share Units
|
—
|
—
|
—
|
7,695
|
15,390
|
30,780
|
—
|
—
|
—
|
1,155,020
|
||
02/27/2024
|
Stock Options
|
—
|
—
|
—
|
—
|
—
|
—
|
—
|
25,640
|
73.13
|
391,266
|
||
04/01/2024
|
Performance
Share Units
(6)
|
—
|
—
|
—
|
720
|
1,440
|
2,880
|
—
|
—
|
—
|
113,170
|
||
04/01/2024
|
Performance
Share Units
(6)
|
—
|
—
|
—
|
2,155
|
4,310
|
8,620
|
—
|
—
|
—
|
350,619
|
||
04/01/2024
|
Deferred
Stock Units
(6)
|
—
|
—
|
—
|
—
|
—
|
—
|
15,770
|
—
|
—
|
1,100,115
|
![]() |
2025 PROXY STATEMENT | 85
|
EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION TABLES
2024
Outstanding Equity Awards at Fiscal Year‑End
|
![]() |
2024
OUTSTANDING EQUITY AWARDS AT FISCAL YEAR-END
|
Option Awards
|
Stock Awards
|
|||||||||
Name
|
Grant
Date
|
Number of
Securities
Underlying
Unexercised
Options
Exercisable
(#)
|
Number of
Securities
Underlying
Unexercised
Options
Unexercisable
(#)
|
Options
Exercise
Price
($)
|
Options
Expiration
Date
|
Number of
Shares or
Units of
Stock
That Have
Not
Vested
(#)
|
Market
Value of
Shares or
Units of
Stock That
Have Not
Vested
($)
|
Equity
Incentive Plan
Awards:
Number of
Unearned
Shares, Units
or Other Rights
That
Have Not
Vested
(1)(3)
(#)
|
Equity
Incentive Plan
Awards: Market
or Payout
Value of
Unearned
Shares, Units
or Other Rights
That
Have Not
Vested
(2)
($)
|
|
Van de Put,
Dirk
|
11/20/2017
|
133,580
|
—
|
42.11
|
11/20/2027
|
—
|
—
|
—
|
—
|
|
02/22/2018
|
258,570
|
—
|
43.51
|
02/22/2028
|
—
|
—
|
—
|
—
|
||
02/22/2019
|
273,740
|
—
|
47.72
|
02/22/2029
|
—
|
—
|
—
|
—
|
||
02/20/2020
|
232,900
|
—
|
59.04
|
02/20/2030
|
—
|
—
|
—
|
—
|
||
02/18/2021
|
256,110
|
—
|
56.13
|
02/18/2031
|
—
|
—
|
—
|
—
|
||
02/24/2022
|
153,133
|
78,887
|
64.65
|
02/24/2032
|
—
|
—
|
—
|
—
|
||
03/02/2023
|
85,202
|
172,988
|
65.36
|
03/02/2033
|
—
|
—
|
309,840
|
18,506,743
|
||
02/27/2024
|
—
|
287,160
|
73.13
|
02/27/2034
|
—
|
—
|
86,150
|
5,145,740
|
||
Zaramella,
Luca
|
02/22/2016
|
24,410
|
—
|
39.70
|
02/22/2026
|
—
|
—
|
—
|
—
|
|
02/16/2017
|
22,570
|
—
|
43.20
|
02/16/2027
|
—
|
—
|
—
|
—
|
||
02/22/2018
|
22,410
|
—
|
43.51
|
02/22/2028
|
—
|
—
|
—
|
—
|
||
08/01/2018
|
29,190
|
—
|
42.83
|
08/01/2028
|
—
|
—
|
—
|
—
|
||
02/22/2019
|
58,940
|
—
|
47.72
|
02/22/2029
|
—
|
—
|
—
|
—
|
||
02/20/2020
|
65,640
|
—
|
59.04
|
02/20/2030
|
—
|
—
|
—
|
—
|
||
02/18/2021
|
73,500
|
—
|
56.13
|
02/18/2031
|
—
|
—
|
—
|
—
|
||
02/24/2022
|
51,044
|
26,296
|
64.65
|
02/24/2032
|
—
|
—
|
—
|
—
|
||
03/02/2023
|
31,557
|
64,073
|
65.36
|
03/02/2033
|
—
|
—
|
114,760
|
6,854,615
|
||
02/27/2024
|
—
|
96,580
|
73.13
|
02/27/2034
|
—
|
—
|
28,975
|
1,730,677
|
||
Gruber,
Vinzenz
|
02/22/2016
|
22,830
|
—
|
39.70
|
02/22/2026
|
—
|
—
|
—
|
—
|
|
02/16/2017
|
20,980
|
—
|
43.20
|
02/16/2027
|
—
|
—
|
—
|
—
|
||
02/22/2018
|
20,830
|
—
|
43.51
|
02/22/2028
|
—
|
—
|
—
|
—
|
||
02/22/2019
|
44,540
|
—
|
47.72
|
02/22/2029
|
—
|
—
|
—
|
—
|
||
02/20/2020
|
46,580
|
—
|
59.04
|
02/20/2030
|
—
|
—
|
—
|
—
|
||
02/18/2021
|
53,450
|
—
|
56.13
|
02/18/2031
|
—
|
—
|
—
|
—
|
||
02/24/2022
|
35,732
|
18,408
|
64.65
|
02/24/2032
|
—
|
—
|
—
|
—
|
||
03/02/2023
|
25,245
|
51,255
|
65.36
|
03/02/2033
|
—
|
—
|
91,800
|
5,483,214
|
||
02/27/2024
|
—
|
51,280
|
73.13
|
02/27/2034
|
—
|
—
|
15,385
|
918,946
|
||
Valle,
Gustavo
|
02/20/2020
|
33,880
|
—
|
59.04
|
02/20/2030
|
—
|
—
|
—
|
—
|
|
02/18/2021
|
35,640
|
—
|
56.13
|
02/18/2031
|
—
|
—
|
—
|
—
|
||
02/24/2022
|
26,803
|
13,807
|
64.65
|
02/24/2032
|
—
|
—
|
—
|
—
|
||
03/02/2023
|
14,516
|
29,474
|
65.36
|
03/02/2033
|
—
|
—
|
52,800
|
3,153,744
|
||
02/27/2024
|
—
|
51,280
|
73.13
|
02/27/2034
|
—
|
—
|
15,385
|
918,946
|
||
Lilak,
Stephanie
|
02/27/2024
|
—
|
25,640
|
73.13
|
02/27/2034
|
—
|
—
|
7,695
|
459,622
|
|
04/01/2024
|
—
|
—
|
—
|
—
|
15,770
|
941,942
|
8,620
|
514,873
|
86 | 2025 PROXY STATEMENT
|
![]() |
EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION TABLES
2024
Outstanding Equity Awards at Fiscal Year‑End
|
Grant Date
|
Grant Type
|
Vesting Schedule
|
02/24/2022
|
Stock Options
|
First tranche (33%) vested on 02/24/2023, second tranche (33%) vested on 02/24/2024 and last tranche (34%) vested
on 02/24/2025.
|
03/02/2023 &
04/01/2024
|
PSUs
|
100% of the grant vests upon approval of the PCC subject to the satisfaction of the performance criteria. Distribution of
any shares awarded will be no later than 03/15/2026.
|
03/02/2023
|
Stock Options
|
First tranche (33%) vested on 03/02/2024, second tranche (33%) vested on 03/02/2025 and last tranche (34%) vests
on 03/02/2026.
|
02/27/2024
|
PSUs
|
100% of the grant vests upon approval of the PCC subject to the satisfaction of the performance criteria. Distribution of
any shares awarded will be no later than 03/15/2027.
|
02/27/2024
|
Stock Options
|
First tranche (33%) vested on 02/27/2025, second tranche (33%) vests on 02/27/2026 and last tranche (34%) vests on
02/27/2027.
|
04/01/2024
|
DSUs
|
50% vested on 04/01/2025 and remaining 50% vests on 04/01/2026.
|
![]() |
2024
OPTIONS EXERCISED AND STOCK VESTED
|
Option Awards
|
Stock Awards
|
|||||
Name
|
|
Number of Shares
Acquired on
Exercise
(#)
|
Value
Realized on
Exercise
(1)
($)
|
|
Number of Shares
Acquired on
Vesting
(#)
|
Value
Realized on
Vesting
(2)
($)
|
Van de Put, Dirk
|
|
—
|
—
|
|
176,810
|
11,423,694
|
Zaramella, Luca
|
|
—
|
—
|
|
58,941
|
3,808,178
|
Gruber, Vinzenz
|
|
22,000
|
852,940
|
|
41,263
|
2,666,002
|
Valle, Gustavo
|
|
—
|
—
|
|
30,950
|
1,999,680
|
Lilak, Stephanie
|
—
|
—
|
1,829
|
112,520
|
![]() |
2025 PROXY STATEMENT | 87
|
EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION TABLES
2024
Pension Benefits
|
![]() |
2024
PENSION BENEFITS
|
Name
(1)
|
Plan Name
|
Number of Years of
Credited Service
(2)
(#)
|
Present Value of
Accumulated
Benefits
(3)
($)
|
Payments During
Last Fiscal Year
($)
|
Gruber, Vinzenz
|
Pension Fund Mondelēz Switzerland
|
35
|
12,011,543
|
—
|
![]() |
RETIREMENT BENEFIT PLAN DESCRIPTION
|
88 | 2025 PROXY STATEMENT
|
![]() |
EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION TABLES
2024
Non‑Qualified Deferred Compensation Benefits
|
![]() |
2024
NON-QUALIFIED DEFERRED COMPENSATION BENEFITS
|
Name
|
Plan
|
Executive
Contributions in
2024
(1)
($)
|
Registrant
Contributions in
2024
(2)
($)
|
Aggregate
Earnings in
2024
(3)
($)
|
Aggregate
Withdrawals/
Distributions in
2024
($)
|
Aggregate Balance as
of December 31,
2024
(4)
($)
|
Van de Put, Dirk
|
Supplemental Plan
|
337,350
|
506,025
|
116,729
|
—
|
4,457,896
|
MEDCP
|
—
|
—
|
578,000
|
—
|
11,774,477
|
|
Zaramella, Luca
|
Supplemental Plan
|
113,587
|
205,650
|
37,908
|
—
|
1,485,565
|
MEDCP
|
391,875
|
—
|
192,950
|
—
|
1,140,255
|
|
Valle, Gustavo
|
Supplemental Plan
|
95,175
|
142,763
|
17,362
|
—
|
715,532
|
Lilak, Stephanie
|
Supplemental Plan
|
18,242
|
27,363
|
281
|
—
|
45,887
|
Name
|
Plan
|
Base Salary ($)
|
AIP Award ($)
|
Van de Put, Dirk
|
Supplemental Plan
|
75,115
|
262,235
|
MEDCP
|
—
|
—
|
|
Zaramella, Luca
|
Supplemental Plan
|
52,788
|
60,799
|
MEDCP
|
—
|
391,875
|
|
Valle, Gustavo
|
Supplemental Plan
|
39,271
|
55,904
|
Lilak, Stephanie
|
Supplemental Plan
|
18,242
|
—
|
![]() |
2025 PROXY STATEMENT | 89
|
EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION TABLES
2024
Non‑Qualified Deferred Compensation Benefits
|
Name of Fund
|
Annual Return
|
SSgA S&P 500 Index (SVSPX)
|
24.82%
|
Vanguard Developed Markets Index Admiral (VTMGX)
|
3.04%
|
Vanguard Emerging Mkts Stock Index Admiral (VEMAX)
|
10.95%
|
Vanguard Extended Market Index Admiral (VEXAX)
|
16.91%
|
Vanguard Federal Money Market Fund (VMFXX)
|
5.23%
|
Vanguard Inflation Protected Sec Admiral (VAIPX)
|
1.86%
|
Vanguard LifeStrategy Moderate Growth Inv (VSMGX)
|
10.31%
|
Vanguard Short Term Treasury Admiral (VFIRX)
|
3.83%
|
90 | 2025 PROXY STATEMENT
|
![]() |
EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION TABLES
Potential Payments Upon Termination or Change in Control
|
![]() |
POTENTIAL PAYMENTS UPON TERMINATION OR CHANGE
IN CONTROL
|
Element
|
Description
|
|
Severance Benefits
|
•
Cash severance equal to one (or two for the CEO) times the NEO’s base salary.
|
|
Health and
Welfare Benefits
|
•
No continuation of health and welfare benefits coverage.
|
|
Other Benefits
|
•
Outplacement services for up to one year following termination.
|
|
AIP Awards
|
•
AIP award based on actual business performance results and prorated based on the number of days of
active employment during the performance period.
|
|
Equity Awards
(1)
|
•
Outstanding PSU grants are generally forfeited; however, the PCC may exercise discretion and has
typically done so in company restructuring events, for a prorated number of PSUs to remain outstanding
and eligible to vest subject to actual company performance.
(2)
•
Unvested stock option grants are generally forfeited; however, the PCC may exercise discretion and has
typically done so in company restructuring events, to prorate and accelerate the vesting of stock option
grants based on the number of months of active employment during the vesting period. An individual who is
involuntarily terminated without cause, who is not retirement eligible, has until the earlier of 12 months from
termination or the end of the original term to exercise vested stock options.
|
![]() |
2025 PROXY STATEMENT | 91
|
EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION TABLES
Potential Payments Upon Termination or Change in Control
|
Element
|
Description
|
|
Severance and Benefits
|
•
Cash severance equal to two (or 2.99 for the CEO) times the NEO’s base salary plus target AIP award.
•
For U.S. NEOs, health and welfare benefits continuation equal to three years for the CEO and two years for
the other NEOs.
•
Continuation of financial counseling and car allowances for three years for the CEO and two years for the
other NEOs.
•
Outplacement services for up to two years.
•
A lump sum payment equal to any employer matching contributions forfeited by the NEO under the
Company’s 401(k) plan which would have vested had the NEO remained employed for two years following
termination, and waiver of any repayment obligations with respect to any sign-on or similar bonuses.
|
|
AIP Awards
|
•
Any unpaid AIP award for the previously completed fiscal year and a prorated target award for the
termination year (the latter may not be duplicative with the In-Flight Bonus below).
•
Upon a CIC, our NEOs will also be eligible to receive an AIP award for the CIC fiscal year, at the higher of
target or actual performance as of immediately prior to the CIC; provided that if less than 50% of the fiscal
year has elapsed prior to the CIC, such AIP will be prorated based on the number of days that have
elapsed through the CIC (the “In-Flight Bonus”).
|
|
Equity Awards
|
•
Upon a CIC, each DSU and stock option assumed by the successor will remain outstanding and continue to
vest pursuant to their terms and outstanding PSUs will be automatically converted into time-based DSUs
based on the higher of target or actual performance, which will be scheduled to vest on the last day of the
original performance period of the related PSU grant.
•
Upon a CIC Qualifying Termination, all of such NEO’s outstanding equity awards will fully vest and stock
options will remain exercisable until the expiration of their original full term.
|
|
Maximum CIC Plan
Benefit/No Gross Up for
Payment of Excise Tax
|
•
The maximum CIC benefit under the CIC Plan or otherwise is the greater of the full benefits or a reduced
benefit that does not trigger the excise tax under Code Section 4999, as determined on an after-tax basis
for each NEO.
•
The CIC Plan does not provide for gross-up excise tax payments for any NEOs.
|
|
92 | 2025 PROXY STATEMENT
|
![]() |
EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION TABLES
Potential Payments Upon Termination or Change in Control
|
Element
|
Description
|
|
AIP Awards
|
•
Eligible for a prorated award under AIP at target.
|
|
PSU Grants
(1)(2)
|
•
After having reached age 55 and achieved at least 10 years of service, a prorated number of PSUs will
remain outstanding and eligible to vest subject to actual company performance.
•
After having reached age 65 and achieved at least 5 years of service, PSUs granted beginning in 2023 will
remain outstanding and eligible to vest subject to actual company performance (PSUs granted prior to 2023
will remain outstanding and eligible to vest on a pro-rata basis).
•
As of December 31,
2024
, Mr. Zaramella and Mr. Gruber are our only NEOs who were eligible for retirement
treatment (eligible for treatment based on reaching age 55 with at least 10 years of service).
|
|
Stock Options
(1)
|
•
Stock options will continue to vest and become exercisable under the original vesting schedule and such
stock options may be exercised during their remaining full original term.
|
|
DSU Grants
(1)(2)
|
•
After having reached age 55 and achieved at least 10 years of service, DSUs will vest on a pro-rata basis.
•
After having reached age 65 and achieved at least 5 years of service, DSUs granted beginning in 2023 will
fully vest (DSUs granted prior to 2023 will vest on a pro-rata basis).
•
None of our retirement eligible NEOs have outstanding DSU grants.
|
![]() |
2025 PROXY STATEMENT | 93
|
EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION TABLES
Potential Payments Upon Termination or Change in Control
|
Name and Type of Benefit
|
Retirement
($)
|
Death or Disability
($)
|
Non-CIC Involuntary
Termination Without Cause ($)
|
CIC Qualifying
Termination ($)
|
Van de Put, Dirk
|
||||
Cash Severance
(1)
|
N/A
|
—
|
3,100,000
|
13,903,500
|
Annual Incentive Award
2)
|
N/A
|
3,100,000
|
2,480,000
|
3,100,000
|
Health & Welfare Continuation
(3)
|
N/A
|
—
|
—
|
39,006
|
Outplacement & Other Benefits
(4)
|
N/A
|
—
|
12,500
|
149,999
|
Unvested Equity Awards
(5)
|
N/A
|
17,915,058
|
—
|
31,401,196
|
Total
|
N/A
|
21,015,058
|
5,592,500
|
48,593,701
|
Zaramella, Luca
|
||||
Cash Severance
(1)
|
—
|
—
|
1,100,000
|
4,950,000
|
Annual Incentive Award
(2)
|
1,375,000
|
1,375,000
|
1,100,000
|
1,375,000
|
Health & Welfare Continuation
(3)
|
—
|
—
|
—
|
38,051
|
Outplacement & Other Benefits
(4)
|
—
|
—
|
12,500
|
95,000
|
Unvested Equity Awards
(5)
|
6,529,206
|
6,210,785
|
—
|
10,889,078
|
Total
|
7,904,206
|
7,585,785
|
2,212,500
|
17,347,129
|
Gruber, Vinzenz
(6)
|
||||
Cash Severance
(1)
|
—
|
—
|
880,439
|
3,486,004
|
Annual Incentive Award
(2)
|
871,501
|
871,501
|
740,776
|
871,501
|
Health & Welfare Continuation
(3)
|
—
|
—
|
—
|
—
|
Outplacement & Other Benefits
(4)
|
—
|
—
|
5,351
|
47,100
|
Unvested Equity Awards
(5)
|
4,762,691
|
4,381,016
|
—
|
7,427,963
|
Pension Fund Mondelēz Switzerland
(7)
|
—
|
—
|
1,663,569
|
1,663,569
|
Total
|
5,634,192
|
5,252,517
|
3,290,135
|
13,496,137
|
Valle, Gustavo
|
||||
Cash Severance
(1)
|
N/A
|
—
|
815,000
|
3,260,000
|
Annual Incentive Award
(2)
|
N/A
|
815,000
|
285,250
|
815,000
|
Health & Welfare Continuation
(3)
|
N/A
|
—
|
—
|
25,992
|
Outplacement & Other Benefits
(4)
|
N/A
|
—
|
12,500
|
95,000
|
Unvested Equity Awards
(5)
|
N/A
|
3,119,519
|
—
|
5,484,170
|
Total
|
N/A
|
3,934,519
|
1,112,750
|
9,680,162
|
Lilak, Stephanie
|
||||
Cash Severance
(1)
|
N/A
|
—
|
675,000
|
2,518,524
|
Annual Incentive Award
(2)
|
N/A
|
584,262
|
467,410
|
584,262
|
Health & Welfare Continuation
(3)
|
N/A
|
—
|
—
|
28,863
|
Outplacement & Other Benefits
(4)
|
N/A
|
—
|
12,500
|
152,272
|
Unvested Equity Awards
(5)
|
N/A
|
1,463,086
|
—
|
2,263,946
|
Total
|
N/A
|
2,047,348
|
1,154,910
|
5,547,867
|
94 | 2025 PROXY STATEMENT
|
![]() |
The People and Compensation Committee oversees the compensation programs on behalf of the Board. In
fulfilling its oversight responsibilities, the People and Compensation Committee reviewed and discussed with
management the Compensation Discussion and Analysis included in this Proxy Statement. Based on that review
and discussion, the People and Compensation Committee recommended that the Board include the
Compensation Discussion and Analysis in the Proxy Statement to be filed with the SEC in connection with the
Annual Meeting and incorporate it by reference in the Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December
31, 2024, filed with the SEC on February 5, 2025.
People and Compensation Committee:
Michael Todman, Chair
Charles E. Bunch
Ertharin Cousin
Brian J. McNamara
Anindita Mukherjee
|
![]() |
2025 PROXY STATEMENT | 95
|
96 | 2025 PROXY STATEMENT
|
![]() |
Summary
Compensation
Table Total for
PEO
(1)
($)
|
Average
Summary
Compensation
Table Total for
Non-PEO
NEOs
(3)
($)
|
Average
Compensation
Actually Paid to
Non-PEO
NEOs
(4)
($)
|
Value of Initial Fixed $100
Investment Based On:
|
|||||
Year
|
Compensation
Actually Paid to
PEO
(2)
($)
|
Total
Shareholder
Return
(5)
($)
|
Peer Group
Total
Shareholder
Return
(6)
($)
|
Net
Income
(7)
($)
|
Adjusted
Gross Profit
Growth
(8)
|
|||
2024
|
|
(
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
2023
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
2022
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
2021
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
2020
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Year
|
Reported
Summary Compensation
Table Total for PEO
($)
|
Less Reported Value of
Equity Awards
(a)
($)
|
Plus Equity Award
Adjustments
(b)
($)
|
Compensation Actually
Paid to PEO
($)
|
2024
|
|
|
(
|
(
|
Year
|
Plus Year End Fair Value
of Outstanding and
Unvested Equity Awards
Granted in the Year
($)
|
Plus or Less Year over
Year Change in Fair Value
of Outstanding and
Unvested Equity Awards
Granted in Prior Years
($)
|
Plus or Less Change in
Fair Value from Prior Year
End through the Vesting Date
for Equity Awards Granted
in Prior Years that Vested
in the Year
($)
|
Plus Value of Dividends on
Stock not Otherwise
Reflected in Fair Value or
Total Compensation
($)
|
Total Equity
Award
Adjustments
($)
|
2024
|
|
(
|
|
|
(
|
![]() |
2025 PROXY STATEMENT | 97
|
PAY VERSUS PERFORMANCE
|
Year
|
Average Reported
Summary Compensation
Table Total for Non‑PEO
NEOs
($)
|
Less Average
Reported Value of
Equity Awards
($)
|
Plus Average
Equity Award
Adjustments
(a)
($)
|
Less Average
Reported Change in
the Actuarial
Present Value of
Pension Benefits
(b)
($)
|
Plus
Average Pension
Benefit
Adjustments
(c)
($)
|
Average
Compensation
Actually Paid to
Non-PEO NEOs
($)
|
2024
|
|
|
(
|
|
|
|
Year
|
Plus Average Year End
Fair Value of
Outstanding and
Unvested Equity Awards
Granted in the Year
($)
|
Plus or Less Average
Year over Year Change in
Fair Value of
Outstanding and
Unvested Equity Awards
Granted in Prior Years
($)
|
Plus or Less Average Change in
Fair Value from Prior Year End
through the Vesting Date for
Equity Awards Granted in Prior
Years that Vested in the Year
($)
|
Plus Average Value of
Dividends on Stock
Awards not Otherwise
Reflected in Fair Value or
Total Compensation
($)
|
Total
Average
Equity Award
Adjustments
($)
|
2024
|
|
(
|
|
|
(
|
98 | 2025 PROXY STATEMENT
|
![]() |
PAY VERSUS PERFORMANCE
Financial Performance Measures
|
![]() |
FINANCIAL PERFORMANCE MEASURES
|
![]() |
ANALYSIS OF THE INFORMATION PRESENTED IN THE PAY
VERSUS PERFORMANCE TABLE
|
![]() |
2025 PROXY STATEMENT | 99
|
PAY VERSUS PERFORMANCE
Analysis of the Information Presented in the Pay Versus Performance Table
|
![]() |
CAP to PEO
|
![]() |
Avg. CAP to NEOs
|
![]() |
Mondelēz TSR
|
![]() |
Peer TSR
|
![]() |
CAP to PEO
|
![]() |
Avg. CAP to NEOs
|
![]() |
Net Income
|
![]() |
CAP to PEO
|
![]() |
Avg. CAP to NEOs
|
![]() |
Adjusted Gross Profit Growth
|
100 | 2025 PROXY STATEMENT
|
![]() |
Name of Beneficial Owner
|
Beneficially
Owned
Shares
(1)
|
Deferred
Stock Units/
Additional
Underlying
Units
(2)
|
Total
Shares/
Interests
Held
|
Beneficially
Owned Shares
Percent of
Class
(3)
|
Current Independent Directors:
|
||||
Bunch, Charles E.
|
14,487
|
33,103
|
47,590
|
*
|
Cousin, Ertharin
|
–
|
10,124
|
10,124
|
*
|
‘t Hart, Cees
|
–
|
5,366
|
5,366
|
*
|
McNamara, Brian J.
|
–
|
3,762
|
3,762
|
*
|
Mesquita, Jorge S.
|
6,500
|
54,186
|
60,686
|
*
|
Mukherjee, Anindita
|
–
|
6,745
|
6,745
|
*
|
Nielsen, Jane Hamilton
|
–
|
12,167
|
12,167
|
*
|
Price, Paul A.
|
2,911
|
2,911
|
*
|
|
Siewert, Patrick T.
|
–
|
53,954
|
53,954
|
*
|
Todman, Michael A.
|
–
|
16,119
|
16,119
|
*
|
Director Nominee:
|
||||
McKinstry, Nancy
|
–
|
–
|
–
|
|
Named Executive Officers:
|
||||
Gruber, Vinzenz P.
|
638,810
|
–
|
638,810
|
*
|
Lilak, Stephanie
|
9,754
|
15,770
|
25,524
|
*
|
Valle, Gustavo
|
219,555
|
–
|
219,555
|
*
|
Van de Put, Dirk
|
2,800,942
|
–
|
2,800,942
|
*
|
Zaramella, Luca
|
771,793
|
–
|
771,793
|
*
|
All directors and executive officers as a group (19 persons)
(4)
|
5,063,205
|
226,487
|
5,289,692
|
*
|
![]() |
2025 PROXY STATEMENT | 101
|
OWNERSHIP OF EQUITY SECURITIES
Delinquent Section 16(a) Reports
|
Name and Address of Beneficial Owner
|
Amount and Nature of
Beneficial Ownership
|
Percent of Class Calculated Based on
Shares of the Issued and Outstanding
Common Stock as of March 12, 2025
|
BlackRock, Inc.
(1)
50 Hudson Yards
New York, NY 10001
|
99,059,304
|
7.6%
|
The Vanguard Group
(2)
100 Vanguard Blvd.
Malvern, PA 19355
|
133,926,151
|
10.3%
|
![]() |
DELINQUENT SECTION 16(a) REPORTS
|
102 | 2025 PROXY STATEMENT
|
![]() |
![]() |
2025 PROXY STATEMENT | 103
|
![]() |
GLOBAL EMPLOYEE STOCK PURCHASE MATCHING
PLAN OVERVIEW
|
104 | 2025 PROXY STATEMENT
|
![]() |
ITEM 3: APPROVAL OF THE GLOBAL EMPLOYEE STOCK PURCHASE MATCHING PLAN
Material Features of The Plan
|
![]() |
MATERIAL FEATURES OF THE PLAN
|
Effective Date and Term
|
•
If approved, the Plan would become effective upon approval by shareholders at the 2025 Annual
Meeting. The Plan will continue until terminated by the Committee.
|
Eligibility
|
•
Only employees of the Company and any other company or corporation (including its subsidiaries) or
other affiliate in which the Company beneficially owns (directly or indirectly) more than 50% of the
outstanding voting stock or voting power that are designated as participating companies in the Plan
are eligible to participate. Participation is limited to those employees who are actively employed on
the first day of an enrollment period. The Plan permits the Committee to require a time-served
qualifying period for eligibility. Officers of the Company subject to the reporting requirement of Section
16 of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (“Section 16 Officers”) are not eligible to participate in
the Plan.
•
The Committee will have the exclusive discretion to determine whether a person is or is not eligible to
participate in the Plan even if that person otherwise satisfies the eligibility requirements of the Plan.
|
Enrollment
|
•
Eligible employees may purchase shares under the Plan by electing to enroll during an enrollment
period and becoming participants in the Plan. The duration and timing of an enrollment window is
determined by the Committee. At the Committee’s discretion, enrollment may be valid for a set period
(with re-enrollment required during each enrollment period), on an “evergreen basis” (with the
participant’s election continuing to be effective for subsequent enrollment periods until revised), or on
a one-off basis.
•
To enroll in the Plan, participants must enter into a subscription agreement, in a form determined by
the Committee, specifying the amount of their contributions, authorize contributions to be deducted
through payroll from their eligible compensation (or agree to another method of payment approved by
the Committee), and accept the maximum and minimum contribution limits and other terms,
established by the Committee, that apply to their purchased shares and the Plan.
|
Purchased Share and
Contribution Limits
|
•
The Committee may limit the number of shares that may be purchased by Plan participants in
connection with any offering. In the event the limit is exceeded, the number of shares received by
each participant will be proportionately reduced.
•
The Plan permits the Committee to set minimum and maximum contribution amounts, which are
determined by the Committee in its discretion in advance of an offering and may change from time to
time. However, in no event may a Participant make contributions in excess of USD $50,000 annually
nor in excess of 25% of their base salary/wages during an offering period (the “Maximum Contribution
Limit”). For participants based outside the United States, these amounts may be converted into their
foreign currency equivalents.
|
![]() |
2025 PROXY STATEMENT | 105
|
ITEM 3: APPROVAL OF THE GLOBAL EMPLOYEE STOCK PURCHASE MATCHING PLAN
Material Features of The Plan
|
•
Where awards are being operated on an evergreen basis or over a specified period (rather than on a
one-off basis), the Committee, prior to an enrollment period or at any other time it decides, may
change any term applicable to a participant’s future awards or future participation, including in relation
to minimum or maximum contribution limits (subject to the Maximum Contribution Limit above). If a
change relates to the contribution limits, any contribution still to be made that would be greater than
the new maximum or less than the new minimum limit will be deemed to be modified accordingly in
order to fit within the new limits and any excess contributions already made will be returned to the
applicable participants.
|
|
Eligible Compensation,
Contributions and
Purchase Price
|
•
All contributions by a participant will be made through payroll (unless the Committee approves a
different method of payment) from the participant’s eligible compensation and credited (without
interest) to a bookkeeping account maintained by the Company or a participating subsidiary or
affiliate on behalf of each participant. Unless the Committee provides otherwise in advance of an
offering, eligible compensation is generally limited to a participant’s regular salary or base pay.
•
These amounts, along with any matching amounts credited to the participant, will be used to
periodically purchase shares on behalf of the participant. The number of shares purchased is
determined by reference to the participant’s contributions and the purchase price of a share on the
purchase date.
•
The purchase price of shares will be equal to (i) the average price paid for shares of our Common
Stock, if purchased on the open market, (ii) the closing price of a share reported on any established
stock exchange or national market system including without limitation the Nasdaq Global Select
Market and the National Market System of the National Association of Securities Dealers, Inc.
Automated Quotation System on the applicable date, if shares are not acquired on the open market,
or (iii) in the absence of an established market for the Common Stock the fair market value of a share
as determined by the Committee in any other circumstances.
•
A participant may not alter the participant’s elected rate of contribution, unless the Committee decides
otherwise. Participants are allowed to elect to stop contributions and payroll deductions will cease as
soon as administratively practicable following such election. In order to re-initiate participation in the
Plan, participants will need to re-enroll in the Plan during an enrollment period.
•
The Committee may decide in connection with an offering that if there is a remaining balance of a
participant’s contributions that is insufficient to purchase a whole share, the participant will acquire a
right to a fractional entitlement, entitling the participant to receive an additional sum, in exchange for
the remaining balance. Otherwise, any unused contributions that have not been used to acquire a
purchased share or a fractional entitlement are retained and added to the next contribution offering,
unless the Committee determines otherwise.
|
Matching Awards
|
•
The Committee has the discretion to offer matching awards under the Plan. In general, the matching
award may be granted in the form of either a matching credit based on a percentage of the amount of
the contribution made by a participant specified by the Committee used to purchase additional
matching shares or a matching award in the form of a right to receive matching shares based on the
number of shares of Common Stock purchased by the participant at a ratio specified by the
Committee. Any matching shares or an award of matching share rights may be subject to vesting
requirements to the extent specified by the Committee. A participant will not be required to pay for the
grant of a matching award. Matching awards granted in the form of an award of matching share rights
may, in the Committee’s discretion, be settled partly or fully in cash.
•
The Committee may decide in connection with an offering that if the application of the matching ratio
would result in a matching award of a fraction of a share, the fraction will instead be awarded as a
fractional entitlement. Any such fractional entitlement may be paid in cash or in a whole number of
shares (rounded down) with a market value at the time of settlement as nearly as practicable equal to
the fractional entitlements.
|
106 | 2025 PROXY STATEMENT
|
![]() |
ITEM 3: APPROVAL OF THE GLOBAL EMPLOYEE STOCK PURCHASE MATCHING PLAN
Material Features of The Plan
|
Matching Credit /
Matching Ratio
|
•
The matching credit percentage will be determined by the Committee in connection with an offering,
provided that the amount contributed by the Company may in no event exceed 25% of the
participant’s contribution during any offering period. Similarly, the matching ratio for any awards of
Common Stock will be determined by the Committee in connection with an offering, but it may in no
event exceed 25%.
•
The Committee may alter the matching credit and/or matching ratio prospectively and may vary
these matching awards among offerings made under the Plan, subject to the maximum limit
specified above.
|
Dividend Equivalents
|
•
The Plan allows the Committee discretion to grant dividend equivalents on matching awards made in
the form of matching share rights under the plan. If dividend equivalents are granted on matching
awards, they will be paid only to the extent such an award vests, will be calculated on such basis as
the Committee decides, and may be paid in cash or shares.
|
Shares Available
Under the Plan
|
•
The aggregate number of shares of Common Stock reserved and available for issuance pursuant to
awards issued under the Plan is 5,000,000, which includes all shares used in the Plan, including
shares that may be purchased by or issued to participants, including through matching awards. The
closing price of a share of Common Stock on the Nasdaq Global Select Market on March 27, 2025
was
$67.50
.
•
Shares issuable under the Plan may use authorized and unissued shares, treasury shares or shares
purchased on the open market.
•
In the event of a stock dividend, stock split, spin-off, rights offering or large nonrecurring cash
dividend or any other similar nonreciprocal transaction between the Company and its shareholders
that causes the per-share value of our Common Stock to change, the Committee will make such
adjustments to the Plan and matching awards as it deems necessary, in its sole discretion, to prevent
dilution or enlargement of rights immediately resulting from such transaction.
|
Changes in Eligibility
|
•
If a participant becomes a Section 16 Officer or ceases to be employed by the Company (or a
participating subsidiary company), generally, the participant’s contributions will stop as soon as
administratively practicable, any contributions previously made will be used to purchase shares on the
next expected purchase date, any unvested matching awards will be forfeited, any dividends paid on
the participant’s shares acquired under the Plan will be paid in cash, in each case, unless and to the
extent the Committee determines otherwise.
•
The Committee may establish provisions and/or policies that will apply to participants who take a
leave of absence, transfer employment (internationally or domestically) to the Company or another
participating subsidiary company or go on a Company-sponsored international assignment to another
participating subsidiary company. The Committee also has the discretion to determine how to treat
participants at the time the Plan is terminated.
|
Change in Control
|
•
The term Change in Control is defined in Section 1.1 of the Plan.
•
If there is a Change in Control of the Company, the Committee may (i) determine to vest matching
awards, (ii) provide that such awards will be assumed by the surviving entity or exchanged for new
awards, or (iii) provide that participants will be entitled to choose whether such awards will be assumed
or exchanged for new awards.
|
![]() |
2025 PROXY STATEMENT | 107
|
ITEM 3: APPROVAL OF THE GLOBAL EMPLOYEE STOCK PURCHASE MATCHING PLAN
Material Features of The Plan
|
•
If matching awards are assumed or exchanged by the surviving entity in connection with a Change in
Control and a participant’s employment is involuntarily terminated other than for cause within one
year following the Change in Control, any unvested matching awards held by the participant will not
be forfeited and will continue under the terms of the Plan and will vest on the original vesting date or
at an earlier time as determined by the Committee.
|
|
Plan Administration
|
•
The Plan will be administered by the Committee, which has the authority to make any rules and
regulations for the administration of the Plan as it considers necessary or desirable. The Committee
may, from time to time, delegate various authority to a subcommittee or subcommittees of the
Committee, one or more officers of the Company or other persons or groups of persons as it deems
necessary, appropriate or advisable, including, but not limited, to facilitate participation in the Plan, to
address all limits and administrative practices under the Plan, and to establish modifications,
procedures, and sub-plans as may be necessary or desirable consistent with, and to further the
objectives of, the Plan. The Committee may delegate any other or all of its rights and powers under
the Plan, to the extent not prohibited by applicable law. The delegates also may delegate any or all of
its rights and powers to the extent not prohibited by applicable law.
•
To the extent not governed by U.S. federal law, the Plan and all awards under the Plan will be
construed in accordance with and governed by the laws of the Commonwealth of Virginia.
|
Plan Amendment
|
•
The Committee may, at any time and from time to time, amend, modify or terminate the Plan, but if an
amendment to the Plan would require shareholder approval under applicable laws, policies or
regulations or the applicable listing or other requirements of the Nasdaq Global Select Market, then
such amendment will be subject to shareholder approval. Except as otherwise provided by the Plan, if
a proposed change to the Plan would materially and adversely impact the rights of one or more plan
participants in respect of existing rights under the Plan, then, except as otherwise provided in the
Plan, the Committee is required to obtain the written consent of such affected participants.
|
Subplans
|
•
The Committee may adopt subplans for certain jurisdictions relating to the operation and
administration of the Plan to accommodate specific requirements of local laws and procedures, or for
any other purpose, the terms of which may take precedence over the general terms of the Plan.
Subject to the share reserve for the Plan, features under subplans may differ from those
summarized here.
|
Taxes
|
•
The Company and/or the participant’s employer may satisfy any applicable withholding obligations or
rights with regard to all tax obligations by one or a combination of the following: (i) requiring the
participant to make a payment in a form acceptable to the Company; (ii) withholding from the
participant’s wages or other cash compensation payable to the participant; (iii) withholding from
proceeds of the sale of shares acquired upon settlement of the award either through a voluntary sale
or through a mandatory sale arranged by the Company (on the participant’s behalf pursuant to this
authorization without further consent); (iv) withholding in shares to be issued upon settlement of the
award; or (v) any other method of withholding determined by the Company.
|
108 | 2025 PROXY STATEMENT
|
![]() |
ITEM 3: APPROVAL OF THE GLOBAL EMPLOYEE STOCK PURCHASE MATCHING PLAN
Income Tax Consequences
|
![]() |
INCOME TAX CONSEQUENCES
|
![]() |
2025 PROXY STATEMENT | 109
|
ITEM 3: APPROVAL OF THE GLOBAL EMPLOYEE STOCK PURCHASE MATCHING PLAN
Income Tax Consequences
|
![]() |
BENEFITS TO NAMED EXECUTIVE OFFICERS AND OTHERS
|
![]() |
REGISTRATION WITH THE SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE
COMMISSION
|
![]() |
ADDITIONAL INFORMATION REGARDING OUR EQUITY
COMPENSATION PLANS
|
Equity Compensation Plan Information
|
|||||
Number of Securities to be
Issued Upon Exercise of
Outstanding Options,
Warrants and Rights
(1)
|
Weighted Average
Exercise Price of
Outstanding Options,
Warrants and Rights
(2)
|
Number of Securities
Remaining Available for
Future Issuance under
Equity Compensation
Plans (excluding
securities reflected
in column (a))
(3)
|
|||
(a)
|
(b)
|
(c)
|
|||
Equity compensation plans approved by
security holders
|
21,015,743
|
$54.51
|
50,900,000
|
110 | 2025 PROXY STATEMENT
|
![]() |
![]() |
REVIEW OF INDEPENDENT REGISTERED PUBLIC
ACCOUNTANTS
|
![]() |
2025 PROXY STATEMENT | 111
|
ITEM 4. RATIFICATION OF THE SELECTION OF INDEPENDENT REGISTERED PUBLIC
ACCOUNTANTS FOR FISCAL YEAR 2025
Selection of Independent Registered Public Accountants
|
![]() |
SELECTION OF INDEPENDENT REGISTERED PUBLIC
ACCOUNTANTS
|
112 | 2025 PROXY STATEMENT
|
![]() |
![]() |
2025 PROXY STATEMENT | 113
|
![]() |
ASSESSMENT OF THE COMPANY’S SUPPLIER & PARTNER
CODE OF CONDUCT DUE DILIGENCE PROCESS
|
RESOLVED:
Stockholders urge the Board of Directors of Mondelēz International, Inc. (the “Company”) to
commission an independent, third-party assessment of the Company’s due diligence process to ensure compliance
with the Company’s Supplier & Partner Code of Conduct for the internationally recognized human rights of freedom
of association and collective bargaining. The assessment, prepared at reasonable cost and omitting legally
privileged, confidential, or proprietary information, should be publicly disclosed on the Company’s website.
SUPPORTING STATEMENT:
Freedom of association and collective bargaining are internationally recognized human rights according to the
International Labour Organization’s Declaration on Fundamental Principles and Rights at Work and the United
Nations’ Universal Declaration of Human Rights. The United Nations’ Guiding Principles on Business and Human
Rights urge companies to “know and show” that they respect human rights by adopting “a human rights due
diligence process to identify, prevent, mitigate and account for how they address their impacts on human rights.”
(1)
Our Company has adopted a Supplier & Partner Code of Conduct to require that suppliers and partners “respect
employees’ rights to organize and bargain collectively, as well as raise concerns without fear of retaliation.” While the
Company’s Supplier & Partner Code of Conduct is commendable, we are concerned that the Company’s corporate
reputation and brand names could be harmed if the Company’s due diligence process to ensure its suppliers’
compliance with the Supplier & Partner Code of Conduct fails to prevent workers’ rights violations.
For example, the New York Times has alleged that our Company’s contract manufacturing supplier Hearthside Food
Solutions (“Hearthside”) violated child labor laws.
(2)
Hearthside has also faced allegations of violating its workers’
rights to freedom of association and to collectively bargain. In 2021, a Hearthside worker testified before a U.S.
Senate Committee about how Hearthside prevented her coworkers from forming a union at a facility in McComb,
Ohio.
(3)
In 2024, a labor union filed various unfair labor practice charges with the National Labor Relations Board
alleging labor law violations at Hearthside’s London, Kentucky facility.
(4)
For these reasons, we urge you to vote
FOR
this proposal.
(1)
United Nations, “Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights,” 2011, p. 16, https://www.ohchr.org/sites/defauIt/files/Documents/Publications/
GuidingPrincipIesBusinessHR_EN.pdf.
(2)
New York Times, “Alone and Exploited, Migrant Children Work Brutal Jobs Across the U.S.,” February 25, 2023, https://www.nytimes.com/2023/02/25/us/
unaccompanied-migrant-child-workers-exploitation.html.
(3)
Testimony of Mrs. Gracie Heldman Before the Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee, “The Right to Organize: Empowering
American Workers in a 21st Century Economy,” July 22, 2021, https://www.help.senate.gov/imo/media/doc/Heldman.pdf.
(4)
Hearthside Food Solutions and Bakery, Confectionery, Tobacco Workers and Grain Millers International Union Local 57, National Labor Relations Board
Case Nos. 09-CA-350423 (September 13, 2024), 09-CA-340924 (April 25, 2024), 09-CA-340905 (April 25, 2024), 09-CA-340911 (April 23, 2024), 09-
CA-340868 (April 18, 2024), 09-CA-340893 (April 18, 2024), 09-CA-339506 (March 26, 2024), 09-CA-337922 (March 14, 2024), available at https://
www.nlrb.gov/search/case/hearthside%20food%20solutions.
|
114 | 2025 PROXY STATEMENT
|
![]() |
ITEM 5. SHAREHOLDER PROPOSAL
Assessment of the Company’s Supplier & Partner Code of Conduct Due Diligence Process
|
![]() |
2025 PROXY STATEMENT | 115
|
ITEM 5. SHAREHOLDER PROPOSAL
Assessment of the Company’s Supplier & Partner Code of Conduct Due Diligence Process
|
116 | 2025 PROXY STATEMENT
|
![]() |
![]() |
REPORT ON FLEXIBLE PLASTIC PACKAGING
|
WHEREAS:
Without immediate and sustained new commitments throughout the plastics value chain, annual flows
of plastics into oceans could nearly triple by 2040.
(1)
The growing plastic pollution crisis poses increasing risks to Mondelēz. Corporations could face an annual financial
risk of approximately $100 billion should governments require them to cover the waste management costs of
packaging they produce.
(2)
Governments around the world are increasingly enacting such policies, including five
new state laws that impose fees on corporations for single-use plastic (SUP) packaging.
(3)
The European Union
has banned ten SUP pollutants and taxed some nonrecycled plastic packaging.
(4)
A French law requires 10% of
packaging be reusable by 2027 and Portugal requires 30% reusable packaging by 2030.
(5)
Additionally, consumer
demand for sustainable packaging is increasing.
(6)
Pew Charitable Trusts’ groundbreaking study, Breaking the Plastic Wave (“Pew Report”), concluded that improved
recycling alone is insufficient to address plastic pollution—instead, recycling must be coupled with reductions in
use, materials redesign, and substitution.
(7)
The Pew Report finds that the greatest opportunity to reduce or
eliminate plastic lies with flexible plastic packaging,
(8)
often used for chips, sweets, and condiments among other
uses, and virtually unrecyclable in America. With innovation, redesign, and substitution, 26 million metric tons of
flexibles can be avoided globally.
(9)
The Pew Report finds that reducing plastic use is the most viable solution from environmental, economic, and
social perspectives,
(10)
yet broad corporate and stakeholder alignment on flexible packaging solutions is lacking.
(11)
Despite stated commitments to sustainable packaging, 70.1% of Mondelēz’s packaging remains in flexibles.
(12)
In
the absence of immediate action to eliminate flexibles by robustly engaging in research and expansion of reusable
packaging, Mondelēz is on track to fail to meet its 2025 reusables and recyclability packaging goals. Only 18.9% of
its packaging is recyclable in practice and at scale and 0% is reusable.
(13)
Our Company could avoid regulatory, environmental, and competitive risks by adopting a comprehensive approach
to addressing flexible plastic packaging use at scale.
BE IT RESOLVED:
Shareholders request that the Board issue a report, at reasonable expense and excluding
proprietary information, describing how Mondelēz could address flexible plastic packaging in alignment with the
findings of the Pew Report, or other authoritative sources, to reduce its contribution to plastic pollution.
SUPPORTING STATEMENT:
The report should, at Board discretion:
•
Assess the reputational, financial, and operational risks associated with continuing to use plastic packaging that
is not recyclable in practice and at scale while plastic pollution grows;
•
Evaluate actions to achieve fully recyclable packaging including elimination and accelerated research into
innovative reusable substitution; and
•
Describe opportunities to pre-competitively work with peers to research and develop reusable packaging as an
alternative to single-use packaging.
|
![]() |
2025 PROXY STATEMENT | 117
|
ITEM 6. SHAREHOLDER PROPOSAL
Report on Flexible Plastic Packaging
|
(1)
https://www.pewtrusts.org/-/media/assets/2020/10/breakingtheplasticwave_mainreport.pdf, p.4
(2)
https://www.pewtrusts.org/-/media/assets/2020/10/breakingtheplasticwave_mainreport.pdf, p.9
(3)
https://www.packworld.com/sustainable-packaging/recycling/article/22922253/ameripen-shares-key-lessons-from-early-epradopters
(4)
https://environment.ec.europa.eu/topics/plastics/single-use-plastics_en
(5)
https://www.greenpeace.org/international/story/51843/plastics-reuse-and-refill-laws
(6)
https://www.shorr.com/resources/blog/the-2022-sustainable-packaging-consumer-report/
(7)
https://www.pewtrusts.org/-/media/assets/2020/10/breakingtheplasticwave_mainreport.pdf, p.9
(8)
https://www.pewtrusts.org/-/media/assets/2020/10/breakingtheplasticwave_mainreport.pdf, p.51
(9)
https://www.pewtrusts.org/-/media/assets/2020/10/breakingtheplasticwave_mainreport.pdf, p.51
(10)
https://www.pewtrusts.org/-/media/assets/2020/10/breakingtheplasticwave_mainreport.pdf, p.10
(11)
https://emf.thirdlight.com/link/pqm3hmtgpwtn-dwj3yc, p.22
(12)
https://gc-data.emf.org/2024/detail?cid=Mondelēz-international#header
(13)
https://gc-data.emf.org/2024/detail?cid=Mondelēz-international#header
|
118 | 2025 PROXY STATEMENT
|
![]() |
ITEM 6. SHAREHOLDER PROPOSAL
Report on Flexible Plastic Packaging
|
![]() |
2025 PROXY STATEMENT | 119
|
![]() |
CLIMATE LOBBYING REPORT
|
![]()
WHEREAS:
The United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change asserts that greenhouse gas
emissions must decline by 43% from 2019 levels by 2030 and 65% by 2035 to avert the worst impacts of climate
change, including more frequent and severe droughts, heatwaves, and rainfall.
(1)
Mondelēz has laid out the strategic, operational, and reputational risks that climate change impacts may have on
its business.
(2)
In response, the Company has publicly committed to a 2050 net zero emissions target that has
been validated by the Science Based Targets Initiative and supports its Vision 2030 growth strategy.
(3)
Although
Mondelēz has disclosed efforts to make progress against its sustainability and climate goals, it acknowledges that
the Company's ability to meet such goals are subject to evolving regulatory requirements and to the availability of
suppliers that can meet the Company's standards.
(4)
However, Mondelēz provides insufficient transparency about
its lobbying activities, making it challenging for investors to evaluate whether and how the Company's advocacy
efforts are supportive of and consistent with its net zero goal and its three key drivers for reducing
carbon emissions.
Mondelēz has spent approximately $9 million on federal lobbying since 2014.
(5)
This does not include state
lobbying, where Mondelēz also lobbies but disclosure is uneven or absent. The Company's disclosure is limited to
a list of broad advocacy areas of focus and a list of memberships in trade associations with annual dues of
$50,000 or more. In contrast, Unilever
(6)
provides a much more informative description of its policy influence
activities, including an assessment of alignment of Unilever's lobbying activities with its positions on climate policy.
Corporate lobbying that contradicts a company's own commitments can damage a brand's value and lead to
negative financial consequences.
(7)
Furthermore, delays in emissions reductions, increases the probability of
physical risks to assets, abrupt policy changes, and limited access to capital and insurance.
Of particular concern is Mondelēz' membership in a trade association that has advocated negatively on multiple
forms of climate policy.
(8)
RESOLVED:
Shareholders of Mondelēz request that the Board of Directors prepare a report, updated annually,
describing whether and how Mondelēz aligns its lobbying and policy influence activities, both direct and indirect
(through trade associations and other organizations), with its net zero by 2050 goal.
Such disclosure, prepared at reasonable cost and excluding proprietary information, could, at management’s
discretion, describe the activities and positions analyzed, the criteria used to assess alignment, and external
stakeholders consulted, if any.
|
120 | 2025 PROXY STATEMENT
|
![]() |
ITEM 7. SHAREHOLDER PROPOSAL
Climate Lobbying Report
|
SUPPORTING STATEMENT:
In evaluating the degree of alignment between the Company's emissions goals and
its lobbying, the proponent suggests that the Company assess and disclose its direct and indirect lobbying
activities, such as comment submissions, regarding climate provisions of relevant legislation and regulation.
|
Mondelēz could consider the Global Standard on Responsible Climate Lobbying
(9)
as a useful resource
for implementation.
(1)
https://unfccc.int/news/new-un-climate-change-report-shows-national-climate-plans-fall-miles-short-of-what-s-needed
(2)
https://www.sec.gov/ix?doc=/Archives/edgar/data/1103982/000110398224000019/mdlz-20231231.htm
(3)
https://ir.mondelezinternational.com/news-releases/news-release-details/mondelez-internationals-near-term-2030-targets-and-2050-net-zero
(4)
https://www.sec.gov/ix?doc=/Archives/edgar/data/1103982/000110398224000019/mdlz-20231231.htm
(5)
https://www.opensecrets.org/orgs/mondelez-international/summary?id=D000067057
(6)
https://www.unilever.com/files/unilever-climate-policy-engagement-review.pdf
(7)
https://www.sustainalytics.com/esg-research/resource/investors-esg-blog/in-whose-best-interest--why-investors-are-demanding-more-transparency-on-
companies%27-lobbying-activities
(8)
https://lobbymap.org/influencer/National-Association-of-Manufacturing-NAM
(9)
https://climate-lobbying.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/03/2022_global-standard-responsible-climate-lobbying_APPENDIX.pdf
|
![]() |
2025 PROXY STATEMENT | 121
|
ITEM 7. SHAREHOLDER PROPOSAL
Climate Lobbying Report
|
122 | 2025 PROXY STATEMENT
|
![]() |
![]() |
THIRD-PARTY REPORT ASSESSING EFFECTIVENESS OF
IMPLEMENTATION OF HUMAN RIGHTS POLICY
|
RESOLVED:
Shareholders request the Board of Directors commission an independent third-party report, at
reasonable cost and omitting proprietary information, assessing the effectiveness of the company’s implementation
of its Human Rights Policy (HRP) for operations in conflict-affected and high-risk areas (CAHRA),
(1)
including
Russia/Ukraine.
WHEREAS:
Mondelēz commits to using the UN Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights (UNGPs) to
prevent and mitigate human rights risks.
(2)
The UNGPs call on companies to conduct heightened human rights due
diligence (HRDD) in CAHRA due to widespread human rights abuses and violations of national and international
law.
(3)
The European Union (EU) passed legislation on mandatory HRDD
(4)
and accounting standards bodies are
calling on companies to report on material human rights risks.
(5)
The International Finance Corporation reports that companies in CAHRA “face business risks that are much greater
than those in other emerging markets,” including destruction of assets, deaths and injuries, and supply-chain
disruptions.
(6)
The Thinking Ahead Institute found 84 percent of the 26 largest investors named “geopolitical
confrontation” as a top three systemic risk.
(7)
Mondelēz’s operations in Russia and Ukraine expose the company to material human rights risks. The United States
and EU imposed an array of sanctions and export controls
(8)
against Russia and its state-owned businesses in
response to the Ukraine invasion and associated credible accusations of war crimes.
(9)
Russia’s “partial mobilization”
order requires companies to facilitate conscription of staff and provide support to the military upon request.
(10)
Mondelēz’s factory in Ukraine was damaged by a Russian military attack in March 2023
(11)
and the Ukrainian
National Agency on Corruption Prevention designated Mondelēz an “international sponsor of war.”
(12)
The company
faced backlash from customers,
(13)
employees,
(14 )
and civil society.
(15)
Mondelēz maintains exposure to other
CAHRA, such as Brazil,
(16)
Côte D’Ivoire,
(17)
and Guatemala.
(18)
Mondelēz lags 200 American companies and industry peers in responding to the heightened risk of operating in
Russia/Ukraine.
(19)
The Kyiv School of Economics estimates Mondelēz’s Russian operations generated $1.4 billion
in revenue and $62 million in taxes in 2023.
(20)
Mondelēz sold 9,800 tons of Milka chocolate in Q1 of 2024, six times
higher than the company’s projections,
(21)
and Mondelēz’s Russian consolidated net revenue slightly increased from
2023.
(22)
Despite claims Mondelēz made its Russian subsidiary “stand-alone with a self-sufficient supply chain,” the
Russian entity allegedly remains connected to Mondelēz’s management system and Russian employees have
access to staff in other regions.
(23)
Mondelēz’s activities in CAHRA may result in brand damage, violations of the company’s HRP and the UNGPs, and
exposure to Russian sanctioned entities, warranting increased disclosure.
SUPPORTING STATEMENT
Shareholders seek information, at board and management discretion, through a report that:
•
Analyzes the effectiveness of the HRP’s assessment, mitigation, and reporting on human rights risks in CAHRA,
including Russia and Ukraine.
•
Assesses if additional policies, practices, and governance measures are needed to mitigate risks.
|
![]() |
2025 PROXY STATEMENT | 123
|
ITEM 8. SHAREHOLDER PROPOSAL
Third-Party Report Assessing Effectiveness of Implementation of Human Rights Policy
|
(1)
http://dx.doi.org/10.1787/9789264185050-en
(2)
https://www.mondelezinternational.com/assets/PDFs/Mondelez-International-Human-Rights-Policy.pdf
(3)
https://www.undp.org/publications/heightened-human-rights-due-diligence-business-conflict-affected-contexts-guide
(4)
https://commission.europa.eu/business-economy-euro/doing-business-eu/corporate-sustainability-due-diligence_en
(5)
https://sasb.ifrs.org/standards/materiality-finder
(6)
https://www.ifc.org/en/what-we-do/sector-expertise/fragile-and-conflict-affected-situations
(7)
https://www.thinkingaheadinstitute.org/news/article/worlds-largest-investors-increasingly-concerned-on-systemic-risks
(8)
https://home.treasury.gov/news/press-releases/jy0608
(9)
https://apnews.com/article/russia-ukraine-kyiv-business-european-commission-united-kingdom-acb86730120a1230b9eb95c3ebdded77
(10)
https://base.garant.ru/136945/#friends
(11)
https://www.reuters.com/business/oreo-maker-mondelez-says-ukrainian-biscuit-factory-suffered-significant-damage-2022-03-31
(12)
https://nazk.gov.ua/en/news/the-nacp-included-the-manufacturer-barney-the-bear-in-the-list-of-international-sponsors-of-the-war
(13)
https://www.business-humanrights.org/it/ultime-notizie/opinion-mondelez-faces-consumer-backlash-over-continued-russia-business
(14)
https://www.reuters.com/business/oreo-maker-nestle-pepsi-face-pressure-european-employees-over-russia-2022-04-14
(15)
https://www.business-humanrights.org/en/latest-news/mondelez-silences-ukrainian-voices-by-deleting-uncomfortable-questions-comments-on-its-
profitable-business-in-russia-during-live-event-on-social-media
(16)
https://lab.org.uk/brazil-palm-oil-producers-launch-an-avalanche-of-litigation
(17)
https://static1.squarespace.com/static/5810dda3e3df28ce37b58357/t/6515a2e3206855235dcb3c5a/1695916782152/
There+Will+Be+No+More+Cocoa+Here+-+Final+Engligh.pdf
(18)
https://www.business-humanrights.org/en/latest-news/mondel%C4%93z-internationals-response-on-sourcing-from-repsa
(19)
https://som.yale.edu/story/2022/over-1000-companies-have-curtailed-operations-russia-some-remain
(20)
https://leave-russia.org/mondelez
(21)
https://euromaidanpress.com/2024/08/01/mondelez-expands-russian-chocolate-sales-sixfold-classifies-earnings
(22)
https://ir.mondelezinternational.com/static-files/c0429400-8daf-4d2e-9939-1b9dcff6bd4b
(23)
https://euromaidanpress.com/2024/08/01/mondelez-expands-russian-chocolate-sales-sixfold-classifies-earnings
|
124 | 2025 PROXY STATEMENT
|
![]() |
ITEM 8. SHAREHOLDER PROPOSAL
Third-Party Report Assessing Effectiveness of Implementation of Human Rights Policy
|
![]() |
2025 PROXY STATEMENT | 125
|
![]() |
REPORT ON RECYCLED CONTENT CLAIMS
|
WHEREAS:
Plastic waste and pollution are increasingly important environmental, social, and public policy issues.
The United States Securities and Exchange Commission, California State Attorney General, public and private
lawsuits, and media investigations are challenging the legitimacy of companies’ recyclability and recycled content
claims related to plastic packaging.
The plastics industry is promoting a false “advanced recycling” (AR) solution to further promote the plastic
recycling myth. Since AR processes are not effective, economic, or scalable, the use of mass balance accounting
schemes and circular certificates were invented by industry to falsely label new plastic as having recycled content.
But AR and circular certificates are viewed by many as a plastics industry public relations stunt to deceive
the public.
USEPA and the CA State AG have both publicly stated that mass balance circular certificates are deceptive to
consumer and are not valid claims of recycled content, recyclability, or “circularity”:
•
USEPA requires recycled content “by weight” in their Safer Choice Standard. USEPA stated “Allowing producers
to advertise that a product contains “recycled content” based on the amount of recycled material purchased is
deceptive” in April 2023 comments to the U.S. Federal Trade Commission.
•
CA State AG: This lawsuit filed against ExxonMobil in September 2024 states that the ISCC certification scheme
is actually a false and misleading marketing scheme, which misleads the public into believing that products
made with “certified circular polymers” have significant environmental benefits or are made of plastic waste
when in fact they likely contain little to no actual “advanced recycling” content. The lawsuit cites California law
that prohibits pyrolysis processes from being claimed as recycling processes.
In September 2024. MONDELĒZ publicly announced the purchase of a significant amount (500 tons) of ISCC
mass balance circular certificates to claim up to 50% content from advanced recycling in Triscuit packaging.
Financial investment to make this purchase is significant based on McKinsey’s estimated certificate cost of about
$2000/ton. But the pyrolysis process employed to create circular certificates produces far more fuel than new
plastic and 50% recycled content is a deceptive claim because the maximum physical content achievable via
pyrolysis is 2%.
MONDELĒZ has fiduciary and legal responsibility to shareholders to make sound corporate investments and not
employ deceptive or allegedly illegal claims about “certified-circular” plastics.
BE IT RESOLVED:
In the best interest of the company, shareholders request the board of directors issue a report
by December 2025 including the factual basis for legitimacy of all recycled content claims made on plastic
packaging. The report should be prepared at reasonable cost, omitting confidential information.
SUPPORTING STATEMENT:
Proponents recommend the report be led by independent legal and technical
experts who have no financial conflicts caused by working for the plastics or plastics recycling industry and include
an assessment of the reputational, financial, and operational risks associated with continuing to make deceptive
claims on recycled content of plastic products.
|
126 | 2025 PROXY STATEMENT
|
![]() |
ITEM 9. SHAREHOLDER PROPOSAL
Report on Recycled Content Claims
|
![]() |
2025 PROXY STATEMENT | 127
|
ITEM 9. SHAREHOLDER PROPOSAL
Report on Recycled Content Claims
|
128 | 2025 PROXY STATEMENT
|
![]() |
![]() |
2025 PROXY STATEMENT | 129
|
![]() |
VOTING INSTRUCTIONS TO PROXIES
|
![]() |
ATTENDING AND VOTING AT THE ANNUAL MEETING
|
![]() |
GETTING INFORMATION AND ASKING QUESTIONS BEFORE
AND DURING THE ANNUAL MEETING
|
130 | 2025 PROXY STATEMENT
|
![]() |
FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS ABOUT THE ANNUAL MEETING AND VOTING
Frequently Asked Questions About the Annual Meeting and Voting
|
![]() |
FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS ABOUT THE ANNUAL
MEETING AND VOTING
|
![]() |
2025 PROXY STATEMENT | 131
|
FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS ABOUT THE ANNUAL MEETING AND VOTING
Frequently Asked Questions About the Annual Meeting and Voting
|
By Internet
|
If you received the Notice or a printed copy of the Proxy Materials, follow the instructions in the Notice or on the
proxy card.
|
By Telephone
|
If you received a printed copy of the Proxy Materials, follow the instructions on the proxy card.
|
By Mail
|
If you received a printed copy of the Proxy Materials, complete, sign, date and mail your proxy card in the
enclosed, postage‑prepaid envelope.
|
In Person (Virtual)
|
You may also vote in person virtually by attending the meeting through
www.proxydocs.com/MDLZ
. To
attend the Annual Meeting and vote your shares, you must register for the Annual Meeting and provide the
control number located on your Notice or proxy card. See “Virtual Annual Meeting” above following the Notice of
2025 Annual Meeting of Shareholders for further information.
|
132 | 2025 PROXY STATEMENT
|
![]() |
FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS ABOUT THE ANNUAL MEETING AND VOTING
Frequently Asked Questions About the Annual Meeting and Voting
|
![]() |
2025 PROXY STATEMENT | 133
|
FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS ABOUT THE ANNUAL MEETING AND VOTING
Frequently Asked Questions About the Annual Meeting and Voting
|
134 | 2025 PROXY STATEMENT
|
![]() |
FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS ABOUT THE ANNUAL MEETING AND VOTING
Frequently Asked Questions About the Annual Meeting and Voting
|
![]() |
2025 PROXY STATEMENT | 135
|
![]() |
SHAREHOLDER NOMINATIONS AND PROPOSALS FOR THE
2026 ANNUAL MEETING
|
136 | 2025 PROXY STATEMENT
|
![]() |
Measures
|
Definitions
(Including Adjustment to GAAP Measure)
|
Modifications
|
Rationale
|
Organic
Volume
Growth
(AIP)
|
Organic Volume is defined as volume excluding the
impacts of:
•
acquisitions;
•
divestitures
(1)
; and
•
short-term distributor agreements related to the
sale of a business
(2)
.
|
Reflects the volume growth
rates for our base business
by eliminating the impact of
certain disclosed one-time
factors, facilitating
comparisons to prior
year(s).
|
|
Organic Net
Revenue
Growth (AIP
and PSUs)
|
Organic Net Revenue is defined as net revenues (the
most comparable U.S. GAAP financial measure)
excluding the impacts of:
•
acquisitions;
•
divestitures
(1)
;
•
short-term distributor agreements related to the sale
of a business
(2)
; and
•
currency rate fluctuations (calculated based on prior
year rates)
(3)
.
|
Organic Net Revenue
Growth:
Defined as the
year-over-year growth of
Organic Net Revenue
based on the definition of
Organic Net Revenue used
for each year of the three-
year performance cycle.
|
Reflects the revenue growth
rates for our base business
by eliminating the impact of
certain disclosed one-time
factors, facilitating
comparisons to prior
year(s).
|
Adjusted Gross
Profit Growth
(AIP)
|
Adjusted Gross Profit is defined as gross profit (the
most comparable U.S. GAAP financial measure)
excluding the impacts of:
•
the Simplify to Grow Program
(4)
;
•
divestiture-related costs
(5)
;
•
acquisition integration costs
(7)
;
•
operating results from divestitures
(1)
;
•
operating results from short-term distributor
agreements related to the sale of a business
(2)
;
•
mark-to-market impacts from commodity, forecasted
currency, and equity method investment transaction
derivative contracts
(10)
;
•
inventory step-up charges
(8)
;
•
2017 malware incident net recoveries; and
•
incremental costs due to the war in Ukraine.
|
Adjusted Gross Profit
Growth:
Defined as the
year-over-year constant
currency growth of Adjusted
Gross Profit calculated at
prior year currency
exchange rates.
|
Indicator of overall business
trends and performance,
based on what business
leaders can control.
|
![]() |
2025 PROXY STATEMENT | 137
|
ANNEX A: FINANCIAL MEASURES DEFINITIONS
|
Measures
|
Definitions
(Including Adjustment to GAAP Measure)
|
Modifications
|
Rationale
|
Adjusted
Operating
Income Growth
(AIP)
|
Adjusted Operating Income is defined as operating
income (the most comparable U.S. GAAP financial
measure) excluding the impacts of:
•
the Simplify to Grow Program
(4)
;
•
gains or losses (including non‑cash impairment
charges) on goodwill and intangible assets;
•
divestiture
(1)
or acquisition gains or losses,
divestiture‑related costs
(5)
, acquisition‑related
costs
(6)
, and acquisition integration costs and
contingent consideration adjustments
(7)
;
•
inventory step‑up charges
(8)
;
•
operating results from divestitures
(1)
;
•
operating results from short‑term distributor
agreements related to the sale of a business
(2)
;
•
remeasurement of net monetary position
(9)
;
•
mark‑to‑market impacts from commodity, forecasted
currency, and equity method investment transaction
derivative contracts
(10)
;
•
impact from resolution of tax matters
(11)
;
•
2017 malware incident net recoveries;
•
incremental costs due to the war in Ukraine
(12)
;
•
impact from the European Commission
legal matter
(13)
;
•
impact from pension participation changes
(14)
; and
•
operating costs from the ERP Systems
Implementation program
(15)
.
|
Adjusted Operating
Income Growth:
Defined
as the year-over-year
constant currency growth
of Adjusted Operating
Income calculated at prior
year currency
exchange rates.
|
Indicator of overall business
trends and performance,
based on what business
leaders can control.
|
138 | 2025 PROXY STATEMENT
|
![]() |
ANNEX A: FINANCIAL MEASURES DEFINITIONS
|
Measures
|
Definitions
(Including Adjustment to GAAP Measure)
|
Modifications
|
Rationale
|
Adjusted EPS
Growth
(PSUs)
|
Adjusted EPS is defined as diluted EPS attributable to
Mondelēz International from continuing operations (the
most comparable U.S. GAAP financial measure)
excluding the impacts net of the related income tax
effects of:
•
the Simplify to Grow Program
(4)
;
•
gains or losses (including non‑cash impairment
charges) on goodwill and intangible assets;
•
divestiture
(1)
or acquisition gains or losses,
divestiture‑related costs
(5)
, acquisition‑related costs
(6)
,
and acquisition integration costs and contingent
consideration adjustments
(7)
;
•
inventory step‑up charges
(8)
;
•
operating results from divestitures
(1)
;
•
operating results from short‑term distributor
agreements related to the sale of a business
(2)
;
•
remeasurement of net monetary position
(9)
;
•
mark‑to‑market impacts from commodity, forecasted
currency, and equity method investment transaction
derivative contracts
(10)
;
•
impact from resolution of tax matters
(11)
;
•
2017 malware incident net recoveries;
•
incremental costs due to the war in Ukraine
(12)
;
•
impact from the European Commission
legal matter
(13)
;
•
impact from pension participation changes
(14)
;
•
operating costs from the ERP Systems
Implementation program
(15)
;
•
loss on debt extinguishment and related expenses;
•
gains or losses on interest rate swaps no longer
designated as accounting cash flow hedges due to
changed financing and hedging plans;
•
mark‑to‑market unrealized gains or losses
and realized gains or losses from
marketable securities
(16)
;
•
initial impacts from enacted tax law changes
(17)
; and
•
gains or losses on equity method
investment transactions
(18)
.
|
Adjusted EPS Growth:
Defined as the year-over-
year constant currency
growth calculated at prior
year currency exchange
rates and based on the
definition of Adjusted EPS
used for each year of the
three-year performance
cycle.
|
Indicator of overall business
trends and performance,
based on what business
leaders can control.
|
Measures
|
Definitions
(Including Adjustment to GAAP Measure)
|
Modifications
|
Rationale
|
Free Cash Flow
(AIP)
|
Free Cash Flow is defined as Net Cash Provided By
Operating Activities less capital expenditures.
|
Reflects financial liquidity,
working capital efficiency and
financial health.
|
![]() |
2025 PROXY STATEMENT | 139
|
ANNEX A: FINANCIAL MEASURES DEFINITIONS
|
140 | 2025 PROXY STATEMENT
|
![]() |
ANNEX A: FINANCIAL MEASURES DEFINITIONS
GAAP to Non‑GAAP Reconciliations
|
![]() |
GAAP TO NON‑GAAP RECONCILIATIONS
|
Net Revenues to Organic Net Revenue
(In millions of U.S. dollars) (Unaudited)
|
Mondelēz
International
|
|
For the Twelve Months Ended December 31, 2024
|
||
Reported (GAAP)
|
$
36,441
|
|
Short‑term distributor agreements
|
(25)
|
|
Acquisitions
(1)
|
(72)
|
|
Currency-related items
|
710
|
|
Organic (Non‑GAAP)
|
$
37,054
|
|
For the Twelve Months Ended December 31, 2023
|
||
Reported (GAAP)
|
$
36,016
|
|
Divestitures
|
(484)
|
|
Short-term distributor agreements
|
(22)
|
|
Organic (Non‑GAAP)
|
$
35,510
|
|
% Change - Reported (GAAP)
|
1.2%
|
|
% Change - Organic (Non‑GAAP)
|
4.3%
|
Gross profit to Adjusted Gross Profit
(In millions of U.S. dollars) (Unaudited)
|
For the Twelve Months Ended December 31,
|
||||||
2024
|
2023
|
$ Change
|
% Change
|
||||
Reported (GAAP)
|
$
14,257
|
$
13,764
|
$
493
|
3.6%
|
|||
Simplify to Grow Program
(1)
|
30
|
9
|
21
|
||||
Mark‑to‑market gains from derivatives
(2)
|
(550)
|
(185)
|
(365)
|
||||
Acquisition integration costs and contingent consideration
adjustments
(3)
|
12
|
25
|
(13)
|
||||
Inventory step‑up
(3)
|
3
|
—
|
3
|
||||
Divestiture-related costs
(3)
|
1
|
—
|
1
|
||||
Operating results from divestitures
(3)
|
—
|
(274)
|
274
|
||||
Operating results from short‑term distributor agreements
|
(3)
|
(5)
|
2
|
||||
Incremental costs due to war in Ukraine
(4)
|
2
|
—
|
2
|
||||
ERP Systems Implementation costs
|
14
|
—
|
14
|
||||
Adjusted (Non‑GAAP)
|
$
13,766
|
$
13,334
|
$
432
|
3.2%
|
|||
Currency-related items
|
242
|
–
|
242
|
||||
Adjusted @ Constant FX (Non‑GAAP)
|
$
14,008
|
$
13,334
|
$
674
|
5.1%
|
![]() |
2025 PROXY STATEMENT | 141
|
ANNEX A: FINANCIAL MEASURES DEFINITIONS
GAAP to Non‑GAAP Reconciliations
|
Diluted EPS to Adjusted EPS
(1)
(Unaudited)
|
For the Twelve Months Ended December 31,
|
||||||
2024
|
2023
|
$ Change
|
% Change
|
||||
Diluted EPS attributable to Mondelēz International (GAAP)
|
$
3.42
|
$
3.62
|
$
(0.20)
|
(5.5%)
|
|||
Simplify to Grow Program
(1)
|
0.09
|
0.08
|
0.01
|
||||
Intangible asset impairment charges
(3)
|
0.08
|
0.01
|
0.07
|
||||
Mark‑to‑market gains from derivatives
(2)
|
(0.32)
|
(0.12)
|
(0.20)
|
||||
Acquisition integration costs and contingent consideration
adjustments
(2)
|
(0.17)
|
0.14
|
(0.31)
|
||||
Divestiture‑related costs
(2)
|
—
|
0.04
|
(0.04)
|
||||
Gain on divestitures
(2)
|
—
|
(0.08)
|
0.08
|
||||
Operating results from divestitures
(2)
|
(0.07)
|
(0.17)
|
0.10
|
||||
European Commission legal matter
(4)
|
—
|
0.01
|
(0.01)
|
||||
ERP Systems Implementation costs
|
0.04
|
0.04
|
|||||
Remeasurement of net monetary position
(5)
|
0.02
|
0.07
|
(0.05)
|
||||
Impact from pension participation changes
(2)
|
0.01
|
0.01
|
—
|
||||
Initial impacts from enacted tax law changes
(6)
|
0.02
|
0.06
|
(0.04)
|
||||
Gain on marketable securities
(7)
|
—
|
(0.34)
|
0.34
|
||||
Loss/(gain) on equity method investment transactions
(7)
|
0.24
|
(0.25)
|
0.49
|
||||
Adjusted EPS (Non‑GAAP)
|
$
3.36
|
$
3.08
|
$
0.28
|
9.1%
|
|||
Currency-related items
|
0.12
|
–
|
0.12
|
||||
Adjusted EPS @ Constant FX (Non‑GAAP)
|
$
3.48
|
$
3.08
|
$
0.40
|
13.0%
|
Net Cash Provided by Operating Activities to Free Cash Flow
(In millions of U.S. dollars) (Unaudited)
|
For the Twelve Months
Ended December 31, 2024
|
|
Net Cash Provided by Operating Activities (GAAP)
|
$
4,910
|
|
Capital Expenditures
|
(1,387)
|
|
Free Cash Flow (Non‑GAAP)
|
$
3,523
|
142 | 2025 PROXY STATEMENT
|
![]() |
![]() |
2025 PROXY STATEMENT | 143
|
ANNEX B: MONDELĒZ INTERNATIONAL, INC. GLOBAL EMPLOYEE STOCK
PURCHASE MATCHING PLAN
|
144 | 2025 PROXY STATEMENT
|
![]() |
ANNEX B: MONDELĒZ INTERNATIONAL, INC. GLOBAL EMPLOYEE STOCK
PURCHASE MATCHING PLAN
|
![]() |
2025 PROXY STATEMENT | 145
|
ANNEX B: MONDELĒZ INTERNATIONAL, INC. GLOBAL EMPLOYEE STOCK
PURCHASE MATCHING PLAN
|
146 | 2025 PROXY STATEMENT
|
![]() |
ANNEX B: MONDELĒZ INTERNATIONAL, INC. GLOBAL EMPLOYEE STOCK
PURCHASE MATCHING PLAN
|
![]() |
2025 PROXY STATEMENT | 147
|
ANNEX B: MONDELĒZ INTERNATIONAL, INC. GLOBAL EMPLOYEE STOCK
PURCHASE MATCHING PLAN
|
148 | 2025 PROXY STATEMENT
|
![]() |
ANNEX B: MONDELĒZ INTERNATIONAL, INC. GLOBAL EMPLOYEE STOCK
PURCHASE MATCHING PLAN
|
![]() |
2025 PROXY STATEMENT | 149
|
ANNEX B: MONDELĒZ INTERNATIONAL, INC. GLOBAL EMPLOYEE STOCK
PURCHASE MATCHING PLAN
|
150 | 2025 PROXY STATEMENT
|
![]() |
ANNEX B: MONDELĒZ INTERNATIONAL, INC. GLOBAL EMPLOYEE STOCK
PURCHASE MATCHING PLAN
|
![]() |
2025 PROXY STATEMENT | 151
|
ANNEX B: MONDELĒZ INTERNATIONAL, INC. GLOBAL EMPLOYEE STOCK
PURCHASE MATCHING PLAN
|
152 | 2025 PROXY STATEMENT
|
![]() |
ANNEX B: MONDELĒZ INTERNATIONAL, INC. GLOBAL EMPLOYEE STOCK
PURCHASE MATCHING PLAN
|
![]() |
2025 PROXY STATEMENT | 153
|
ANNEX B: MONDELĒZ INTERNATIONAL, INC. GLOBAL EMPLOYEE STOCK
PURCHASE MATCHING PLAN
|
154 | 2025 PROXY STATEMENT
|
![]() |
ANNEX B: MONDELĒZ INTERNATIONAL, INC. GLOBAL EMPLOYEE STOCK
PURCHASE MATCHING PLAN
|
![]() |
2025 PROXY STATEMENT | 155
|
ANNEX B: MONDELĒZ INTERNATIONAL, INC. GLOBAL EMPLOYEE STOCK
PURCHASE MATCHING PLAN
|
156 | 2025 PROXY STATEMENT
|
![]() |
ANNEX B: MONDELĒZ INTERNATIONAL, INC. GLOBAL EMPLOYEE STOCK
PURCHASE MATCHING PLAN
|
![]() |
2025 PROXY STATEMENT | 157
|
ANNEX B: MONDELĒZ INTERNATIONAL, INC. GLOBAL EMPLOYEE STOCK
PURCHASE MATCHING PLAN
|
158 | 2025 PROXY STATEMENT
|
![]() |
ANNEX B: MONDELĒZ INTERNATIONAL, INC. GLOBAL EMPLOYEE STOCK
PURCHASE MATCHING PLAN
|
![]() |
2025 PROXY STATEMENT | 159
|
ANNEX B: MONDELĒZ INTERNATIONAL, INC. GLOBAL EMPLOYEE STOCK
PURCHASE MATCHING PLAN
|
160 | 2025 PROXY STATEMENT
|
![]() |
ANNEX B: MONDELĒZ INTERNATIONAL, INC. GLOBAL EMPLOYEE STOCK
PURCHASE MATCHING PLAN
|
No information found
* THE VALUE IS THE MARKET VALUE AS OF THE LAST DAY OF THE QUARTER FOR WHICH THE 13F WAS FILED.
FUND | NUMBER OF SHARES | VALUE ($) | PUT OR CALL |
---|
DIRECTORS | AGE | BIO | OTHER DIRECTOR MEMBERSHIPS |
---|
No information found
Customers
No Suppliers Found
Price
Yield
Owner | Position | Direct Shares | Indirect Shares |
---|