SAUL CENTERS REIT INC (BFS)
Sector: Real Estate
2026 Annual Meeting Analysis
SAUL CENTERS REIT INC · Meeting: May 8, 2026
Directors FOR
3
Directors AGAINST
1
Say on Pay
FOR
Auditor
FOR
Director Elections
Election of Four Directors to Serve Until the Annual Meeting of Stockholders in 2029
Against Analysis
Mr. Saul is the founder, Chairman, and CEO whose son, daughter, and granddaughter all serve on the same board — a concentration of family members in governance roles that creates a significant independence concern under our policy, which calls for a AGAINST vote when a director has a familial relationship to senior management; the TSR trigger does not fire (BFS 3-year return of +7.5% trails ^FNER by only 5.6 percentage points, well below the 50-point threshold for a low-positive-return company), so the sole basis for the AGAINST vote is the family-dominated governance structure.
For Analysis
Mr. Pearson joined the board in May 2023, which is within 24 months of the meeting date, making him exempt from the TSR underperformance trigger; he has extensive real estate, finance, and operational experience relevant to BFS's business.
BFS's 3-year price return of +7.5% trails the ^FNER benchmark by only 5.6 percentage points, far below the 50-point threshold required to trigger a AGAINST vote for a low-positive-return company, and Mr. Platts brings relevant finance and governance experience including serving as an audit committee financial expert.
Ms. Walker is a new nominee with no prior board tenure at BFS, so no TSR trigger applies, and she brings legal, regulatory, and governance experience that adds relevant expertise to the board.
Three of the four nominees pass all policy screens and receive a FOR vote; B. Francis Saul II receives an AGAINST vote because his son, daughter, and granddaughter all serve alongside him on the same board, creating a family-dominated governance structure that our policy flags as a material independence concern — the TSR performance trigger does not apply since the stock's 3-year underperformance versus ^FNER (5.6 percentage points) is far below the 50-point threshold required for a low-positive-return company.
Say on Pay
✓ FORCEO
B. Francis Saul II
Total Comp
$1,262,364
Prior Support
94.8%%
The CEO's total reported compensation of $1,262,364 is modest for a retail REIT of BFS's size, and the prior say-on-pay vote received 94.8% support, well above the 70% threshold that would require a mandatory response; however, the proxy discloses that annual bonuses are determined largely on subjective factors rather than pre-set measurable targets, which weakens the pay-for-performance link, and the CEO's base salary of $125,000 is unusually low (reflecting his partial-time allocation to other Saul Organization entities), making his pay structure atypical but not abusive. On balance, the overall program passes the policy screens — pay levels are not excessive, equity awards include both time-vested and FFO-based performance conditions, a clawback policy is in place, and strong prior shareholder support indicates no urgent concern — so a FOR vote is warranted.
Auditor Ratification
✓ FORAuditor
Deloitte & Touche LLP
Tenure
N/A
Audit Fees
$912,700
Non-Audit Fees
$84,900
Non-audit fees (tax fees of $82,900 plus other fees of $2,000 = $84,900) represent approximately 9.3% of audit fees ($912,700), well below the 50% threshold that would raise independence concerns; Deloitte is a Big 4 firm appropriate for a company of BFS's size; auditor tenure is not disclosed in the proxy so the tenure trigger cannot fire, and no material restatements are noted.
Overall Assessment
The 2026 BFS annual meeting presents three standard proposals; the main governance concern is the unusually concentrated family presence on the board — the founder-CEO, his son, daughter, and granddaughter all serve together — which drives an AGAINST vote on B. Francis Saul II's director election, while the auditor ratification and say-on-pay proposals both pass policy screens and receive FOR votes. Stock performance does not trigger any additional AGAINST votes, as BFS's 3-year return trails the ^FNER benchmark by only 5.6 percentage points, well short of the 50-point threshold applicable to low-positive-return companies.