KEYSIGHT TECHNOLOGIES INC (KEYS)

Sector: Information Technology

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2026 Annual Meeting Analysis

KEYSIGHT TECHNOLOGIES INC · Meeting: March 19, 2026

Policy v0.7high confidenceView Filing ↗
For informational purposes only. This AI-generated analysis applies a published voting policy to publicly available proxy filings. It does not constitute investment advice, proxy voting advice, or a solicitation of any kind. AI analysis may be incomplete or inaccurate — always review the actual filing and make your own independent decision.

Directors FOR

3

Directors AGAINST

0

Say on Pay

FOR

Auditor

FOR

Director Elections

Election of Directors to New Three-Year Terms Expiring in 2029

3 FOR
✓ FOR
Satish C. Dhanasekaran

CEO and director since May 2022; Keysight's 3-year total shareholder return of +78.5% outperforms the peer group median of +33.0% by approximately +45.5 percentage points, which does not reach the 50-percentage-point underperformance threshold required to trigger a No vote under the strong-positive-TSR tier; no overboarding, attendance, or independence concerns identified.

✓ FOR
Richard P. Hamada

Independent director since October 2014 with extensive technology and electronics industry leadership experience; Keysight's 3-year TSR outperforms the peer group median — the underperformance trigger does not apply; no overboarding, attendance, or independence concerns identified.

✓ FOR
Kevin A. Stephens

Independent director and Audit and Finance Committee Chair since March 2022 with relevant technology and business services leadership background; Keysight's 3-year TSR outperforms the peer group median — the underperformance trigger does not apply; no overboarding, attendance, or independence concerns identified.

All three nominees are recommended FOR. Keysight's 3-year total shareholder return of +78.5% outperforms the compensation peer group median of +33.0% by +45.5 percentage points. Under the policy's strong-positive-TSR tier (absolute 3-year TSR above +20%), a No vote on performance grounds requires underperformance of 50 percentage points or more — this threshold is not met. No overboarding, attendance failures, independence issues, or familial relationship concerns were identified for any nominee.

Say on Pay

✓ FOR

CEO

Satish C. Dhanasekaran

Total Comp

$18,020,109

Prior Support

90%%

The prior Say on Pay vote received 90% support, well above the 70% threshold that would require demonstrated changes. The CEO's total reported compensation of approximately $18.0 million is sizeable for a large-cap technology company at Keysight's market cap, but the compensation structure is strongly performance-oriented: approximately 94% of the CEO's pay is variable and at-risk, with long-term equity awards making up 84% of total target pay — well above the policy's 50-60% minimum for variable compensation. The pay-for-performance link is meaningful: the FY2023–FY2025 performance stock award based on total shareholder return paid out at 0% (Keysight's TSR was 74.5 percentage points below the S&P 500 over that period), demonstrating that below-market stock performance directly reduced executive payouts, while the operating margin component paid out at roughly 100% reflecting in-line operational execution; the company also discloses robust clawback policies covering both fault-based and mandatory restatement scenarios.

Auditor Ratification

✓ FOR

Auditor

PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP

Tenure

N/A

Audit Fees

$7,728,600

Non-Audit Fees

$74,927

Non-audit fees (tax fees of $60,802, audit-related fees of $11,000, and other fees of $3,125, totaling approximately $74,927) represent less than 1% of audit fees of $7,728,600, well below the 50% threshold that would raise independence concerns; PwC is a Big 4 firm appropriate for a company of Keysight's size and complexity; auditor tenure is not disclosed in the proxy so the tenure trigger cannot be applied, and no material financial restatements were identified.

Stockholder Proposals

2 proposals submitted by shareholders

Proposal 4

Approve an Amendment to Keysight's Amended and Restated Certificate of Incorporation to Declassify the Board of Directors

✓ FOR
Filed by:Board of DirectorsOtherCharter Amendment
Board recommends: FOR
board-proposed governance improvementmoves from classified to annual director elections

This is a board-proposed charter amendment that would phase out Keysight's classified board structure — under which directors currently serve staggered 3-year terms — and transition to annual elections for all directors beginning at the 2027 annual meeting. Eliminating a classified board is a mainstream governance improvement that gives shareholders more frequent and direct accountability over every director, which is broadly recognized as a shareholder-friendly change. The policy supports charter amendments that move the governance baseline in a more shareholder-friendly direction, and this proposal clearly does so.

Proposal 5

Advisory Vote on Stockholder Proposal: Shareholder Ability to Call for a Special Shareholder Meeting

✓ FOR
Filed by:John CheveddenIndividual ActivistGovernance
Board recommends: AGAINST
credible governance activist filer (John Chevedden)governance structural ask — special meeting rightcurrently no shareholder right to call special meetings at Keysight10% threshold is below the 15-25% market norm but represents a genuine improvement from zero shareholder right

John Chevedden is a well-known individual governance activist with a strong track record of submitting legitimate governance proposals focused on shareholder rights — our policy treats such filers seriously. The ask is a governance structural change: granting shareholders who collectively own 10% of shares the right to call a special meeting. Currently, Keysight shareholders have no such right — special meetings can only be called by the board, the chairman, or the CEO with board concurrence — which means shareholders have no mechanism to raise urgent matters between annual meetings without board permission. The board argues that a 10% threshold is below the roughly 80% market-practice floor of 15% or above among S&P 500 companies with this right, and that its existing governance practices are sufficient, but the more important comparison is against the current baseline of zero shareholder ability to call special meetings: any threshold represents a meaningful improvement in shareholder rights, and the board's defense of the status quo is not compelling given that the company simultaneously proposes to declassify its board in Proposal 4, signaling openness to governance reform.

Overall Assessment

The 2026 Keysight ballot covers five proposals: electing three directors, ratifying PwC as auditor, approving executive compensation, declassifying the board, and a shareholder special-meeting-right proposal. We recommend FOR on all proposals except the board's opposition to the special meeting right — we recommend FOR on Proposal 5 because granting shareholders any ability to call special meetings is a clear improvement over the current structure where only the board controls that right, and the filer is a credible governance activist.

Filing date: January 26, 2026·Policy v0.7·high confidence

Compensation Peer Group

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