UNIFIRST CORP (UNF)

Sector: Industrials

    Home/Companies/UNF/Annual Meeting

2025 Annual Meeting Analysis

UNIFIRST CORP · Meeting: May 21, 2025

Policy v1.1high 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 three Class B Directors identified in the proxy statement

3 FOR
✓ FOR
John-Paul E. Besong

Director since 2013 with strong technology and business expertise relevant to the insurance industry; attended all meetings; no overboarding, independence, or TSR trigger concerns (3-year stock return of +47.9% trails XLI by only 30.1pp, well below the 65pp threshold required to trigger a vote against).

✓ FOR
Matthew R. Foran

Director since 2022 (fewer than 36 months tenure); brings deep insurance technology and private equity investment experience; exempt from TSR trigger as tenure is under 24 months at the start of the 3-year measurement window, and in any event the 30.1pp gap is far below the 65pp ETF fallback threshold.

✓ FOR
James W. Noyce

Director since 2009 with extensive insurance, accounting, and actuarial credentials including CPA and audit committee financial expert designation; no overboarding concern (serves on one other public company board); 3-year TSR gap of 30.1pp versus XLI is well below the 65pp threshold needed to trigger a vote against.

All three Class B nominees pass every policy screen: the 3-year price return of +47.9% trails the XLI industrials ETF (fallback benchmark, no named peer group used) by only 30.1 percentage points, well below the 65pp threshold that applies when absolute TSR is strongly positive; no director is overboarded; all attended at least 75% of meetings; none has a disqualifying familial or independence issue; and each brings relevant insurance, technology, finance, or governance experience.

Say on Pay

✓ FOR

CEO

Steven S. Sintros

Total Comp

$3,886,540

Prior Support

97%%

The CEO received total compensation of approximately $3.6 million in 2024, with base salary of $800,000 representing only about 22% of total pay — well within the policy's requirement that fixed pay not exceed 40% of total compensation, meaning the majority is performance-linked. Annual cash bonuses are tied to five specific, measurable financial metrics (adjusted return-on-equity, written premium growth, net adjusted loss ratio, underwriting expense ratio, and core earnings), and long-term equity awards split equally between time-vesting restricted stock units and performance stock units with a three-year performance period, reflecting a sound pay mix aligned with long-term shareholder interests. Prior-year advisory vote support was approximately 97%, well above the 70% threshold that would require visible remediation, and the company maintains a clawback policy compliant with Dodd-Frank rules.

Auditor Ratification

✓ FOR

Auditor

Ernst & Young LLP

Tenure

23 yrs

Audit Fees

$1,600,000

Non-Audit Fees

$350,892

Non-audit fees (audit-related fees of $29,832 plus tax fees of $321,060, totaling $350,892) represent approximately 21.9% of core audit fees of $1,600,000, comfortably below the 50% threshold that would raise independence concerns; EY's tenure of approximately 23 years is below the 25-year threshold that would require a compelling justification; no material restatements were disclosed; and EY is a Big 4 firm appropriate for the company's size and complexity.

Overall Assessment

The 2025 United Fire Group annual meeting presents three standard proposals — director elections, auditor ratification, and an advisory say-on-pay vote — all of which pass the applicable policy screens and receive a FOR determination. No stockholder proposals appear on the ballot, and no material governance concerns (overboarding, independence failures, excessive auditor fees, or pay-for-performance misalignment) were identified across any proposal.

Filing date: April 8, 2025·Policy v1.1·high confidence