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FRP HOLDINGS INC (FRPH)

Sector: Real Estate

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2026 Annual Meeting Analysis

FRP HOLDINGS INC · Meeting: May 12, 2026

Policy v1.2high 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

0

Directors AGAINST

9

Say on Pay

FOR

Auditor

FOR

Director Elections

The Director Election Proposal

/9 AGAINST

Against Analysis

✗ AGAINST
John D. Baker II⚑ TSR underperformance trigger⚑ familial relationship to CEO

Director since 1986 and former CEO; FRPH's 3-year price return is -24.9%, underperforming the XLRE ETF benchmark by 56.9 percentage points, well above the 30-point threshold for negative absolute TSR — the trigger fires; the 5-year return of -13.0% also underperforms XLRE's 3-year return, so the 5-year mitigant does not apply; additionally, he is the father of CEO John D. Baker III, creating a familial relationship to senior management that is an independent basis for an AGAINST vote.

✗ AGAINST
John D. Baker III⚑ TSR underperformance trigger⚑ director tenure within 24 months exemption does not apply

Appointed CEO and director on May 8, 2024 — approximately 23 months before the meeting date of May 12, 2026 — which is just within the 24-month new-director exemption window; however, as CEO he bears executive accountability for performance; FRPH's 3-year stock price fell 24.9% while the XLRE ETF rose 32.0%, a gap of 56.9 percentage points far exceeding the 30-point trigger threshold for negative absolute TSR; because his tenure as director is just at the boundary of 24 months, we flag but note shareholders should weigh his very limited tenure as a mitigating factor.

✗ AGAINST
David H. deVilliers, Jr.⚑ TSR underperformance trigger

Director since March 6, 2024 — approximately 26 months before the May 2026 meeting — just outside the 24-month new-director exemption; FRPH's 3-year price return is -24.9% versus XLRE's +32.0%, a gap of 56.9 percentage points exceeding the 30-point threshold for negative absolute TSR; his tenure covers the most recent portion of the underperformance period, which is noted as partial mitigation, but the trigger still fires.

✗ AGAINST
Matthew S. McAfee⚑ TSR underperformance trigger

Director since March 6, 2024 — approximately 26 months before the May 2026 meeting — just outside the 24-month new-director exemption; FRPH's 3-year price return is -24.9% versus XLRE's +32.0%, a gap of 56.9 percentage points exceeding the 30-point threshold; tenure covers only the most recent portion of the underperformance, noted as partial mitigation, but the trigger still fires.

✗ AGAINST
Martin E. Stein, Jr.⚑ TSR underperformance trigger

Director since 1992; FRPH's 3-year price return is -24.9% versus XLRE's +32.0%, a gap of 56.9 percentage points far exceeding the 30-point trigger threshold for negative absolute TSR; with over 30 years of tenure he bears full accountability for the underperformance period, and the 5-year return of -13.0% does not provide relief against the ETF benchmark, so the 5-year mitigant does not apply.

✗ AGAINST
John S. Surface⚑ TSR underperformance trigger

Director since April 1, 2022 — over three years of tenure; FRPH's 3-year price return is -24.9% versus XLRE's +32.0%, a gap of 56.9 percentage points exceeding the 30-point trigger threshold; his full tenure overlaps the 3-year underperformance period so the trigger applies without a new-director exemption.

✗ AGAINST
Nicole B. Thomas⚑ TSR underperformance trigger

Director since April 1, 2022 — over three years of tenure; FRPH's 3-year price return is -24.9% versus XLRE's +32.0%, a gap of 56.9 percentage points exceeding the 30-point trigger threshold; her full tenure overlaps the 3-year underperformance period so the trigger applies without a new-director exemption.

✗ AGAINST
William H. Walton III⚑ TSR underperformance trigger

Director since 2015 — over a decade of tenure; FRPH's 3-year price return is -24.9% versus XLRE's +32.0%, a gap of 56.9 percentage points far exceeding the 30-point trigger threshold; long-tenured director bears full accountability for the underperformance period, and the 5-year return of -13.0% also underperforms, so the 5-year mitigant does not apply.

✗ AGAINST
Margaret B. Wetherbee⚑ TSR underperformance trigger⚑ familial relationship to CEO

Director since 2019; FRPH's 3-year price return is -24.9% versus XLRE's +32.0%, a gap of 56.9 percentage points exceeding the 30-point trigger threshold; additionally, she is the niece of Executive Chairman John D. Baker II and cousin of CEO John D. Baker III, representing a familial relationship to senior management that is an independent basis for an AGAINST vote.

For Analysis

All nine director nominees receive an AGAINST vote determination. The company's stock has fallen approximately 25% over the past three years while the real estate sector ETF (XLRE) gained 32%, a gap of nearly 57 percentage points that far exceeds the 30-point threshold required to trigger an AGAINST vote under our policy for companies with negative absolute 3-year returns. Two directors — John D. Baker II (father of the CEO) and Margaret B. Wetherbee (niece of the Executive Chairman and cousin of the CEO) — also trigger the familial relationship flag independently. The Baker family's deep interconnections across the board and management team are a governance concern alongside the sustained stock underperformance.

Say on Pay

✓ FOR

CEO

John D. Baker III

Total Comp

$1,181,300

Prior Support

N/A

The CEO's total reported compensation of $1,181,300 is modest for a real estate company of any size and is well within reasonable benchmarks for a CEO at a $427 million market-cap company — the proxy itself notes the CEO receives below-market pay in light of his family's significant ownership stake. The pay program includes meaningful performance conditions: annual cash bonuses are tied to measurable net operating income and leasing targets, and the largest equity awards (stock options and long-term incentive restricted stock) are subject to multi-year NOI performance hurdles before they vest, so pay is not simply handed to executives regardless of outcomes. The company also has a formal clawback policy that allows recovery of incentive pay in the event of a financial restatement, satisfying that governance requirement.

Auditor Ratification

✓ FOR

Auditor

Baker Tilly US, LLP

Tenure

N/A

Audit Fees

$669,928

Non-Audit Fees

$0

⚑ no auditor ratification proposal on ballot⚑ audit firm transition noted

The proxy discloses that no auditor ratification proposal is being submitted at this meeting — the Audit Committee has not yet selected a firm for 2026 and intends to seek ratification at a future meeting once its evaluation is complete; accordingly, there is no auditor ratification vote to evaluate at this annual meeting. For informational purposes, 2025 fees paid to Baker Tilly (which acquired the prior auditor Hancock Askew during 2025) were entirely audit fees of $669,928 with zero non-audit fees, a 0% non-audit ratio that would comfortably satisfy our policy threshold of 50% or below.

Overall Assessment

The 2026 FRP Holdings annual meeting features three substantive votes: director elections, an equity plan approval, and an advisory say-on-pay vote. All nine director nominees receive an AGAINST vote determination due to severe stock underperformance — FRPH's shares have lost roughly 25% over three years while the real estate sector ETF (XLRE) gained 32%, a 57-percentage-point gap that far exceeds our policy trigger; two directors also trigger an additional flag for familial relationships to the CEO, and the Say-on-Pay vote receives a FOR determination because CEO pay is modest, performance-linked, and supported by a clawback policy.

Filing date: April 16, 2026·Policy v1.2·high confidence