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2026 Annual Meeting Analysis

HOME BANCSHARES INC · Meeting: April 16, 2026

Policy v1.2medium 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

11

Directors AGAINST

3

Say on Pay

FOR

Auditor

FOR

Director Elections

Election of Directors

11 FOR/3 AGAINST

Against Analysis

✗ AGAINST
John W. Allisonfamilial relationship to directorcombined chairman ceo concentration

Mr. Allison is the father of fellow director John W. Allison II and the brother-in-law of fellow director and executive officer Donna J. Townsell; the presence of two close family members on the same board — one of whom is also a senior executive — creates a concentration of related-party influence at the top of the board that triggers the familial relationship concern under our policy, which flags directors with family ties to senior management.

✗ AGAINST
John W. Allison IIfamilial relationship to ceonew director limited experience

John W. Allison II is the son of Chairman and CEO John W. Allison and the nephew of executive director Donna J. Townsell; our policy requires a vote against directors with familial relationships to senior management, as such relationships raise concerns about the board's ability to provide independent oversight of management, regardless of the individual's personal qualifications.

✗ AGAINST
Donna J. Townsellfamilial relationship to ceonon independent executive director

Ms. Townsell is the sister-in-law of Chairman and CEO John W. Allison and the aunt of fellow director John W. Allison II; she also serves as a senior executive officer of the company, making her a non-independent insider whose familial relationship to the CEO and co-director compounds the concentration of related-party influence at the board level that our policy is designed to guard against.

For Analysis

✓ FOR
Brian S. Davis

Mr. Davis is a CPA and the company's CFO with over 30 years of banking experience; no overboarding, attendance, or TSR concerns apply, and the 3-year TSR gap versus QABA is only -6.0 percentage points, far below the 65-point threshold required to trigger a vote against.

✓ FOR
Milburn Adams

Mr. Adams is an independent director with 20+ years of banking board experience; all attendance, overboarding, and TSR screens pass, and no disqualifying relationships are present.

✓ FOR
Robert H. Adcock, Jr.

Mr. Adcock is an independent co-founder with deep banking and regulatory experience; all policy screens pass and the TSR gap versus QABA is well within the 65-point threshold.

✓ FOR
Mike D. Beebe

Mr. Beebe is an independent director with extensive public leadership experience; all attendance, overboarding, and TSR screens pass.

✓ FOR
Jack E. Engelkes

Mr. Engelkes is a CPA serving as independent Vice Chairman and Audit Committee Chair with over 30 years of combined board tenure at the company and its predecessor; all policy screens pass.

✓ FOR
Karen E. Garrett

Ms. Garrett is an independent CPA and Managing Partner with audit and financial expertise; all attendance, overboarding, and TSR screens pass.

✓ FOR
James G. Hinkle

Mr. Hinkle is an independent director with over 40 years of banking experience; all policy screens pass and no disqualifying factors are present.

✓ FOR
Alex R. Lieblong

Mr. Lieblong is an independent director with extensive financial services and public company board experience; all policy screens pass.

✓ FOR
Thomas J. Longe

Mr. Longe is an independent director with banking and real estate development experience including prior CEO tenure at a public bank holding company; all policy screens pass.

✓ FOR
Jim Rankin, Jr.

Mr. Rankin is an independent director with legal, real estate, and banking experience serving as Nominating Committee Chair; all policy screens pass.

✓ FOR
Larry W. Ross

Mr. Ross is an independent director appointed in January 2021 with broad business and community leadership experience; all policy screens pass.

The 14-director slate is predominantly independent and experienced in banking and finance, with strong TSR performance versus the QABA community bank benchmark (only -6.0pp gap against a 65pp threshold). However, three directors — John W. Allison (CEO), John W. Allison II (CEO's son), and Donna J. Townsell (CEO's sister-in-law and executive officer) — trigger our familial-relationship policy concern due to an unusual concentration of close family ties to the CEO within a single board, warranting AGAINST votes on those three individuals.

Say on Pay

✓ FOR

CEO

John W. Allison

Total Comp

$7,221,420

Prior Support

94.4%%

CEO John W. Allison received total compensation of approximately $7.2 million in 2025, a meaningful amount but one where the majority consists of equity awards (including performance-based restricted shares tied to 3-year relative financial metrics against a peer group of banks with $10–$50 billion in assets), which is consistent with a pay-mix weighted toward variable, at-risk compensation. The company achieved record net income, return on assets of 2.10%, and all performance targets under the Executive Incentive Plan were met or exceeded, demonstrating strong pay-for-performance alignment. Prior-year shareholder support was 94.4%, well above the 70% threshold that would require scrutiny, a meaningful clawback policy is in place, and no red flags around pay mix, excessive fixed compensation, or misaligned incentive metrics were identified.

Auditor Ratification

✓ FOR

Auditor

Forvis Mazars, LLP

Tenure

N/A

Audit Fees

N/A

Non-Audit Fees

N/A

tenure not disclosedfee data not extractable from provided text

Auditor tenure and fee detail were not fully extractable from the provided filing text; under our policy, when tenure cannot be confirmed we do not assume a negative vote and instead default to FOR. Forvis Mazars is a large national accounting firm appropriate for a $5.2 billion market cap regional bank, and no material restatements or other disqualifying factors are evident from the filing.

Overall Assessment

Home BancShares' 2026 annual meeting presents a largely clean ballot with strong company financial performance, well-structured executive pay, and a community bank ETF (QABA) TSR gap that is far below the threshold needed to trigger director votes based on stock performance. The primary governance concern is the unusual concentration of close family relationships at the board level — the CEO's son, the CEO's sister-in-law (who is also an executive officer), and the CEO himself collectively create an interconnected family bloc that triggers our familial-relationship policy, resulting in AGAINST votes on those three directors while the remaining eleven nominees receive FOR votes.

Filing date: February 27, 2026·Policy v1.2·medium confidence