STOCK TITAN

Descartes Systems Group (NASDAQ: DSGX) plans 2026 virtual AGM, rights plan and Say-on-Pay votes

Filing Impact
(Neutral)
Filing Sentiment
(Neutral)
Form Type
6-K

Rhea-AI Filing Summary

The Descartes Systems Group Inc. is holding a virtual annual meeting of shareholders on June 11, 2026 at 10:00 a.m. Eastern time to conduct key governance business. Shareholders will vote on electing nine directors, re-appointing KPMG LLP as auditors, continuing and amending the shareholder rights plan, and approving an advisory “Say-on-Pay” resolution on executive compensation. The meeting will be online-only via webcast, with voting eligibility based on shareholders of record at the close of business on April 27, 2026. As of that record date, 85,927,027 common shares were issued and outstanding, each carrying one vote, with a quorum requirement of at least two persons representing 25% of shares.

Positive

  • None.

Negative

  • None.
Meeting date and time June 11, 2026, 10:00 a.m. ET Annual meeting of shareholders held as virtual-only webcast
Record date shares outstanding 85,927,027 common shares Issued and outstanding as of record date April 27, 2026
Quorum threshold 25% of voting shares Minimum represented at opening of meeting with at least two persons
Audit fees 2026 $957,095 Audit fees paid to KPMG LLP for fiscal year ended January 31, 2026
Total audit-related fees 2026 $2,430 Audit-related assurance services for fiscal year ended January 31, 2026
Board meetings in period 14 meetings Board met 12 times in year ended January 31, 2026 plus 2 times to April 27, 2026
Audit Committee meetings in period 9 meetings Seven in year ended January 31, 2026 and two from February 1 to April 27, 2026
Prior Say-on-Pay support 96.46% of votes Support for Say-on-Pay resolution on June 12, 2025 (74,071,830 shares)
notice and access regulatory
"the Corporation is using “notice and access” to deliver proxy-related materials such as this Circular"
Notice and access is a delivery method regulators allow for sending shareholders a brief paper notice that tells them where to find full meeting materials and voting forms online instead of mailing long paper packets. Investors can read documents, cast votes, or request a paper copy; it speeds delivery and cuts costs like receiving a postcard with a website link instead of a thick booklet. It matters because it affects how quickly and easily investors get information and vote, and may influence participation and record-keeping.
Shareholder Rights Plan regulatory
"Continuation, Amendment and Restatement of Shareholder Rights Plan"
A shareholder rights plan is a board-approved defense that makes an unsolicited takeover harder by triggering measures—such as issuing extra shares or special rights—if one investor accumulates a large stake without board approval. Think of it as a temporary roadblock that protects existing management and gives the company time to seek better offers. It matters to investors because it can affect share price, takeover chances, and whether a competing buyer can quickly buy control.
Say-on-Pay regulatory
"Advisory Vote on Executive Compensation (Say-on-Pay Vote)"
A say-on-pay is a shareholder vote that gives investors a chance to approve or disapprove a company’s executive compensation packages, typically held at annual meetings. It matters because the vote signals investor satisfaction with how leaders are paid—like customers rating how well managers are rewarded—and can push boards to change pay plans, reducing governance risk and affecting investor confidence and stock value even though the vote is usually advisory rather than legally binding.
Advance Notice Provisions regulatory
"The Corporation’s by-laws provide for advance notice of nominations of directors (“Advance Notice Provisions”)"
Advance notice provisions are rules in a company’s bylaws that require shareholders or potential board candidates to give written notice — by a set deadline — before proposing agenda items or nominating directors for a shareholder meeting. Like an RSVP and agenda deadline for a meeting, they help the company plan and prevent last-minute surprises; for investors, they shape the timing and feasibility of shareholder campaigns and influence how quickly governance changes can occur.
non-objecting beneficial owners regulatory
"Non-registered shareholders who have not objected to their Intermediary disclosing certain ownership information about them to the Corporation are referred to as non-objecting beneficial owners"
Non-objecting beneficial owners are individual or institutional shareholders who hold stock through a broker or bank and have allowed that intermediary to share their name and contact details with the company that issued the shares. This matters to investors because it lets companies contact those shareholders directly about votes, proxy materials, tender offers or corporate updates, which can speed communication and influence participation much like a sender getting permission to mail you directly rather than through a forwarding service.
Risk Management Framework financial
"a framework for risk management (the “Risk Management Framework”) that includes risk identification, risk assessment/measurement"
UNITED STATES
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
Washington, D.C. 20549
 
FORM 6-K
 
REPORT OF FOREIGN PRIVATE ISSUER
PURSUANT TO RULE 13a-16 OR 15d-16 UNDER
THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934
 
 
For the month of May 2026
 
Commission File Number:  000-29970
 
 
DESCARTES SYSTEMS GROUP INC
(Translation of registrant’s name into English)
 
120 Randall Drive
Waterloo, Ontario
Canada N2V 1C6
(Address of principal executive office)

Indicate by check mark whether the registrant files or will file annual reports under cover of Form 20-F or Form 40-F.
Form 20-F [ ] Form 40-F [x]



The attached 2026 Annual General Meeting Circular is furnished herewith as Exhibit 99.1.


SIGNATURES

Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, the registrant has duly caused this report to be signed on its behalf by the undersigned, thereunto duly authorized.

THE DESCARTES SYSTEMS GROUP INC.
 
(Registrant)
 
 
By:
/s/ Peter V. Nguyen                    
Name:
Peter V. Nguyen
Title:
General Counsel

Date:  May 5, 2026
 
 
 
 

EXHIBITS

 

Exhibit No.
Description
 
 
99.1
2026 Annual General Meeting Circular
101 
Interactive Data File (formatted in Inline XBRL) 
 


Exhibit 99.1





The Descartes Systems Group Inc.


Annual Meeting of Shareholders

to be held on

Thursday, June 11th, 2026









THE DESCARTES SYSTEMS GROUP INC.
Notice of Annual Meeting of Shareholders (“Notice of Meeting”)
Thursday, June 11th, 2026

NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN THAT the Annual Meeting (the “Meeting”) of holders of common shares (“Common Shares”) of The Descartes Systems Group Inc. (the “Corporation”) will be held on Thursday, June 11th, 2026, at 10:00 a.m. (Eastern time) by way of an online virtual only meeting for the following purposes:


1.
to receive the consolidated financial statements of the Corporation for the fiscal year ended January 31st, 2026, together with the auditors’ report thereon;


2.
to elect directors;


3.
to re-appoint auditors;


4.
to consider and, if deemed advisable, approve the continuation, amendment and restatement of the Corporation’s Shareholder Rights Plan;


5.
to consider and, if deemed advisable, approve the advisory resolution to accept the approach to executive compensation disclosed herein; and


6.
to transact such further and other business as may properly come before the Meeting or any adjournment thereof.

All registered shareholders (as defined in the Management Information Circular accompanying this Notice of Meeting (the “Circular”) under the heading “Registered Shareholders”) and duly appointed proxyholders can attend the Meeting online at https://meetnow.global/MD9SP2A where they can participate, vote or submit questions during the Meeting’s live webcast. A shareholder of record at the close of business on April 27th, 2026 will be eligible to vote at the Meeting.

The specific details of the foregoing matters to be put before the Meeting are set forth in the Circular.

Registered shareholders who are unable to attend the Meeting online are requested to complete, date and sign the enclosed form of proxy and send it in the enclosed envelope or otherwise to the attention of the Proxy Department of Computershare Investor Services Inc. at 320 Bay Street, 14th Floor, Toronto, Ontario, Canada, M5H 4A6. To be effective, a proxy must be received by Computershare Investor Services Inc. not later than 10:00 a.m. (Eastern time) on June 9th, 2026 or, in the case of any adjournment of the Meeting, not less than 48 hours, Saturdays, Sundays and holidays excepted, prior to the time of the adjournment. The return of the form of proxy will not affect your right to vote at the Meeting online.

Non-registered shareholders who receive these materials through their broker or other intermediary are requested to follow the instructions for voting provided by their broker or intermediary, which may include the completion and delivery of a voting instruction form.
As permitted by the Canadian Securities Administrators and pursuant to an exemption from the management proxy solicitation requirement received from the Director appointed under the Canada Business Corporations Act, the Corporation is using “notice and access” to deliver proxy-related materials such as the Circular and the Corporation’s annual financial statements for the year ended January 31st, 2026 and associated management’s discussion and analysis (collectively, the “Meeting Materials”) to both registered and non-registered shareholders. Rather than receiving a paper copy of the Meeting Materials in the mail, shareholders will have access to them online at


www.envisionreports.com/TSCQ2026 or otherwise posted in the company's profile in www.sedarplus.ca. Shareholders will receive a notice package (the “Notice Package”) containing the information prescribed by applicable Canadian securities laws (including a description of the matters to be addressed at the Meeting and of the notice-and-access procedures to access the Meeting Materials), as well as a form of proxy (for registered shareholders) or a voting instruction form (for non-registered shareholders). Where a shareholder has previously consented to electronic delivery, the Notice Package will be sent to the shareholder electronically, and otherwise will be mailed to the shareholder.

Dated at Toronto, Ontario, Canada on April 27th, 2026.
BY ORDER OF THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS

“Peter Nguyen”

Peter Nguyen
Corporate Secretary



Table of Contents
SOLICITATION OF PROXIES
1
DELIVERY OF MEETING MATERIALS
1
APPOINTMENT OF PROXIES
2
ATTENDING THE MEETING
3
Registered Shareholders
3
Non-Registered Shareholders
3
Observing as a Guest
4
PARTICIPATING AT THE MEETING
4
Registered Shareholders and Duly Appointed Proxyholders
5
Non-Registered Shareholders
5
VOTING AT THE MEETING
6
REVOCATION OF PROXIES
6
VOTING OF PROXIES
6
VOTING OF SHARES
7
PRINCIPAL HOLDERS OF VOTING SHARES
7
CURRENCY
7
MATTERS TO BE ACTED UPON AT THE MEETING
7
1.   Presentation of Financial Statements
7
2.   Election of Directors
8
Director Nominees
8
Skill Set and Experience of Proposed Director Nominees
14
Board Independence
15
Independent Chair of the Board
15
Meetings of Independent Directors
15
Director Service on Other Boards
15
Director Meetings and Attendance
15
Director Tenure, Age and Board Renewal
16
Nomination of Directors
17
Orientation of New Directors
17
Continuing Education
18
Majority Voting for Director Nominees
20
Advance Notice Provisions
21
3.   Appointment of Auditors
21
Audit Fees
21

1

4.   Continuation, Amendment and Restatement of Shareholder Rights Plan
22
Background
22
Proposed Amendments
22
Summary of the Amended Rights Plan and Copy of the Amended Rights Plan Agreement
23
Objectives of the Amended Rights Plan
23
General Impact of the Amended Rights Plan
24
Vote Required
24
Recommendation of the Board of Directors
25
5.   Advisory Vote on Executive Compensation (Say-on-Pay Vote)
25
6.   Other Matters
25
STATEMENT OF CORPORATE GOVERNANCE PRACTICES
26
7.   Mandate of the Board of Directors
27
8.   Risk Oversight
27
9.   Corporate Responsibility
29
10.   Role of Board in Corporate Strategy
29
11.   Committee Charters and Position Descriptions
29
12.   Audit Committee
30
13.   Compensation Committee
32
14.   Corporate Governance Committee
32
15.   Nominating Committee
32
16.   Board of Directors, Committee and Individual Director Assessments
33
17.   Policy Regarding Human Capital Management
33
18.   Ethical Business Conduct
34
19.   Succession Planning
35
20.   Shareholder Engagement
36
21.   Corporate Responsibility
36
Organizational Governance
37
Impact Initiatives
37
Human Rights and Labour Practices
37
Business Conduct and Fair Dealing
38
STATEMENT OF COMPENSATION GOVERNANCE
39
Compensation Committee
39
Compensation Committee Report
40
Compensation Discussion and Analysis
40
Overview of Compensation Program
41
Executive Officer Compensation Philosophy
41

2

Compensation Objectives
42
Compensation Oversight Process
53
Use of Compensation Consultants
54
Role of Executive Officers in the Compensation Process
54
Compensation-related Risk Mitigation
55
Compensation Clawback Policies
56
Management Equity Ownership Policy
57
Total Value of Equity Holdings of NEOs
58
Hedging and Pledging Restrictions
59
Fiscal 2026 Compensation Structures of the NEOs
59
22.   Summary Compensation Table
65
23.   Outstanding NEO Option-based Awards and Share-based Awards
67
24.   NEO Incentive Plan Awards – Value Vested or Earned During Fiscal 2026
69
25.   NEO Option Exercises During Fiscal 2026
69
26.   CEO Five-Year Look Back Compensation
69
NEO Termination and Change of Control Benefits
70
Quantitative Estimates of Payments to NEOs upon Termination or Change of Control
72
Director Compensation
73
Compensation Policies
74
Fiscal 2026 Compensation for Directors
75
Outstanding Director Option-Based Awards and Share-based Awards
75
Director Incentive Plan Awards – Value Vested or Earned During Fiscal 2026
76
Director Equity Ownership Policy
76
SECURITY-BASED COMPENSATION PLANS
77
Common Shares Authorized for Issuance Under Equity Compensation Plans
77
1998 Stock Option Plan
77
PRSU Plan
80
Directors’ DSU Plan
84
Cash-settled RSU Plan
84
INDEBTEDNESS OF DIRECTORS AND EXECUTIVE OFFICERS
84
CERTAIN RELATIONSHIPS AND RELATED TRANSACTIONS
85
GENERAL
85
SHAREHOLDER PROPOSALS
85
APPROVAL BY THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS
85
SCHEDULE “A”  SUMMARY OF THE AMENDED AND RESTATED SHAREHOLDER RIGHTS PLAN
A-1

3

SCHEDULE “B”  THE DESCARTES SYSTEMS GROUP INC. MANDATE FOR THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS
B-1
SCHEDULE “C”  RECONCILIATION OF NON-GAAP FINANCIAL MEASURES - ADJUSTED EBITDA
C-1
SCHEDULE “D”  VIRTUAL MEETING USER GUIDE
D-1


4



THE DESCARTES SYSTEMS GROUP INC.



Management Information Circular

for the

Annual Meeting of Shareholders

Thursday, June 11th, 2026


SOLICITATION OF PROXIES
This management information circular (this “Circular”) is furnished in connection with the solicitation by and on behalf of management (the “Management”) of The Descartes Systems Group Inc. (the “Corporation”) of proxies to be used at the Corporation’s annual meeting (the “Meeting”) of holders of common shares of the Corporation (the “Common Shares”) to be held on Thursday, June 11th, 2026 at 10:00 a.m. (Eastern time) or at any adjournment(s) thereof. It is expected that the solicitation will be primarily by mail, but proxies may also be solicited personally, by advertisement, by telephone by employees of the Corporation without special compensation, or by the Corporation’s transfer agent, Computershare Investor Services Inc., at a nominal cost. The cost of solicitation will be borne by the Corporation.
DELIVERY OF MEETING MATERIALS
As permitted by the Canadian Securities Administrators and pursuant to an exemption from the management proxy solicitation requirement received from the Director appointed under the Canada Business Corporations Act (the “CBCA”), the Corporation is using “notice and access” to deliver proxy-related materials such as this Circular and the Corporation’s annual financial statements for the year ended January 31st, 2026 and associated management’s discussion and analysis (collectively, the “Meeting Materials”) to both registered and non-registered shareholders. Rather than receiving a paper copy of the Meeting Materials in the mail, shareholders will have access to them online. Shareholders will receive a notice package (the “Notice Package”) containing the information prescribed by applicable Canadian securities laws (including a description of the matters to be addressed at the Meeting and of the notice and access procedures for accessing the Meeting Materials, as well as a form of proxy (for registered shareholders) or a voting instruction form (for non-registered shareholders). Where a shareholder has previously consented to electronic delivery, the Notice Package will be sent to the shareholder electronically, and otherwise will be mailed to the shareholder. Shareholders are reminded to review the Circular prior to voting.

Electronic copies of the Meeting Materials are available online at www.envisionreports.com/TSCQ2026 and on SEDAR+ at www.sedarplus.ca.  All references to websites are for your information only. The information contained on or linked through any website is not part of, and is not incorporated by reference in, this Circular.
Shareholders may obtain paper copies of the Meeting Materials free of charge by following the instructions provided in the Notice Package. Shareholders may request paper copies of the Meeting Materials for up to one year from the date of that this Circular was filed on SEDAR+. In order to receive paper copies of the Meeting Materials in advance of the deadline for submission of voting instructions and the date of the Meeting, your request must be received by Computershare by May 27th, 2026. Please note that if you request a paper copy of the Meeting Materials, you will not receive a new form of proxy
1


or voting instruction form, and you should therefore retain the forms included in the Notice Package in order to vote.
APPOINTMENT OF PROXIES
The persons specified in the enclosed form of proxy are officers of the Corporation. A shareholder has the right to appoint as a proxyholder a person or company (who need not be a shareholder of the Corporation) other than the persons designated by Management of the Corporation in the enclosed form of proxy (the “Management Appointees”) to attend and act on the shareholder’s behalf at the Meeting or at any adjournment(s) thereof. Such right may be exercised by inserting the name of the person or company in the blank space provided in the enclosed form of proxy or by completing another form of proxy.

A proxy can be submitted by a registered shareholder to Computershare Trust Company of Canada / Computershare Investor Services Inc. (“Computershare”) either in person, or by mail or courier, to 320 Bay Street, 14th Floor, Toronto, Ontario M5H 4A6, or via the internet at www.investorvote.com. The proxy must be deposited with Computershare by no later than 10:00 a.m. Eastern time on June 9th, 2026, or if the Meeting is adjourned or postponed, not less than 48 hours, excluding Saturdays, Sundays and statutory holidays, before the commencement of such adjourned or postponed Meeting. If a shareholder who has submitted a proxy attends the Meeting via the webcast and has accepted the terms and conditions when entering the Meeting online, any votes cast by such shareholder on a ballot will be counted and the submitted proxy will be disregarded.

Registered Shareholders
A person or company whose name appears on the books and records of the Corporation as a holder of Common Shares is a registered shareholder.

A registered shareholder may vote Common Shares owned by it at the Meeting in one of two ways – either in by themselves by participating in the Meeting as set out below or by proxy.

A registered shareholder who does not wish to attend the Meeting or does not wish to vote should properly complete and deliver the enclosed form of proxy, and the Common Shares represented by the shareholder’s proxy will be voted or withheld from voting in accordance with the instructions indicated on the form of proxy, on any ballot that may be called at the Meeting or any adjournment(s) thereof.

Non-Registered Shareholders
A non-registered shareholder is a beneficial owner of Common Shares whose shares are registered in the name of an intermediary (such as a bank, trust company, securities dealer or broker, or a clearing agency in which an intermediary participates).

Non-registered shareholders will typically be given the ability to provide voting instructions in one of the following two ways.

Usually, a non-registered shareholder will be given a voting instruction form which must be completed and signed by the non-registered shareholder in accordance with the instructions provided by the intermediary. In this case, a non-registered shareholder cannot use the mechanisms described above for registered shareholders and must follow the instructions provided by the intermediary (which in some cases may allow the completion of the voting instruction form by telephone or the internet).

Occasionally, however, a non-registered shareholder may be given a proxy that has already been signed by the intermediary. This form of proxy is restricted to the number of Common Shares beneficially
2


owned by the non-registered shareholder but is otherwise not completed. This form of proxy does not need to be signed by the non-registered shareholder. In this case, the non-registered shareholder can complete the proxy and return by mail, as described above for registered shareholders.

Delivery of Proxy-Related Materials to Non-Registered Holders
Non-registered shareholders who have not objected to their Intermediary disclosing certain ownership information about them to the Corporation are referred to as non-objecting beneficial owners (“NOBOs”). Those non-registered shareholders who have objected to their intermediary disclosing ownership information about them to the Corporation are referred to as objecting beneficial owners (“OBOs”). In accordance with the requirements of National Instrument 54-101 – Communication with Beneficial Owners of Securities of a Reporting Issuer, the Corporation has elected to send copies of the proxy-related materials in connection with the Meeting directly to the NOBOs and indirectly through intermediaries for onward distribution to the OBOs. Intermediaries often forward the materials to beneficial shareholders through a service company such as Broadridge Financial Solutions Inc. The Corporation pays for an intermediary to deliver the proxy-related materials to NOBOs and OBOs.
ATTENDING THE MEETING
The Meeting will only be hosted online by way of a live webcast. Shareholders will not be able to attend the Meeting in person. A summary of the information shareholders will need to attend the online Meeting is provided below.
Registered Shareholders

Registered shareholders can attend the Meeting online by going to https://meetnow.global/MD9SP2A and clicking on “Shareholder” and entering the applicable control number.
Registered shareholders who wish to appoint a third-party proxyholder other than the Management Appointees to represent them at the online Meeting must submit their proxy form prior to registering their proxyholder. Registering the proxyholder, other than the Management Appointees, is an additional step once a shareholder has submitted their proxy. Failure to register a duly appointed proxyholder will result in the proxyholder not receiving a Username to participate in the Meeting. To register a proxyholder, shareholders MUST visit https://www.computershare.com/descartes by June 9th, 2026 at 10:00 a.m. Eastern time and provide Computershare with their proxyholder’s contact information, so that Computershare may provide the proxyholder with a Username via email.
Non-Registered Shareholders

Any non-registered shareholder receiving either a form of proxy or a voting instruction form who wishes to attend at the Meeting should, in the case of a form of proxy, insert the non-registered shareholder’s name in the blank space provided or, in the case of a voting instruction form, follow the corresponding instructions provided by the intermediary. In either case, the non-registered shareholder should carefully follow the instructions provided by the intermediary.
Non-Registered shareholders who wish to appoint a third-party proxyholder other than the Management Appointees to represent them at the online Meeting must submit their proxy or voting instruction form (as applicable) prior to registering their proxyholder. Registering the proxyholder is an additional step once a shareholder has submitted their proxy/voting instruction form. Failure to register a duly appointed proxyholder will result in the proxyholder not receiving a Username to participate in the Meeting. To register a proxyholder, shareholders MUST visit https://www.computershare.com/descartes by June 9th, 2026 at 10:00 a.m. Eastern time and
3


provide Computershare with their proxyholder’s contact information, so that Computershare may provide the proxyholder with an Invite Code via email.
Observing as a Guest

Non-registered shareholders who have not appointed themselves as proxyholders may observe the Meeting by clicking “I am a guest” and completing the online registration process but will be unable to participate in the Meeting.
PARTICIPATING AT THE MEETING
The Meeting will begin at 10:00 a.m. Eastern Time on June 11th, 2026. It is important that you are connected to the internet at all times during the Meeting in order to vote when balloting commences. It is each shareholder’s responsibility to ensure connectivity for the duration of the Meeting. In order to participate online, registered shareholders must have a valid 15-digit control number and duly appointed proxyholders must have received an email from Computershare containing a Username, as explained below.
If you have any difficulties accessing the Meeting (or after accessing the Meeting), please contact our webcast provider at: +1-888-724-2416 / International +1 781-575-2748.
For more information, please see Computershare’s Virtual Meeting User Guide, attached hereto as Schedule “D”.
It is recommended that registered shareholders and duly appointed proxyholders submit their questions or comments as soon as possible during the Meeting so they can be addressed at the right time. Submission may be made in writing by using the relevant dialog box in the function “Q&A” during the Meeting. Written submissions received through the dialog box function regarding the formal business of the Meeting will be read by a representative of the Corporation, after which the Chair of the Meeting or members of management present at the Meeting will respond. Submissions relating to a formal matter to be voted on at the Meeting will be addressed before a vote is held on such matter, if applicable. General questions (i.e., those not relating to a formal matter to be voted on at the Meeting) received through the dialog box function will be read or summarized by a representative of the Corporation and be addressed by the Chair of the Meeting and other members of management following the end of the Meeting during the question period.
So that as many submissions as possible are addressed, shareholders and proxyholders are asked to be brief and concise and to cover only one topic per submission. If several general submissions to be addressed during the question period following the end of the Meeting relate to the same or very similar topic, the Corporation will group the submissions and state that it has received similar submissions. All shareholder submissions are welcome. However, the Corporation does not intend to address submissions that are: irrelevant to the Corporation’s business or to the business of the Meeting; related to non-public information; are repetitive or have already been addressed; are in furtherance of a shareholder’s personal or business interests; or are out of order or not otherwise appropriate as determined by the Chair or Secretary of the Meeting in their reasonable judgment.
For any general submissions made but not addressed during the question period following the end of the Meeting, a member of the Corporation’s management will attempt to contact such shareholder to respond to the submission to the extent the shareholder has provided an email address within their submission. Shareholders may also contact the Corporation’s Corporate Secretary at investor@descartes.com.
4


In the event of technical malfunction or other significant problem that disrupts the Meeting, the Chair of the Meeting may adjourn, recess, or expedite the Meeting, or take such other action as the Chair determines is appropriate considering the circumstances.
Registered Shareholders and Duly Appointed Proxyholders

Registered shareholders that have a 15-digit control number, along with duly appointed proxyholders who were assigned an invite code by Computershare (see details above under the heading “Appointment of Proxies”), will be able to vote and submit questions during the Meeting. To do so, please go to https://meetnow.global/MD9SP2A prior to the start of the Meeting to login. Registered shareholders and their duly appointed proxyholders can participate in the Meeting by clicking “Shareholder” and entering a control number or an invite code before the start of the Meeting.

o
Registered shareholders – The 15-digit control number is located on the form of proxy or in the email notification you received.


o
Duly appointed proxyholders – Computershare will provide the proxyholder with an invite code after the proxy cut-off has passed.
Non-Registered Shareholders

Non-registered shareholders (other than United States non-registered shareholders – see below) who have duly appointed themselves as proxyholders will follow the proxyholder process described above.
To attend and vote at the virtual Meeting, United States resident non-registered shareholders must first obtain a valid legal proxy from their broker, bank or other agent and then register in advance to attend the Meeting. United States resident non-registered shareholders should follow the instructions from their broker or bank included with these proxy materials or contact their broker or bank to request a legal proxy form. After first obtaining a valid legal proxy from their broker, bank or other agent, to then register to attend the Meeting, United States resident non-registered shareholders must submit a copy of their legal proxy to Computershare. Requests for registration should be directed to:
Computershare
320 Bay Steet
14th Floor
Toronto, Ontario, Canada
M5H 4A6

OR

Email at uslegalproxy@computershare.com

Requests for registration must be labeled as “Legal Proxy” and be received no later than June 9th, 2026 by 10:00 am. United States resident non-registered shareholders will receive a confirmation of their registration and an invite code by email after Computershare receives their registration materials. Such United States resident non-registered shareholders may then attend the Meeting and vote their shares at https://meetnow.global/MD9SP2A during the Meeting. Please note that you are required to register your appointment at www.computershare.com/descartes.
Non-registered shareholders who have not appointed themselves as proxyholders to participate and vote in the meeting will only be able to log-in to the Meeting as a guest which
5


allows them to listen to the Meeting however will not be able to vote or submit questions. Please see the information under the heading “Appointment of Proxy – Non-Registered Shareholders” above for an explanation of why certain shareholders may not receive a form of proxy.
VOTING AT THE MEETING
A Registered Shareholder (or a Non-Registered Shareholder) who has appointed themselves or appointed a third-party proxyholder to represent them at the Meeting, will appear on a list of proxyholders prepared by Computershare, who is appointed to review and tabulate proxies for the Meeting. To be able to vote their shares at the Meeting, each Registered Shareholder or proxyholder will be required to enter their control number or Invite Code provided by Computershare at https://meetnow.global/MD9SP2A prior to the start of the Meeting.
In order to vote, Non-Registered Shareholders who appoint themselves as a proxyholder MUST register with Computershare at www.computershare.com/descartes AFTER submitting their voting instruction form in order to receive an Invite Code (please see the information under the headings “Appointment of Proxies” above for details).
REVOCATION OF PROXIES
Registered Shareholders
A registered shareholder who has given a proxy may revoke it by depositing an instrument in writing signed by the shareholder or by the shareholder’s attorney, who is authorized in writing, or by transmitting, by telephonic or electronic means, a revocation signed by electronic signature by the shareholder or by the shareholder’s attorney, who is authorized in writing, to the attention of the Corporate Secretary of the Corporation at 120 Randall Drive, Waterloo, Ontario, Canada, N2V 1C6, or facsimile number (519) 747-0082, at any time up to and including 10:00 a.m. (Eastern time) on June 10th, 2026, or in the case of any adjournment of the Meeting, at 10:00 a.m. (Eastern time) on the last business day preceding the date of the adjournment, or with the Chair of the Meeting on the day of, and prior to the start of, the Meeting or any adjournment thereof. A shareholder may also revoke a proxy in any other manner permitted by law.
Non-Registered Shareholders
A non-registered shareholder may revoke previously given voting instructions by contacting his or her Intermediary and complying with any applicable requirements imposed by such Intermediary. An Intermediary may not be able to revoke voting instructions if it receives insufficient notice of revocation.
VOTING OF PROXIES
On any ballot that may be called for, Common Shares represented by properly executed proxies in favour of the persons specified in the enclosed form of proxy will be voted for, against or withheld from voting, as applicable, in accordance with the instructions given thereon. If the shareholder specifies a choice with respect to any matter to be acted upon, the Common Shares will be voted or withheld from voting accordingly. If no choice is specified in the proxy with respect to a particular matter identified in the accompanying notice of meeting (the “Notice of Meeting”), the Common Shares represented by proxies given in favour of the persons designated by Management will be voted FOR such matter.
The enclosed form of proxy confers discretionary authority upon the persons specified in the proxy to decide how to vote on any amendment(s) or variation(s) to matters identified in the accompanying Notice of Meeting and on any other matters which may properly come before the Meeting or any adjournment(s) thereof. As of the date of this Circular, Management is not aware of any such
6


amendment, variation or other matters. However, if any amendments or variations to matters identified in the accompanying Notice of Meeting, or any other matters that are not now known to Management, should properly come before the Meeting or any adjournment thereof, the Common Shares represented by proxies given in favour of the persons designated by Management in the enclosed form of proxy will be voted or withheld from voting by those persons pursuant to such discretionary authority.
VOTING OF SHARES
The board of directors (the “Board”) has fixed April 27, 2026 as the record date for the Meeting (the “Record Date”). Shareholders of record at the close of business on April 27, 2026 are entitled to vote the Common Shares registered in their name at that date on each matter to be acted upon at the Meeting. As of the Record Date, the Corporation had 85,927,027 Common Shares issued and outstanding, each entitling the holder to one vote, without cumulation, on each matter to be voted on at the Meeting.
Under normal conditions, confidentiality of voting is maintained by virtue of the fact that proxies and votes are tabulated by the Corporation’s transfer agent. However, such confidentiality may be lost as to any proxy or ballot if a question arises as to its validity or revocation or any other like matter. Loss of confidentiality may also occur if the Board decides that disclosure is in the interest of the Corporation or its shareholders.
A quorum for the transaction of business at the Meeting shall be persons not being less than two in number and holding or representing by proxy not less than 25% of the issued and outstanding Common Shares entitled to vote at the Meeting. A quorum is required only at the opening of the Meeting.
The Corporation has been granted an exemption from the rules of the NASDAQ Stock Market (“NASDAQ”) that require a quorum at any meeting of the holders of Common Shares of no less than 33 1/3% of the outstanding Common Shares. This exemption was granted because this requirement is not consistent with generally accepted business practices in Canada. In particular, Section 139(1) of the CBCA provides that a corporation’s by-laws may set the quorum requirements for a meeting of shareholders.
PRINCIPAL HOLDERS OF VOTING SHARES
To the knowledge of the directors and executive officers of the Corporation, as of the Record Date, no person or company beneficially owned or controlled or directed, directly or indirectly, more than 10% of the votes attached to the outstanding Common Shares.
CURRENCY
In this Circular, unless otherwise specified or the context otherwise requires, all references to “$” and “US$” are to U.S. dollars and all references to “Cdn.$” are to Canadian dollars. All currency amounts, except where otherwise indicated, have been converted into U.S. dollars at the indicative foreign exchange rate on January 30, 2026, the last business day of fiscal 2026. At that date, the exchange rate, as reported by the Bank of Canada, was US$1.00 = Cdn$1.3562.
MATTERS TO BE ACTED UPON AT THE MEETING
1.            Presentation of Financial Statements
The audited consolidated financial statements of the Corporation for the fiscal year ended January 31st, 2026 and the reports of the auditors thereon accompany this Circular or have been mailed to shareholders separately and will be submitted to the Meeting. No vote will be taken on the financial statements at the Meeting.
7


2.            Election of Directors
The number of directors to be elected at the Meeting is nine. Under the Corporation’s by-laws, directors of the Corporation are elected annually. Each director will hold office until the next annual meeting or until the successor of such director is duly elected or appointed, unless such office is earlier vacated in accordance with the by-laws.
The nominees proposed for election as directors, who were recommended to the Board by the Nominating Committee, are listed under the heading “Director Nominees” in the table below.
In the absence of a contrary instruction, the persons designated by Management in the enclosed form of proxy intend to vote FOR the nominees listed in the table below under the heading “Director Nominees”. Management does not contemplate that any of the nominees will be unable to serve as a director, but if that should occur for any reason prior to the Meeting, the persons named in the enclosed form of proxy reserve the right to vote for another nominee in their discretion.
The following sets forth information as of March 31, 2026 regarding each of the nine people proposed to be nominated for election as a director at the Meeting, including the number of Common Shares (and share-based units) beneficially owned, or controlled or directed, directly or indirectly, by such person or the person’s associates or affiliates as at the date of this Circular. In the table, certain information, not being within the knowledge of the Corporation, has been furnished by the respective proposed nominees individually.

Director Nominees
 
 
 
Nominee
Director Since
Equity Holdings
Deepak Chopra, B. Comm (Hons), FCPA, FCGA
Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Age – 63
Member – Audit Committee
Member – Nominating Committee
 
2025 AGM Votes in Favour:
75,876,565 (98.81%)
2020
DSUs          17,796
 
Mr. Chopra is a corporate director. Mr. Chopra most recently served as President and Chief Executive Officer of Canada Post Corporation from February 2011 to March 2018. Mr. Chopra has more than 30 years of global experience in the financial services, technology, transportation, logistics & supply-chain industries. Prior to that, for more than 20 years, he worked for Pitney Bowes Inc., a NYSE-traded technology company known for postage meters, mail automation and location intelligence services. He served as President of Pitney Bowes Canada and Latin America from 2006 to 2010. He held a number of increasingly senior executive roles internationally, including President of its new Asia Pacific and Middle East region from 2001 to 2006 and Chief Financial Officer for Europe, Africa & Middle East (EAME) region from 1998-2001. He has previously served on the boards of Canada Post Corporation, Purolator Inc., SCI Group, Celestica Inc., The North West Company, the Canada Post Community Foundation, The Conference Board of Canada and the Toronto Region Board of Trade. He currently sits on the board of Sun Life Financial (TSX:SLF) and Cargojet, Inc. (TSX:CJT). Mr. Chopra is a Fellow of the Institute of Chartered Professional Accountants of Canada and has a Bachelor’s degree in Commerce (Honours) and a Master’s degree in Business Management (PGDBM).

8


Nominee
Director Since
Equity Holdings
Eric A. Demirian, BBM, C.P.A, C.G.A,
C.A.
Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Age – 67
Chair of the Board
Member – Audit Committee
Member – Governance Committee
Member – Nominating Committee
 
2025 AGM Votes in Favour:
72,960,218 (95.01%)
 
2011
Common Shares            1,000
DSUs                                        71,956
 
Mr. Demirian is a Chartered Professional Accountant, Certified General Accountant and a Chartered Accountant. Since 2003, Mr. Demirian has served as President of Parklea Capital, Inc. (“Parklea”), a boutique financial and strategy advisory firm providing services to small- and mid-market public and private companies, and President of Demicap Inc., a private investment firm. Prior to Mr. Demirian’s position at Parklea, he held the position of Executive Vice President of Group Telecom, Inc. from 2000 to 2003. From 1983 to 2000, Mr. Demirian was with PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP (“PwC”) where he was a partner and head of the Information and Communications Practice. Mr. Demirian serves on the boards of Imax Corporation (NYSE:IMAX) and Calian Group Ltd. (TSX:CGY). Mr. Demirian is a former director and chair of the audit committees of a number of public and private companies including Enghouse Systems Limited from 2004 to 2025. Mr. Demirian holds a Bachelor of Business Management degree from Toronto Metropolitan University.

9

 
Nominee
Director Since
Equity Holdings
Dennis Maple, B.Sc.
Malvern, Pennsylvania, U.S.A.
Age – 66
Chair – Nominating Committee
Member – Compensation Committee
 
2025 AGM Votes in Favour:
73,891,505 (96.23%)
2017
DSUs                                        35,137
 
Mr. Maple is the retired Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of Goddard Systems, LLC, an operator of early childhood education schools in the United States. Between January 2014 and August 2019, Mr. Maple was the President of First Student, Inc., a subsidiary of United Kingdom based publicly-traded First Group plc., a transport operator in the United Kingdom and North America, that provides transportation solutions encompassing student bus transportation and public rail and public bus operations. Prior to serving as President of First Student, from 2006 to January 2014, Mr. Maple was President of Aramark Education, the market leading provider of food and nutrition planning services, facilities management, construction project management and related services to school districts across North America. Prior to his role as President of Aramark Education, from 2003 to 2006, Mr. Maple held senior executive management positions at Aramark serving both K-12 schools and Higher Education Colleges and Universities. Prior to serving in executive roles at Aramark, from 1994 to 2003, Mr. Maple served as an Area Vice President at Coors Brewing and in several other management roles. Leading up to 1994, Mr. Maple held executive roles at Kraft-General Foods, PepsiCo and The Quaker Oats Company.  Mr. Maple holds a Bachelor of Science degree with a major in accounting from the University of Tennessee, Knoxville. During the past 30 years, Mr. Maple has served on numerous charitable and community-based boards, including the Urban League of Philadelphia, The Episcopal Academy, a leading college preparatory school, recognized nationally, based in the suburbs of Philadelphia, and as well, he has served on numerous other local organization boards, including Philadelphia Outward Bound, Philadelphia Academies and the Paoli Hospital Foundation. Mr. Maple has also been an active participant in organizations across North America supporting primary and secondary schools and communities. In 2021, Mr. Maple was elected to the International Franchise Association’s (IFA) Board of Directors. In 2023, Mr. Maple was awarded the Diversity in Business award from the Philadelphia Business Journal; and in 2024, Mr. Maple was named among Savoy Magazine’s Most Influential Executives. Finally, in 2024 Mr. Maple was recognized locally in the City of Philadelphia and the State of Pennsylvania as one of several Black Trailblazers for his community engagement work and support of the Philadelphia Region.

10


 
Nominee
Director Since
Equity Holdings
Jane Mowat, B. Comm, CPA, CA
Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Age – 69
 
2025 AGM Votes in Favour:
75,883,997 (98.82%)
2025
Common Shares           1,000
DSUs                                        2,281
 
Ms. Mowat is a corporate director and a former information technology executive who, from 2003 to 2020, worked as an independent consultant, advising clients on acquisitions in the software industry, as well as providing advice on corporate finance, borrowings and business valuations. She previously served as Chief Financial Officer of Centrinity, a TSX-listed software company, from 2001 to 2003, General Manager of IBM’s financing business in Canada and the United States, from 1996 to 2000, and as Chief Financial Officer of ISM Information System Management Corporation, a TSX-listed technology outsourcing company from 1990 to 1995. Ms. Mowat has considerable governance experience having served on the boards of both private and public companies and as committee chairs and lead director. She presently also sits on the Board of Enghouse Systems Limited. She holds a Bachelor of Commerce degree from the University of Toronto and earned her CPA, CA designation while working with Price Waterhouse Coopers.

 
Nominee
Director Since
Equity Holdings
Chris Muntwyler
Baech, Switzerland
Age – 73
Member – Governance Committee
Chair – Compensation Committee
 
 
2025 AGM Votes in Favour:
76,767,145 (99.97%)
2020
DSUs                                          19,420
 
 
Mr. Muntwyler is a corporate director. Mr. Muntwyler has significant international experience in the transportation, logistics and technology sectors.  Having previously held various senior executive positions at SwissAir and the positions of Chief Executive of DHL Express (UK) Limited and Managing Director (Switzerland, Germany and Central Europe) at DHL Express, he is now a management consultant through his business, Conlogic AG, specializing in strategic development, leadership guidance and customer orientation and process automation.  Mr. Muntwyler spent 10 years in the DHL Express organization following a 27-year career with SwissAir. Mr. Muntwyler previously served as a non-executive director on the board of The Austrian Post from 2010 to April 2023, National Express Group PLC in the United Kingdom (LSE:NEX) from 2011 to 2020 and as a director of Panalpina World Transport (Holding) Ltd. from 2010 to 2018.  During the period of 2007 and 2008, Mr. Muntwyler served as a member of the President’s Committee on the United Kingdom’s Confederation of British Industry. During his professional career, Mr. Muntwyler has lived and worked in Switzerland, Sweden, the United States, Germany and the United Kingdom.

11


 
Nominee
Director Since
Equity Holdings
Jane O’Hagan, B.A. (Hons.), ICD.D
Calgary, Alberta, Canada
Age – 62
Chair – Governance Committee
Member – Compensation Committee
 
2025 AGM Votes in Favour:
75,883,997 (98.82%)
2014
DSUs                                        65,398
 
Ms. O’Hagan is a corporate director with over 20 years experience in the transportation and logistics sectors. From 2010 until 2014, Ms. O’Hagan was the Executive Vice President and Chief Marketing Officer of Canadian Pacific Railway Limited. Ms. O’Hagan also held various roles at CP including Senior Vice President, Strategy and Yield, Vice President, Strategy and External Affairs and Assistant Vice President, Strategy and Research. Ms. O’Hagan joined the GCT Global Containers Terminal Inc. Board of Directors in August 2023 and in April 2025 was appointed Chair of the Board and chairs the Human Resources Committee. Ms. O’Hagan also serves as a director of USD Partners GP LCC, the general partner of USD Partners LP (NYSE:USDP). From 2018 until its acquisition in 2021, Ms. O’Hagan was a member of the board of Pinnacle Renewable Holdings (TSX:PL), a supplier of industrial wood pellets based in Richmond, BC where she also served as a member of the audit and risk committees. Ms. O’Hagan has a Bachelor of Arts (Hons.) and a Bachelor of Administrative and Commercial Studies from the University of Western Ontario (London, Ontario, Canada) and has completed graduate studies in Program and Policy Studies from the University of Western Ontario. In December 2012, Ms. O’Hagan was named one of Canada’s Top 100 Most Powerful Women by the Women’s Executive Network. Ms. O’Hagan is also a holder of the ICD.D designation from the Institute of Corporate Directors, which she achieved in June 2016 and earned the CERT Certificate in Cyber Risk Oversight issued by Carnegie Mellon University and the National Association of Corporate Directors in February 2018.

 
Nominee
Director Since
Equity Holdings
Edward J. Ryan, B.A.
Fort Washington, Pennsylvania, U.S.A.
Age – 57
Chief Executive Officer
 
 
2025 AGM Votes in Favour:
76,223,399 (99.26%)
2014
Common Shares         44,539
RSUs                                         214,314
PSUs                                         451,500
Stock Options                     264,508
 
Mr. Ryan is Descartes’ Chief Executive Officer, having been appointed to that position in November 2013. Mr. Ryan joined Descartes in February 2000 in connection with our acquisition of E-Transport Incorporated. Mr. Ryan guides the company’s executive management team and drives its growth and M&A strategies. Prior to taking on his current role in 2013, Mr. Ryan led Descartes’ global sales and marketing operations as Chief Commercial Officer after having served as Executive Vice President of Global Field Operations. Mr. Ryan brings more than 30 years of experience in supply chain and logistics technology to the company and its customers.

12


 
Nominee
Director Since
Equity Holdings
John J. Walker, B.Sc., C.P.A., C.G.M.A
Naples, Florida, U.S.A.
Age – 73
Chair – Audit Committee
Member – Governance Committee
 
2025 AGM Votes in Favour:
73,935,135 (96.28%)
 
2011
Common Shares            5,429
DSUs                                        80,125
 
Mr. Walker is a corporate director and a Certified Public Accountant and a Chartered Global Management Accountant with 37 years overall financial and executive management experience, including twenty-one years of experience as a Chief Financial Officer with both public and private companies. Mr. Walker served as Chief Financial Officer, and Senior Vice President of Bowne & Company, a New York Stock Exchange-listed provider of services to help companies produce and manage their shareholder, investor and marketing & business communications, from 2006 until its acquisition by R.R. Donnelley & Sons in 2010. Prior to Bowne & Company, from 1988 to 2006, Mr. Walker was an executive with Loews Cineplex Entertainment Corporation a motion picture theatre exhibition chain, including sixteen years as Chief Financial Officer. Prior thereto, Mr. Walker served for six years as Controller and Principal Accounting Officer of Corporate Property Investors, then one of the largest real estate investment trusts in the United States. Mr. Walker also served for six years as Treasurer and Assistant Corporate Controller of Princess Hotels International a company involved in the ownership and operation of luxury resort hotels, real estate and timesharing developments. From October 2021 to October 2023, Mr. Walker was a member of the Board of Schultze Special Purpose Acquisition Corp. II (Nasdaq: SAMAU, SAMA, SAMAW) where he was Chair of the Audit Committee and also served on the Nominating and Compensation Committees.  Mr. Walker was a member of the Board of Schultze Special Purpose Acquisition Corp. I from June 2018 until December 2020 up to the completion of a “de-SPAC” business combination. Mr. Walker started his career in the New York office of then-Price Waterhouse. Mr. Walker is a member of the American Institute of Certified Public Accountants and the New York State Society of CPAs.
13


 
Nominee
Director Since
Equity Holdings
Laura Wilkin, B.Sc.
St. Louis, Missouri, U.S.A.
Age – 61
 
2025 AGM Votes in Favour:
73,935,135 (99.97%)
2025
DSUs                                        2,297
Laura Wilkin has served on the board of Descartes since June, 2025. She is the founder and CEO of Excelerate Supply Chain Advisory Services, a supply chain consultant, and serves on the board of GXO Logistics (NYSE: GXO), a global third-party logistics company. She previously served on the advisory board of Vorto, a private-equity-backed, artificial intelligence (“AI”) enabled transportation platform, on the board of directors and compensation committee of Industrial Logistics Properties Trust (NASDAQ: ILPT), a publicly traded REIT, and on the board of directors and sourcing committee of Second Harvest Food Bank of Orange County. She currently serves as co-chair of the retail, consumer, hospitality and transportation committee of WomenExecs on Boards, a Harvard affiliated non-profit. With more than 30 years of executive and management consulting experience in omnichannel retail and e-Commerce, Ms. Wilkin has developed deep expertise in supply chain, operations, technology, and industrial real estate. Most recently Ms. Wilkin served as Vice President Global Supply Chain and Industrial Real Estate at Amazon where she helped the company double its global fulfillment network to accommodate massive COVID-19-driven growth. Prior to Amazon she served as Chief Supply Chain Officer at Petco and from 2010-2017 she held various leadership roles at Walmart including as Sr. Vice President of Logistics. In these roles she gained significant experience leading strategy and transformational initiatives, managing multi-billion dollar P&Ls, overseeing a global real estate portfolio and leading large, global teams. Ms. Wilkin holds a Bachelor of Science in decision science from Indiana University’s Kelley School of Business. She is certified as a Qualified Risk Director® by the Directors and Chief Risk Officers Institute.
Skill Set and Experience of Proposed Director Nominees
The Corporate Governance Committee uses the following categories of skills and experience to assess the overall strength and range of perspectives and expertise of the group of proposed non-executive director nominees to the Board.
 
Senior Executive Leadership
Other Public Company Board Experience
Risk and Compliance Management
Financing
Financial Expert
(for Audit Committee Purposes)
Strategic Planning
M&A
Human Resources / Compensation
Corporate Governance
International Business Operations and Sales and Marketing
Technology / IT Industry
Transportation and Logistics Industry
Deepak Chopra
Eric A. Demirian
 
Dennis Maple
 
 
Jane Mowat
 
Chris Muntwyler
   
Jane O’Hagan
   
John J. Walker
 
Laura Wilkin
   
 

14


Board Independence
National Policy 58-201 – Corporate Governance Guidelines recommends that boards of directors of reporting issuers be composed of a majority of independent directors. The Board is currently composed of a majority of independent directors with eight of the nine current directors being independent. Of the nine nominees standing for election at the Meeting, all are independent with the exception of Mr. Ryan, the CEO of the Corporation.
Independent Chair of the Board
Mr. Demirian, an independent director, is the Chair of the Board, and is responsible for, among other things, providing leadership to ensure that the Board functions independently of Management and non-independent directors and calling, where necessary, the holding of special meetings of the Board, non-Management directors or independent directors.
Meetings of Independent Directors
The independent directors meet without management at every board meeting, including special meetings. The various committees of the Board also hold in-camera sessions of the independent directors at the conclusion of every committee meeting, during which management is not present. The Board met twelve (12) times during fiscal 2026, and at each meeting held an in-camera session without members of management present and has met two (2) times between February 1, 2026 and April 27, 2026, again holding an in-camera session at each such meeting without management present.
Director Service on Other Boards
Currently, the following proposed director nominees serve on the following boards of other public companies:
Director
Public Company Board Membership
Deepak Chopra
SunLife Financial (TSX:SLF)
Cargojet, Inc. (TSX: CJT)
Eric A. Demirian
Imax Corporation (NYSE:IMAX)
Calian Group Ltd (TSX:CGY)
Jane Mowat
Enghouse Systems Limited (TSX: ENGH)
Jane O’Hagan
USD Partners LP (NYSE:USDP)
Laura Wilkin
GXO Logistics Inc. (NYSE: GXO)
Director Meetings and Attendance
The Board is committed to scheduling regular meetings of the Board and its committees and encouraging attendance by applicable directors and committee members to ensure the Board Mandate is fulfilled. The Board and its committees held the following number of meetings since January 31, 2025:
15



 
Year ended January 31, 2026
February 1, 2026 – April 27, 2026
Total
Board
12
2
14
Audit Committee
7
2
9
Compensation Committee
6
2
8
Corporate Governance Committee
6
2
8
Nominating Committee
7
1
8

The attendance of each of the current directors at such meetings was as follows:
Director
Board Meetings Attended
Audit Committee Meetings Attended
Compensation Committee Meetings Attended
Corporate Governance Committee Meetings Attended
Nominating Committee Meetings Attended
Deepak Chopra
14 of 14
9 of 9
   
8 of 8
Eric A. Demirian
14 of 14
9 of 9
 
8 of 8
3 of 3(1)
Dennis Maple
14 of 14
 
8 of 8
 
8 of 8
Jane Mowat
8 of 8(2)
6 of 6(3)
4 of 4(3)
5 of 5(3)
3 of 3(3)
Chris Muntwyler
14 of 14
 
8 of 8
8 of 8
 
Jane O’Hagan
13 of 14
 
8 of 8
8 of 8
 
Edward J. Ryan
14 of 14
       
John J. Walker
14 of 14
9 of 9
 
8 of 8
 
Laura Wilkin
8 of 8(2)
6 of 6(4)
4 of 4(4)
5 of 5(4)
3 of 3(4)
(1) Mr. Demirian was appointed as a member of the Committee on June 12, 2025.
(2) Reflects attendance at meetings held following the election of Ms. Mowat and Ms. Wilkin to the Board on June 12, 2025.
(3) Ms. Mowat attended Committee meetings as an invited guest of the Committee.
(4) Ms. Wilkin attended Committee meetings as an invited guest of the Committee.
Director Tenure, Age and Board Renewal
The Corporation does not have director term limits or a formal retirement policy. In considering its approach to these topics, the Board of Directors believes term limits and retirement policies may indiscriminately eliminate both high and low performing directors as well as directors with unique and critical skill sets based solely on tenure or age. Instead, the Board:
1.
Has a process of rigorous annual director peer evaluations that allow the Chair of the Board (or in the case of the evaluation of the Chair of the Board, the Chair of the Corporate Governance Committee) to have a clear understanding of relative director contribution, skillset and expertise, so that an appropriate level of director turnover can be achieved by having one or more directors not stand for re-election at appropriate times;

2.
Maintains a director skill set and experience matrix to ensure that, in choosing director candidates, it is focused appropriately on skills and experience critical to the Board’s responsibilities, including assessing and providing input on the Corporation’s strategic and operating activities; and

3.
Provides clear disclosure in the Corporation’s management information circular of director tenure and age and an explanation of how the Corporation’s approach ensures a range of skills, experience, background and an appropriate level of turnover.

The Board strives to maintain a balance of experience and familiarity with the business and operations of the Corporation with fresh perspectives, as reflected by the following chart which summarizes the tenure composition of the current Board, including Ed Ryan as CEO and a member of the Board.
16


Average Tenure:                          8.6 years
 

 
Average Age:                                  65.6 years


The average tenure of the current directors of the Corporation is 8.6 years and the average age is 65.6 years.
Forty-four percent (44%) of the Board is made up of directors who have joined the Board in the past six years and during that period two individuals have retired from the Board.
Nomination of Directors
The Nominating Committee is responsible for identifying and recruiting new candidates for nomination to the Board. The Nominating Committee, on at least an annual basis, reviews the competencies and skills that the Board as a whole should possess as well as the current strengths, skills and experience represented by each current director in light of the objectives, priorities, strategic direction and areas of focus of the Corporation. The Nominating Committee assesses potential candidates for nomination to the Board based on a particular candidate’s skills, experience, background and ability to commit and fulfill their duties as a director. The Nominating Committee also considers the Corporation’s policy with respect to human capital management and the Corporation’s current needs after taking into consideration the current composition of the Board.
Orientation of New Directors
Responsibility for orientation of new directors is assigned by the Board to the Nominating Committee. In this regard, the Nominating Committee’s duties include ensuring the adequacy of the orientation and education program for new members of the Board. The Nominating Committee reviews this program on an annual basis.
When a new director joins the Board, the new director’s orientation program considers the new director’s background and skills as well as the new director’s contemplated committee involvement. The orientation program is designed to introduce the new director to the business and to the Corporation’s expectations of directors. New directors have the opportunity to meet with the Chair of the Board, the CEO, the President and Chief Operating Officer (the “President and COO”), the Chief Financial Officer (the “CFO”) and the Corporation’s General Counsel, in addition to other senior members of Management. The Corporation’s General Counsel also reviews with each new member: (i) certain information regarding the Corporation, including the role of the Board and its committees and the Corporation’s corporate history; (ii) certain key documents of the Corporation, including the Corporation’s Code of Business Conduct and Ethics (the “Code of Conduct”), the Corporation’s corporate governance framework, the Corporation’s policy with respect to human capital management, Insider Trading Policy, Disclosure Policy, Risk Management Policy, Board Mandate, committee charters and position
17


descriptions; and (iii) the legal obligations of a director of the Corporation. The Corporation’s General Counsel includes the Chair of the Board in this orientation process to assist independent directors with enquiries and information relating to such independent director’s role on the Board.
Continuing Education
The Corporate Governance Committee is responsible for arranging continuing education for directors in order to ensure that directors acquire and maintain skills and knowledge relevant to the performance of their duties as directors. In addition to external continuing education sessions attended by Board members, director education sessions, which are presented by Management or external consultants, are generally scheduled to coincide with the Corporation’s regular quarterly Board meetings to extend the Board’s knowledge of the Corporation and its operations and topics that the Corporate Governance Committee identifies as relevant to those operations. Sessions conducted for the Board in relation to fiscal 2026 included the following:
Date
Topic
Description
Director Attendance
March 4, 2025
Proxy Season and SEC Disclosure Update
The Board received a presentation from the Corporation’s external lawyers on a number of topics relating to securities laws and trends in Canada and the United States.
All directors
June 3, 2025
Artificial Intelligence (AI) Governance
The Board received a presentation from an AI vendor on key trends in AI Governance.
All directors(1)
 
Sept 2, 2025
Trade and Tariff Update
The Board received a presentation from an internal expert on trade and tariffs on global trade-related matters. The Board also received a focused presentation on one of the Corporation’s business units from an internal business leader.
All directors
 
Dec 2, 2025
Climate presentation: The State of Carbon Emissions in Transportation
The Board received a presentation from a customer of the Corporation on the state of carbon emissions in the transportation industry. The Board also received a focused presentation on one of the Corporation’s business units from an internal business leader.
 
All directors
 

(1)
Two former directors of the Corporation who did not stand for election last year did not attend the meeting. Ms Wilkin attended as an invited guest of the Board prior to her election on June 12, 2025; Ms. Mowat was absent from the June 3, 2025 meeting (prior to her election on June 12, 2025).

With the importance of AI, the Board also receives, on a quarterly basis, updates from internal business leaders and subject matter experts regarding the Corporation’s use of AI, including both educational briefings and operational updates.  In addition, each of the committees of the Board may schedule education sessions with third party consultants that have been retained by such committees in connection with the fulfillment of the mandate of the committee. Each member of the Board is also eligible for reimbursement of up to $3,000 per fiscal year (Chair of the Board, $5,000) of fees paid by that individual director for enrolment in continuing education courses or programs conducted by third parties or institutions relevant to their role as a director of the Corporation. The Board encourages individual directors to enroll in such programs and advise the Corporate Secretary of the programs they have participated in. The following is a summary of the continuing education undertaken during fiscal 2026 by each of the current non-executive directors proposed for re-election at the Meeting:

Director
Continuing Education
Deepak Chopra
Participated in education sessions at public company boards where topics including the West Asia War and its implications on global order, Global trade flows, Effectiveness of sanctions, and Cyber Security in the age of AI were reviewed. Self-study included understanding the impact of AI on the make-up of future job categories, the role of the leisure industry in creating new jobs, trade agreements and their impact on e-commerce, particularly for small business.

18



Director
Continuing Education
Eric A. Demirian
Attended various ongoing continuing education courses provided by outside accounting and consulting firms, including as a participant at Audit Committees and Boards of other public companies, in the areas of corporate governance, accounting and financial reporting, cyber-security, human resources and legal matters. In addition, undertook self-study of accounting, and corporate governance topics by reading trade journals and other publications.
Dennis Maple
Attended industry and consultant-led events on post-COVID leadership, AI business impact, IT security, and best practices for physical plants. Self-study focused on board governance, executive compensation, and director recruitment for oversight in public companies. Over the past four years, participated in over 60 radio and TV interviews across national markets, sharing insights on early childhood education and family support. Recently evaluated investment opportunities and led projects to develop quality, affordable housing.
Jane Mowat
Attended director education sessions for another listed company regarding changing regulations in the financial industry, cybersecurity and changing climate regulations and disclosures. Also attended certificated courses on Professional Ethics and Evolving Technology, Evolving Privacy Risks and Requirements and Tariff Disruption.
 
Attends quarterly updates for both Canada and the United States on Financial and regulatory reporting requirements and budget updates. Self-study, in addition to certificated study, of publications focused on governance, evolving technologies and finance are also completed.
 
Chris Muntwyler
In his role as CEO of the consulting company Conlogic AG, Mr. Muntwyler  leads and consults in the areas of process and strategy designs in transportation and supply chain management and information technology. He was actively involved in the strategic development of transportation- and supply chain organizations in several countries in Europe. He was also actively engaged in the remuneration policies and cyber-security strategies of various large organizations.  He regularly attends further education programs in IT strategy and cyber-security, ESG development, corporate governance and risk management.

19


Director
Continuing Education
Jane O’Hagan
Attended multiple seminars and webinars on AI in the boardroom and beyond. Specific focus on best practices and emerging views on AI governance, board oversight, disclosure, board skill matrix development, new imperatives for board education and the changing AI regulatory landscape. Attended specific sessions on strengthening AI risk management and integration with Enterprise Risk Management and cyber, board committee structure options to improve board oversight, strengthening risk engagement with shareholders and proxy advisors. Attended in person education sessions on geopolitical risk, pressures, tariffs and understanding the impact on supply chain providers in terms of strategy, disclosure and executive compensation. Undertook research on best practices on board effectiveness, peer review and skill development for directors. Attended seminars and self-study on the new legal and disclosure considerations for environmental, social and governance (“ESG”) and diversity as well as climate risk management. Attended external expert education sessions in executive compensation, pay design practices along with talent management and retention.
John J. Walker
Completed 50 Continuing Education Credit Hours (“CPE”) during 2025.  Areas of study included: Accounting and Financial Reporting, Income Tax Accounting and Disclosures, SEC Updates and SEC Hot Topics, Audit Committee Best Practices, Corporate Governance Matters, Generative AI in the Finance function, AI Oversight and the role of the Board,  Internal Audit Effectiveness and Best Practices, Impact of the U.S.’s One Big Beautiful Bill Act,  ESG reporting disclosures and controls, Greenwashing and ESG, Climate Disclosure requirements, Enterprise-wide Risk Evaluation and Controls, Cyber Security Updates and Controls, Cyber Security readiness, IT Risks and Controls, M&A Updates, Geo-Political Updates.  The CPE course providers were KPMG, PWC, Deloitte and EY.
Laura Wilkin
Currently pursuing certification through the National Association of Corporate Directors by taking the Director Professionalism online coursework in board governance. As an active member of WomenExecs on Boards (WEOB), participated in educational sessions and the annual symposium covering corporate governance, cybersecurity, managing geopolitical risks, AI and financial reporting & analysis. Attended several supply chain conferences with topics including trade & tariffs, industrial real estate, and AI in the supply chain. As part of other public board work, has received education and benchmarking in the areas of executive compensation, cybersecurity and AI.
Majority Voting for Director Nominees
The election of directors at the meeting will be governed by the majority voting requirements under the CBCA. These require that in an uncontested election of directors, such as the one planned for the Meeting, in order for a nominee to be elected as a director, they must receive more votes in favour of their election, than against. If a nominee fails to receive a majority of votes in favour of their election, they will not be elected, though they may continue to serve up to 90 days after the Meeting if they were a member of the Board prior to the Meeting. In light of the CBCA statutory majority voting requirements, the Board resolved to revoke the Corporation’s then existing Majority Voting Policy, such that this policy will not apply at the Meeting.
20


Advance Notice Provisions
The Corporation’s by-laws provide for advance notice of nominations of directors (“Advance Notice Provisions”) in circumstances where nominations of persons for election to the Board are made by shareholders other than pursuant to a requisition of a meeting or a shareholder proposal, in each case made pursuant to the provisions of the CBCA. The Advance Notice Provisions fix deadlines by which a shareholder must notify the Corporation of nominations of persons for election to the Board as follows: such notice must be provided to the Corporate Secretary of the Corporation (i) in the case of an annual meeting (including an annual and special meeting) of shareholders, not less than 30 nor more than 65 days prior to the date of the meeting; provided, however, that in the event that the meeting is to be held on a date that is less than 60 days after the date (the “Notice Date”) on which the first public announcement of the date of the meeting was made, notice by the nominating shareholder may be given not later than the close of business (Eastern time) on the tenth day following the Notice Date; and (ii) in the case of a special meeting (which is not also an annual meeting) of shareholders called for the purpose of electing directors (whether or not called for other purposes), not later than the close of business (Eastern time) on the fifteenth day following the day on which the first public announcement of the date of the meeting was made. The Advance Notice Provisions also stipulate that certain information about any proposed nominee and the nominating shareholder be included in such a notice for it to be valid. The purpose of the Advance Notice Provisions is to ensure that all shareholders, including those participating in a meeting by proxy rather than in person, receive adequate prior notice of director nominations, as well as sufficient information concerning the nominees, and can thereby exercise their voting rights in an informed manner. In addition, the Advance Notice Provisions should assist in facilitating an orderly and efficient meeting process. A copy of the Corporation’s by-laws is available on the Corporation’s website at www.descartes.com and on SEDAR+ at www.sedarplus.ca.
3.            Appointment of Auditors
At the Meeting, the holders of Common Shares will be requested to vote on the re-appointment of KPMG LLP, Chartered Professional Accountants, Licensed Public Accountants, as auditors of the Corporation to hold office until the next annual meeting of shareholders or until a successor is appointed. KPMG LLP have been the auditors of the Corporation since April 16, 2015. At the most recent shareholder meeting of June 12th, 2025, vote in respect of the appointment of auditors received a vote of 99.66% (77,241,699 Common Shares) in favour.
Except where authority to vote in respect of the appointment of auditors is withheld, the persons designated by Management in the enclosed form of proxy intend to vote FOR the re-appointment of KPMG LLP, Chartered Professional Accountants, Licensed Public Accountants, as auditors of the Corporation to hold office until the next annual meeting of shareholders or until a successor is appointed. A simple majority of the applicable votes cast at the Meeting, whether in person or by proxy, will constitute approval of the resolution to re-appoint KPMG LLP, Chartered Professional Accountants, Licensed Public Accountants, as auditors of the Corporation to hold office until the next annual meeting of shareholders or until a successor is appointed.
Audit Fees
For the fiscal year ended January 31, 2026 (“fiscal 2026”) and the fiscal year ended January 31, 2025 (“fiscal 2025”), the Corporation incurred the approximate fees set out below for the services of KPMG LLP. Fees billed in Canadian dollars are presented in U.S. dollars using the Bank of Canada indicative foreign exchange rate on the last business day of the applicable fiscal period.
21


The following table sets forth the fees we have incurred in using the services of KPMG LLP in respect of the applicable fiscal years:
Fiscal Year Ended
Audit Fees
Audit-Related Fees
Tax Fees
All Other Fees
Total
January 31, 2026
$957,095
$2,430
Nil
Nil
$959,095
January 31, 2025
$958,873
$2,430
Nil
Nil
$961,303

Audit Fees” consist of fees and related disbursements for professional services rendered for the audit of the Corporation’s annual consolidated financial statements, reviews of the Corporation’s interim consolidated financial statements, services provided in connection with regulatory filings and statutory audits of certain of the Corporation’s foreign subsidiaries.
 “Audit-Related Fees” consist of fees for assurance and related services that are reasonably related to the performance of the audit or review of the Corporation’s financial statements and are not reported as Audit Fees.
4.            Continuation, Amendment and Restatement of Shareholder Rights Plan
Background
The Corporation and Computershare Investor Services Inc. (the “Rights Agent”) entered into an agreement dated as of May 28, 2020 (the “Rights Plan Agreement”) to implement the Amended and Restated Shareholder Rights Plan (the “Rights Plan”), which amended and restated a predecessor of the Rights Plan that was amended and restated as of May 28, 2020, June 1, 2017, May 29, 2014, June 2, 2011 and May 29, 2008 and originally established in 2004. The Rights Plan was last confirmed by the shareholders at the annual and special meetings of shareholders held on June 15, 2023. The Corporation’s Board has approved an amended and restated shareholder rights plan (the “Amended Rights Plan”) that is to be governed by an agreement to be dated the date of the Meeting (the “Amended Rights Plan Agreement”), if approved at the Meeting.
The Amended Rights Plan discourages the making of certain take-over bids by creating the potential of significant dilution to any offeror who becomes the beneficial owner of 20% or more of the outstanding Common Shares. This potential is created through the issuance to all shareholders of contingent rights to acquire additional Common Shares at a significant discount to the then-prevailing market prices, which could, in certain circumstances, become exercisable by all shareholders other than the offeror and its joint actors. An offeror can avoid that potential by making a “Permitted Bid” (as defined in the Amended Rights Plan Agreement), negotiating with the Board to have the rights plan waived, or by applying to a securities commission to “cease trade” the rights issued under the rights plan. Any of these approaches will give the Board more control over such sale process and increase the likelihood of a better offer to the Corporation’s shareholders. See “Objectives of the Amended Rights Plan” below.
Proposed Amendments
Certain provisions of the Rights Plan have been revised in the Amended Rights Plan to reflect that the continuation of the Amended Rights Plan will be subject to review by holders of Common Shares at or prior to the annual meeting of such shareholders to be held in the 2029 calendar year.
Apart from the above-mentioned amendments, the Amended Rights Plan is identical to the Rights Plan in all material respects with limited, non-material house-keeping amendments also being
22


proposed. If the Rights Plan Resolution is passed at the Meeting, the Corporation and Rights Agent will execute the Amended Rights Plan Agreement and the Amended Rights Plan will come into effect. If the resolution is not passed, the Rights Plan will become void and of no further force and effect, the Amended Rights Plan Agreement will not be executed and will not become effective and the Corporation will no longer have any form of shareholder rights plan.
At the Meeting, holders of Common Shares will be asked to consider, and if thought advisable, to approve, with or without amendment, the following resolution approving the continuation, amendment and restatement of the shareholder rights plan of the Corporation (the “Rights Plan Resolution”):
BE IT RESOLVED THAT:
1. The shareholder rights plan of the Corporation be continued and the Amended and Restated Shareholder Rights Plan Agreement to be made effective as of June 11, 2026 between the Corporation and Computershare Investor Services Inc. (the “Rights Agent”), which amends and restates the Amended and Restated Shareholder Rights Plan Agreement dated June 15, 2023 between the Corporation and the Rights Agent (the “Rights Plan Agreement”) and continues the rights issued under the Rights Plan Agreement, is hereby approved; and
2. Any director or officer of the Corporation is hereby authorized to do all such things and execute all such documents and instruments as may be necessary or desirable to give effect to the above resolution.
Summary of the Amended Rights Plan and Copy of the Amended Rights Plan Agreement
A summary of the key features of the Amended Rights Plan is attached as Schedule “A” hereto. All capitalized terms used in this section of the Circular and Schedule “A” have the meanings set forth in the Amended Rights Plan Agreement unless otherwise indicated. The complete text of the Amended Rights Plan Agreement is available on the Corporation’s website at www.descartes.com. The complete text of the Rights Plan Agreement is available on SEDAR+ at www.sedarplus.ca under filings of “The Descartes Systems Group Inc.”, filed on April 27, 2026 under the filing type of “Other securityholders documents”. Both the Rights Plan Agreement and the Amended Rights Plan Agreement are also available to any shareholder upon request to the Corporate Secretary of the Corporation. Shareholders wishing to receive a copy of the Rights Plan Agreement or the Amended Rights Plan Agreement should contact the Corporation by email at investor@descartes.com. The description of the Rights Plan, the Rights Plan Agreement, the Amended Rights Plan and the Amended Rights Plan Agreement contained herein is qualified in its entirety by the full text of the Rights Plan Agreement and the Amended Rights Plan Agreement, as applicable.
Objectives of the Amended Rights Plan
Approval of the Amended Rights Plan is not being proposed in response to or in anticipation of any pending or threatened take-over bid, nor to deter take-over bids generally. As of the date of this Circular, the Board is not aware of any third party considering or preparing any proposal to acquire control of the Corporation. The primary objectives of the Amended Rights Plan are to ensure, in the context of a bid for control of the Corporation through an acquisition of the Common Shares, that shareholders have an equal opportunity to participate in a bid.
In approving the Amended Rights Plan, the Board considered, in particular, that while existing securities legislation has addressed many concerns of unequal treatment, there remains the possibility that control or effective control of an issuer may be acquired at a premium to market price which premium is not shared with other security-holders. For example, a bidder could acquire blocks of shares by private agreement from one or a small group of shareholders at a premium to market price which is not shared
23


with the other shareholders. In addition, a person may slowly accumulate securities through stock exchange acquisitions which may result, over time, in an acquisition of control or effective control without payment of fair value for control or a fair sharing of a control premium among all security-holders. These are generally known as “creeping bids” or “exempt bids”. The Amended Rights Plan addresses these concerns by applying to all acquisitions of greater than 20% of the Common Shares, including those acquisitions that are not subject to the formal take-over bid rules under Canadian securities laws, to better ensure that shareholders receive equal treatment.
The Amended Rights Plan in no way prohibits a change of control of the Corporation in a transaction that is fair and in the best interests of the Corporation. The rights of shareholders to seek a change in the management of the Corporation or to influence or promote action of management in a particular manner will not be affected by the Amended Rights Plan. The approval of the Amended Rights Plan does not affect the duty of a director to act honestly and in good faith with a view to the best interests of the Corporation.
General Impact of the Amended Rights Plan
It is not the intention of the Board, in approving the Amended Rights Plan, to secure the continuance of existing directors or management in office, nor to avoid a bid for control of the Corporation in a transaction that is fair and in the best interests of the Corporation. For example, through the Permitted Bid mechanism, described in more detail in the summary contained in Schedule “A” hereto, shareholders may tender to a bid that meets the Permitted Bid criteria without triggering the Amended Rights Plan, regardless of the acceptability of the bid to the Board. Furthermore, even in the context of a bid that does not meet the Permitted Bid criteria, the Board will continue to be bound to consider fully and fairly any bid for the Common Shares in any exercise of its discretion to waive application of the Amended Rights Plan or redeem the Rights. In all such circumstances, the Board must act honestly and in good faith with a view to the best interests of the Corporation.
The Amended Rights Plan does not preclude any shareholder from utilizing the proxy mechanism under the CBCA and securities laws to promote a change in the management or direction of the Corporation, or its Board, and has no effect on the rights of holders of outstanding Common Shares to requisition a meeting of shareholders in accordance with the provisions of applicable corporate and securities legislation, or to enter into agreements with respect to voting their Common Shares. The definitions of “Acquiring Person” and “Beneficial Ownership” have been developed to minimize concerns that the Amended Rights Plan may be inadvertently triggered or triggered as a result of an overly-broad aggregation of holdings of institutional shareholders and their clients.
The Amended Rights Plan will not interfere with the day-to-day operations of the Corporation. The continuation of the Rights Plan does not in any way alter the financial condition of the Corporation, impede its business plans or alter its financial statements.
The Board believes that the dominant effect of the Amended Rights Plan will be to maximize the Corporation’s opportunity to enhance shareholder value and ensure equal treatment of all shareholders in the context of a take-over bid for the Common Shares.
Vote Required
The Amended Rights Plan has been conditionally approved by the Toronto Stock Exchange (the “TSX”), subject to shareholder approval. The TSX and the terms of the Rights Plan Agreement require that the continuation of the Rights Plan, and amendment and restatement of the Rights Plan Agreement, must be approved by (i) a simple majority of the votes cast in favour of the Rights Plan Resolution by all shareholders, whether in person or by proxy, at the Meeting; and (ii) a simple majority of the votes cast in favour of the Rights Plan Resolution by the Independent Shareholders (as defined in the Rights Plan), whether in person or by proxy, at the Meeting. If the Rights Plan Resolution is passed at the Meeting,
24


the Corporation and the Rights Agent will execute the Amended Rights Plan Agreement as of the date the resolution is passed and the Amended Rights Plan will come into effect. If the Rights Plan Resolution is not passed, the Rights Plan will become void and of no further force and effect, the Amended Rights Plan Agreement will not be executed and the Amended Rights Plan will not become effective and the Corporation will no longer have any form of shareholder rights plan.
Recommendation of the Board of Directors
The Board has reviewed the Amended Rights Plan for conformity with current practices of Canadian issuers with respect to shareholder rights plan design. Based on its review, the Board has determined that it is advisable and in the best interests of the Corporation that the Corporation have in place a shareholder rights plan in the form of the Amended Rights Plan. Accordingly, the Board unanimously recommends that shareholders vote FOR the continuation of the Rights Plan as the Amended Rights Plan, and amendment and restatement of the Rights Plan Agreement as the Amended Rights Plan Agreement. On April 27, 2026, the Board resolved to authorize, subject to regulatory approval and approval by the shareholders at the Meeting, the entering into of the Amended Rights Plan Agreement. The Corporation has been advised that the directors and senior officers of the Corporation intend to vote all Common Shares held by them FOR the Rights Plan Resolution. In the absence of a contrary instruction, the persons designated by Management in the enclosed form of proxy intend to vote FOR the Rights Plan Resolution.
5.            Advisory Vote on Executive Compensation (Say-on-Pay Vote)
The Board has determined to provide the Corporation’s shareholders with an advisory vote on the Corporation’s approach to executive compensation. While this “Say-on-Pay” vote is non-binding, it gives shareholders an opportunity to provide important input to the Board. Shareholders will be asked at the Meeting to consider, and, if deemed advisable, adopt the following resolution (the “Say-on-Pay Resolution”):
“BE IT RESOLVED, on an advisory basis and not to diminish the role and responsibilities of the Board, that the shareholders accept the approach to executive compensation disclosed in the Corporation’s Management Information Circular dated April 27, 2026.”

Approval of the Say-on-Pay Resolution will require an affirmative vote of a majority of the votes cast by holders of Common Shares present or represented by proxy at the Meeting.
In the absence of a contrary instruction, the persons designated by Management in the enclosed form of proxy intend to vote FOR the Say-on-Pay Resolution.
As this is an advisory vote, the results will not be binding upon the Board. However, the Board of Directors will take the results of the vote into account, as it deems appropriate, when considering future compensation policies, procedures and decisions and in determining whether to increase its current engagement practices with shareholders on compensation and related matters. The Corporation will disclose the results of the shareholder advisory vote as part of its report of voting results for the Meeting.
At the previous year’s annual meeting of shareholders held on June 12th, 2025, 96.46% of the votes cast by shareholders (74,071,830 Common Shares) were cast in favour of the “Say-on-Pay” resolution.
6.            Other Matters
The Corporation knows of no other matters to be submitted to the shareholders at the Meeting. If any other matters properly come before the Meeting, it is the intention of the persons designated by
25


Management in the enclosed form of proxy to vote the Common Shares they represent in accordance with their judgment on such matters.
STATEMENT OF CORPORATE GOVERNANCE PRACTICES
The Board and Management consider good corporate governance to be central to the effective operation of the Corporation. Both Management and the Board, with the assistance of the Corporate Governance Committee, have devoted significant attention and resources to ensuring that the Corporation’s system of corporate governance meets or exceeds applicable legal and stock exchange requirements, and reflects consideration of best practices in corporate governance and their application to the Corporation’s circumstances.

The Corporation is subject to the requirements of the Canadian Securities Administrators National Instrument 58-101 – Disclosure of Corporate Governance Practices; National Policy 58-201 – Corporate Governance Guidelines; and National Instrument 52-110 – Audit Committees (the “Audit Committee National Instrument”).
The Corporation is also subject to certain requirements of the U.S. Sarbanes-Oxley Act and requirements of the TSX and NASDAQ and comparable requirements under Canadian provincial securities legislation, including those relating to the certification of financial and other information by the Corporation’s CEO and CFO; oversight of the Corporation’s external auditors; enhanced independence criteria for audit committee members; the pre-approval of permissible non-audit services to be performed
26


by the Corporation’s external auditors; and the establishment of procedures for the anonymous submission of employee complaints regarding the Corporation’s accounting practices (commonly known as whistle-blower procedures).
The Board and Management believe that the Corporation has a sound governance structure in place for both Management and the Board, and a comprehensive system of internal controls designed to ensure reliability of financial records. These structures and systems are reviewed and assessed on a regular basis considering developments in both Canada and the United States relating to corporate governance, accountability and disclosure.
7.            Mandate of the Board of Directors
The Board is responsible for the overall stewardship of the Corporation. The Board discharges this responsibility directly and through delegation of specific responsibilities to committees of the Board, the Chair of the Board, and the executive officers of the Corporation, all as more particularly described in the Board Mandate attached to this Circular as Schedule “B”.
8.            Risk Oversight
The Board Mandate, among other things, describes the Board’s responsibility for oversight of risks impacting the Corporation. The Board Mandate provides that the Board will provide regular oversight of the Corporation’s risk management practices, either directly or through its committees, and, with the assistance of its committees, oversee Management’s assessment, management and monitoring of key risks affecting the Corporation and the Corporation’s risk management/monitoring systems. The Board Mandate also provides that the Board will, with the assistance of the Audit Committee, review the controls relating to financial information and the integrity of the Corporation’s financial information and systems, the effectiveness of internal controls and Management’s reports on those controls.
Consistent with the Board Mandate, the Corporation has adopted a risk management policy that is reviewed and updated as necessary on an annual basis (the “Risk Management Policy”) that establishes principles to guide Management’s implementation and operation of the Corporation’s risk management program, which are based on the International Organization for Standardization ISO 31000:2018, Risk management – Principles and guidelines standards. The Risk Management Policy also establishes a framework for risk management (the “Risk Management Framework”) that includes risk identification, risk assessment/measurement, risk response and control activities, risk reporting and communication, risk monitoring and risk reduction/mitigation.
Each fiscal quarter, Management reports directly to the Board and Audit Committee on existing and emerging risks impacting the Corporation’s business risk profile, including human-resource based risk, regulatory changes, litigation, changes in customer relationships, information technology risks, cyber-security risks, AI risks, product development, credit and liquidity risks, market risks and other business risks, including those more particularly identified in the “Certain Factors That May Affect Future Results” section of the Corporation’s periodic financial reports. Management also reports to the Audit Committee on an ongoing basis on Management’s risk management activities consistent with the Risk Management Framework. In addition, on an ongoing basis the Board and Management consider short- and long-term risks in developing the Corporation’s strategic plans. If new or emerging risks are identified, the Board considers what, if any, amendments to the Corporation’s existing policies and procedures are appropriate to establish compensating controls to manage or mitigate the risk. On an ongoing basis, the Corporate Governance Committee and Audit Committee review the Corporation’s Risk Management Policy and Risk Management Framework to assist the Board in evaluating the framework’s effectiveness.
Although the Board as a whole has responsibility for risk oversight, the Board exercises its oversight of the Corporation’s risk management policies and practices primarily through its committees, which in turn report back to the Board on risk oversight.
27


The Audit Committee is responsible for overseeing risks related to our accounting, financial statements, financial reporting process and internal controls related to financial reporting. The Board has also assigned to the Audit Committee primary responsibility for overall enterprise risk management and oversight of the Corporation’s risk management policies, except in those areas where other committees have express responsibility for specific categories of risk, for example, the Compensation Committee in the area of compensation-related risk. As discussed above, the Audit Committee is also responsible for receiving reports from Management on an ongoing basis related to the risk management activities undertaken pursuant to the Risk Management Framework.
Within its oversight of overall enterprise risk management, the Audit Committee is responsible for oversight of the Corporation’s approach to cybersecurity risk management. On a quarterly basis, the Audit Committee receives an update from Management on the Corporation’s ongoing approach to cybersecurity risk management, and on a periodic basis, the Audit Committee receives reports from third-party consultants related to reviews of the Corporation’s level of maturity in its cybersecurity risk management practices. On an annual basis, the Audit Committee also engages with Management of the Corporation in a dedicated session focused on cybersecurity. As part of its annual review of the Corporation’s commercial insurance program, the Audit Committee also reviews the level of cybersecurity-specific insurance maintained by the Corporation.
AI risk management and oversight are currently the responsibility of the full Board of Directors. On a quarterly basis, the Board receives updates from internal business leaders and subject matter experts regarding the Corporation’s use of AI, including both educational briefings and operational updates. These sessions support the Board’s oversight of AI-related risks and opportunities in the context of strategy, risk management, and operating performance.
Also, within its oversight of overall risk management, the Audit Committee exercises oversight of the Corporation’s approach to climate-related risks that may be relevant to the Corporation and, on a quarterly basis, the Audit Committee together with Management considers any climate-related events or developments that may pose a material risk to the Corporation or its financial performance.
The Board delegates to the Compensation Committee the responsibility to provide risk oversight of the Corporation’s compensation policies and practices, and to identify and mitigate compensation policies and practices that could encourage inappropriate or excessive risks by members of senior Management. See “Statement of Compensation Governance – Compensation Oversight Process – Compensation-related Risk Mitigation”.
The Corporate Governance Committee is responsible for monitoring risk and potential risks associated with the effectiveness of the Corporation’s corporate governance framework, including its corporate responsibility framework.
The Nominating Committee is delegated responsibility to monitor risks related to overall Board composition and director succession.
The Board reviews the composition of its committees at least annually, typically following the annual meeting of the Corporation’s shareholders, to ensure that the committees are appropriately composed to discharge each committee’s respective responsibilities. In assigning committee responsibilities among its members, the Board considers factors including the applicable restrictions and requirements of committee composition established by law and regulation; the qualifications and knowledge of the individual members eligible to serve on committees; and the relative distribution of committee responsibilities to each individual member.
28


9.            Corporate Responsibility
The Board has, through its oversight of the overall governance framework under which the Corporation has operated, exercised oversight over many of the areas that now fall within the broad concept of corporate responsibility.  The Board Mandate also expressly recognizes the role of the Board in reviewing and providing oversight of the Corporation’s approach to corporate responsibility practices, programs, and initiatives on a regular basis.
10.            Role of Board in Corporate Strategy
The Board engages in a detailed review and discussion of the Corporation’s short- and long-term strategy on at least an annual basis. The primary areas of focus in such reviews include consideration of forecasted areas of growth, planned investments, corporate development initiatives, capitalization requirements of the Corporation and overall organizational development. In addition to the formally scheduled strategy review sessions, the Board also regularly engages in considering various elements of the Corporation’s strategy as part of each quarterly review of the financial results of the Corporation.
11.            Committee Charters and Position Descriptions
The Board delegates certain responsibilities to the following four committees of the Board: (i) the Audit Committee; (ii) the Compensation Committee; (iii) the Corporate Governance Committee; and (iv) the Nominating Committee. As of April 27, 2026, the following directors serve on the following committees in the following roles:
Current Board Committee Composition

Director
Audit
Compensation
Corporate Governance
Nominating
Deepak Chopra
Member
   
Member
Eric A. Demirian
Member
 
Member
Member
Dennis Maple
 
Member
 
Chair
Chris Muntwyler
 
Chair
Member
 
Jane Mowat
       
Jane O’Hagan
 
Member
Chair
 
John J. Walker
Chair
 
Member
 
Laura Wilkin
       

In addition to the above, in fiscal 2026, the Chair of the Board also attended all Committee meetings in an ex-officio capacity.
The Board has adopted a written charter for each of these committees. Each committee charter includes a description of the role of the chair of that committee. A description of each committee charter, the committee membership and each committee’s activities in fiscal 2026 is included below in this “Statement of Corporate Governance Practices” section. The committee charters are also available at https://www.descartes.com/who-we-are/investor-relations/corporate-governance or upon request from the Corporate Secretary of the Corporation.
From time to time, the Board may appoint ad hoc committees to assist it in specific matters. Where such ad hoc committees are established, the Board delegates a specific mandate to such ad hoc committee.
The Board has adopted a written position description for the roles of the Chair of the Board and the CEO. The Chair of the Board’s role is described as facilitating the operations and deliberations of the Board and the satisfaction of the Board’s functions and responsibilities under the Board Mandate. The Chair of the Board’s functions and responsibilities include facilitating the functioning of the Board independently of Management, providing independent leadership to the Board, Board management and
29


reviewing Management’s strategic initiatives. The CEO’s role includes having general supervision over the business and affairs of the Corporation, including strategic planning, operational planning and shareholder communication, and leading the implementation of the resolutions and policies of the Board. The position descriptions of the Chair of the Board and the CEO are available at https://www.descartes.com/who-we-are/investor-relations/corporate-governance or upon request from the Corporate Secretary of the Corporation.
12.            Audit Committee
The Audit Committee currently comprises John Walker (Chair), Deepak Chopra and Eric Demirian. Each member of the Audit Committee is independent and financially literate for purposes of the National Instrument 52-110 – Audit Committees, as well as pursuant to the Listing Standards of NASDAQ and U.S. federal securities laws. Item 7.2 of the Corporation’s Annual Information Form dated March 11th, 2026, a copy of which is filed on www.sedarplus.ca contains further disclosure with respect to the Corporation’s Audit Committee. The Board has also determined that John Walker, Deepak Chopra and Eric Demirian are each an “audit committee financial expert” for the purposes of applicable U.S. securities laws and regulations.
The responsibilities, power and operation of the Audit Committee are set out in its written charter, a copy of which is annexed to the Corporation’s Annual Information Form as filed on www.sedarplus.ca. The Committee reviews its charter for updates on a regular basis.  The Committee’s primary functions are to oversee the accounting and financial reporting practices of the Corporation and the audits of the Corporation’s financial statements. This includes: assisting the Board in fulfilling its responsibilities in reviewing financial disclosures and internal controls over financial reporting; monitoring the system of internal control and risk management; monitoring the adequacy of the Corporation’s computerized information system controls and overall enterprise risk management program including cyber-security risk and climate-related risks that may be material to the Corporation’s financial performance, monitoring the Corporation’s compliance with applicable laws and regulations; selecting the auditors for shareholder approval; reviewing the qualifications, independence and performance of the auditors; overseeing the internal audit function of the Corporation and approving an annual internal audit plan; reviewing and approving any related-party transactions between the Corporation and any of its directors or executive officers; reviewing and approving the Audit Committee charter; and reviewing the qualifications, independence and performance of the Corporation’s financial management.
In fiscal 2026, the Audit Committee’s activities included the following:
Audit Committee Meetings

The Audit Committee conducted eight committee meetings during the year with all members of the committee present(1) at each of the meetings;

The Corporation’s independent auditors – KPMG – attend each quarterly meeting of the Committee at which the financial results are reviewed, to report on the results of their quarterly reviews of the interim financial statements and the annual audit of the financial statements and annual audit of internal controls over financial reporting;

At each quarterly meeting of the Audit Committee, an in-camera meeting with the independent auditor is conducted without Management present, as well as an in-camera meeting with the head of internal audit without Management present, and an in-camera meeting with the CFO without the other members of Management present; and

At each meeting of the Audit Committee including both the regular quarterly meetings and any of the other ad-hoc meetings held, an in-camera meeting of the members of the Audit committee and other Board members in attendance is conducted without Management present.
30


Fiscal 2026 Audited Consolidated Financial Statements

Reviewed and discussed with Management and the independent auditor the audited annual consolidated financial statements prepared by Management, and the notes disclosures and management’s discussion and analysis thereon; and

Reviewed and discussed with Management and the independent auditor the results of the audit of the internal control over financial reporting.

Independent Auditor

Reviewed the qualifications, performance and independence of the independent auditor and approved the compensation of the independent auditor;

Approved audit and permitted non-audit services to be performed by the independent auditor;

Delegated authority to the Chair of the Audit Committee to approve requests received during the year for audit and permitted non-audit services to be provided by the independent auditor and reviewed and ratified the decisions of the Chair at the next meeting; and

Reviewed the overall scope and plan of the annual audit with the independent auditor and Management.

Financial Reporting

Reviewed with Management and the independent auditor prior to publication, and recommended for approval by the Board, the interim quarterly financial statements and the annual consolidated financial statements prepared by Management and the notes and management’s discussion and analysis thereon, and the related earnings press release for each quarter;

Compliance

Reviewed the Corporation’s design plans and testing of internal controls over financial reporting in accordance with the COSO 2013 framework;

Reviewed Management’s reports on the effectiveness of internal control over financial reporting and disclosure controls and procedures; and

Reviewed the results of the Audit Committee whistle-blower hotline program.

Risk Oversight

Reviewed results of annual risk assessment survey;

Reviewed the annual fraud risk assessment prepared by management and the controls and procedures designed to monitor and manage fraud risk;

Received regular updates from management and external consultants on approach to cyber-security risk management and mitigation (including by way of a dedicated meeting on cyber-security risk management);

On a quarterly-basis considered the risk factors discussed by the Corporation with respect to its financial performance including any material climate-related risks; and

Reviewed the Corporation’s commercial insurance coverage program.

Planning

Reviewed the performance of the CFO, the head of internal audit and senior finance and tax staff; and

Reviewed Management’s annual proposed budget for the Corporation and related planning initiatives.
31


Internal Audit

Received and reviewed quarterly reports from the internal audit function reporting directly to the Chair of the Audit Committee; and

Reviewed and approved the annual work plan for internal audit.
13.            Compensation Committee
The Compensation Committee currently comprises of Chris Muntwyler (Chair), Dennis Maple and Jane O’Hagan. Each of the members of the Compensation Committee is an independent director. The responsibilities, powers and operation of the Compensation Committee are set out in its written charter and are described in the section “Compensation – Compensation Committee” included later in this Circular.
14.            Corporate Governance Committee
The Corporate Governance Committee is currently comprised of Jane O’Hagan (Chair), Chris Muntwyler, Eric Demirian and John Walker. Each of the members of the Corporate Governance Committee is an independent director. The responsibilities, powers and operation of the Corporate Governance Committee are set out in its written charter. As described in its charter, the Corporate Governance Committee is responsible for, among other things, assisting the Board in fulfilling its corporate governance oversight responsibilities. In fiscal 2026, the Corporate Governance Committee’s activities included the following:

Reviewed and recommended for Board approval the Corporation’s corporate governance framework;

Periodically reviewed the Corporation’s corporate governance activities and reported to the Board on these activities at quarterly Board meetings;

Reviewed development of and progress towards ongoing corporate responsibility initiatives, and the Corporation’s disclosure relating to those initiatives;

Reviewed and recommended for Board approval the statement of corporate governance practices included in the management information circular for the 2025 AGM;

Reviewed the Corporation’s governing documents including the Corporation’s Board Mandate and each of its committee charters;

Reviewed the Code of Conduct and recommended for Board re-approval;

Reviewed the Corporation’s disclosure policy;

Oversaw the ongoing director education program and the selection of topics for director education sessions;

Reviewed the Corporation’s directors’ and officers’ liability insurance;

Conducted an assessment of the performance of the Board, the individual directors and each Board committee against their respective mandates;

Evaluated each director against independence criteria applicable to the Corporation; and

Reviewed, together with the Compensation Committee, the CEO’s recommendations for Management succession and development plans.
15.            Nominating Committee
The Nominating Committee currently comprises Dennis Maple (Chair), Deepak Chopra and Eric Demirian. Each of the members of the Nominating Committee is independent. The responsibilities, powers and operation of the Nominating Committee are set out in its written charter. The Nominating Committee’s primary function is to assist the Board in identifying and nominating suitable candidates to serve on the Board and to succeed the Chair of the Board. To identify new candidates to serve on the Board, the Nominating Committee:
32



Considers the criteria established by the Board for the selection of new directors, which includes ensuring representation of a wide range of backgrounds, experiences, and perspectives;

Maintains a list of desired competencies, expertise, skills, background and personal qualities for potential candidates for the Board;

Identifies and recommends to the Board individuals qualified and suitable to become Board members, taking into consideration any perceived gaps in the current Board or committee composition; and

Considers the experience and expertise of the independent members of the Board with a view to identification of a suitable potential successor for the Chair of the Board role.

In fiscal 2026, the Nominating Committee’s activities included the following:

Considered the overall size of the Board;

Reviewed the composition of the Board’s committees and recommended to the Board the proposed composition of the Board’s committees having regard to succession planning within those committees in light of changes in Board composition;

Continued to identify the key skills, expertise and background for potential new additions to the Board to ensure the Board remains well positioned for future refreshment and then began to identify potential candidates who could address those areas of interest; and

Reviewed the Corporation’s director orientation program.
16.            Board of Directors, Committee and Individual Director Assessments
The Corporate Governance Committee, in consultation with the Chair of the Board, is responsible for assessing the effectiveness of the Board as a whole and the committees of the Board. Each director is required to complete, on an annual basis, a confidential written evaluation with respect to the performance of the Board; the performance of its committees; and the contributions of the other directors to the Board and its committees. The results of the evaluations are summarized by the Chair of the Corporate Governance Committee and presented to the full Board. In addition, the Chair of the Board reviews with each director that director’s aggregate peer evaluation results. In the case of the peer evaluation results for the Chair of the Board, those results are reviewed with the Chair of the Board by the Chair of the Corporate Governance Committee.
17.            Policy Regarding Human Capital Management
The Corporation has a written policy relating to human capital management, which states that the Corporation recognizes and embraces the benefits of having its Board of Directors represent the necessary range of perspectives, experience and expertise required for the Corporation to achieve its objectives and deliver for its stakeholders.
The Corporation regularly considers, among other factors, the level of representation of women on the Board and as executive officers in assessing the appropriateness of candidates for nomination or appointments. However, the Corporation does not have specific targets or goals respecting the representation of women on the Board and in executive officer positions, instead focusing on choosing the most qualified candidate for the position. In the context of identification of potential candidates for roles on the Board, potential candidates, including candidates proposed by a third-party search firm, include female candidates.  The Nominating Committee also attempts to ensure that its list of potential candidates for any new board position includes individuals who are members of a visible minority.
On an annual basis, the Nominating Committee (i) assesses the effectiveness of the Board nomination processes at identifying candidates who contribute to a wide range of backgrounds, experiences, and perspectives within the composition of the Board; and (ii) considers if it is advisable to recommend to the Board for adoption any additional actions to support such variety among the members
33


of the Board. Further to the foregoing, among other things, the Nominating Committee considers (i) the number of women considered or brought forward for a position on the Board; (ii) the skills, knowledge, experience and other characteristics of female candidates to ensure that such candidates have been fairly considered relative to other candidates; and (iii) the number of women on the Board and the proportion (in percentage terms) of persons on the Board.
Having regard to the current composition of the Board, the Nominating Committee is satisfied that there is a wide range of backgrounds, experiences, and perspectives among the members of the Board.
As described above, the Corporation does not have specific targets for the number of women in senior management positions, choosing to focus on hiring the most appropriate candidate for the position but having regard to an overall interest in increasing the level of representation of women within senior management roles at the Corporation. Management reports to the Board on a quarterly basis with respect to the composition of its workforce including specific disclosure of the number of women within the overall employee base as well as in senior management positions within the Corporation. The Board, in its quarterly one-on-one meetings with the CEO, regularly reinforces its interest in continuing to attract and promote women into senior management positions within the Corporation.
In reference to the disclosure requirements under the Canada Business Corporations Act, the Corporation has not adopted a written policy that specifically relates to the identification and nomination of women, aboriginal peoples in Canada, persons with disabilities and members of visible minorities (the “Designated Groups”) for election as directors or for the appointment of members of senior management. As discussed above, the current written policy includes consideration of a range of perspectives, experience and expertise required by the Corporation which includes but goes beyond the Designated Groups.
Three of the nine Directors on the Board are women (three of the nine nominees proposed for election as Directors at the Meeting), and two other Directors (two of the nine nominees proposed for election as Directors at the Meeting) identify as members of a visible minority. In looking at the independent directors only by excluding the CEO, the percentages increase to 37.5% representation by women and 25% representation by individuals identifying as members of a visible minority.  Currently, there are thirteen (13) women who are part of the senior management team of the Corporation, representing 14% of the total group of 91 positions that the Corporation currently identifies as being senior management but there are not currently any women in any of the nine roles that are currently identified as executive officer positions of the Corporation. This is an increase in the number (thirteen (13)) of women and a slightly lower proportion (14%), from what the Corporation reported within the 85 senior management positions identified in its Information Circular for fiscal 2025. The Corporation has not requested that executive officers provide self-identification information by which the Corporation can identify if such individuals may constitute a member of a Designated Group and does not have data available to report the level of representation in its executive officers across those Designated Groups beyond gender.
Please refer to the earlier discussion under the heading of “Director Tenure and Age” for our approach to director renewal and term limits.
18.            Ethical Business Conduct
The Board has adopted the Code of Business Conduct and Ethics (“Code of Conduct”) applicable to the Corporation’s directors and employees. A copy of the Code of Conduct is available on the Corporation’s website at https://www.descartes.com/who-we-are/investor-relations/corporate-governance and has been filed on and is accessible through SEDAR+ at www.sedarplus.ca. The Code of Conduct sets out in detail the core values and principles by which the Corporation is governed and addresses topics such as: honest and ethical conduct; conflicts of interest; compliance with applicable laws and the Corporation’s policies and procedures; public disclosure and books and records; use of
34


corporate assets and opportunities; confidentiality of corporate information; reporting responsibilities and procedures; health and safety; and non-retaliation.
The Corporation’s General Counsel is responsible for communicating the Code of Conduct to directors, officers, and employees and assisting the Corporate Governance Committee in administering the Code of Conduct. The Corporate Governance Committee monitors overall compliance with the Code of Conduct. The Corporation’s General Counsel and Corporate Governance Committee each report to the Board at regular quarterly meetings of the Board on any issues or concerns that have been raised, provided that any issues or concerns specifically related to accounting, internal financial controls and/or auditing are reviewed and forwarded to the Audit Committee.
In addition, the Board has adopted and communicated policies and procedures for the submission by employees, directors or officers of concerns regarding accounting matters or violations of the Code of Conduct or applicable laws; and the receipt, retention and treatment of such concerns. The Board and the Audit Committee have established a confidential, anonymous hotline to encourage employees, officers and directors to raise concerns regarding matters covered by the Code of Conduct (including accounting, internal controls or auditing matters) on a confidential basis free from discrimination, retaliation or harassment. Employees have also been advised that concerns relating to compliance with the Code of Conduct may also be raised to an independent director by way of the Chair of the Board. Frequent reminders are sent to employees about the availability of the hotline.
As noted above under the description of the duties of the Corporation’s Audit Committee, the Audit Committee has responsibility for oversight and review of any related-party transaction between the Corporation or any of the subsidiary companies under the direct or indirect control of the Corporation and any Director or any executive officer of the Corporation. Under the terms of the Audit Committee Charter this includes any transaction or series of transactions in the same fiscal year involving a payment or any other consideration payable to or receivable by any Director or executive officer of the Corporation outside of approved compensation arrangements or customary expense reimbursement. There were no such related-party transactions in fiscal 2026 or agreements in respect of which a Director or executive officer declared a material interest in fiscal 2026.
19.            Succession Planning
Oversight of the Corporation’s succession planning is primarily the responsibility of the Compensation Committee, with the Nominating Committee having responsibility for succession planning related to the role of the Chair of the Board. Each of these two committees is comprised entirely of independent directors. In addition, other committees of the Board may be consulted in the succession planning process depending upon the specific role under consideration.
The Corporation’s process for succession planning for the roles held by Management, including the CEO, involves the identification and consideration of potential internal and external candidates based on various factors, including the following: executive experience; market and industry expertise; geographic location; familiarity with the Corporation’s business and customers; and past successes in achieving particular corporate goals. Interim internal successors for those roles are also identified for the purposes of the Corporation’s Emergency Succession Plan, and these may differ from those identified as potential longer-term succession candidates.
The Compensation Committee reviews the Corporation’s Emergency Succession Plan on at least an annual basis. The Compensation Committee also reviews the CEO’s recommendations for the ongoing longer-term succession plans for other members of Management.
In succession planning for the role of the CEO, the Compensation Committee, with the assistance of the Corporation’s senior human resources management, has developed a skills matrix that identifies the key skills and experience that would be important in any successor to the CEO role. The
35


Compensation Committee utilizes that matrix in considering whether there are individuals within the existing senior management team who have the skills and experience to be a potential successor to the CEO role and what additional skills or experience might need to be further developed or expanded by any of those individuals.
Succession planning for the CEO role and other key senior management roles is regularly discussed between the Compensation Committee and the CEO at quarterly in-camera meetings without other members of Management present. The recommendations and views of the Compensation Committee and, in the case of the Chair of the Board, the Nominating Committee in respect of succession planning are presented to the Board on an annual basis for consideration at a session without Management present.
20.            Shareholder Engagement
The Board has a formal shareholder engagement policy that encourages regular and constructive engagement directly with shareholders by both Management and the Board. Members of the Board actively contact a target list of the largest shareholders of the Corporation on at least a bi-annual basis to solicit feedback from those shareholders on the performance of the CEO; the performance of the Board; the performance of the Corporation generally; and overall governance and compensation matters. These meetings are generally held with the Chair of the Board and the Chair of either the Compensation Committee, the Corporate Governance Committee or the Audit Committee. The Board most recently engaged in this shareholder engagement process during fiscal 2026 and a meaningful percentage of the Corporation’s largest shareholders accepted the invitation to provide feedback directly to the Board through this process.
In addition to engagement with shareholders by the Board, Management also regularly engages with shareholders of the Corporation and attempts to meet with, or offer meetings to, each of the Corporation’s largest shareholders on at least an annual basis.  On a quarterly basis, Management holds a conference call available to all shareholders to review the financial and operating results of the most recently completed quarter and several of our Management regularly attend and speak at various investor conferences and broker-sponsored meetings with groups of investors and potential investors.
On an annual basis, our shareholders are invited to consider and approve an advisory resolution on our approach to executive compensation.
To facilitate communication and engagement with our shareholders, the following means of communication are available:
By email to:  investor@descartes.com
By email directly to the Chair of the Board:  boardofdirectors@descartes.com
By phone: 519-746-6114 x.202358
By mail:  Investor Relations, Descartes, 120 Randall Drive, Waterloo, ON, Canada N2V 1C6
21.            Corporate Responsibility
The Corporation continues to recognize the role that it can play in helping advance corporate responsibility initiatives that are important to our stakeholders, including our shareholders, customers, suppliers and employees. The Corporate Governance Committee exercises oversight over the Corporation’s corporate responsibility practices, programs, and initiatives and consider progress towards such initiatives on a regular basis.
36


Organizational Governance
Within the area of Organizational Governance, we have adopted a number of policies and procedures to reinforce the principle that the Corporation, and its employees and directors, should at all times act in an ethical, respectful and responsible manner. These include, but are not limited to, our Code of Business Conduct and Ethics, Business Partner Code of Conduct, Global Anti-Corruption Policy, Disclosure Policy, Whistle-blower Policy, Anti-Harassment Policy and Modern Slavery Statement and a variety of other policies that set the tone for the type of workplace we intend to operate and the manner in which we expect all employees and directors to conduct themselves.
Impact Initiatives
Each year, the Corporation publishes an Impact Report, available on its website at www.descartes.com, to give stakeholders, shareholders, customers, suppliers, employees, and the communities the Corporation is a part of, an update and an account of where the Corporation’s initiatives regarding the responsible operation of its business. Information on the Corporation’s website is specifically not incorporated by reference into this Circular.
Human Rights and Labour Practices
The Corporation has adopted a number of policies that are focused on respecting the rights of all employees and providing a safe and healthy working environment. These include compliance with requisite occupational health and safety requirements of the jurisdictions in which we operate. Our Code of Business Conduct and our Anti-Harassment Policy are two key components of our approach in this area. We also expect each of our suppliers to respect basic human rights in their own operations and we enshrine that principle in our Business Partner Code of Conduct which defines the standards by which we expect our suppliers to conduct their own businesses. Finally, on a quarterly basis, Management provides the Board with a report that touches upon workplace issues including employee wellbeing, employee engagement (by way of results from employee surveys) and employee-related inclusion and belonging initiatives.
The Corporation is committed to the protection of personal information and to the principle of only using such information for the purpose for which it was provided and has implemented a variety of measures to protect the security and confidentiality of the data it processes.
The Corporation has also adopted a policy on human capital management with respect to directors and executive officers.  We refer to the discussion earlier under the heading “Policy Regarding Human Capital Management”.
Recognizing that the Corporation’s commitments to these principles are reflected in a variety of different policies, the Corporation has adopted an over-arching Human Rights Statement which can be found below.
37


The Descartes Systems Group Inc.
Human Rights Statement

The Descartes Systems Group Inc. and its various affiliates (collectively, the “Company”) is committed to providing a global work environment that is free from harassment or discrimination based on the grounds enumerated in federal, national, state, provincial or other Human Rights legislation.  More fundamentally, in addition to compliance with applicable laws and regulations, the Company is steadfast in conducting its business in a manner that is consistent with internationally recognized norms, tenets and principles such as the United Nations Universal Declaration of Human Rights.

These core values are specifically reflected in the manner by which the Company conducts itself in its dealings with its prospective and current employees, its customers and its other stakeholders as further outlined in the following practices, policies and initiatives:


Providing a safe space for employees that is free of harassment, bullying and violence as expressed in the Company’s Workplace Violence and Harassment Policy and Program;

Promoting ethical conduct and behaviour by our employees and suppliers through adherence to the Company’s Code of Business Conduct and Ethics;

Protecting the privacy of our employees, customers and suppliers and others in accordance with the Company’s various privacy policies and programs including but not limited to the General Privacy Policy, Commercial Relationship Privacy Policy and Recruitment Privacy Policy;

Forgoing the use of forced or child labour in compliance with applicable laws and international norms;

Ensuring that employees and prospective employees are treated fairly and equally in the recruitment and hiring process;

Fostering a diverse and inclusive work environment and providing opportunities for underrepresented employee groups and communities to participate and thrive;

Recognizing the right of our employees to join associations of their own choosing or to refrain from joining, and the right to collective bargaining; and

Maintaining safe, healthy and respectful working conditions in accordance with the Company’s Environmental, Health, Safety and Sustainability Statement.
Business Conduct and Fair Dealing
The Corporation is committed to conducting its business in an ethical and honest manner. This principle is a core component of the approach taken in the design of the Corporation’s Code of Business Conduct, our Business Partner Code of Conduct, our Global Anti-Corruption Policy and our Modern Slavery Statement. Our Code of Business Conduct is an internally facing policy, designed to set out our expectations of our employees in how they conduct themselves in their business dealings on behalf of the Corporation and in the performance of their duties. This includes guidance in the areas of ethical conduct in dealing with customers, suppliers and co-workers; avoiding conflicts of interest; compliance with applicable laws; and reporting of any violations of the code itself. Our Business Partner Code of Conduct sets out our expectations of how our suppliers will conduct themselves in their business operations, including our expectations of their compliance with applicable laws, providing a safe work environment, following sound labour practices, compliance with the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act and responsible sourcing.
38


STATEMENT OF COMPENSATION GOVERNANCE
Compensation Committee
The Compensation Committee of the Board (the “Compensation Committee”) currently comprises Chris Muntwyler (Chair), Dennis Maple, and Jane O’Hagan. Each member of the Compensation Committee is an independent director and none of the members of the Compensation Committee have been or are an officer or employee of the Corporation or any of its subsidiaries.
In addition to each Compensation Committee member’s general business background, senior management experience and involvement with other companies (see, as applicable, biographical information under “Matters to be Acted Upon at the Meeting – 2. Election of Directors”), all three of the current members have been involved in the committee for more than three years. The following further, direct experience of the members of the Compensation Committee in the design, implementation or oversight of compensation programs is also relevant to their responsibilities in executive compensation, and the members of the Compensation Committee draw upon this experience, as well as the skills gained with this experience, to enable them to make decisions on the suitability of the Corporation’s compensation policies and practices:
Chris Muntwyler - Mr. Muntwyler has significant international experience in the transportation, logistics and technology sectors. Having previously held various senior executive positions at SwissAir and the positions of Chief Executive of DHL Express (UK) Limited and Managing Director (Switzerland, Germany and Central Europe) at DHL Express, he is now a management consultant through his business, Conlogic AG, specializing in strategic development, leadership guidance and customer orientation and process automation. Mr. Muntwyler spent 10 years in the DHL Express organization following a 27-year career with SwissAir. Over the course of Mr. Muntwyler’s career in various operational and executive level roles, Mr. Muntwyler has been closely involved in setting and managing executive compensation programs and defining operational goals and objectives related to compensation plans.

Dennis Maple, B.Sc. – Mr. Maple is the retired Chair and CEO of Goddard Systems, Inc., where he oversaw the operation of more than 500 premium early childhood education schools across the United States. Between January 2014 and August 2019, Mr. Maple was the President of First Student, Inc., which employed 57,000 employees in various capacities, and was actively involved in setting, implementing and overseeing executive management compensation programs with the company. Mr. Maple has been involved in the design, structure and evaluation of numerous performance-based compensation structures and for assessing performance of senior management against specific goals and criteria. In addition, over his thirty-plus years of senior management level experience, Mr. Maple himself has been subject to a variety of short-term and long-term compensation and incentive structures tied to specific goals and performance criteria.

Jane O’Hagan, B.A.(Hons.), ICD.D – Ms. O’Hagan previously served as the Executive Vice-President, Marketing and Sales and Chief Marketing officer of CP Rail. The Compensation Committee benefits from Ms. O’Hagan’s experience in being part of the management team at large companies, specifically in the review of executive compensation policies, programs and levels, and in setting appropriate performance measures and targets for incentive compensation plans. Ms. O’Hagan has experience working with external compensation consultants to assess compensation-related risk, human resources practices and benefits and in measuring the competitiveness of compensation policies and practices. She has directly participated in developing leadership succession, talent management and development plans and for implementing performance-based goals for executive and enterprise-wide personnel. She also has extensive experience in corporate restructuring and organizational change initiatives.
39


The responsibilities, powers and operation of the Compensation Committee are set out in its written charter, available on the Corporation’s website at www.descartes.com. As of the date of this Circular, the Compensation Committee is generally responsible for, among other things, the following:

reviewing and making recommendations to the Board with respect to the appointment, compensation and other terms of employment of the CEO;

reviewing and making recommendations to the Board based on the recommendations of the CEO with respect to the appointment, compensation and other terms of employment of the CFO, the President and COO and all other officers appointed by the Board, which includes each of the NEOs (as defined herein);

reviewing and approving the quarterly accrual of any variable compensation in the quarterly financial results of the Corporation and confirming same to the Audit Committee for the purposes of its review of the financial results;

reviewing and making recommendations to the Board with respect to the Corporation’s compensation principles, policies and plans for Management, including the establishment of performance measures and evaluation processes;

reviewing and making recommendations to the Board with respect to the compensation arrangements for members of the Board;

reviewing, administering and interpreting equity-based compensation plans and making recommendations to the Board with respect to the grant of compensation thereunder;

administering and interpreting the Corporation’s equity ownership and retention policies applicable to members of the Board and senior Management;

reviewing the CEO’s recommendations respecting any major changes to the structure, organization and responsibilities of the CEO or senior Management;

reviewing the CEO’s recommendations respecting succession planning and executive development for the CEO, CFO, President and COO and senior Management;

providing risk oversight of the Corporation’s compensation policies and practices and identifying and mitigating compensation policies and practices that could encourage inappropriate or excessive risk taking by members of senior Management; and

reviewing and approving certain compensation disclosures prior to their public release.
Compensation Committee Report
The Compensation Committee has reviewed and discussed with Management the following Compensation Discussion and Analysis. Based on this review and discussion, the Compensation Committee has recommended to the Board that the following Compensation Discussion and Analysis be included in this Circular.
Compensation Discussion and Analysis
This Compensation Discussion and Analysis provides you with a detailed description of our executive compensation objectives, philosophy and programs, the compensation decisions we have made under those programs, and the rationale and details supporting specific compensation decisions relating to our fiscal 2026 period ended January 31, 2026.
40


Overview of Compensation Program
The CEO, CFO and the Corporation’s three other most highly compensated executives (collectively, the “Named Executive Officers” or “NEOs”), who are the subject of this Compensation Discussion and Analysis, are as set forth in the following table:
Name
Position
Edward J. Ryan
Chief Executive Officer
Allan Brett
Chief Financial Officer(1)
J. Scott Pagan
President & Chief Operating Officer
William Green
Executive Vice President, Global Sales(2)
Edward Gardner
Executive Vice President, Corporate Development / Chief Financial Officer(3)
(1) Mr. Brett was Chief Financial Officer for all of fiscal 2026. He was succeeded by Edward Gardner on March 12, 2026 and will continue his employment with Descartes in a senior advisory role to the executive team.
(2) Mr. Green was appointed Executive Vice President, Global Sales as of June 1, 2025.
(3) Mr. Gardner was Executive Vice President, Corporate Development for all of fiscal 2026. He succeeded Mr. Brett as Chief Financial Officer on March 12, 2026.

The Compensation Committee’s oversight is designed to ensure that total compensation paid to the NEOs is fair and reasonable and consistent with our compensation philosophy.
Executive Officer Compensation Philosophy
The Compensation Committee believes that compensation plays an important role in achieving the Corporation’s short- and long-term business objectives that ultimately drive business success in alignment with long-term shareholder goals. The Corporation’s compensation philosophy is based on three fundamental principles:
Strong link to business strategy — the performance required to successfully execute our business strategy and achieve the Corporation’s short- and long-term goals should be reflected in our overall compensation program;

Performance-based — compensation should be linked to the operating and financial performance of the Corporation to a significant degree; and

Market-relevant — compensation should be market competitive in terms of value and structure to retain key employees who are performing according to their objectives and to attract new talented employees.

What we do
What we don’t do
Link executive pay to company performance through our annual and long-term incentive plans
No single-trigger change-in-control provisions
Balance among short- and long-term incentives, cash and equity and fixed and variable pay
No golden-parachute type arrangements
Compare executive compensation and company performance to relevant peer group companies
No hedging or pledging by executives or directors of equity holdings
Require executives to meet minimum stock ownership requirements
No re-pricings of underwater stock options
Maintain compensation clawback policies to recapture incentive pay in appropriate circumstances
No tax gross-ups
Provide only limited perquisites
No aspect of our pay policies or practices pose material adverse risk to the Company

41


Compensation Objectives
The objectives of our executive compensation program are to:

1.
Attract and retain highly-qualified executive officers;

2.
Align the interests of executive officers with our shareholders’ interests and with the execution of our business strategy;

3.
Evaluate executive performance based on key financial metrics which we believe closely measure the performance of our business; and

4.
Tie compensation directly to those metrics based on achieving and overachieving predetermined objectives.


1.
Market Competitive Compensation for Attracting and Retaining Highly Qualified Executive Officers
We seek to attract and retain high performing executives by offering competitive compensation; and an appropriate mix and level of short- and long-term financial incentives. We benchmark compensation to a comparator group of peer companies to assess the competitiveness of our compensation programs. The Compensation Committee reviews the comparator group annually with assistance from its independent compensation consultant. The comparator group used by the Compensation Committee to assess compensation levels at the beginning of fiscal 2026 and for the purposes of setting performance criteria for performance-based awards comprised 15 publicly traded peers in the technology industry, consisting of two Canadian peers, 12 US peers and one Australian peer (the “Comparator Group”).  The Corporation was positioned as follows against the Comparator Group in terms of revenue and market capitalization based on data as of the end of calendar year 2024, being immediately prior to the commencement of the Corporation’s fiscal 2026 period:

 
Revenue (in millions)
Market Capitalization (in millions)
25th Percentile
$ 584
$ 2,487
Median
$ 690
$ 4,608
75th Percentile
$ 980
$ 8,969
Descartes
$ 608
$ 8,531
Percentile Rank
P34
P73
Historically, the Comparator Group had included a larger number of Canadian peers but, as the Corporation has grown in terms of revenue and market capitalization, it has been increasingly difficult to find appropriate technology company peers of the Corporation that are based in Canada. Accordingly, over the past several years, the Compensation Committee has found that identifying an appropriate Comparator Group for the Corporation has resulted in a larger number of US-based and other international peers being added to the group. The Compensation Committee has determined that this is appropriate given a number of factors, including the dual-listing of the Corporation’s shares in Canada and the US; the distribution of the Corporation’s shares across shareholders in both Canada and the US; the nature of the Corporation’s operations with a significant portion of its revenue coming from and operations being located in the US; the location of the most directly comparable industry peers to the Corporation; and the composition of both its Board of Directors and Management, being a mix of Canadian and US residents.
42


The Comparator Group used in developing the Corporation’s director and officer compensation program for fiscal 2026 was as follows:
Canadian Peers
US Peers
Enghouse Systems Ltd.
Altair Engineering Inc.
Blackbaud Inc..
Kinaxis Inc
Commvault Systems, Inc.
E2Open Parent Holdings, Inc.

EverCommerce Inc.
Guidewire Software, Inc.

Instructure Holdings, Inc.
Manhattan Associates Inc.
Australian Peer
Paylocity Holding Corporation
Progress Software Corp
WiseTech Global Limited
Qualys, Inc.
SPS Commerce Inc.
Compensation for each of the CEO, President & COO, CFO and Executive Vice President, Global Sales is designed to be competitive with the target total direct compensation for similar roles and/or seniority positioning in the Comparator Group and for the other NEOs, to be competitive to available market benchmarking data for the particular role and consistent with the internal pay practices for other executive officers of the Corporation who are not NEOs. Although we review each element of compensation for market competitiveness, and weigh each particular element based on the individual NEO’s role within the Corporation, we are primarily focused on remaining competitive in the market with respect to total direct compensation.
In determining the overall compensation program of our CEO for fiscal 2026, the Compensation Committee, with assistance from its compensation consultant, compared the material elements of our CEO compensation program to those of the Comparator Group. The review included base salary, actual and target bonus, actual and target total cash, expected value of long-term incentives and actual and target total direct compensation. The purpose of this process was to:

Understand the competitiveness of current pay levels for the Chief Executive Officer position relative to the Comparator Group;

Identify and understand any significant differences between current compensation levels for the Corporation’s CEO and market compensation levels; and

Serve as a basis for determining salary adjustments and short- and long-term incentive awards for Compensation Committee consideration.
At the beginning of fiscal 2026, the Compensation Committee also conducted an annual benchmarking compensation study with its compensation consultant for the positions of: (i) President and Chief Operating Officer and (ii) Chief Financial Officer.
Based on the results of the compensation study, the Compensation Committee recommended certain increases to the overall compensation program for each of the NEOs to be effective during fiscal 2026, which consisted of a combination of increases in base salary, on-target short-term incentives and on-target long-term incentives in each case as set out below.

2.
Aligning the Interests of the NEOs with the Interests of Descartes’ Shareholders and the Execution of our Business Strategy
We believe that transparent, objective and easily verified corporate goals, combined with individual performance goals, play an important role in creating and maintaining an effective compensation strategy for our NEOs. We use a combination of fixed and variable compensation to motivate our executives to achieve our corporate goals because we believe that achieving these goals contributes to increases in shareholder value.
For fiscal 2026, the three basic components of our executive officer compensation program were: (i) base salary and benefits; (ii) short-term incentives; and (iii) long-term incentives. In establishing the appropriate pay mix among these components, we consider what compensation is “at-risk” based on performance. The greater the NEO’s ability to drive the business results, the higher the “at risk” portion
43


of his or her compensation. We consider all compensation other than base salary and benefits to be “at risk”.
In establishing the appropriate pay mix to align the interests of the NEO with the interests of the Corporation’s shareholders and execution of our business strategy, we consider the following in respect of the three components of total compensation:

i.
Base Salary and Benefits

Base salaries for our NEOs are reviewed annually. The base salary review for each NEO considers factors such as current competitive market conditions and particular skills, scope of the role, experience in the role, leadership ability and management effectiveness, internal equity, responsibility and proven or expected performance of the particular individual. The following chart outlines the base salaries that were in place for the NEOs during fiscal 2026 and shows the changes in base salary levels compared to fiscal 2025. The Compensation Committee, having regard to the findings of the compensation benchmarking study discussed above and considering the performance of the Corporation over the past several fiscal years, recommended an increase to the base salary of the CEO and approved the recommendation of the CEO for certain increases to the base salaries of the other NEOs effective during fiscal 2026 to more closely align those salaries and the overall compensation structure with the Compensation Committee’s target of the 50th percentile findings within the Peer Group compensation study.
Name
Fiscal 2025 Base Salary
($)1
Fiscal 2026 Base Salary2
($)
Percentage Change
Edward J. Ryan
$650,000
$650,000
0%
Allan Brett
$500,000
$500,000
0%
J. Scott Pagan
$500,000
$500,000
0%
William Green
$260,100
$300,000
15.3%
Edward Gardner
$214,029
$310,000
44.8%
(1) Mr. Gardner’s Fiscal 2025 Base Salary was converted from Canadian to US dollars based on the Bank of Canada’s exchange rate as of January 31, 2025 (the last business day of fiscal 2025) of US$1.00 = Cdn$1.4484
(2) Fiscal 2026 base salaries were made effective May 1, 2025.

We also provide various benefits to all of our employees, which include but are not limited to medical and health insurance; dental insurance; life insurance; and tax-based retirement savings plan matching contributions. NEOs are also eligible to participate in an executive health care benefits program that is not otherwise available to all of our employees. Under this program, each NEO is eligible to be reimbursed for a limited value of additional health care expenses in excess of the dollar limitations available to all of our employees.
NEOs in Canada are eligible to participate in the Corporation’s deferred profit-sharing plan (“DPSP”) under which the Corporation will contribute to the NEO’s DPSP account 50% of the NEO’s contributions to the Corporation’s group registered retirement savings plan, subject to a maximum contribution by the Corporation of 3% of the NEO’s annual base salary. NEOs in the United States are eligible to participate in the Corporation’s 401(k) plan under which the Corporation will contribute to the NEO’s 401(k) account 3% of the NEO’s base salary contributions to the 401(k) plan, subject to a maximum annual contribution by the Corporation of $2,000 per NEO. This is provided in lieu of a pension or retirement benefit.

ii.
Short-Term Incentives

For each NEO, the at-target and maximum eligibility for short-term incentives is established for each fiscal year. These levels are assessed in the context of the findings of the Peer Group compensation study and established to roughly align to a compensation structure at the 50th percentile
44


of such findings. The following table shows the percentage of salary payable for fiscal 2026 for on-target short-term incentives (“On-Target Short-Term Incentive Eligibility”):
Name
Base Salary
($)
On-Target STI Eligibility
(% of Base Salary)
On-Target STI Eligibility
($)
Maximum STI Eligibility (% of Base Salary)
Maximum STI Eligibility
($)
Actual STI Awarded in Fiscal 2026(1)
Edward J. Ryan
$650,000
100%
$650,000
150%
$975,000
$975,000
Allan Brett
$500,000
100%
$500,000
150%
$750,000
$750,000
J. Scott Pagan
$500,000
100%
$500,000
150%
$750,000
$750,000
William Green(1)
$300,000
133%
$400,000
200%
$600,000
$482,820
Edward Gardner
$310,000
30%
$93,000
45%
$139,500
$139,500
(1) In 2026, each of Messrs. Ryan, Brett, Pagan, Green and Gardner were eligible for the Maximum STI Eligibility amount.  The Actual STI awarded to the NEO in 2026 was a combination of cash and grant of additional stock options in recognition of the Corporation’s overperformance for fiscal 2026. See “Fiscal 2026 Compensation Structures of the NEOs - Management Equity Ownership Policy” for further details.
(2) Mr. Green was appointed Executive Vice President, Global Sales as of June 1, 2025, as such his award was pro-rated.

For the NEOs, where short-term incentives have been awarded, the amount has historically been paid, at the option of the NEO, in cash and/or in cash settled restricted share units (“CRSUs”) vesting and paid over a period of no more than three years from the grant. However, the Compensation Committee determined to award each NEO their 2026 short-term incentive in cash.
The amount of the short-term incentive actually payable to each NEO is based on meeting pre-established, Board-approved, Corporation-wide quantitative and qualitative corporate objectives related to creating shareholder value and executing business strategy on budget. For fiscal 2026, the quantitative objectives measured and monitored by the Compensation Committee in assessing performance (the “Quantitative Measures”) were:

Adjusted EBITDA;

Revenue; and

Cash generated from operations as a percentage of Adjusted EBITDA.
The Compensation Committee considered these Quantitative Measures to be the most appropriate to ensure the Corporation remained focused on its path of consistent, profitable growth. The Committee used Adjusted EBITDA (a non-GAAP measure) to determine eligibility for short-term incentive awards for fiscal 2026 and the Committee retains discretion to reduce or increase the short-term incentive awards based on performance against the two other Quantitative Measures (revenue and cash generated from operations as a percentage of Adjusted EBITDA) as well as other factors, as discussed below.
 Adjusted EBITDA Criteria

Adjusted EBITDA, which is a non-GAAP measure, was the exclusive measure of corporate performance for purposes of determining eligibility for short-term incentive awards for fiscal 2026. To achieve On-Target Short-Term Incentive Eligibility, the Compensation Committee requires that the Corporation has achieved its annual target for Adjusted EBITDA, which for fiscal 2026 was as set out in the table below. To the extent the Corporation over-achieves the annual target, the Compensation Committee may award Short-Term Incentives up to the Maximum STI Eligibility set out above. The Compensation Committee will not award short-term incentives unless the annual target for Adjusted EBITDA has been achieved.
45


FY26 Adjusted EBITDA* Target
(in millions of USD)
FY26 Adjusted EBITDA* Target Growth
(as a % increase from FY25 Actual)
FY26 Adjusted EBITDA Actual
(in millions of USD)
FY26 Adjusted EBITDA* Actual Growth
(as a % increase from FY25 Actual)
$313.2
15%
$329.5
16%
* A non-GAAP ratio.  A description and definition of Adjusted EBITDA used by the Corporation, as well as a reconciliation of Adjusted EBITDA to net income for fiscal 2026, is included in Schedule “C” to this Circular.
In considering whether the Adjusted EBITDA target has been achieved, the Compensation Committee considers any impact on the target based on fluctuations in foreign currency exchange compared to the foreign currency exchange rates used at the time of setting the targets. If the Adjusted EBITDA target has been achieved, the Compensation Committee then considers whether there are reasons (e.g. performance against the other two quantitative measures) that an amount greater than or less than the On-Target Short-Term Incentive Eligibility should be awarded. For fiscal 2026, the Compensation Committee concluded that the On-Target amount was appropriate and should neither be adjusted upwards nor downwards.
Other Quantitative Measures
The Committee retains discretion to reduce the short-term incentive awards even when the annual target for Adjusted EBITDA is achieved if the Corporation has not achieved its objectives for the other Quantitative Measures (revenue and cash generated from operations as a percentage of Adjusted EBITDA) or has otherwise failed to perform against the Other Factors monitored by the Compensation Committee, as discussed below.  For fiscal 2026, the Compensation Committee concluded that there were no concerns in terms of the Corporation’s performance against the Other Factors that would warrant a downward adjustment to the short-term incentive awards.
Revenue
The following table details the Corporation’s fiscal 2026 target and actual results for revenue in fiscal 2026.
FY26 Revenue Target
(in millions of USD)
FY26 Revenue Target Growth
(as a % increase from FY25 Actual)
FY26 Revenue Actual
(in millions of USD)
FY26 Revenue Actual Growth
(as a % increase from FY25 Actual)
$704.0
8.1% - 12.9%
$729.0
12%

46


Cash Flow from Operations as a Percentage of Adjusted EBITDA
For fiscal 2026, the target for cash flow from operations was set at a target range of 80-90% of Adjusted EBITDA.

Actual Cash Flow from Operations
(in millions of USD)
Target Cash Flow from Operations (% of Adjusted EBITDA)
Actual Cash Flow from Operations (% of Adjusted EBITDA)*
$266
80-90%
81%
* A non-GAAP ratio.  A description and definition of Adjusted EBITDA used by the Corporation, as well as a reconciliation of Adjusted EBITDA to net income for fiscal 2026, is included in Schedule “C” to this Circular.

Other Factors
In determining whether an amount less than the On-Target Short-Term Incentive Eligibility should be awarded when the annual minimum target for Adjusted EBITDA has otherwise been achieved, the Compensation Committee will consider the following “Other Factors”: (i) the performance of the Corporation relative to the above mentioned Quantitative Measures other than Adjusted EBITDA; (ii) the progress of the Corporation’s corporate development activities; (iii) the performance of the Corporation against various return metrics on invested capital that are monitored on a quarterly basis; (iv) the Corporation’s performance in comparison to its annual budget; (v) the performance of the Corporation’s Common Shares in the public market over the year; and (vi) the progress of the Corporation towards the achievement of its corporate responsibility initiatives. In addition, the Compensation Committee considers the individual performance of each NEO which, in the case of the CEO, is evaluated by the Compensation Committee and, in the case of the other NEOs, is evaluated by the Compensation Committee based on the recommendation of the CEO, as further discussed below under “Evaluating Individual Executive Performance”.
In determining whether an amount more than the On-Target Short-Term Incentive Eligibility should be awarded, up to the Maximum Short-Term Incentive Eligibility, the Compensation Committee considers whether there has been significant over-performance by the Corporation against its Adjusted EBITDA target, provided that any additional amount awarded above the On-Target Short-Term Incentive must continue to result in the Corporation achieving, or exceeding, its Adjusted EBITDA target. The Compensation Committee establishes “high-end” targets for both Adjusted EBITDA and Revenue which are used in assessing over-performance and considering if the Maximum Short-Term Incentive Eligibility should be awarded. For fiscal 2026, these “high-end” targets were based on 15% growth in Adjusted EBITDA and 12.9% growth in Revenue. Prior to making any award above the On-Target Short-Term Incentive Eligibility, the Compensation Committee will also consider the Other Factors discussed above.
Upon the completion of fiscal 2026, the Compensation Committee considered the appropriate level of short-term incentives to award to the NEOs. Considering the Corporation’s overall performance in fiscal 2026, the Compensation Committee determined to award each NEO a short-term incentive in respect of fiscal 2026 in an amount in excess of the On-Target Short-Term Incentive Eligibility amount for fiscal 2026. The On-Target Short-Term Incentive Eligibility amount for each NEO was satisfied in cash. The incremental amount awarded to each NEO above the On-Target Short-Term Incentive Eligibility, reflecting the Corporation's over-performance, was granted in the form of stock options in lieu of cash.
47



iii.
Long-Term Incentives
The fiscal 2026 compensation program for our NEOs, included long-term incentive compensation in the form of equity-based awards consisting of a mix of:

PSU grants which vest at the end of a three-year performance period (weighted 50%);

RSU grants which vest over a period of three fiscal years (weighted 25% or 35% depending on role); and

stock options that vest over a period of three fiscal years (weighted 15% or 25% depending on role).
The PSUs are subject to performance conditions and vest on an interpolation basis from 0% to 200% based on the total shareholder return performance of the Corporation relative to the Comparator Group over a three-year period in accordance with the following criteria:
RELATIVE PERFORMANCE
ADJUSTMENT FACTOR
Less than the 30th percentile
0
30th percentile
0.50
50th percentile
1.00
75th percentile
1.50
90th percentile
2.00
The following table shows the on-target long-term incentive compensation established for fiscal 2026 (“On-Target Long-Term Incentive Eligibility”):
Name
On-Target Total LTI
Value of PSUs at time of grant (and percentage
of total LTI)
Value of RSUs at time of grant (and percentage of total LTI)
Value of stock options at the time of grant (and percentage of total LTI)
Edward J. Ryan
$7,700,000
 $3,850,000 (50%)
 $2,695,000 (35%)
$1,155,000 (15%)
Allan Brett
 $2,800,000
 $1,400,000 (50%)
 $980,500 (35%)
 $420,000 (15%)
J. Scott Pagan
 $4,000,000
 $2,000,000 (50%)
 $1,400,000 (35%)
 $600,000(15%)
William Green
$412,500
$183,333 (44%)
$91,667 (22%)
$137,500 (25%)
Edward Gardner
 $847,000
 $352,250 (50%)
 $176,125 (25%)
 $176,125 (25%)
The Board and Compensation Committee review and approve all grants of PSUs, RSUs and stock options. In making these determinations, the Board and Compensation Committee consider the recommendations of the CEO (except for grants to the CEO). The Board and Compensation Committee also consider previous grants of stock options and Share Units that have been made to an individual in deciding whether to make new grants of stock options and Share Units.
When deciding whether to grant stock options, our Board, subject to the recommendation of our Compensation Committee, makes the following determinations:

Which NEOs and others are eligible for a grant of options;

The number of options to be granted under the plan in general and to each recipient;

The exercise price for each stock option granted (which may not be less than fair market value of a Common Share at the date of the grant);

The date on which each option is granted (which may not be earlier than the date the grant is approved by the Board);

The vesting period;

The expiration date; and

Other material terms and conditions of each stock option grant.
48


As the long-term incentives granted to our NEOs are Common Share-based, and the price of our Common Shares has increased over each of the past five fiscal years, the value to be realized by each NEO from such incentives has increased over this same period.

3.
Evaluating Individual Executive Performance
We believe that regular and comprehensive evaluation of each NEO’s individual performance contributes to effective compensation programs and the achievement of the Corporation’s business goals. Our Board, Compensation Committee and CEO have instituted a set of procedures to evaluate the performance of each of our NEOs to help determine the amount of base salary and short- and long-term incentives to award to each NEO.
CEO – The Board and Compensation Committee assess the performance of the CEO on an ongoing basis, with a formal review conducted annually. The formal review includes interviews with the CEO and comments solicited from members of the Board, Management and the Corporation’s major shareholders. The Compensation Committee, if appropriate, approves adjustments to the CEO’s compensation under authority delegated to it by the Board. However, decisions about share-based compensation are ultimately determined by the Board on receiving the recommendation of the Compensation Committee. The Compensation Committee communicates its assessment and any compensation decisions directly to the CEO.
NEOs other than the CEO – The performance of each NEO other than the CEO is evaluated by the CEO and assessed by the Compensation Committee based on the CEO’s evaluation. Recommendations for adjustments to compensation for these NEOs are made by the CEO to our Compensation Committee for consideration. The Compensation Committee follows its review and assessment process described in this Circular and, if appropriate, approves compensation adjustments for the NEOs under authority delegated to it by the Board. However, decisions about share-based compensation are ultimately determined by the Board on receiving the recommendation of the Compensation Committee.
In evaluating NEO performance for a fiscal year, the Compensation Committee and Board consider several factors including the following:

a)
Contribution to the achievement of the Corporation’s longer-term financial and corporate development plan;

b)
Contribution to the achievement of annual corporate financial targets;

c)
Contribution to the achievement of the Corporation’s corporate development goals in acquiring businesses and integrating acquired businesses;

d)
Contribution to advancing the Corporation’s corporate responsibility initiatives;

e)
Customer service, satisfaction and retention;

f)
Infrastructure development;

g)
Investor communication;

h)
Organizational development;

i)
Succession planning and initiatives;

j)
Strategic planning; and

k)
Other corporate and individual qualitative factors.
49


4.            Evaluating Overall Corporate Performance
a.            Longer-term Financial and Corporate Development Plan
The Corporation’s long-term financial plan is focused on consistent, sustainable growth in Adjusted EBITDA, accomplished through a combination of the performance of existing operations and acquiring and integrating new operations. The Corporation typically targets ongoing growth in Adjusted EBITDA of 10-15% per year.
The Corporation’s Adjusted EBITDA in fiscal 2026 grew by 16% over fiscal 2025, which exceeded the high end of the Corporation’s ongoing financial plan.
The Corporation also acquired three businesses in fiscal 2026 (#GTMS, Package Route and Finale Inventory) consistent with its corporate development goals.
b.            Annual Corporate Financial Targets
The Corporation’s annual corporate financial targets are considered and established in two levels for each of annual revenues and annual Adjusted EBITDA: (i) a minimum level; and (ii) a high-end target level.
This budget and the financial targets are established with various assumptions, including foreign exchange rate assumptions relating to foreign operations.
The Corporation exceeded its established target for Adjusted EBITDA and revenues in fiscal 2026. The Corporation targeted growing its Adjusted EBITDA 10-15%, and it grew 16% from fiscal 2025. The Corporation targeted growing its revenues by 8.1% -12.9%, and they grew 12.0% from fiscal 2025.
The following table details the Corporation’s fiscal 2026 minimum and high-end target plans for both revenues and Adjusted EBITDA and the Corporation’s actual reported revenues and approximate unaudited Adjusted EBITDA results in the period. The targets have not been adjusted for movements in foreign exchange rates from the beginning of the fiscal year to the end of the fiscal year.
Revenue Minimum Target
(millions)
Revenue High-End Target
(millions)
Revenue Actual
(millions)
Adjusted EBITDA Minimum Target
(millions)
Adjusted EBITDA High-End Target
(millions)
Adjusted EBITDA Actual
(millions)
$704.0
$735.0
$729.0
$313.2
$327.3
$329.5
Overall, the Corporation’s revenues and Adjusted EBITDA grew 12% and 16%, respectively, from fiscal 2025.
In addition, the Compensation Committee noted the Corporation’s strong cash generated from operations in fiscal 2026 in evaluating the Corporation’s and executive officer’s performance. The Corporation has targeted cash from operations of between 80% and 90% of Adjusted EBITDA in a fiscal period. In fiscal 2026, the Corporation generated $266 million in cash from operations, representing 81% of Adjusted EBITDA for the year.
On an ongoing basis, the Compensation Committee and Board also monitored the Corporation’s return on invested capital, both on individual acquisitions and in the aggregate, using various return metrics. The Compensation Committee noted that the metrics were in-line with the aggregate returns anticipated to be generated by the Corporation’s acquisition portfolio.
50


c.            Common Share Price
The Compensation Committee also considers changes in the trading price of the Corporation’s Common Shares during the fiscal year in evaluating awards of shortterm compensation.  Over fiscal 2026, the market price of the Corporation’s Common Shares declined on both the Toronto Stock Exchange and the NASDAQ as follows:
Market
January 31, 2025 (closing price)
January 31, 2026 (closing price)
% Increase (Decrease)
TSX
Cdn.$168.23
Cdn.$101.69
(39.6)%
NASDAQ
$115.83
$74.76
(35.5)%
During fiscal 2026, equity markets experienced increased volatility, particularly in the technology and software sectors. In January 2026, technology stocks were subject to a broadbased selloff driven by investor concerns regarding the pace of nearterm monetization of artificial intelligence investments, rising capital expenditure requirements, valuation compression across software companies, and heightened macroeconomic uncertainty. This marketwide rerating affected a broad range of technology issuers, including companies with strong operating performance, and was not specific to the Corporation. As a result, the trading price of the Corporation’s Common Shares declined during the latter portion of fiscal 2026, notwithstanding continued revenue growth, profitability and cash generation. In assessing shortterm compensation outcomes for fiscal 2026, the Compensation Committee considered this broader market context alongside the Corporation’s financial and operational performance, recognizing that share price movements during the period were influenced in significant part by external market factors beyond management’s control.
Performance Graph
The following graph compares the cumulative total shareholder return on the Common Shares of the Corporation to the cumulative total return of the S&P/TSX Composite Index, the NASDAQ Composite Index and the “Software & Services” industry subgroup of the S&P/TSX Composite Index for the Corporation’s last five years commencing January 31, 2021.
51




 
Jan 31, 2021
Jan 31, 2022
Jan 31, 2023
Jan 31, 2024
Jan 31, 2025
Jan 31, 2026
Actual Data
           
Descartes (DSG) (Cdn.$)
77.98
92.48
97.10
117.72
168.23
101.69
S&P/TSX Composite Index
17337.02
21098.30
20767.38
21021.88
25533.10
31923.52
NASDAQ Composite Index
13070.69
14239.88
11584.55
15164.01
19627.44
23461.82
Software & Services Industry Subgroup
16553.19
15669.94
11211.38
16771.99
22969.92
19582.06
CEO Compensation1
4687068
5926482
6157116
8463615
8402372
10438129
Nominal Data
           
Descartes (DSG) (Cdn.$)
100
119
125
151
216
130
S&P/TSX Composite Index
100
122
120
121
147
184
NASDAQ Composite Index
100
109
89
116
150
179
Software & Services Industry Subgroup
100
95
68
101
139
118
CEO Compensation1
100
126
131
181
179
223
1. CEO Compensation set out in the table above is based on total compensation from the Summary Compensation Table.
As reflected in the graph above, over that five-year period, the performance of the Corporation's Common Shares has exceeded that of the S&P/TSX Composite Index "Software & Services" industry
52


subgroup, but has been exceeded by the S&P/TSX Composite Index and the NASDAQ Composite Index. During this five-year period, the price of the Corporation's Common Shares on the TSX has shown an increase of 30%. During that same period, the aggregate total compensation awarded to the Chief Executive Officer (as calculated as set out in the Summary Compensation Table below) has shown an increase of 116%. As the Corporation's revenues and market capitalization have grown over the past five years, the composition of the Corporation's compensation peer group has similarly changed over that period to include larger companies in terms of revenue and market capitalization. This, in turn, has led to an increase in the median compensation levels observed within the compensation peer group over that period and a resulting increase in the overall total compensation awarded to the Chief Executive Officer to maintain competitiveness with the trends in median compensation levels within the selected peer group.
d.            Shareholder Engagement
The Board has a formal shareholder engagement policy that encourages regular and constructive engagement directly with shareholders by both Management and the Board. Members of the Board actively contact a target list of the largest shareholders of the Corporation on at least a bi-annual basis to solicit feedback from those shareholders on the performance of the CEO; performance of the Board; performance of the Corporation generally; and overall governance and compensation matters. These meetings are generally held with the Chair of the Board and the Chair of either the Compensation Committee, the Corporate Governance Committee or the Audit Committee. This policy of engagement has also included regular meetings with the Canadian Coalition for Good Governance to review governance and compensation matters relative to the Corporation and responding to other governance related inquiries from other investment industry focused governance bodies from time to time. In addition to engagement with shareholders by the Board, Management also regularly engages with shareholders of the Corporation and attempts to meet with, or offer meetings to, each of the Corporation’s largest shareholders on at least an annual basis.
As discussed above, during fiscal 2026, the Board conducted a pro-active outreach program with many of the Corporation’s largest shareholders inviting discussion on the Corporation’s governance and compensation practices. Many of the contacted shareholders agreed to participate in the process and provided feedback directly to the Board members who led the process.
Management has also continued its outreach program with the Corporation’s largest shareholders, offering one-on-one meetings following the release of each quarter’s financial results. Feedback from these meetings is discussed on a quarterly basis with the Board.
The Corporation has adopted an annual “say on pay” resolution at its annual shareholder meeting to give shareholders the opportunity to vote on the executive compensation arrangements of the Corporation. At the most recent shareholder meeting of June 12th, 2025, the “say on pay” resolution received a vote of 96.46% (74,071,830 Common Shares) in favour. This significant level of support from shareholders, combined with the direct feedback received from shareholders through the engagement process discussed above, has given the Compensation Committee increased confidence that its overall approach to compensation structure is well received by shareholders.
Compensation Oversight Process
The Compensation Committee has responsibility for overseeing executive compensation and director compensation and makes compensation recommendations to the Board for final approval. The Compensation Committee met six times during fiscal 2026 and, as of the date of this Circular, had met twice more during fiscal 2027. Management assists the Chair of the Compensation Committee in the coordination and preparation of the meeting agenda and materials for meetings as requested by the Chair. Following the approval of the Chair of the Compensation Committee, meeting materials are
53


delivered for review to the other Compensation Committee members and invitees, if any, typically in advance of each meeting.
Use of Compensation Consultants
The Compensation Committee seeks the advice of outside, independent compensation consultants to provide assistance and guidance on compensation issues. Consultants are screened and chosen by the Compensation Committee and report to the Compensation Committee. The consultants provide the Compensation Committee with relevant information pertaining to market compensation levels, alternative compensation plan designs, market trends and best practices. The consultants assist the Compensation Committee with respect to determining the appropriate compensation benchmarks for the Chief Executive Officer and each of the other executive officers of the Corporation (which includes the NEOs).
Commencing from the latter half of fiscal 2018, the Compensation Committee has engaged the services of Mercer (Canada) Limited (“Mercer”) to act as compensation consultant to the committee. Mercer has confirmed to the Compensation Committee that it will not accept any engagement from the Corporation or any members of Management of the Corporation except with the prior written approval of the Compensation Committee. During the same period, the Corporation’s human resources department has subscribed to a global compensation and benefits database service operated by Mercer. This database subscription service is unrelated to the compensation consulting services provided by Mercer to the Compensation Committee and identified as “Other Fees” in the summary of fees set out below.
During fiscal 2026 and fiscal 2025 Mercer provided services to the Compensation Committee in the following: (i) assisting the Compensation Committee in considering the comparator group used to assess the Corporation’s director and executive officer compensation arrangements; (ii) conducting a compensation-related risk review; (iii) conducting a competitive benchmarking analysis of the Corporation’s director and NEO compensation arrangements; and (iv) recommending the overall short-term and long-term incentive mix for CEO compensation.
Mercer’s fees incurred in fiscal 2026 and fiscal 2025 regarding services provided were as follows(1):
Fiscal year ended
Executive Compensation-Related Fees
All Other Fees(2)
January 31, 2026
$99,703
$52,778
January 31, 2025
$89,676
$52,778
(1)
Amounts included in this table have been converted to US dollars at the indicative foreign exchange rate on the last business day of the applicable year as reported by the Bank of Canada, which was 1 US dollar = 1.3562 Canadian dollars at January 30, 2026 and 1 US dollar = 1.4484 Canadian dollars at January 31, 2025.
(2)
The Other Fees consist of an annual subscription to global compensation and benefits survey data published by Mercer and subscribed to by the Corporation’s Human Resources department independent of the relationship with Mercer as a compensation consultant to the Compensation Committee.
The Compensation Committee’s written charter provides that, with respect to any external compensation consultant or advisor retained by the Compensation Committee or the Board for determining executive or director compensation, the Compensation Committee must pre-approve any other services that Management has requested be provided to the Corporation or Management by such external compensation consultant or advisor or its affiliates.
Role of Executive Officers in the Compensation Process
The Compensation Committee makes recommendations to the Board: (i) with respect to the CEO’s compensation following an annual review of the performance of the CEO, an annual review of
54


compensation benchmarking data provided by its compensation consultant and following discussion with the CEO; and (ii) with respect to all other executive officers of the Corporation, including the NEOs, the Compensation Committee makes recommendations to the Board following an annual review of the overall performance of the Corporation, consideration of any compensation benchmarking data that may have been requested by the Committee from its compensation consultant and based on the Compensation Committee’s consideration of the recommendations of the CEO. At a meeting of the Compensation Committee at which Management, including the CEO, is not present, the Compensation Committee determines the compensation of the CEO and of the executive officers of the Corporation, including the NEOs, that will be recommended by the Committee to the Board. The Compensation Committee then makes its recommendations to the Board, which approves the compensation of the CEO and of the executive officers of the Corporation, including the NEOs.
Compensation-related Risk Mitigation
The Board provides regular oversight of the Corporation’s risk management practices, and delegates to the Compensation Committee the responsibility to provide risk oversight of the Corporation’s compensation policies and practices, and to identify and mitigate compensation policies and practices that could encourage members of Management to take inappropriate or excessive risks.
In respect of fiscal 2026, the Compensation Committee retained Mercer to assist it in reviewing the risks associated with the Corporation’s executive compensation policies and practices. The Compensation Committee reviewed Mercer’s risk report and presented it to the Board in March 2025. The Compensation Committee and Board concluded that there were no identified risks arising from the Corporation’s compensation policies or practices that are likely to have a material adverse effect on the Corporation.
The Compensation Committee and Board have concluded that the Corporation has policies and practices to ensure that Management does not have incentives to take inappropriate or excessive risks including the following:

An appropriate balance of fixed and variable compensation, and an appropriate weighting of share-based compensation and short- and long-term compensation;

An appropriate equity ownership policy for Management;

Quantitative and qualitative Corporation-wide metrics used to form a balanced scorecard to determine the amount of awards to NEOs under the Corporation’s short-term incentive plans;

Board and Compensation Committee discretion to adjust the amount, if any, of awards under the Corporation’s short-term incentive programs, to take into account the quality of the results and the level of risk required to achieve results, with awards historically being made only out of the Corporation’s operating profits;

Clawback policies under which incentive compensation may be clawed back, including on a mandatory basis in some circumstances, if there a restatement of financial results;

A mix of equity compensation vehicles in the long-term incentive program, which measure both relative and absolute performance;

Periodic share-based compensation awards with overlapping vesting periods to provide ongoing retention incentives to Management and long-term share-based exposure to the risks Management undertakes;

Annual incentive awards that have historically been a reasonable percentage of revenues and Adjusted EBITDA to ensure an appropriate sharing of value created between management and shareholders;

Annual incentive awards that are not determined until the completion of the audit of the Corporation’s consolidated annual financial statements by the independent auditor;

An insider trading policy that prohibits hedging and restricts pledging of the Common Shares and Common Share-based incentives;
55



An organizational culture of prudent risk-taking, which is maintained by a practice of promoting from within the organization;

A strong shareholder outreach program designed, in part, to ensure that the Corporation’s compensation programs are aligned with shareholder interests and expectations;

A comprehensive Code of Conduct and Whistleblower Policy that encourages reporting of imprudent corporate behavior;

A Compensation Committee comprised entirely of independent directors that retains an independent compensation consultant to assist in its review of compensation, compensation governance and incentive programs;

A Compensation Committee charter that expressly requires the committee to provide risk oversight of Descartes’ compensation policies and practices and to identify and mitigate compensation policies and practices that could encourage excessive or inappropriate risk taking;

A Chair of the Board, Eric Demirian, who attends all meetings of the Compensation Committee as an ‘ex-officio’ member of the Committee and who is also a member of the Audit Committee, which allows him to inform the Compensation Committee with respect to the Corporation’s enterprise risks and financial results when making decisions in respect of compensation; and

Compensation Committee members, Dennis Maple, Chris Muntwyler and Jane O’Hagan, who are also members of either the Corporate Governance Committee or the Nominating Committee, which ensures that compensation governance and compensation related risk are considered from a broader corporate governance perspective.
Compensation Clawback Policies
In April 2015, the Board adopted an Incentive Compensation Clawback Policy (the “Clawback Policy”). The Clawback Policy authorizes the independent directors of the Corporation (the “Independent Committee”) to recover short- and long-term incentive compensation of an executive officer, including any gains realized upon exercise or settlement of any share-based awards, in the following circumstances:

1.
the Corporation is required to prepare an accounting restatement due to non-compliance with any financial reporting requirement under applicable securities laws (the “Restatement”);

2.
the executive officer engaged in gross negligence, intentional misconduct or fraud that either caused or significantly contributed to the non-compliance resulting in the Restatement; and

3.
the executive officer was over-compensated as a result of originally reported metrics that led to the Restatement.
If the Independent Committee concludes that such circumstances exist, it may in its sole discretion, to the extent that it considers such action to be in the best interests of the Corporation, direct the Corporation to take any combination of the following actions as it considers necessary or advisable for the Corporation to recover the amount of the excess incentive compensation and all costs incurred in recovering the incentive compensation: (a) require the executive officer to reimburse the Corporation; (b) withhold any amounts owing or that may become owing, or cancel any share-based awards outstanding (whether vested or unvested) or due to be granted or awarded, to the executive officer; and (c) such other action as the Independent Committee considers appropriate.
On December 1, 2023, the Board adopted another Compensation Recoupment Policy (the "Mandatory Recoupment Policy") to comply with NASDAQ rules. This policy mandates a clawback of erroneously awarded incentive-based compensation from executive officers under specified circumstances.
56


In contrast to the Clawback Policy, the Mandatory Recoupment Policy applies in instances where the Corporation must issue a restatement of its financial statements due to material noncompliance with financial reporting requirements without regard to the officer's involvement in any fraud or misconduct. The Compensation Committee, which administers the Mandatory Recoupment Policy, is authorized to recover any incentive-based Compensation received erroneously by executive officers during the recovery period.
The recovery is not limited to cash payments but extends to any shares received and any gains from such shares. The amount of recovery will be calculated based on the difference between the compensation received based on erroneous data and what would have been received under the corrected financial statements. The Compensation Committee also retains the discretion to take additional actions as necessary, including legal measures, to recover the erroneously awarded compensation.
The Corporation’s commitment to uphold the highest standards of financial discipline and compliance is underscored by its continued enforcement of both the Clawback Policy and the Mandatory Recoupment Policy. In circumstances where both policies may be implicated, the Independent Committee in good faith will apply the more restrictive policy.
Management Equity Ownership Policy
The Corporation has an equity ownership policy applicable to Management (the “Management Equity Ownership Policy”).
The objective of the Management Equity Ownership Policy is to ensure that the CEO and other senior executives acquire and hold a meaningful equity ownership interest in the Corporation within a reasonable period following the individual’s appointment to the office. Under the policy, within five years of becoming subject to the policy, the NEOs are required to attain and maintain the following equity ownership levels:
Position
Equity Ownership Level as a Multiple of Annual Base Salary
CEO
6X
President & COO
4X
Chief Financial Officer
4X
Other NEOs
1X
For purposes of the Management Equity Ownership Policy, “Market Value” for determining compliance means the volume-weighted average trading price of a Common Share on the TSX for the five trading days preceding the measurement date. In determining compliance with the Management Equity Ownership Policy:

Common Shares are included and valued at Market Value;

CRSUs and vested RSUs are included and valued at Market Value at the date of measurement.  Any RSUs that are not yet vested are not included in this calculation;

Vested PSUs are included and valued at Market Value at the date of measurement. Any PSUs that are subject to a vesting condition or future performance condition are not included in this calculation until fully vested or earned; and

Options are given no value under the terms of the policy.
During a period when an NEO has not met the applicable equity ownership levels, the NEO must retain 25% of the Common Shares received on the exercise of a stock option or the redemption of an RSU or PSU and, to the extent made available to the NEO, elect to convert to CRSUs 25% of any cash
57


proceeds otherwise receivable by the NEO pursuant to the Corporation’s annual short-term incentive compensation plans.
The following table identifies the equity ownership levels of each of the NEOs as at March 31, 2026 with reference to the minimum equity ownership levels required by the Management Equity Ownership Policy. Market Values included in the table are calculated by multiplying the number of securities by the volume-weighted average trading price of a Common Share on the TSX for the five trading days preceding March 31, 2026, being Cdn $97.63, converted to US dollars at the rate of 1 US dollar = 1.3926 Canadian dollars, being the indicative foreign exchange rate reported by the Bank of Canada on March 30, 2026. The table identifies the Market Value of Common Share-based holdings included for the purposes of calculation pursuant to the Management Equity Ownership Policy (which does not include any value for stock options, whether vested or unvested). Minimum equity ownership levels are determined by multiplying the level set out in the Management Equity Ownership Policy for the applicable position by the individual’s current annual base salary converted to US dollars at the rate of 1 US dollar = 1.3926 Canadian dollars, being the indicative foreign exchange rate reported by the Bank of Canada on March 30, 2026:
Name
Multiple of Base Salary
Minimum Equity Ownership Level Required
($)
Market Value of Common Shares Held
($)
Market Value of vested Share Units Held (vested RSUs and vested PSUs)
($)
Market Value of cash-settled Share Units Held (CRSUs)
($)
Value of Holdings per Equity Ownership Policies
($)
Minimum Equity Ownership Level Achieved?
Edward J. Ryan
6X
3,900,000
 -
  39,452,167
-
    39,452,167
Yes
Allan Brett
4X
2,000,000
 2,795,628
  14,896,251
-
    17,691,880
Yes
J. Scott Pagan
4X
2,000,000
17,061,133
  20,134,313
-
   37,195,446
Yes
William Green
1X
300,000
 -
        20,822
-
           20,822
No(1)
Edward Gardner
1X
310,000
 -
    1,336,716
-
1,336,716
Yes
(1) Mr. Green became subject to the Management Equity Ownership Policy on June 1, 2025. As he is within the five-year period to achieve the required ownership level of 1 times his annual base salary, Mr. Green is subject to the holding requirements described above until such time as the minimum ownership level is attained.
Total Value of Equity Holdings of NEOs
The following table shows the total value of all equity holdings of each of the NEOs as at January 31, 2026, determined in accordance with the Market Value determination set out above plus the “in the money value” of unexercised but vested options, which are otherwise not included in the calculation under the Corporation’s Equity Ownership Policies.
Name
Market Value of Common Shares Held
($)
Market Value of vested RSUs
($)
Market Value of vested PSUs
($)
Market Value of cash-settled Share Units Held (CRSUs)
($)
Value of unexercised in-the-money options1
Total
Edward J. Ryan
                   -
      15,528,757
  31,237,320
                   -
               3,958,222
 50,724,300
Allan Brett
       2,990,040
       5,781,229
  11,764,083
                   -
               1,626,069
 22,161,420
J. Scott Pagan
      18,247,589
       7,972,940
  16,466,327
                   -
               2,118,992
 44,805,848
William Green
                   -
            22,270
               -
                   -
                  490,772
      513,041
Edward Gardner
                   -
          484,756
      892,056
                   -
                  284,902
   1,661,713
(1) The value of unexercised in-the-money options has been calculated using the difference between the closing price of the Corporation’s Common Shares on the TSX on January 30, 2026, the last business day of fiscal 2026, (Cdn.$101.69) and the Canadian dollar option exercise price. The value has been reported in US dollars using an exchange rate of 1 US dollar = 1.3562 Canadian dollars, being the indicative foreign exchange rate reported by the Bank of Canada on January 30, 2026, the last business day of fiscal 2026.
58


Hedging and Pledging Restrictions
The Corporation’s compensation program is designed to align a significant portion of NEO compensation to longer-term shareholder interests. Under the terms of the Corporation’s Insider Trading Policy, all employees and Directors, including the NEOs, are prohibited from purchasing financial instruments, including, prepaid variable forward contracts, equity swaps, collars, or units of exchange funds that directly hedge or offset a decrease in market value of securities or Common Share-based compensation held, directly or indirectly, by the individual. In addition, any Director or NEO who seeks to specifically pledge securities held, directly or indirectly, by the Director or NEO must first consult with the Corporation’s insider trading policy administrator to determine whether the proposed pledge would reasonably be expected to cause the Director or NEO to no longer have a meaningful aggregate equity ownership interest in the Corporation.
Fiscal 2026 Compensation Structures of the NEOs
CEO - Edward J. Ryan
Mr. Ryan was appointed Chief Executive Officer on November 26, 2013 and had served in senior executive roles at the Corporation for more than 10 years prior to this appointment.
On an annual basis, the Compensation Committee reviews Mr. Ryan’s compensation as the Chief Executive Officer of the Corporation. As part of this review the Compensation Committee considers the total target direct compensation of the chief executive officer role in the Comparator Group and the mix of the overall compensation components, including the allocation among base salary, short-term incentives and long-term incentives, as well as the split between guaranteed components and “at-risk” components. The Compensation Committee also considers the level of equity ownership that it wants Mr. Ryan to accumulate over the long-term incentive period.
For fiscal 2026, the Compensation Committee considered various factors in determining that Mr. Ryan’s total target direct compensation should be positioned roughly in line with the median of the Comparator Group, including the following factors:

Mr. Ryan has significant tenure with the Corporation in a senior executive role;

During Mr. Ryan’s tenure in a senior executive role, and since his appointment to the role of Chief Executive Officer, the Corporation has achieved superior financial performance and executed on its long-term and corporate development strategy;

During the past five years of Mr. Ryan’s tenure, the performance of the Common Shares exceeded that of the S&P/TSX Composite Index and the NASDAQ Composite Index and tracked slightly under the S&P/TSX Composite Index “Software &Services” industry subgroup index;

Mr. Ryan developed a strong relationship with many of the significant shareholders of the Corporation, and the Board of Directors receives positive feedback regarding Mr. Ryan and his performance through its shareholder engagement process; and

Mr. Ryan played an integral role in the steady increase in the Corporation’s revenues and the completion of various acquisitions and financing transactions over the past fiscal year.
59


The following chart illustrates the pay mix for, and components of, Mr. Ryan’s overall compensation structure as was set for fiscal 2026, assuming on-target performance:
In determining the appropriate compensation levels and pay mix for Mr. Ryan for fiscal 2026, the Compensation Committee continued to weight total compensation more heavily towards “at-risk” and long-term incentives, consistent with the Corporation’s past practice, market practice and the Comparator Group. Following a review of the compensation benchmarking study for the CEO position conducted by the Compensation Committee’s compensation consultant and in consideration of the performance achieved by the Corporation through fiscal 2025, the Compensation Committee determined that a moderate increase in Mr. Ryan’s aggregate compensation was appropriate for fiscal 2026.
Accordingly, Mr. Ryan’s base salary remained at $650,000, his eligibility for on-target short-term incentives was set at 100% of base salary, with a maximum of 150% of base salary (the same percentages as in fiscal 2025), and his total on-target long-term incentive eligibility was set at $7,700,000 for fiscal 2026 (an increase from $6,700,000 in fiscal 2025). This increase in long-term incentive eligibility was identified by the Compensation Committee as necessary to continue to maintain target total compensation roughly in line with the median compensation level identified in the Peer Group compensation study for fiscal 2026. The long-term incentive component continued to be awarded 50% in the form of PSUs, 35% in the form of RSUs and 15% in the form of stock options.
Upon the completion of fiscal 2026, the Compensation Committee considered the appropriate level of short-term incentives to award Mr. Ryan in respect of fiscal 2026. As previously discussed above, considering the Corporation’s overall performance in fiscal 2026 and its performance against its Adjusted EBITDA targets, as well as the performance of the Corporation in a number of other areas (as discussed above under the headings “Longer-term Financial and Corporate Development Plan”, “Annual Corporate Financial Targets” and “Common Share Price”) and Mr. Ryan’s contribution to such performance, Mr. Ryan was awarded a short-term incentive in respect of fiscal 2026 in the amount of $650,000, being his on-target short-term incentive eligibility at 100% of his on-target short-term incentive for fiscal 2026, to be paid in cash. In addition to this cash award, and in recognition of the Corporation's overperformance for fiscal 2026, Mr. Ryan was granted additional stock options with a value of $325,000, representing a further 50% of his on-target short-term incentive for fiscal 2026. This incremental amount reflects the maximum over-performance eligibility established by the Board and Compensation Committee at the beginning of fiscal 2026, which was set at 50% of the on-target short-term incentive amount. Having regard to the Corporation's over-performance against its Adjusted EBITDA targets and the other
60


performance factors described above, the Compensation Committee determined that the maximum over-performance amount was warranted.
Chief Financial Officer – Allan Brett
Mr. Brett joined the Corporation as Chief Financial Officer on May 29, 2014. Mr. Brett previously served as Chief Financial Officer of Aastra Technologies Limited from 1996 through to its sale to Mitel Networks Corporation in 2014.
The Compensation Committee received certain recommendations from the Chief Executive Officer, including positive input from the Audit Committee regarding Mr. Brett’s outstanding performance, with respect to the setting of Mr. Brett’s compensation package for fiscal 2026. In considering these recommendations, the Compensation Committee considered compensation benchmarking data prepared by the Corporation’s compensation consultant in past fiscal periods assessing the compensation arrangements of the chief financial officer position within the Comparator Group.
The Compensation Committee considered various factors in determining that Mr. Brett’s total target direct compensation should be positioned at a level that approaches the median for the chief financial officer position in the Comparator Group, including the following factors:

Mr. Brett has significant experience in the role of a Chief Financial Officer to a publicly traded company with international operations;

Mr. Brett has demonstrated his abilities and knowledge in several areas that have added value to the Corporation since his appointment, including in the areas of capital market transactions, merger and acquisition integration, taxation, business planning and overall financial management and financial reporting; and

Mr. Brett has played a key role in capital market transactions, including putting in place a restated credit facility that assists the Corporation in executing against its business plan.
The following chart illustrates the pay mix for, and components of, Mr. Brett’s overall compensation structure as was set for fiscal 2026, assuming on-target performance:

61


In determining the appropriate compensation levels and pay mix for Mr. Brett for fiscal 2026, the Compensation Committee determined that the total compensation should be more heavily weighted towards “at-risk” and long-term incentives, consistent with the compensation of the Chief Executive Officer. Considering the performance of the Corporation in fiscal 2026 and based on the recommendation of the CEO which was then approved by the Compensation Committee, the compensation arrangements for Mr. Brett for fiscal 2026 included base salary in the amount of $500,000, on-target eligibility for short-term incentives set at $500,000, being 100% of base salary, with a maximum eligibility of 150% of base salary and eligibility for long-term incentives set at $2,800,000 for fiscal 2026 (an increase from $2,350,000 in fiscal 2025). This increase in long-term incentive eligibility was identified by the Compensation Committee as necessary to continue to maintain target total compensation roughly in line with the median compensation level identified in the Peer Group compensation study for fiscal 2026. Consistent with the arrangements with the CEO and the President and COO, and consistent with past practice, it was determined that the long-term incentives for Mr. Brett continue to be granted 50% in the form of PSUs, 35% in the form of RSUs and 15% in the form of stock options.
Upon the completion of fiscal 2026, the Compensation Committee considered the appropriate level of short-term incentives to award Mr. Brett in respect of fiscal 2026. As previously discussed above, considering the Corporation’s overall performance in fiscal 2026 and its over-performance against its Adjusted EBITDA targets, as well as the performance of the Corporation in a number of other areas (as discussed above under the headings “Longer-term Financial and Corporate Development Plan”, “Annual Corporate Financial Targets” and “Common Share Price”) and Mr. Brett’s contribution to such performance, Mr. Brett was awarded a short-term incentive in respect of fiscal 2026 in the amount of $500,000, being his on-target short-term incentive eligibility at 100% of his on-target short-term incentive for fiscal 2026, to be paid in cash. In addition to this cash award, and in recognition of the Corporation's overperformance for fiscal 2026, Mr. Brett was granted additional stock options with a value of $250,000, representing a further 50% of his on-target short-term incentive for fiscal 2026. This incremental amount reflects the maximum over-performance eligibility established by the Board and Compensation Committee at the beginning of fiscal 2026, which was set at 50% of the on-target short-term incentive amount. Having regard to the Corporation's over-performance against its Adjusted EBITDA targets and the other performance factors described above, the Compensation Committee determined that the maximum over-performance amount was warranted.
President & COO – J. Scott Pagan
Mr. Pagan was appointed President and COO on November 26, 2013 and had served in a senior executive role in the Corporation for more than 10 years prior to this appointment.
The Compensation Committee received certain recommendations from the Chief Executive Officer with respect to the setting of Mr. Pagan’s compensation package for fiscal 2026. In considering these recommendations, the Compensation Committee reviewed a benchmarking report prepared by the Corporation’s compensation consultant assessing the compensation arrangements of the second-highest paid officer position within the Comparator Group. The Compensation Committee considered various factors in determining that Mr. Pagan’s total target direct compensation should be positioned within a competitive range of the median of the Comparator Group for the second-highest paid officer, including the following factors:

The scope of Mr. Pagan’s role is broader than comparable roles at peer companies;

Mr. Pagan had served in a senior executive role for more than 10 years;

During such time, the Corporation has achieved superior financial performance and executed on its long-term and corporate development strategy;

During the past five years of Mr. Pagan’s tenure, the performance of the Common Shares exceeded that of the S&P/TSX Composite Index and the NASDAQ Composite Index and
62


tracked slightly under the S&P/TSX Composite Index “Software &Services” industry subgroup index; and

Mr. Pagan played an integral role in the steady improvement in the Corporation’s operating performance and the completion of various acquisitions and financing transactions.
The following chart illustrates the pay mix for, and components of, Mr. Pagan’s overall compensation structure as was set for fiscal 2026, assuming on-target performance:


In determining the appropriate compensation levels and pay mix for Mr. Pagan for fiscal 2026, the Compensation Committee determined that the total compensation should be more heavily weighted towards “at-risk” and long-term incentives, consistent with the compensation of the Chief Executive Officer. Considering the performance of the Corporation in fiscal 2026 and based on the recommendation of the CEO which was then approved by the Compensation Committee, the compensation arrangements for Mr. Pagan for fiscal 2026 included base salary in the amount of $500,000, on-target eligibility for short-term incentives set at $500,000, being 100% of base salary, with a maximum eligibility of 150% of base salary and eligibility for long-term incentives set at $4,000,000 for fiscal 2026 (an increase from $3,000,000 in fiscal 2025). This increase in long-term incentive eligibility was identified by the Compensation Committee as necessary to continue to maintain target total compensation roughly in line with the median compensation level identified in the Peer Group compensation study for fiscal 2026. Consistent with the arrangements with the CEO and the CFO, and consistent with past practice, it was determined that the long-term incentives for Mr. Pagan continue to be granted 50% in the form of PSUs, 35% in the form of RSUs and 15% in the form of stock options.
Upon the completion of fiscal 2026, the Compensation Committee considered the appropriate level of short-term incentives to award Mr. Pagan in respect of fiscal 2026. As previously discussed above, considering the Corporation’s overall performance in fiscal 2026 and its over-performance against its Adjusted EBITDA targets, as well as the performance of the Corporation in a number of other areas (as discussed above under the headings “Longer-term Financial and Corporate Development Plan”, “Annual Corporate Financial Targets” and “Common Share Price”) and Mr. Pagan’s contribution to such performance, Mr. Pagan was awarded a short-term incentive in respect of fiscal 2026 in the
63


amount of $500,000, being his on-target short-term incentive eligibility at 100% of his on-target short-term incentive for fiscal 2026, to be paid in cash. In addition to this cash award, and in recognition of the Corporation's overperformance for fiscal 2026, Mr. Pagan was granted additional stock options with a value of $250,000, representing a further 50% of his on-target short-term incentive for fiscal 2026. This incremental amount reflects the maximum over-performance eligibility established by the Board and Compensation Committee at the beginning of fiscal 2026, which was set at 50% of the on-target short-term incentive amount. Having regard to the Corporation's over-performance against its Adjusted EBITDA targets and the other performance factors described above, the Compensation Committee determined that the maximum over-performance amount was warranted.
Executive Vice President, Corporate Development – Edward Gardner

Mr. Gardner was promoted to the role of Chief Financial Officer on March 12, 2026 from Mr. Gardner’s previous role of Executive Vice President, Corporate Development which he had held since 2003.
The Compensation Committee received certain recommendations from the Chief Executive Officer with respect to Mr. Gardner’s compensation package for fiscal 2026. As part of its review of the recommendations, the Compensation Committee considered overall executive compensation trends that had been noted by its compensation consultant and determined that any compensation adjustments within the executive officer positions of the Corporation, of which Mr. Gardner is a part, should be more heavily weighted towards increases in the long-term incentive component of such compensation.  Considering the performance of the Corporation in fiscal 2025 and based on the recommendation of the CEO which was then approved by the Compensation Committee, the compensation arrangements for Mr. Gardner for fiscal 2026 included base salary in the amount of $310,000 (a 44.8% increase from $214,029 in fiscal 2025), on-target eligibility for short-term incentives set at $93,500, being 30% of base salary, with a maximum eligibility of 45% of base salary and eligibility for long-term incentives set at $847,500 for fiscal 2026 (an increase from CAD$672,000 in fiscal 2025).  The long-term incentive component for Mr. Gardner in respect of fiscal 2026 was awarded 50% in the form of PSUs vesting following a three-year performance period, 25% in the form of RSUs vesting equally over three years and 25% in the form of stock options vesting over three years.
Upon the completion of fiscal 2026, the Compensation Committee considered the appropriate level of short-term incentives to award Mr. Gardner in respect of fiscal 2026. As previously discussed above, considering the Corporation’s overall performance in fiscal 2026 and its over-performance against its Adjusted EBITDA targets and Mr. Gardner’s contribution to such performance, Mr. Gardner was awarded a short-term incentive in respect of fiscal 2026 in the amount of $93,000, being his on-target short-term incentive eligibility at 100% of his on-target short-term incentive for fiscal 2026, to be paid in cash. In addition to this cash award, and in recognition of the Corporation's overperformance for fiscal 2026, Mr. Gardner was granted additional stock options with a value of $46,500, representing a further 50% of his on-target short-term incentive for fiscal 2026. This incremental amount reflects the maximum over-performance eligibility established by the Board and Compensation Committee at the beginning of fiscal 2026, which was set at 50% of the on-target short-term incentive amount. Having regard to the Corporation's over-performance against its Adjusted EBITDA targets and the other performance factors described above, the Compensation Committee determined that the maximum over-performance amount was warranted.
Executive Vice President, Global Sales – William Green
Mr. Green was promoted to the role of Executive Vice President, Global Sales in June 2025 from Mr. Green’s previous role of Senior Vice President, North American Sales which he had held since August 2020.
64


The Compensation Committee received certain recommendations from the Chief Executive Officer with respect to Mr. Green's compensation package for fiscal 2026 following his promotion to EVP Global Sales. As part of its review of the recommendations, the Compensation Committee considered overall executive compensation trends that had been noted by its compensation consultant and determined that any compensation adjustments within the executive officer positions of the Corporation, of which Mr. Green is a part, should be more heavily weighted towards increases in the long-term incentive component of such compensation. Considering the performance of the Corporation in fiscal 2025 and based on the recommendation of the CEO which was then approved by the Compensation Committee, the compensation arrangements for Mr. Green for fiscal 2026 included base salary in the amount of $300,000 (pro-rated for the balance of fiscal 2026 following his promotion to EVP Global Sales), on-target eligibility for short-term incentives set at $400,000, being 133% of base salary, with a maximum eligibility of 200% of base salary and eligibility for long-term incentives set at $550,000 for fiscal 2026. The long-term incentive component for Mr. Green in respect of fiscal 2026 was awarded 50% in the form of PSUs vesting following a three-year performance period, 25% in the form of RSUs vesting equally over three years and 25% in the form of stock options vesting over three years. Upon the completion of fiscal 2026, the Compensation Committee considered the appropriate level of short-term incentives to award Mr. Green in respect of fiscal 2026. As previously discussed above, considering the Corporation's overall performance in fiscal 2026 and its over-performance against its Adjusted EBITDA targets and Mr. Green's contribution to such performance, Mr. Green was awarded a short-term incentive in respect of fiscal 2026 in the amount of $400,000, being his on-target short-term incentive eligibility at 100% of his on-target short-term incentive for fiscal 2026, to be paid in cash. In addition to this cash award, and in recognition of the Corporation's overperformance for fiscal 2026, Mr. Green was granted additional stock options with a value of $133,333, representing a further 50% of his on-target short-term incentive for fiscal 2026, pro-rated for the eight months of fiscal 2026 following his promotion to Executive Vice President, Global Sales. This incremental amount reflects the maximum over-performance eligibility established by the Board and Compensation Committee at the beginning of fiscal 2026, which was set at 50% of the on-target short-term incentive amount. Having regard to the Corporation's over-performance against its Adjusted EBITDA targets and the other performance factors described above, the Compensation Committee determined that the maximum over-performance amount was warranted.
22.            Summary Compensation Table
The following table sets forth information regarding compensation earned by the NEOs for the fiscal years as specified:
Name and Principal
Position
Fiscal
Year
Ended
Jan. 31
 
Salary1
Share-
based
Awards2
Option-
based
Awards3
Annual
Non-Equity
Incentive Plan
compensation4
All Other
Compensation5
Total
Compensation
 
 
($)
($)
($)
($)
($)
($)
Edward J. Ryan
Chief Executive Officer
2026
2025
2024
 
650,000
637,000
587,500
7,628,808
6,157,391
6,333,700
 
1,180,320
955,481
940,415
 
975,000
650,000
600,000
 
4,000
2,000
2,000
 
10,438,129
8,402,372
8,463,615
 
               
Allan Brett(6)
Chief Financial Officer
2026
2025
2024
 
 
500,000
487,500
433,333
 
 
2,774,116
2,159,750
2,234,081
 
 
429,213
335,126
331,705
 
 
750,000
500,000
450,000
 
 
13,998
12,868
12,306
 
 
4,467,327
3,495,244
3,461,424
 
 
               
Edward Gardner
Executive Vice
President, Corporate
Development / Chief
Financial Officer
2026
2025
2024
259,182
212,303
222,065
750,657
402,232
489,860
1,557,273
115,995
113,831
139,500
64,209
67,179
7,432
6,240
6,531
2,714,044
800,979
899,467

65

Name and Principal
Position
Fiscal
Year
Ended
Jan. 31
 
Salary1
Share-
based
Awards2
Option-
based
Awards3
Annual
Non-Equity
Incentive Plan
compensation4
All Other
Compensation5
Total
Compensation
               
J. Scott Pagan
President & COO
2026
2025
2024
 
 
500,000
487,500
433,333
 
 
3,962,954
2,757,118
2,841,375
 
 
613,157
427,816
421,894
 
 
750,000
500,000
450,000
 
 
13,998
12,868
12,306
 
 
5,840,109
4,185,301
4,158,908
 
 
               
William Green(6)
Executive Vice
President, Global Sales
 
2026
2025
2024
 
 
286,700
258,825
253,750
288,157
-
-
1,743,802
104,567
99,899
482,820
205,526
185,855
4,000
2,000
2,000
2,805,478
570,918
541,504
(1) Amounts in this column reflect actual amounts paid during the specified period and may not reflect the base salary set for the specified period under the Corporation’s compensation plans depending upon the timing of any adjustments to base salary during the fiscal year.
(2) Dollar amounts in this column reflect the grant date fair value of CRSUs, PSUs and RSUs issued in the applicable year which are recorded by the Corporation for expense purposes in its functional currency of Canadian dollars and converted to US dollars at the exchange rate in effect at the end of the specified period and which may vary from the exchange rate applied at the time of calculating the US dollar equivalent fair value as of the grant date. Stated amounts do not include any amounts of annual short-term incentive plan compensation that the NEO elected to receive in the form of CRSUs. The grant date fair value of a CRSU was determined by multiplying the number of CRSUs granted by the weighted-average closing price of the Common Shares in the period of five trading days preceding the date of the grant. This approach is used as it is the model used to value CRSUs for the purposes of the Corporation’s consolidated financial statements. The grant date fair value of a PSU is determined using a Monte Carlo simulation approach. This approach is used as it is the model used to value PSUs for the purposes of the Corporation’s consolidated financial statements. The grant date fair value of an RSU is based on the closing price of the Common Shares on the trading day preceding the date of the grant. This approach is used as it is the model used to value RSUs for the purposes of the Corporation’s consolidated financial statements. Amounts in this column do not reflect any actual financial benefit an NEO may receive upon any eventual vesting and redemption of PSUs, RSUs or CRSUs. Please see the section entitled “Security-Based Compensation Plans”.
(3) Dollar amounts in this column reflect the grant date fair value of stock options issued in the applicable year which are recorded by the Corporation for expense purposes in its functional currency of Canadian dollars and converted to US dollars at the exchange rate in effect at the end of the specified period and which may vary from the exchange rate applied at the time of calculating the US dollar equivalent fair value as of the grant date. Amounts in this column do not reflect whether the NEO has actually realized a financial benefit from the exercise of the awards. The grant date fair value of a stock option is determined using the Black-Scholes-Merton model. This model is used as it is the model used to value stock options for the purposes of the Corporation’s consolidated financial statements. Please see the section entitled “Security-Based Compensation Plans – Common Shares Authorized for Issuance Under Equity Compensation Plans”. In 2026, each of Messrs. Ryan, Brett, Pagan, Green and Gardner were eligible for the Maximum STI Eligibility amount.  The Actual STI awarded to the NEO in 2026 was a combination of cash and grant of additional stock options in recognition of the Corporation’s overperformance for fiscal 2026.
(4) Annual non-equity incentive plan compensation reflects the entitlement of an NEO pursuant to the Corporation’s short-term incentives, described earlier in this Circular. An NEO may elect to take such entitlements in the form of cash or CRSUs. Where the NEO elected to receive an award in the form of CRSUs, the award is made using the weighted average closing price of the Common Shares on the TSX in the period of five trading days preceding the date of the grant and paid out over a period of ten quarters.
(5) “All Other Compensation” includes contributions made by the Corporation to, in the case of Messrs. Brett, Pagan and Roszko, the NEO’s DPSP Plan or, in the case of Messrs. Ryan and Wood, the NEO’s 401(k) plan. “All Other Compensation” does not include benefits received by the NEOs which are available generally to all our salaried employees. “All Other Compensation” also does not include the value of perquisites for each NEO where the aggregate value of those is less than 10% of the NEO’s total salary for the financial year and less than Cdn.$50,000. Mr. Ryan, as a salaried officer of the Corporation, does not receive compensation for serving as a Director of the Corporation.
(6) Mr. Brett retired as CFO effective March 12, 2026. Mr. Gardner was appointed Chief Financial Officer of the Corporation on March 12, 2026 and prior to that, Mr. Gardner was Executive Vice President, Corporate Development of the Corporation.
Using the data and valuation methodology from the above summary compensation table, the Corporation has calculated the following:
Total Compensation of NEOs in Fiscal 2026 as a percentage of the Corporation’s total revenue in Fiscal 2026
3.60%

66


23. Outstanding NEO Option-based Awards and Share-based Awards
The following table details the outstanding option-based awards and share-based awards for each NEO as at January 31, 2026.
 
Option-based Awards1
Share-based Awards1
Name
Grant Date
Number of securities underlying unexercised options
Option Exercise Price2
Option Expiration Date
Value of unexercised in-the-money options3
Number of shares or units of shares that have not vested4,5
Market or payout value of share-based awards that have not vested5,6
Market or payout value of vested share-based awards not paid out or distributed7
(#)
($)
($)
(#)
($)
($)
Edward J. Ryan
 April 13, 2019
34,193
37.16
April 13, 2026
1,293,142
 
 
 
 
 April 12, 2020
33,851
38.03
April 12, 2027
1,250,755
 
 
 
 
 Dec 7, 2020
11,392
54.32
Dec 7, 2027
235,366
 
 
 
 
April 14, 2021
35,596
60.37
April 14, 2028
520,213
 
 
 
 
April 14, 2022
42,161
59.36
April 14, 2029
658,746
 
 
 
 
April 14, 2023
35,640
79.49
April 14, 2030
0
 
 
 
 
 April 15, 2024
34,028
90.11
April 15, 2031
0
     
 
April 14, 2025
37,647
104.17
April 14, 2032
0
     
           
103,066
 
7,705,214
 
46,627,887
                 
Allan Brett
April 13, 2019
15,122
37.16
April 13, 2026
571,897
 
 
 
 
April 12, 2020
14,971
38.03
April 12, 2027
553,161
 
 
 
 
Dec 7, 2020
3,625
54.32
Dec 7, 2027
74,895
 
 
 
 
April 14, 2021
13,237
60.37
April 14, 2028
193,450
 
 
 
 
April 14, 2022
14,891
59.36
April 14, 2029
232,665
 
 
 
 
April 14, 2023
12,571
79.49
April 14, 2030
0
 
 
 
 
April 15, 2024
11,935
90.11
April 15, 2031
0
     
 
April 14, 2025
13,690
104.17
April 14, 2032
0
 
 
 
           
                36,881
          2,757,224
 
17,493,466

 
Option-based Awards1
Share-based Awards1
Name
Grant Date
Number of securities underlying unexercised options
Option Exercise Price2
Option Expiration Date
Value of unexercised in-the-money options3
Number of shares or units of shares that have not vested4,5
Market or payout value of share-based awards that have not vested5,6
Market or payout value of vested share-based awards not paid out or distributed7
(#)
($)
($)
(#)
($)
($)
J. Scott Pagan
April 13, 2019
20,163
37.16
April 13, 2026
762,543
 
 
 
 
April 12, 2020
19,961
38.03
April 12, 2027
737,536
 
 
 
 
Dec 7, 2020
4,039
54.32
Dec 7, 2027
83,448
 
 
 
 
April 14, 2021
16,352
60.37
April 14, 2028
238,974
 
 
 
 
April 14, 2022
18,976
59.36
April 14, 2029
296,491
 
 
 
 
April 14, 2023
15,989
79.49
April 14, 2030
0
 
 
 
 
April 15, 2024
15,236
90.11
April 15, 2031
0
     
 
April 14, 2025
19,557
104.17
April 14, 2032
0
     



67

           
                50,210
          3,753,700
      24,367,050
                 
William Green
Sep 14, 2020
14,248
52.33
Sep 14, 2027
322,739
     
 
April 14, 2021
5,933
60.37
April 14, 2028
86,707
     
 
April 14, 2022
5,205
59.36
April 14, 2029
81,326
     
 
April 14, 2023
3,786
79.49
April 14, 2030
0
     
 
April 15, 2024
3,724
90.11
April 15, 2031
0
     
 
April 14, 2025
3,306
104.17
April 14, 2032
0
     
 
July 11, 2025
50,750
105.16
July 10, 2032
0
     
           
                  2,378
              177,779
              22,204
                 
                 
Edward Gardner
April 12, 2020
2,165
38.03
April 12, 2027
79,994
     
 
Dec 7, 2020
2,299
54.32
Dec 7, 2027
47,499
     
 
April 14, 2021
4,726
60.37
April 14, 2028
69,067
     
 
April 14, 2022
5,654
59.36
April 14, 2029
88,341
     
 
April 14, 2023
4,314
79.49
April 14, 2030
0
     
 
April 15, 2024
4,131
90.11
April 15, 2031
0
     
 
April 14, 2025
6,902
104.17
April 14, 2032
0
     
 
Jan 15, 2026
50,000
88.51
Jan 15, 2033
0
     
           
                  8,863
              662,598
        1,372,743
(1) See the discussion of Executive Compensation for each of the NEOs commencing on page 61 above for details of the specific option- and share-based awards received in respect of fiscal 2023.
(2) Options granted April 13, 2019, April 12, 2020, September 14, 2020, December 7, 2020, April 14, 2021, April 14, 2022, April 14, 2023, April 15, 2024, April 14, 2025, July 15, 2025 and January 15, 2026 were granted with Canadian dollar exercise prices of Cdn.$50.40, Cdn.$51.58, Cdn. $70.97, Cdn.$73.67, Cdn.$81.87, Cdn.$80.50, Cdn.$107.81, Cdn. $122.21, Cdn. $141.27, Cdn $142.62 and Cdn.$ 120.04 respectively. The exercise prices noted in this table have been converted to US dollars using an exchange rate of 1 US dollar = 1.3562 Canadian dollars, being the indicative foreign exchange rate reported by the Bank of Canada on January 30, 2026, the last business day of fiscal 2026. The April 13, 2019 options granted to Mr. Ryan, Mr. Brett, Mr. Pagan, and Mr. Gardner vest annually over a period of three years from January 31, 2020. The April 12, 2020 options granted to Mr. Ryan, Mr. Brett, Mr. Pagan, and Mr. Gardner vest annually over a period of three years from January 31, 2021. The September 14, 2020 options granted to Mr. Green vest annually over a period of five years from September 14, 2021. The December 7, 2020 options granted to Mr. Ryan, Mr. Brett, Mr. Pagan and Mr. Gardner vest annually over a period of two years from January 31, 2022. The April 14, 2021 options granted to Mr. Ryan, Mr. Brett, Mr. Pagan, Mr. Green and Mr. Gardner vest annually over a period of three years from January 31, 2022. The April 14, 2022 options granted to Mr. Ryan, Mr. Brett, Mr. Pagan, Mr. Green and Mr. Gardner vest annually over a period of three years from January 31, 2023. The April 14, 2023 options granted to Mr. Ryan, Mr. Brett, Mr. Pagan, Mr. Green and Mr. Gardner vest annually over a period of three years from January 31, 2024. The April 15, 2024 options granted to Mr. Ryan, Mr. Brett, Mr. Pagan, Mr. Green and Mr. Gardner vest annually over a period of three years from January 31, 2025. The April 14, 2025 options granted to Mr. Ryan, Mr. Brett, Mr. Pagan, Mr. Green and Mr. Gardner vest annually over a period of three years from January 31, 2026. The July 11, 2025 options granted to Mr. Green vest annually over a period of five years from July 11, 2026. The January 15, 2026 options granted to Mr. Gardner vest annually over a period of five years from January 15, 2027.
(3) The value of unexercised in-the-money options has been calculated using the difference between the closing price of the Corporation’s Common Shares on the TSX at the end of fiscal 2026 (Cdn.$101.69) and the Canadian dollar option exercise price (see footnote (2) above). The value has been reported in US dollars using an exchange rate of 1 US dollar = 1.3562 Canadian dollars, being the indicative foreign exchange rate reported by the Bank of Canada on January 30, 2026, the last business day of fiscal 2026. No adjustment has been made for options that have not yet vested and are therefore not yet exercisable.
(4) The number of PSUs included assumes a 1.0 adjustment factor. See also footnote (5).
(5) PSU awards under the PRSU Plan are subject to performance vesting criteria. The number of PSUs that vest on a vesting date is subject to an adjustment factor which ranges from 0.0 to 2.0 for outstanding grants. Please see the section entitled “Security-Based Compensation Plans – PRSU Plan”. The market value of PSUs included assumes a 1.0 adjustment factor.
(6) Unvested share-based awards are in the form of CRSUs, RSUs and PSUs. The market value of CRSUs, RSUs and PSUs that have not vested was determined using the closing price of the Common Shares on NASDAQ on January 30, 2026 ($74.76) being the last trading day of fiscal 2026.
(7) Vested share-based awards are in the form of RSUs and PSUs. The market value of RSUs and PSUs that have vested but have not been distributed was determined using the closing price of the Common Shares on NASDAQ on January 30, 2026 ($74.76), being the last trading day of fiscal 2026.
68


24.            NEO Incentive Plan Awards – Value Vested or Earned During Fiscal 2026
Name
Option-based awards – Value vested during the year1
Share-based awards – Value vested during the year2
Non-equity incentive plan compensation – Value earned during the year3
($)
($)
($)
Edward J. Ryan
-
9,802,157
 650,000
Allan Brett
-
 3,465,874
 500,000
J. Scott Pagan
-
 4,451,808
 500,000
William Green
308,407
22,204
349,487
Edward Gardner
-
726,667
93,000
(1) The total value of stock options that vested in fiscal 2026. The value is equal to the difference between the closing price of the Corporation’s Common Shares on the TSX on the vesting date and the Canadian dollar option exercise price. The value has been reported in US dollars using an exchange rate of 1 US dollar = 1.3562 Canadian dollars, being the indicative foreign exchange rate reported by the Bank of Canada on January 30, 2026, the last business day of fiscal 2026.
(2) The total value of RSUs, PSUs and CRSUs vested during fiscal 2026. The value of RSUs and PSUs that have vested was determined using the closing price of the Common Shares on NASDAQ on January 30, 2026 ($74.76), the last trading day of fiscal 2026. PSUs that vested in fiscal 2026 are based on PSUs awarded in fiscal 2023 subject to three-year performance vesting criteria and, based on the three year total shareholder return applicable to those PSU awards for the three-year period ended January 31, 2026, the final vested number of units resulting from such awards reflected a 1.61x performance factor adjustment.
(3) Annual non-equity incentive plan compensation reflects the entitlement of an NEO pursuant to the Corporation’s short-term incentives, described earlier in this Circular. These amounts are also included in the Summary Compensation Table above.
25.            NEO Option Exercises During Fiscal 2026
Name
Shares acquired on exercise during the year
Aggregate Value Realized1
Unexercised options at the end of the year2
(#)
($)
(#)
Edward J. Ryan
34,135
2,726,421
264,508
Allan Brett
 -
 -
 100,042
J. Scott Pagan
 -
 -
 130,273
William Green
 -
 -
86,952
Edward Gardner
 -
 -
80,191
(1) The aggregate value realized is the difference between the fair market value of the common shares on the exercise date and the exercise price of the option.
(2) See Summary Compensation Table above for value of unexercised option holdings.
26.            CEO Five-Year Look Back Compensation
The following chart represents a five-year look back comparison of the on-target compensation awarded to the CEO in a fiscal year compared to the amounts “realizable” from those compensation awards.
The “Total Target Compensation” reflects the total on-target compensation set for the CEO by the Compensation Committee for the fiscal year as indicated, consisting of base salary, on-target STI eligibility and on-target LTI award values at time of grant.
The “Total Realizable Compensation” reflects the actual salary and STI amounts received by the CEO in respect of the fiscal year indicated plus the value of any vested RSUs, vested PSUs or vested stock options awarded as part of the LTI for the fiscal year indicated. RSUs and PSUs have been valued based on the fair market value of a Common Share on the date of vesting. Stock options have been valued based on the “in-the-money” value of the stock option on the date of vesting, being the difference between the fair market value of a Common Share and the exercise price of the stock option. In each case, the values have been calculated using the Canadian dollar closing price of Common Shares on
69


the date of vesting, converted to USD at the applicable exchange rate as of that calculation date. These calculations are based on values determined as of vesting dates and are not reflective of actual amounts that may be received by the CEO depending on the timing of the redemption of any vested stock options or vested share units resulting from any of the RSU or PSU awards included in the five-year period covered below. For details of any actual amounts received from exercises of vested stock options, please refer to the separate discussion of NEO option exercises above.
As a significant portion of the CEO's target compensation is in the form of LTI that is equity-based and vests over time, more recent periods will reflect that the LTI corresponding to that period has largely not yet vested.  The appreciation in the price of Common Shares during the  five year period has had a corresponding appreciation impact on the realizable value of the LTI compensation awarded in past years that is now being calculated in this chart as those past LTI awards vest. In addition, the Corporation's success in achieving the applicable performance criteria for incremental adjustment to the PSU awards during this five year period (as discussed above and in previous years in the discussion of Long-Term Incentives) has also resulted in a corresponding increase in the realizable value of the PSU component of the LTI compensation.  The combination of share price appreciation and the impact of PSU performance-based adjustment factor vesting has resulted in an increase in Total Realizable Compensation compared to Target Total Compensation as the long-term incentive components of that compensation structure vest.  This is consistent with the compensation program adopted by the Compensation Committee which is designed to reward long-term performance.
The chart below similarly reflects that a significant portion of the compensation awarded in fiscal 2025 and 2026 is in the form of LTI that has not yet been earned and has not yet vested and therefore is not reflected in the “Total Realizable Compensation” for those fiscal years as of the date of this Circular based on the calculation method outlined above.
NEO Termination and Change of Control Benefits
The employment contracts we have with our NEOs may require us to make certain types of payments and provide certain types of benefits to the NEOs upon the occurrence of:

-
The termination without cause of the NEO;

-
A material adverse change to the NEO’s terms of employment; and/or
70



-
A change of control of the Corporation.
The Corporation considers it to be in its best interests to establish severance benefits for its NEOs to provide certainty to both the Corporation in respect of its obligations in the event of termination of employment as well as to the NEOs as an incentive to encourage their retention and continued focus on the Corporation’s operations in circumstances such as an unsolicited change of control transaction. The Corporation believes that the severance benefits established for its NEOs are competitive and in-line with market practice. The period over which severance benefits are calculated is based on the position held by the NEO and the NEO’s length of service with the Corporation.
a.            Termination Without Cause
If the NEO is terminated without cause, we may be obligated to make severance payments as described below. We may also be required to continue the NEO’s employment benefits during any applicable severance period.
Edward J. Ryan / J. Scott Pagan


We are required to pay the NEO his base salary and on-target short-term compensation for up to two years.

William Green


We are required to pay the NEO his base salary plus on-target short-term compensation for up to one year.

Edward Gardner


We are required to pay the NEO his pro-rated on-target short-term compensation up to his termination date and his base salary and on-target short-term compensation for one year.
The PRSU Plan provides that if the employment of an NEO is terminated by the Corporation without cause, a prorated portion of the NEO’s unvested Share Units will automatically vest, based on the number of months from the first day of the grant to the termination date divided by the number of months in the grant and, in the case of PSUs, using an adjustment factor of 1.0. The PRSU Plan provides that if the employment of an NEO is terminated by the Corporation without cause within 12 months of a Change of Control (as defined below), then there will be immediate accelerated vesting of all of the NEO’s Share Units using an adjustment factor of 1.0. Potential payouts relating to such grants are reflected in the table in the section “Quantitative Estimates of Payments upon Termination or Change of Control”.

b.            Material Adverse Change to the NEO’s Terms of Employment
If there is an adverse change in the relationship between the Corporation and the NEO without the NEO’s written consent, we may be obligated to provide the payments or benefits to the NEO outlined above in the section “Termination Without Cause”. Some examples of such an adverse change in the relationship between the NEO and the Corporation are as follows:

A Change in Control as described in the section below which results in a material change of the NEO’s position, duties, responsibilities, title or office which were in effect immediately prior to such a change in control;
71



A material reduction by the Corporation of the NEO’s salary, benefits or any other form of remuneration payable by the Corporation; or

A material breach of the employment agreement between the Corporation and the NEO that is committed by the Corporation.
c.            Change of Control
The only situation in which a change in control, by itself and absent any termination of employment, results in any unvested compensation of an NEO being accelerated is the limited circumstances where there is:

A Corporate Transaction; and

The surviving, successor or acquiring entity does not assume the outstanding Share Units; in which case, under the PRSU Plan all outstanding and then unvested Share Units will vest immediately prior to the Corporate Transaction at not less than 100% and not more than 200% as determined by the Compensation Committee.

A “Change of Control” includes:

o
A transaction in which any person or group acquires ownership of more than 50% of the Corporation’s Common Shares, on a fully-diluted basis;

o
During any two-year period, directors, including any additional director whose election was approved by a vote of at least a majority of the directors then in office or who were appointed by the directors then in office, cease to constitute a majority of the Board;

o
A transaction which results in more than 50% of the Corporation’s Common Shares, on a fully-diluted basis, being held by any person or group other than the Corporation’s shareholders immediately preceding the transaction; or

o
There is a transaction to sell all or substantially all of the assets of the Corporation;


A “Corporate Transaction” is defined as any of the following:

o
A capital reorganization, amalgamation, arrangement, plan of arrangement or other scheme or reorganization;

o
An offer for Common Shares, where the Common Shares subject to the offer, together with the offeror’s Common Shares and Common Shares of any person or company acting jointly or in concert with the offeror, constitute in the aggregate 20% or more of the Common Shares;

o
An acquisition by a person of Common Shares such that the Common Shares acquired, together with the person’s Shares and Shares of any person or company acting jointly or in concert with such person, constitute in the aggregate 20% or more of the Common Shares outstanding immediately after such acquisition, unless another person has previously acquired and continues to hold Common Shares that represent a greater percentage than the first-mentioned person;

o
A sale of all or substantially all of the assets of the Corporation or any subsidiary; or

o
An extraordinary distribution to shareholders, including extraordinary cash dividends, dividends in kind and return of capital.
Quantitative Estimates of Payments to NEOs upon Termination or Change of Control
Further information regarding payments to our NEOs (other than Allan Brett, due to his retirement in March 2026) in the event of a termination without “cause” and/or upon a Change of Control may be found in the table below. This table sets forth the estimated amount of payments each applicable NEO would be entitled to receive upon the occurrence of the indicated event, assuming that the event occurred on January 31, 2026. Amounts potentially payable under plans which are generally available to all salaried employees, such as life and disability insurance, are excluded from the table. The values
72


related to vesting of stock options and awards are based upon the fair market value of our Common Shares of Cdn.$101.69 per Common Share as reported on the TSX on January 30, 2026, the last trading day of fiscal 2026, converted to US dollars at the rate of 1 US dollar = 1.3562 Canadian dollars, being the indicative foreign exchange rate reported by the Bank of Canada on January 30, 2026, the last business day of fiscal 2026. Stock option amounts deduct the applicable exercise price of the stock options. Severance amounts included in the table below assume that an NEO does not obtain alternate employment during any severance period. Severance amounts do not include amounts payable by the Corporation on account of, or in lieu of, employment benefits. The “Without Cause” summary information includes any deemed termination by the Corporation due to an adverse change in relationship between the Corporation and the NEO.
Name(1)
Event
Salary
($)
Short-term ($)
Stock Options ($)
Share Units ($)
Total
($)
Edward J. Ryan
Termination Without Cause
1,300,000
1,300,000
2,838,737
5,438,737
Termination Without Cause Within 12 Months of Change of Control
1,300,000
1,300,000
7,705,214
 10,305,214
Solely Upon Change of Control
J. Scott Pagan
Termination Without Cause
1,000,000
1,000,000
 1,340,98
 3,340,098
Termination Without Cause Within 12 Months of Change of Control
1,000,000
1,000,000
3,753,700
5,753,700
Solely Upon Change of Control
William Green
Termination Without Cause
300,000
44,432
344,432
Termination Without Cause Within 12 Months of Change of Control
300,000
177,779
477,779
Solely Upon Change of Control
Edward Gardner
Termination Without Cause
310,000
242,546
552,546
Termination Without Cause Within 12 Months of Change of Control
310,000
662,598
972,598
Solely Upon Change of Control
(1) Mr. Brett was Chief Financial Officer for all of fiscal 2026. He was succeeded by Edward Gardner on March 12, 2026 and will continue his employment with Descartes in a senior advisory role to the executive team. Mr. Brett is not entitled to any incremental payments, payables or benefits that have been triggered by, or result from, the foregoing.
Director Compensation
The Compensation Committee also exercises oversight over the compensation paid to non-executive directors of the Corporation and recommends the annual compensation program for directors to the Board of Directors for approval. In setting the director compensation structure for fiscal 2026, the Compensation Committee sought the advice of its outside, independent compensation consultant, Mercer, to provide assistance and guidance on director compensation issues. In making director compensation recommendations to the Board for approval, the Compensation Committee considers a number of factors, including: if applicable for that particular year, the director compensation benchmarking report from Mercer and the relative positioning of the board compensation within the Comparator Group; feedback from shareholders in the shareholder engagement process undertaken by the Board; the results of the previous year's "say on pay" shareholder vote; the overall performance of the Corporation over the past fiscal year in terms of both financial performance against its budget and its share price performance relative to the Comparator Group; overall industry trends in director compensation; and the general macro-economic environment facing the Corporation.
In addition, effective as of November 1, 2025, on the recommendation of the Compensation Committee, the Board of Directors approved certain changes to the equity compensation arrangements for non-executive directors. Under these changes, once a director has met the Corporation's minimum equity ownership threshold specified by the Director Equity Ownership Policy described below, such director may elect to receive up to two-thirds of his or her annual equity grant in cash, with at least one-third to be received in the form of Deferred Share Units. In addition, the director share ownership
73


requirement was increased from three times to five times the annual cash retainer, and the eligibility threshold for electing to receive cash in lieu of equity under this arrangement was set at two times the share ownership requirement.
Compensation Policies
Directors who are officers or employees of the Corporation receive no compensation for serving as directors. Non-employee directors of the Corporation were compensated in fiscal 2026 based on the annual retainers for Board and committee work outlined in the table below.
Retainer
Amounts
(February 1, 2025 – October 31, 2025)
Amounts
(November 1, 2025 – January 31, 2026)
Base Annual Retainer – Non-Executive Chair
$135,000
$140,000
Base Annual Retainer – All Other Non-Executive Directors
$60,000
$60,000
Audit Committee Retainer
$28,000 – Chair
$14,000 – Member
$28,000 – Chair
$14,000 – Member
Compensation Committee Retainer
$14,000 – Chair
$7,000 – Member
$16,000 – Chair
$8,000 – Member
Corporate Governance Committee Retainer
$14,000 – Chair
$5,250 – Member
$15,000 – Chair
$7,500 – Member
Nominations Committee Retainer
$7,000 – Chair
$3,500 – Member
$10,000 – Chair
$5,000 – Member
Annual Equity Grant – Non-Executive Chair
$200,000
$220,000
Annual Equity Grant – All Other Non-Executive Directors
$175,000
$190,000

Outside directors who are not ordinarily resident in the Province of Ontario and travel to attend a meeting of the Board in person were compensated an additional $1,500 per meeting.
All annual retainers are paid in cash and/or DSUs. Each DSU granted has a value equal to the weighted-average closing price of the Common Shares in the period of five trading days preceding the date of grant. A director may elect, prior to the commencement of a fiscal year, to receive a portion of his or her cash compensation for that fiscal year in the form of DSUs. Directors are required to receive a minimum of 50% of their base annual cash retainer compensation in the form of DSUs if they have not yet attained and maintained the minimum equity ownership threshold specified by the Director Equity Ownership Policy described below.
Directors are not permitted to purchase financial instruments, including, for greater certainty, prepaid variable forward contracts, equity swaps, collars, or units of exchange funds that directly hedge or offset a decrease in market value of securities held, directly or indirectly, by the director.
Directors are entitled to reimbursement for expenses incurred by them in their capacity as directors. During fiscal 2026, each non-employee member of the Board was also eligible for reimbursement of up to $3,000 per fiscal year (Non-Executive Chair of the Board, $5,000) of fees paid by that individual director for enrolment in continuing education courses or programs conducted by third parties or institutions relevant to their role as a director of the Corporation.
74


Fiscal 2026 Compensation for Directors
The following table sets forth summary information concerning the annual compensation earned by each of the current non-executive directors of the Corporation for fiscal 2026.
Name
Fees Earned(1) ($)
Share-based Awards(2) ($)
Total(3) ($)
Deepak Chopra
77,875
183,750
261,625
Eric A. Demirian - Chair(4)
136,250
211,667
347,917
Dennis Maple
78,000
183,750
261,750
Jane Mowat(5)
38,096
183,750
221,846
Chris Muntwyler(6)
80,757
183,750
264,507
Jane O’Hagan
84,750
183,750
268,500
John J. Walker
96,813
183,750
280,563
Laura Wilkin(5)
39,596
183,750
223,346
(1) Of the fees disclosed, each of the following directors elected to receive the following amounts in the form of DSUs under the DSU Plan (number of DSUs expressed in parentheses): (i) Deepak Chopra – $77,875 (859); (ii) Dennis Maple – $78,000 (862); (iii) Chris Muntwyler – $80,757 (895); (iv) Jane Mowat - $38,096 (451); (v) Jane O’Hagan – $84,750 (934); and (vi) Laura Wilkin – $39,596 (467). DSUs are valued by multiplying the number of DSUs granted and the weighted-average closing price of the Common Shares on the NASDAQ in the period of five trading days preceding the date of the grant.
(2) Amounts set forth in this column reflect awards of DSUs under the DSU Plan (other than DSUs that directors elected to receive in lieu of fees). DSUs are valued by multiplying the number of DSUs granted and the weighted-average closing price of the Common Shares on NASDAQ in the five trading days preceding the date of the grant.
(3) Table does not include any amounts paid as reimbursement of expenses.
(4) Mr. Demirian was appointed as a member of the Nominating Committee on June 12, 2025.
(5) Mss. Mowat and Wilkin were elected to the Board on June 12, 2025.
(6) Mr. Muntwyler was appointed as the chair of the Compensation Committee on June 12, 2025, having already served as a member of the committee prior to such date.
Outstanding Director Option-Based Awards and Share-based Awards
The following table details the outstanding share-based awards for each of the Corporation’s non-employee directors as at January 31, 2026. The Corporation’s non-employee directors did not hold any outstanding option-based awards as of the date of this Circular.
 
Share-based Awards
Name
Number of shares or units of shares that have not vested
Market or payout value of share-based awards that have not vested
Market or payout value of vested share-based awards not paid out or distributed(1)
(#)
($)
($)
Deepak Chopra
1,309,720
Eric A. Demirian
5,379,431
Dennis Maple
2,606,358
Jane Mowat
154,828
Chris Muntwyler
1,429,935
Jane O’Hagan
4,867,100
John J. Walker
5,990,145
Laura Wilkin
156,024
(1) All share-based awards that have vested are in the form of DSUs. DSUs vest on grant, however, are not paid to the director until the director ceases to serve on the Board. The market value of DSUs was determined using the closing price of the Common Shares on NASDAQ on January 30, 2026 ($74.76), the last business day of fiscal 2026.
75


Director Incentive Plan Awards Value Vested or Earned During Fiscal 2026
Name
Option-based awards – Value vested during the year ($)
Share-based awards – Value vested during the year(1) ($)
Deepak Chopra
261,625
Eric A. Demirian
211,667
Dennis Maple
261,750
Jane Mowat
221,846
Chris Muntwyler
264,507
Jane O’Hagan
268,500
John J. Walker
183,750
Laura Wilkin
223,346
(1) Amounts shown are inclusive of annual share-based awards plus any fees earned which are taken in the form of DSUs.  DSUs vest on grant, however, are not paid to the director until the director ceases to serve on the Board of Directors.
Director Equity Ownership Policy
The Corporation has an equity ownership policy applicable to directors (the “Director Equity Ownership Policy”).
The objective of the Director Equity Ownership Policy is to ensure that non-Management members of the Board acquire and hold a meaningful ownership interest in the Corporation within a reasonable period following the individual’s election or appointment to the Board. Under the policy, within five years of becoming subject to the policy, each non-Management director is required to attain and maintain the following equity ownership level.
Position
Equity Ownership Level as a Multiple of Base Annual Cash Retainer
Non-Management Director
5X
For purposes of the Director Equity Ownership Policy, “Market Value” for determining compliance means the volume-weighted average trading price of a Common Share on the TSX for the five trading days preceding the measurement date. In determining compliance with the Director Equity Ownership Policy, Common Shares are included and valued at Market Value at the date of measurement and DSUs are included and valued at Market Value at the date of measurement.
For as long as a non-Management director has not attained or maintained the applicable equity ownership levels, the non-Management director must elect to receive at least 50% of the base annual cash retainer received by the director for serving on the Board in the form of DSUs. A non-Management director who has attained and continues to maintain an equity ownership level at least equal to ten times the base annual cash retainer for serving on the Board may elect to convert to cash up to two thirds of their annual equity grant of DSUs. Accordingly, at least one third of the annual equity grant for such a non-Management director will be received in the form of DSUs.
The following table identifies the equity ownership levels of each of the current Directors, other than Mr. Ryan, Chief Executive Officer, as at March 31, 2026 with reference to the minimum equity ownership levels required by the Director Equity Ownership Policy. Where Market Values have been included in the table they are calculated by multiplying the number of securities by the volume-weighted average trading price of a Common Share on the TSX for the five trading days preceding March 31, 2026, being Cdn.$97.63  converted to US dollars at the rate of 1 US dollar = 1.3926, being the indicative foreign exchange rate reported by the Bank of Canada on March 30, 2026. Minimum equity ownership levels are determined by multiplying the level set out in the Director Equity Ownership Policy by the current base annual cash retainer (which, as of the date of this Circular, is $140,000 for Mr. Demirian in his role as Chair and $60,000 for other directors):
76



Name
Minimum Equity Ownership Level
($)
Value of Holdings per Equity Ownership Policies(1)
($)
Minimum Equity Ownership Level Achieved?
Deepak Chopra
 180,000
              1,247,611
Yes
Eric A. Demirian
420,000
              5,114,673
Yes
Dennis Maple
180,000
              2,463,324
Yes
Jane Mowat
180,000
                 230,019
Yes
Chris Muntwyler
180,000
              1,361,464
Yes
Jane O'Hagan
180,000
              4,584,810
Yes
John Walker
180,000
              5,997,872
Yes
Laura Wilkin
180,000
                 161,034
Time Remaining to Achieve(2)
 (1) As calculated in accordance with the Director Equity Ownership Policy methodology described above.  The value of holdings is based on DSUs held by the Director as well as any Common Shares owned by the Director (if applicable).
 (2) Ms. Wilkin was elected to the Board on June 12, 2025 and therefore has until June 12, 2030 to achieve the applicable minimum equity ownership level established under the Director Equity Ownership Policy.
SECURITY-BASED COMPENSATION PLANS
Common Shares Authorized for Issuance Under Equity Compensation Plans
The following table sets out, as of January 31st, 2026, the number and price of Common Shares to be issued under equity compensation plans to employees, directors and others. The percentages in parentheses in the table are the number of Common Shares to be issued under equity compensation plans to employees and others as a percentage of the Corporation’s Common Shares outstanding as of each of January 31st, 2026.
Plan Category
Plan
 
(A)
Number of Common Shares to be issued upon exercise of outstanding options, warrants and rights(1)
(#)
(B)
Weighted-average exercise price of outstanding options, warrants and rights(2)
($)
(C)
Number of Common Shares remaining available for future issuance under equity compensation plans (excluding securities reflected in column (A))(1)
(#)
Equity compensation plans approved by shareholders(3)
1998 Stock Option Plan
 
1,555,101 (1.8%)
Cdn.$101.94
1,820,430 (2.1%)
PRSU Plan
 
1,739,551 (2.0%)
N/A
1,797,981 (2.1%)
TOTAL
 
3,294,652 (3.8%)
Cdn.$101.94
3,618,411 (4.2%)
(1) PSU awards under the PRSU Plan are subject to performance vesting criteria. The number of PSUs that vest on a vesting date is subject to an adjustment factor which ranges from 0.0 to 2.0 for unvested outstanding grants. Please see the section entitled “Security-Based Compensation Plans – PRSU Plan”. In this chart, the number of Common Shares to be issued upon redemption of outstanding PSUs assumes a 2.0 adjustment factor.
(2) RSUs and PSUs issued under the PRSU Plan are excluded from the total calculation of weighted-average exercise price.
(3) The Corporation’s 1998 Stock Option Plan and the PRSU Plan, each of which is described in more detail below, are the only current equity compensation plans that have been approved by shareholders pursuant to which the Corporation may issue previously unissued Common Shares.
1998 Stock Option Plan
Eligible participants (“Participants”) under the Corporation’s 1998 Stock Option Plan are directors, officers, key employees and service providers of the Corporation. Participants under the plan are eligible to be granted options to purchase Common Shares at an exercise price established upon approval of the grant by the Board. A maximum aggregate of 13,154,787 Common Shares have been reserved for issuance under the 1998 Stock Option Plan since its inception, representing 15.29% of the
77


issued and outstanding Common Shares as of January 31, 2026. As at each of January 31, 2026, the Common Shares issuable pursuant to outstanding options under the 1998 Stock Option Plan were 1,555,101, and the aggregate number of Common Shares remaining available for issuance pursuant to further grants was 1,820,430.
The annual “burn rate” under the 1998 Stock Option Plan for the three most recently completed financial years, expressed as a percentage and calculated by dividing the number of options granted during the fiscal year by the weighted average number of Shares outstanding for the fiscal year, is set forth in the following table:
 
Fiscal 2024
Fiscal 2025
Fiscal 2026
Options Granted during the fiscal period
278,845
280,658
432,191
Weighted average number of Common Shares outstanding for the fiscal period
85,067,552
85,443,193
85,871,235
“Burn Rate”
0.33%
0.33%
0.50%
When options are granted, the exercise price is determined as the highest of the closing sale prices for board lots of Common Shares on the stock exchanges on which the Common Shares are listed, and on which at least one board lot was traded, on the first business day immediately preceding the day on which the grant was made. The 1998 Stock Option Plan does not authorize grants of options with an exercise price below this market price. Vesting rules for stock option grants are determined by the Board and set out in the option grant agreement between the Participant and the Corporation. The typical vesting for employee grants is annual vesting over five years, and the typical vesting for directors and executive officers is quarterly vesting over three to five years. The term of the options is established by the Board and set out in the option grant agreement; provided that, pursuant to the terms of the 1998 Stock Option Plan, the term of an option may not exceed 10 years from the date of the grant. All outstanding options that have been granted pursuant to the 1998 Stock Option Plan have terms of seven years. Options that would expire within, or within the 10 business days that follow, a trading black-out may be exercised within 10 business days following the end of such trading black-out. Notwithstanding any of the foregoing, the Compensation Committee of the Board has the sole and complete authority to take any action required by Section 162(m) of the United States Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended (the "US Tax Code"), with respect to any awards under the 1998 Stock Option Plan that are intended to be performance-based compensation under Section 162(m) of the US Tax Code.
No options may be granted under the 1998 Stock Option Plan if, together with any of the Corporation’s other security based compensation arrangements of the Corporation, such grant of options could result in the aggregate number of Common Shares (i) issued to insiders, within any one-year period or (ii) issuable to insiders at any time, in either case, exceeding 10% of the issued and outstanding Common Shares; provided, however, that the number of options or Share Appreciation Rights (“SARs”) that may be granted to any Participant in any one calendar year shall not exceed 5% of the issued and outstanding Common Shares (on a non-diluted basis).
No options may be granted under the 1998 Stock Option Plan to any non-employee director if such grant would, at the time of the grant, result in: (i) the aggregate number of Common Shares reserved for issuance to non-employee directors under the 1998 Stock Option Plan and all other security-based compensation arrangements of the Corporation exceeding 1.0% of the total number of Common Shares then-issued and outstanding; (ii) the aggregate value of options granted to the non-employee director during the Corporation’s fiscal year exceeding $100,000; or (iii) the aggregate value of options and, in the case of security based compensation arrangements that do not provide for the granting of options (“Full Value Awards”), the grant date value of Common Shares, granted to the non-employee director during the Corporation’s fiscal year exceeding $150,000, provided that any Full Value Award elected to be received by a non-employee director, in the non-employee director’s discretion, in place of
78


the same value of foregone cash compensation from the Corporation shall not be counted toward the foregoing $150,000 limit.
The 1998 Stock Option Plan also provides for the issuance of SARs in tandem with options. Shareholder approval for such amendment was not required under the 1998 Stock Option Plan or pursuant to the rules of the TSX or NASDAQ and therefore was not sought. Under the terms of the 1998 Stock Option Plan, each SAR entitles the holder to surrender to the Corporation, unexercised, the right to subscribe for a Common Share pursuant to the related option and receive from the Corporation cash in an amount equal to the fair market value of a Common Share on the date the SAR is exercised minus the exercise price under the related option, net of applicable withholding taxes and other source deductions. For this purpose, fair market value of a Common Share is deemed to be the amount that would be the exercise price of an option covering such Common Share, if such option were granted on the date of exercise of the SAR. The Corporation may, if authorized by the Board in its discretion, in lieu of all or a portion of the cash amount that would be payable to a holder of a SAR in respect of the exercise of one or more SARs, issue to such holder Common Shares equal to the number produced by dividing the amount that would be payable in cash in respect of the exercise of such SARs by the amount that would be the fair market value of a Common Share on the date of exercise of the SARs, rounded down to the next whole Common Share.
Each unexercised SAR terminates when the related option is exercised or the option terminates. Upon each exercise of a SAR in respect of a Common Share covered by an option such option shall be cancelled in respect of such Common Share and shall be of no further force or effect. If any option is cancelled in connection with the exercise of the related SAR, the aggregate number of Common Shares that may be issued pursuant to the 1998 Stock Option Plan shall be reduced by the number of Common Shares underlying such cancelled options.
The 1998 Stock Option Plan addresses the implications for option exercise rights in the case of the termination of a Participant’s employment, the removal or non re-election of a Participant who is a director, and the death of a Participant, all of which are subject to the discretion of the Board to establish alternate treatment on a case-by-case basis. In the event of the termination of the Participant’s employment with the Corporation for cause or the removal of a Participant who is a director of the Corporation prior to the end of his or her term, each vested and unvested option granted to that Participant immediately terminates, subject to the discretion of the Board. In the event of the death of a Participant, each option granted to that Participant that has not then vested immediately terminates, subject to the discretion of the Board, and all options that have vested may be exercised by the Participant’s estate at any time within six months from the date of death. If a Participant’s employment with the Corporation is terminated other than for cause or a director is not re-elected to the Board, each option granted to the Participant that has not vested will immediately terminate, subject to the discretion of the Board, and each option that has vested may be exercised by the Participant at any time within six months of the date of termination or non re-election, as the case may be.
A Participant may assign or transfer one or more options granted under the 1998 Stock Option Plan to a personal holding corporation wholly owned by such Participant or to a registered retirement savings plan established for the sole benefit of such Participant. Except as specified above and in the preceding paragraph, options granted under the 1998 Stock Option Plan may only be exercised by a Participant personally and no assignment or transfer of options is permitted.
The 1998 Stock Option Plan does not permit financial assistance to be provided to Participants to facilitate the purchase of Common Shares pursuant to options granted.
The Corporation may withhold from any amount payable to a Participant such amount as may be necessary to enable the Corporation to comply with the applicable requirements of any federal, provincial, state or local law, or any administrative policy of any applicable tax authority, relating to the withholding of tax or any other required deductions with respect to Options hereunder (“Withholding
79


Obligations”). The Corporation also has the right, in its discretion, to satisfy any liability for any Withholding Obligations by selling, or causing a broker to sell, on behalf of any Participant or causing any Participant to sell such number of Common Shares issued to the Participant sufficient to fund the Withholding Obligations (after deducting any commissions payable to the broker).
The following types of amendments to the 1998 Stock Option Plan require shareholder approval: (i) any increase in the maximum number of Common Shares issuable by the Corporation under the 1998 Stock Option Plan; (ii) any amendment that would reduce the option exercise price at which options may be granted below the minimum price currently provided for in the 1998 Stock Option Plan; (iii) any amendment that would increase or delete the percentage limits on the aggregate number of Common Shares issuable or that could be issuable to insiders under the 1998 Stock Option Plan; (iv) any amendment that would increase or delete the maximum term during which options may be exercised pursuant to the 1998 Stock Option Plan to be greater than 10 years; (v) any amendment that would extend the expiry date of any outstanding option, subject to the expiry date occurring during a trading black-out; (vi) any amendment that would reduce the exercise price of an outstanding option (other than as may result from general anti-dilution adjustments provided for in the 1998 Stock Option Plan) including a cancellation of an option and re-grant of an option to the same Participant in conjunction therewith, constituting a reduction of the exercise price of the option; (vii) any exchange for cash or other entitlements of an option for which the exercise price is equal to, or less than, the fair market value of a Common Share; (viii) any amendment that would permit transfers or assignments to persons not currently permitted under the 1998 Stock Option Plan; (ix) any amendment that would expand the scope of those persons eligible to participate in the 1998 Stock Option Plan; (x) any amendment to increase or delete the value of options granted or the percentage limit relating to Common Shares issuable, in each case, to non-executive directors; (xi) any amendment that would allow the Board to reduce the aggregate number of Common Shares that may be issued under the 1998 Stock Option Plan in respect of the exercise of a SAR by less than one whole Common Share; (xii) any amendment to provide for other types of compensation through equity issuance; and (xiii) any amendment to the amendment procedures. Any amendment other than those expressly enumerated in the 1998 Stock Option Plan or that would require shareholder approval under applicable law (including, without limitation, the rules, regulations and policies of the TSX and NASDAQ) may be made by the Board without shareholder approval.
PRSU Plan
On April 30th, 2012, the Board adopted the PRSU Plan pursuant to which the Board may, from time to time, determine those eligible employees who will receive a grant of RSUs and/or PSUs. The purposes of the PRSU Plan are to: (i) support the achievement of the Corporation’s performance objectives; (ii) ensure that interests of key persons are aligned with the success of the Corporation; (iii) provide compensation opportunities to attract, retain and motivate senior Management critical to the long-term success of the Corporation and its subsidiaries; and (iv) provide compensation incentives that do not promote excessive risk-taking by the Corporation’s key employees. Non-employee directors are not eligible to participate in the PRSU Plan.
As of January 31, 2026, there were 1,012,268 PSUs and 473,999 RSUs issued and outstanding pursuant to the PRSU Plan, with a potential of up to a further 253,284 PSUs being earned if a maximum 2.0 performance factor is achieved in respect of the outstanding PSU awards.
80


Over the past three fiscal years, the Corporation’s “burn rate” under the PRSU Plan has been as follows:
 
Fiscal 2024
Fiscal 2025
Fiscal 2026
RSUs and PSUs Granted during the fiscal period1
252,042
248,343
276,471
Weighted average number of Common Shares outstanding for the fiscal period
85,067,552
85,443,193
85,871,235
“Burn Rate”
0.30%
0.29%
0.32%
(1) The number of PSUs granted for the purposes of the above is calculated based on the maximum number of PSUs that could be earned over the three-year performance period applicable to the PSUs using a maximum 2.0 performance factor.
As of January 31, 2026: (i) the maximum number of Common Shares available for issuance under the PRSU Plan since its establishment was 4,353,340 Common Shares, representing 5.06% of the issued and outstanding Common Shares as at that date; and (ii) the number of Common Shares remaining available for future issuance under the PRSU Plan was 1,797,981 Common Shares, representing 2.1% of the issued and outstanding Common Shares as at that date; provided that Common Shares reserved for issuance pursuant to Share Units that are terminated or are cancelled without having been redeemed will again be available for issuance under the PRSU Plan; and also provided that Common Shares underlying Share Units that are redeemed will not again be available for issuance under the PRSU Plan.
Pursuant to the terms of the PRSU Plan: (i) the number of Common Shares reserved for issuance pursuant to Share Units and/or other units or stock options and/or under any other security-based compensation arrangement of the Corporation to any one person shall not exceed 5% of the issued and outstanding Common Shares of the Corporation; (ii) the number of Common Shares issued to any insider or that insider's associates under the PRSU Plan and/or under any other security-based compensation arrangement of the Corporation shall not exceed 5% of the issued and outstanding Common Shares of the Corporation within a 12-month period; and (iii) the aggregate number of Common Shares issued to insiders of the Corporation within any 12-month period, or issuable to insiders of the Corporation at any time, under the PRSU Plan and any other security-based compensation arrangement of the Corporation, may not exceed 10% of the total number of issued and outstanding Common Shares of the Corporation at such time.
Subject to the Compensation Committee reporting to the Board on all matters relating to the PRSU Plan and obtaining approval of the Board for those matters required by the Compensation Committee’s mandate, the PRSU Plan is administered by the Compensation Committee, which has the sole and absolute discretion to recommend to the Board the individuals to whom grants of Share Units should be made and the number of Share Units to be granted; interpret and administer the PRSU Plan; establish conditions to the vesting of Share Units; set, waive, and amend performance targets; and make any other determinations that the Compensation Committee deems necessary or desirable for the administration of the PRSU Plan. Any decision of the Compensation Committee with respect to the administration and interpretation of the PRSU Plan will be conclusive and binding on the participants.
The Board may award Share Units to any eligible person and an eligible person may elect to defer compensation to be received under the Corporation's annual incentive program in the form of RSUs, by delivering to the Corporation an election notice not later than December 31 of the year preceding the first date of any period of services over which any compensation to be received under the annual incentive program would be earned. Such eligible person will be awarded the number of RSUs determined by dividing the dollar amount of incentive compensation to be deferred by the Fair Market Value as at the award date.
Each Share Unit granted to a participant under the PRSU Plan is credited to the participant’s share unit account. From time to time, a participant’s share unit account will be credited with Dividend
81


Share Units in respect of outstanding PSUs or RSUs, as applicable, on each dividend payment date in respect of which dividends are paid in the ordinary course on Common Shares. Such Dividend PSUs and Dividend RSUs are computed as the amount of any such dividend declared and paid per Common Share multiplied by the number of PSUs and RSUs, as applicable, recorded in the participant’s share unit account on the date for the payment of such dividend, divided by the Fair Market Value as at the dividend payment date.
Each RSU vests on the date or dates designated in the applicable grant agreement or such earlier date as is provided for in the PRSU Plan or is determined by the Compensation Committee, conditional on the satisfaction of any additional vesting conditions established by the Compensation Committee.
Each PSU vests on the date or dates designated in the applicable grant agreement or such earlier date as is provided in the PRSU Plan or is determined by the Compensation Committee, conditional on the satisfaction of any additional vesting conditions established by the Compensation Committee. The number of PSUs that vest on a vesting date are the number of PSUs and Dividend PSUs scheduled to vest on such vesting date multiplied by the applicable adjustment factor set out in the relevant grant agreement. The adjustment factor, which ranges from 0.0 to 2.0 for outstanding grants, is determined based on the relative performance of the Corporation with respect to a group of comparator companies determined by the Compensation Committee.
Canadian participants may elect at any time to redeem vested Share Units on any date or dates after the date the Share Units become vested and on or before the expiry date. U.S. participants shall elect to redeem vested Share Units on a fixed date or dates after the date the Share Units become vested and on or before the expiry date in accordance with the terms of the PRSU Plan. A participant who does not elect an early redemption date as specified under the PRSU Plan shall have vested Share Units redeemed on their expiry date. The expiry date for Share Units is determined by the Compensation Committee for each applicable grant.
The Corporation redeems each Share Unit elected to be redeemed by a participant on the applicable redemption date by (i) issuing to the participant the number of Common Shares equal to one Common Share for each whole vested Share Unit elected to be redeemed and delivering (A) such number of Common Shares; less (B) the number of Common Shares with a Fair Market Value equal to the Applicable Withholdings (as defined in the PRSU Plan); or (ii) at the election of the participant and subject to the consent of the Corporation, paying the participant an amount in cash equal to: (A) the number of vested Share Units elected to be redeemed multiplied by (B) the Fair Market Value minus (C) Applicable Withholdings; or (iii) a combination of (i) and (ii).
If a Share Unit would be redeemed within a trading blackout period applicable to the holder of the Share Unit, such redemption will automatically be postponed until the trading blackout period ends.
Rights respecting Share Units and Dividend Share Units are not transferable or assignable other than by will or the laws of descent and distribution.
In the event a participant’s employment is terminated due to resignation by the participant or by the Corporation for just cause, the participant will forfeit all rights, title and interest with respect to Share Units and the related Dividend Share Units which are not vested at the participant’s termination date. All vested Share Units will be redeemed as at the participant’s termination date.
In the event a participant’s employment is terminated by the Corporation without just cause, a pro-rata portion of the participant’s unvested PSUs and Dividend PSUs will vest immediately prior to the participant’s termination date, based on the number of complete months from the first day of the performance period to the applicable termination date divided by the number of months in the performance period and using an adjustment factor of one. Similarly, if the participant's employment is
82


terminated by the Corporation without just cause, a pro-rata portion of the participant's unvested RSUs and Dividend RSUs will vest immediately prior to the participant's termination date, based on the number of months from the first day of the grant term to the termination date divided by the number of months in the grant term. The participant’s vested PSUs and RSUs will be redeemed as at the participant’s termination date.
In the event a participant’s employment is terminated by the death or disability of the participant or the participant ceases to be employed due to retirement, all of the participant’s PSUs and RSUs and related Dividend PSUs and Dividend RSUs, as applicable, will vest immediately prior to the date of such event, for purposes of PSUs using an adjustment factor of one, and will be redeemed as at that date.
In the event that employment of a participant is terminated by the Corporation without just cause or if the participant resigns in circumstances constituting constructive termination, in each case, within twelve months following a Change of Control (as such term is defined under the PRSU Plan) which includes, among other things the acquisition of 50% or more of the Common Shares, sale of all or substantially all of the assets of the Corporation or a significant change in directors of the Corporation, all of the participant's Share Units and related Dividend Share Units as applicable will vest immediately prior to the participant’s termination date, for purposes of PSUs using an adjustment factor of one, and will be redeemed as at that date.
The Board may amend, suspend or terminate the PRSU Plan, or any portion thereof or, subject to the consent of the holder, any outstanding Share Units granted thereunder, at any time, and in whole or in part, subject to those provisions of applicable law (including, without limitation, the rules, regulations and policies of the TSX and NASDAQ), if any, that require the approval of shareholders or any governmental or regulatory body, provided that, the Board may not, without seeking shareholder approval of the holders of a majority of the Common Shares present and voting in person or by proxy at a meeting of shareholders, make:

(i)
amendments to the number of Common Shares issuable under the PRSU Plan;

(ii)
any amendment expanding the categories of eligible person which would have the potential of permitting the introduction of non-employee members of the Board;

(iii)
any amendment extending the term of a Share Unit or any rights pursuant thereto held by an insider beyond its original expiry date;

(iv)
the addition of any other provision which results in participants receiving Common Shares while no cash consideration is received by the Corporation;

(v)
any amendment that would increase or remove the insider participation limits;

(vi)
amendments which would permit awards to be transferred or assigned other than for normal estate planning purposes; and

(vii)
amendments to the amending provision within the PRSU Plan.
Without limiting the generality of the foregoing pre-amble, but subject to the foregoing listed subsections, the Board may, without shareholder approval, make:

(i)
amendments that are of a “housekeeping” nature;

(ii)
amendments to the terms and conditions of the PRSU Plan necessary to ensure that the PRSU Plan complies with the provisions of applicable law (including, without limitation, the rules, regulations and policies of the TSX);

(iii)
amendments to the provisions of the PRSU Plan respecting administration of the PRSU Plan and eligibility for participation under the PRSU Plan;

(iv)
amendments to the provisions of the PRSU Plan respecting the terms and conditions on which Share Units may be granted to eligible persons pursuant to the PRSU Plan; and

(v)
any other amendments not requiring shareholder approval under the provisions of applicable law (including, without limitation, the rules, regulations and policies of the TSX and NASDAQ).
83


Subject to the foregoing, the Board may amend or modify any outstanding Share Unit in any manner, provided that, where such amendment or modification is adverse to the holder, the consent of the holder is required to effect such amendment or modification.
Directors’ DSU Plan
The Corporation adopted a deferred share unit plan (the “DSU Plan”) effective June 28th, 2004. Pursuant to the DSU Plan, non-employee directors are entitled to elect to receive deferred share units (“DSUs”) in full or partial satisfaction of their annual retainers, with each DSU having a value equal to the market price of the Common Shares, which under the DSU Plan is equal to the weighted-average closing price of the Common Shares in the period of five trading days preceding the date of grant. Although each DSU is fully vested on grant, it is not payable by the Corporation until the non-employee director ceases to be a member of the Board. Each director is required to hold the DSUs until the director either resigns or is not re-elected to the Board, following which the DSU will be redeemed by the Corporation for cash during a prescribed period at a value equal to the market price of the Common Shares prevailing at the date of redemption. No Common Shares are issuable pursuant to the DSU Plan. There are no restrictions on a director assigning his or her entitlement to payment pursuant to the DSU Plan. The Corporation may amend the DSU Plan as it deems necessary or appropriate, but no such amendment may adversely affect the rights of an eligible director in DSUs granted prior to the date of amendment without the consent of the director.
Cash-settled RSU Plan
The Corporation adopted a cash-settled restricted share unit plan (the “CRSU Plan”) effective May 23rd, 2007. Pursuant to the CRSU Plan, full-time employees and outside directors are eligible to receive cash-settled restricted share units (“CRSUs”) in respect of services rendered in a fiscal year. A participant is entitled to receive a payout in respect of each vested CRSU, with each CRSU having a value equal to the market price of the Common Shares, which under the CRSU Plan is equal to the weighted-average closing price of the Common Shares in the period of five trading days preceding the date of the payout. Vesting terms and conditions for the CRSUs may be set out in a separate grant agreement, provided that all CRSUs automatically vest on December 1st of the third calendar year following the end of the calendar year that includes the last day of the fiscal year in which services to which the grant of CRSUs relates were rendered. Vested CRSUs must be paid out by the Corporation within 30 days of vesting and, at the latest, by the end of the calendar year in which they vest. No Common Shares are issuable pursuant to the CRSU Plan. There are no restrictions on a participant assigning his or her entitlement to payment pursuant to the CRSU Plan. The Corporation may amend the CRSU Plan as it deems necessary or appropriate, but no such amendment may adversely affect the rights of a participant in CRSUs granted prior to the date of amendment without the consent of the participant.
INDEBTEDNESS OF DIRECTORS AND EXECUTIVE OFFICERS
No director or executive officer, either current or having held such position during fiscal 2026, or any person nominated for election to the Board at the Meeting, or any of their respective associates and no employee, former executive officer, former director or former employee of the Corporation or its subsidiaries is, as at April 27, 2026, or has been, at any time since the beginning of fiscal 2026, indebted, in connection with a purchase of Common Shares or otherwise, to (i) the Corporation or any of its subsidiaries; or (ii) another entity in respect of which the indebtedness is the subject of a guarantee, support agreement, letter of credit or other similar arrangement or understanding provided by the Corporation or any of its subsidiaries.
84


CERTAIN RELATIONSHIPS AND RELATED TRANSACTIONS
Except as otherwise disclosed in this Circular, no person who has been a director or an executive officer of the Corporation at any time since the beginning of fiscal 2026, or any person nominated for election to the Board at the Meeting, or any associate or affiliate of any such director or executive officer, has any material interest, direct or indirect, by way of beneficial ownership of securities or otherwise, in any matter to be acted upon at the Meeting. Except as otherwise disclosed in this Circular, no informed person or any associate or affiliate of any informed person has or had a material interest, direct or indirect, in any transaction since the beginning of fiscal 2026 or in any proposed transaction which has materially affected or would materially affect the Corporation or any of its subsidiaries.
GENERAL
Except where otherwise indicated, information contained herein is given as of the date hereof. Additional information relating to the Corporation can be found on SEDAR+ at www.sedarplus.ca and on EDGAR at www.sec.gov. Further financial information for the Corporation’s most recently completed fiscal year is provided in the Corporation’s audited consolidated comparative financial statements for the fiscal year ended January 31st, 2026 prepared in accordance with United States Generally Accepted Accounting Principles (“GAAP”) and related Management’s Discussion & Analysis. Shareholders may contact the Corporation’s investor relations department by phone at (519) 746-6114 ext. 202358 or by e-mail at investor@descartes.com to request copies of these documents.
SHAREHOLDER PROPOSALS
Based on the current provisions of the CBCA, persons entitled to vote at the next annual meeting of the Corporation, and who wish to submit a proposal at that meeting, must submit proposals within the 60-day period that starts on January 13, 2027 and ends on March 14, 2027.
APPROVAL BY THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS
The contents and the sending of this Circular have been approved by the Board of the Corporation. A copy of this Circular has been sent to each director of the Corporation, each shareholder entitled to notice of the Meeting and to the auditors of the Corporation.
Dated as of April 27, 2026.

THE DESCARTES SYSTEM GROUP INC.

“Peter Nguyen”


Peter Nguyen
Corporate Secretary


85

A
SCHEDULE “A”


SUMMARY OF THE AMENDED AND RESTATED SHAREHOLDER RIGHTS PLAN
The following is a summary of key features of the Amended Rights Plan. The summary is qualified in its entirety by the full text of the Amended Rights Plan Agreement, a copy of which is available on www.sedarplus.ca or also on request from the Corporate Secretary of the Corporation as described in the Circular. All capitalized terms used in this summary without definition have the meanings attributed to them in the Amended Rights Plan unless otherwise indicated.
(a)            Issuance of Rights
One Right was issued by the Corporation for each Common Share outstanding at the close of business on November 29, 2004, the date that the Rights Plan came into effect, and one Right was issued and will continue to be issued for each Common Share of the Corporation after such date and prior to the earlier of the Separation Time and the Expiration Time. The Amended Rights Plan reconfirms the Rights and the Corporation’s authority to continue issuing one new Right for each Common Share issued.
Each Right entitles the registered holder thereof to purchase from the Corporation one Common Share at the exercise price equal to three times the Market Price of the Common Share, subject to adjustment and certain anti-dilution provisions (the “Exercise Price”). The Rights are not exercisable until the Separation Time. If a Flip-in Event occurs, each Right will entitle the registered holder to receive, upon payment of the Exercise Price, Common Shares having an aggregate market price equal to twice the Exercise Price.
The Corporation is not required to issue or deliver Rights, or securities upon the exercise of Rights, outside Canada or the United States where such issuance or delivery would be unlawful without registration of the relevant Persons or securities. If the Amended Rights Plan would require compliance with securities laws or comparable legislation of a jurisdiction outside Canada and the United States, the Board may establish procedures for the issuance to a Canadian resident fiduciary of such securities, to hold such Rights or other securities in trust for the Persons beneficially entitled to them, to sell such securities, and to remit the proceeds to such Persons.
(b)            Trading of Rights
Until the Separation Time (or the earlier termination or expiration of the Rights), the Rights will be evidenced by the certificates representing the Common Shares and will be transferable only together with the associated Common Shares. From and after the Separation Time, separate certificates evidencing the Rights (“Rights Certificates”) will be mailed to holders of record of Common Shares (other than an Acquiring Person) as of the Separation Time. Rights Certificates will also be issued in respect of Common Shares issued prior to the Expiration Time, to each holder (other than an Acquiring Person) converting, after the Separation Time, securities (“Convertible Securities”) convertible into or exchangeable for Common Shares. The Rights will trade separately from the Common Shares after the Separation Time.
(c)            Separation Time
The Separation Time is the Close of Business on the tenth Business Day after the earlier of (i) the “Stock Acquisition Date”, which is generally the first date of public announcement of facts indicating that a Person has become an Acquiring Person or such later date as may from time to time be determined by the Board; (ii) the date of the commencement of, or first public announcement of the intent of any Person (other than the Corporation or any Subsidiary of the Corporation) to commence a Take-over Bid (other than a Permitted Bid or a Competing Permitted Bid, so long as such bid continues to satisfy the requirements of a Permitted Bid or Competing Permitted Bid); and (iii) the date on which a Permitted Bid ceases to qualify as such.
A-1


In any case, the Separation Time can be such later date as may from time to time be determined by the Board. If a Take-over Bid expires, is cancelled, terminated or otherwise withdrawn prior to the Separation Time, it shall be deemed never to have been made.
(d)            Acquiring Person
In general, an Acquiring Person is a Person who is or becomes the Beneficial Owner of 20% or more of the outstanding Common Shares. Excluded from the definition of “Acquiring Person” are the Corporation and its Subsidiaries, and any Person who becomes the Beneficial Owner of 20% or more of the outstanding Common Shares as a result of one or more or any combination of an acquisition or redemption by the Corporation of Common Shares, a Permitted Bid Acquisition, an Exempt Acquisition, a Convertible Security Acquisition and a Pro Rata Acquisition. The definitions of “Permitted Bid Acquisition”, “Exempt Acquisition”, “Convertible Security Acquisition” and “Pro Rata Acquisition” are set out in the Amended Rights Plan. However, in general:

(i)
a “Permitted Bid Acquisition” means an acquisition of Common Shares made pursuant to a Permitted Bid or a Competing Permitted Bid;

(ii)
an “Exempt Acquisition” means an acquisition of Common Shares in respect of which the Board has waived the application of the Amended Rights Plan, which was made pursuant to a dividend reinvestment plan of the Corporation, which was made pursuant to the receipt or exercise of rights issued by the Corporation to all the holders of Common Shares (other than holders resident in a jurisdiction where such distribution is restricted or impracticable as a result of applicable law) to subscribe for or purchase Common Shares or Convertible Securities (provided that such rights are acquired directly from the Corporation and not from any other Person and provided that the Person does not hereby acquire a greater percentage of Common Shares or Convertible Securities so offered than the Person’s percentage of Common Shares or Convertible Securities Beneficially Owned immediately prior to such acquisition), which was made pursuant to a distribution by the Corporation of Common Shares or Convertible Securities made pursuant to a prospectus (provided that the Person does not thereby acquire a greater percentage of the Common Shares or Convertible Securities so offered than the percentage Beneficially Owned immediately prior to such acquisition), which was made pursuant to a distribution by the Corporation of Common Shares or Convertible Securities by way of a private placement or a securities exchange take-over bid circular or upon the exercise by an individual employee of stock options granted under a stock option plan of the Corporation or rights to purchase securities granted under a share purchase plan of the Corporation, or which is made pursuant to an amalgamation arrangement, merger or other statutory procedure requiring approval of the Corporation’s shareholders;

(iii)
a “Convertible Security Acquisition” means an acquisition of Common Shares upon the exercise of Convertible Securities received by such Person pursuant to a Permitted Bid Acquisition, Exempt Acquisition or a Pro Rata Acquisition; and

(iv)
a “Pro Rata Acquisition” means an acquisition as a result of a stock dividend, a stock split or other event pursuant to which such Person receives or acquires Common  Shares or Convertible Securities on the same pro rata basis as all other holders of Common Shares of the same class.
Also excluded from the definition of “Acquiring Person” are underwriters or members of a banking or selling group, acting in such capacity, who are acting in connection with a distribution of securities by way of prospectus, registration statement or private placement.
A-2


(e)            Beneficial Ownership
General
In general, a Person is deemed to Beneficially Own Common Shares actually held by others in circumstances where those holdings are or should be grouped together for purposes of the Amended Rights Plan. Included are holdings by the Person’s Affiliates (generally, a Person that controls, is controlled by, or under common control with another Person) and Associates (generally, relatives sharing the same residence). Also included are securities which the Person or any of the Person’s Affiliates or Associates has the right to acquire within 60 days (other than (1) customary agreements with and between underwriters and banking group or selling group members with respect to a distribution to the public or pursuant to a private placement of securities; or (2) pursuant to a pledge of securities in the ordinary course of business).
A Person is also deemed to “Beneficially Own” any securities that are Beneficially Owned (as described above) by any other Person with which the Person is acting jointly or in concert (a “Joint Actor”). Generally, a Person is a Joint Actor with any Person who (i) is a party to an agreement, arrangement or understanding with the first Person or an Associate or Affiliate thereof to acquire or offer to acquire Common Shares or (ii) is an Associate or Affiliate of the first Person or any Person referred to in (i).
Institutional Shareholder Exemptions from Beneficial Ownership
The definition of “Beneficial Ownership” contains several exclusions whereby a Person is not considered to “Beneficially Own” a security. There are exemptions from the deemed “Beneficial Ownership” provisions for institutional shareholders acting in the ordinary course of business. These exemptions apply to (i) an investment manager (“Investment Manager”) which holds securities in the ordinary course of business in the performance of its duties for the account of any other Person (a “Client”), including, the acquisition or holding of securities for non-discretionary accounts held on behalf of a Client by a broker or dealer registered under applicable securities laws; (ii) a licensed trust company (“Trust Company”) acting as trustee or administrator or in a similar capacity in relation to the estates of deceased or incompetent persons (each an “Estate Account”) or in relation to other accounts (each an “Other Account”) and which holds such security in the ordinary course of its duties for such accounts; (iii) the administrator or the trustee (a “Plan Trustee”) of one or more pension funds or plans (a “Plan”) registered under applicable law; (iv) a Person who is a Plan or is a Person established by statute (the “Statutory Body”), and its ordinary business or activity includes the management of investment funds for employee benefit plans, pension plans, insurance plans, or various public bodies; (v) a Crown agent or agency; (iv) a manager or trustee (“Manager”) of a mutual fund (“Mutual Fund”) that is registered or qualified to issue its securities to investors under the securities laws of any province of Canada or the laws of the United States of America or is a Mutual Fund. The foregoing exemptions only apply so long as the Investment Manager, Trust Company, Plan Trustee, Plan, Statutory Body, Crown agent or agency, Manager or Mutual Fund is not then making or has not then announced an intention to make a Take-over Bid, other than an Offer to Acquire Common Shares or other securities pursuant to a distribution by the Corporation or by means of ordinary market transactions.
A Person will not be deemed to “Beneficially Own” a security solely because (i) the Person is a Client of the same Investment Manager, an Estate Account or an Other Account of the same Trust Company, or Plan with the same Plan Trustee as another Person or Plan on whose account the Investment Manager, Trust Company or Plan Trustee, as the case may be, holds such security; or (ii) the Person is a Client of an Investment Manager, Estate Account, Other Account or Plan, and the security is owned at law or in equity by the Investment Manager, Trust Company or Plan Trustee, as the case may be.
Exemption for Permitted Lock-up Agreement
Under the Amended Rights Plan, a Person will not be deemed to “Beneficially Own” any security solely because the holder of such security has agreed to deposit or tender such security, pursuant to a
A-3


Permitted Lock-up Agreement, to a Take-over Bid made by such Person or such Person’s Affiliates or Associates or a Joint Actor, or such security has been deposited or tendered pursuant to a Take-over Bid made by such Person or such Person’s Affiliates, Associates or Joint Actors until the earliest time at which any such tendered security is accepted unconditionally for payment or is taken up or paid for.
A Permitted Lock-up Agreement is essentially an agreement between a Person and one or more holders of Common Shares and/or Convertible Securities (the terms of which are publicly disclosed and available to the public within the time frames set forth in the definition of Permitted Lockup Agreement) pursuant to which each Locked-up Person agrees to deposit or tender Common Shares and/or Convertible Securities to the Lock-up Bid and which further (i) permits the Locked-up Person to withdraw its Common Shares and/or Convertible Securities in order to deposit or tender the Common Shares and/or Convertible Securities to another Take-over Bid or support another transaction at a price or value that exceeds the price under the Lock-Up Bid; or (ii) permits the Locked-up Person to withdraw its Common Shares and/or Convertible Securities in order to deposit or tender the Common Shares and/or Convertible Securities to another Take-over Bid or support another transaction at an offering price that exceeds the offering price in the Lock-up Bid by as much as or more than a Specified Amount and that does not provide for a Specified Amount greater than 7% of the offering price in the Lock-up Bid. The Amended Rights Plan therefore requires that a Person making a Take-Over Bid structure any lock-up agreement so as to provide reasonable flexibility to the shareholder in order to avoid being deemed the Beneficial Owner of the Common Shares and/or Convertible Securities subject to the lock-up agreement and potentially triggering the provisions of the Amended Rights Plan.
A Permitted Lock-up Agreement may contain a right of first refusal or require a period of delay to give the Person who made the Lock-up Bid an opportunity to match a higher price in another Take-Over Bid or other similar limitation on a Locked-up Person’s right to withdraw Common Shares and/or Convertible Securities so long as the limitation does not preclude the exercise by the Locked-up Person of the right to withdraw Common Shares and/or Convertible Securities during the period of the other Take-Over Bid or transaction. Finally, under a Permitted Lock-up Agreement, no “break up” fees, “top up” fees, penalties, expenses or other amounts that exceed in aggregate the greater of (i) 2.5% of the price or value of the consideration payable under the Lock-up Bid; and (ii) 50% of the amount by which the price or value of the consideration received by a Locked-up Person under another Take-Over Bid or transaction exceeds what such Locked-up Person would have received under the Lock-up Bid; can be payable by such Locked-up Person if the Locked-up Person fails to deposit or tender Common Shares and/or Convertible Securities to the Lock-up Bid or withdraws Common Shares and/or Convertible Securities previously tendered thereto in order to deposit such Common Shares and/or Convertible Securities to another Take-Over Bid or support another transaction.
(f)            Flip-in Event
A Flip-in Event occurs when any Person becomes an Acquiring Person. In the event that, prior to the Expiration Time, a Flip-in Event which has not been waived by the Board occurs (see “Redemption, Waiver and Termination”), each Right (except for Rights Beneficially Owned or which may thereafter be Beneficially Owned by an Acquiring Person or a Joint Actor (or a transferee of any such Person), which Rights will become null and void) shall constitute the right to purchase from the Corporation, upon exercise thereof in accordance with the terms of the Amended Rights Plan, that number of Common Shares having an aggregate Market Price on the date of the Flip-in Event equal to twice the Exercise Price, for the Exercise Price (such Right being subject to anti-dilution adjustments). For example, if at the time of the Flip-in Event the Exercise Price is $75 and the Market Price of the Common Shares is $30, the holder of each Right would be entitled to purchase Common Shares having an aggregate Market Price of $150 (that is, five Common Shares) for $75 (that is, a 50% discount from the Market Price).
(g)            Permitted Bid and Competing Permitted Bid
A Permitted Bid is a Take-over Bid made by way of a Take-over Bid circular and which complies with the following additional provisions:
A-4



(i)
the Take-over Bid is made to all holders of record of Common Shares, other than the Offeror;

(ii)
the Take-over Bid contains irrevocable and unqualified conditions that:

A.
no Common Shares shall be taken up or paid for pursuant to the Take-over Bid prior to the close of business on the date that is no earlier than the earlier of (1) the date 105 days following the date of the Take-over Bid and (2) the last day of the initial deposit period that the Offeror must allow securities to be deposited under the Take-over Bid pursuant to National Instrument 62-104;

B.
unless the Take-over Bid is withdrawn, Common Shares may be deposited pursuant to the Takeover Bid at any time prior to the close of business on the date of first take-up or payment for Common Shares and all Common Shares deposited pursuant to the Take-over Bid may be withdrawn at any time prior to the close of business on such date;

C.
more than 50% of the outstanding Common Shares held by Independent Shareholders must be deposited to the Take-over Bid and not withdrawn at the close of business on the date of first take-up or payment for Common Shares; and

D.
in the event that more than 50% of the then outstanding Common Shares held by Independent Shareholders have been deposited to the Take-over Bid and not withdrawn as at the date of first take-up or payment for Common Shares under the Take-over Bid, the Offeror will make a public announcement of that fact and the Take-over Bid will remain open for deposits and tenders of Common Shares for not less than 10 Business Days from the date of such public announcement.
A Competing Permitted Bid is a Take-over Bid that is made after a Permitted Bid has been made but prior to its expiry and that satisfies all the requirements of a Permitted Bid as described above, except that a Competing Permitted Bid is not necessarily required to remain open for 105 days so long as it is open until the close of business on the date that is the last day of the initial deposit period that the Offeror must allow securities to be deposited under the Take-over Bid pursuant to National Instrument 62-104.
(h)            Redemption, Waiver and Termination

(i)
Redemption of Rights on Approval of Holders of Common Shares and Rights. The Board acting in good faith may, after having obtained the prior approval of the holders of Common Shares or Rights, at any time prior to the occurrence of a Flip-in Event, elect to redeem all but not less than all of the then outstanding Rights at a redemption price of $0.000001 per Right, appropriately adjusted for anti-dilution as provided in the Amended Rights Plan Agreement (the “Redemption Price”).

(ii)
Waiver of Inadvertent Acquisition. The Board acting in good faith may waive or agree to waive the application of the Amended Rights Plan in respect of the occurrence of any Flip-in Event if (i) the Board has determined that a Person became an Acquiring Person under the Amended Rights Plan by inadvertence and without any intent or knowledge that it would become an Acquiring Person; and (ii) the Acquiring Person has reduced its Beneficial Ownership of Common Shares such that at the time of waiver the Person is no longer an Acquiring Person.

(iii)
Deemed Redemption. In the event that a Person who has made a Permitted Bid or a Take-over Bid in respect of which the Board has waived or has deemed to have waived the application of the Amended Rights Plan consummates the acquisition of the Common Shares, the Board shall be deemed to have elected to redeem the Rights for the Redemption Price.
A-5



(iv)
Discretionary Waiver with Mandatory Waiver of Concurrent Bids. The Board acting in good faith may, prior to the occurrence of a Flip-in Event as to which the Amended Rights Plan has not been waived under the applicable clause, upon prior written notice to the Rights Agent, waive the application of the Amended Rights Plan to a Flip-in Event that may occur by reason of a Take-over Bid made by means of a Take-over Bid circular to all holders of record of Common Shares. However, if the Board waives the application of the Amended Rights Plan, the Board shall be deemed to have waived the application of the Amended Rights Plan in respect of any other Flip-in Event occurring by reason of such a Take-over Bid made prior to the expiry of a bid for which a waiver is, or is deemed to have been, granted.

(v)
Discretionary Waiver respecting Acquisition not by Take-over Bid Circular. The Board acting in good faith may, with the prior consent of the holders of Common Shares, determine, at any time prior to the occurrence of a Flip-in Event as to which the application of the Amended Rights Plan has not been waived, if such Flip-in Event would occur by reason of an acquisition of Common Shares otherwise than pursuant to a Take-over Bid made by means of a Take-over Bid circular to holders of Common Shares and otherwise than by inadvertence when such inadvertent Acquiring Person has then reduced its holdings to below 20%, to waive the application of the Amended Rights Plan to such Flip-in Event. However, if the Board waives the application of the Amended Rights Plan, the Board shall extend the Separation Time to a date subsequent to and not more than 10 Business Days following the meeting of shareholders called to approve such a waiver.

(vi)
Redemption of Rights on Withdrawal or Termination of Bid. Where a Take-over Bid that is not a Permitted Bid is withdrawn or otherwise terminated after the Separation Time and prior to the occurrence of a Flip-in Event, the Board may elect to redeem all the outstanding Rights at the Redemption Price.
If the Board is deemed to have elected or elects to redeem the Rights as described above, the right to exercise the Rights will thereupon, without further action and without notice, terminate and the only right thereafter of the holders of Rights is to receive the Redemption Price.  Within 10 Business Days of any such election or deemed election to redeem the Rights, the Corporation will notify the holders of the Common Shares or, after the Separation Time, the holders of the Rights.
(i)            Anti-Dilution Adjustments
The Exercise Price of a Right, the number and kind of securities subject to purchase upon exercise of a Right, and the number of Rights outstanding, will be adjusted in certain events, including:

(a)
if there is a dividend payable in Common Shares or Convertible Securities (other than pursuant to any optional stock dividend program, divided reinvestment plan or a dividend payable in Common Shares in lieu of a regular periodic cash dividend) on the Common Shares,

(b)
a subdivision or consolidation of the Common Shares,

(c)
an issuance of Common Shares or Convertible Securities in respect of, in lieu of or in exchange for Common Shares in a reclassification, amalgamation, merger, statutory arrangement or consolidation; or

(d)
if the Corporation fixes a record date for the distribution to all holders of Common Shares of certain rights or warrants to acquire Common Shares or Convertible Securities, or for the making of a distribution to all holders of Common Shares of evidences of indebtedness or assets (other than regular periodic cash dividend or a dividend payable in Common Shares) or rights or warrants.
A-6


(j)            Supplements and Amendments
The Corporation may make amendments to correct any clerical or typographical error or which are necessary to maintain the validity of the Amended Rights Plan Agreement as a result of any change in any applicable legislation, rules or regulation. Any changes made to maintain the validity of the Amended Rights Plan shall be subject to subsequent confirmation by the holders of the Common Shares or, after the Separation Time, the holders of the Rights.
Subject to the above exceptions, any amendment, variation or deletion of or from the Amended Rights Plan Agreement and the Rights is subject to the prior approval of the holders of Common Shares, or, after the Separation Time, the holders of the Rights.
Under the Amended Rights Plan Agreement, such required approval of the holders of Common Shares regarding any such amendment, variation or deletion shall be deemed to have been given if authorized by the affirmative vote of a majority of the votes cast by Independent Shareholders at a meeting of the holders of Common Shares in compliance with the Amended Rights Plan Agreement.
Under the Amended Rights Plan Agreement, such required approval of the holders of Rights regarding any such amendment, variation or deletion shall be deemed to have been given if authorized by the affirmative vote of a majority of the votes cast by the holders of Rights at a meeting of such holders in compliance with the Amended Rights Plan Agreement.
The Board reserves the right to alter any terms of the Amended Rights Plan Agreement or not proceed with the Amended Rights Plan at any time prior to the Meeting if the Board determines that it would be in the best interests of the Corporation and its shareholders to do so, in light of subsequent developments.
(k)            Expiration
If the Rights Plan Resolution is passed at the Meeting, the Corporation and the Rights Agent will execute the Amended Rights Plan Agreement as of the date the resolution is passed and the Amended Rights Plan will come into effect and remain in force until the earlier of the Termination Time (the time at which the right to exercise Rights shall terminate pursuant to the Amended Rights Plan) and the termination of the annual meeting of the shareholders in the calendar year 2029 unless at or prior to such meeting the Corporation’s shareholders ratify the continued existence of the Amended Rights Plan on the basis described below, in which case the Amended Rights Plan would expire at the earlier of the Termination Time and the termination of the annual meeting of the Corporation’s shareholders in the year that is three years after the year in which such ratification occurs.
At or prior to the annual meeting of the shareholders of the Corporation in the calendar year 2029, provided that a Flip-in Event (as defined in the Amended Rights Plan) has not occurred prior to such time, the Board shall submit a resolution ratifying the continued existence of Amended Right Plan to: (a) the Independent Shareholders (as defined in the Amended Rights Plan) for their consideration and, if thought advisable, approval; and (b) if required by the rules and regulations of any stock exchange on which the Common Shares are then listed, all holders of Common Shares for their consideration and, if thought advisable, approval. Unless the majority of the votes cast by the Independent Shareholders and, if the approval of all holders of Common Shares is required pursuant clause (b) of the immediately preceding sentence, the majority of the votes cast by all holders of Common Shares who vote in respect of such resolution are voted in favour of the continued existence of the Amended Rights Plan, the Board shall, immediately upon the confirmation by the chair of such shareholders’ meeting of the results of the votes on such resolution and without further formality, be deemed to elect to redeem the Rights issued and outstanding under the Rights Plan
A-7

B
SCHEDULE “B”


THE DESCARTES SYSTEMS GROUP INC.
MANDATE FOR THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS

1. PURPOSE

1.
The members of the Board of Directors (the “Board”) have the duty to supervise the management of the business and affairs of The Descartes Systems Group Inc. (the “Company”). The Board, directly and through its committees, the Chair of the Board and Lead Director, as applicable, shall provide direction to senior management, generally through the Chief Executive Officer, to pursue the best interests of the Company.
2. MEMBERSHIP, ORGANIZATION AND MEETINGS

1.
General - The composition and organization of the Board, including: the number, qualifications and remuneration of directors; the number of Board meetings; residency requirements; quorum requirements; meeting procedures and notices of meetings shall be established in accordance with the Canada Business Corporations Act and the by-laws of the Company.

2.
Independence - The Board shall establish independence standards for the directors in accordance with Applicable Requirements (as defined below), and, at least annually, shall affirmatively determine the independence of each director in accordance with these standards. At least a majority of the directors shall be independent in accordance with these standards.

3.
Access to Management and Outside Advisors - The Board shall have unrestricted access to the Company’s management and employees. The Board shall have the authority to retain external legal counsel, consultants or other advisors to assist it in fulfilling its responsibilities and to set and pay the respective compensation of these advisors without consulting or obtaining the approval of any Company officer. The Company shall provide appropriate funding, as determined by the Board, for the services of these advisors.

4.
Chair of the Board / Lead Director - The Chair of the Board shall facilitate the operations and deliberations of the Board and the satisfaction of the Board’s functions and responsibilities under this mandate. If the Chair of the Board is not independent, then the independent directors shall select from among their number a director who will
B-1


act as a “Lead Director” and who will facilitate the functioning of the Board independently of management and provide independent leadership to the Board.

5.
Directors’ Responsibilities - Each director is expected to use their best efforts to attend all meetings of the Board and any committee of which they are a member. Each director is expected to have read and considered the materials sent to them in advance of each meeting and to actively participate in the meeting. Each director shall declare their interest, and abstain from voting on, matters in which the director has an interest.

6.
Secretary and Minutes - The Corporate Secretary, their designate or any other person the Board requests shall act as secretary of Board meetings. Minutes of Board meetings shall be recorded and maintained by the Corporate Secretary and subsequently presented to the Board for approval.

7.
In Camera Sessions - As part of each meeting, the Board shall hold an in camera session, at which management and non-independent directors are not present, and the agenda for each Board meeting shall afford an opportunity for such a session.
3. FUNCTIONS AND RESPONSIBILITIES
The Board shall have the functions and responsibilities set out below. In addition to these functions and responsibilities, the Board shall perform such duties as may be required by applicable law and any binding requirements of any exchange upon which securities of the Company are traded, or any governmental or regulatory body exercising authority over the Company, as are in effect from time to time (collectively, “Applicable Requirements”).  While the Board maintains oversight of the Company’s operations, it delegates to the Chief Executive Officer and senior management of the Company the responsibility for day-to-day management of the Company. The Board discharges its oversight responsibilities both directly and through its committees.

1.
Strategic Planning

a.
Strategic Plans - At least annually, the Board shall review and, if advisable, approve the Company’s strategic planning process and short- and long-term strategic plan prepared by management. In discharging this responsibility, the Board shall review the plan in light of management’s assessment of emerging trends, the competitive environment, risk issues, and significant business practices and products.

b.
Business Plans - The Board shall review and, if advisable, approve the Company’s annual business plans.

c.
Monitoring - At least annually, the Board shall review management’s implementation of the Company’s strategic and business plans. The Board shall
B-2


review and, if advisable, approve any material amendments to, or variances from, these plans.

2.
Risk Management

a.
General - The Board shall provide regular oversight of the Company’s enterprise risk management practices either directly, or through its committees, which shall report to the Board with respect to risk oversight undertaken in accordance with their respective charters. The Board shall, with the assistance of its committees, oversee management’s assessment, management and monitoring of key risks (including, but not limited to, risks related to information security, corporate responsibility practices, programs, and initiatives, and artificial intelligence) affecting the Company and the Company’s risk management/monitoring systems.

b.
Review of Controls - The Board shall, with the assistance of the Audit Committee, review the internal, financial, non-financial and business control and information systems that have been established by management.

3.
Human Resource Management

a.
General - At least annually, the Board shall, with the assistance of the Compensation Committee, review the Company’s approach to human resource management and executive compensation, including as a result of the Compensation Committee’s: (i) review of reports from management to monitor the Company’s culture and employee engagement; (ii) oversight of policies and programs in place to support and promote the health, safety and well-being of the Company’s employees; and (iii) consideration of other corporate responsibility practices, programs, and initiatives related to the committee’s charter. In considering its approach to executive compensation, the Board, with the assistance of the Compensation Committee, will consider the results of any “say-on-pay” vote from the Company’s most recent annual meeting of shareholders.

b.
Succession Review - At least annually, the Board shall, with the assistance of the Nominating Committee and the Compensation Committee, as applicable, review the Lead Director, Chair of the Board, the Chief Executive Officer and the senior management succession plans of the Company.

c.
Integrity of Senior Management - The Board shall, to the extent feasible, satisfy itself as to the integrity of the Chief Executive Officer and other senior management.
B-3



4.
Corporate Governance

a.
General - At least annually, the Board shall, with the assistance of the Corporate Governance Committee, review the Company’s approach to corporate governance.

b.
Governing Documents - At least annually, the Board shall review and assess any comments or recommendations of the Corporate Governance Committee in respect of the adequacy of the Company’s organizing documents and by-laws, and the mandate, charters and role descriptions for the Board, each Board committee, the Chief Executive Officer, the Chair of the Board and their compliance with Applicable Requirements. At least annually, the Board shall review and assess any comments or recommendations of the Audit Committee on the adequacy of the Company’s audit committee charter.

c.
Director Independence - At least annually, the Board shall, with the assistance of the Corporate Governance Committee, evaluate the director independence standards established by the Board and pursuant to Applicable Requirements and the Board’s ability to act independently from management in fulfilling its duties.

d.
Ethics Reporting - At least annually, the Board shall, with the assistance of the Corporate Governance Committee, review reports provided by management relating to compliance with, or material deficiencies of, the Company’s Code of Business Conduct and Ethics.

e.
Conflicts of Interest - From time to time on an ad hoc basis, if and when required or otherwise viewed by the Board as being prudent in the circumstances, the Board shall form a special committee of disinterested directors to review and evaluate any material related party or other significant conflict of interest transactions involving the Company (except for material transactions solely involving the Company and one or more wholly-owned subsidiaries of the Company).

5.
Corporate Responsibility - At least annually, the Board shall, with the assistance of the Corporate Governance Committee, review the Company’s approach to corporate responsibility practices, programs, and initiatives and the risks and disclosures related thereto.

6.
Financial Information

a.
General - At least annually, the Board shall, with the assistance of the Audit Committee, review the Company’s internal controls relating to financial
B-4


information and reports provided by management on material deficiencies in, or material changes to, these controls.

b.
Integrity of Financial Information - The Board shall, with the assistance of the Audit Committee, review the integrity of the Company’s financial information and systems, the effectiveness of internal controls and management’s assertions on internal control and disclosure control procedures.

7.
Communications

a.
General - The Board shall adopt and, at least annually, shall review the Company’s overall communications policy, including measures for communicating with and receiving feedback from the Company’s stakeholders.

b.
Disclosure - At least annually, the Board shall review management’s compliance with the Company’s disclosure policies and procedures. The Board shall, if advisable, approve material changes to the Company’s disclosure policies and procedures.

c.
Shareholder Engagement - At least annually, the Board shall review the Company’s approach to shareholder engagement.

8.
Committees of the Board

a.
Board Committees - The Board has established the following committees of the Board: the Compensation Committee; the Audit Committee; the Corporate Governance Committee; and the Nominating Committee. Subject to Applicable Requirements, the Board may establish other Board committees or merge or dispose of any Board committee.

b.
Delegation to Committees - The Board has delegated to each of its committees those responsibilities set out in each Board committee’s mandate.

c.
Consideration of Committee Recommendations - As required, the Board shall consider for approval the specific matters delegated for review to Board committees.

d.
Board/Committee Communication - To facilitate communication between the Board and each Board committee, each committee chair shall provide a report to the Board on material matters considered by the committee at the first Board meeting after each meeting of the committee.

9.
Auditors - In conjunction with the Audit Committee, the Board shall review and, if advisable, select and recommend for shareholder approval the appointment of the auditors.
B-5


4. DIRECTOR ORIENTATION, EDUCATION AND EVALUATION

1.
Each director shall participate in the Company’s orientation and ongoing education program.

2.
At least annually, with the assistance of the Corporate Governance Committee, the Board shall evaluate and review the performance of the Board, each of its committees, each of the directors, including the specific performance assessment findings of the Corporate Governance Committee and the adequacy of this mandate.
5. CURRENCY OF THE BOARD MANDATE

1.
This mandate was last reviewed and approved by the Board on March 11, 2026.


B-6

C
SCHEDULE “C”


RECONCILIATION OF NON-GAAP FINANCIAL MEASURES - ADJUSTED EBITDA
We prepare and release quarterly unaudited and annual audited financial statements prepared in accordance with GAAP. We also disclose and discuss certain non-GAAP financial information, used to evaluate our performance as a complement to results provided in accordance with GAAP. We believe that current shareholders and potential investors in our company use non-GAAP financial measures, such as Adjusted EBITDA and Adjusted EBITDA as a percentage of revenues, in making investment decisions about our company and measuring our operational results.
The term “Adjusted EBITDA” refers to a financial measure that we define as earnings before certain charges that management considers to be non-operating expenses and which consist of interest, taxes, depreciation, amortization, stock-based compensation (for which we include related fees and taxes) and other charges (for which we include restructuring charges, acquisition-related expenses and contingent consideration incurred due to better-than-expected performance from acquisitions). Adjusted EBITDA as a percentage of revenues divides Adjusted EBITDA for a period by the revenues for the corresponding period and expresses the quotient as a percentage.
Management considers these non-operating expenses to be outside the scope of Descartes’ ongoing operations and the related expenses are not used by management to measure operations. Accordingly, these expenses are excluded from Adjusted EBITDA, which we reference to both measure our operations and as a basis of comparison of our operations from period-to-period. Management believes that investors and financial analysts measure our business on the same basis, and we are providing the Adjusted EBITDA financial metric to assist in this evaluation and to provide a higher level of transparency into how we measure our own business. However, Adjusted EBITDA and Adjusted EBITDA as a percentage of revenues are non-GAAP financial measures and may not be comparable to similarly titled measures reported by other companies. Adjusted EBITDA and Adjusted EBITDA as a percentage of revenues should not be construed as a substitute for net income determined in accordance with GAAP or other non-GAAP measures that may be used by other companies, such as EBITDA. The use of Adjusted EBITDA and Adjusted EBITDA as a percentage of revenues does have limitations. In particular, we have completed eight acquisitions since the beginning of fiscal 2025 and may complete additional acquisitions in the future that will result in acquisition-related expenses and restructuring charges. As these acquisition-related expenses and restructuring charges may continue as we pursue our consolidation strategy, some investors may consider these charges and expenses as a recurring part of operations rather than expenses that are not part of operations.
The table below reconciles Adjusted EBITDA and Adjusted EBITDA as a percentage of revenues to net income reported in our unaudited Consolidated Statements of Operations for Q4FY26, Q3FY26, Q2FY26 and Q1FY26, which we believe is the most directly comparable GAAP measure.
C-1



(US dollars in millions)
Q4FY26
Q3FY26
Q2FY26
Q1FY26
Net income, as reported on Consolidated Statements of Operations
45.6
43.9
38.0
36.27
Adjustments to reconcile to Adjusted EBITDA:
       
Interest expense
0.2
0.2
0.2
0.2
Investment income
(2.6)
(2.0)
(1.5)
(1.9)
Income tax expense
15.8
14.5
11.5
11.7
Depreciation expense
1.5
1.5
1.5
1.5
Amortization of intangible assets
20.9
20.7
20.5
19.1
Stock-based compensation and related taxes
6.2
6.0
4.9
4.9
Other charges
1.1
0.7
5.1
3.4
Adjusted EBITDA
88.7
85.5
80.2
75.1
         
Revenues
192.8
187.7
179.8
168.7
Net income as a % of revenues
24%
23%
21%
21%
Adjusted EBITDA as a % of revenues
46%
46%
45%
45%

The table below reconciles Adjusted EBITDA to net income reported in our audited Consolidated Statements of Operations for the year ended January 31, 2026, which we believe is the most directly comparable GAAP measure.
(US dollars in millions)
FY26
Net income, as reported on Consolidated Statements of Operations
163.8
Adjustments to reconcile to Adjusted EBITDA:
 
Interest expense
0.9
Investment income
(8.1)
Income tax expense
53.4
Depreciation expense
5.9
Amortization of intangible assets
81.2
Stock-based compensation and related taxes
22.0
Other charges
10.4
Adjusted EBITDA
329.5
   
Revenues
729.0
Net income as a % of revenues
22%
Adjusted EBITDA as a % of revenues
45%


C-2

D
SCHEDULE “D”


VIRTUAL MEETING USER GUIDE

C-3









The Descartes Systems Group Inc.
Corporate Headquarters
120 Randall Drive
Waterloo, Ontario N2V 1C6 Canada
Tel: +1 (519) 746-8110 x202358
Toll Free +1 (800) 419-8495
Fax: +1 (519) 747-0082
e-mail: info@descartes.com


www.descartes.com



FAQ

What is Descartes Systems Group (DSGX) asking shareholders to vote on at the 2026 annual meeting?

Shareholders will vote on nine director nominees, re-appointing KPMG LLP as auditors, continuing and amending the shareholder rights plan, and an advisory Say-on-Pay resolution. The meeting also includes presentation of fiscal 2026 financial statements, though no vote is taken on those statements.

When and how will Descartes Systems Group (DSGX) hold its 2026 annual shareholder meeting?

The 2026 annual meeting will be held virtually on June 11, 2026 at 10:00 a.m. Eastern time. Shareholders can attend online via live webcast at https://meetnow.global/MD9SP2A, where eligible holders and duly appointed proxyholders can vote and submit questions during the meeting.

Who is eligible to vote at Descartes Systems Group (DSGX) 2026 annual meeting and what is the quorum?

Shareholders of record at the close of business on April 27, 2026 are entitled to vote at the meeting. As of that date, 85,927,027 common shares were outstanding, each with one vote. A quorum requires at least two persons representing not less than 25% of voting shares.

What changes are proposed to Descartes Systems Group (DSGX) shareholder rights plan in 2026?

The company seeks approval to continue, amend and restate its shareholder rights plan through a new Amended Rights Plan Agreement. Key changes include updating review timing so continuation is reconsidered by shareholders by the 2029 annual meeting, while core anti-creeping bid protections and 20% ownership thresholds remain consistent with the prior plan.

How did Descartes Systems Group (DSGX) shareholders previously vote on Say-on-Pay and auditors?

At the June 12, 2025 meeting, 96.46% of votes supported the Say-on-Pay resolution and 99.66% supported KPMG LLP as auditors. These strong prior approvals are cited as background while shareholders are again asked to re-appoint KPMG and vote on the 2026 Say-on-Pay resolution.

How can Descartes Systems Group (DSGX) shareholders access meeting materials under the notice-and-access system?

Shareholders receive a notice package with instructions to access the circular and financial statements online. Materials are available at www.envisionreports.com/TSCQ2026 and on SEDAR+ at www.sedarplus.ca, with paper copies obtainable free of charge by requesting them from Computershare within the specified timeframes.

Filing Exhibits & Attachments

4 documents