Nestle’s share price slips as chairman exits after CEO

Nestle’s share price slips as chairman exits after CEO

Chairman Paul Bulcke, who was scheduled to remain in his post until next April, is being replaced by vice-chairman Pablo Isla.

Nestle CEO Laurent Freixe (L) and chairman Paul Bulcke (R) attended the general shareholders’ meeting of the Swiss food giant in Ecublens. (AFP pic)
ZURICH:
Nestle shares slipped today after the Swiss food giant announced the earlier-than-expected departure of its chairman, just weeks after the sudden ouster of its CEO over an office relationship.

The multinational behind Nespresso coffee capsules and KitKat chocolate bars announced late yesterday that its longtime chairman, Paul Bulcke, would step down “earlier than planned” on Oct 1.

“Bulcke, who had been scheduled to remain in his position until next April, is being replaced by vice-chairman Pablo Isla,” the company said.

Nestle shares were down 0.51% to CHF71.52 (US$90.80) in early trading after opening slightly higher, weighing on the Swiss stock exchange’s main SMI index, which fell 0.31%.

The announcement of Bulcke’s early departure came only two weeks after Nestle said it had dismissed Laurent Freixe as CEO with immediate effect over an “undisclosed romantic relationship with a direct subordinate”.

The board chose to replace Freixe, who had been in his position for just a year, with Nespresso director Philipp Navratil.

According to observers, Nestle investors had since been pushing for Bulcke – a Belgian national who served as Nestle CEO for nearly a decade before becoming chairman in 2017 – to step down.

The Financial Times reported that investors blamed him for a chaotic period at the company that culminated with Freixe’s ouster.

“Pressure from investors had mounted to a peak in recent weeks following the turmoil involving former CEO Laurent Freixe,” Vontobel analyst Jean-Philippe Bertschy said in a note.

“Nestle needs to return to calmer waters and regain its former stature,” Bertschy said.

Patrik Schwendimann, an analyst at Zurich Cantonal Bank, agreed.

“The early resignation comes as little surprise after the events of the past few weeks,” he wrote in a note, adding that Bulcke’s departure should allow “Nestle to focus on the future, hopefully with less background noise”.

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