Mark Zuckerberg serves platter of creepy crawlies 31 Oct 2018 The Facebook boss candidly addressed the social network’s problems - encouraging for a company with grave transparency issues. Zuckerberg still lacks answers on how to squeeze revenue from things like private messaging and video ads, but at least the bogeyman is in plain sight.
GE’s new boss struggles to find the bottom line 30 Oct 2018 The ailing conglomerate missed sales and earnings estimates and notched a $23 bln loss after a massive power writedown. A 90 pct dividend cut will conserve much-needed cash and shows CEO Larry Culp is serious. Still, there’s little evidence of a turnaround in sight.
New BT CEO’s task is to keep it simple 25 Oct 2018 Philip Jansen, the current boss of Worldpay, will run the 25 bln pound former phone monopoly. He lacks experience dealing with a regulator as fierce as BT’s and joins after a new strategy has been announced. His job will be limited to making as few unforced errors as possible.
New threats cloud Benetton’s lasting legacy 23 Oct 2018 Gilberto Benetton led the Italian group’s diversification from garments into concessions. His vision protected the business from the threat of globalisation. But even seemingly stable assets like infrastructure, as the Genoa bridge tragedy shows, can hide great perils.
Kimberly-Clark points to end of long-tenured CEOs 22 Oct 2018 The $37 bln Kleenex maker’s chief is exiting after 16 years, much like peers at Pepsi and Campbell Soup recently. It’s a sign of accelerating executive turnover at consumer-goods and industrial companies. As successors struggle to revive growth, they can expect a shorter leash.
Succession cloud is one issue Glencore can clarify 22 Oct 2018 Boss Ivan Glasenberg may have talked to investors of retiring in up to five years. The company's driving force is a youthful 61. But the group has had a torrid 2018, including a U.S. subpoena, and lost some $16 bln in value. A clearer view of the next generation would help.
Facebook hires one weapon for two-handed fight 19 Oct 2018 Nick Clegg, former UK deputy PM, will lead global affairs at the $450 bln social network. His anti-Brexit stance and EU background could help with tribulations in Brussels. But he’s an odd choice to deal with Washington, where scrutiny may intensify after the midterm elections.
Energy bigwigs fiddle while world burns 16 Oct 2018 The White House may nix a plan to breathe life into the coal industry. Exxon’s new support for a carbon tax could mostly hit anthracite, not its own fossil fuels. Avoiding devastating climate change requires serious commitment, not baby steps, putting yet more onus on investors.
The Exchange: Anshu Jain 15 Oct 2018 Deutsche Bank was credited with coming through the 2008 crisis in better shape than many of its rivals. Jain, who rose from running the German lender’s global markets business to eventually become CEO, stopped by Times Square to speak with Rob Cox about the state of finance.
Lampert now at mercy of Sears, not vice versa 15 Oct 2018 The bankrupt retailer’s top owner dragged investors along for over a decade as he kept it alive against the odds. Now although he’s owed some $2.6 bln, he’s no longer in charge and he’ll have to fight with other lenders and the government’s pension guarantor for every dollar.
Citi can rise above Wall Street’s bad governance 15 Oct 2018 The mega-bank was one of the first to split the chair and CEO roles in the financial crisis – and is one of the last still adhering to this best practice. It has served Citi well, augmenting the case for finding a new overseer for Mike Corbat when Mike O’Neill retires.
BofA punches above Wells Fargo’s weight 15 Oct 2018 The Charlotte-based bank’s earnings typically lag those of its West Coast rival. Yet the two trade at the same multiple of tangible book value. CEO Brian Moynihan's implicit valuation premium has taken years to achieve. Wells' Tim Sloan may soon reach his turning point.
ConvaTec investors brace for lengthy patch-up job 15 Oct 2018 The UK medical devices maker lost nearly 30 pct of its value after it warned of lower growth and its CEO resigned. The selloff seems excessive given modest changes to revenue and margins. The remedy could be cost cuts. But any turnaround will have to wait for a new chief.
Cox: Global finance has a Saudi Arabia problem 14 Oct 2018 Wall Street bosses and their European and Japanese peers are reconsidering next week’s “Davos in the Desert.” Like China, there’s money at stake. Unlike Russia there’s no guidance from above. A coordinated pullout following Jamie Dimon’s withdrawal is their least-bad option.
Sears’ checkout moment is a lesson in timing 11 Oct 2018 The retail chain is on the brink of bankruptcy after creditors lost patience. Its fate may follow that of Toys R Us, which is being liquidated. Retail failures are common but not inevitable. Sears might have had a shot if boss Eddie Lampert had grasped the nettle six years ago.
Tesla can find a better chair than James Murdoch 11 Oct 2018 The media executive is in line to lead the board, the FT says. He’d be a better pick than any of the $45 bln electric-car maker’s other directors. But Elon Musk’s tweet denying the story is a reminder that Tesla and its investors need a strong outsider to oversee the CEO.
South Africa offers markets a too-friendly face 9 Oct 2018 New finance chief Tito Mboweni is one of the country’s most respected black economists, and his decade at the helm of the reserve bank adds credibility to Cyril Ramaphosa’s government. Ties to Goldman Sachs, though, could make him a target for political criticism at home.
Perrigo’s new CEO is a strategic smoke signal 9 Oct 2018 An ill-timed expansion left the Irish firm struggling with a tough market for generic drugs. Now it has hired a new chief who formerly ran cigarette companies, breaking a pharma-sector taboo. That’s an emphatic statement that its future lies in consumer goods.
Aviva will find strategy harder to switch than CEO 9 Oct 2018 Mark Wilson is leaving the insurer after six years. Although he simplified the firm, boosted capital and bought Friends Life, Aviva’s valuation lags peers. If his successor can’t strategically advance beyond cross-selling and digital forays, it could become a takeover target.
GE could take a leaf from Elon Musk on CEO pay 5 Oct 2018 There’s little worth emulating in the recent antics of Tesla’s erratic boss. But his long-term pay plan, while outsized, is tied to several ambitious performance metrics. That’s more defensible than GE offering Larry Culp up to some $226 mln for hitting stock-price targets alone.