By Annie Gasparro and Jacob Bunge
This article is being republished as part of our daily
reproduction of WSJ.com articles that also appeared in the U.S.
print edition of The Wall Street Journal (May 30, 2018).
America's food giants are shedding a generation of CEOs at a
remarkable rate, the culmination of years of bleak sales in an
industry that until recently, had gone unshaken for half a
century.
Over the past two years, at least 16 major packaged-food and
beverage chief executives have stepped down, according to a Wall
Street Journal analysis. The departure of Campbell Soup Co. chief
Denise Morrison earlier this month followed CEO changes at General
Mills Inc., Mondelez International Inc., Kellogg Co., Nestle USA,
Hershey Co., J.M. Smucker Co. and Twinkie-maker Hostess.
"I don't think we've ever seen something like this," said Greg
Wank, partner at Anchin, an advisory firm that works with food
companies.
The outgoing executives have contended with a new era of
American eating and grocery shopping habits, shepherded in by
millennials and the internet. Stalwart food brands no longer can
consistently command higher prices from retailers, forcing
management to focus on cost cuts. And as executives try to invest
on change, investors want stronger profit margins. The S&P 500
Packaged Food & Meat subindex has dropped 15% in the past two
years, while the S&P 500 has climbed 30%.
The top 25 food and beverage companies in the U.S. have
continued to lose market share, averaging annual sales growth of 2%
from 2012 through 2016, compared with 6% for the rest of the
industry, according to consultancy A.T. Kearney.
"You've got a lot of CEOs that are at their wit's end trying to
figure out growth," said a now-retired big-food-company chief.
"It was certainly much easier in my early decades than today's
CEOs have it," said former Conagra Foods Chief Gary Rodkin, who
retired in 2015.
While each company's situation is a little different, companies
say they now have the right leaders in place to navigate next
steps. Mondelez said its prior CEO improved its profit margin over
the past few years while sales growth was slower than it hoped.
Most of the other companies mentioned in this article declined to
comment further.
Hershey's Chief Digital Commerce Officer, Doug Straton, said the
industry for decades trained people on how things were -- including
focusing on physical stores and not e-commerce. "It's really hard
to burst out of that mindset, including for the CEOs," he said,
adding that sometimes a new face at the top can do that.
Sean Connolly, who joined Conagra Brands Inc. as chief in 2015,
quickly shook things up at the maker of Hunt's ketchup, Peter Pan
peanut butter, and Chef Boyardee. He relocated its headquarters to
downtown Chicago from Omaha, Neb., and sold off two big chunks of
the business.
With Conagra shares up 26% since he took over, Mr. Connolly has
called out rival food companies for neglecting brands and letting
bureaucracy impede innovation. Walking down the frozen-food aisle,
"you'll still find plenty of products that look like they're left
over from the 1980s and 1990s," he said at a conference this month.
"They're going to have trouble hanging on to that real estate
unless they modernize themselves."
Until recently, big brands were synonymous with the foods they
made -- Kraft and cheese; Heinz and ketchup; Kellogg and cereal;
Coke and soda. They won prime shelf space with retailers and had
big marketing budgets that furthered their favor with consumers.
And they could always charge a little bit more for their products
to keep profits rolling in when costs rose or sales slowed. The
strategy for success was straightforward and often attainable.
Now, shifts toward simpler ingredients and shopping for food
online, combined with a rise in niche, small brands and
grocery-store brands, have made the old playbook irrelevant.
Campbell tried to break into the fresh-food sector by acquiring
Bolthouse Farms in 2012. But the move backfired in many ways,
weakening profit margins and revealing the difficulties of managing
the supply chain for perishables. Meanwhile, Campbell's core soup
sales continued to struggle. Ms. Morrison's departure came as the
company faced its fifth consecutive year of lower U.S. soup
sales.
Investors said the CEO shuffle is a positive step for the
industry, particularly when a new executive is brought in from
outside. "There's always a bit more intrigue when you have an
external hire come into a company that's been around for 100
years," said Jacob Gamerman, senior research analyst at Neuberger
Berman Group, which manages $299 billion of investor funds.
Many of the food companies that have changed CEOs over the past
two years, however, have promoted internal candidates instead.
Campbell's interim chief and board member Keith McLoughlin said the
company is open to internal and external candidates for its
CEO.
A few factors unite some of the newly named leaders. Many, like
General Mills' Jeff Harmening and TreeHouse Foods' Steve Oakland,
have worked across different divisions of companies and bring
experience integrating acquisitions or restructuring
operations.
Others, including Kellogg's Steve Cahillane and Mondelez's Dirk
Van de Put, have worked on developing international markets, where
packaged-food sales have been growing faster than in the U.S.
Meanwhile, since 2016, activists have publicly demanded changes
such as a CEO replacement or sale at more than 40 food and drink
manufacturers around the world, according to data from Activist
Insight, making food processing one of the consumer-goods
industries most vulnerable to activists.
Some expect more changes. PepsiCo Inc. CEO Indra Nooyi has been
leading the beverage and salty-snack giant since 2006. Unilever
PLC's Chief Paul Polman has been at the helm since 2009, and people
familiar with the matter told The Wall Street Journal last November
that the board was looking for his successor. Pepsi and Unilever
declined to comment.
"The industry kind of reminds you of an NFL off-season with all
the coaching changes," said Brett Hundley, food analyst at the
Vertical Group LLC. "When a team changes its head coach, that
doesn't do anything in and of itself unless that person brings a
new strategy and gets a different outcome."
-- Cara Lombardo contributed to this article.
Write to Annie Gasparro at annie.gasparro@wsj.com and Jacob
Bunge at jacob.bunge@wsj.com
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
May 30, 2018 02:47 ET (06:47 GMT)
Copyright (c) 2018 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.
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