By Mike Esterl And Angela Chen
Coca-Cola Co. named James Quincey president and chief operating
officer, making him the clear No. 2 to Chairman and Chief Executive
Muhtar Kent.
Mr. Quincey, 50 years old, has worked at Coca-Cola for 19 years
and has been president of the company's Europe group since 2013.
Before that, he oversaw Coke's Northwest Europe and Nordic business
unit and spent several years in Latin America, including heading
Mexican operations.
Mr. Quincey helped lead the recently announced merger of
Coca-Cola Enterprises, Coca-Cola Iberian Partners SA and Coca-Cola
Erfrischungsgetranke AG. The new entity will become the world's
largest independent Coca-Cola bottler based on revenue.
"His wealth of experience across our global system, particularly
in Europe and Latin America, will be a valuable asset as we
continue to accelerate growth through our 2020 Vision and our
previously announced five strategic actions," Mr. Kent said of Mr.
Quincey.
Mr. Quincey's promotion also positions him as the leading
internal candidate to eventually succeed the 62-year-old CEO, who
has run the Atlanta-based beverage giant since 2008.
Coca-Cola also said Ahmet Bozer, who is president of Coca-Cola
International, will retire in March. The 55-year-old Mr. Bozer,
once considered a succession candidate and a top deputy to Mr.
Kent, joined Coke in 1990.
The world's largest beverage company has been struggling
recently as health-conscious consumers turn away from soda. It said
last year that it plans to eliminate at least 1,000 to 2,000 jobs
globally in the coming weeks, the biggest thinning of its ranks in
15 years. It also introduced stricter budgeting, telling executives
to swap limousines for taxis and dropping its lavish Christmas
party for Wall Street analysts.
Shares, inactive premarket, have fallen about 2% this year.
Write to Mike Esterl at mike.esterl@wsj.com and Angela Chen at
angela.chen@wsj.com
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