Bangkok Post

Ford names new chief executive

Fields ousted amid stock price decline

- KEITH NAUGHTON Hackett: Turnaround specialist BLOOMBERG

SOUTHFIELD, MICHIGAN: Ford Motor Co is replacing embattled chief executive officer Mark Fields with Jim Hackett, a turnaround specialist who has been leading the automaker’s moves into selfdrivin­g cars and ride sharing, according to a person familiar with the move.

“The company plans to announce in Detroit early on Monday that Fields, 56, is retiring and Hackett will move up from his position as head of Ford’s Smart Mobility unit,’’ said the person, who asked not to be identified revealing internal plans.

“The company can’t confirm any media speculatio­n,’’ a representa­tive at Ford China’s communicat­ions department said by phone in response to an earlier Forbes report on the executive changes.

Hackett, 62, revived the fortunes of office furniture maker Steelcase Inc as CEO from 1994 to 2014 and his promotion indicates Ford is looking to seize on that expertise as consumer demands change.

Fields’ departure comes amid a more than 30% plunge in Ford’s stock since Fields took the helm on July 1, 2014, and shareholde­rs have assailed management over the strategy at the company, which announced a voluntary buyout programme last week to show it was moving to cut costs.

“It’s surprising how quickly Fields is being replaced,” said Stefan Bratzel, director of the Center of Automotive Management at the University of Applied Sciences in Bergisch Gladbach, Germany.

“Ford isn’t exactly in crisis, but this developmen­t shows that shareholde­r value is more in focus, even as carmakers face pressure to invest in technology where the payoff is uncertain.’’

“Ford is also ousting Fields’s communicat­ions chief Ray Day and replacing him with Mark Truby, a former newspaper reporter who had most recently been leading Ford’s communicat­ions in Asia,’’ the person said.

Hackett, who j oined Ford’s board of directors in 2013, was appointed in March 2016 as chairman of Ford Smart Mobility, according to his profile on the company’s website. The unit was formed to accelerate Ford’s foray into emerging mobility services.

He worked at Grand Rapids, Michigan-based office furniture maker Steelcase for two decades. He was recognised for predicting the office landscape would shift away from cubicles to an open-space environmen­t, and transforme­d the traditiona­l manufactur­er of office furniture, the profile showed.

Hackett led a major reorganisa­tion at Steelcase that involved deep cuts in the workforce, including personally pinkslippi­ng the best man from his wedding, according to Automotive News.

After Steelcase, he became athletic director of the University of Michigan at a time of turmoil and hired Jim Harbaugh to return the football team to its winning ways.

Fields has been under scrutiny by Ford’s board, which scheduled extra meeting time to drill him on his plans for reversing the company’s fortunes, according to a person familiar with the discussion­s.

The CEO has been pouring billions into self-driving cars and ride-sharing experiment­s as its traditiona­l-car business has struggled far more than at General Motors Co in a slowing US market.

Fields joined Ford in July 1989 and helped its businesses through several tough situations before he was named to the top job in July 2014.

In 2000, Fields became CEO of Mazda Motor Corp, in which Ford had a controllin­g stake at the time. He led a turnaround at Mazda with several Ford executives with whom he later worked to revive the US automaker’s North American business.

Promoted to chief operating officer in December 2012, Fields took over as CEO from Alan Mulally, the former Boeing Co executive who steered Ford through the global economic crisis and avoided the bailouts and bankruptci­es that burdened the predecesso­rs of GM and Chrysler Group LLC.

Fields is leading an overhaul of Ford’s business model so the company can take on self-driving cars from the likes of Alphabet Inc’s Waymo and Uber Technologi­es Inc.

He has warned the cost of investing in new technologi­es would reduce profits last year and this year before rebounding in 2018.

Ford’s first-quarter adjusted earnings fell 42%, while GM appears on pace for another record annual profit. Net income at Ford plunged 38% last year.

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