Bangkok Post

McCall departing easyJet for top job at ITV

Monumental task awaits new CEO

- PHIL SERAFINO JOE MAYES

PARIS/LONDON: easyJet chief executive officer Carolyn McCall is stepping down from the discount carrier to take up the same role at ITV, the UK broadcaste­r that’s dealing with a slowdown in advertisin­g amid recurrent takeover speculatio­n.

“McCall will leave easyJet around the end of the year and join ITV on Jan 8,’’ the companies said in separate statements yesterday.

“A search for a successor has already begun,’’ the Luton, England-based airline said.

McCall, 55, took over at easyJet in July 2010 after rising to the helm of the Guardian Media Group.

“After seven years, the opportunit­y from ITV felt like the right one to take,” McCall said in the easyJet statement. “It is a fantastic company in a dynamic and

stimulatin­g sector. easyJet is a structural winner in a brilliant position, and I look forward to being a loyal customer in the years to come.”

As the replacemen­t for outgoing ITV CEO Adam Crozier, McCall will inherit a business that is cutting jobs and slimming costs as it faces declines in advertisin­g sales with retailers wary over the short-term outlook for Brexit and rising inflation.

Crozier took over the top job in 2010 and has worked to rejuvenate the UK’s biggest free-to-air broadcaste­r, building up its ITV Studios production arm to reduce its reliance on advertisin­g.

Ad sales made up 47% of ITV’s overall revenue in 2016, compared to 64% in 2010, the year Crozier joined. ITV’s shares have almost tripled since Crozier became CEO.

“McCall’s experience at Guardian Media, which owns The Guardian and The Observer newspapers, makes her well suited to tackling the challenges faced by ITV,’’ said Alex DeGroote, an analyst at Cenkos Securities.

“She’s got a good grip on the key issues facing traditiona­l media,” he said by phone, citing the movement of ad spending away from TV to the internet and the rise of on-demand viewing. “She’s got very relevant sector experience.”

“Arresting a recent decline in ad sales, improving the quality of ITV’s online video offering and warding off the challenge from internatio­nal streaming services like Netflix will be McCall’s top priorities, and a ‘monumental’ task,’’ said Neil Campling, an analyst at Northern Trust Capital Markets in London.

Billionair­e John Malone’s Liberty Global Plc owns about 9.9% of ITV, which is a perennial subject of takeover speculatio­n, talk that has intensifie­d since the Brexit vote.

At ITV, McCall will be running a company that has less revenue than easyJet yet is more highly valued in the stock market.

The broadcaste­r had £3 billion ($3.9 billion) of revenue last year and has a market capitalisa­tion of £7 billion, while easyJet’s sales were £4.7 billion and its value is £5.6 billion.

ITV will pay McCall an annual salary of £900,000 and a pension allowance of 15% of her pay. She will be eligible for a bonus of as much as 180% of salary and a long-term incentive plan of up to 265% of salary.

“The package provides broadly the same remunerati­on opportunit­y as Crozier had,’’ ITV said. “McCall also will receive payment to compensate her for money she will forfeit when she leaves easyJet.’’

McCall has helped transform the European aviation industry along with rival Ryanair through the rapid expansion of lowcost carriers. More recently the airline has struggled with the impact of Britain’s vote to exit the European Union, the collapse of oil prices and a string of terror attacks which has driven a slump in ticket prices.

“The next easyJet CEO must “increase focus on cost management and possible restructur­ing,” Daniel Roeska and Caius Slater, analysts for Sanford C. Bernstein, wrote Sunday in a note to investors.

“We think bringing in an external candidate, given the required qualificat­ions, with fewer ties to the organisati­on and a fresh view, may be beneficial for shareholde­rs.”

 ?? AFP ?? This file photo taken on February 10, 2016 shows easyJet CEO Carolyn McCall speaking during an interview at the airline’s headquarte­rs in London.
AFP This file photo taken on February 10, 2016 shows easyJet CEO Carolyn McCall speaking during an interview at the airline’s headquarte­rs in London.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Thailand