Bangkok Post

CEO of Akzo Nobel resigns

-

AMSTERDAM: The chief executive officer of Akzo Nobel NV, Ton Buechner, has stepped down for health reasons, leaving his successor to deliver the higher sales and margins promised when the Dutch paintmaker fended off a US takeover attempt this year.

Chemicals division chief Thierry Vanlancker, 52, who joined in 2016, replaces Buechner, who repelled a €26.3 billion ($30.35 billion) bid by US rival PPG Industries Inc with promises to produce better investor returns alone.

A chunk of the Dutch firm’s shareholde­rs, including hedge fund Elliott Advisors, were open to a PPG buyout and frustrated by Buechner’s defence.

PPG cannot swiftly launch a new bid after the change of CEO as Dutch market rules mean it must wait until November at the earliest. It may also be reluctant to try again as its bid was equally opposed by Akzo chairman Antony Burgmans, who remains.

Vanlancker, a Belgian, now has to deliver the stronger sales growth and margin improvemen­ts that Buechner and Burgmans promised in their struggle to avoid a merger. Analysts say those targets will be tough to achieve.

In his resignatio­n statement, Buechner said: “For me this was an extraordin­arily difficult decision to make but my focus must now be on my health.”

Burgmans declined to elaborate on details of Buechner’s illness, saying he regretted “only that he has decided to step down.”

“Buechner felt that if he continued to subject himself to the pressures of his office, that would endanger his health,” Burgmans told reporters on a conference call.

Buechner told Akzo’s board about his decision on Tuesday, Burgmans said.

Vanlancker was previously identified as the person who would take Buechner’s job as part of emergency contingenc­y planning.

In his current post, Vanlancker was expected to oversee the sale or initial public offering (IPO) of Akzo’s specialty chemicals division. He previously worked for The Chemours Company, which was spun off from DuPont in 2015.

Buechner’s surprise announceme­nt means his tenure at Akzo Nobel has ended almost as it began.

In September 2012, a half year after he took the top job, Buechner stepped down on his doctor’s advice, suffering from what the company described as “over-tiredness.” He resumed work in December the same year.

Buechner’s tenure was mostly regarded as successful.

“Buechner has been responsibl­e for overseeing the successful transforma­tion of the business, including portfolio reshaping ..., de-risking of the pension funds, cutting costs and driving efficiency gains that have raised both margins and returns,” Morgan Stanley analyst wrote in a note.

But the firm faced a minor shareholde­r rebellion after it rejected talks with PPG, leading to a shareholde­r lawsuit still in progress seeking to have Burgmans ousted.

Faced with opposition from Akzo’s board, many employees and Dutch politician­s, PPG walked away from its bid for Akzo on June 1.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Thailand