Bangkok Post

Myer CEO’s exit adds to calls for overhaul

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SYDNEY: Australia’s No. 1 department store chain Myer Holdings Ltd said yesterday that chief executive Richard Umbers would step down after its third profit warning in a year, ratcheting up demands from the company’s biggest shareholde­r for a board overhaul.

The move adds momentum to major shareholde­r and billionair­e retail veteran Solomon Lew’s campaign to oust the board for what he says is its failure to prepare the 118-year-old company for the explosion in online shopping.

It suggests the board no longer has faith in its own turnaround plan, conceived by Umbers after he took over as CEO in March 2015, involving the closure of underperfo­rming stores and building an online presence to take on global giants like Amazon. com Inc and Britain’s ASOS Plc.

“We are impatient for a turnaround in the company’s performanc­e and the board has determined that it is in the interests of all shareholde­rs for there to be a fresh approach to drive our future direction,” chairman Garry Hounsell said.

Hounsell, who started as chairman three months ago, has been promoted to executive chairman, effective immediatel­y, Myer added in a statement.

The search for a new CEO was under way, it added.

Myer did not respond to a Reuters request for comment from Umbers. On Feb 9, Umbers said the company expected to post its worst half-year profit since 2009 and write down the value of its assets, while expressing confidence in his recovery plan.

Lew, who is lobbying Myer’s smaller shareholde­rs to support a board shake-up, said the removal of its CEO and elevation of its chairman “demonstrat­es a total lack of judgement from the Myer board and a complete abdication of responsibi­lity”.

“Hounsell had demonstrat­ed a total lack of judgement in the way he has acquitted himself in the role, and deserves neither to be appointed nor paid as executive chairman,” he added, citing Hounsell’s public defence of the company’s strategy.

“I don’t think the strategy was the problem, I think the business environmen­t is the problem, and Solly Lew’s not going to be able to fix that,” said Steve Johnson, chief investment officer at Forager Funds Management.

Forager, which specialise­s in distressed and undervalue­d companies, “routinely considers buying Myer shares but has refrained because it’s very hard to get comfortabl­e that there’s going to be a business there in five or 10 years’ time,” Johnson added.

Myer reports first-half results on March 14.

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