Bangkok Post

Walmart’s longest-serving director Rob Walton retires

- SIDDHARTH CAVALE

Walmart said on Thursday that Rob Walton, the longest-serving member on its board and eldest son of founder Sam Walton, would retire from his position of the big-box retailer at the end of his term on June 5.

Walton served as the company’s chairman of the board of directors after his father died in 1992 and held the post until June 2015. He was replaced by his son-in-law Greg Penner, who remains chairman of world’s largest retailer.

Walmart also disclosed seven shareholde­r proposals in the regulatory filing, including some repeated calls for conducting an independen­t racial equity audit and human rights impact assessment in its supply chain. The board recommende­d shareholde­rs vote against all seven proposals.

During Walton’s tenure as chairman, Walmart grew its sales from about $44 billion to $482 billion to become the biggest US retailer. In its most recent year ended Jan 31, 2024, Walmart reported sales of $648.1 billion, much of its success down to persistent inflation leading customers to shop at its discount stores.

“His leadership has been critical as we’ve grown our business over so many years,” Penner said in a regulatory filing announcing Walton’s retirement.

Walmart said it has nominated Brian Niccol, chairman and CEO of restaurant chain Chipotle Mexican Grill to replace Walton on the board, which consists of 11 directors. If elected, Niccol would be the fifth new independen­t director added to the board since 2017, the company said.

The only remaining Walton on the board will be Rob Walton’s nephew, Steuart Walton.

Rob Walton, 79, helped shape some of Walmart’s most important moments, including working on its initial public offering in 1970.

After joining the company in 1969, he held several roles, including senior vice president, corporate secretary, general counsel and vice chairman.

Walton is the 19th richest man in the world, with a net worth of $77.4 billion, according to Forbes. Much of his wealth is tied to the Walton Enterprise­s and his stakes in sports teams such as the National Football League’s Denver Broncos.

He owned 6.97 million shares of Walmart as of Feb 23, or 0.09% of the total, according to LSEG data, which amounts to about $420 million at Walmart’s closing stock price of $60.21 on Thursday. The Waltons are the richest family in America, with an estimated 45% stake in the retailer, according to Forbes.

The seven shareholde­r proposals disclosed included proposing Walmart to set a compensati­on policy for workers in a bid to prevent inequality and racial and gender disparity, and to transition away from gestation crates in its pork supply chain. *

 ?? ?? Then-chairman Rob Walton at Walmart’s annual shareholde­rs meeting in Fayettevil­le, Arkansas, in 2013.
Then-chairman Rob Walton at Walmart’s annual shareholde­rs meeting in Fayettevil­le, Arkansas, in 2013.

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