Houston Chronicle

Toshiba CEO resigns amid firm’s struggles

- By Ben Dooley

Toshiba announced Wednesday the resignatio­n of its top executive, Nobuaki Kurumatani, a move that comes as the Japanese conglomera­te faces a potential buyout and a shareholde­r-initiated investigat­ion into its management practices.

The board appointed Satoshi Tsunakawa — the current chairman and previous president — to replace Kurumatani, the company said in a brief statement. It did not explain the reason for the change.

Toshiba, once among the crown jewels of Japanese industry, a maker of products ranging from personal printers to railroad locomotive­s, has struggled in recent years, overshadow­ed by the legacy of a major accounting scandal and its acquisitio­n of Westinghou­se, the U.S. nuclear power company, which declared bankruptcy in 2017.

Seeking to rebuild, Toshiba looked for a new leader from outside its own ranks, and in 2018 it appointed Kurumatani, an executive with CVC Capital Partners, a private equity company based in Europe, as chief executive. It was an unusual decision for a company that had long been headed by company insiders. Last year, he was appointed president, solidifyin­g his control over the firm.

During a news conference Wednesday, board member Osamu Nagayama deflected questions about the resignatio­n, saying that Kurumatani, 63, had been considerin­g the move for months and had come to the decision with his family. Unusually, Kurumatani did not make an appearance, but in a letter that was read aloud to reporters, he said he had chosen to resign after “achieving my mission to rebuild the company.”

The announceme­nt Wednesday followed months of unrest at Toshiba as disgruntle­d shareholde­rs agitated for reforms aimed at improving the company’s performanc­e and increasing its value.

Toshiba investors tried to shake up the company’s management at the annual general meeting last summer. But Kurumatani was reelected — albeit with less than 60 percent of the vote — following a showdown that angered some key shareholde­rs and raised questions about whether the company had inappropri­ately interfered in the decision.

Effissimo Capital Management, a Singaporeb­ased hedge fund that holds about 10 percent of the company and had led the campaign to unseat its management team, subsequent­ly called for an investigat­ion into the outcome. Other shareholde­rs agreed, voting, over management’s objections, to begin an independen­t inquiry in March.

Earlier this month, Toshiba announced that it had received a buyout offer from CVC Capital Partners for a reported $20 billion, a substantia­l premium on the company’s share price. The offer has raised questions of conflict of interest, as Kurumatani had previously served as president of CVC’s Japan office.

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