Los Angeles Times

Gap brand gets new CEO

Neil Fiske is tasked with trying to turn around troubled unit.

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Gap Inc. has named Neil Fiske as president and chief executive of its namesake brand as the clothing retailer looks for a comeback amid declining mall traffic, operationa­l missteps and disappoint­ing growth.

The search for a new top executive for the brand began in February, when the San Francisco company announced Jeff Kirwan would leave the post after just over three years.

The Gap brand has been the company’s most troubled division, with a slew of management changes and shifts in strategy.

The parent company has been working to fix issues at the brand, which have included late deliveries that resulted in excess inventory that it had to discount in order to sell.

“They’ve turned the dial; now if they can continue to do that is a separate question,” said Poonam Goyal, an analyst at Bloomberg Intelligen­ce.

Wall Street is “still a little pessimisti­c about if they can do it. While it’s an iconic brand, there’s just so much competitio­n,” Goyal said.

The market reaction was muted, with shares initially rising 0.4% in after-hours trading before returning to where they’d closed the day’s session. The shares are down 5.4% this year.

The company’s stock fell the most in the last 18 months in May after it reported that first-quarter sales at Gap-brand stores slipped more than analysts had anticipate­d.

The results prompted Art Peck, CEO of the parent company, to say he “was not pleased with the performanc­e.”

The parent company has become increasing­ly dependent on its Old Navy and Athleta chains, and it hasn’t been able to translate growth there into success at its eponymous brand.

“Neil brings significan­t retail and apparel experience to Gap Inc. and a track record of transformi­ng and reposition­ing brands,” Peck said.

Fiske most recently served as CEO at surfwear company Billabong Internatio­nal. Before that, he held CEO roles at outdoor outfitter Eddie Bauer and Bath & Body Works, Gap said. Fiske will begin his new post June 20 and will report to Peck.

“I think they’ve hired a good candidate to lead the turnaround,” Goyal said of Fiske.

“He seems promising, and the Gap brand needs someone that sort of understand­s what it takes to turn around a brand. It really needed leadership that can envision the longer term of a brand and create better brand perception,” Goyal said.

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