The Columbus Dispatch

Whole Foods CEO refers to investor Jana as ‘greedy’

- By Nick Turner and Craig Giammona

John Mackey, the embattled chief executive officer at Whole Foods Market Inc., referred to activist investor Jana Partners as “greedy bastards” interested only in profiting from a forced sale of the grocer.

“We need to get better, and we’re doing that,” Mackey said in an interview with Texas Monthly. “But these guys just want to sell us, because they think they can make 40 or 50 percent in a short period of time.”

The remarks signal an escalation in tension between Mackey and Jana, which disclosed a stake in the grocery chain earlier this year and pushed to shake up the board. The New York-based investment firm has been calling on Whole Foods to overhaul its operations and seek potential buyers. Decrying Whole Foods’ poor performanc­e, Jana vowed to reassess everything from the company’s brand to the way it schedules worker hours.

Jana made its campaign public at the same time that Mackey was launching a new book on the benefits of vegan eating — timing that Mackey now says was intentiona­l.

“They hijacked my book tour,” he said in the Texas Monthly interview. “It’s not that I think that they were trying to harm the book tour. It’s just like, ‘OK, the CEO is going to be distracted. He’s not going to be able to give full attention to this.’”

Representa­tives for Jana and Whole Foods declined to comment to Bloomberg News.

The company’s same-store sales — a closely watched measure — have declined for seven straight quarters. The slump has put intense pressure on the former darling of the organic-food movement. Mackey co-founded Whole Foods in 1980 with a single store and built it into an industry powerhouse, but now organic food is widely available at mainstream supermarke­ts.

Last month, in a bid to avoid a fight with Jana and other restless shareholde­rs, Whole Foods overhauled its board of directors, appointing five new members and replacing the chairman. The grocer had hoped the changes would be enough to reach a truce with the activist investor, but Jana decided to keep its options on the table. Whole Foods has already held its 2017 annual meeting, meaning a potential proxy fight for control of the board has to wait until next year.

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