Daily Mail

Crisis engulfs Just Eat board

Chairman quits and top executive faces misconduct probe

- By Archie Mitchell

JUST Eat Takeaway has been plunged into crisis after its chairman quit and a top executive faced a ‘personal misconduct’ probe.

Just hours before the food delivery group’s annual general meeting in amsterdam, it said chairman adriaan Nuhn was stepping down over ‘shareholde­r concerns’ following months of criticism.

and in a second shock, it scrapped a vote on whether to reappoint chief operating officer Jorg Gerbig following a formal complaint about ‘possible personal misconduct at a company event’.

Just Eat launched an investigat­ion into the allegation­s under its ‘speak up policy’ which encourages staff to report issues including sexual harassment, unethical or dishonest conduct, bribery and other issues.

Gerbig, 41, founded German takeaway firm Lieferando before it was bought by Just Eat in 2014, when he became chief operating officer. He is ‘fully cooperatin­g with the investigat­ion’, Just Eat said.

His term ended yesterday but if the allegation­s are unfounded he may be put up for re-election. Just Eat would not disclose details of the allegation­s. US fund manager Cat Rock Capital, Just Eat’s second largest shareholde­r with a near-7pc stake, said bosses had overseen a ‘complete loss of trust’ among investors.

Just Eat’s London-listed shares have fallen almost 80pc since late 2020 and yesterday closed down 9.37pc, or 209.5p, at 2025.5p. Cat Rock urged fellow shareholde­rs to vote against the re-election of finance chief Brent Wissink and to oppose the re-election of the supervisor­y board.

The delivery business was formed in 2020 through a £9bn merger between Just Eat and Dutch rival Takeaway.

It is listed in London and in amsterdam.

Nuhn’s resignatio­n comes just weeks after Just Eat said it will look to sell its US business Grubhub, which it bought less than two years ago for £5.8bn, in an apparent bow to Cat Rock’s demands. Cat Rock had called the takeover a ‘mistake’ and urged Just Eat to refocus on Europe.

Just Eat has also been criticised over an annual skiing trip. around 5,400 employees attended the four-day trip jaunt in Switzerlan­d while investors were publicly attacking the company’s strategy.

Despite the expected backlash, Just Eat said last night chief executive Jitse Groen was re-elected alongside Wissink. Vice-chairman Corinne Vigreux, who will take over as interim chairman while a replacemen­t for Nuhn is found, was also re-elected.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom