The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

Peloton co-founder steps down after rough ride

- By Michelle Chapman and Anne D’innocenzio Associated Press Staff Writer John Seewer in Toledo, Ohio, contribute­d to this report.

The co-founder of Peloton is stepping down as chief executive after an extended streak of tumult at the interactiv­e exercise bike and treadmill company.

John Foley first pitched the idea for Peloton in 2011, hoping to disrupt the industry. He will give up the CEO position and become executive chair at Peloton Interactiv­e Inc. The company is also cutting almost 3,000 jobs.

Barry McCarthy, who served as CFO at Spotify as well as at Netflix, will take over as CEO, the company said Tuesday.

Shares surged more than 30% in mid-day trading on Tuesday on the moves, despite Peloton reducing its annual outlook for sales and subscripti­ons and reporting a big loss for its fiscal second quarter.

Peloton has been on a wild ride for the past two years during the pandemic. Company shares surged more than 400% in 2020 amid COVID-19 lockdowns that included gyms. Nearly all of those gains were wiped out last year as the distributi­on of vaccines sent many people out of there homes and back into gyms.

Peloton’s initial success also created competitio­n, with companies peeling away customers by selling cheaper bicycles and exercise equipment. Highend gyms also jumped into the game, offering virtual classes that once were Peloton’s biggest draws. All the while, Peloton misjudged the slowing demand and kept churning out its products.

“The problem for Peloton isn’t that it has a bad product. Nor is it that there is no demand for what it sells,” said Neil Saunders, managing director of GlobalData Retail in a note published Tuesday. “The central problem is one of hubris and bad judgment. Peloton incorrectl­y assumed that the demand created by the pandemic would continue to curve upward.”

In a conference call with analysts on Tuesday, Foley acknowledg­ed that the company expanded its operations too quickly and overinvest­ed in certain areas of the business.

“We own it. I own it, and we are holding ourselves accountabl­e,” said Foley, noting he will be working closely with the new CEO. “That starts today.”

Peloton has had to address previous missteps. In May, it halted production of its Tread+ treadmills, after recalling about 125,000 of them less than a month after denying they were dangerous. One was linked to the death of a child, while others were linked to 29 injuries. Last August, the company cut the price of its main stationary bike — the product that was the cornerston­e of its original popularity — by $400 because of slower revenue growth.

Peloton also found itself entangled in a marketing debacle last month. Its stationary bike was used in the first episode of “Sex and the City” spinoff “And Just Like That,” but not in a flattering way. One of the characters, Mr. Big, dropped dead after a ride on a Peloton. The company reportedly knew about the product placement but not the plot line, leaving it scrambling to respond to the negative attention.

And last week, there were reports that Amazon or Nike might buy the company. Those that pushed for the sale of Peloton continued to do so this week, with activist investor Blackwells

Capital asking again for the company to be sold despite the change in leadership, pointing to “the mismanagem­ent of the company by John Foley, the poor governance and board compositio­n and the rationale for immediatel­y commencing a sale process.”

But a sale is not assured. “I think the moves, as a whole, do not signify that Peloton is throwing in the towel. I believe this means they are going to slim down, refocus, and stay independen­t,” said Raj Shah, North America lead for tech, media, and telecom at digital consulting firm Publicis Sapient.

Others maintain the change-up means a sale is more likely to occur: “We believe Foley leaving makes it more likely that Peloton

ultimately sells the company and the board clearly has major decisions to make in the days/weeks/months ahead,” wrote Wedbush analysts Daniel Ives and John Katsingris.

Also on Tuesday, Peloton announced that it was cutting 2,800 jobs, including approximat­ely 20% of corporate jobs at the New York City company. The instructor­s who lead interactiv­e classes for Peloton will not be included in cuts, nor will the content that the company relies on to lure users.

Peloton said its winding down the developmen­t of its Peloton Output Park in Ohio. It will also reduce its owned and operated warehousin­g and delivery locations and will instead ramp up its third-party relationsh­ips.

Peloton is looking to reduce its planned capital expenditur­es for this year by about $150 million. The restructur­ing program is expected to result in approximat­ely $130 million in cash charges related to severance and other exit and restructur­ing activities and $80 million in non-cash charges. The majority of the charges will be recorded in fiscal 2022.

The company also slashed its full-year sales outlook and now expects a range of $3.7 billion to $3.8 billion. That’s down from a prior range of $4.4 billion to $4.8 billion, which it announced last November. It originally had expected $5.4 billion.

Peloton anticipate­s it will finish the year with roughly 3 million connected fitness

subscriber­s, compared with previous estimates of 3.35 million to 3.45 million.

Peloton reported a net loss of $439.4 million, or $1.39 per share for its fiscal second quarter, which ended Dec. 31,2021, compared with net income of $63.6 million, or 18 cents a share, a year earlier. Total revenue increased more than 6% to $1.13 billion. Analysts had expected $1.24 per share on sales of $1.14 billion, according to FactSet.

The company anticipate­s at least $800 million in annual cost savings once its actions are fully implemente­d.

 ?? (AP PHOTO/MARK LENNIHAN, FILE) ?? Peloton CEO John Foley celebrates at the Nasdaq MarketSite before the opening bell and his company’s IPO, Sept. 26, 2019in New York. Activist investor Blackwells Capital is asking Peloton to remove CEO John Foley and consider selling the company just a few days after a media report said the exercise and treadmill company was temporaril­y halting production of its connected fitness products amid waning consumer demand.
(AP PHOTO/MARK LENNIHAN, FILE) Peloton CEO John Foley celebrates at the Nasdaq MarketSite before the opening bell and his company’s IPO, Sept. 26, 2019in New York. Activist investor Blackwells Capital is asking Peloton to remove CEO John Foley and consider selling the company just a few days after a media report said the exercise and treadmill company was temporaril­y halting production of its connected fitness products amid waning consumer demand.

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