Trade Asia Homepage
Trade Events Center promotes your trade shows to worldwide
 
 
Show Name, Acronym or Partial Name   Product Keywords
Industry Country Year Month
 
 
Tesco boss Philip Clarke expresses relief over exit
2014/7/21
Tesco's chief executive Philip Clarke has told the BBC that he feels "enormous relief" over leaving the supermarket giant.

The retailer announced he would be leaving in October amid news that it would miss profit forecasts.

Speaking to BBC business editor Kamal Ahmed, Mr Clarke said it was clearly an "emotional" time.

Mr Clarke, who had previously insisted that he was "not going anywhere", will be replaced by Dave Lewis of Unilever.

Tesco said current trading had been "more challenging" than anticipated, adding that sales and trading profit for the first half of the year had been "somewhat below expectations".

Asked about whether it was his choice to leave this week, Mr Clarke told the BBC's business editor, Kamal Ahmed, that: "[The date] is not one of my choosing but it is a choice I would willingly make."

Party cancelled
A party to mark Mr Clarke's 40th year at Tesco was planned for tomorrow night - suggesting the news was unexpected. The party has now been cancelled.

Mr Clarke had worked his way up from the shop floor and became chief executive in 2011, after taking over from Sir Terry Leahy.

He said he had "nothing to regret, only positive thoughts".

Mr Clarke had been trying to revive Tesco's fortunes through a £1bn turnaround plan, but a trading update last month showed a 3.7% fall in like-for-like sales, which he admitted were the worst figures for decades.

At the time, Mr Clarke spoke of his intention to stay with the store and outlined that he was "going to see through a fundamental reshaping of Tesco".

But in the statement announcing his departure, he said: "Having taken the business through the huge challenges of the last few years, I think this is the right moment to hand over responsibility."

Investors welcomed the change of leadership, sending shares in Tesco up more than 2% to 291.40p.

Bryan Roberts, retail analyst at Kantar Retail told the BBC: "Philip Clarke inherited a troubled business that had not seen enough investment in the UK and also featured misguided overseas expansion.

"Although a lot of progress has been made under Clarke, he has failed to reignite performance in a British grocery market that has undergone structural change and a huge shift in shopper behaviour."

'Fresh perspectives'
Mr Clarke will leave Tesco's board on 1 October to be replaced by Dave Lewis, who is currently president of personal care at consumer goods firm Unilever.

It is the first time Tesco has appointed someone from outside the firm to the position of chief executive.

In a statement, Tesco chairman Richard Broadbent said: "Philip Clarke agreed with the board that this is the appropriate moment to hand over to a new leader with fresh perspectives and a new profile.

"Dave Lewis brings a wealth of international consumer experience and expertise in change management, business strategy, brand management and customer development.

"He is already known to many people inside Tesco, having worked with the business over many years in his roles at Unilever."

'Sizeable task'
The latest figures from research firm Kantar Worldpanel found that Tesco's market share had fallen to 29% in the 12 weeks to 25 May, down from 30.5% a year earlier.

In the statement announcing Mr Clarke's departure, Tesco said trading conditions were "more challenging than we anticipated" at the time of its trading update in June.

"The overall market is weaker and, combined with the increasing investments we are making to improve the customer offer and to build long term loyalty, this means that sales and trading profit in the first half of the year are somewhat below expectations."

Tesco has faced intense competition from discount rivals including Aldi and Lidl as well as from more upmarket retailers such as Waitrose.

Keith Bowman, equity analyst at Hargreaves Lansdown Stockbrokers, said: "In all, the task ahead for the new chief executive remains sizeable. The march of the discounters Aldi and Lidl continues, whilst Tesco's prior advantage in the form of its overseas operations is not what it once was.

"The question now will be whether the new chief executive will have the courage to take early aggressive action."


News Source : BBC News

Contacts

Company : BBC News

Country : United Kingdom


 
Trade Event Updates SEE ALL
 
Industrial News SEE ALL
 
Member ID
Password
Register to submit trade events
Sponsor banner ad,
Newsletter e-blasting,
& other advertisements.
Contact for details
Trade Event Reports
The National Hardware Show 2010
TaiSPO 2010
Giftionery Taipei 2010
 
 
 
 
 
Bookmark and Share
 
 
Featured Products


Home - 中文版

About TradeAsia  |   TradeAsia Taiwan  |   TradeAsia China  |   Terms of Service  |   Privacy Policy  |   Advertise  |   Media Exchange  |   Link Exchange  |   Help Center  |   Contact Us
Copyright (c) 2024 TradeAsia. All Rights Reserved.