Campari turns to industry veteran after bumpy 2024
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After a somewhat rocky few months, Campari, in its search for a new CEO, has selected someone it hopes can be a steady hand on the tiller.

On Wednesday (4 December), the Aperol owner named Simon Hunt as its new chief executive.

Hunt, who is set to take the helm next month, will join Campari at a time when the group, one of the better performers in the global spirits industry in the last couple of years, has seen sales slow and announced the exit of its previous CEO after just five months in the job in September.

He arrives with bags of experience in the spirits industry. A former Diageo, Allied Domecq and Pernod Ricard executive, Hunt also spent just over a decade at William Grant & Sons’, including four-and-a-half years as the UK spirits group’s chief executive up to late 2020.

While in charge at William Grant, the Glenfiddich owner enjoyed solid top- and bottom-line growth. In 2016, William Grant’s turnover stood at £1.06bn ($1.35bn) and net profit of £222.1m; by 2019, those figures had reached £1.42bn and just under £314m.

While the company’s numbers unsurprisingly took a Covid hit in 2020 as much of the on-trade closed down, its turnover and net profit bounced back in 2021 and have continued to grow.

Announcing Hunt’s appointment, Campari described its incoming CEO as “a proven business leader” and pointed to his “strong track record in driving step-change performance and global brand building”.

Hunt’s experience will be crucial as Campari tries to breathe fresh life into its sales growth, which has come under pressure in recent quarters. In the three months to the end of September, the Grand Marnier owner’s organic sales, for so long one of the strongest among publicly listed players, fell into negative territory.

When Campari reported its third-quarter and nine-month numbers in October, the company said its performance had been hit by “a combination of concomitant factors”, taking in its businesses in the Americas, Europe and Asia-Pacific. For all Campari’s growth in recent years, 2024 has proven tougher and the news of Hunt’s appointment gave a boost to the company’s share price, which climbed more than 5% on Wednesday (it's down more than 30% year to date).

Cedric Lecasble, an analyst covering Campari for investment bank Stifel, says investors welcomed the speed of the appointment and Hunt’s background. “The stock reaction was positive, probably because of the speed and, more importantly, because of the characteristics of the guy,” he says. “His international experience and experience of the US market and working in a family-owned company, I think he ticked all the boxes.”