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Pace of delivery at play in Unilever CEO Hein Schumacher’s short innings

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Unilever’s revelation of the sudden departure of Hein Schumacher – before he could celebrate a second summer as CEO – seemed shrouded in mystery.

But the devil might just be in the detail – in the case of Unilever, the choice of words used by chairman Ian Meakins to announce the exit of Schumacher just eighteen months after he joined the CPG giant from dairy group FrieslandCampina.

And the expectations on incoming chief Fernando Fernandez – promoted to CFO in January 2024 from president of the company's beauty and wellbeing division – might well weigh heavily, with the terminology expressed by Meakins indicative of the pressures on executives to deliver results in such a fraught operating environment.

That environment was evident in the comments coming out of CAGNY presentations last week around consumers still struggling with food affordability, while manufacturers are still having to raise prices to offset inflation-linked costs and, at the same time, protect volumes and margins.

“Speed” and “urgency” would appear to be the not-so-obvious details in Meakins comments but you would have to look closely.

The “board is committed to accelerating its execution”, the Unilever chairman said in a statement, referring to the Growth Action Plan (GAP) Schumacher put in place in October 2023, a speedy move just three months after taking the CEO baton.

And, perhaps more revealing, Meakins added: “The board has been impressed with Fernando’s decisive and results-oriented approach and his ability to drive change at speed…

“Having worked with Fernando closely over the last 14 months, the board is very confident in his ability to lead a high-performing management team, realise the benefits of the GAP with urgency, and deliver the shareholder value that the company’s potential demands.”

Demand being another operative word there.

Muted share reaction

One might have expected the shock announcement would have sent Unilever’s shares into a dive. But, while they started and traded the day yesterday (25 February) in the red, the decline was limited to around one and a half percent.

Read into that what you will.

“Whilst unexpected, we agree with the board that Fernandez is best placed to accelerate the value unlock. We would buy into weakness,” Barclays analysts, led by Warren Ackerman, wrote in a research note.

“Usually, when you get unexpected CEO change, the market worries about a problem or trading. This isn't the case here – rather, the board have made a decisive decision to empower, in our view, the best candidate for the next leg of the story.”