Starbucks uncorks the bazooka to end its crisis

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With one stunning press release on a mid-summer morning perfect for a $7 cold brew, Starbucks' (SBUX) board has moved decisively to end its crisis and unlock a new decade of possibilities.

Starbucks stock steadied Wednesday after its biggest one-day surge on record on the heels of the ailing coffee chain's shock appointment of Chipotle (CMG) chairman and CEO Brian Niccol as its CEO, effective Sept. 9. Niccol, 50, will assume the position from Lax Narasimhan, who was on the job for less than 18 months.

He'll take the chairman role from founder Howard Schultz's friend and confidant Mellody Hobson. Hobson will rotate to being an independent director, potentially a first step to her rolling off the board within the next 12-18 months.

This comes as the company fends off recent activist attacks from Elliott Management and Starboard Value.

Elliott wanted corporate governance overhauls, as I previously reported. It got that for the most part in today's moves.

"Elliott has been engaged with Starbucks' board over the past two months regarding our perspectives on the company's key issues, and we view today's announcement as a transformational step forward for the company," Elliott said in a statement following the news.

As for Starboard Value, a person familiar with the thinking of Jeff Smith — the restaurant turnaround maestro who leads the firm — told Yahoo Finance that Smith believes Niccol is an "awesome" choice. The investment firm is likely pushing for operating margin improvements similar to efforts it suggested for tech beast Salesforce (CRM) late in 2022.

Starboard declined Yahoo Finance's request for comment.

Starbucks stock rose 20% on Tuesday, while Chipotle fell about 10%.

Make no mistake — Starbucks is currently an icon in crisis. Don't believe me? Let's review the facts.

First, the company's financial results and share price have been dreadful.

Its most recent quarter showed a 6% drop in North America transactions as consumers shunned the chain's ever-pricier coffees and long wait times.

International sales tanked 7%, and Chinese comparable sales plunged 14%, spurring execs to say on the earnings call that they're exploring strategic options for the business. Non-GAAP operating profits declined to 16.7% from 17.4%.

The company's prior quarter wasn't too hot, either.

Starbucks shares were down 20% over the past five years before the pop today. The S&P 500 is up 85%. Chipotle is up 201%.

"Fixable, but it will take time," a Starbucks insider with knowledge of the company's many troubles recently told me.