J.C. Penney CEO Quits to Join Lowe's -- Update
May 22 2018 - 10:23AM
Dow Jones News
By Imani Moise and Suzanne Kapner
Marvin Ellison is quitting his job as chief executive of
struggling J.C. Penney Co. to take over leadership of Lowe's Cos.,
another retailer in need of a revamp.
The retail veteran joined Penney in 2014 and shifted the
department-store chain away from apparel toward appliances. Last
year, he closed hundreds of stores and slashed jobs. But the
company's sales continue to lag behind rivals.
Lowe's, meanwhile, has been searching for a new CEO that can
improve results at the home-improvement chain, which faces pressure
from an activist investor and has trailed behind sales gains at
Home Depot Inc.
"This is the most challenging and competitive retail market that
we've seen in over 50 years," Mr. Ellison told analysts last week
on a conference call. Before Penney, he previously worked at Home
Depot and Target Corp.
On Tuesday, Lowe's said it had hired Mr. Ellison and he would
join the company on July 2. Penney shares slid 3.6%, while Lowe's
edged up 0.4%.
Penney said Tuesday it was launching a search for a new CEO. It
created an office of the chairman consisting of the chief financial
officer, the chief information officer and other executives who
will manage the day-to-day responsibilities until a successor is
found.
Mr. Ellison joined Penney when it was in crisis after former CEO
Ron Johnson's failed experiment to revamp the 116-year-old chain.
While Mr. Ellison stabilized sales, the company remains challenged,
which could make it more difficult for it to find a new CEO. It is
carrying a hefty debt load and it is unprofitable. It lost $78
million in the most recent quarter, compared with $187 million a
year ago.
"The turnaround program that Ellison put in place at JCP has
partly delivered but is still far from complete," said Neil
Saunders, managing director of GlobalData Retail, a consulting
firm. The "exit will also raise speculation that he is not
particularly optimistic about the future prospects of JCP."
Penney's same-store sales for the three months to May 5 rose a
scant 0.2%, below the company's own expectations and less than
rivals such as Macy's Inc. and Kohl's Corp., which both reported
strong results for the period.
Write to Imani Moise at imani.moise@wsj.com and Suzanne Kapner
at Suzanne.Kapner@wsj.com
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
May 22, 2018 10:08 ET (14:08 GMT)
Copyright (c) 2018 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.
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