Bed Bath Poaches Target for CEO -- WSJ
October 10 2019 - 3:02AM
Dow Jones News
By Sarah Nassauer
This article is being republished as part of our daily
reproduction of WSJ.com articles that also appeared in the U.S.
print edition of The Wall Street Journal (October 10, 2019).
Target Corp.'s chief merchant, Mark Tritton, has resigned ahead
of the key holiday season to take the top job at Bed Bath &
Beyond Inc., a rival chain that has been struggling to adapt to the
shifting retail landscape.
Mr. Tritton, who joined Target in 2016 from Nordstrom Inc.,
helped launch a collection of house brands for his new employer,
including a new line of lingerie and inexpensive toiletries. The
moves, along with Target's recent investments in its stores and
ecommerce, helped reverse a sales slump.
At Bed Bath & Beyond, he will take over a 1,000-store chain
that competes with Target and has been contending with falling
sales and board upheaval. The housewares chain, under pressure from
activist investors, has been looking for new permanent leader since
earlier this year. Mr. Tritton will join as chief executive and a
board member on Nov. 4.
Target said two existing executives will take over Mr. Tritton's
duties on an interim basis and report directly to CEO Brian
Cornell. The company said it isn't conducting an external search
for a new merchandising chief.
Target also said it promoted Michael Fiddelke to be its chief
financial officer starting Nov. 1, succeeding Cathy Smith, who had
previously announced plans to retire. Mr. Fiddelke, a 15-year
Target veteran, was most recently senior vice president of
operations.
Shares of Bed Bath & Beyond, which have tumbled by half
since April, jumped 17% in late trading Wednesday to $11.65. Shares
of Target, which have gained more than 60% this year, were little
changed.
Mr. Tritton takes over at Bed Bath & Beyond from board
member Mary Winston, who held the CEO job on an interim basis after
longtime chief Steven Temares exited in May. Three activist
investors disclosed a stake in the company earlier this year and
called for changes, saying Bed Bath & Beyond failed to adapt
its business model to the rise of ecommerce.
Bed Bath & Beyond has been conducting a strategic review of
its portfolio, which totals roughly 1,500 stores including the Buy
Buy Baby and Christmas Tree Shops chains. In the latest quarter,
the company posted a net loss of $139 million on $2.7 billion of
revenue.
Write to Sarah Nassauer at sarah.nassauer@wsj.com
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
October 10, 2019 02:47 ET (06:47 GMT)
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