Showing posts with label CEO. Show all posts
Showing posts with label CEO. Show all posts

Tuesday, December 1, 2015

Seagate Chairman and CEO Steve Luczo The Best Performing CEO in The world (2014)




Harvard Business Review on has ranked Seagate Chairman and CEO Steve Luczo as one of the best-performing CEOs in the world.
According to a media release, Luczo was ranked No. 34 overall on the magazine's global list of top 100 CEOs.
"I'm honored to be recognized by such a respected publication and alongside a collection of outstanding leaders," said Steve Luczo, Seagate Chairman and CEO. "Seagate's performance and reputation are a result of the collective effort and unwavering commitment of our employees around the world."

Friday, July 4, 2014

CIMB shares down after Nazir Razak resigns as CEO

KUALA LUMPUR: Shares of CIMB Group Holdings Bhd fell at mid-morning on Friday as Datuk Seri Nazir Razak relinquished his position as group chief executive officer.
At 10.56am, CIMB fell 11 sen to RM7.19 with some 3.57 million shares done between the prices of RM7.17 and RM7.29.
The FBM KLCI was up 0.14 of a point to 1,888.83. Turnover was 644.89 million shares valued at RM447.79mil. There were 362 gainers, 264 decliners and 303 counters unchanged.
CIMB said Nazir will take over as the bank’s chairman effective Sept 1 in a leadership transition plan announced by the bank on Thursday.
At the age of 48, Nazir will be one of the youngest chairmen of a leading financial institution in the region.
CIMB Bank said in a statement that a new group CEO would be announced once regulatory approvals had been obtained.
Nazir said that after having served as group chief executive for 15 years, he felt that it was time for someone with fresh thinking and energy to lead the management team of the bank.

Saturday, March 31, 2012

World's Best CEOs by By ANDREW BARY

As Warren Buffett sees it, the best CEOs always think like business owners. What he means is that great leaders combine passion, commitment, creativity, and an entrepreneurial drive. That mix isn't easy to find, but Buffett definitely is onto something. So, as Barron's drew up its annual list of the 30 best CEOs around the world, we looked hard for ownership mentalities.

Buffett certainly has one. Berkshire Hathaway is his baby, with Buffett having created $200 billion in market value from a floundering business purchased in 1965. Buffett is working because he loves the job, and so are other wealthy founder/CEOs likeAmazon.com's Jeff Bezos, Starbucks' Howard Schultz and FedEx's Fred Smith – men who could easily have followed the lead of Microsoft's former CEO Bill Gates and gone into philanthropy full time.

Our list includes a mix of familiar names, like JPMorgan Chase's Jamie Dimon andOracle's Larry Ellison, as well as some deserving but lesser-known leaders likePriceline.com's Jeffrey Boyd, Perrigo's Joseph Papa, and Hyflux's Olivia Lum, who heads a high-growth Singapore company with a strong position in water-treatment technology. There's more turnover on this year's list than usual, with 12 new CEOs joining our pantheon. Besides Papa, Boyd, and Lum, the newcomers include Coach's Lew Frankfort, Salesforce.com's Marc Benioff, TD Bank's Ed Clark, and Intel's Paul Otellini. Some of the departing CEOs left as a result of retirement, including Cummins'Tim Solso and IBM's Sam Palmisano. And Apple's Steve Jobs died in October. We removed Netflix's Reed Hastings because his company is having a hard time turning rapid expansion into significant profits. While Wynn Resorts' Steve Wynn has been a huge winner for investors over the past few decades, we dropped him after he had an acrimonious business dispute with a Japanese partner.

It was a tough call to remove several other former members of our club, like Gordon Nixon of Canada's Royal Bank and Daimler's Dieter Zetsche. We felt Ed Clark of TD Bank, Royal Bank's rival, was more deserving after Royal Bank sold its flagging U.S. banking operations last year; a customer-focused TD continues to produce some of the highest returns in the industry from banks both north and south of the border. Instead of Zetsche, we opted for BMW's chief, Norbert Reithofer. BMW remained profitable throughout the downturn, and it maintained its No. 1 position in the luxury-car market while generating some of the industry's best margins.

Our list is global. Eighteen CEOs come from the U.S., seven from Europe, three from Asia, and one each from Australia and Canada. To see Profiles of all 30 leaders click here.

Our selection process isn't based on any formula. It reflects the views of theBarron's staff, drawing on insight from investors, analysts, and executives. Of course, as an investment-oriented magazine, we do look closely at stock-price performance. The best CEOs deliver for all "stakeholders" -- customers, employees and investors. There's no better example of that than Schultz, who provides health insurance and retirement accounts even to part-timers in an industry not known for good treatment of workers. With Starbucks shares up 50% in the past year, shareholders aren't complaining.

We require a CEO to have been on the job for at least three years -- and we prefer five years -- because it takes time to have an impact on a large organization. We generally want companies to have market values of at least $5 billion.

It takes a global perspective to run any big company, and the most successful CEOs tend to be those that have a winning international strategy.

Yum! Brands, which is the parent of KFC and is headed by David Novak, might as well be based in Asia rather than Kentucky -- it gets almost half its profit and much of its growth from China. Rival McDonald's hasn't done as well as Yum! in China, but it produces more than 50% of its earnings outside the U.S. Even Starbucks, a fixture of the American landscape, gets nearly a quarter of its revenue overseas. Priceline quietly has become the leader in the online travel business -- and developed a market value of $35 billion -- by becoming the top site for European hotel reservations.

Notable innovators include Marc Benioff, the brash founder of Salesforce.com, which pioneered the delivery of software over the Internet and created a $20 billion company from the cloud. Joseph Papa has turned Perrigo into the leading supplier of generic over-the-counter drugs -- and generated one of the best shareholder returns in the Standard & Poor's 500 in the past five years. His obsession with quality control is paying off at a time when makers of branded products like Johnson & Johnson have suffered manufacturing problems.

Lew Frankfort has worked for Coach for three decades, and led the company since it was taken public by Sara Lee in 2000. He has created one of the world's top luxury-goods brands and rewarded investors with a 40-fold gain since the IPO. We were wrong to remove him from our list during the financial crisis in 2009; now he's back where he belongs.

The little-known Tadashi Yanai of Fast Retailing has become Japan's richest man, with an estimated net worth of $10 billion, by upending Japan's staid retailing business with the Uniqlo chain. It offers fashionable but budget-priced clothes -- an Asian version of Gap . Now Uniqlo is trying to win over American consumers in select big cities, including New York, with a big store on Fifth Avenue.

Intel's Otellini has done a lot to make the pioneering chip maker relevant again -- and less reliant on personal computers. It's a closet play on the cloud because it makes the bulk of the processors used by servers that store a soaring amount of data, and it's also getting traction in mobile, long a weak spot. Intel's combination of an ample dividend and stock buybacks is a model for how tech companies ought to return cash to shareholders.

We put Larry Fink of BlackRock in our first list of top CEOs in 2005, when he wasn't well known outside of Wall Street. He has rewarded that selection by becoming an industry leader and a go-to guy for policymakers when they need an honest view of business and finance.

Fink isn't afraid to speak his mind. BlackRock may be one of the globe's largest bond managers, but that didn't stop the firm from running recent newspapers ads highlighting the risk in U.S. Treasuries: "2% isn't a return; it's a retreat."

If you think we put the wrong people on the list or want to make a suggestion for next year, please write to editors@barrons.com. We take advice seriously.

Wednesday, January 4, 2012

Yahoo names PayPal’s Scott Thompson as CEO

Iconic internet company Yahoo has named a new CEO, former PayPal CEO Scott Thompson, the companyannounced today.

Yahoo fired its long-time CEO Carol Bartz in September after board members decided she wasn’t pushing the company forward. Yahoo CFO Tim Morse has been acting as interim CEO since then while the company boosted its efforts to find a replacement.

We’re pasting more from the official release below. Check back shortly for a more through report.

Yahoo! Inc., the premier digital media company, today announced the appointment of Scott Thompson as Chief Executive Officer, effective January 9, 2012 , at which time Tim Morse will resume his role as Chief Financial Officer. Thompson has also been appointed to the Company’s Board of Directors, effective January 9, 2012.

Thompson served most recently as President of PayPal, a division of eBay, where he continued his established track record of growing businesses by driving customer engagement built on strong technology platforms. Under his leadership, PayPal solidified its lead as the global online payment service, expanding its user base from 50 million to more than 104 million active users in 190 countries worldwide, increasing the number of merchant partners to more than 8 million globally, and growing revenues from $1.8 billion to $4+ billion in 2011.

“Scott brings to Yahoo ! a proven record of building on a solid foundation of existing assets and resources to reignite innovation and drive growth, precisely the formula we need at Yahoo!,” said Roy Bostock , Chairman of the Yahoo ! Board. “His deep understanding of online businesses combined with his team building and operational capabilities will restore the energy, focus, and momentum necessary to grow the core business and deliver increased value for our shareholders. The search committee and the entire Board concluded that he is the right leader to return the core business to a path of robust growth and industry-leading innovation.”

“Yahoo! is an industry icon and I am very excited about the prospect of working with one of the great teams in the online world to deliver Yahoo!’s next era of success,” Mr. Thompson said. “Yahoo! has a rich history and a solid foundation to build on, and its continued user engagement is one of the many reasons for my enthusiasm. With the ultimate goal of delivering the value our shareholders expect, my immediate focus will be on getting to know the entire team and hearing more from all Yahoo!s, working closely with the engineers and product teams, and diving deeply into our products and services to learn more about what our more than 700 million users find most engaging and useful. I will also be working directly with our region leaders and sales teams globally to get a clearer understanding of the needs of our advertisers and publishers. Clearly, speed is important but we will attack both the opportunity ahead and the competitive challenges with an appropriate balance of urgency and thoughtfulness. I cannot wait to get started.”

“Scott’s primary focus will be on the core business, and as CEO and director, he will work closely with the Board as we continue the strategic review process to identify the best approaches for the Company and its shareholders. As part of this process, Yahoo ! is considering a wide range of opportunities for the Company’s business, as well as specific investments or dispositions of assets,” added Bostock.

“We are all grateful to Tim Morse for leading the company with a steady hand during the last several months. His deep understanding of the Company and his positive approach kept the company on course and we will continue to benefit from his exceptional capabilities as he returns to his Chief Financial Officer role,” Bostock concluded.