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News / Business

Whole Foods shakes up board as key sales figure falls again

By Associated Press
Published: May 10, 2017, 4:58pm

NEW YORK — Whole Foods announced a board shake-up and cost-cutting plan as it fights to appease investors and hold onto shoppers who have more choices about where to buy organic foods.

The company, which has seen sales at established stores fall for seven straight quarters, is under pressure from activist investor Jana Partners. The group disclosed its stake in the chain last month and pushed for a reorganization of the senior management, among other changes.

Gabby Sulzberger, Whole Foods’ newly appointed board chair, said Wednesday the company had offered to name two of Jana’s nominees to its board in exchange for an agreement that would let the company focus on its improvement plan. She said Jana declined.

Jana said in a statement that it decided to “keep all options on the table” and will see if the new board “can show a real commitment to fixing the operations at Whole Foods and pursuing all avenues to shareholder value creation.”

The five new independent board members include Panera CEO Ron Shaich and Sharon McCollam, who was most recently chief financial officer of Best Buy. The company also named a new chief financial officer, and said it plans to cut $300 million in costs by its fiscal 2020. That will be in part through more effective labor scheduling, it said.

Whole Foods Market Inc., founded in 1978, disrupted the supermarket industry but is now being unsettled by the trends it helped popularize. The company says people are turning to “good enough alternatives” to its organic and natural foods. Overall competition is also intensifying, with more places where people can buy groceries.

“It’s become this hypercompetitive space, in which someone’s going to end up losing,” said Diana Sheehan, director of retail insights at consulting firm Kantar Retail.

The pressure on Whole Foods doesn’t look to let up. European grocery chain Lidl is planning to enter the U.S. market with 100 stores starting this summer along the East Coast. Aldi has 1,600 U.S. locations and plans to expand to 2,000 stores by the end of next year. The chain focuses on private label products that sell for low prices.

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