Coke CEO Kent hands reins to Quincey in widely expected move

NEW YORK--Coca-Cola Co said on Friday that Muhtar Kent would step aside as chief executive next year and be replaced by James Quincey, a company veteran credited with several recent changes to help the company cut its dependence on sugary drinks.


  Quincey's ascension was widely expected since he became chief operating officer in August 2015 after jobs that included running Coke's businesses in Europe and Mexico over two decades. Kent, 64, will have completed nine years at the helm when he steps down in May, but he will continue as chairman of the board, a post he has held since 2009, Coke said.
  Coke's shares were up 2.6 percent to $42.04 in afternoon trading, making the stock biggest percentage gainer on the Dow Jones industrial average.
  Quincey, 51, is credited with several changes at Coke including introducing smaller bottles to boost profit and reducing the sugar and calorie content in drinks - initiatives he would continue to focus on, the CEO-designate said on Friday. "The future in terms of the beverage industry in some parts of the world - yes, there'll be less added sugar, and yes, we think we need to push ahead with the smaller packages and reformulations and innovations," Quincey said.
  He said Coke would also concentrate on its sparkling beverage business, push into other drink categories and continue to innovate. Coke still gets about 70 percent of its volume sales from sodas and its sales have fallen in the last three years on sagging demand for sugary drinks, which health experts and governments have blamed for rising obesity levels.
  Since Kent took over as CEO in July 2008, Coke's sales have increased by about 39 percent, while the company's shares have surged 61 percent.
  Quincey, who joined Coke in 1996, is also credited with streamlining Coke's bottling operations by merging its three main bottlers in Europe to form Coca-Cola European Partners Plc, now Coke's largest independent bottler by net revenue. His latest promotion was given a vote of confidence by Warren Buffett, CEO of Berkshire Hathaway Inc, Coke's largest shareholder.
  "I know James and like him, and believe the company has made a smart investment in its future with his selection," Buffett said in the statement issued by Coke.
  The CEO announcement comes a day after Coke said Buffett's son Howard Buffett would retire from its board next year. Some analysts saw the move as potentially paving the way for Buffett's firm Berkshire Hathaway to sell down its nearly $17 billion stake.

The Daily Herald

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