Danone will replace nearly all of its board members over two years, including the son of its founder, the French food group said on Thursday, clearing the way for its new CEO.
The company behind Evian water and Activia yoghurt also showed its confidence in the future by announcing plans to buy back 800 million euros ($948 million) worth of its shares in the second half of this year.
The board revamp will see all Danone's old timers progressively go, including Franck Riboud, a former chairman and CEO and son of Danone's founder, Antoine Riboud, who will step down as a board member after 30 years in April 2022.
The company also kept its 2021 profit margin guidance, despite input cost inflation, and its goal of returning to profitable growth in the second half of 2021, after posting a 6.6% rise in second quarter sales.
That beat analysts' expectations for a 5.1% increase as its waters and baby food units returned to growth.
Danone's shares rose 6%.
First-half recurring operating income, however, slipped to €1.55 billion, a like-for-like decline of 4.2%, as higher costs for raw materials from milk to packaging weighed.
That highlighted some of the challenges facing new CEO Antoine de Saint-Affrique, the former boss of chocolatier Barry Callebaut who joins in September.
Board Renewal
"We see this (board overhaul) as further evidence of Chairman Gilles Schnepp's determination to improve governance and expect the review to be taken positively by shareholders," Jefferies analysts said.
Former Danone boss Emmanuel Faber was abruptly ousted as chairman and CEO in March following clashes with some board members over strategy and calls from activist funds for him to resign over the group's lacklustre returns compared with some rivals.
The main challenge for Antoine de Saint-Affrique, who was named in May, will be to boost lagging profit margins and sales.
Group operating margin slipped to 13.1% of sales in the first half from 14% in the same period of 2020.
Danone nevertheless reiterated it expected its full year recurring operating margin to be broadly in line with the 14% achieved last year, banking on productivity gains and price increases to mitigate higher input costs.
Danone also expects to benefit from lower COVID-related costs in the second half, finance chief Juergen Esser said.
Food groups are grappling with surging commodity costs that are hitting margins, though Danone's key rival Nestle, raised its full-year organic sales growth guidance on Thursday.
News by Reuters edited by Donna Ahern, Checkout. For more A Brands stories click here. Click subscribe to sign up for the Checkout print edition.