NO LOVE A SUPERVALU FARM FRESH MARKETS & PHARMACIES

Am I Next? Supervalu & Farm Fresh restructuring, mass layoffs

Another mass layoff of 1,000 employees as Minnesota-based Supervalu, Inc. continues to restructure its retail operations to transform its business into an even larger nationwide wholesale supplier of grocery to other retailers.

In this phase, Supervalu will abandon the 60-year old Farm Fresh brand and its stores and pharmacies serving Virginia and North Carolina. Some of the stores will be sold to other retailers who may accommodate some of the displaced workers. 

Of course, Supervalu President and CEO Mark Gross offered up the obligatory corporate-speak, “This decision was not taken lightly given the impact on our employees and the communities we serve, but we strongly believe this decision is in the best long-term financial and strategic interest of our business. Our leadership team and board of directors remain committed to taking proactive steps to transform our business and drive stockholder value.”

In 2016, Supervalu sold Save-A-Lot and its network of approximately 1,350 retail locations. In 2017 Supervalu acquired Unified Grocers and Associated Grocers of Florida.

The employees are not the only ones at risk.

Blackwells Capital is seeking to nominate six director candidates to the nine-member Supervalu Board of Directors, effectively taking over control of the company. As you may imagine, the present Board and executives are not pleased and have issued a statement. 

“The Board and management team already have SUPERVALU’s transformation strategy well underway, and do not believe the changes to the Board proposed by Blackwells are necessary to ensure the continued execution of the Company’s initiatives to create stockholder value.

As previously disclosed, members of our Board and management team have had several discussions and meetings with representatives of Blackwells over the last several months to discuss overlapping objectives and attempt to reach a constructive path forward. Nonetheless, Blackwells has chosen to respond with a public campaign and an attempt to take effective control of the Company.

However, and as previously announced, we are committed to Board refreshment and will consider Blackwells’ candidates as we would any other potential directors to assess their ability to add value to the Board and the Company for the benefit of all stockholders.”

This appears to be another prime example where the employees are at risk from company boards and executives struggling to keep their position in the face of activist investors who only care about the financial returns and are divorced from any other considerations such as impacts on individuals and communities. 

Are you asking yourself, Am I Next?

NO LOVE AT HESS

Am I Next? Hess Corporation 300 Layoffs

Once again we find a major company, the Hess Corporation, a global energy company, embarking on a cost-cutting restructuring program that will result in at least 300, some say 700 or more, employee layoffs. According to Hess spokesperson Lorrie Hecker, “the company is also aiming to make reductions in its contractor base. We moved aggressively in 2017 to focus and up-grade our company’s portfolio. The combination of this cost reduction program and our upgraded-graded portfolio is expected to drive down cash unit production costs by approximately 30 percent" by 2020.” 

Funny, not one mention of the activists sparring with Hess in the boardroom -- like Elliot Management Corporation, which is demanding that billionaire, second-generation CEO John Hess step aside, sell certain assets to fund stock buy-backs to ramp up the price. No mention of whether or not Elliot Management Corporation will dump the stock to feather the nests of their own investors.

Are you asking yourself, Am I Next?

 

PROCTER & GAMBLE: MASS LAYOFF DANGER AHEAD?

The fox may be in the hen-house.

Am I Next? Proctor & Gamble: Mass Layoffs Ahead?

It appears that whenever an activist investor, yesterday’s Wall Street Gunslingers, purchases a significant stake in a company or assumes a seat on the board, restructuring and mass layoffs are sure to follow. According to the Wall Street Journal, Nelson Peltz may have won his proxy battle for a seat on the giant consumer goods company Procter & Gamble by the thinnest of vote count margins. Reportedly 43,000 votes out of 2 BILLION votes — a 0.002% margin. Allegedly the proxy battle cost Peltz’s Trian Partners and P&G approximately $100 MILLION – quite a few employees to make up the loss.

A previous story on P&G was not encouraging

The hedge fund boss seeking a seat on Procter & Gamble's board of directors has pushed companies to remove more than 100,000 jobs through layoffs or business unit sales, a review by The Cincinnati Enquirer shows. Peltz has decried P&G's "suffocating bureaucracy" and advocates a "flat organization" but has side-stepped any specifics on potential job cuts. He says he wants to thin P&G's corporate jobs from 10,000 to 1,000 but move an unspecified amount back into business units such as oral care or baby care.  Since 2012, P&G has already shed 34,000 jobs through buyouts and business unit sales, a 26% reduction in headcount. <10/4/2017 USA Today>

The handwriting is on the wall, it is up to the P&G employees to react accordingly.

Change is coming. There will always be a tomorrow, no matter how much you may try to ignore it. There are no guarantees in life or promises for a bright future. We see good people being laid off through no fault of their own. Just because something bad hasn't happened yet, doesn't mean it won't. It can happen to anyone, anytime, anywhere. No one is guaranteed to wake up tomorrow and still have a job by evening. Are you now wondering, Am I Next?