Home improvement chain Lowe's CEO to retire, shares rise 8 percent

Reuters

Published Mar 26, 2018 12:00PM ET

Home improvement chain Lowe's CEO to retire, shares rise 8 percent

By Aishwarya Venugopal

(Reuters) - Lowe's Cos Inc (N:LOW) on Monday said its chief executive officer is retiring, the latest executive departure as the home improvement chain tries to move out of the shadow of larger rival Home Depot Inc (N:HD) that has outperformed it for years.

Shares of Lowe's rose as much as 7.8 percent to $90.33 after Robert Niblock said he would step down once a successor was found.

The No.2 U.S. home improvement store has struggled to control margin pressures and its same-store sales growth has trailed Home Depot's for many years, weighed down by a focus on do-it-yourself customers compared to Home Depot's core customer base of professional contractors who bill more.

Lowe's underperformance has also attracted shareholder activism.

Hedge fund D.E. Shaw Group secured two independent board seats after taking a nearly $1 billion stake and agitating for change.

"If you look at Lowe's relative performance against Home Depot, I think many people, not only D.E. Shaw, were calling for an agent of change," BTIG analyst Alan Rifkin said.

In the past year, Lowe's stock gained 1.7 percent, in contrast to Home Depot's near 17 percent rise.

(For a graphic on Lowe's vs Home Depot financial performance click https://reut.rs/2IV3MGE)

"A transition will be well received by investors, given their pent-up frustration with the company, and could be the first step toward improved operational execution," Telsey Advisory Group analyst Joseph Feldman said.

Niblock's departure follows the retirements of the company's Chief Financial Officer Robert Hull and Chief Operating Officer Rick Damron over the past year.

Lowe's said its board has formed a six-person committee to find a successor, led by D.E. Shaw-backed director David Batchelder.

"After a 25-year career at Lowe's...I am confident that it is the right time to transition the company to its next generation of leadership," Niblock, who is also the chairman and president of the board, said in a statement.

Since Niblock took the top job at Lowe's in January 2005, the company's sales have risen 88 percent to $68.62 billion, while the stock has gained more than threefold.

Lowe's shares were up 5.7 percent at $88.55 in late morning trading.