Two Peloton co-founders leave amid massive restructuring

Reuters

Published Sep 12, 2022 04:40PM ET

Updated Sep 13, 2022 06:41AM ET

(Reuters) -Peloton Interactive Inc co-founders John Foley and Hisao Kushi are stepping down from their executive roles, at a time the troubled exercise bike maker is undergoing massive changes to trim losses and win back investor confidence.

"It is time for me to start a new professional chapter," said Foley, who was replaced earlier this year as chief executive under pressure from an activist investor as the company struggled to maintain the breakneck growth that propelled its valuation to $52 billion in early 2021.

Karen Boone, elected to the company's board in 2019, will replace Foley as the executive chair. Chief Legal Officer Kushi, who crafted the novel music license deals, will be succeeded by former Uber Technologies (NYSE:UBER) Inc executive Tammy Albarrán.

Peloton (NASDAQ:PTON) shares were up 0.5% in after hours trading. They had fallen about 69.1% this year through Friday's close.

Foley, who founded Peloton in 2012 with four others, was replaced as CEO by Barry McCarthy, a former Spotify Technology SA (NYSE:SPOT) and Netflix Inc (NASDAQ:NFLX) executive, after activist investor Blackwells Capital had called for his removal.

"Say what you want about John Foley. He's the reason that I'm here today. And he's the reason Peloton is here," McCarthy said at a Goldman Sachs (NYSE:GS) conference on Monday.