Skip to content
Search
AI Powered
Latest Stories

Unilever replaces CEO Schumacher in shock move

Who is Fernando Fernandez, Unilever’s new CEO?

Unilever CEO Hein Schumacher Replaced by CFO Fernando Fernandez

Photo: iStock

In an unexpected turn of events, Unilever stunned investors today (25) by replacing chief executive Hein Schumacher with finance chief Fernando Fernandez, who will take on the tough task of reviving the consumer group's performance.

Unilever, which gave no specific reason for the change, is facing pressure from investors to revitalise its fortunes and the top management upheaval comes just weeks after Unilever announced underwhelming full-year earnings.


Unilever, which owns Hellmann's mayonnaise, Dove soap and Ben & Jerry's ice cream, said there was no change to its 2025 outlook or medium-term forecast and that the board was committed to "further accelerating" Schumacher's growth plan.

Schumacher, who joined in July 2023, will step down as CEO in March and leave the company on May 31. He is leaving by mutual agreement, the company said.

"We have made real progress and I am proud of what we have achieved in a short period of time," Schumacher said in a statement.

Srinivas Phatak, currently Unilever's deputy chief financial officer and group controller, will become acting CFO, while the company looks for a permanent replacement.

Schumacher's appointment and strategic changes had been welcomed by billionaire activist investor Nelson Peltz, who built a stake in the company in 2022.

Peltz, who is also on Unilever's board, did not immediately respond to requests for comment sent to representatives at his Trian fund.

"We are gobsmacked at the news that Unilever's very highly regarded CEO Hein Schumacher is to step down after a very successful 18 months in charge," RBC Capital analyst James Edwardes Jones said in a note.

When Schumacher became CEO, analysts and investors had applauded Unilever's decision to choose an external candidate as CEO.

"We conclude that it has to be something to do with his style of managing the company. We felt that the job needed an outsider, but maybe this was not the view of a meaningful proportion of Unilever's employees," Jones said.

Schumacher reset the group's strategy to address years of underperformance and laid out cost cuts last year, including separating its ice cream division and cutting thousands of jobs.

But Chairman Ian Meakins said the Board was impressed by Fernandez's "decisive and results-oriented approach", and had given him the task of executing the growth strategy.

"While the Board is pleased with Unilever's performance in 2024, there is much further to go to deliver best-in-class results," Meakins said in a statement.

Fernandez, 58, has been with Unilever since 1988. Before he became CFO last year, he held a number of roles such as President Latin America and CEO Brazil.

"Difficult to see this any other way as a negative, as growth was slowing recently, and the market will worry that more disappointing news may come," said Tineke Frikkee, a portfolio manager at Waverton Investment Management, a Unilever investor.

Frikkee said investors may know Fernandez from when he worked in Unilever's personal care division.

Harsharan Mann in the Global Equities team at Aviva Investors, a Unilever shareholder, said: "We were surprised by the announcement but have a positive view of the CFO and are encouraged by the appointment. He is a 30-year veteran of the business who ran the Beauty and Wellbeing division very well."

More for you

How the Donation Will Help the Peterborough Community

Nisa Local Supports Bharat Hindu Samaj Mandir with £611 Donation

Peterborough Nisa Local's donation to help local Hindu temple in community outreach programs

Nisa Local on Mountsteven Avenue, operated by retailer Billy Maher, has donated £611.26 to the Bharat Hindu Samaj Mandir in Peterborough through Nisa’s Making a Difference Locally (MADL) initiative.

The donation will help fund the temple’s vital community outreach efforts, which provide essential services to those in need, primarily by supporting the temple's extensive community outreach programs.

Keep ReadingShow less
Retail Trust Patron HRH The Princess Royal

HRH The Princess Royal

Retail Trust

HRH The Princess Royal to support retail worker through patronage at leading charity

Succeeding her mother, the late Queen Elizabeth II, Her Royal Highness The Princess Royal has assumed patronage of the Retail Trust, a charity dedicated to the welfare of retail workers established way back in 1832.

Retail Trust is a known name in among retailers and retail workers. It is known for improving the lives through wellbeing services, vocational and career development programmes, and supported living estates.

Keep ReadingShow less
Police officers stand in sight of the Elizabeth Tower

Crime and Policing Bill 2025 aims to reduce retail theft and protect shop workers in the UK

Photo by JUSTIN TALLIS/AFP via Getty Images

Assaulting shop worker to become separate offence under Crime and Policing Bill

After years of relentless campaigning by retail sector, Crime and Policing Bill is laid in Parliament today (25), paving way for the legislation to create a standalone offence for attacking and abusing a shopworker and the scrapping of "effective immunity" for shop theft offences under the value of £200.

The Crime and Policing Bill is at the heart of what the government calls its "Safer Streets mission". Ministers want it to become law by the end of the year.

Keep ReadingShow less
BRC Consumer Sentiment Monitor showing record low UK confidence in 2025

iStock image UK independent retailer facing challenges amid 2025 consumer confidence crisis

iStock image

Bira warns of challenges ahead as consumer confidence drops

The record low consumer confidence, as revealed in the latest industry data, will create significant challenges for independent retailers in the coming months, leading retailers' body has warned.

The latest BRC Consumer Sentiment Monitor for February 2025 shows a concerning decline in consumer outlook, with pessimism in the economy continuing to increase and rising to a record high.

Keep ReadingShow less
Kellanova Pioneers Hydrogen in UK Food Manufacturing

Government-Funded HyNet Industrial Fuel Switching Programme

Kellogg’s factory powers breakfast with pioneering hydrogen-fuelled manufacturing demo

A first-of-its-kind, Government-funded hydrogen demonstration has been completed at a Kellogg’s factory in the UK, making it the first food manufacturer in the country to produce cereal using this method.

The three-week demonstration, part of the HyNet Industrial Fuel Switching programme, replaced fossil fuel gas with hydrogen to power the toasting oven at the factory. The hydrogen fuelled process successfully produced Corn Flakes, Bran Flakes, Special K and Rice Krispies.

This comes after Kellanova UK was selected to receive £3 million funding by the Department for Energy Security and Net Zero in 2023.

The HyNet Industrial Fuel Switching Two programme is funded through the UK Government’s £55m Industrial Fuel Switching Competition, as part of the £1bn Net Zero Innovation Portfolio (NZIP).

The demonstration showcased the role that hydrogen can play to support industry decarbonisation, and forms an important part of the manufacturer’s commitment to reducing greenhouse gas emissions, as part of its Better Days promise.

As of the end of 2024, Kellanova has achieved a reduction of 54 per cent in Europe for its scope one and two greenhouse gas emissions, putting it well on track towards its commitment of a 63 per cent reduction in scope one and two emissions across its European operations by the end of 2030.

As well as showcasing the potential of hydrogen in food manufacturing, the demonstration also provided key learning and upskilling opportunities to employees.

“The production of our cereal using hydrogen is an exciting first for us," said Sam Bistiaux, Vice President of Manufacturing at Kellogg manufacturer Kellanova. "It’s a significant moment for our people, our operations, and the industry as a whole as it demonstrates the potential of investing in low carbon fuels to drive decarbonisation. We are excited to be at the pioneering edge of this process, with the technology still in its infancy, and the long-term potential truly transformative.

“As we look to continue reducing our carbon footprint, we hope that sharing examples of best practice and learnings from the demonstration can equip other businesses with the confidence and know-how to do the same, so that we can take urgent and collective action towards a greener future.”

David Parkin, Chair of the HyNet Alliance, added: “It’s been fantastic to see the results of this demonstration, as part of HyNet’s Industrial Fuel Switching 2 programme, and to see the positive impact investment in hydrogen could have for industry, society, and the planet. ”