Home Depot: One year later: CEO Blake has calmed waters after six rocky Nardelli years
posted by admin in Home DepotHeading a home improvement chain during the worst housing slump in decades is no picnic. Ask Frank Blake, who’s just marked his first year as chief executive of Home Depot. The company’s earnings and share price have suffered, but Blake has had some success in steadying the company after Bob Nardelli’s rocky six-year ride at the helm. For starters, Blake gets paid a lot less. He has sought to restore the company’s focus on retail store operations and service, and he’s smoothed local relations. Some themes of the new regime’s first year:
BACK TO BASICS
Blake’s biggest strategic move: reversing Home Depot’s dramatic expansion into wholesale supply via an HD Supply division catering to builders and municipalities. The unit generated close to 15 percent of revenue, but critics said it had lower margins and clashed with the core retail business. Weeks after Blake’s appointment, Home Depot abruptly put the unit on the block, eventually selling it for $8.5 billion. Blake also moved to shutter stand-alone landscape and flooring stores and put the focus on improving the company’s staple big boxes.
A NEW TONE
Whereas Nardelli made lots of headlines - many for his $30 million pay package and stony public demeanor - Blake came across as a quiet, “regular guy” type of leader. He told employees he wanted to foster an inverted pyramid corporate culture, with customers and workers on top and “me as CEO at the bottom.” His base salary is $975,000, less than half of Nardelli’s. Possible bonuses and add-ons are capped at about $8 million and depend on performance.
STRONGER TIES
Nardelli’s reign frayed local ties and even spawned rumors of a possible headquarters move to Florida. Blake squelched that idea, saying Atlanta will be the home base “forever, I hope.” He had his first shareholder meeting at Cobb Galleria, with the board of directors present and questions allowed. That was in stark contrast to Nardelli’s final meeting, held in Delaware with most of the board AWOL. The company said local charitable giving for 2008-11 will be up 50 percent from the prior four years.
HOUSING WOES
Anything with “home” in its name had a tough 2007, and Home Depot was no exception. The company hoped for an upturn in the second half, but the housing slump and mortgage crunch got worse. Home Depot’s third-quarter profit of $1.09 billion was off 27 percent from a year earlier, while same-store sales slumped 6.2 percent.
POOR RETURNS
One of the raps on Nardelli was poor stock performance. So far, the vicissitudes of Wall Street have been even less kind to Blake. Home Depot stock was about $40 a share when he was named CEO. It bounced around that price for the first half of the year, but since July shares have steadily tumbled, closing Tuesday at $24.74. Ouch.
ELIZABETH LANDT / Staff HOW THE STOCK HAS TUMBLED Chart shows stock price from Jan. '07 to present. Jan. 4 close: $40.57 Tuesday's close: $24.74, down 80 cents Source: StockgroupTags: anc, business, company, customers, decade, Home Depot, Home Improvement, housing slump, Inverted Pyramid, lt, Operation, stock, Stores














