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Retail

Wal-Mart’s Holley To Retire As CFO, Succeeded By Brett Biggs

By Steve Wynne-Jones
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Wal-Mart’s Holley To Retire As CFO, Succeeded By Brett Biggs

Wal-Mart Stores Inc. Chief Financial Officer Charles Holley will retire at the end of the year and pass the job to Brett Biggs, an executive in the retailer’s international division.

Biggs, 47, joined Wal-Mart in 2000 and currently serves as CFO of the international unit, the Bentonville, Arkansas-based company said in a statement. Holley, 59, will stay on until Jan. 31 to help with the transition, which was one of several management changes that Wal-Mart announced on Friday.

Biggs will be under pressure to manage a tight ship. Wal- Mart’s effort to raise wages and improve training programmes is adding $1 billion in expenses, increasing the importance of cutting costs elsewhere. The retailer eliminated hundreds of jobs at its headquarters last week in a move that Chief Executive Officer Doug McMillon said would make Wal-Mart “a more nimble organisation.”

Wal-Mart also has reorganised the management structure in its stores and added staff hours to make sure more checkouts are open during peak times. And the company has gotten more aggressive about asking vendors to pay fees for using its warehouses and distribution centers.

Biggs has held roles in the company’s Sam’s Club division as well as international strategy and mergers and acquisitions. Holley has served as Wal-Mart’s CFO since December 2010.

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"He made the decision," said Randy Hargrove, a Wal-Mart spokesman. "He felt the timing was right to announce his retirement."

Earnings fell short of analysts’ estimates last quarter, and the company cut its forecast for the year. The weak results have contributed to Wal-Mart’s 22 per cent stock decline this year. Wal-Mart shares fell 0.3 per cent to $66.69 at the close in New York.

Wal-Mart said in a separate statement Friday that Steve Bratspies would become chief merchandising officer for U.S. stores, overseeing all product categories across the company’s more than 4,500 domestic locations. Bratspies most recently was executive vice president of food for the U.S. division and led an overhaul of the retailer’s grocery aisles. The change is effective Oct. 19.

Charles Redfield, currently executive at Sam’s Club, will take on the food role.

News by Bloomberg, edited by ESM. To subscribe to ESM: The European Supermarket Magazine, click here.

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