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Morrisons' Finance Boss In Pole Position For Top Job After Promotion

By Steve Wynne-Jones
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Morrisons' Finance Boss In Pole Position For Top Job After Promotion

British supermarket group Morrisons has promoted finance chief Trevor Strain to the role of chief operating officer, putting him in pole position to eventually take over from chief executive David Potts.

The promotion is Strain's second in 13 months. Having joined Morrisons, Britain's No. 4 grocer, in 2009, he was appointed chief financial officer in 2013 and assumed the additional responsibilities of group commercial director in October 2018.

Business Turnaround

Potts, CEO since 2015, and Strain have delivered a major turnaround in Morrisons' fortunes after it was badly damaged in its northern England heartlands by the rise of German-owned discounters Aldi and Lidl and the mistakes of previous management.

Morrisons trails market leader Tesco, Sainsbury's and Asda.

In his new role as COO, Strain will continue to report into Potts. Strain's responsibilities will include commercial, manufacturing, supply chain, logistics, operations development, online and wholesale.

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New Finance Chief

Strain will be succeeded as finance chief by Michael Gleeson, currently Morrisons' trading director responsible for ambient grocery, frozen, dairy, fuel and services.

"These two appointments are a result of strong management development plans at Morrisons and I am delighted that we are promoting two highly capable colleagues from within the team. I look forward to continuing to work closely with both of them," commented Potts.

"Trevor is a proven and outstanding business leader who has played a pivotal role in the ongoing Morrisons turnaround. Michael has extensive financial, commercial and retail experience, together with a first-class track record, and his appointment will further strengthen the executive team. Together, and as part of the wider Morrisons team, we will continue to build a broader, stronger Morrisons."

Shares in Morrisons closed Tuesday at 195.6 pence, valuing the business at £4.7 billion (€5.53 billion).

News by Reuters, edited by ESM. Click subscribe to sign up to ESM: European Supermarket Magazine.

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