SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - Hewlett-Packard is set to name Meg Whitman, the former eBay CEO and California candidate for governor, as its new CEO, forcing aside Leo Apotheker after just 11 months on the job.
HP’s board was meeting Thursday and an announcement could come as soon as the close of trading, a source familiar with the matter told The Associated Press.
Whitman is getting the nod because there are few available people with the ability to run complex technology businesses, said the person, who was not authorized to speak on behalf of HP, and therefore spoke on condition of anonymity. Apotheker is being removed because the board lost confidence in his ability to lead the company long-term, not because of any particular strategy decision, this person added.
The Wall Street Journal and the AllThingsD websites, citing anonymous sources, had earlier reported the change.
Whitman’s appointment would be an embarrassing end to Leo Apotheker’s 11-month stint as HP’s CEO. It would be the second time in two years Apotheker has been forced out of a top technology job. He resigned from German business software maker SAP AG last year, after less than a year as CEO.
Whitman’s appointment would represent yet another turnaround strategy at one of Silicon Valley’s oldest, but most publicly dysfunctional, firms. Since joining HP in November, Apotheker’s strategic decisions have been drastic, and have done little to inspire confidence. HP’s stock is down nearly 50 percent since he took the helm.
Hewlett-Packard’s stock fell $1.01, or 4.2 percent, to $22.97 in early afternoon trading on Thursday, as some investors questioned whether Whitman had the right skills for the job.
The stock rose 6.7 percent on Wednesday, its biggest percentage gain of the year, after reports that the board was considering firing Apotheker. It was a rare bright spot for HP. The stock has fallen 45.4 percent this year, making it the second-worst performer in the Dow Jones industrial average behind Bank of America Corp, which is down 54.4 percent.
HP is facing a classic big-company problem: How to meaningfully grow revenue. But it’s also facing an identity crisis. The company’s trying to figure out whether it works best as a technology conglomerate that can be all things to all customers, or as a more streamlined operation that does only a few things well.
Apotheker’s potential exit comes as HP is predicting tough times ahead. In August the company lowered its outlook, saying it expects adjusted earnings of as much as $4.86 per share and revenue of as much as $127.6 billion, both of which were below analyst projections. The proposed spinoff of the PC division could make matters worse as customers refrain from ordering until a buyer is found.
Deliberations among the company’s board of directors, which leaked Wednesday in published reports, also signal the disarray within HP about its direction. Shareholders have already voiced their fears. HP’s market value has fallen by $60 billion since former CEO Mark Hurd was forced out in August of last year over an ethical scandal. If Apotheker is ousted, he will be the third CEO jettisoned from HP in the past six years.
It won’t be the first time for Apotheker, who was forced out of his previous job as CEO of business software maker SAP AG over ill-timed price hikes he implemented and widespread employee dissatisfaction. Apotheker was supposed to be a steady hand to steer HP out of controversy. Many analysts mocked the pick as an unusual choice, considering the circumstances.
In some ways, Meg Whitman would be an odd choice to replace Apotheker. While Whitman is more of a celebrity, her record wasn’t perfect at eBay. She resigned from eBay in 2008 amid slowing growth and disappointment over eBay’s $2.6 billion gamble on the Skype Internet phone service. She’s a billionaire who spent more than any candidate for a statewide office in U.S. history in unsuccessful Republican campaign for California governor last year. She spent at least $174 million, all but $30 million of it her own money.
Still, Whitman spent a decade guiding eBay and is a widely respected executive who took a website with 30 employees and $86 million in revenue and turned it into corporation with 15,000 people and nearly $6 billion in revenue. Whitman is among the people brought onto HP’s board in a reshuffling shortly after Apotheker was hired. How she would fare as CEO amid HP’s current restructuring is unclear.
Apotheker has struggled, while complaining that HP suffered years of under-investment by his predecessor, Mark Hurd.
Reaction to his latest decision to try to sell or spin off HP’s personal computer division showed that many investors aren’t sure what to make of his decision-making. The move was widely praised and vilified at the same time. Analysts cheered HP’s efforts to exit parts of the computer hardware business that are barely profitable. But they assailed Apotheker’s approach, which was to waffle about whether HP would actually shed the business or keep it after an auction to gauge buyers’ interest. The equivocation has already done serious harm to the businesses’ value, analysts said.
HP’s board is reconsidering a spinoff or sale of the PC division. According to Bloomberg News, some board members think the plan wasn’t thoroughly thought out.
Brian White, an analyst with Ticonderoga Securities, floated the idea that HP may not have had Apotheker in mind for the long term anyway. In a research note Wednesday, White wrote that he wouldn’t be surprised if Apotheker all along was the “fall guy,” hired to take the hit for the ugly work of restructuring.
White said he wouldn’t be surprised if HP brings in a new CEO, “as we have always thought that Leo was placed in the role on a short-term basis to take the fall for the company’s under investment under the previous CEO,” White wrote. “At the same time, we believe a new CEO could begin to build credibility for HP and join the company after quite a bit of damage has already been done.”
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