Companies and Brands

America's 5 Worst-Run Companies of 2020

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The successes and failures of America’s largest public companies have been marked in many cases by the effects of the COVID-19 pandemic as much as anything else this year. At one end of this spectrum, the chance of a banner year for cruise ship company Carnival ended in March. Zoom Video Communications, on the other hand, went from a small provider of video conferencing to one of the largest stock market successes in decades, as people moved from their offices to their homes. However, in some situations, management decisions were as important, if not more so, than the pandemic or the economy, to determine how companies performed in 2020.

24/7 Wall St. looked at large public companies to find those that did particularly poorly against broad measurements. This included the quality of their products and services as measured by third parties, their market share, their financial performance compared to competitors in the first three-quarters of the calendar year, their employee relationships and their stock market performances against peers for the first 11 months of 2020. Finally, we looked at the wisdom of major strategic decisions.

These five companies did unusually badly, based on the tools their companies had to work with. The list did not take include companies with new chief executive officers unless those CEOs had been in senior management immediately before being promoted. Coincidentally, some of these companies had executive board chairs who were previously CEOs but remained in senior management.

AT&T
> John Stankey, CEO

Stankey took over AT&T Inc. (NYSE: T) when former CEO Randall Stephenson left on July 1, 2020, under pressure from investors because of AT&T’s extremely poor financial performance. Many view Stankey as more of the same. He was instrumental in two huge merger and acquisition decisions. The first was the buyout of DirecTV, which was never fully integrated into AT&T’s broader customer bases and is shedding subscribers. The buyout of Time Warner was probably a worse decision.

Stankey has struggled to figure out the best ways to monetize brands like HBO and CNN. The company’s new run at streaming, HBO Max, is late to a crowded market dominated by Netflix and Amazon. At least Stankey has 5G to drive wireless revenue. AT&T’s stock is off 24% this year. Shares of rival Verizon are flat.

Intel
> Robert (Bob) Holmes Swan, CEO

Swan took up the reins at Intel Corp. (NASDAQ: INTC) at the start of 2019. Since then, the largest chip company repeatedly has been overwhelmed by the competition. Its shares are off 13% this year. The stock of major rival AMD is higher by 106%. Nvidia, another competitor, has seen a 130% gain.

Intel is one of 2020’s few big tech failures. Not only is Intel losing market share and critical customers like Apple, but it has problems with slow product development and lagging production. Swan still has a dominant market share in many of Intel’s key sectors, but in many cases, that is slipping away. One analyst recently wrote that there is “no easy fix” for Intel’s problems.



Ford
> James (Jim) D. Farley Jr., CEO

Ford Motor Co.’s (NYSE: F) Farley has only been in his job for a few months, but he has been part of Ford’s problems for years. He was chief operating offer before replacing beleaguered CEO Jim Hackett, who barely lasted three years. Farley has been at Ford since 2007 and has run strategy, technology and new business. Ford’s stock is flat this year, while shares in rival General Motors are up 21%.

Farley participated at a senior level as Ford failed to move rapidly into electric and autonomous cars, as global rivals like Volkswagen and Tesla make swift advances. Despite some improvement, Ford continues to lag in China, the world’s largest car market. Ford’s biggest product launch this year was a new version of the niche Bronco, which will only be a rounding error on Ford’s financials. Farley’s biggest challenge is William Clay Ford Jr., who churns through CEOs rapidly and has control of Ford through family trusts.

IBM
> Arvind Krishna, CEO

Krishna took over from Ginni Rometty, who badly crippled International Business Machines Corp. (NYSE: IBM) in her eight years as CEO. She remains as executive chair of the board.

IBM’s persistent year-after-year series of quarters in which revenue dropped appears to have no end. Its move into cloud computing, which it continues to say is the most critical factor in growth, continues to leave it well behind leaders Amazon, Google and Microsoft. IBM has not been able to make the case it has any chance to make progress against any of them. Almost all the company’s other lines of business are shrinking rapidly.

IBM shares are down 5% this year, while Amazon’s are 71% higher and Microsoft’s are up by 36%. Krishna has been given the job to wipe IBM’s screen clear of Rometty’s mistakes and then to turn things around. It won’t happen.

Macy’s
> Jeff Gennette, board chair and CEO

Macy’s Inc. (NYSE: M) said revenue dropped to $4.0 billion from $5.2 billion last year when it released results for the third quarter. The company continues to retreat as its national store footprint gets smaller. Same-store sales fell just over 20% in the most recent period. Digital sales “penetrated” at 38% of comparable store sales, which means physical store sales must have been dismal. While that number seems strong, it is not nearly enough to cover Macy’s retreat.

Macy’s needs to win online, given the level of competition it faces in both e-commerce and brick-and-mortar retail. It has done neither. Its shares are off 31% this year.

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