CEO Performance

CEO Performance Articles

A total of 109 CEOs left their jobs in April according to the latest data from Challenger, Gray & Christmas. For the first four months of 2018, CEO departures have reached a four-year high.
Can CEO James Hackett keep the sales of Ford's flagship, the F-150 full-sized pickup, going strong? His job may depend on it.
24/7 Wall St. named Wells Fargo's Tim Sloan as one of the worst CEOs in America late last year. The case for the selection persists and has gotten more powerful.
Wells Fargo fined $1 billion, Home Depot to hire a large number of tech workers, AT&T to start an inexpensive streaming service, and other important headlines.
How a kinder, gentler Microsoft has succeeded where the former 800-pound gorilla couldn't.
Elon Musk's credibility is weak enough that his predictions are no longer accepted by the broader market.
The longer the board of United Continental keeps CEO Oscar Munoz, the more questionable its judgment on behalf of shareholders and employees becomes.
Age discrimination took place on her watch, another large blow to the reputation of CEO Ginny Rometty.
Though Wells Fargo continues to implode, CEO Timothy Sloan made more than $17 million last year. How does the board justify that number?
Who is CEO and who isn't? It is hard to make a case that the new 3M management structure is good for shareholders.
Snap CEO Evan Spiegel has filed documents with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission regarding the sale of about $25 million in company stock.
One question that seems to go unanswered is how all of the negative news is making the great Warren Buffett feel toward keeping his investment in Wells Fargo.
When CEOs are dismissed for conduct reasons, investors often do not look back at why they became CEOs in the first place.
Waymo calls Uber "a cheater," the CEO of Lululemon Athletica leaves suddenly, the value of bitcoin continues to crash, and other important headlines.
Walmart has changed its corporate name, Sony has a new CEO, CBS and Viacom are considering a merger, and more important headlines.