CEO Performance

CEO Performance Articles

The IEA predicts when oil demand will pick up again, the Federal Reserve is expected to bump up interest rates and Boeing continues cost-cutting at its defense business.
General Electric has named John Flannery, president and CEO of GE Healthcare, as chief executive, effective August 1, ending the nearly 16-year tenure of Jeff Immelt.
International Business Machines Corp. (NYSE: IBM) shares haven’t recovered from the beating they took earlier this year. Despite the company’s effort spending tens of millions to promote Watson,...
Outgoing Ford CEO Mark Fields made a total of $59 million between 2014 and 2016, the majority of that in stock awards.
Mark Fields will be fired as Ford chief executive officer and replaced by Jim Hackett, who runs the Ford autonomous car division.
IBM CEO Ginni Rometty's turnaround has never happened. The board needs to get a new chief executive before more of Wall Street abandons the company.
IBM has failed almost every test a turnaround can fail. CEO Ginni Rometty has been in her job too long. IBM's board must know that.
Amazon's founder, Jeff Bezos, and Berkshire's founder, Warren Buffett, have become two of the wealthiest people in the world, almost entirely thanks to the success of the two companies they run.
Uber CEO Travis Kalanick found himself in hot water after a video surfaced of him arguing with an Uber driver. The question is whether it is enough for him to get the boot.
CEO Brian Cornell has been turning around Target since mid-2014. The turnaround is in tatters, particularly based on Target's most recent earnings report.
What is the more important quality in a CEO, brains or looks? When it comes to pay, looking like a CEO pays off better than performing well.
Concern about IBM CEO Ginni Rometty's role as an advisor to President Trump has caused deep concern among some of her employees and may may spread to shareholders and customers.
The Disney board apparently believes its long-time chief executive officer, Bob Iger, cannot be replaced. It is among the most dangerous designations a company's board can give a CEO.
As same-store sales disintegrate and it becomes clear the holiday season was unkind to many retailers, several retail company chief executives cannot be ousted, no matter what their results.
Based on a new disclosure of same-store sales over the holiday, Barnes & Noble is in a decline that makes it look more and more like other failed retailers.