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NewslettersThe Trust Factor

Shareholders are forcing Bayer’s CEO out. What do they expect from his replacement?

By
Eamon Barrett
Eamon Barrett
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By
Eamon Barrett
Eamon Barrett
Down Arrow Button Icon
March 10, 2023, 11:05 AM ET
Shareholders lost faith in Bayer CEO Werner Baumann after he led a disastrous $63 billion takeover of Monsanto.
Shareholders lost faith in Bayer CEO Werner Baumann after he led a disastrous $63 billion takeover of Monsanto.Hollie Adams—Bloomberg/Getty Images

When a new CEO takes charge at a company, it’s often because shareholders think the incumbent captain has allowed things to run off course, presenting the new leader with the immediate challenge of regaining investor confidence and getting operations back on track.

That’s the situation unfolding at German pharmaceutical giant Bayer where mutineering shareholders have pressured the board to replace longtime CEO Werner Baumann a year before his planned departure.

“It was very obvious that there was a lot of vocal discontent from the larger shareholders about the direction of Bayer, and a strong message was given to chairman that their largest shareholders wanted to see an external rather than internal hire for CEO,” says Peter Verdult, managing director and pharmaceuticals analyst at Citi. 

Shareholders have been displeased with Bayer since 2016 when then-new CEO Baumann initiated the $63 billion merger with U.S. agricultural giant Monsanto.

The princely acquisition blindsided shareholders who had been assured by Baumann previously that Bayer’s M&A strategy would be measured and “evolutionary”—a strategy that didn’t align with charging into the pesticides and seeds business.

“The problem for Baumann was that Monsanto was seen as his deal. He was the architect. It was his vision. So he got all the heat,” Verdult says. 

Besides the cash price of the acquisition, the merger has also embroiled Bayer in a number of costly lawsuits over Monsanto’s Roundup product. Last month, Bayer said it expected to pay $2 billion to $3 billion in settlements over the weed killer this year, as part of the total $16 billion the company has earmarked for expenditure on related litigation since the deal closed.

In 2019, activist investors tried rallying fellow shareholders to launch a vote of no confidence against Baumann but failed. Baumann was granted a stay of execution in 2020 when his contract as CEO was extended for another four years.

Meanwhile, shareholders have voiced their upset with the Monsanto deal by “voting with their feet,” stripping 40% off of Bayer’s market cap since the deal closed in June 2018. Last year, shareholders overwhelmingly voted against the executive’s compensation package, too. Yet, in the same proxy season, 82% of shareholders approved of Bayer’s management actions that year. 

Recently, however, shareholder patience ran out. 

“When it comes to CEO succession we say: the sooner the better,” Markus Manns, a portfolio manager at Union Investment, one of Bayer’s 10 biggest shareholders, told Reuters in January. 

Shareholders are pushing Baumann to the exit now because the Monsanto drama is at last wrapping up. Bayer has won six consecutive lawsuits related to Roundup in the past year. Manns told Bloomberg that “once the problem is almost solved, it’s time for a new CEO.”

On Feb. 8, Bayer succumbed to shareholder pressure and announced that Baumann will be replaced by former Roche Pharmaceuticals CEO, Bill Anderson, in June this year, 11 months ahead of schedule. 

“We welcome the timely change at the top of Bayer and hope that the fresh perspective of an external candidate will provide new momentum for the strategy of the company,” Ingo Speich, head of sustainability and corporate governance at Deka, a top-20 investor in Bayer, told Reuters.

Taking the helm at a wayward ship and winning back shareholder confidence is no easy task, but it might actually be a good thing for Baumann’s replacement that shareholders are piling the Monsanto drama along with Baumann and jettisoning both overboard together.

Anderson, at least, gets a clean slate and also has the advantage of being an external hire, which is precisely what shareholders wanted.

The hope among shareholders is that Anderson will be less attached to the status quo than an internal hire would be and will implement much-needed structural reforms at the lumbering giant, potentially separating out the conglomerate’s legacy pharma units and its new agri-business.

It’s much too early to say what Anderson’s first moves will be, but the inbound CEO will have to carefully manage the expectations of an already exasperated shareholder class, providing the company’s financiers relief without simply succumbing to investor pressure.

“The Bayer stock is in a crisis of trust which the executive board is responsible for,” Speich told Reuters. “Bayer has to take investor demands more seriously going forward.”

Eamon Barrett
eamon.barrett@fortune.com

Update, March 19: this article has been updated to show that Bayer’s predicted Roundup litigation spending this year is covered by $16 billion it previously earmarked.

IN OTHER NEWS

Trust in ESG
If you read Fortune’s Impact Report, the other newsletter I’m writing this month, you’ll know I think the distrust around ESG metrics has been inflated beyond a reasonable degree. In an op-ed for Fortune, the head of investments at Ford Foundation, Roy Swan, agrees and argues that the insurance industry could act as an “apolitical arbiter” for how cooler heads can engage with the practice of ESG tracking. 

Decentralized pyramids
Crypto touts often cite the decentralized nature of blockchain technology as a plus for consumers, providing users with protection thorough autonomy. But, according to the Fed’s vice chair of supervision, Michael S. Barr, it’s often the purveyors of crypto products that benefit from the lack of regulatory oversight. Barr said consumers are prone to cases of fraud he described, in a speech at the Peterson Institute for International Economics, as “Ponzi schemes under a high-tech veneer.” 

Never mind the hype
Does your manager really want you back in the office? According to a survey by international think tank The Conference Board most CEOs in the U.S. are happy with the state of hybrid work. Only 3% of the roughly 250 CEOs surveyed in the U.S. plan to decrease the availability of remote work. Of the 1,100 executives surveyed globally, 5% said they would increase hybrid work policies. 

Justice for fraud
White collar crimes seem to rarely go punished but, this week, a U.S. court convicted Roger Ng, a former Goldman banker, to 10 years in prison for his role in the 1MDB scandal—where bankers and politicians conspired with a fraudster to embezzle billions from Malaysia’s sovereign wealth fund. The U.S. previously fined Goldman Sachs itself $2.9 billion for its role in the swindle, detailed in the book Billion Dollar Whale, and Ng says he is being set up as the fall guy for other coconspirators in the case.

TRUST EXERCISE

“I think the most important issue right now, and a lesson to be learned, certainly from my experience with Watson—is the world going to trust the technology?” former IBM CEO Ginni Rometty told the Harvard Business Review this week, before providing some tips for how to instill that trust. Rometty’s checklist includes “watching the upside and downside, putting in guard rails so that people understand when to use it and when not based on how mature it is, and being explainable and transparent.”

Learn how to navigate and strengthen trust in your business with The Trust Factor, a weekly newsletter examining what leaders need to succeed. Sign up here.

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