Starbucks named a new chief financial officer on Tuesday as part of a larger turnaround strategy.
Cathy Smith, who has been Nordstrom’s CFO since 2023, will join Starbucks in the next month, Starbucks Chairman and CEO Brian Niccol said in a letter to employees. Smith previously served as the chief financial officer of Target and Walmart International.
Smith will replace Rachel Ruggeri, who is leaving the company. Niccol said Smith brings extensive experience in retail, global operations and corporate turnarounds.
Ruggeri will stay at Starbucks for a period of time to assist with the transition, he said..
“Over her nearly 20 years at Starbucks, Rachel has held many important roles, always leading with integrity, a focus on results and a strong belief in the importance of our culture,” Niccol wrote.
He said Smith brings extensive experience in retail, global operations and corporate turnarounds.
Niccol is trying to reinvigorate Starbucks' sluggish sales with faster service times, a less complicated menu and others moves he says are intended to restore a community coffeehouse feel to the company's stores.
In January, the company reversed its open-door policy and said only customers who bought something would be allowed to hang out or use the restroom at a local Starbucks.
Niccol, who joined Starbucks last fall, also has been reshaping the company’s executive ranks in an effort to streamline decision-making and make leadership more accountable. In January, the president of Starbucks’ North America division stepped down after her job was split into two; Starbucks now has one executive in charge of existing stores and another in charge of store development.
Late last month, Niccol announced a plan to lay off 1,100 corporate employees globally.
U.S. stocks are rising following updates on the economy that kept alive hopes for a coming cut to interest rates. The S&P 500 rose 0.7%, as 4 out of every 5 stocks within the index climbed. The Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 562 points, and the Nasdaq composite rose 0.4%. Nvidia weighed on the market after a report suggested Meta Platforms may spend billions on AI chips from Alphabet instead of it. Treasury yields eased after reports on U.S. retail sales and inflation kept traders betting on a good chance for a cut to interest rates in December.
The U.S. stock market is rallying after it seemed to successfully pass a couple of crucial tests. Not only did Nvidia provide another blockbuster profit report that suggested AI superstar stocks can keep rising, a mixed report on the U.S. jobs market Tuesday also kept alive hopes for more cuts to interest rates by the Federal Reserve. The S&P 500 rose 1.7% Thursday and pulled closer to its all-time high set almost a month ago. The Dow Jones Industrial Average climbed 581 points, and the Nasdaq composite jumped 2.2%. Walmart also rose after delivering better-than-expected results.
Computer chipmaker Nvidia is poised to release a quarterly earnings report that is expected to either deepen a recent downturn in the stock market or prompt an ebullient sigh of relief among investors increasingly worried the world’s most valuable company is perched upon an artificial intelligence bubble about to burst.
U.S. stocks are drifting in mixed trading. The S&P 500 rose 0.2% Wednesday and remains near its all-time high set a couple weeks ago.
Shares are higher in Europe and Asia, lifted by technology stocks that have rebounded from last week's losses.
Arguments at the Supreme Court have concluded for the day as the justices consider President Donald Trump's sweeping unilateral tariffs in a trillion-dollar test of executive power.
Stocks are gaining ground on Wall Street following several upbeat economic updates and a steady flow of quarterly reports from U.S. companies.
Nvidia and other technology stocks are propping up Wall Street.
For President Donald Trump, tariffs — or the threat of them — can bend nations to his will.
The mighty heft of Amazon is pulling the U.S. stock market higher. The S&P 500 rose 0.6% Friday, erasing some of its slump from the day before and pulling closer to its all-time high set on Tuesday. The index is on track to close a third straight winning week and a sixth straight winning month, which would be its longest monthly winning streak since 2021. The Dow Jones Industrial Average added 65 points, and the Nasdaq composite climbed 1.1%. Amazon led the way after delivering a much bigger profit than analysts expected. Treasury yields eased a bit in the bond market.
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