Nestle has fired its CEO Laurent Freixe after just one year in the job after an investigation into an undisclosed “romantic relationship,” ousting its second CEO in a year and throwing the Swiss food giant into its deepest leadership chaos in decades.
Freixe is replaced by Nespresso chief Philipp Navratil, a rising star at the world’s largest food company as it battles slowing sales, the impact of U.S. tariffs and eroding investor confidence after years of underperformance.
The Frenchman’s predecessor Mark Schneider failed to cope with the challenge, costing him his job in August 2024.
Freixe’s sudden dismissal follows an investigation into an undisclosed romantic relationship with a direct subordinate which breached Nestle’s code of business conduct, Nestle said late on Monday.
“The loss of two CEOs and a chairman in a year is of historic proportions for Nestle,” said Ingo Speich, head of corporate governance and sustainability at Deka, a top-30 Nestle investor.
“The new CEO needs to fix the business model and bring volumes back. He needs to do better M&A and focus more on emerging markets.”
Shares in the maker of Nescafe and KitKat chocolate bars were down 0.8% in Zurich by 1118 GMT.
‘SPEAK UP’
The company said concerns about a possible relationship were raised by staff via the company’s internal reporting channel ‘Speak Up’, although an initial investigation was unsubstantiated. Freixe had initially denied the relationship to the board, a company spokesperson said.
When staff concerns persisted, Nestle said it ordered an investigation overseen by Chairman Paul Bulcke and Lead Independent Director Pablo Isla with the support of independent outside counsel. Swiss media reported that Swiss lawyers Baer & Karrer helped with the inquiry.
Freixe, who spent 39 years with Nestle, will receive no exit package following his departure, the company told Reuters.
In a short statement, Bulcke, who has previously announced he would step down in 2026, thanked Freixe for his years of service at Nestle, but said the dismissal was a “necessary decision.”
Freixe was not immediately available to comment when contacted via email. The identity of the female subordinate has not been made public.
His dismissal adds to a list of top executives forced to resign following investigations into their relationships with colleagues.
Energy giant BP’s former CEO Bernard Looney and McDonald’s CEO Steve Easterbrook were both removed for failing to disclose relationships with colleagues.
STABILITY SOUGHT
Nestle’s shares, a bedrock of the Swiss stock exchange, have lost almost a third of their value over the past five years, underperforming European peers.
Freixe’s appointment failed to halt the slide, with the company’s shares shedding 17% during his leadership, disappointing investors.
One top 20 Nestle investor welcomed news of the change, saying that Freixe had been a disappointment and that bringing in Navratil was an opportunity for more ambitious overhaul.