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Rolls-Royce has announced its chief executive Warren East will stand down at the end of this year, shocking investors who wiped £1.5bn off the market value of the aero-engine maker.
The 60-year old, appointed CEO in 2015 to turnaround a business beleaguered by years of scandals and a string of profit warnings, said that “this is the right moment to look to the future”.
The surprise news rattled investors, as Rolls-Royce’s board announced the start of a hunt for a successor, with shares in the company plummeting as much as 18% giving it a market value of $8.1bn.
The announcement overshadowed the company’s full-year results which showed that the engine-maker has weathered the worst of the pandemic and returned to profit last year.
A £124m profit for 2021 compared with a loss of £3bn in 2020, when income, derived from the hours its engines are flown by airline customers, plummeted as the travel industry was grounded at the height of the pandemic.
Rolls-Royce remained cautious on its outlook for this year saying it expected to generate “modestly positive” free cash flow this year.
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The company said it has achieved its restructuring target of £1.3bn savings, made in part by axing 9,000 jobs, a fifth of its global workforce.
“We have achieved the benefits of our restructuring programme a year ahead of schedule, positioning civil aerospace to capitalise on increasing international travel,” said East.
“It is a privilege to lead Rolls-Royce – it’s a job which I thoroughly enjoy. There have been challenges, but we have built on the cultural and organisational improvements we have made to work through them, deliver on our commitments and create a better business.”