By Mateusz Rabiega
GDANSK (Reuters) -European discount retailer Pepco Group on Tuesday said that CEO Trevor Masters will resign from the role with immediate effect, without providing a reason for the decision.
Andy Bond, chair of the board of directors, will assume the role of executive chair and will lead the overall management of the company until a new CEO is appointed, the company said.
The firm also trimmed its full-year earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization (EBITDA) guidance, which is expected to be slightly lower than previously anticipated, but still in-line with analysts' consensus.
Erste Group's analyst Krzysztof Kawa estimated that the profit warning implies high single digit growth of EBITDA versus the previous "mid-teens" increase.
The retailer reported that the change in guidance was prompted by weaker-than-expected sales performance, but the company reaffirmed that it will meet the full-year target for opening 550 new stores.
Masters, a former Tesco (LON:TSCO) executive, joined Pepco in 2019 and first took over as interim CEO last March, a role he had worked in for a month, before he was promoted to a permanent position.
Shares in the Warsaw-listed group, which owns the Pepco, Poundland and Dealz brands, fell over 4% in morning trading Tuesday, at the bottom of Poland's blue chip index WIG20.
J.P. Morgan analysts saw the immediate departure of the CEO as an indication of a challenging 6-12 months ahead for the company.
"Management change with immediate effect may signal turbulence for the business in the near-term, but we do not see this as a negative development in the long run, expecting new leadership to adopt a more cost-conscious and returns-focused approach", the analysts commented.
At 0819 GMT the shares were down 4.2%, pushing the year-to-date losses to more than 25%.