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  • Home Depot CEO Menear named chairman

    Atlanta – The Home Depot Inc. has named CEO and president Craig Menear as chairman, effective Feb. 2. He will succeed Frank Blake, who will retire as chairman.
     

  • AutoNation names CEO Jackson as president; names new COO

    Fort Lauderdale, Fla. – AutoNation Inc. has named Mike Jackson, chairman and CEO, to the additional role of president, effective Feb. 4, and signed a five-year employment contract extension through 2019. Jackson has been the CEO of AutoNation since 1999 and the chairman since 2002.  

  • Consumer sentiment in January hits 11-year high

    New York -- Consumers are feeling bullish, buoyed by low gas prices and an improving job market. The University of Michigan preliminary consumer sentiment index for January rose to an 11-year high of 98.2, from a final reading of 93.6 for December.

  • Target Bullseye: Q&A With Brian Cornell on Target’s Exit From Canada

    Brian Cornell, CEO and chairman of Target Corp., used the company’s A Bullseye View blog to discuss Target’s decision to shutter its operations in Canada.

    Does this decision mean that Target is declaring bankruptcy?

  • Target gets Canada government OK to wind down its Canadian operations

    New York -- Target Corp. has received official approval from the Canadian goverment to shutter its troubled operations in Canada. The retailer said it has obtained an Initial Order from the Ontario Superior Court of Justice for creditor protection under the Companies' Creditors Arrangement Act.

    The order allows Target Canada to proceed with a court-supervised wind-down of its business and authorizes the company to provide a debtor-in-possession credit facility of $175 million to finance its operations during the proceedings.

  • Staples chief executive won’t take pay increase; board changes

    New York -- Staples chairman and CEO Ron Sargent will not accept a $31,000 base pay raise the board of directors had previously approved as the chain comes off a not-so-great year.

    The company announced that Sargent would not accept the 2.5% pay increase, along with several noteworthy governance moves, including the appointment of an independent chair when Sargent retires.

    In other board moves, current director and former Toys “R” Us CEO Robert Nakasone is relinquishing his seat to make room for a Google executive.

  • Staples CEO passes on pay increase as board evolves

    Staples didn’t have a great year, so Chairman and CEO Ron Sargent won’t accept a $31,000 base pay raise the board of directors had previously approved.

    The company announced that Sargent would not accept the 2.5% pay increase, along with several noteworthy governance moves, including the appointment of an independent chair when Sargent retires.

    In other board moves, current director and former Toys “R” Us CEO Robert Nakasone is relinquishing his seat to make room for a Google executive.

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