M&S veteran Rowe to succeed Bolland as chief executive

Marks & Spencer Chief Executive Marc Bolland poses for photographers at the opening of a Marks & Spencer store in Mumbai November 11, 2013. REUTERS/Danish Siddiqui·Reuters

By James Davey and Kate Holton

LONDON (Reuters) - Marc Bolland will step down as the boss of Marks & Spencer (MKS.L) in April, bringing an end to six difficult years at the British retailer following yet another weak Christmas.

Bolland will be replaced as chief executive by Steve Rowe, 48, who has run divisions covering both food and clothing in his 25 years at the company, the best known name in British shopping.

M&S Chairman Robert Swannell told reporters Bolland had not been under any pressure to leave from either the board or shareholders and one investor told Reuters they had not expected the departure so swiftly.

"(The news was) quite a surprise, although it is not uncommon for CEOs to move on after that kind of tenure," said Richard Marwood, senior investment manager at AXA Investment Managers, one of the company’s top 40 shareholders.

"Having somebody already in the business succeeding him is probably no bad thing. I don't think we are looking for a change of direction. Investors are still waiting for the Bolland plan of a more cash generative, well invested and internet enabled business to be fully delivered," he added.

Analysts said Bolland had modernized M&S and put it on to a stronger footing -- with international and online sales improving and the food business taking market share -- giving Rowe a stronger platform than Bolland when he took over in 2010.

M&S shares traded 0.8 percent higher at 442.3 pence at 0825 GMT.

Bolland, 56, spent billions of pounds on the redesign of products, stores, supply chain logistics and the website to address decades of underinvestment at its clothing business.

He had gained investor backing by focusing on growing gross margins -- the difference between the price M&S pays for goods and the price it sells them, which had helped it to maintain a strong dividend and begin a share buyback program.

But weak trading over Christmas shows the group is still struggling to properly compete with British rivals such as Next (NXT.L) and John Lewis and fashion chains including Zara.

In the third quarter which includes the Christmas trading period, like-for-like sales at the general merchandise division which covers clothes, shoes and homewares fell 5.8 percent. The company nudged up its margin guidance for the division however.

It said it enjoyed its best ever Christmas in the food division.

"Unseasonal weather impacted sales across the clothing sector and resulted in unprecedented levels of promotional activity in the market, starting from Black Friday and intensifying through December," it said.

M&S said it held off from heavy discounting, hitting its sales but protecting the gross margin.

The firm put the deterioration down to unusually warm weather which deterred people from buying warm clothing, and availability. The mild weather was also blamed by Next for its poor Christmas.

(Additional reporting by Sinead Cruise; Editing by Guy Faulconbridge and Keith Weir)

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