Senin, 04 November 2019

Krispy Kreme orders student to halt doughnut resale service - AOL

ST. PAUL, Minn. (AP) -- An enterprising Minnesota college student who drove to Iowa every weekend to buy hundreds of Krispy Kreme doughnuts that he then sold to his own customers in the Twin Cities area has been warned by the confectionary giant to stop.

There have been no Krispy Kreme stores in Minnesota for 11 years.

Jayson Gonzalez, 21, of Champlin, Minnesota, would drive 270 miles (430 kilometers) to a Krispy Kreme store in Clive, Iowa, pack his car with up to 100 boxes, each carrying 12 doughnuts, then drive back up north to deliver them to customers in Minneapolis-St. Paul.

He charged $17 to $20 per box. He said some of his customers spent nearly $100 each time. Gonzalez said he did not receive a discount from the store in Iowa where he bought the doughnuts.

But less than a week after the St. Paul Pioneer Press reported on his money-making scheme, Gonzalez received a phone call from Krispy Kreme's Nebraska office telling him to stop. The senior studying accounting at Metropolitan State University in St. Paul said he was told his sales created a liability for the North Carolina-based company.

In a statement Sunday night, Krispy Kreme said it's looking into the matter.

Related: Krispy Kreme

8 PHOTOS

Krispy Kreme

See Gallery

Krispy Kreme doughnuts go into production at the opening of the store at Harrods in London, October, 3, 2003. [The U.S. chain opened its first European outlet in London on Friday.]

Krispy Kreme doughnuts go into production at the opening of the store at Harrods in London, October, 3, 2003. The U.S. chain opened its first European outlet in London on Friday. REUTERS/ David Bebber ASA/JV

Employees tend to the assembly line as doughnuts are baked, fried, and glazed at a Krispy Kreme Doughnuts Inc. store in Farragut, Tennessee, U.S., on Wednesday, Dec. 5, 2013. The doughnut chain plans to add at least 30 new U.S. stores next year and is opening up new markets for franchising. Photographer: Luke Sharrett/Bloomberg via Getty Images

An employee picks up fresh donuts from a conveyor belt at a Krispy Kreme Doughnuts Inc. store in Farragut, Tennessee, U.S., on Wednesday, Dec. 5, 2013. The doughnut chain plans to add at least 30 new U.S. stores next year and is opening up new markets for franchising. Photographer: Luke Sharrett/Bloomberg via Getty Images

Doughnuts are displayed in a case at a Krispy Kreme Doughnuts Inc. store in Farragut, Tennessee, U.S., on Wednesday, Dec. 5, 2013. The doughnut chain plans to add at least 30 new U.S. stores next year and is opening up new markets for franchising. Photographer: Luke Sharrett/Bloomberg via Getty Images

Customers wait inside a Krispy Kreme Doughnuts store to collect on the promotion of a free doughnut to anyone with an "I Voted" sticker on election day in Washington, November 4, 2008. REUTERS/Mitch Dumke (UNITED STATES) US PRESIDENTIAL ELECTION CAMPAIGN 2008 (USA) REUTERS

MIAMI - MAY 17: Glazed Krispy Kreme doughnuts are seen May 17, 2004 in Miami, Florida. Krispy Kreme Doughnuts Inc. last week said that the low-carb diet trend has hurt sales and they now face shareholder lawsuits alleging it misled investors about the direction its business was headed. (Photo by Joe Raedle/Getty Images)

UNITED STATES - MAY 25: Customer Anthoney Golladay and his newly purchased Doughnuts at a Krispy Kreme Doughnut shop in Alexandria, Virginia, May 25, 2004. Krispy Kreme Doughnuts Inc. had its first loss as a public company after closing its Montana Mills business and doughnut-chain sales declined amid the popularity of low-carbohydrate diets. (Photo by Dennis Brack/Bloomberg via Getty Images)

HIDE CAPTION

SHOW CAPTION

of

SEE ALL

BACK TO SLIDE

"We appreciate Jayson's passion for Krispy Kreme and his entrepreneurial spirit as he pursues his education," the statement read.

Gonzalez, also known as "The Donut Guy," would have made his 20th run to Iowa on Saturday. He told his Facebook followers on Thursday that he has been told he has to shut down operations.

"Life happens, and it could be a sign that something else it meant to be," Gonzalez posted.

___

Information from: St. Paul Pioneer Press, http://www.twincities.com

Let's block ads! (Why?)


https://www.aol.com/article/news/2019/11/04/krispy-kreme-orders-student-to-halt-doughnut-resale-service/23852975/

2019-11-04 13:34:52Z
CBMicWh0dHBzOi8vd3d3LmFvbC5jb20vYXJ0aWNsZS9uZXdzLzIwMTkvMTEvMDQva3Jpc3B5LWtyZW1lLW9yZGVycy1zdHVkZW50LXRvLWhhbHQtZG91Z2hudXQtcmVzYWxlLXNlcnZpY2UvMjM4NTI5NzUv0gEA

McDonald's stock falls after CEO is fired for misconduct with employee - CNBC

Steve Easterbrook, president and chief executive officer of McDonald's Corp., walks the grounds after a morning session during the Allen & Co. Media and Technology conference in Sun Valley, Idaho, U.S., on Wednesday, July 12, 2017.

David Paul Morris | Bloomberg | Getty Images

Shares of McDonald's fell Monday, after the fast-food giant announced it has fired CEO Steve Easterbrook for having a relationship with an employee.

The stock, which has a market value of $149 billion, opened down 1.9% Monday. It had slid as much as 3.1% in the premarket. Shares of rival Wendy's, valued at $4.8 billion, were up 2.2%.

After taking the helm of McDonald's in 2015, Easterbrook led a turnaround of the company, leading the value of its stock to nearly double. His successor Chris Kempczinski, in his prior role as head of McDonald's U.S. business, worked closely with Easterbrook in efforts to turn around U.S. restaurants.

"Given Kempczinski's role as President of McDonald's USA, he was the obvious eventual successor to Easterbrook, but the timing is clearly much sooner than anticipated," Bernstein analyst Sara Senatore wrote in a note.

Kempczinski told The Wall Street Journal on Sunday is not planning any "radical, strategic shift."

Under Easterbrook, McDonald's increasingly turned its attention to technology. U.S. locations have been receiving tech-focused upgrades, like self-order kiosks and digital menu boards. It is trying to hit $4 billion in delivery sales by the end of 2019. The company also acquired two companies this year that are trying to use artificial intelligence in drive-thrus.

But pricey store renovations, delivery commission fees and value deals led to a fraying relationship between McDonald's management and its U.S. franchisees, who formed an independent group a year ago to address their concerns. As a result of concessions made by McDonald's, relations have improved in recent months.

"This balance of relations with franchisees and shareholders, that can sometimes have differing objectives, will be paramount as Mr. Kempczinski begins his new role," Cowen analyst Andrew Charles wrote in a note.

While Kempczinski does not have any international experience at the global fast-food chain, he was president of Kraft International before coming to McDonald's.

"We are definitely surprised by the news and view Mr. Easterbrook's departure as a loss but also believe the company's strategy is on very solid footing and the McDonald's system is much more than just one man," BTIG analyst Peter Saleh wrote in a note.

Joe Erlinger, who will take over as president of McDonald's USA, is currently president of its international operated markets, which includes countries like Australia and the United Kingdom. Before taking over that role in January, he was president of high growth markets.

Piper Jaffray analyst Nicole Miller Regan downgraded McDonald's stock following the announcement.

"Our experience leads us to take a more cautionary view noting the potential lack of momentum and time involved in formalizing a new team," she said.

McDonald's last month had its first quarterly earnings miss in two years after promotions struggled to lure U.S. customers away from the competition.

Easterbrook's firing follows two other recent executive departures. McDonald's global Chief Marketing Officer Silvia Lagnado and Chief Communications Officer Robert Gibbs left last month.

Let's block ads! (Why?)


https://www.cnbc.com/2019/11/04/mcdonalds-stock-falls-after-firing-ceo-and-announcing-successor.html

2019-11-04 13:55:06Z
52780426349059

Alberta separation wouldn't solve problem of landlocked oil: expert - CTV News

CALGARY -- International trade experts say it's a pipe dream to think the landlocked oil-producing western provinces would have an easier time getting their product to international markets if they were to split from Canada.

"Wexit" -- an apparent play on the word "Brexit" used to describe the United Kingdom's planned departure from the European Union -- was trending on social media after the Liberals secured a minority government in last week's federal election, but were shut out of Alberta and Saskatchewan.

Peter Downing, a founder of the western separatist movement that wants a referendum on separation, has said an independent country in the middle of the Prairies could leverage the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea to gain coastal pipeline access.

"We have more freedom as an independent country to get our resources to the coast than as part of Canada," he said the day after the election.

"We'll have the best of both worlds: We'll keep our money and we'll have access to the coast."

The UN convention, adopted in 1982, does say that "landlocked states shall enjoy freedom of transit through the territory of transit states by all means of transport."

However, it goes on to say that terms "shall be agreed between the landlocked states and transit states concerned through bilateral, subregional or regional agreements," and that transit states have the right to ensure their "legitimate interests" aren't infringed upon.

"It's not an unqualified right. They can't just say, 'OK, we need to get through here,"' said Silvia Maciunas, a fellow at the Centre for International Governance Innovation in Waterloo, Ont.

"They have to talk to the other state, which would be Canada."

The "means of transport" in the convention refers to railways, waterways, roads and even porters and pack animals, but the treaty specifies that landlocked and transit states would have to agree to add pipelines to the list.

Landlocked countries such as Ethiopia and Switzerland have long had agreements to use ports in other countries.

Bolivia, on the other hand, lost its ocean access in a war with Chile in the 1800s and has been fighting to regain it ever since. The International Court of Justice in The Hague ruled last year that Chile has no obligation to engage in talks with Bolivia.

"Had the court ruled in the favour of Bolivia, Chile would have theoretically been obligated to enter into 'good faith' negotiations, whatever the heck that means," said Carlo Dade, director of the Trade and Investment Centre at the Canada West Foundation.

"You can imagine how that would play out up here if Alberta, Saskatchewan leave ... We've seen enough out of B.C. to know how that would play out," said Dade.

The British Columbia government has resisted, primarily through court actions, the Trans Mountain pipeline expansion that would triple the amount of crude shipped between Alberta and the Lower Mainland.

Add to that there is no real enforcement mechanism through the international court, Dade said.

"The only thing the ICJ gives you is the ability to go from saying, 'Please give us access' to 'Pretty please give us access."'

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Nov. 3, 2019.



from Business - Latest - Google News https://ift.tt/34nxWMH
via IFTTT
November 03, 2019 at 10:04PM

McDonald’s fires CEO Steve Easterbrook because he had a consensual relationship with an employee - Financial Post

McDonald’s Corp. fired Chief Executive Officer Steve Easterbrook because he had a consensual relationship with an employee, losing the strategist who led the company’s charge into online ordering and delivery.

The burger chain’s board voted Friday to terminate Easterbrook, 52, after investigating the relationship, which violated company policy, according to a statement Sunday. McDonald’s policy doesn’t allow the CEO to have a relationship with anyone in the company. Chris Kempczinski, who runs U.S. operations, was promoted to president and CEO.

“This was a mistake,” Easterbrook said of his actions in an email sent to employees. “Given the values of the company, I agree with the board that it is time for me to move on.”

You can make a very strong argument that Easterbrook was the best CEO in the restaurant industry

Michael Halen, Bloomberg Intelligence

McDonald’s shares fell as much as 2.3 per cent in pre-market trading Monday. The stock had almost doubled since Easterbrook took over in March 2015, more than twice the gain in the S&P 500 Index, giving the company a market capitalization of US$147 billion.

Easterbrook was seen as relentless in his push to capture a new generation of customers who would be willing to order through smartphone apps, pay online, and choose to have food delivered to home or work instead of venturing into the outlets. To stress urgency, he tied executives’ compensation to the speed and breadth of the delivery rollout, and worked with vendors including UberEats.

His strategies are paying off: Same-store sales, a key metric of success, recovered with the arrival of all-day breakfast, and he axed poorly selling items and added new ones while creating lower priced value menus to draw in diners.

“You can make a very strong argument that Easterbrook was the best CEO in the restaurant industry,” said Michael Halen, who covers the sector for Bloomberg Intelligence.

Along the way, Easterbrook’s changes caused some franchisees to chafe at the expenses being pushed down from the corporate headquarters in Chicago.

McDonald’s independent group of franchisees, the National Owners Association, didn’t immediately reply to requests for comment. Store owners are scheduling a private conference call to discuss how to respond and protect the brand, according to a person familiar with their plan who asked not to be identified.

Target Customers

“Large public companies are less likely to tolerate such behavior because of reputational risk concerns,” said Yuen Teen Mak, a professor at NUS Business School in Singapore wrote in an email. “The nature of the business may also be a factor — after all, their target customers are families and children.”

Regardless of Easterbrook’s successes, the company’s board had little room for error in how it handled the British executive’s transgression at a time when even consensual relationships draw scrutiny — and especially when there’s an imbalance of power. In May, the company revamped its harassment policy after coming under pressure from employees, labour advocates and members of Congress.

In a letter responding to an inquiry from U.S. Senator Tammy Duckworth, from the chain’s home state of Illinois, Easterbrook said the company has improved its policy and is committed “to ensuring a harassment and bias-free workplace.”

#MeToo Climate

“In the current #MeToo climate, it will be even more difficult for corporations to retain a CEO in such situations,” said NUS’ Mak. “It is absolutely the right thing for McDonald’s to do and to do it swiftly.”

For the first time in 19 years, more CEOs were dismissed for ethical lapses than for financial performance or board struggles in 2018, according to a study by one of the PriceWaterhouseCooper’s units that analyzed CEO turnovers in the world’s 2,500 largest companies.

Executives who depart after violating company policy typically don’t get to collect severance and must forfeit any unvested long-term compensation. Easterbrook held unvested shares and stock options worth roughly US$31.3 million as of Friday’s close in New York, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

Easterbrook is divorced, according to a report in the Wall Street Journal, and also sits on the board of Walmart Inc.

​At the time, the American Civil Liberties Union and the union-backed Fight For $15 just announced a handful of new lawsuits and 20 complaints to the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission. They accused the company of failing to prevent misconduct including groping and inappropriate comments from supervisors, as well as retaliation for speaking up.

With Easterbrook now out of the picture, it’s left to Kempczinski to continue the push into delivery and electronic ordering. He joined McDonald’s in 2015 to oversee global strategy, business development and innovation. He most recently served as president of the U.S. business and, like Easterbrook, was deeply involved in the drive to expand online delivery.

‘Important Partner’

“Chris has been an important partner to me over the last four years and is the ideal person to take on the role of CEO,” Easterbrook said in his departure note. Joe Erlinger, who joined the company in 2002, will become president of the U.S. business.

Kempczinski, who helped implement many of the recent changes as head of U.S. operations, will maintain his predecessor’s focus on technology and believes the company’s investments will pay off, according to an interview with the Wall Street Journal.

“There isn’t going to be some radical, strategic shift. The plan is working,” the new CEO told the Journal, adding that he wants to discuss any concerns with franchisees.

Kempczinski, who’s also joining McDonald’s board, is taking over a behemoth chain, with more than 38,000 locations in 100 countries, including 14,000 in the U.S.

He’ll have to contend with stagnant customer traffic across the restaurant industry. Growth has been fuelled in recent quarters by higher prices, but chains have struggled to bring in larger volumes of diners. Competition has intensified as consumers eat out less and buy more prepared foods from grocery stores.

Best Performers

In recent quarters, McDonald’s has been one of the industry’s best performers, with same-store sales rising 5.9 per cent globally in the latest quarter, more than analysts had projected.

It hasn’t been quite as easy in its home market, where heavy discounting by rivals and more competition at breakfast has made it harder to get customers in its doors, resulting in a slowdown in customer traffic last quarter. But those who do come in are spending more and more, keeping the company on comfortable footing.

The company has sought to renovate its image by remodeling its locations — but franchisees have complained about the high costs associated with changes like building a wall to hide the kitchen operations behind the cash registers. In 2018, it slowed the pace of remodels, letting operators complete them by 2022 instead of the initial goal of 2020.

The improvements have also included self-ordering kiosks and even extra drive-thru lanes in some locations.

While the company’s fundamentals are solid, the CEO change could presage additional disruption, Piper Jaffray analyst Nicole Miller Regan said in a note.

“Our experience leads us to take a more cautionary view, noting the potential lack of momentum and time involved in formalizing a new team,” she said.

Bloomberg.com



from Business - Latest - Google News https://ift.tt/2PKY1kw
via IFTTT
November 04, 2019 at 06:56PM

Cannabis NB president says no profit until at least next year - CTV News

FREDERICTON -- The new president of Cannabis NB -- New Brunswick's Crown-owned cannabis retailer -- says it will be next year or later before the operation can be profitable.

Patrick Parent says the money-losing agency is like any start-up and needs time to mature.

"We are looking at operational improvements. We do recognize there was a price gap with the illicit market. We are aggressively addressing that. I think if you were to go into stores today there are very competitive products. In fact in some cases it is more competitive than in the illegal stores," Parent said in an interview in his Fredericton office Friday.

"I don't disagree that we need to accelerate the road to profitability. Everyone would agree that we have to return a profit to the taxpayers of New Brunswick," he said. "The best way we can do that is ignore external noise and distractions and really focus on improving the business every day."

The agency, with its 20 stores across the province, lost almost $12 million in its first six months and continues to bleed red ink, although sales are on the rise. It was announced last week that second quarter losses for the current year were $1.5 million.

The previous Liberal government pitched legalized cannabis as an economic windfall and sought to make the province an industry leader. The University of New Brunswick even named the first cannabis health research chair in the country.

More recently, Progressive Conservative Premier Blaine Higgs has said he'll look at all options including privatization to stem the financial losses.

Last October, then Cannabis NB president Brian Harriman said with overhead and start-up costs he hoped the 20 stores would at least break even in their first fiscal year.

Parent -- who became president and CEO of Cannabis NB and NB Liquor in September -- said many changes have been made to improve product pricing and supply.

"We are getting to the point of offering the right products at the right price point," he said.

There have been other changes too. Instead of going through security to enter the stores, proof-of-age is now done at the checkout.

The company has also reduced the number of staff, and recently cut eight management positions.

Parent said the major changes have been made.

"We've made some adjustments that were necessary to give the business every chance to get to profitability sooner. Right now our focus will turn to product availability, product pricing, competitiveness and things of that nature," he said.

Weed-infused brownies, CBD-based hand creams and cannabis vaping products are now legal in Canada, but won't be available in stores until at least mid-December.

Parent said he expects they'll attract a new wave of customers.

"We are optimistic about the offering of edibles, which we call phase-two products which includes vapes and things of that nature. We believe edibles will help. It remains to be seen to what degree," he said.

But Parent said they still face competition from upwards of 50 illegal cannabis stores in the province.

"It is not within our scope of authority to address that issue, so we try to educate people in terms of the differences between the illegal market and our market. There's no doubt it is taking away a significant amount of revenue that would likely put us in a much more favourable financial position," Parent said.

In the meantime, Parent said he's told staff to keep their heads down and concentrate on improving the business.

"We will continue on that path of improvement until we get to profit," he said.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Nov. 3, 2019.



from Business - Latest - Google News https://ift.tt/2NHkDjA
via IFTTT
November 03, 2019 at 07:31PM

McDonald's shares slide after parting ways with CEO over relationship with employee - Fox Business

McDonald’s shares were sliding Monday morning after the company on Sunday parted ways with CEO Steve Easterbrook over an inappropriate relationship with an employee.

Continue Reading Below

TickerSecurityLastChangeChange %
MCDMCDONALD'S CORP.193.94-2.76-1.40%

The fast-food chain said Easterbrook “violated company policy and demonstrated poor judgement involving a recent consensual relationship with an employee.”

Chris Kempczinski, president of McDonald’s USA, was named CEO and president. He was also elected to McDonald’s board of directors.

Easterbrook became McDonald’s CEO in March 2015 after the company posted one of its worst financial quarters in years. He was instrumental in the company’s turnaround, emphasizing a technological shift that included third-party delivery through apps and the installation of kiosks that let customers customize their orders.

DEMOCRATS' PLAN TO RAISE TAXES DANGEROUS FOR STOCK MARKET: GOLDMAN SACHS

“While fundamentals are solid (nowhere more apparent than last week's earnings results), changes of this magnitude tend to be disruptive,” Minneapolis-based Piper Jaffray analysts wrote in a note to clients on Monday morning. They downgraded shares to neutral and cut their price target from $224 to $195 – less than 1 percent above where shares settled on Friday.

The analysts say the risks associated with the transition are “potentially short-lived” as Kempczinski was “instrumental in orchestrating current (and well performing) strategies as well as having global CPG experience.”

On Oct. 22, McDonald’s reported quarterly results that fell short of Wall Street estimates for the first time in two years. The company earned a profit of $1.6 billion, or $2.11 a share, flat from the year prior. Same-store sales rose 4.8 percent year-over-year, missing the 5.2 percent that was expected.

CLICK HERE TO READ MORE ON FOX BUSINESS

McDonald’s shares were up 9.2 percent this year. They gained 96 percent under Easterbrook’s leadership.

FOX Business' James Leggate contributed to this report.

Let's block ads! (Why?)


https://www.foxbusiness.com/markets/mcdonalds-steve-easterbrook-chief-executive-out-stock-reaction

2019-11-04 11:44:58Z
52780426349059

Human rights group slams Saudi Arabia for crackdown on dissent - NBC News

Legitimate reforms benefiting women mask a broader crackdown on freedom and dissent in Saudi Arabia, the international monitor Human Rights Watch said Monday.

Reforms like allowing women to drive or to appear in public performances followed Mohammed bin Salman's ascension to crown prince in June 2017. Prince Mohammed said he wanted to reshape how the world views the kingdom, historically seen as an isolated incubator of Islamist radicals.

But behind the scenes, Saudi authorities have harshly oppressed perceived opponents of the prince, 34, targeting prominent clerics, academics, women's and human rights activists, leading businessmen and even other members of the royal family, the watchdog, Human Rights Watch, said in a 62-page report.

Let our news meet your inbox. The news and stories that matters, delivered weekday mornings.

"Allegations have emerged of rampant torture and mistreatment," the report said.

The abuses didn't come to widespread attention until Jamal Khashoggi, a Saudi journalist and columnist for The Washington Post, was brutally killed at the Saudi consulate in Istanbul, Turkey, in October 2018, the group said.

The CIA quickly concluded that Prince Mohammed ordered the assassination of Khashoggi, a critic of Saudi Arabia's crackdown on dissent. The prince said a month ago that as the kingdom's leader, he took responsibility for Khashoggi's death but denied that he had ordered it.

NBC News reported in January that former U.S. officials and diplomats were deeply troubled by the United States' reluctance to confront Saudi Arabia over its continuing human rights abuses. They said the U.S. failure to confront the kingdom was a repudiation of decades of U.S. policy that would serve as a tacit green light signaling the Trump administration's approval.

Download the NBC News app for breaking news

Michael Page, deputy Middle East director for Human Rights Watch, acknowledged Monday that the prince had "created an entertainment sector and allowed women to travel and drive."

But "it's not real reform in Saudi Arabia if it takes place in a dystopia where rights activists are imprisoned and freedom of expression exists just for those who publicly malign them," he said.

Let's block ads! (Why?)


https://www.nbcnews.com/news/world/human-rights-group-slams-saudi-arabia-crackdown-dissent-n1075906

2019-11-04 05:03:00Z
52780425436576