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PRIVACY
Retail & Consumer

Next Plc boss Lord Simon Wolfson leaves Deliveroo board as takeaway giant says losses growing

Lord Wolfson is the longest-standing FTSE 100 boss having been chief executive at Next since May 2001

Next chief executive Simon Wolfson

Next boss Lord Simon Wolfson has left the board of nationwide takeaway delivery business Deliveroo saying he no longer had enough time to support it.

The departure was announced as Deliveroo revealed that pre-tax losses were growing because cash-strapped customers were cutting back on food deliveries.

Lord Wolfson is the longest-standing boss at a FTSE 100 business having been chief executive at Leicestershire-headquartered Next since May 2001. He joined the Deliveroo board as a non-executive director 18 months ago in the run up to its stock market listing in spring, 2021.

He said: “After much consideration, and with regret, I believe that the time required to continue in my role at Deliveroo is no longer compatible with my executive and other commitments.”

Deliveroo posted a pre-tax loss of £147.3 million for the first half of 2022, against losses of £95.4 million a year earlier, just weeks after slashing its annual outlook on the back of slumping sales growth.

The food delivery giant also announced plans to pull out of the Netherlands, which it said accounted for just 1 per cent of sales by gross transaction value (GTV).

Despite that, it notched up half-year revenues of more than £1 billion for the first time, with turnover 12 per cent higher year-on-year.

Last month it downgraded its guidance as it said the slowdown will affect sales over the full year, forecasting annual sales growth of between 4 per cent and 12 per cent, down markedly from the previous 15 per cent to 25 per cent guidance.