Fortune - USA (2019-12)

(Antfer) #1

6 TRICIA GRIFFITH, CEO


of Progressive and 2018’s
Businessperson of the Year,
continued to deliver the
steady growth her share-
holders have become
happily accustomed to.

7 Strong skin care
sales—especially in China—
helped drive Estée Lauder
stock up 44% year to date
under the leadership of
CEO FABRIZIO FREDA.

8 Moving beyond cards
(into health care, supply
chain, and fintech) has
paid off for Mastercard
CEO AJAY BANGA.

9 While Costco’s U.S.
business continued its re-
markably steady growth un-
der CEO W. CRAIG JELINEK,
the chain’s first outpost in
China made headlines for
attracting crazy crowds.

10 2019 saw JPMorgan
Chase’s stock hit an all-
time high, while CEO JAMIE
DIMON was lauded for his
Business Roundtable ef-
forts to make companies
more accountable to all
stakeholders.

11 DANIEL SCHULMAN,
CEO of PayPal, has seen his
stock rise: up 144% over
the past three years. A deal
to launch a Venmo credit
card rolls out in 2020.

12 TOM LINEBARGER,
CEO of Cummins, notched
one-year net income
growth of 144% in fiscal
2018 depite a difficult
trade environment.

13 Surprise! What’s now
the No. 2 footwear brand
in the U.S. behind Nike?
That would be Skechers,
helmed by CEO ROBERT
GREENBERG.

BUSINESSPERSON OF THE YEAR


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BUSINESS PEOPLE OF THE


YEAR AT FORTUNE.COM.


14 At only 48, JOEY WAT
of Yum China has become
not only a female Fortune
500 CEO but also the
architect of a massive
expansion of brands like
Pizza Hut and KFC across
China.

15 Pretty sweet: Under
CEO JULIE SWEET, Accen-
ture revenue and EPS
continue a steady upward
climb as the company
helps clients navigate a
new tech-disrupted world.

16 Since DANIEL ZHANG,
CEO of Alibaba, took over in
2015, the online retailer’s
stock has soared 116%.

17 STRAUSS ZELNICK,
CEO of Take-Two Interac-
tive, has an MBA and a law
degree from Harvard plus
some of the hottest games
around (NBA 2K, Grand
Theft Auto). The stock is up
138% in three years.

18 JAYSHREE ULLAL,
CEO of Arista, saw revenue
grow 19% year to date, and
analysts remain confident
in the company despite
recent earnings warnings.

19 GARY GUTHART, CEO
of medical robot giant
Intuitive Surgical, grew
profits 64% over the past
12 months.

20 CHEN LIN, presi-
dent of beverage maker
Wuliangye Yibin, has deliv-
ered a 163% total return
to shareholders over the
past 12 months.

—Additional reporting
by Hadley Hitson

82


FORTUNE.COM // DECEMBER 2019


he went on to earn his
MBA and later to man-
age divisions at Adidas
and Helly Hansen and
to run Danish jeweler
Pandora.
When he took the
helm at Puma in
July 2013, Gulden ze-
roed in on the “Forever
faster” brand mantra,
which came to embody
the entire business
strategy. “Puma is about
fast products, fast ath-
letes, fast designs, and
fast decision-making,”
Gulden told the markets
when introducing his
turnaround strategy.
It’s working. Six years
on, Puma is on pace to
nearly double sales to
an estimated $6 billion
in 2019 and more than
double operating mar-
gins. Those collabora-
tions with Rihanna and
Jay-Z as well as hits like
the Clyde shoe (origi-
nally made famous by
the Knicks’ Walt “Clyde”
Frazier in the 1970s)
have propelled Puma to
nearly 20% year-over-
year sales growth in its
left-for-dead U.S. busi-
ness. The brand is as
cool in Brooklyn as it is
in Beijing. Says Beren-
berg analyst Graham
Renwick: “At the rate
they’re growing, they
should be closing in on
No. 3 globally” behind
Nike and Adidas. Over
three years, the stock
has returned 232%.
Says NPD’s Matt
Powell: “Puma has read
the market well.” Guess
it’s that vision thing.
—Bernhard Warner

“Puma” were seldom
uttered in the same sen-
tence. In 2013, Puma
was losing everywhere.
Sales were tanking.
Market share was slip-
ping. More ominously,
the brand had little
street or performance
cred. Ballers wanted
Nike. Skateboarders
wanted Vans. Nobody
wanted Pumas.
To regain the alle-
giance of athletes, Puma
turned to one: Bjørn
Gulden.
In his youth, Gulden
was a footballer. He
played soccer profes-
sionally in the 1980s in
his native Norway and
for two seasons in Ger-
many for FC Nuremberg,
just down the road from
Puma headquarters. A
midfielder, he wasn’t
much of a goal-scorer.
His talent lay in a kind
of supercharged field
vision that’s stuck with
him all these years.
After his career ended,

Q3 2016 Q3 2019


PUMA REVENUES


(QUARTERLY,


TRAILING 12


MONTHS)


0


1


2


3


4


5


$6 billion $5.9 B.

Puma Scores on Its
Quarterly Goals

list: 6-20
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