By Paul Sandle
LONDON (Reuters) -Vodafone appointed interim chief executive officer Margherita Della Valle to the role on Thursday, saying she impressed the company’s board with her “pace and decisiveness to begin the necessary transformation” of the mobile operator.
The company, which spans Europe and Africa, said it had conducted a rigorous internal and external search before choosing the insider who has been chief financial officer since 2018.
She stepped into the top role on an interim basis after Nick Read abruptly left in December, when he agreed with the board that it was the right moment for a new leader.
“To realise our potential Vodafone needs to change,” she said. “We know we can do better. My focus will be to improve the service for our customers, simplify our business and grow.”
Her strong backers included institutional investors such as biggest shareholder Emirates Investment Authority, which has built up a 14.6% stake, a source told Reuters.
Shares in Vodafone were trading up 1.2% at 95 pence.
Dalle Valle, who is Italian like former chief executive Vittorio Colao, joined Omnitel Pronto Italia – which later became Vodafone Italy – in 1994, and held roles in marketing and analytics before moving to finance.
Her immediate predecessor Read had pinned his hopes on the consolidation of Europe’s fragmented telecoms markets but he struggled to turn intention into action.
Investors’ frustration was reflected in a 45% fall in the company’s share price during his four-year tenure.
After he left, some investors and analysts said an outsider was needed to shake up the group.
Analysts at Berenberg said in January that they believed “Della Valle would be viewed by investors as a ‘continuity’ appointment, which is not what we believe shareholders are looking for”.
Dalle Valle’s first major deal is likely to be the tie up between Vodafone UK and Hutchison’s Three in Britain, expected imminently.
Reuters reported that she recently met Hutchison’s co-managing director Canning Fok in a push to get the deal over the line.
(Reporting Paul Sandle in London and by Radhika Anilkumar in Bengaluru; Editing by Emelia Sithole-Matarise, Kirsten Donovan)