August 20, 2012 - 11:31 AMT
Best Buy chooses new chief executive

Electronics retailer Best Buy has chosen a new chief executive as it grapples with lagging sales and a proposal to take the company private by its founder.

Hubert Joly stepped down as CEO of hospitality and restaurant giant Carlson to lead the struggling electronics giant, CNET reported citing The Wall Street Journal.

Best Buy touted Joly as having a record turning around companies in the media, technology and services sectors. Joly, who is French, is expected to assume his new position next month once he secures a visa, the Journal said.

The appointment comes on the heels of a proposal by Best Buy founder and ousted chairman Richard Schulze to acquire the brick-and-mortar retailer and take it private. Schulze, who already owns about 20 percent of Best Buy, has proposed paying between $24 and $26 per share in cash to the company to acquire the outstanding shares he doesn't own -- a premium of 36 percent to 47 percent on its Friday closing price of $17.64.

Schulze, who founded Best Buy in 1966 and served as the company's CEO until 2002, got caught up in a scandal involving former CEO Brian Dunn earlier this year. A Best Buy investigation found that Dunn had engaged in an "extremely close personal relationship with a female employee that negatively impacted the work environment."

After that relationship was discovered, Dunn was asked to resign as chairman. During its investigation, the audit committee found that Schulze had learned of the relationship but didn't inform anyone, prompting the board to ask him to step down.

With more than 1,400 stores, the company has been struggling to compete with online retailers. For the previous fiscal year, the Richfield, Minn.-based company posted a loss of $1.2 billion for its last fiscal year, which ended March 31, compared with a $1.3 billion profit for the previous year.