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Sunday, May 12
The Indiana Daily Student

McDonald's CEO dies of heart attack Charlie Bell named successor

Former president Charlie Bell to succeed late Jim Cantalupo

CHICAGO -- McDonald's Corp. chairman and CEO Jim Cantalupo, who orchestrated a turnaround of the fast-food giant in a 16-month tenure as chief executive after overseeing the proliferation of its restaurants worldwide in the 1980s and 90s, died unexpectedly of a heart attack Monday at age 60.\nThe company moved quickly to name Cantalupo's successors. Charlie Bell, McDonald's 43-year-old president and chief operating officer, was elected CEO by the board of directors and will keep the president's title; Andrew J. McKenna, 74, the board's presiding director, was named chairman.\nCantalupo was stricken in Orlando, Fla., where McDonald's was holding its international franchisees' convention. The company said he died at a hospital after suffering the heart attack at his hotel just after 4 a.m.\n"Jim was a brilliant man who brought tremendous leadership, energy and passion to his job," McKenna said. "He made an indelible mark on McDonald's system."\nA three-decade veteran of the Oak Brook, Ill.-based hamburger giant, Cantalupo returned from a brief retirement to take over the top post in January 2003 in a management shakeup after McDonald's had struggled through two-plus years of sagging U.S. sales and reported its first-ever quarterly loss for the last three months of 2002.\nUnder his leadership, the company worked to revitalize its brand through new products, a focus on health and a return to the basics -- better food and faster service -- instead of the expansion he'd once championed.\nThe fast-food giant slowed its breakneck expansion pace and has sharply boosted U.S. sales in recent months with help from three new products -- entree-sized salads, McGriddles breakfast sandwiches and white-meat chicken nuggets -- as well as by keeping more of its domestic restaurants open late at night. Led by the U.S. resurgence, McDonald's revenues for the last three months of 2003 jumped 17 percent to $4.56 billion.\nLast week, the company kicked off an anti-obesity campaign by announcing the introduction of Adult Happy Meals, with salad, bottled water and a pedometer, as well as healthier options for children's Happy Meals it introduced last year overseas.\nThe company also introduced a new global advertising campaign, adopting a slogan -- "I'm lovin' it" -- meant to appeal to younger and hipper consumers. Customers responded, and so did shareholders -- McDonald's stock rose 71 percent during his tenure.\nCantalupo previously had made his mark as head of international operations, overseeing a more than sixfold increase of its international restaurants from 1987 until his retirement in 2001.\nBell had been the heir apparent since the company promoted him from head of European operations in December 2002 as part of the shakeup that saw CEO Jack Greenberg depart.\nA native of Australia, Bell began his McDonald's career as a part-time crew worker in Sydney and advanced through the ranks, becoming Australia's youngest store manager at 19, vice president at 27 and a member of the Australian board of directors at 29. He previously headed the company's operations in his home country and in the Asia Pacific, Middle East and Africa divisions.\n"Charlie Bell has worked side by side with Jim during these past 16 months to revitalize McDonald's all over the world," the board said in a statement after the succession vote. "He is ideally suited and prepared to continue Jim's remarkable focus and discipline on our business."\nCompany spokeswoman Anna Rozenich said she was not aware of Cantalupo having had a previous heart attack or health problems.\nHe had lost weight in recent years and appeared fit after having been overweight in the 1990s, said franchisee consultant Dick Adams, a former McDonald's executive. Adams said international travel takes a toll on industry executives, resulting in numerous premature deaths.\n"He was doing an extensive amount of international travel," Adams said. "That's about the most stressful thing you can do to yourself."\nThe Orlando convention, where Cantalupo was to have given opening remarks to franchisees Monday morning, was postponed. Franchisees interviewed expressed sadness but said they expect the company's day-to-day operations to remain the same.\n"The company has been on a roll for the last year," said Jim McGarry, who owns a McDonald's in Boston. "He was a big part of it. ... Everybody's walking around here kind of shocked. (But) business will go on."\nAnalysts said Cantalupo's death is a harsh blow to the company, even if it was well-prepared with a deep lineup of experienced executives.\n"Cantalupo was, in my mind, the one guy who was able to get their organization shifted out of the expansion mode and more in an efficiency mode," said Morningstar analyst Carl Sibilski. "It was a tough thing to do. Not a lot of people thought he could do it, but he proved them wrong."\nCantalupo, a Chicago native, joined the company as controller in 1974 after eight years with Arthur Young & Co. He was promoted to vice president in 1975, senior vice president in 1981, Chicago district manager and zone manager for the northeastern U.S. before moving to the international job.\nMcDonald's shares fell 71 cents to close at $26.75 on the New York Stock Exchange.

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