Business

Peloton ousting CEO John Foley, cutting thousands of jobs in turnaround bid

Peloton unveiled a turnaround plan Tuesday that calls for thousands of job cuts and replacing its CEO after the onetime pandemic darling haꦚs faced a serie♐s of black eyes over the past year.

Investors appeared to cheer the roadmap for getting back in the saddle, with the Web-connected bike maker soaring more than 25% on the day, though the company’s shares are still down more than 75% over the past year.

CEO John Foley, who has faced widespread criticism over his leadership in recent months, will step down, the company announced, though he’ll stay with Peloton as its executive chairman of the board. He co-founded Peloton and had served as CEO since its debut.

Barry McCarthy, the former CFO of Spotify a♚nd Netflix, will replace Foley as Peloton’s CEO. He will also join the connected fitness company’s board of di🐲rectors.

Still, the overhaul may not be enough to placate Foley’s skeptics, including activist investor firm Blackwells Capital, which has publicly pushed for his ouster and for Peloton to sell itself to a tech giant.

Blackwells Capital argued Foley has effectively given himself a promotion rather than stepping aside to allow fresh leadership for the struggling company.

John Foley will be out as Peloton CEO soon. AP

“Peloton CEO John Foley naming himself Executive Chairman and hiring a new CFO does not address any of Peloton investors’ concerns,” Blackwells chief investment officer Jason Aintabi said in a statement. “Mr. Foley has proven he is not suited to lead Peloton, whether as CEO or Executive Chair, and he should not be hand-picking directors, as he appears to have done today.” 

Blackwells said it intends to exercise its right to review Peloton’s books and company records.

The C-suite shakeup also impacted Peloton president William Lynch, who will step down from that position and transition to a role as a non-executive board director. Foley’s wife, Jill, who had served as Pelot💎on’s vice president for apparel, will also exit her rol💮e in the months ahead.

John Foley’s exit as Peloton CEO comes as the company reportedly explores a potential sale. Getty Images for TechCrunch

“These leadership changes are the culmination of a succession planning process that the Board and John have worked on together over the last sev🐠eral months,” a Peloton spokesperson said.

Aside from the leadership shakeup, Peloton will lay off approximately 2,800 employees as demand for its products slows from its peak in the early d✃ays of the COVID-19 pandemic. The cuts account for roughly 20% of Peloton’s corporate workforce, but will reportedly not impact the t🅰rainers who host its virtual workouts.

Peloton said the changes will “not impact the member experience.” The company is reducing its plꦫanned capital expenditures by $150 ꦇmillion in 2022.

Former Spotify CFO Barry McCarthy will replace John Foley as CEO of Peloton. Getty Images for Spotify

“The company’s roster of instructors is foundational to the user experience, and Peloton will continue to invest in its content creators for the benefit ✱of its loyal and growing community of 6.6+ million Members,” the company said.

Peloton shares gained more t💛han 25% on Tuesday to close at $37.27 each in the wake of the news. Company representa♑tives did not immediately return The Post’s request for comment.

“The choices we’ve made today, some of which were very difficult, will help us get closer to creatinꦅg a more focused, stronger Peloton for tomorrow,” Foley said in

The overhaul of Peloton’s operations comes as the company explores a potential sale. Apple, Amazon and Nike are among the firms rumored as potential suitors. The outgoing CEO and other Peloton insiders still control more than 80% of t𝔍he c♐ompany’s shares and would have to support a sale for it to proceed.

“We are open to exploring any opportunity that could create value for Peloton shareholders,” the outgoing CEO told the , which was first to report on the shakeup.

Peloton’s market value surged at the outset of t꧃he COVID-19 pandemic as homebound Americans bought its bikes and treadmills to stay in shape during lockdown. But demand for the company’s products has considerably slowed as states reopen and the company’s stock is down roughly 80% over the last 12 months.

CNBC reported last month that Peloton was temporarily halting production of its bikes and treadmills due to a “significant reduction” in demand. The Post reported Peloton was deℱlaying the opening of its $400 million factory in Ohio from 2023 to 2024 due to a backlog of inventory.

John Foley faced mounting criticism from company insiders and investors in recent days. Bloomberg via Getty Images

Those reports drew a sharp response from Foley, who admitted Peloton wasﷺ “resetting our production levels for sustainable growth” but called reports of a full pause “false.” He also said Peloto♐n was pursuing legal action against a “leaker” who provided details of its plans to the press.

Foley drew scrutiny from both external and internal critics during the downturn in the company’s fortunes. Last month, Blackwells Capital ripped Foley in an open letter and called for him to be replaced due to what it descri🍰bed asꦓ his “repeated failures to effectively lead.”

“Remarkably, the Company is on worse footing today than it was prior to the pandemic, with high fixed costs, excessive inventory, a listless strategy, dispirited employees and thousands of disgruntled shareholders,” the lette🧜r said.

As The Post previously reported, company insiders have grumbled about Foley’s leadership for months. In December, Foley held an invite-only holiday party for Peloton instructors, even as the comp🎀any froze hiring and canceled a companywide event.

The move ꦐprompted a Peloton insider to note “company morale is a♏t an all-time low.”