Chris Viehbacher, a longtime GSK executive and Triangle resident who lost out in the battle to become CEO of that job giant, has lost his job as CEO at French drugmaker Sanofi.
Sanofi sacked its CEO of the past six years on Wednesday following a board room rift in which the chairman complained about his management style and an “inappropriate” lack of communication.
“The Board of Directors held a meeting Wednesday, October 29 at 8 am and decided unanimously to remove Christopher A. Viehbacher as Chief Executive Officer of Sanofi,” Sanofi said in a statement. “As a consequence Christopher A. Viehbacher resigned as a director of Sanofi.”
Viehbacher was a candidate for the top job at GSK (NYSE: GSK) but lost the battle to Andrew Witty. He later joined Sanofi and continued to maintain a residence for several years.
Just last year, Viehbacher was a keynote speaker at the Council for Entrepreneurial Development’s annual biotech and life science conference in Raleigh. He also was scheduled to speak at a CEO conference in Raleigh on Thursday.
A 54-year-old Canadian-German, he was the first non-Frenchman to lead Sanofi, which is one of France’s largest publicly traded companies and traces its roots to the early 19th century.
But although his six years appear largely successful — the company share price more than doubled — his relationship with the board in Paris became strained recently. When earnings results disappointed on Tuesday, the board pulled the plug on his tenure.
Chairman Serge Weinberg said the board unanimously decided to fire Viehbacher because of dissatisfaction with his management approach and handling of business, including a loss of U.S. market share for Sanofi’s key diabetes drug, Lantus.
In a conference call with analysts, Weinberg also slammed Viehbacher’s communication with the board, saying “it didn’t work.” He cited Viehbacher’s plan to offload a multi-billion-euro portfolio of slow growing or declining drugs, saying the board had learned of it in the press. “This is not appropriate,” Weinberg said.
Weinberg, 63, the one-time head of Gucci parent company PPR who was himself ousted following a rift with his board, will temporarily take over as CEO.
During his time at Sanofi Viehbacher cut costs and shifted focus to biotechnology, vaccines and over-the-counter medications. He orchestrated the $20 billion takeover of U.S. biotech firm Genzyme in 2011.
But his move earlier this year to Boston from Paris, where he’d moved after taking the helm at Sanofi, raised eyebrows in France.
On Tuesday, shares in Sanofi dived after the company reported a slide in quarterly earnings. Viehbacher said pricing pressure on its blockbuster diabetes treatment Lantus in the key U.S. market would continue to hamper sales growth into 2015.
Sanofi shares fell 4.3 percent following news of Viehbacher’s dismissal.