Jan 12 (Reuters) - Dutch brewer Heineken announced the departure of its CEO Dolf van den Brink, the latest consumer goods company to make a change at the top as the sector navigates tariff pressures and choppy consumer spending.

Here are some of the major CEO changes among global consumer goods companies in 2025 and 2026:

Company Date of Details

Announcement

Unilever February 25 The company ousted

chief executive Hein

Schumacher, replacing

him with finance

chief Fernando

Fernandez.

Stanley June 30 The power tools maker

Black & appointed operations

Decker chief Christopher

Nelson as its next

CEO and president,

effective October 1,

succeeding Donald

Allan Jr., who is set

to retire.

Hershey July 8  Hershey named  burger

chain Wendy's chief

Kirk Tanner as its

CEO, effective August

18, replacing Michele

Buck, who is set to

retire.

Hindustan July 10  Hindustan Unilever

Unilever named Priya Nair as

managing director and

CEO, replacing Rohit

Jawa well before the

completion of his

five-year term as the

company's chief.

Kenvue July 14 The Band-Aid and

Tylenol maker

fired its CEO Thibaut

Mongon, laying what

some investors expect

will be the

groundwork for an

eventual sale of the

entire company or

pieces of it, and

named director Kirk

Perry as interim CEO.

Diageo July 16 The Johnnie Walker

whisky and Guinness

beer maker's CEO,

Debra Crew,  stepped

down after two years

in the job, with

finance chief Nik

Jhangiani taking over

in the interim.

Procter & July 28 Procter & Gamble said

Gamble CEO Jon Moeller is

stepping away from

the role, to be

succeeded by Chief

Operating Officer

Shailesh Jejurikar.

Target August 20 The retailer  named

longtime company

veteran Michael

Fiddelke as its CEO,

replacing retail

industry bigwig Brian

Cornell, effective

February 1, 2026.

Nestle September 1  Nestle  dismissed its

CEO, Laurent Freixe,

a year after

appointing him,

following an

investigation into an

undisclosed romantic

relationship with a

direct subordinate

that breached the

company's code of

conduct. Freixe was

replaced by Philipp

Navratil, CEO of

Nestle Nespresso, on

September 1.

Walmart November 14  The company said Doug

McMillon, who has

been heading the

retail bellwether

since 2014, will

retire in January

2026. John Furner,

McMillon's successor,

currently serves as

CEO of Walmart U.S.

and has held

leadership roles at

the company.

Kohl's November 24 Kohl's Corp  named 

Corp retail veteran

Michael Bender as its

permanent CEO, after

he served as the

interim chief since

May. Bender replaced

Ashley Buchanan, who

was fired for a

personal relationship

with a vendor.

Coca-Cola December 10 Coca-Cola  named COO

Henrique Braun as its

new CEO, effective

March 31, 2026. Braun

succeeds James

Quincey, who is

stepping down after

nine years at the

helm.

Altria December 11 Altria  announced

that CEO Billy

Gifford, who has led

the tobacco giant

since 2020, will

retire, effective May

14, 2026. The tobacco

giant announced

Gifford will be

succeeded by finance

head Salvatore

Mancuso.

Lululemon December 11 Lululemon Athletica

Athletica  LULU.O said its CEO

  Calvin McDonald will

step down in January

after about seven

years at the helm.The

company named its

finance chief Meghan

Frank and chief

commercial officer

André Maestrini as

co-interim CEOs while

it searches for its

new boss. 

Kraft December 16 Kraft Heinz named

Heinz  industry veteran and

former Kellanova

head, Steve Cahillane

as its new CEO, ahead

of the packaged food

giant's split.

Cahillane will join

the new role on

January 1, succeeding

Carlos Abrams-Rivera,

who will serve as an

advisor until March

6.

Coty December 22 Coty named Procter &

Gamble veteran Markus

Strobel interim CEO

and executive

chairman, handing him

the reins as the

CoverGirl parent

battles a steep

share-price slide and

pressure on its

mass-market business.

January Heineken

Heineken 12, 2026 said

on

Monday its CEO Dolf

van den Brink would

step down on May 31

after nearly six

years of leading the

Dutch brewer, as the

industry battles to

get drinkers buying

more beer.

(Reporting by Neil J Kanatt, Sanskriti Shekhar and Koyena Das in Bengaluru, Vera Dvorakova in Gdansk; Editing by Anil D'Silva, Alan Barona and Arun Koyyur)