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BAT slashes 2,300 jobs as new CEO Bowles spurs changes

BAT slashes 2,300 jobs as new CEO Bowles spurs changes

BENGALURU: British American Tobacco (BAT) said it would lay off 2,300 employees globally by January, about 4 percent of its workforce, as the world’s second largest tobacco company by sales focuses on newer smoking options such as e-cigarettes.

More than 20 percent of its senior roles will be affected as the maker of Lucky Strike and Dunhill cigarettes eliminates duplicate roles and consolidates business units. The company employs more than 55,000 people, according to its 2018 annual report.

BAT has said it will invest in what it calls its “New Category” business under CEO Jack Bowles and this year announced plans to consolidate the portfolio.

The division makes tobacco heating products glo and Vype e-cigarettes, as well as snuff and nicotine pouches. “Since taking on the role of chief executive five months ago, I have been clear that I wanted to make BAT a stronger, simpler and faster organization,” Bowles said on Thursday.

“My goal is to oversee a step change in New Category growth,” said Bowles, who took charge in April. BAT expanded by buying US rival Reynolds American for $49 billion in 2017.

The company said the planned changes would help the firm deliver on its target of generating £5 billion ($6.2 billion) of revenue in new categories by 2023-24.

By focusing on the three “New Category” brands, Bowles has said BAT would see less complexity and faster decision making when responding to new trends.

This month, BAT said it would launch two new tobacco heating products in Japan under its glo brand. It is also seeking toclose the gap with market leader Philip Morris International Inc. in the United States’ fast-growing vaping industry.

BAT beat first-half sales forecasts last month, helped by higher demand for e-cigarettes, and predicted a stronger performance in the second half as it focuses on a smaller number of fast-growing brands.

Like its rivals, BAT is striving for higher smoking alternative sales as volumes of traditional cigarettes slide.

At the same time, however, health concerns over e-cigarettes are increasing. The Trump administration announced plans on Wednesday to remove all flavored e-cigarettes from store shelves as officials warned that sweet flavors had drawn millions of children into nicotine addiction.

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