What You Need to Know About PotashCorp’s New CEO

The selection shows the company is willing to move in a new direction.

| More on:
The Motley Fool

After a nearly 15-year career at Potash Corporation of Saskatchewan (TSX: POT)(NYSE: POT), Bill Doyle is stepping down as CEO of the company. Mr. Doyle has been the face of the company for a long time, and is a legend in the industry. His absence will certainly create a void.

Replacing him will be Jochen Tilk, who last worked as CEO of Inmet Mining before it was taken over by First Quantum Minerals (TSX: FM) early last year.

The end of an era

When Mr. Doyle joined PotashCorp back in 1987, it was still owned by the Saskatchewan government. And the government seemed more concerned about keeping lots of people employed at the mines rather than running the operation at a profit. Production was always maximized regardless of price, and PtoashCorp typically lost money.

Mr. Doyle changed that. After PotashCorp became a publicly traded company in 1989, Mr. Doyle spearheaded a new price-over-volume strategy that is still in place. It turned PotashCorp into a profitable business.

Since becoming CEO in 2009, Mr. Doyle has rode a very strong wave for the potash industry. China’s rise led to record prices, and a long run of good fortune for PotashCorp and its shareholders. More recently, Mr. Doyle helped defend the company from a hostile takeover offer from BHP Billiton.

Mr. Doyle is known to be very brash. For example, during the economic crisis, Bill Doyle said that his competitors “really need a sugar daddy like me to come along and bail them out.” More recently, when rival Uralkali exited its marketing arrangement with the Belarusians, he called it “probably the single dumbest thing I’ve ever seen.”

Jochen Tilk: An operator first

Aside from a great record as CEO, Jochen Tilk has very little in common with Mr. Doyle. While Mr. Doyle’s background is in sales, Mr. Tilk is a mining engineer. And while Mr. Doyle can be very brash, Mr. Tilk is soft-spoken.

Mr. Tilk accomplished a lot at Inmet. First of all, he helped fix some operational issues at the company’s largest producing mine, Las Cruces (in Spain). He also advanced the Cobre Panama project, a massive undertaking that required winning over a once-hostile local population. His operational and political skills were on full display throughout his tenure as Inmet CEO, which began in late 2009.

There is one other big difference between the two leaders: Mr. Tilk was unable to defend his company from a hostile takeover. First Quantum is now the one developing Cobre Panama, and is benefiting immensely from Inmet’s efforts in that country.

So why the change in direction?

The last year has been a rough one for PotashCorp. Depressed potash prices led to reduced profits for the company, and in response the company cut over 1,000 workers. This angered Saskatchewan premier Brad Wall, who was instrumental in blocking BHP’s takeover attempt.

So Mr. Tilk is an ideal figure to rebuild relations between PotashCorp and the government, something that the company desperately needs. Also Mr. Tilk’s engineering background may bring some new ideas for improving PotashCorp’s operations.

Foolish bottom line

Bill Doyle is nothing short of a legend in his industry, so PotashCorp shareholders may be sceptical that Jochen Tilk can fill such big shoes. But by selecting Mr. Tilk, the company has made an excellent choice, one that should pay dividends over time. Congratulations are in order for everyone involved.

Fool contributor Benjamin Sinclair holds no positions in any of the stocks mentioned in this article. The Motley Fool owns shares of PotashCorp.

More on Investing

Abstract technology background image with standing businessman
Tech Stocks

1 Canadian Company Set to Make a Fortune From the $725B Data Centre Buildout

AI data centres are exploding with a $725B hyperscaler spend. Canadian transformer titan Hammond Power Solutions (TSX:HPS.A) hit record sales…

Read more »

Couple working on laptops at home and fist bumping
Dividend Stocks

2 Dividend Stocks to Buy Today and Feel Good Holding for at Least 5 Years

Given their strong fundamentals, a proven track record of consistent payouts, and solid growth prospects, these two dividend stocks offer…

Read more »

top TSX stocks to buy
Dividend Stocks

1 Canadian Dividend Stock I’d Buy Before Inflation Heats Up Again

This TSX ETF pays monthly income and could rebound when inflation heats up.

Read more »

Hourglass projecting a dollar sign as shadow
Dividend Stocks

This 6.5% Dividend Play Sends a Cheque Like Clockwork

This TSX dividend stock has consistently paid dividends supported by steady cash flow growth, enabling it to send a cheque…

Read more »

A worker gives a business presentation.
Dividend Stocks

The Bank of Canada Held Rates: Here Are 3 Stocks to Watch

With the Bank of Canada on pause, these three TSX stocks stand out for income, essential demand, and hard-asset cash…

Read more »

crisis concept, falling stairs
Dividend Stocks

1 Magnificent Canadian Dividend Stock Down 13.9% to Buy and Hold for Decades

Given its solid first-quarter performance, encouraging growth outlook, and discounted stock price, Magna International would be an excellent buy for…

Read more »

boy in bowtie and glasses gives positive thumbs up
Dividend Stocks

2 Canadian Blue-Chip Stocks I’d Buy Before the Next Rally

Two TSX blue chips could be well-positioned before the next rally, one riding nuclear momentum, the other compounding quietly in…

Read more »

bank of canada governor tiff macklem
Metals and Mining Stocks

2 TSX Stocks That Could Benefit From Canada’s New Market Reality

Tariffs, sticky inflation, and higher-for-longer rates are pushing investors back toward hard assets, and these two TSX/TSXV miners sit right…

Read more »