Olympus Corp said yesterday that its chairman and president Tsuyoshi Kikukawa is stepping down amid widening scrutiny into acquisitions after the company’s British former chief executive alleged financial wrongdoing.
The Japanese camera and medical device maker said the move was to take responsibility for the troubles caused to customers, business partners and investors over recent media reports that have sent Olympus shares plunging.
Olympus shares, which have lost half their value in the last two weeks, dipped 7.6 percent yesterday.
The drop followed Kikukawa’s firing of chief executive Michael Woodford after he questioned a US$687 million payment to financial advisers as part of Olympus’ purchase of Britain’s Gyrus Group PLC as too high.
The payment represented more than a third of the US$2 billion purchase. Fees for advisers are normally 1 percent to 2 percent of the deal value.
Shuichi Takayama would become president, the company said in a statement.
Takayama apologized for the latest woes, including the sliding stock price, and promised to do his utmost to investigate what had happened.
“We will work day by day with sincerity and with all our hearts to resolve the problem, regain social trust and allay the worries of our customers, business partners and investors as soon as possible,” he said in a statement.
Last week, the company said it would establish an independent task force to review past acquisitions, seeking to ease mounting pressure from shareholders.
The clash between Kikukawa and Woodford, a Briton and one of a handful of foreigners to ever head a major Japanese company, was widely viewed as raising questions about whether old-style Japanese management was up to date on global standards.
Woodford had also questioned the lofty prices Olympus paid for three other Japanese companies that appear to have little strategic value.
He commissioned Pricewaterhouse Coopers to analyze the deals and distributed the results to the board of directors.
The findings compelled Woodford to call for Olympus executives to resign.
“In putting the company first, the honorable way forward would be for you and Mori-san to face the consequences of what has taken place, which is a shameful saga by any stretch of the imagination,” he said in an Oct. 11 letter to Kikukawa, referring to Hisashi Mori, a group president at Olympus.
“It is clear that the current situation is now untenable and to move forward positively the necessary course of action is for you both to tender your resignations from the board,” the letter said.
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