Greggs Loses a Finance Veteran as Growth Gets Stickier – Moby
THE GIST
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Greggs is changing finance chiefs after nearly three decades with Richard Hutton in the building. The bakery chain has named former Bakkavor executive Ben Waldron as its next CFO, but investors did not exactly celebrate with a steak bake. Shares fell after the news, reflecting worries that Hutton’s exit comes as Greggs faces slower growth, cost pressure and a share price that has already lost some heat.
WHAT HAPPENED
Greggs said chief financial officer Richard Hutton will retire and step down from the board at the end of 2026. He has been with the company for 28 years, including 20 on the board, joining in 1998 after roles at KPMG and Procter & Gamble. He helped oversee Greggs’ shift from a traditional bakery chain into a modern food-on-the-go business and, presumably, ate more sausage rolls than any human in recorded history.
Ben Waldron will join on October 27 as CFO-designate, then take over fully on January 1, 2027. He spent more than 14 years at Bakkavor, the fresh prepared foods group, where he served as CFO and held senior operating roles including CEO of Bakkavor Asia and CEO of its U.S. business. Before that, he did 12 years at Ernst & Young. He knows food. He knows spreadsheets. Chair Matt Davies said Waldron’s financial, commercial and operational experience would be valuable as the company continues to expand. The market was less sentimental, sending shares down roughly 3% to 5%.
WHY IT MATTERS
CFO changes usually do not make casual investors drop their lunch. But at Greggs, Richard Hutton is not just another spreadsheet officer. He has been part of the company’s modern success story, the shift from humble high-street baker to one of Britain’s sharpest food-to-go operators, helped along by better stores, better marketing, longer trading hours, delivery, coffee, hot food and one extremely famous vegan sausage roll that briefly convinced the nation that pastry could be a moral position.
That transformation created a stock market darling. For years, Greggs had the rare combination investors love: familiar brand, simple product, steady rollout story and enough operational discipline to make pasties look like a growth category. Hutton helped keep that machine financially credible. You could argue that when your flagship product is a sausage roll that costs £1.20 and sells itself, you barely need a finance department. The sausage rolls do the heavy lifting. The CFO is mainly there to count them.
Story Continues
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His retirement matters because investors are already asking harder questions about the next phase. Greggs is still a strong brand, but the easy part of the story is behind it. Costs are higher. Consumers are cautious. Food inflation is still annoying. Wage pressure has not vanished. The share price has already been bruised after a weaker period, which makes leadership continuity more important. When the sausage rolls are doing less of the work, the humans have to pick up the slack.
The good news is that Waldron looks like a serious hire. He is not coming in as a pure finance technician. His Bakkavor background gives him exposure to food manufacturing, operations, strategy and international markets. That matters because Greggs is no longer just managing shops. It is managing supply chains, production capacity, evening trade, delivery channels and national expansion. This is a business where the CFO has to understand dough, not just debt. Ideally both, but the dough is non-negotiable.
Waldron’s experience could be useful as Greggs keeps scaling its production and logistics backbone. The growth plan depends on opening more stores, extending operating hours and building capacity behind the scenes. That requires capital discipline. It also requires not making the sausage roll empire too complicated for its own good. You cannot over-engineer the sausage roll. It is a sausage roll.
Still, investors hate uncertainty. Hutton’s exit may be planned and orderly, but it comes when Greggs is no longer getting the benefit of the doubt automatically. Recent sales growth has been respectable, not explosive. The market wants evidence that Greggs can keep expanding without margins being nibbled by labor, rent, ingredients and energy costs. That is why the share reaction makes sense. It is not a vote against Waldron. It is a reminder that Greggs has moved from cute growth story to mature execution story. And mature execution stories are less forgiving.
Greggs still has plenty going for it. The brand is loved, the price point is accessible and the company understands British lunch better than most. But the next CFO inherits a business that has to keep proving it can grow profitably in a tougher consumer environment. The pasty flywheel still works. It just needs tighter steering now. And maybe a vegan sausage roll sequel. Those things printed money.
WHAT’S NEXT
The handover runs through the rest of 2026, with Waldron joining in October and taking the CFO role in January. Investors will watch upcoming trading updates for signs that sales momentum is stabilizing and costs are under control. They will also want to see whether Waldron brings fresh discipline to Greggs’ expansion plans. Greggs still has the brand. Now it needs to show the finance bench can stay as reliable as the sausage rolls, which is saying something, because those things never miss.