Irwin Simon, one of the food industry’s longest tenured CEOs, to step down at Hain Celestial

FAN Editor

Hain Celestial announced Monday that Irwin Simon is stepping down as CEO, a quarter of a century after he founded the organic food company.

Hain is working with an executive search firm to fill the post, and when a candidate is selected Simon will step down and become non-executive chairman.

The announcement comes as the owner of Terra Chips and Earth’s Best baby food is under pressure from activist investor investor Engaged Capital, which previously disclosed a 9.9 percent stake. A settlement with the firm in October put Engaged’s founder, Glenn Welling, on the Hain board.

It is likely to once again raise speculation about a potential acquisition of the company. Rumors and potential suitors have swarmed Hain for years, but the company owns a number of different businesses — from tea to meat — making it a hard match for a single suitor.

Simon, meantime, is viewed as having the keys to the company’s complexities, as the singular person to have overseen its many deals. That knowledge stronghold had made potential buyers cautious, sources have told CNBC.

Hain has sought to streamline its businesses and is currently in the process of selling its protein unit. Still, sale of the unit, which includes Plainville Farms poultry and FreeBird Chicken, faces challenges. Like the rest of Hain, the brand can no longer rest on the fact it is organic as its standalone draw to shoppers. The organic food industry has become more crowded in recent years, thereby also making it more competitive.

Meantime, Simon’s departure adds one more to the ever-growing number of food company CEOs that have left their roles in the last few years, as pressures on the food industry continue to squeeze the country’s largest food companies. Simon had been the second-largest tenured food company CEO, a position now held by Conagra Brands CEO Sean Conolly, who joined the company in 2015.

WATCH: Hain CEO: E-commerce will be a big part of our growth

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