Activision CEO Bobby Kotick will leave Coca-Cola’s board before Microsoft deal closes

FAN Editor

CEO of Activision Blizzard, Bobby Kotick, speaks onstage during “Managing Excellence: Getting Consistently Great Results” at the Vanity Fair New Establishment Summit at Yerba Buena Center for the Arts on October 19, 2016, in San Francisco.

Michael Kovac | Getty Images

Coca-Cola Co. said Friday that Bobby Kotick, CEO of video game publisher Activision Blizzard, would not stand for re-election to the company’s board of directors.

Kotick is stepping down as the company works to complete the sale to Microsoft for $68.7 billion, the largest U.S. technology transaction in history. The deal was announced in January, and Microsoft expects it to close in the fiscal year ending June 30, 2023.

“I have decided not to stand for re-election to The Coca-Cola Company board in order to focus my full attention on Activision Blizzard at this pivotal time as we prepare for our merger with Microsoft,” Kotick, who served as a company director for 10 years, said in a statement.

Kotick, 58, has emerged as a controversial figure in recent months. The Wall Street Journal reported in November that women have accused Kotick of misconduct, alleging he didn’t share everything he knew about mistreatment inside Activision with the company’s board. The family of an employee who committed suicide is now suing Activision, alleging wrongful death, the Washington Post said earlier on Friday.

Kotick’s involvement in politics also has drawn scrutiny. Through secret companies, he funded Republican campaigns in 2020 as well as GOP causes, CNBC reported last month.

Coke has a financial relationship with Activision, but the beverage giant’s board determined the relationship wasn’t material, in part because sponsorship agreements represented less than 1% of Activision’s gross revenue, according to an SEC filing.

Kotick received $340,003 in total compensation for his board work from Coca-Cola in 2020, the filing said.

WATCH: What the blockbuster Microsoft and Sony deals mean for the future of gaming

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