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Co-op boss Shirine Khoury-Haq to step down after difficult year for group

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March 26, 2026, 1:05 PM 6 min read 7 views

Summary

Shirine Khoury-Haq : ‘It has been an honour to lead our Co-op as chief executive.’ Photograph: Joel Goodman/The Guardian View image in fullscreen Shirine Khoury-Haq : ‘It has been an honour to lead our Co-op as chief executive.’ Photograph: Joel Goodman/The Guardian Co-op boss Shirine Khoury-Haq to step down after difficult year for group Company reported loss of £125m after cyber-security attack hit sales and claims of ‘toxic’ culture Business live – latest updates The Co-op Group has announced that its boss will step down this weekend after a difficult year that included a cyber-attack and recent claims of a “toxic” culture at the business. Shirine Khoury-Haq will step down as chief executive on 29 March, with Kate Allum, a board member and former boss of dairy group First Milk, stepping in as interim boss while a permanent replacement is found. Khoury-Haq’s departure after four years heading the company, and almost seven at the business, comes a month after reports of concerns over the culture at the top of the group. Khoury-Haq said on Thursday that Co-op colleagues had reported to her that they did not recognise the reports of a toxic culture, but there was “some discomfort” in areas of reorganisation. “They said to us that there were concerns where we had not communicated as clearly as we could have,” she said. “We’ve of course taken on that feedback.” She said in a written statement that it had “been an honour to lead our Co-op ”, adding: “Following last year’s cyber-attack, the organisation is now ready to deliver on an ambitious strategy of stabilisation and transformation. “This extends beyond the timeframe I had planned for my CEO tenure and now is the right moment to hand over to leadership that can commit to seeing the strategy through.” Explore more on these topics Co-operative Group Retail industry news Share Reuse this content

## Summary
Shirine Khoury-Haq : ‘It has been an honour to lead our Co-op as chief executive.’ Photograph: Joel Goodman/The Guardian View image in fullscreen Shirine Khoury-Haq : ‘It has been an honour to lead our Co-op as chief executive.’ Photograph: Joel Goodman/The Guardian Co-op boss Shirine Khoury-Haq to step down after difficult year for group Company reported loss of £125m after cyber-security attack hit sales and claims of ‘toxic’ culture Business live – latest updates The Co-op Group has announced that its boss will step down this weekend after a difficult year that included a cyber-attack and recent claims of a “toxic” culture at the business. Shirine Khoury-Haq will step down as chief executive on 29 March, with Kate Allum, a board member and former boss of dairy group First Milk, stepping in as interim boss while a permanent replacement is found. Khoury-Haq’s departure after four years heading the company, and almost seven at the business, comes a month after reports of concerns over the culture at the top of the group. Khoury-Haq said on Thursday that Co-op colleagues had reported to her that they did not recognise the reports of a toxic culture, but there was “some discomfort” in areas of reorganisation. “They said to us that there were concerns where we had not communicated as clearly as we could have,” she said. “We’ve of course taken on that feedback.” She said in a written statement that it had “been an honour to lead our Co-op ”, adding: “Following last year’s cyber-attack, the organisation is now ready to deliver on an ambitious strategy of stabilisation and transformation. “This extends beyond the timeframe I had planned for my CEO tenure and now is the right moment to hand over to leadership that can commit to seeing the strategy through.” Explore more on these topics Co-operative Group Retail industry news Share Reuse this content

## Article Content
Shirine Khoury-Haq : ‘It has been an honour to lead our Co-op as chief executive.’
Photograph: Joel Goodman/The Guardian
View image in fullscreen
Shirine Khoury-Haq : ‘It has been an honour to lead our Co-op as chief executive.’
Photograph: Joel Goodman/The Guardian
Co-op boss Shirine Khoury-Haq to step down after difficult year for group
Company reported loss of £125m after cyber-security attack hit sales and claims of ‘toxic’ culture
Business live – latest updates
The Co-op Group has announced that its boss will step down this weekend after a difficult year that included a cyber-attack and recent claims of a “toxic” culture at the business.
Shirine Khoury-Haq will step down as chief executive on 29 March, with Kate Allum, a board member and former boss of dairy group First Milk, stepping in as interim boss while a permanent replacement is found.
News of the exit came as the company, which owns more than 800 funeral parlours and an insurance and legal advisory business, as well as operating more than 2,000 convenience stores, dived to an underlying loss of £125m.
The drop from a £45m profit the year before came after it took a £107m profits hit from the
damaging IT hack,
which forced it to shut down some systems.
On Thursday, Khoury-Haq denied her resignation was linked to the allegations of a toxic culture. “My decision to leave was very much a personal decision,” she said. “The reason is I want to go and do something else.”
Sales at Co-op fell 2.3% to £11bn in the year to 3 January after the mutual’s shops were left with gaps on shelves after last April’s cyber-attack, which knocked £285m off sales.
Co-op, which has said it “lost trading momentum” while it focused on recovery from the attack, has also been affected by a “contracting convenience market” as household budgets have come under pressure.
The group said it also faced “layered cost headwinds” of about £150m during the year from increases in employers’ national insurance, pay and packaging taxes.
Khoury-Haq’s departure after four years heading the company, and almost seven at the business, comes a month after reports of concerns over the culture at the top of the group.
In February, the Co-op defended the behaviour of its bosses after reports said senior managers had complained of a “toxic” environment at the retailer. The grocery and services chain said it did not believe the criticisms “represent the views of our broader leadership and colleagues”.
The BBC reported that a letter, claiming to reflect the views of a large number of senior managers, had been sent to the chair and another member of the Co-op board last month.
The letter raised complaints about a culture of “fear and alienation”, with some senior staff members feeling scared to raise concerns about business decisions in front of the company’s management, including Khoury-Haq, according to previous reports. The company defended its culture and the behaviour of its leadership team at the time.
Khoury-Haq said on Thursday that Co-op colleagues had reported to her that they did not recognise the reports of a toxic culture, but there was “some discomfort” in areas of reorganisation.
“They said to us that there were concerns where we had not communicated as clearly as we could have,” she said. “We’ve of course taken on that feedback.”
She said in a written statement that it had “been an honour to lead our Co-op ”, adding: “Following last year’s cyber-attack, the organisation is now ready to deliver on an ambitious strategy of stabilisation and transformation.
“This extends beyond the timeframe I had planned for my CEO tenure and now is the right moment to hand over to leadership that can commit to seeing the strategy through.”
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## Expert Analysis

### Merits
N/A

### Areas for Consideration
- Shirine Khoury-Haq : ‘It has been an honour to lead our Co-op as chief executive.’ Photograph: Joel Goodman/The Guardian View image in fullscreen Shirine Khoury-Haq : ‘It has been an honour to lead our Co-op as chief executive.’ Photograph: Joel Goodman/The Guardian Co-op boss Shirine Khoury-Haq to step down after difficult year for group Company reported loss of £125m after cyber-security attack hit sales and claims of ‘toxic’ culture Business live – latest updates The Co-op Group has announced that its boss will step down this weekend after a difficult year that included a cyber-attack and recent claims of a “toxic” culture at the business.

### Implications
- Shirine Khoury-Haq : ‘It has been an honour to lead our Co-op as chief executive.’ Photograph: Joel Goodman/The Guardian View image in fullscreen Shirine Khoury-Haq : ‘It has been an honour to lead our Co-op as chief executive.’ Photograph: Joel Goodman/The Guardian Co-op boss Shirine Khoury-Haq to step down after difficult year for group Company reported loss of £125m after cyber-security attack hit sales and claims of ‘toxic’ culture Business live – latest updates The Co-op Group has announced that its boss will step down this weekend after a difficult year that included a cyber-attack and recent claims of a “toxic” culture at the business.
- Shirine Khoury-Haq will step down as chief executive on 29 March, with Kate Allum, a board member and former boss of dairy group First Milk, stepping in as interim boss while a permanent replacement is found.
- Khoury-Haq said on Thursday that Co-op colleagues had reported to her that they did not recognise the reports of a toxic culture, but there was “some discomfort” in areas of reorganisation. “They said to us that there were concerns where we had not communicated as clearly as we could have,” she said. “We’ve of course taken on that feedback.” She said in a written statement that it had “been an honour to lead our Co-op ”, adding: “Following last year’s cyber-attack, the organisation is now ready to deliver on an ambitious strategy of stabilisation and transformation. “This extends beyond the timeframe I had planned for my CEO tenure and now is the right moment to hand over to leadership that can commit to seeing the strategy through.” Explore more on these topics Co-operative Group Retail industry news Share Reuse this content

### Expert Commentary
This article covers khoury, haq, culture topics. Areas of concern are also raised. Readability: Flesch-Kincaid grade 0.0. Word count: 636.
khoury haq culture group company attack toxic business

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