Another RH exec. cashes out. I'd interpret it as a resounding vote of "no confidence" and seems they know something us worker bees don't.
https://www.bizjournals.com/triangle/news/2021/02/08/second-red-hat-exec-announces-retirement-in-2021.html
By: Lauren Ohnesorge – Senior Staff Writer, Triangle Business Journal
Feb 8, 2021, 7:30am EST
Two years after banking millions in IBM’s 2019 buyout, another Red Hat executive has left the Raleigh-based open source software company.
DeLisa Alexander, the attorney-turned chief people officer at Red Hat, left the firm at the end of January.
A Red Hat spokeswoman confirmed the news in an email to TBJ. Alexander’s LinkedIn profile listed her as “retired" Friday.
'We wish her the very best," spokeswoman Stephanie Wonderlick said. "We have not yet named her replacement."
Alexander spent nearly 20 years at Red Hat. She joined the company in 2001 as Red Hat’s second attorney. Five years later, she joined the people department, moving up through the ranks. She was named chief people officer in 2011.
When IBM (NYSE: IBM) bought out Red Hat for $34 billion in 2019, she was among those benefiting the most. Securities filings show that in conjunction with the deal close, Alexander reported a $6.9 million stock sale.
As CPO, Alexander led the department responsible for global human resources. But her activities in Raleigh extend beyond Red Hat as she was a past chair of the Raleigh Chamber of Commerce.
Alexander’s retirement follows a similar announcement from another longtime Red Hat exec, Arun Oberoi, executive vice president of global sales and services. He, like Alexander, saw major returns when IBM bought out Red Hat. Oberoi reported a stock sale valued at $26.8 million when the deal closed.
They're leaving Red Hat at a pivotal time for its parent company.
While Red Hat saw its revenue increase 18 percent last year, IBM was at $73.6 billion, down about 5 percent. IBM is planning to spin off its managed infrastructure services unit so it can push more of its focus toward its cloud business. And once that deal closes, there will be even more pressure to deliver, analysts have said.
“Once this spinoff happens, Red Hat becomes the growth engine of IBM,” Edward Jones Analyst Logan Purk said last month.