CEO of 7-Eleven US retires as company undergoes broader revamp

    • Seven & i, which brought 7-Eleven to Japan, refined the convenience-store concept and eventually took over the entire franchise.
    • Seven & i, which brought 7-Eleven to Japan, refined the convenience-store concept and eventually took over the entire franchise. PHOTO: REUTERS
    Published Sat, Dec 20, 2025 · 11:27 AM

    US CONVENIENCE store chain 7-Eleven said its chief executive will retire at the end of this month, as Japanese parent Seven & i Holdings seeks a turnaround of the business. 

    Joe DePinto, who was CEO for two decades and orchestrated its expansion through the acquisition of Speedway and Sunoco petrol stations, will be replaced on an interim basis by President Stan Reynolds and chief operating officer Doug Rosencrans of the US unit, the company said in a statement late Friday.

    Seven & i, which brought 7-Eleven to Japan, refined the convenience-store concept and eventually took over the entire franchise, is going through a broad restructuring that includes a partial sale of the US unit and changes at the top.

    The revamp was spurred on, in part, by Alimentation Couche-Tard’s 6.77 trillion yen (S$55.6 billion) takeover proposal that it abandoned earlier this year. 

    DePinto’s compensation was 7.7 billion yen and 4.35 billion yen in the past two fiscal years, which made him the top-paid executive at the company. 

    Stephen Dacus, who took over as CEO of Tokyo-based Seven & i six months ago, said the company is pushing ahead with “transformational leadership, capital, and business initiatives to enhance our performance.” 

    “We strive to find, through a thorough selection process, the right person who can lead 7-Eleven Inc. and help us work even more closely together as one group,” Dacus said in the statement, referring to the US unit by its corporate name. 

    Over the past decade, 7-Eleven’s North American footprint expanded through the US$3.1 billion acquisition of Sunoco LP petrol stations in 2018 and the US$21 billion purchase of Speedway outlets from Marathon Petroleum in 2021.

    Dacus has said that the retailer is at a “turning point” and he plans add more than 2,000 new stores to fuel growth. At the same time, the business faces headwinds from inflation biting into consumer spending in Japan and the US and rising costs.

    In October, Seven & i downgraded its operating profit forecast for the fiscal year that ends in February, to 404 billion yen on revenue of 10.6 trillion yen. The stock is down 11 per cent this year, while the benchmark Topix Index has climbed 21 per cent. BLOOMBERG

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