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Pool Corporation Stock Sinks as CEO Exit and Investor Day Delay Raise Fresh Doubts
5 May 2026
2 mins read

Pool Corporation Stock Sinks as CEO Exit and Investor Day Delay Raise Fresh Doubts

COVINGTON, Louisiana, May 5, 2026, 15:03 (CDT)

  • John B. Watwood steps in as president and CEO at Pool Corporation on May 4, taking over from Peter D. Arvan.
  • Shares dropped roughly 7% on Tuesday after the sudden leadership switch and postponement of Investor Day gave investors pause.
  • The company left its 2026 earnings target where it was, holding on to the uncertainty rather than clearing it up.

Shares of Pool Corporation tumbled over 7% Tuesday after the swimming-pool products distributor ousted CEO Peter D. Arvan, naming John B. Watwood as his replacement and delaying an investor meeting that was originally scheduled for next week. The stock hit $188.85 in the afternoon, hovering near its session low, after starting the day at $197.20.

Timing is a factor here. PoolCorp moves into its busiest stretch as pool season ramps up, with maintenance and equipment sales taking center stage. Investors were looking to the May 12 Investor Day in Phoenix for more detail on management’s approach to strategy, margins, and capital spending. That event’s off the calendar for now—the company plans to announce a new date once it’s set.

PoolCorp named Watwood, 47, as its new president and CEO effective May 4. On that day, Arvan exited both the CEO post and the board, and board chair John E. Stokely shifted over to become executive chair. According to a Securities and Exchange Commission filing, Arvan’s resignation from the board wasn’t tied to any disputes with PoolCorp over its operations, policies, or practices.

Stokely said the board sees “now is the right time for this leadership transition,” pointing to both succession planning and Watwood’s background running operations. Watwood came to PoolCorp in January as executive vice president, after his stint as senior vice president of sales and operations at Motion Industries, part of Genuine Parts. SEC

Watwood’s deal from the board includes an $800,000 annual salary, with a target bonus set at 125% of that base, plus an initial equity package worth roughly $1.75 million. The stock grant is divided between restricted shares and performance-based awards. Stokely, as executive chair, is set to collect a $50,000 monthly fee, according to the filing.

PoolCorp stuck with the full-year 2026 forecast it rolled out alongside first-quarter numbers back on April 23, looking to keep expectations anchored. The company still sees diluted earnings per share landing between $10.87 and $11.17, factoring in a minor tax benefit linked to share-based payment accounting.

First-quarter results handed Watwood a smoother transition than the stock’s reaction implies: net sales up 6% to $1.1 billion, operating income up 7% at $82.6 million, and diluted EPS at $1.45. Gross margin edged down 20 basis points to 29.0%. A basis point equals one-hundredth of a percentage point.

Arvan, CEO at the time those numbers came out, pointed to stable maintenance demand and a slow pickup in discretionary spending. That’s a key split for PoolCorp: maintenance goods drive repeat business, but discretionary sales—think pool builds and remodels—track alongside consumer sentiment, housing trends, and credit costs.

Trading action was uneven along the outdoor and pool supply chain. SiteOne Landscape Supply dropped roughly 2.8%. Hayward Holdings, which makes pool equipment, was up 1.6% in the afternoon.

The risk is hard to miss. Swapping out a CEO just ahead of an investor event often disrupts messaging, and PoolCorp flags a laundry list of possible headwinds—weather, consumer spending, housing, inflation, and interest rates all have the power to throw off forecasts. If rising borrowing costs keep squeezing new pool construction and remodels, PoolCorp could end up relying even more on maintenance demand to protect its bottom line.

The board wants investors to look past the leadership shakeup and focus on short-term results. On Tuesday, though, the market wasn’t entirely willing to make that distinction.

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