Airbnb CFO leaves as company delays IPO

Airbnb CEO Brian Chesky is shaking up his executive ranks as the company delays a possible initial public offering into next year at the earliest. Airbnb CEO Brian Chesky is shaking up his executive ranks as the company delays a possible initial public offering into next year at the earliest. Photo: Scott Olson, Getty Images Photo: Scott Olson, Getty Images Image 1 of / 1 Caption Close Airbnb CFO leaves as company delays IPO 1 / 1 Back to Gallery

Airbnb Chief Financial Officer Laurence Tosi is leaving the company amid tensions and a shakeup in the senior ranks. His departure raises questions about the timeline for an initial public offering, which now won’t come until at least next year.

The San Francisco company said Thursday that it named Belinda Johnson as chief operating officer. Johnson, 50, joined Airbnb in 2011 as the first executive hired by Brian Chesky, Airbnb’s co-founder and CEO. As chief business affairs and legal officer, Johnson led efforts to work with city governments and is at the forefront of the company’s many legal battles.

“The COO is one of the most critical positions in any company,” Chesky said in a statement. “Before the holidays, I made a decision about who was right for this role, and I’m incredibly excited to announce that we have appointed Belinda Johnson.”

Tosi, who was CFO at Blackstone Group and one of the most visible executives on Wall Street before joining Airbnb in 2015, learned of Chesky’s decision Monday evening, said people familiar with the matter. Tosi had envisioned the role for himself but was butting heads with Chesky recently as he jostled for more control, said the people, who asked not to be identified. Tosi told Chesky he would leave Airbnb later that night.

Although Airbnb grew up alongside Uber Technologies, the travel-accommodations company isn’t known for palace intrigue. Chesky presented an amiable, mostly drama-free demeanor as he transformed his scrappy upstart into a global business valued at $31 billion. Also unlike Uber, Airbnb has been profitable since last year, thanks largely to Tosi’s financial discipline. Now the two most valuable U.S. technology startups are without financial chiefs.

“I know people will ask what these changes mean for a potential IPO. Let me address this directly. We are not going public in 2018,” Chesky said in the statement. “We’re working on getting ready to go public, and we will make decisions about going public on our own timetable.”

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While Tosi was at Blackstone, Apple’s Steve Jobs tried to hire him as CFO early this decade. Tosi told Blackstone CEO Steve Schwarzman and declined the Apple job. At Airbnb, Tosi was seen by employees as a shrewd operator who failed to adapt to Airbnb’s progressive culture and follow Chesky’s grand ambitions, said three people who worked with him. Tosi, who turns 50 next week, was focused more on cutting costs and pursuing businesses that were revenue-generating instead of world-changing, they said.

“The two and half years I’ve spent at Airbnb have been some of the most thrilling of my career,” Tosi said in a statement. “We achieved much of what I set out to accomplish when I joined.” He declined to comment on the circumstances of his departure.

Tosi plans to spend more time on his personal investment fund, Weston Capital Partners. Airbnb has hired executive search firm Crist Kolder Associates to find a new CFO, according to company spokesman Nick Papas. Ellie Mertz, Airbnb’s head of global financial planning and analysis, will serve as interim head of finance.

Olivia Zaleski is a Bloomberg writer. Email: ozaleski@bloomberg.net