More CFOs are becoming CEOs: What it takes to get there


Good morning. Elevating CFOs to the top job is a practice that is gaining steam in corporate America and, as Fortune‘s recent “9 CFOs ready to make the jump to CEO” list suggests, the trend is likely to continue. But the C-suite trend of CFO-to-CEO didn’t happen overnight—its growing popularity is the result of several factors. 

For starters, companies are looking for leaders who can navigate an increasingly unsteady economic climate. But there’s also been an evolution at the corporate level that has seen the role of CFO change from a back-office function to a leader of company strategy. For example, drugstore giant Rite Aid, which emerged from federal bankruptcy protection, needed a new leader. And so it turned to its trusted CFO Matt Schroeder, naming him CEO in September.

I asked Alyse Bodine, global managing partner of the Financial Officers Practice at Heidrick & Struggles, what she’s seeing. In many instances, companies are considering CFOs as potential CEO succession candidates, she said. Although specific remits are bespoke to companies and their needs, there are common factors. “At a minimum, CFOs who have led and have had an impact on operational, commercial, and strategic activities will strengthen an executive’s ability to ascend the ranks to CEO,” according to Bodine.

Shawn Cole, president and founding partner of executive search firm Cowen Partners, is also finding that companies are hiring CFOs as CEOs who have operational acumen of the core business and strategy experience. “CFOs have become a real strategic partner to the CEO, and I would call them ‘truth-tellers,’” he said.

According to Scott W. Simmons of the executive search firm Crist Kolder Associates, CFOs looking to move up should own the profit and loss (P&L) report as general manager and possess effective communication and emotional intelligence. “CFOs have a unique vantage point since work crosses all segments of the company,” he said. The firm’s Volatility Report provides data on the increase in the promotions of CFOs to CEOs at Fortune 500 and S&P 500 companies since 2014.

So which big company CFOs possess this type of experience? Simmons shared with Fortune his take on current Fortune 500 CFOs who could potentially step into a CEO role in the next three years.

One finance chief he named is Yanela Frias who began her tenure in March as EVP and CFO of Prudential Financial succeeding Ken Tanji. Frias is the insurance giant’s first female CFO and has built a 27-year career at Prudential. 

“This is a deep-rooted Pru person,” Simmons said. Looking at her track record, she ran businesses and worked in international markets, he said. In addition to her finance leadership roles during her time at the company, she also led the Investment & Pension Solutions business within Prudential Retirement, served as president of Prudential Retirement, and was appointed president of Group Insurance in 2021. Over the years, she gained experience central to the CFO role, like running a P&L.  

You can read more of Simmons’ and Fortune’s discussion in “9 CFOs ready to make the jump to CEO.”

Sheryl Estrada
sheryl.estrada@fortune.com

The following sections of CFO Daily were curated by Greg McKenna

Leaderboard

Eric Aboaf was appointed EVP and CFO of S&P Global (NYSE: SPGI), effective February 2025. He will succeed interim CFO Christopher Craig, who is the company’s chief accounting officer. Aboaf arrives from State Street Corporation, where he has been CFO for nearly eight years and also held the role of vice chairman since 2022. Previously, he served as CFO of Citizens Financial Group and treasurer of Citigroup. 

Sherri R. Luther was appointed CFO and treasurer of Coherent (NYSE: COHR), a lasers, materials and networking company, effective immediately. She will succeed Richard J. Martucci, who has served as interim CFO since September 2023 and will remain with the company in a non-executive officer role. Luther returns to the company after serving as CFO of Lattice Semiconductor Corporation since 2019. She previously spent 16 years at Coherent, most recently serving as corporate vice president of finance. 

Big deal

Earnings season is off to a great start for U.S. banks, but lower deposit costs thanks to the Federal Reserve’s recent pivot to lower interest rates are unlikely to show up in third-quarter earnings, according to a new report from S&P Global Market Intelligence. While net interest margins should expand, the report said, loan growth will likely remain slow as banks face increased credit risk and regulatory scrutiny. 

“Higher credit costs will serve as a headwind to bank earnings,” said Nathan Stovall, the division’s director of financial institutions research, “but lower rates will provide some relief for strained borrowers and prevent credit quality from seriously challenging most institutions’ balance sheets.”

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Courtesy of S&P Global Market Intelligence

 

Going deeper

Startup that wants to be the eBay for AI data taps Google vets and a top IP lawyer for key roles,” is a new report from Fortune’s Jeremy Khan. To date, companies building large language models have mostly harvested data for free, often with little regard for copyright. That era is drawing to a close, however, and Human Native AI wants to connect AI companies with publishers and other businesses that have data to sell.

Overheard

“The war in Ukraine changed everything about how young people think about the Department of Defense’s work, and really the important mission of deterrence and making sure that we invest in the next technologies.”

— Katherine Boyle, a general partner at Andreessen Horowitz, said on stage at Fortune’s Most Powerful Women Conference on Tuesday.

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