Prudential announces FTSE 100’s 26th CFO change in 2023

Russ Mould
31 May 2023
  • This year is now challenging difficult year of 2020 for most CFO changes
  • Seventeen changes already made, nine more in the pipeline
  • Average tenure of FTSE 100 CFOs down to 4.1 years
  • Six of twenty longest-serving number crunchers are still due to leave in 2023
  • Nine of 2023’s changes welcome a female CFO (as four change posts)

“Whatever lay behind the sudden dismissal of Prudential’s chief financial officer James Turner, a breach of conduct rules is an unusual reason for someone to leave such a position, even in a year when no fewer than 26 changes in CFO have already been announced by FTSE 100 firms,” says AJ Bell investment director Russ Mould. “Shareholder pressure on the board after poor operational or share price performance, retirement, getting (or missing out on) the job of chief executive, the promotion of a predecessor to the top job, the appointment of an interim CFO after a sudden change or the desire for a fresh challenge are all much more common.

“The number of planned changes in CFO this year is well above the post-2000 average of 15 and is also the second-highest since 2000, with only the Covid-hit year of 2020 having a greater impact.

Source: Company accounts. *2023 changes as already announced or happened. FTSE 100 performance to date.

“Mr Turner’s immediate departure means that seventeen changes of CFO have already come into effect, with nine more announced, six of which have been scheduled for this year. The other three – at DS Smith, JD Sports and Unilever – have a less well-defined timeline, with Graeme Pitkethly’s term at Unilever running until the May 2024 annual general meeting at the latest.

 

Changes in FTSE 100 CFO announced in 2023

 

Company

In

Out

1

HSBC

Georges Elhedery

Ewen Stevenson

2

Halma

Steve Gunning

Marc Ronchetti

3

Centrica

Russell O'Brien

Kate Ringrose

4

Endeavour Mining

Guy Young

Joanna Pearson

5

Sainsbury

Blathnaid Bergin

Kevin O'Byrne

6

Intertek

Colm Deasy

Jonathan Timmins

7

Flutter Entertainment

Paul Edgecliffe-Johnson

Jonathan Hill

8

InterContinental Hotels

Michael Glover

Paul Edgecliffe-Johnson

9

Burberry

Ian Brimicombe (interim)

Julie Brown

10

Croda

Louisa Burdett

Jez Maiden

11

WPP

Joanne Wilson

John Rogers

12

Associated British Foods

Eion Tonge

John Bason

13

GSK

Julie Brown

Iain Mackay

14

RS Group

Jane Titchener (interim)

David Egan

15

abdrn

Ian Jenkins (interim)

Stephanie Bruce

16

British American Tobacco

Javed Iqbal (interim)

Tadeu Marroco

17

Prudential

Ben Bulmer

James Turner

 

 

 

 

 

Changes announced but yet to be effective

18

Scottish Mortgage Inv. Trust

Sharon Flood (audit)

Justin Dowley (audit)

19

Burberry

Kate Ferry

Ian Brimicombe (interim)

20

Severn Trent

Helen Miles

James Bowling

21

Schroders

Richard Oldfield

Richard Keers

22

SSE

Barry O'Regan

Gregor Alexander

23

Rolls-Royce

Helen McCabe

Panos Kakoullis

24

DS Smith

Richard Pike

Adrian Marsh

25

JD Sports Fashion

Dominic Platt

Neil Greenhalgh

26

Unilever

TBC

Graeme Pitkethly

Source: Company accounts

“One notable trend is the departure of some of the longest-serving CFOs. John Bason at AB Foods entered 2023 with the longest term in office, dating back to 1999, and the next person on that list, SSE’s Gregor Alexander, will also retire shortly.

“Another five of the twenty-longest serving CFOs are also slated to step down in 2023 (or up, in the case of Scottish Mortgage’s Justin Dowley, who will switch from head of the audit committee to chair after the AGM and Fiona McBain’s departure from that role at the end of June). The changes at SSE, Scottish Mortgage, Schroders, DS Smith, Severn Trent and Unilever would take the average FTSE 100 CFO’s tenure down from 4.1 years to just 3.5 if they all happened today, as 61 members of the index have appointed a new number cruncher since the start of 2020.

 

Twenty longest-serving FTSE 100 CFOs

Company

CFO

Start date

Tenure – years

SSE

Gregor Alexander*

Oct-2002

20.7

Scottish Mortgage IT

Justin Dowley (audit)*

Jan-2005

18.4

Glencore

Steven Kalmin

Jul-2005

17.9

Melrose Industries

Geoffrey Martin

Jul-2005

17.9

Unite

Joe Lister

Jan-2008

15.4

Fresnillo

Mario Arreguin

Apr-2008

15.1

Schroders

Richard Keers*

May-2013

10.1

Smith DS

Adrian Marsh*

Sep-2013

9.7

Airtel Africa

Jaideep Paul

May-2014

9.1

Informa

Gareth Wright

Jul-2014

8.9

Standard Chartered

Andy Halford

Jul-2014

8.9

Admiral Group

Geraint Jones

Aug-2014

8.8

RELX

Nick Luff

Sep-2014

8.8

Experian

Lloyd Pitchford

Oct-2014

8.7

Next

Amanda James

Apr-2015

8.2

Severn Trent

James Bowling*

Apr-2015

8.2

Berkeley

Richard Stearn

Apr-2015

8.1

Unilever

Graeme Pitkethly*

Oct-2015

7.7

Smurfit Kappa

Ken Bowles

Apr-2016

7.2

BT

Simon Lowth

Jul-2016

6.9

Source: Company accounts. *Names in italics have announced their departure from the role of CFO.

“While keen followers of corporate governors will note with interest the rigour with which Prudential has applied its code of conduct for executives in the case of Mr Turner, they may well also approve of the gender mix among the newly appointed ranks of CFOs.

“Seven female CFOs (or heads of audit, in the case of Julie Tankard at Foreign & Colonial Investment Trust) were appointed in 2022 and five more have been selected in 2023, with another four to come (including another head of audit at an investment trust, this time Sharon Flood at Scottish Mortgage).

“Although Julie Brown switched to GSK from Burberry and Joanna Pearson and Stephanie Bruce stepped aside at Endeavour Mining and abdrn respectively, the number of female CFOs in the FTSE 100 now stands at 24, with an average term to date of 2.1 years, and all things being equal will be 28 by the end of 2023, although Vodafone will presumably find a successor to Margherita Della Valle and spare her the twin burden of being both CEO and CFO.”

 

           FTSE 100 Female CFOs

Company

CFO

Start date

Tenure - years

Next

Amanda James

Apr-2015

8.2

Vodafone

Margherita Della Valle

Jul-2018

4.8

NatWest Group

Katie Murray

Jan-2019

4.4

Compass

Karen Witts

Apr-2019

4.1

Beazley

Sally Lake

May-2019

4.0

Pearson

Sally Johnson

Apr-2020

3.1

Smith & Nephew

Anne-Francoise Nesmes

Aug-2020

2.8

Rightmove

Alison Dolan

Sep-2020

2.7

London Stock Exchange

Anna Manz

Nov-2020

2.5

Land Securities

Vanessa Simms

Jun-2021

2.0

Diageo

Lavanya Chandrashekar

Jul-2021

1.9

AstraZeneca

Aradhana Sarin

Aug-2021

1.8

Hargreaves Lansdown

Amy Stirling

Feb-2022

1.3

Shell

Sinead Gorman

Mar-2022

1.2

Barclays

Anna Cross

Apr-2022

1.1

Smiths Group

Clare Sherrer

Apr-2022

1.1

M & G

Kathryn McLeland

May-2022

1.1

Aviva

Charlotte Jones

Sep-2022

0.7

F&C Investment Trust

Julie Tankard (audit)

Aug-2022

0.8

Sainsbury

Blathnaid Bergin

Mar-2023

0.2

WPP

Joanne Wilson

Apr-2023

0.1

Croda

Louisa Burdett

Apr-2023

0.1

GSK

Julie Brown

May-2023

0.1

RS Group

Jane Titchener

May-2023

0.1

 

 

 

2.1

Changes already announced to come in 2023

Scottish Mortgage Inv. Trust

Sharon Flood (audit)

Jun-2023

 

Burberry

Kate Ferry

Jul-2023

 

Severn Trent

Helen Miles

Jul-2023

 

Rolls-Royce

Helen McCabe

H2 2023

 

Source: Company accounts

Russ Mould
Investment Director

Russ Mould’s long experience of the capital markets began in 1991 when he became a Fund Manager at a leading provider of life insurance, pensions and asset management services. In 1993, he joined a prestigious investment bank, working as an Equity Analyst covering the technology sector for 12 years. Russ eventually joined Shares magazine in November 2005 as Technology Correspondent and became Editor of the magazine in July 2008. Following the acquisition of Shares' parent company, MSM Media, by AJ Bell Group, he was appointed as AJ Bell’s Investment Director in summer 2013.

Contact details

Mobile: 07710 356 331
Email: russ.mould@ajbell.co.uk

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