Matinee movies, random woodworking projects, and sipping ice cold beverages beachside. Dream vacation, or a day in the life of a CFO? Increasingly, there might not be much of a difference: CFO retirements are markedly on the rise. Globally, 60% of outgoing CFOs at companies in major stock indices either retired or moved to the board in Q1 2026, significantly above the seven-year Q1 average of 39%, according to the latest CFO Turnover Index from leadership advisory firm Russell Reynolds Associates. We’re at an interesting point for turnover overall: CFO appointments at those publicly held companies dipped for the first time since Q1 2022, falling from a high of 5.2% in Q1 2025 to 4.9% for the same quarter in 2026. “It’s the first quarterly decline, but it’s very minor, and it’s still pretty significantly elevated against the seven-year trend,” Linda Barham, Russell Reynolds’s financial officers practice Americas leader, told us, adding that “a lot of the impetus and the catalyst behind [activity] actually haven’t changed, and so we’re still sitting at a very significant high, even across the last seven years.” Things get interesting, however, when you dig a little deeper into the side effects we may increasingly see as a result of the retirement stats: As the supply of experienced CFO candidates shrinks, the demand for experienced CFOs is growing, potentially creating an intriguing supply and demand dilemma in the future. Search committees may have to work overtime.—NP |