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2023 CEO Transitions in Europe

March 2024

Spencer Stuart has analysed every CEO transition since 2010 in each of the major European stock indices. Here we break down what the numbers mean for you as a board director, CEO or CHRO.

Spencer Stuart has long tracked CEO turnover among major European listed companies. In this report we look at leadership changes at the top of European business during 2023, together with data on CEO transition trends since 2010. We define a transition as the replacement of a permanent outgoing CEO with a permanent incoming CEO.

CEO transitions have largely bounced back to pre-pandemic levels across Europe. During Covid we saw a decline in CEO appointments, just as we did in the wake of the Global Financial Crisis. In the midst of economic and social turmoil, many boards opted to retain leaders who might otherwise have retired, in order to capitalize on their experience and ensure continuity.

Total number of transitions: 2005–2023
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

The highest rate of CEO turnover in 2023 was found in the UK, where there were 17 new appointments in FTSE 100 companies compared with just eight in 2022. In Belgium, by contrast, there were no permanent transitions, despite the arrival of a spinoff in the BEL 20 (Syensqo) and an interim appointment at Elia Group.

Transitions by country: 2023
Country Companies 2023 transitions Turnover
United Kingdom
FTSE
100 17 17%
Switzerland
SMI
20 3 15%
Spain
IBEX
35 5 14%
Italy
FTSE MIB
40 5 13%
Germany
DAX
40 4 10%
Netherlands
AEX
25 2 8%
Nordics
OMX Nordics
40 3 8%
France
CAC
40 2 5%
Belgium
BEL
20 0 0%
Total 354* 39** 11%

*  The following five companies are dual listed in more than one of these countries, which is why the total number of companies is 354 not 360: ABB Ltd, AstraZeneca, International Consolidated Airlines Group, RELX, Shell and Unilever

**  There were CEO transitions at Unilever and Shell, which are listed in Amsterdam and London. Both transitions are included in the UK and Netherlands above, hence the total number of actual transitions is 39, not 41.

The highest proportion of transitions could be found within the technology, media, telecommunications and software sector, whereas the most actual transitions happened in industrial companies, which dominate the index.

CEO transitions by industry: 2023
Country Number of transitions Number of companies Turnover
TMTS 6 37 16%
Consumer 9 69 13%
Healthcare 3 31 10%
Industrial 13 129 10%
Financial Services 8 90 9%
Total 39 355 11%
5 women out of 39 CEOs appointed during 2023

Just five out of the 39 CEOs appointed during 2023 were women (13%), bringing the total number of female CEOs in our sample of companies to 23 (6.5% of all CEOs). Of the eleven CEOs appointed in financial services and healthcare companies, none was a woman.

Following a noticeable uptick during 2019, there has been little improvement in the rate at which women have been appointed as CEOs. This stagnation is in stark contrast to the steady rise in female board director appointments, for example 40% in Germany, 46% in the UK and 65% in Sweden last year (see Boards Around the World for more information).

Female CEO appointments since 2010
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

The majority of new CEOs in Europe (59%) were internal appointments, the same percentage as 2022. This is significantly below the US, where 70% of new CEOs appointed to S&P 1500 companies were internal. Consistent with our findings in the US, European healthcare companies hire a greater percentage of outsider CEOs than other industries. Insider appointments were predominant in both consumer (78%) and financial services (75%) sectors. Of the 39 transitions during 2023, 17 (44%) CEOs had a seat on the board before being appointed to their CEO role. Of these 17, 12 held an executive role within the company, two served on the board for a short period as CEO designate, and three were non-executive directors before being appointed as the CEO.

Who’s an insider and who’s an outsider?

Internal successors are internally promoted CEOs, former company C-suite executives/CEOs and “insider-outsiders,” two-step appointments who were recruited from outside the company and promoted into the CEO role within 18 months.

External successors are externally recruited CEOs and include those appointed from the company’s board of directors.

 

Insider/outsider CEOs: 2010–2023
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

The proportion of CEOs with prior public company CEO experience doubled in 2023, further evidence that there has been a flight to experience in some companies. This increase was largely due to the fact that 41% of CEO appointments in the UK were experienced CEOs (an all-time high), compared with just 12% for the rest of Europe.

CEOs with prior public company CEO experience
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Our research shows that the majority of first-time CEOs appointed in 2023 came from a divisional CEO role (53%). Recent, hands-on P&L experience was probably considered critical by many of the European boards that went through a CEO succession process, although companies in our sample may equally have had multiple divisional CEOs in the frame for promotion, increasing the likelihood that one would be picked over other internal candidates such as functional leaders.

Former CFOs are less likely to be appointed as CEO (10%), with no CFOs promoted to the top job in any industrial, financial services or healthcare company during 2023. Only 10% of CEOs had previously held the role of president/COO, whereas in the US 60% of new S&P 1500 CEOs were promoted COOs or presidents.

Over the five-year period between 2018–2023, European financial services companies have shown a strong preference for divisional CEOs, whereas TMT companies have been more likely to appoint COOs and CFOs.

The proportion of “leapfrog” CEOs — those who have not previously been in one of the most senior executive roles — has halved in Europe since 2022 to 10%.

Most new CEOs in Europe were appointed from four “last mile” roles

53%

Promoted from a divisional CEO role

10%

Promoted from CFO

10%

Promoted from a COO or president role

10%

“Leapfrog” appointments from below the C-suite

Remaining appointments came from a range of other roles.

Why do CEOs leave?

In 2021, 28% of departing CEOs resigned under pressure, whereas in 2023, only 10% of departing CEOs resigned. The remaining 90% were reported to have retired or stepped down for roles elsewhere.

Since the onset of COVID-19, there has been a steady and notable increase in the average age of newly appointed CEOs, with 18% over 60 at the time of appointment, a historical high. We saw a similar increase in average age of CEOs appointed in the wake of the Financial Crisis, suggesting that deeper experience may have been a factor in some appointments. CEOs appointed to financial services companies had the highest average age of any sector, an average that has increased from 50 to 57.5 years since 2019.

Average age at appointment
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

The average tenure of departing CEOs remains high despite peaking at 9.7 years in 2022. Consistent with other data in this report, it would appear that many of the CEOs who stayed on longer due to the pandemic are only now stepping out of the role. Likewise, the average age of departing CEOs also remains historically high at 59.9 years after a similar peak in 2022.

Average tenure of departing CEOs
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

2023 was the first year since 2010 that none of the newly appointed European CEOs in our sample also assumed the role of chair at their start date1; in 2022, 18% of CEOs did so. This is evidence of a longer-term trend towards separating the roles both sides of the Atlantic. It is interesting to note that a growing number of boards in the US have appointed an executive chair to work alongside the CEO and smooth the transition from a long-time CEO to an internal candidate or to provide continuity following an external CEO appointment.

1  Thomas Glanzmann, who had been appointed as chair at Grifols in February 2023, assumed the role of CEO three months later.

Related Insights

Our analysis of CEO transitions, tenure and backgrounds among S&P 1500 companies, including breakdowns by large-, mid- and small-cap companies.