CME CEO Terry Duffy will step down from the chief executive role he has held since 2016, the derivatives exchange operator announced on 17 June 2026, in the most consequential leadership change of a busy week for financial services appointments.
CME CEO Terry Duffy’s Exit: What the Transition Actually Means
According to the CME Group press release, the change takes effect on the later of 1 March 2027 and the date the company files its 2026 Form 10-K annual report. CME calls this the ‘Transition Date.’ Duffy will then serve as Executive Chairman through 31 December 2027.
Lynne Fitzpatrick, currently President and Chief Financial Officer, will be appointed CEO and join the board on that same Transition Date. For investors, the overlap period matters: Duffy remains involved through the end of 2027, giving Fitzpatrick a runway with the outgoing CEO still in the building.
CNBC reports that Duffy is 67. He has chaired CME Group since 2002 and took on the CEO title in 2016. His tenure covered the group’s transformation from open-outcry pit trading to an electronic marketplace, along with its acquisition of the Chicago Board of Trade in 2007 and the New York Mercantile Exchange in 2008.
Charlie Carey, Lead Director of the CME Group board, described Duffy in the CME announcement on PR Newswire as ‘the longest running Chairman and CEO in our company’s history’ and ‘the foremost champion of our business, our markets and the global futures industry.’
BitGo Brings Singapore Regulatory Expertise In-House
In crypto, BitGo appointed Angela Ang as managing director for Asia-Pacific and president of BitGo Singapore. Ang spent more than a decade at the Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS), the city-state’s financial regulator, where she helped build the payments and crypto licensing framework. She led the team that operationalised the licensing regime under which BitGo’s Singapore unit now operates.
BitGo Singapore Pte. Ltd. is licensed by the MAS as a Major Payment Institution (MPI) authorised for Digital Payment Token services, including trading and custodial wallets for retail customers in Singapore. The company secured that MPI licence in August 2024, according to BitGo’s licence announcement. BitGo’s listing on the MAS Financial Institutions Directory confirms that status.
Ang joins from TRM Labs, where she was head of APAC public policy and strategic partnerships and part of the firm’s founding regional team. BitGo said she assumed the role after satisfying regulatory fit-and-proper requirements.
The Rest of the Week’s Moves
iFOREX appointed Daniel Shalom as chief operating officer with immediate effect. Shalom arrives from Yad Vashem, Israel’s World Holocaust Remembrance Center, where as chief information officer he oversaw a technology overhaul centred on a six-petabyte data environment. Before that, he spent eight years at Amdocs, most recently as vice president of data and AI leading a 500-person team. iFOREX has been building out its technology layer, including an AI-powered trading recommendation service called Pulse.
HFM made two appointments in the same week. Georgios Papassavas became CEO in February, after nearly a decade at the Larnaca-based broker, having previously served as chief information officer. HFM also named Jean Nahas as Head of Category in the UAE to lead its newly licensed Dubai entity. Nahas previously co-founded 357 Group and served as Group COO at Zarvista Capital Markets between 2023 and 2025.
Kraken promoted Stavros Vassiliades to Chief Operating Officer and Executive Director of its EU business. Vassiliades joined Kraken from Pepperstone EU, the Cyprus-licensed unit of the Australian CFD (contract for difference, a derivative product allowing traders to speculate on price moves without owning the underlying asset) broker, where he spent three years as executive director. His retail brokerage background mirrors Kraken’s strategic push to bring derivatives to European retail clients under its Cyprus licence.
CLS, the infrastructure group running the world’s largest payment-versus-payment foreign exchange settlement system, added six directors to its board. The new members represent Deutsche Bank, UBS Switzerland AG, BNP Paribas CIB, and JPMorgan Chase Bank, alongside two independents. The board now stands at 21 directors, with eight independent members. Chairman Gottfried Leibbrandt said the additions support the company’s risk agenda.
TenTrade hired Andreas Andreou as Partner and Chief Revenue Officer and Marios Morfakis as Chief Sales Officer, both from INGOT Brokers. Andreou most recently served as Chief Sales Officer at INGOT Brokers up to June 2026.
For investors watching CME Group, the key date to mark is the filing of the 2026 Form 10-K, the document that formally starts the clock on Fitzpatrick’s tenure as CEO.

