Fintech's Summer C-Suite Churn: Revolut, Adyen, and Nubank Lose Senior Leaders in One Week
Between June 1 and June 4, 2026, three of the world's most closely watched fintech companies announced senior executive departures within days of each other. The exits of Revolut co founder and CTO Vlad Yatsenko , Adyen CFO Ethan Tandowsky , and Nubank CFO Guilherme Lago arrive not at moments of crisis but at moments of inflection, when companies built on speed and disruption are engineering their transformation into regulated, bank stage institutions.[1][2][3] Three Transitions, One Week The facts, taken together, form a striking tableau. Yatsenko will step down from Revolut on July 1 after more than a decade as the technical architect of a platform that now serves over 70 million customers across 100 countries. Lago will hand off the Nubank CFO role to an incoming executive on July 13, capping seven years that took the Brazilian neobank from 20 million customers to 135 million across three countries. Tandowsky will exit Adyen entirely on August 31, the only one of the three to leave the fintech sector altogether, a rare move in an industry where executives typically migrate horizontally between platforms.[2][3] | Executive | Company | Outgoing Role | Transition | Effective Date | | | | | | | | Vlad Yatsenko | Revolut | Co Founder, CTO | Non executive director on board; Donato Lucia named VP of Technology | July 1, 2026 | | Guilherme Lago | Nubank | CFO | Special Advisor; Rob Livingston (ex Visa) named CFO | July 13, 2026 | | Ethan Tandowsky | Adyen | CFO | Departing fintech entirely; successor search underway | August 31, 2026 | Revolut: Engineering Leadership in the IPO Era Yatsenko joined Revolut in 2015 alongside CEO Nik Storonsky, building the technical infrastructure that underpins one of Europe's most ambitious fintech businesses. Revolut generated £4.5 billion in revenue in 2025, a 46 percent year on year increase, with pre tax profit of £1.7 billion. The company holds banking licences in the UK, Lithuania, and Mexico, and has filed for an OCC national bank charter in the United States, committing $500 million toward that application in March 2026. Its secondary share sale in November 2025 valued it at $75 billion, the highest valuation for any private technology company in Europe, and the company is now targeting a US IPO that analysts have suggested could reach $200 billion.[4] Yatsenko's departure from the CTO seat is notable for what it signals beyond the individual. His successor, Donato Lucia , joined Revolut as a senior software engineer in 2018, spent eight years building core banking infrastructure, and was promoted to Head of Technology in April 2025. The role Lucia is stepping into has been deliberately rebranded: not CTO but Vice President of Technology , a deliberate de emphasis from the C suite governance tier. "I feel content with this decision, as Revolut has grown from a young, ambitious startup into a mature, highly impactful global company," Yatsenko said in a company statement.[4] The title change is a signal in its own right. As Revolut pursues a US bank charter and prepares for public markets, the company is visibly restructuring its governance hierarchy, moving engineering leadership from the founder stage governance table to the operational layer underneath it. The tech infrastructure Yatsenko built will now need to satisfy OCC examiners and the capital adequacy demands of a regulated US national bank. Nubank: Hiring from the Card Networks Nubank's transition is the most architecturally revealing of the three. The company announced on June 1 that Rob Livingston will become its global CFO on July 13, arriving directly from Visa , where he served as CFO for North America, the network's largest revenue segment. Before his 12 years at Visa, Livingston spent 18 years at Capital One , serving as President of Capital One Canada, Divisional CFO, and Senior Credit Officer. He holds a BA in Economics from Yale University and brings more than 30 years of cross regional financial services experience spanning North America, Europe, and Asia.[3] Nubank CEO David Velez framed the succession in explicitly strategic terms. "Lago has been a true partner and helped lead the finance organization through Nubank's growth into the leading digital bank in Latin America. After careful consideration, he decided this was the right moment to step down, and we shaped this succession together. Rob Livingston is the right person to lead the team through what comes next. Our priorities, growth in our core markets, reshaping Nubank around AI, and disciplined international expansion, are unchanged," Velez said.[3] Lago's own departure statement reflected the magnitude of what he helped build. "I joined Nubank in 2019, when the company had around 20 million customers and operated only in Brazil. Today Nu has 135 million customers across three countries, with a finance organization strong enough to lead through any cycle. That is the work I am most proud of, and this is the right moment to step down," Lago said.[3] Nubank announced its $1 billion share repurchase program on June 4, the same week as the CFO transition news, authorizing buybacks over a 12 month period beginning that date. The company also confirmed approximately BRL 45 billion (roughly $8.2 billion) in Brazil investments for 2026, as Nubank prepares for a US bank launch that will require precisely the kind of regulatory capital experience Livingston brings from his time at both Visa and Capital One.[3] That a fintech of Nubank's scale is recruiting its CFO directly from the card networks is not a footnote. It marks the effective dissolution of the organizational boundary between traditional financial infrastructure and the challengers that were once defined by their opposition to it. Livingston is not a fintech native converting to Nubank's model; Nubank is adopting his. Adyen: The Departure That Goes Furthest Tandowsky's exit from Adyen is the quietest of the three in terms of market drama, but arguably the most unusual in b…