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Fortune 500 Power Moves
Christopher DelOrefice was appointed CFO of Ulta Beauty (No. 375), effective Dec. 5. Chris Lialios will continue to serve as interim CFO until then. DelOrefice succeeds former CFO Paula Oyibo, who left the company in June. He joins Ulta Beauty from medical technology company Becton Dickinson & Co., where he has served as EVP and CFO since September 2021. Before that, DelOrefice spent over 20 years with Johnson & Johnson in various financial leadership roles, including VP of investor relations, VP of finance, and CFO of North America consumer.
Every Friday morning, the weekly Fortune 500 Power Moves column tracks Fortune 500 company C-suite shifts—see the most recent edition.
More notable moves this week:
Lydia Brown has been appointed CFO of Citrin Cooperman, a professional services provider for private, middle market businesses and high net-worth individuals, effective Oct. 13. Brown succeeds Larry Diamond, who will retire after three years of dedicated service as the firm's CFO. Brown brings more than 30 years of experience in the professional services industry, including senior financial leadership roles across both private-equity-backed and publicly traded companies. Most recently, she served as CFO for HKA, a global consultancy.
Vitor Roque, SVP of finance, business units and corporate financial planning and analysis, has been named interim CFO at BD (Becton, Dickinson and Company) (NYSE: BDX), a global medical technology company. Chris DelOrefice, EVP and CFO, will depart the company effective Dec. 5 for the CFO role at Ulta Beauty. BD is conducting a search to identify a permanent successor.
Jonathan Mir was appointed CFO of Bitfarms Ltd. (Nasdaq/TSX: BITF), a North American energy and digital infrastructure company, effective Oct. 27. Bitfarms’ current CFO, Jeff Lucas, is retiring and will remain on as a strategic financial advisor and consultant through Q1 2026. Mir has more than 25 years of capital markets experience in energy infrastructure. He spent most of his career at Lazard Inc., where he served as head of North American power, energy and infrastructure. Most recently, Mir was a managing director in Bank of America’s Natural Resources and Energy Transition group.
Craig Chamberlin was appointed EVP and CFO of Vertiv Holdings Co. (NYSE: VRT), a digital infrastructure company, effective Nov. 10. Chamberlin succeeds David Fallon, who previously announced his intention to retire from Vertiv and serve as a consultant to the company through Dec. 31. Chamberlin joins Vertiv from Wabtec Corporation, where he most recently served as group VP and CFO of the company's transit segment.
Mark Daniel was appointed CFO of Atossa Therapeutics, Inc. (Nasdaq: ATOS), a clinical-stage biopharmaceutical company. Daniel is a senior finance leader with more than 25 years of experience. He also brings deep treasury and capital markets expertise relevant to Atossa's transition from clinical development to commercialization.
Kris Smith, CFO of Suncor Energy (NYSE: SU) will retire on Dec. 31, after more than 25 years of service. During his tenure at the company, Smith has held several roles, including EVP, downstream and interim CEO. Troy Little, currently SVP of external affairs, will be appointed CFO. Little has over 25 years of financial experience.
Big Deal
The AuditBoard’s Risk Intelligence Report combines proprietary platform data, including major U.S. companies, with survey insights from more than 400 global risk leaders, covering how enterprises are managing AI risks.
A key finding is that enterprises are eager to invest in AI; however, inconsistent execution—not budget—is the barrier keeping most organizations stuck in a “middle maturity trap.” While AI is creating new risks, enterprises with a mature approach to risk management are using the technology to strengthen governance, embed continuous monitoring, and transform oversight into foresight, according to the report.
Fifty-three percent of enterprises report implementing AI-specific tools, and 39% plan to expand AI/ML skills. However, fewer than 30% feel prepared for upcoming AI governance requirements.
Going deeper
Here are four Fortune weekend reads:
"How Palantir’s CEO forged a connection with investors by writing spicy shareholder letters that quote philosophers and skewer ‘technocratic elites’" by Jessica Mathews
"Bloom Energy’s stock is up 1,000% in a year because its fuel cells are solving AI’s data center power problem" by Jordan Blum
"BlackRock’s $40 billion deal highlights the unstoppable AI data center gold rush, as CEO Larry Fink pushes back on AI bubble fears" by Sharon Goldman
"JPMorgan CEO Jamie Dimon says AI will eliminate jobs and ‘people should stop sticking their head in the sand’" by Amanda Gerut
Overheard
"Smart, early career, and motivated employees can be an organization’s greatest asset, especially at a time when AI early adopters are in high demand—but it’s critical to understand and mitigate the risks each generation brings with them."
—Nick Kathmann, chief information security officer at LogicGate, writes in a Fortune opinion piece titled, "Gen Z’s digital native status is a double-edged sword. They have cyber blind spots."