The EU Women on Boards Directive’s June 2026 deadline has passed. For many listed companies in France, Germany, Italy, and beyond, the 40% non-executive board target has been met — or is being actively pursued under enforcement. A significant compliance milestone.
But the data tells an uncomfortable story about what board compliance has and has not produced. At executive level — where strategy is set, culture is shaped, and tomorrow’s CEOs are made — gender diversity has barely moved. The board quota addressed the symptom. The executive pipeline remains largely untouched.
1. The Board-Executive Gap: The 2025–2026 Picture
Three independent, non-competing sources published in 2025 and 2026 provide the clearest current picture of where female leadership stands in the C-suite roles that produce tomorrow’s CEOs.
Fortune’s tracking of the Fortune 500 and Global 500 shows that women now run 55 of 500 Fortune 500 companies — 11% — a milestone, but one that Fortune’s own December 2025 analysis describes as stalling. Women accounted for just 25.5% of new US CEO appointments through October 2025, down from 26.4% the prior year and the lowest rate since 2020. At the Global 500 level, just 6.6% of companies have a female CEO despite that being a record high.
Crist Kolder Associates’ 2025 Volatility Report — tracking Fortune 500 and S&P 500 appointments — shows women held 17.5% of CFO roles at mid-2025, down from 17.6% in 2024 and 18.5% in 2023. Women CFOs in the consumer sector dropped from 30 in 2023 to just 17 in 2025.
MSCI’s Women on Boards and Beyond 2025 report confirmed that female representation among board chairs, CEOs, and CFOs shows signs of stagnation globally — a pattern MSCI notes may impact the pipeline for future female director candidates.
At board level: women represent 32% of board members across Global 20 index companies — but just 6.5% of CEOs globally (Altrata, 2024). A board that is 40% female and a C-suite that is 6–11% female is not a diverse organisation. It is a compliant one.
“The board quota has been answered. The executive pipeline question has not. These are different problems requiring different tools.”
2. Why Board Compliance Has Not Produced Executive Diversity
The substitution effect
Research published in Corporate Governance: An International Review in 2024 identified the substitution effect: when companies focus on meeting board gender quotas, they often reduce pressure on executive diversity. Women enter non-executive positions to satisfy the regulatory requirement. The executive track remains unchanged. In Germany: 37% female supervisory board representation alongside just 19.7% female management board representation and 4.4% management board chairs.
The pipeline breaks earlier than boards can fix
McKinsey’s 2025 Women in the Workplace report — the eleventh consecutive year of tracking — confirms women remain underrepresented at every pipeline level. For every 100 men promoted into their first management role, 93 women are promoted. For Asian and Latina women: 82. For Black women: 60. For the first time in eleven years, McKinsey identifies a measurable ambition gap: 80% of women want to be promoted versus 86% of men — and the gap widens at entry and senior levels. McKinsey attributes this not to individual choice but to structural signals: women are receiving less organisational support, fewer sponsorships, and fewer flexible work options.
The DEI retreat is real and measurable
Only half of surveyed companies say women’s career advancement is a high priority in 2025. One in six have cut DEI staff or resources. Just 31% of entry-level women have a sponsor, versus 45% of men. Fortune’s December 2025 analysis found women gained a net of only 47 board seats in the Russell 3000 in 2025, compared to 258 in 2024 — and 59% of those gains came from expanding board size rather than replacing male directors.
3. Country-by-Country: Where the Executive Gap Is Widest Post-Deadline
France — Board Leader, Executive Laggard
CAC 40 boards: 46.7% female. Female CEOs across SBF indices: less than 10%. No female chair-CEO in the CAC 40. The Rixain Act’s separate requirement — 30% women in senior executive roles by March 2026, rising to 40% by March 2030 — addresses this gap with an obligation continuing well beyond the board deadline.
Germany — The Opt-Out Consequence
Germany exercised the EU directive’s opt-out in November 2024. Women hold just 19.7% of management board seats and 4.4% of chair positions. Without binding executive requirements, Germany’s executive gender gap is unlikely to close through market forces alone.
Italy — The Competition Effect Extends to Executives
Italy’s quota experience produced the competition effect documented in Management Science: the influx of qualified women into board talent pools raised standards for all candidates. Italy’s supply of female executives with board experience is now materially stronger than in markets that relied on voluntary approaches.
Sweden and the Netherlands — Binding Rules, Persistent Executive Gap
Both markets have now moved to binding board requirements. Executive diversity in both markets remains substantially below board levels, and no binding executive targets exist to drive further progress.
United States — Market Pressure, No Mandate, Slowing Progress
The December 2024 Fifth Circuit ruling removed Nasdaq’s board diversity rules. Fortune data shows women ran 11% of Fortune 500 companies in 2025 — but by December 2025 that figure had slipped back to 10.4% as several female CEOs departed. The share of new CEO appointments going to women is at its lowest rate since 2020.
4. What Closing the Executive Gap Now Requires
- Specialist executive search at every C-suite appointment — a process designed from the outset to find the best female candidate, not one where diversity is secondary. The pipeline of qualified female CFOs, COOs, and CEO-ready executives is real — but largely invisible to standard search processes
- Outcome-based executive briefs that define roles by what needs to be delivered, not who has done it before. The WEF (2023) documented how overly precise criteria reduce diverse candidate pools through the law of small numbers
- Active sponsorship — not mentoring. McKinsey 2025: 31% of entry-level women have a sponsor versus 45% of men. Closing this gap at every level is the single most evidenced structural intervention available
- Executive pipeline metrics tracked and reported at board level — % of C-suite female, % of P&L roles female, depth of female CEO succession pipeline — entirely distinct from board composition metrics
5. The Role of Specialist Search in the Next Chapter
The board compliance question has been answered through legislation and enforcement. The executive leadership question requires a different tool: access to the female executive talent that standard search processes do not reach.
Female Executive Search, powered by CEO Worldwide, has spent seven years building exactly this access. Our network of curated, vetted female executives spans every major sector and the geographies where executive gender diversity is now the defining governance challenge. We do not add diversity as a filter. We build searches around it.
Ready to close your executive gender gap — not just maintain your board compliance?
Visit www.female-executive-search.com or submit a mandate today.
Related reading
- The EU 40% Board Gender Quota Deadline Has Passed: What Non-Compliant Companies Must Do Now →
- After the Quota: Why Europe’s Most Regulated Markets Still Haven’t Built a Female CEO Pipeline →
- Why a Specialised Female Executive Search Firm Outperforms Traditional Search →
References & Sources
- Fortune (June 2025) — Women Run 11% of Fortune 500 Companies in 2025. 55 of 500; nine new female CEOs added, six departed; all new appointments were internal promotions.
fortune.com - Fortune (August 2025) — Global 500 Hits a Record High for Female CEOs. 33 of 500 Global 500 companies (6.6%) led by women.
fortune.com - Fortune (December 2025) — Why Women’s Rise to CEO Jobs and Board Seats Is Slowing in Corporate America. Women: 25.5% of new US CEO appointments through October 2025; net gain only 47 Russell 3000 board seats vs 258 in 2024.
fortune.com - Crist Kolder Associates / CFO Dive (November 2025) — Is the Rise of Female CFOs Pausing — or Stalling Out? Women: 17.5% of Fortune 500/S&P 500 CFOs (June 2025), down from 17.6% in 2024 and 18.5% in 2023.
cfodive.com - Crist Kolder Associates / CFO.com (February 2026) — CFO-to-CEO Promotions Reach Decade High. Female CEOs: 9.1% (down from 9.7%); female CFOs: 16.5% (down from 17.6%); consumer women CFOs: 30 in 2023 → 17 in 2025.
cfo.com - Fortune (June 2025) — Women Hold 17% of Fortune 500 CFO Roles. 87 women (17.4%) in 2025; 19 of top 100 Fortune 500 CFOs are women.
fortune.com - MSCI (March 2026) — Women on Boards and Beyond 2025. Female representation among board chairs, CEOs and CFOs shows signs of stagnation globally.
msci.com - McKinsey & Company / LeanIn.Org (December 2025) — Women in the Workplace 2025. C-suite: 29% unchanged. 93 women promoted per 100 men. First-ever ambition gap: 80% vs 86%. 31% entry-level women have a sponsor vs 45% of men. One in six companies cut DEI staff.
mckinsey.com - Glass Lewis (2025/2026) — Update on French Board Gender Diversity. CAC 40: 46.7%; <10% female CEOs; no female chair-CEO in CAC 40 in 2025.
glasslewis.com - Linklaters Sustainable Futures (2025) — EU Transposition of the Women on Boards Directive. French Rixain Act: 30% senior executive target March 2026, 40% March 2030.
sustainablefutures.linklaters.com - AllBright Foundation / DLA Piper (Autumn 2024) — Frankfurt Stock Exchange boards: 19.7% management boards, 37% supervisory boards, 4.4% management board chairs.
dlapiper.com - Wiley / Corporate Governance: An International Review (2024) — Lifting Women Up: Gender Quotas and Advancement on Corporate Boards. Substitution effect: board compliance without executive progress.
onlinelibrary.wiley.com - IEP at Bocconi University (2024) — Italy competition effect; Sweden and Denmark: progress stalled under voluntary measures.
iep.unibocconi.eu - Altrata (2024) — Global Gender Diversity 2024. Women: 32% of Global 20 board members; 45.5% CAC 40 boards; 6.5% of CEOs globally.
altrata.com - World Economic Forum (2023) — Create an Executive Search Process That Promotes Diversity. Law of small numbers: overly precise criteria reduce diverse candidate pools in executive search.
weforum.org
Female Executive Search is powered by CEO Worldwide, the global executive recruitment group founded in 2001. Female Executive Search was launched in 2018 as a dedicated practice exclusively focused on placing female executives at C-suite and board level across four continents. Published July 2026.

Managing Director @ Female Executive Search & International Talent Acquisition Director @ CEO Worldwide
As the Managing Director of Female Executive Search, She has the privilege of connecting businesses with the best vetted executive talent on the planet, with a focus on enhancing gender diversity and inclusion at the senior level. France has over 15 years of experience in executive recruitment, strategy, and management consulting, working with clients across various industries and geographies.
She is passionate about empowering women to fulfill their professional potential and break the glass ceiling, as well as helping organizations benefit from the proven advantages of having a balanced and diverse leadership team.
She leads Female Executive Search as a platform for international female executives to showcase their capabilities, access opportunities, and network with peers. France also partners with global executive search firm CEO Worldwide to source and certify candidates and meet the needs of our clients within 10 days.
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