The Fortune 500 gains another female CEO next month as Gunjan Kedia takes on U.S. Bank: The risks in her inbox range from tariffs to wild fires
US Bank will welcome its new CEO next month · Fortune

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  • Gunjan Kedia will become the new CEO of U.S. Bancorp in April, taking over from Andrew Cecere, as the financial industry navigates economic uncertainties, trade tensions, and evolving policies from the White House. Despite challenges, U.S. Bancorp remains focused on leveraging its recent acquisitions, technological investments, and a unified business approach to maintain industry leadership while addressing long-term risks like climate change and financial volatility.

The Fortune 500 is set to gain another female CEO among its ranks as U.S. Bancorp welcomes Gunjan Kedia to the top job.

Kedia, 54, currently serves as president of the business, which she joined in 2016. In April she will take on the corner office from Andrew Cecere, who has been in the role since 2018.

Leading America's fifth-largest bank in 2025 is no small undertaking. CEOs and analysts across Wall Street are growing increasingly uneasy about the policy coming out of the White House, as well as rising geopolitical tensions and the suffering health of consumers as a result.

The stock market has wobbled in recent weeks—losing the majority of gains made during the so-called 'Trump bump'—with speculation mounting about just how far trade wars between the U.S., China, Canada and Mexico will go.

Despite the watchlist of red flags in Kedia's inbox seemingly growing daily, she's had years to prepare for the challenge.

In its 2025 proxy statement, the bank, which reported net revenue of $27.5 billion in 2024, revealed it had conducted a multi-year process establishing candidates with "the necessary experience, leadership capabilities, skills and attributes critical to the role and leadership of our company."

Kedia emerged as the frontrunner and was named to inherit the CEO position following the company's annual shareholder meeting on April 15.

In his letter to shareholders published on March 5, Cecere outlined that his successor will prioritize continuing to unite the bank's 70,000 employees, including those it inherited courtesy of its recent MUFG Union Bank acquisition.

He wrote: "We have spent considerable time simplifying and optimizing our organization—aligning business lines under Gunjan, centralizing our operations, and enhancing our technology experiences for employees and clients.

"We have talked about being 'one U.S. Bank' for many years ... Interconnectedness is the manifestation of the one U.S. Bank approach, and it is a focus Gunjan is bringing to the organization as we head into the future. Our intent is to think as one team."