Most decisions in business are first-order decisions. They answer the question in front of them. Second-order decisions answer the question behind the question. When a company searches externally for a CFO, it is making a first-order decision: we need someone with these credentials. When a company promotes from within, it is making a second-order decision: we need someone whose judgment is already priced into the outcomes we are living with today. These decisions are not the same, even though the market treats them as though they are. This is how institutional knowledge gets mispriced. Consider the math. A senior executive hired from outside carries a known credential set and an unknown performance distribution in your specific operating environment. The variance on that distribution is wide and statistics on senior executive hires succeeding in their first two years are not encouraging. Studies across industries consistently place it below fifty percent when measured against the objectives that prompted the hire. The market keeps pricing external candidates at a premium anyway, because credentials are visible and judgment is not. This is a persistent inefficiency. It is also one of the more expensive mistakes a scaling company can make. Compounding works in organizations the same way it works in portfolios. It is not linear. The executive who spends four years inside a business does not accumulate four years of experience. They accumulate something closer to the compound interest of four years of pattern recognition, relationship capital, institutional memory, and calibrated judgment about where the real leverage points are. The person hired from outside starts at zero on that curve. The catch-up period, if it comes at all, typically costs 18 to 24 months of organizational drag. On a platform moving at the speed that Payward is moving, that drag is not a rounding error. Robert Moore joined this company more than four years ago. He moved through senior finance roles, then took on corporate development, the function most responsible for the decisions that are hardest to reverse. He led the acquisition of NinjaTrader and its integration into the Payward platform. He operated in regulated environments where the penalty for imprecision is not a performance review but an enforcement action. He built the financial architecture that the next phase of this business will run on. He did not do these things in preparation for a CFO role. He did them because they needed doing. That distinction matters. People who work toward a title optimize for the title. People who work toward outcomes optimize for the business. Robert did the latter. The Payward platform, formalized in February 2026, is the expression of a thesis about infrastructure and compounding. Own the infrastructure. Build the products on top of it. Let the network effects between Kraken, NinjaTrader, Breakout, xStocks, and CF Benchmarks produce returns that no single product could generate alone. This is a long-duration asset. Long-duration assets require long-duration thinking. They require financial leadership that understands not just the current-period income statement but the present value of decisions being made today, the consequences of which will not be realized for three to five years. That kind of judgment cannot be onboarded. It is resident in the people who were present when those decisions were made. Before joining us, Robert spent 15 years in senior finance and operating roles at Betterment, Workframe, and Credit Suisse. That built his technical range. But technical range is the entry condition, not the differentiator. The differentiator is what happens when you apply that range inside a specific organism long enough to understand its tolerances, its failure modes, and its actual sources of durable advantage. Robert understands ours. We named him CFO because the analysis was straightforward once we asked the right question. Not “who is available in the market with the right credentials?” But “who already carries the compound value of this company’s financial history in their judgment, and what would it cost us to try to replicate that elsewhere?” The answer to the second question made the first question unnecessary. This is how we want to build. Promote the people who are best suited for the role. Invest in the ones who already understand the machine. Let institutional knowledge compound. The returns are non-linear and they are not available on the open market. Robert Moore is Payward’s CFO, effective immediately. Learn more about Payward The post Payward appoints Robert Moore as Chief Financial Officer appeared first on Kraken Blog .