Pin-up photographs and smutty jokes have long been commonplace on trading floors, but the finance world is gradually opening up to women — underlined by the arrival today of Jane Fraser at the head of Wall Street banking flagship Citigroup.
Her elevation marks “a milestone,” said Lorraine Hariton, director of Catalyst, an organization that promotes women in the workplace.
“But there is also a long way to go,” she said.
Photo: AFP
Employment figures demonstrate the mountains that still have to be moved to achieve parity between men and women in the financial services sector.
Women in 2019 made up more than 50 percent of employees in the field in the US, but only 22 percent of managers — leaving aside the highest positions — Deloitte said in a report.
Current trends predict that the figure would rise to 31 percent by 2030.
Male financial analysts last year earned 17 percent more on average than their female counterparts.
Several women told reporters that women have to work harder than men to climb the ranks, and have to be seen as beyond reproach.
Prestigious professions and those that pay the most, like investment bankers and traders, still remain strongholds of white men — and sexist remarks still come out from time to time.
“For every Jane Fraser, there are hundreds, if not thousands, out there,” said Muriel Wilkins of the executive consultancy firm Paravis Partner.
“Are they being provided with the opportunities to be able to advance?” she said.
However, the old certainties have started to shift.
Vague promises about the need to diversify recruiting have gradually led to some real reflection on the issue.
“Slowly more leaders ... are starting to think and to talk about what it means to have equity in their organization ... and which structures they can put in place, so that it is not just on women,” Wilkins said.
At JPMorgan Chase, the US’ largest bank by asset size, there has long been an informal women’s network. In 2013, women at the most senior level started organizing women-only meetings while on business trips around the world so that they could hear employees’ thoughts.
Company head Jamie Dimon wanted to formalize these various initiatives and so in 2018 the “Women on the Move” program was created, project manager Sam Saperstein said.
“It allowed us to reinvigorate what we were doing with HR, with training and just pull everything together and elevate it in a clear strategy across the firm,” she said.
The initiative organized a career development program open to all women in the company. About 500 participated in the first session last year, and 2,000 have applied for the second.
To tackle the citadel of asset management, which is still the preserve of men, the organization “Girls who Invest,” founded in 2015, has set itself the goal of having 30 percent of the money invested in funds worldwide managed by women by last year.
Women currently represent only 6 percent of managers in venture capital companies and only 3 percent in hedge funds, the group said.
The organization wants to prove that contrary to popular belief, women are not at all turned off by the job: companies just have to go out and find them.
It scours university campuses to recruit students, train them and offer them internships.
“The industry had moved tremendously in the past five years,” director Katherine Jollon Colsher said. “More and more firms are now having 50 percent female analyst classes and are focused on those same numbers at the associate level.”
“Measurement and holding people accountable is critical to make change,” said Lorraine Hariton of Catalyst.
Michael Corbat, Jane Fraser’s predecessor, was one of the first in the industry to release statistics on diversity within his firm.
It is also essential for companies to put in place support measures, whether it is sponsorship programs or parental leave, Hariton said.
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