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Analysis-Women's U.S. boardroom gains slow as diversity focus shifts
FILE PHOTO: The female gender symbol is seen displayed on the Ernst and Young Building on International Women's Day in Times Square in New York City, New York · Reuters

By Ross Kerber

(Reuters) - A push to get more women on U.S. boards has slowed this year, raising concern among recruiters that some firms may have "ticked the gender box" by hitting minimum levels of female representation or moved on to focus on other diversity issues.

Improving boardroom diversity has become a focus for many investors who say having a broader range of experiences around the top table improves decision-making and corporate cultures.

But new data and interviews show that's not the only priority at many companies. Figures that researcher Equilar shared with Reuters showed women made up a smaller share of new directors who joined company boards in the first two quarters of this year, accounting for around 40% of new directors in both timeframes.

The figures undo a rising trend seen in 2021 when women accounted for 41% of new directors in the first quarter and 47% of new directors in the second quarter.

The figure then rose to 48% for the last two quarters of 2021, the highest share since Equilar began tracking companies on the Russell 3000 index in 2017. (Graphic: https://tmsnrt.rs/3edQSYk)

Graphic: Women’s share of new directorships declines- https://graphics.reuters.com/USA-CORPORATIONS/byprjgrjepe/chart.png

To be sure quarterly numbers can fluctuate, with women accounting for just 36% of new directors as recently as mid-2020. The total share of women directors among the Russell 3000 has risen steadily.

Equilar, and a number of recruiters, told Reuters the slowing pace in part reflects boards turning their attention away from gender equality to racial equality, instead of focusing on both.

Boards are "focusing on diversity beyond gender," said Equilar Director of Research Courtney Yu, especially if they already include at least one woman as required by Nasdaq Inc.

Equilar said 67 Russell 3000 companies had no women on their boards as of June 30 and 443 companies had just one woman, down from 633 such companies a year earlier.

'LITTLE REVOLT'

Beth Stewart, CEO of search firm Trewstar Corporate Board Services, said some boards also may have reached level where a third of members were women - the goal of activists like the 30% Club https://30percentclub.org/ – and then shifted their attention as they recruit other new directors.

In addition some white male directors think they have enough diverse candidates, she said. "There's been a little revolt going on among white men," Stewart said.

Pressure to add women eased in May when a California judge struck down a state law mandating boardroom gender diversity.