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Number of female managers on Wall Street is still low but improving

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When Katrin Dambrot began the Financial Women’s Association (FWA) of New York’s Back2Business returnship program in 2016, she expected participants to consist largely of new mothers and junior employees with a few years’ experience that had stepped away to start families. But what she found was women with significant experience, some at the managing director level, who were out of work. And they all shared one persistent worry.

“Women who had left the workplace were extremely reticent to even apply for anything,” Dambrot told Yahoo Finance. “They felt they didn’t have a place at the table anymore. They felt that if they had been away for a couple years that nobody would want them.”

The Back2Business program seeks out women who have been out of the financial services industry and places them in trial positions with partner companies such as BMO Capital Markets, Deloitte, New York Life and PGIM in paid assignments that last from 90 days to a year, with both sides hoping it leads to a permanent position.

One of the most important parts of the program, Dambrot added, is that it provides participants training workshops and mentors, which many women say has been acutely absent in financial industry for some time.

The industry stats for women are dismal

In asset management, women today represent 47% of the total workforce, but only 10% of fund managers. Of all mutual funds managed in the United States, just 2% are run by a woman or a team of women. In contrast, 76% of funds are run exclusively by men, according to Morningstar data.

Those numbers lag many other professional fields. Women make up 37% of medical doctors, 20% of law-firm partners, 24% of federal judges and 19% of partners in U.S. accounting firms.

Data from Morningstar analyzed by Yahoo Finance found that over the last 15 years, the number of U.S. debt and equity funds managed by a team that includes a woman has stayed exactly the same.

Historic marker on Wall Street in New York. (AP Photo/Mark Lennihan)
Historic marker on Wall Street in New York. (AP Photo/Mark Lennihan)

Why the discrepancy? Some chalk it up to outright gender discrimination, while others opine that’s just the way things are. Conversations with dozens of women in senior positions on Wall Street, as well as researchers, hiring managers and recruiters, suggest there isn’t a simple answer.

“If you’re looking for someone with a 15-year track record, there aren’t a lot of women around,” said Diane Garnick, a board member of the CFA Research Foundation and managing director and chief income strategist at TIAA.

One major reason for this is that women have historically not gotten the chance to build a long-term track record. Companies typically want to hire fund managers with a minimum of five years of experience. If managers leave the industry for more than a few months, they can no longer claim the record that they’ve built and essentially have to start from scratch. This can leave women feeling they have to choose between having a family or caring for an ailing older relative, responsibilities that disproportionately fall to women, and succeeding in their careers.