The Borneo Post

For women CEOs, danger lurks atop the corporate ladder

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Above and beyond all other factors we might use to explain why these firms are being targeted, we found very large and significan­t gender effect. Christine Shropshire, Arizona State University management professor

NEW YORK: In one recent 24-hour span, two women were pushed out of leadership roles at major US corporatio­ns, spotlighti­ng how investor pressure can frustrate efforts to broaden diversity in the boardroom.

Ellen Kullman, Meg Whitman, Mary Barra, Indra Nooyi, Marissa Mayer, Irene Rosenfeld, Sheri McCoy and Ursula Burns all have led large, publicly-traded companies.

Burns was the first black woman to serve as chief executive officer (CEO) of a major company.

These women led DuPont, HP, General Motors, PepsiCo, Yahoo!, Xerox, Mondelez and Avon Products, but they also all have been in the crosshairs of influentia­l Wall Street investors, activists who succeeded in pushing Kullman, Burns, Rosenfeld and McCoy to the exit.

To save their jobs, others gave in to the critics: Whitman agreed to split HP in two, while Barra agreed to dividend payments for GM shareholde­rs.

Do male CEOs really outperform their female counterpar­ts or are the women simply easy targets for investors trying to throw their weight around in search of bigger returns?

That question has taken on greater importance at a time when Silicon Valley tech companies face accusation­s of sexism and are under pressure to increase their racial and gender diversity.

Of the 500 corporatio­ns included in S& P’s Wall Street stock index, just 27 firms, or 5.4 per cent, are led by women.

“Above and beyond all other factors we might use to explain why these firms are being targeted, we found very large and significan­t gender effect,” said Christine Shropshire, a professor of management at Arizona State University.

Shropshire studied the demands that so- called activist investors made of corporate leadership between 2003 and 2013.

Among companies with similar financial results, those that had put a woman in charge faced a disproport­ionate share of investor pressure, she told AFP.

“Investors perceive these women CEOs to be weaker, to be less confident, less competent, less able. And then they target their activism accordingl­y.”

In an interview with The New York Times, former DuPont chief Kullman said the workplace becomes less fair for women as they reach the highest rungs of the corporate ladder.

“We are never taught to fight for ourselves,” she said.

A 2013 study by PwC found women had a 38 per cent chance of leaving the CEO position within 10 years compared to only 27 per cent for men.

But in most cases the performanc­es turned in by women CEOs surpassed the industry average.

Shares in women-led businesses have produced 25 per cent annual returns since 2009 compared to only 11 per cent for the MSCI World index of large and mid- cap companies, according to a study of 11,000 companies in 27 developed countries that was produced this month by Nordea Bank AB. — AFP

 ??  ?? Of the 500 corporatio­ns included in S&P’s Wall Street stock index, just 27 firms, or 5.4 per cent, are led by women. — Reuters photo
Of the 500 corporatio­ns included in S&P’s Wall Street stock index, just 27 firms, or 5.4 per cent, are led by women. — Reuters photo

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