San Francisco Chronicle

Why it’s smart to invest in firms led by women

- By Jena McGregor Jena McGregor is a Washington Post writer.

In recent years, some financial services companies have been adding investment products that place bets on women-led firms, investing in companies that have either female chief executives or diverse boards of directors. New research from Scandinavi­a’s largest bank shows why the wager might be a good one.

Companies with a woman in the CEO or chairman role have performed far better than a major global index over the past eight years, according to an analysis by the bank Nordea of nearly 11,000 companies globally. The results, first reported by Bloomberg, found that on average, companies with a woman in either of those two top jobs at the end of the calendar year more than doubled the performanc­e of the MSCI World Index in the following year. The annualized return for female-led firms, based on an equal weighting, was 25 percent since 2009, compared with just 11 percent for the broader market.

“It’s not one year that’s doing the work,” said Robert Naess, a portfolio manager at Nordea in Norway who did the analysis. Over the eight years he studied, he said in an interview, there was “only one year where they lagged the market.”

Naess’ study adds to a growing body of research aimed at examining whether gender diversity has an effect on corporate performanc­e. Some studies show a link: Credit Suisse, for example, has found that having a woman on the board was associated with better performanc­e, and that having more female top managers was associated with higher returns on equity, valuations and payout of dividends, as well as better stock performanc­e. Other studies, meanwhile, have shown less clear links, with one study showing the stock price of Norwegian companies dropped after adding female directors to meet a mandate that 40 percent of the country’s corporate boards be female — the drop was attributed in part to less experience­d directors.

Naess’ analysis examined publicly traded companies

from developed and emerging markets that had at least $2 million in stock trading each year from both developed and emerging markets. He looked at nearly 400 companies over the period in which women held one of the two roles, examining how the performanc­e of the company fared in the following year if a woman was CEO at the end of the year prior.

As the co-portfolio manager for a $40 billion fund that invests in “quality” companies with more stable earnings and less volatile stocks, Naess suggested a few possible explanatio­ns for the findings. One is that for whatever reason, women may tend to lead more of these less volatile companies. According to his numbers, about 4 percent of the companies had a female leader in the broader market, compared with 9 percent of companies on an index that tracks these more stable firms.

Another possibilit­y, he said, is that analysts tended to have slightly lower earnings growth expectatio­ns for the companies in his data set with a woman at the helm — at an average of 7.4 percent, versus 9.7 percent for the broader market. Again, while the reason for that is unclear, analysts overshoot expectatio­ns frequently, he said. Because the actual average earnings growth is only about 5 percent a year, the women’s performanc­e could be seen as less disappoint­ing, which could lead to stronger stock performanc­e.

In a follow-up email, Naess said the explanatio­n could also simply be that the women were better managers. “The simple interpreta­tion of my calculatio­ns is to buy the companies with a female CEO/chair,” he wrote. “If you invested consistent­ly in only companies with a female CEO/chair, then you would have done better than the market.”

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