Toronto Star

Why headlines are bad for new female CEOs

Lots of media attention linked to drop in stock price when women get the top job

- JENA MCGREGOR THE WASHINGTON POST

When a woman is appointed to lead a major public company these days — think GM’s Mary Barra or Yahoo’s Marissa Mayer — it often becomes a major media event, met with wall-towall news coverage and an avalanche of headlines.

That’s partly because they remain such a rare breed: Just 21 companies in the S&P 500 index are led by women. And in 2015, just one woman was named CEO of a major North American company. (Yes, one.)

But when it comes to appointing female CEOs, a new study finds, there apparently is such a thing as getting too much press.

Researcher­s have examined the link between the amount of media attention new CEO appointmen­ts receive and the performanc­e of the stock immediatel­y following the announceme­nt. They looked at the news coverage on days that CEO appointmen­ts were made, more than 8,000 of them between 2000 and 2014 — just 84 of them female.

They found that when a new female CEO is named, the stock tended to go down if the announceme­nt generated lots of headlines. Yet “the opposite held true for men,” said Ned Smith, a co-author of the paper and professor at Northweste­rn’s Kellogg School of Management. “Firms that appointed men and got lots of attention in the media got a positive response in the market.”

The working paper has not been published yet, but recently won an award from the Academy of Management. The researcher­s found that women do get a lot more press attention than men when they’re named CEO — 3.6 times as much, in fact. They also found that on the whole, the stock market reaction is not measurably different whether the newly picked chief executive is male or female.

But when the researcher­s also analyzed how many media outlets covered those appointmen­ts, they found the market appeared to respond differentl­y to gender. Companies that named female CEOs who were showcased in the press found their stocks trading at a discount just after the announceme­nt, while the stocks of companies that gave the top job to women quietly were more likely to receive a positive response.

Smith points to a few examples: When Lynn Elsenhans was named CEO of Sunoco in 2008, just one media outlet covered the news on the day the appointmen­t was announced; the stock initially rose 5.5 per cent, his data show.

Meanwhile, he says, when Beth Mooney was named CEO of KeyCorp in 2011, 20 media outlets reported the announceme­nt, and the stock fell 3.1 per cent. (Of course, there are outliers. For instance, Mayer’s appointmen­t as CEO of Yahoo in 2012 — which also included her sharing the news she was pregnant — was met with a deluge of media coverage, but the stock fell less than 1per cent.)

Smith and his co-authors think what’s going on isn’t necessaril­y straight prejudice — though he won’t rule out that some investors may think that way.

Rather, he theorizes that what’s going on is something a little more meta.

There’s a concept in sociology, variably known as “anticipato­ry bias,” “pre-emptive discrimina­tion” or “second-order sense-making,” which basically says we behave in a way that may look like we’re prejudiced.

But what we’re really doing instead is acting in response to how we think others will behave. Investors may be doing the same thing in these instances.

“It’s thinking about the way others are going to respond, and adjusting one’s response accordingl­y,” Smith said. “It’s the nature of speculativ­e trading in markets of all kinds.”

But what if it’s not bias at all? What if it’s simply a realizatio­n that because female CEOs of publicly traded companies are so rare, and under so much scrutiny, the market won’t cut them any slack, and will respond negatively with even the smallest hiccup?

Smith argues that if that were true, the negative market response to female CEOs who get lots of press wouldn’t go away over time, because the scrutiny they face wouldn’t go away either. His results, meanwhile, show that after a couple of weeks, the stock effect seen right after the announceme­nt goes away.

So what should companies do? Whisper the news and try not to call attention to the fact that they’ve named a woman CEO? Ignore the effect entirely? Smith says no.

“I really don’t think the right interpreta­tion of this is to say companies should shut up when you’re appointing women,” he said. “I’m of a belief that we need more women in business. We need to break down the hurdles to get to a more even playing field. So there are plenty of reasons to highly publicize these things.”

Besides, when a company in the news such as Yahoo names a woman to the CEO job, the press is going to cover it, whether the company touts it or not. Rather, he thinks firms need to simply be mindful and aware of the phenomenon his research shows, and evaluate male and female CEOs accordingl­y.

While that immediate blip in the stock price may not seem like it should matter, Smith says past research has tied the way a market responds to a CEO appointmen­t with their compensati­on and their likelihood for dismissal down the line.

Smith admits his research, or at least his explanatio­n for their results, is a little depressing.

“If this market response was really just about investors being prejudiced against women — which we’re not completely ruling out — then time alone should make that go away, education should make that go away, as more women are appointed CEO,” he said.

But if it’s true that the bias seen is really investors anticipati­ng the biases of other investors, then it could take longer for change to happen.

“It’s much easier to update ourselves than to update our beliefs about others. It becomes a much stickier problem.”

 ?? PAUL SANCYA/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Female CEOs, such as General Motors’ Mary Barra, have made up only 84 out of the more than 8,000 CEO appointmen­ts between 2000 and 2014.
PAUL SANCYA/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO Female CEOs, such as General Motors’ Mary Barra, have made up only 84 out of the more than 8,000 CEO appointmen­ts between 2000 and 2014.

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