Lawsuit claims Steven A. Cohen's firm
Point72 is hostile to women
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[February 13, 2018]
By Jonathan Stempel
NEW YORK (Reuters) - A female executive at
billionaire Steven A. Cohen's Point72 Asset Management LP on Monday
filed a lawsuit accusing the firm of operating as a "boys' club" that
subjects women to a openly hostile working environment and pays them
less than men.
Lauren Bonner, an associate director, said a "structural sexism"
pervades Point72, where women are denigrated by even high-level
employees, including a top executive who declares "no girls allowed" in
advance of some meetings.
Cohen was not accused of inappropriate behavior.
Bonner is seeking a variety of damages and an injunction against further
discrimination in her lawsuit filed in the U.S. District Court in
Manhattan against Point72, Cohen and the firm's president, Douglas
Haynes.
"The firm emphatically denies these allegations and will defend itself
in a more appropriate venue than the media," Point72, which is based in
Stamford, Connecticut, said in a statement.
"We stand by our record of hiring and developing women," Point72 added.
"In an industry where women are historically under-represented, the
hundreds of women at Point72 are vital members of every part of our
organization."
Cohen has been trying to rebuild his reputation and attract money from
investors after his former hedge fund firm, SAC Capital Advisors LP,
pleaded guilty in an unrelated insider trading case in 2014.
Cohen was not charged by authorities in that case, but accepted a
two-year ban from managing public money that expired six weeks ago.
Point72 managed his personal fortune during the ban.
Bonner is represented by the Wigdor law firm, which also represents
plaintiffs in several sexual harassment and employment-related lawsuits
against Twenty-First Century Fox Inc <FOXA.O> and Fox News.
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Steven Cohen, Chairman and CEO of Point72 Asset Management, speaks
at the Milken Institute Global Conference in Beverly Hills,
California, U.S., May 2, 2016. REUTERS/Lucy Nicholson/File Photo
According to the complaint by Bonner, a New York resident who joined
Point72 in August 2016, only one of the firm's 125 portfolio
managers and one of its roughly 30 managing directors is a woman,
while its hiring committee is exclusively male.
She also said that while she could earn up to $525,000 in salary and
bonus this year, men often earn two or three times as much as their
female counterparts.
Bonner also objected to Point72's alleged "sexist and misogynist
treatment" of women, citing as an example a whiteboard in Haynes'
office that contained the word "pussy" for several weeks.
"Female employees were humiliated and ashamed as they were forced to
work and participate in meetings held in Haynes's office, including
with other male executives, as the Pussy Board drifted above them,
taunting them with repulsive references to their own bodies," she
said.
The case is Bonner v Point72 Asset Management LP et al, U.S.
District Court, Southern District of New York, No. 18-01233.
(Reporting by Jonathan Stempel in New York; Additional reporting by
Jennifer Ablan; editing by Clive McKeef)
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