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						Women running the money? Rarely at hedge funds
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		 [March 29, 2019]   
		By Maiya Keidan and Simon Jessop 
 LONDON (Reuters) - Generous salary and 
		juicy bonus? Check. Client meetings at private members' club? Check. 
		Swanky Mayfair office? Check. Company maternity scheme? Maybe, we’ll get 
		back to you.
 
 In the competition for talent, the hedge fund industry still has an edge 
		over many other areas of finance, except, it would seem, when it comes 
		to employing women.
 
 Women are in the minority across the financial industry when it comes to 
		top jobs. A Reuters analysis of regulatory filings shows the proportion 
		is especially low among British hedge funds, most of which are private 
		and not bound by disclosure rules.
 
 Just seven women were hired or promoted last year as investment 
		executives at 20 of Britain’s top private hedge funds, the lowest level 
		in at least a decade, the analysis found. They took on 82 men in that 
		period.
 
 Of all the places to work in hedge funds, the investment team is the 
		most coveted. Portfolio managers or traders decide where to invest 
		client money and are traditionally the highest-paid members of staff. 
		Such roles are a launch pad for star managers to set up their own firms 
		in the future, establishing the next generation of hedge funds.
 
		
		 
		
 In Britain, these roles are registered with the Financial Conduct 
		Authority (FCA) under a category known as the 'CF 30' function, which 
		also comprises senior marketing jobs.
 
 A Reuters analysis of CF 30 filings for 76 financial firms showed hedge 
		funds registered women at a fraction of the rate of other finance 
		companies.
 
 (For a graphic on British hedge funds lag on diversity of key staff, 
		click https://tmsnrt.rs/2UNZpml)
 
 For an interactive version of the graphic showing registration rates 
		across financial firms in Britain, click here https://tmsnrt.rs/2HA0lb3.
 
 Hedge funds say they struggle to find women to work as portfolio 
		managers and point out that women are better represented in other areas, 
		including compliance and legal counsel. These are middle-office or 
		back-office positions, rarely involved in investment calls.
 
 People who work for or in financial services say more female candidates 
		would emerge for trading positions if hedge funds cast the net wider for 
		potential candidates, and offered better maternity packages and 
		mentorships.
 
 "Hedge funds will all say they don't get female applicants but are they 
		even looking for them? Do they care? The data suggests no they don't," 
		said Yasmine Chinwala of think tank New Financial.
 
		
		 
		
 Unlike the rest of the financial sector, where large, listed companies 
		are now required to disclose pay gaps between men and women, and are 
		under public pressure to have more women in senior roles, hedge funds 
		can mostly operate below the radar.
 
 Usually privately-owned and run by their founders, they are not the 
		target of government drives to improve female representation in finance.
 
 "Public scrutiny, and more specifically, mandated government-backed 
		scrutiny … delivers results," said Chinwala. "These sectors have shown 
		they are not going to make significant changes themselves without a big, 
		concerted, external push."
 
 INVESTING BY NUMBERS
 
 Three of the 20 top British hedge funds covered in the Reuters analysis 
		commented about their record of hiring women.
 
 "We have women represented across all functional areas of the firm as 
		well as in senior management positions which are not covered by CF 30 
		registrations, which represents a small proportion of our staff," a 
		spokeswoman for Marshall Wace said.
 
 The firm has registered three women in the CF 30 category since 2009 
		compared with 40 men over the same period.
 
 "Algebris continues to invest in women's careers, developing talent and 
		creating the next generation of female leaders in finance," said a 
		spokesman for the firm, which registered nine women and 24 men as a CF 
		30 since 2009.
 
 Emso Asset Management said 35 percent of its employees were women and 
		said it paid employees for the first 26 weeks of their 52 week maternity 
		leave. It has registered nine women and 30 men as a CF 30 since 2009.
 
 "Our diversity in employee base reflects the diversity of markets within 
		which we make investments," Chief Operating Officer Rory McGregor said 
		in an emailed statement.
 
 Emso was the only one of the 20 hedge funds to comment publicly on its 
		maternity pay.
 
 Paid leave after becoming a parent can vary widely between firms. One 
		portfolio manager told Reuters she had to argue her case to get paid 
		while on maternity leave. She declined to be named for fear of damaging 
		her career.
 
 Valerie Kosenko, at recruitment consultant Mondrian Alpha, said 
		maternity pay was an important consideration for a lot of women looking 
		to work in the hedge fund industry.
 
 "I don't think hedge funds gave a lot of thought to it at all. It's 
		something that hedge funds can definitely improve."
 
 The 10 largest U.S. hedge funds with a UK office - including Citadel and 
		Millennium Management - registered slightly more women than their 
		British counterparts, at nearly 13 percent, in 2018, according to the 
		Reuters analysis.
 
 A spokesman for Millennium declined to comment. Citadel did not respond 
		to requests for comment.
 
 
		
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			Luke Ellis, CEO of Man Group, is pictured in this undated image 
			obtained by Reuters on March 27, 2019. Chris Tille for Man 
			Group/Handout via REUTERS 
             
		CF 30 is an imperfect measure of diversity because firms can have a 
		different interpretation of the FCA guidelines as to who should be 
		registered.
 Some firms register investor relations staff as CF 30. Women tend to be 
		well-represented in such jobs, meaning that the CF 30 category may 
		exaggerate the actual number of women hired or promoted to be traders.
 
 In the decade covered by the Reuters analysis, the ratio of women 
		employed under the CF 30 designation by 20 of the top private British 
		hedge funds never went above 23 percent and averaged 16 percent.
 
		WHY TRY?
 There are no comparable figures on hedge funds' portfolio manager hires 
		in the United States, but data on U.S. firms founded in the last few 
		years show the industry remains dominated by men. Women-led firms 
		managed only about 3 percent of the assets in new funds launched between 
		2013 and 2017, according to figures from Hedge Fund Intelligence.
 
 Jane Buchan, who spent nearly 20 years allocating money as chief 
		executive of PAAMCO, one of the world's biggest investors in hedge 
		funds, says female money managers have to work harder to get investors 
		to trust them.
 
 “Women need to outperform significantly in order to have the same asset 
		levels as men who perform worse," said Buchan, who now runs her own 
		fund, Martlet Asset Management.
 
 "With this sort of outcome, which can be shown in academic studies and 
		what many women perceive from their own interactions with investors, why 
		try?"
 
		
		 
		
 Man Group, one of the few listed hedge funds, is the only UK hedge fund 
		firm to sign up to the British government's Women in Finance Charter, 
		which sets targets to increase female representation in the upper 
		echelons of the City.
 
 The London-headquartered firm is targeting 25 percent female 
		representation in senior management roles by the end of 2020 from 22 
		percent last year and has introduced a number of measures to improve 
		gender diversity, including a returners program for women who left the 
		industry.
 
 It offers 18 weeks paid leave globally for new parents, male or female.
 
 Man Group registered five women as a CF 30 last year, but that 
		represented a re-categorization to comply with European rules rather 
		than new hires.
 
 "We have concentrated on making sure internal people can meet their 
		potential, introduced a lot of mentoring, ensured that we always 
		consider a female candidate and looked at things that have historically 
		slowed down hiring women," said Man’s chief executive officer, Luke 
		Ellis.
 
 Women held 13 percent of investment management roles at Man Group 
		globally in 2018, up from 11 percent in 2017 and 8 percent in 2013, a 
		source familiar with the matter told Reuters.
 
 THE SLEAZY BITS
 
 Interviews with nine women who work or worked as portfolio managers in 
		Britain and the United States, said hedge funds could be a tough sector 
		for female investment managers. Some of them had experienced disparaging 
		comments about their appearance or their investment abilities.
 
		
		 
		Male colleagues making unwelcome advances at female co-workers on 
		nights-out was not an unusual occurrence, according to seven women who 
		worked in a variety of different roles for hedge funds, including as 
		traders.
 One hedge fund reassigned the female toilet on the trading floor as a 
		men's toilet, meaning women on the investment team had to walk to 
		another part of the building, two of the women said.
 
 None of the women, who requested anonymity to avoid damaging their 
		careers, worked at the hedge funds named in this story.
 
 Clare Flynn Levy, a former hedge fund portfolio manager who now runs her 
		own behavioral analytics company, said women might put up with a toxic 
		work culture for a while but ultimately they tended to leave.
 
 "In retrospect, I think I used a combination of working very hard, 
		laughing off the sleazy bits and occasionally putting my foot down if I 
		felt someone had crossed a line," she said.
 
 Kosenko, the recruitment consultant, said she has had a hard time 
		convincing women to join hedge funds where they might be the first 
		female on the trading floor.
 
 But with investors increasingly considering diversity when deciding 
		where to put their money, some hedge funds are looking to shake up their 
		ranks. Last year, Kosenko had five meetings with hedge fund clients 
		about hiring women. In the first few months of this year, she has had 
		four.
 
 "I think in general the big trend is let's grow the talent and let's go 
		outside of what we are used to -- white males from Goldman Sachs," she 
		said.
 
 (Additional reporting by Svea Herbst in Boston and Carolyn Cohn and 
		Kirstin Ridley in London. Editing by Carmel Crimmins)
 
				 
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