Take Microsoft, which tops the MSCI ESG index, and which Forbes criticized for its “grim” diversity statistics: much like the tech sector at large, Microsoft’s workplace is over 75% male and 60% white; Apple and Amazon offer similarly homogeneous environments.4 Microsoft’s CEO recommended that “women shouldn't ask for raises, and instead, rely on karma to propel their careers forward.”5 Karma! As of fall 2019, Microsoft’s women were still in legal battles for pay equity.6 Recently, its Black employees leaked memos to the media to pressure their CEO to support Black Lives Matter.7
Actively managed ESG funds did not show a substantial difference in investments than passively invested funds that track the ESG index. Forbes calculated that the $2.3 billion held in actively managed ESG mutual funds had its largest holdings in Microsoft, Alphabet, Amazon, and Apple.8 Why are ESG funds so focused on these companies when there are other, more socially conscious tech companies? Marc Benioff, CEO of Salesforce, led the push for a San Francisco tax on big companies9, to be used to combat homelessness and publicly pay women on an equal footing with men.10 Yet Salesforce does not show up in the top investments for socially responsible investment indices.
Why haven’t ESG fund managers paid attention to the lack of diversity of the companies they invest in?
That’s an excellent question—especially since a company’s governance and social consciousness are supposed to be among the criteria for ESG investments. But it’s hard to see a problem when you’re looking in a mirror.
While diversity in the tech industry is bad, it’s even worse in wealth management.
In 2004, I wrote the first paper for the World Economic Forum on the business case for women and diversity "Why the Advancement of Women is Strategically (and not just Politically) Correct".11 Since I wrote that paper, the World Economic Forum launched its highly regarded Global Gender Gap Report12 and McKinsey13, Gartner14 and other prestigious firms have shown statistically that diverse teams result in better financial outcomes. The industry has had more than a decade to incorporate this information and diversify itself, but little has changed for white women and people of color. Dive into the current statistics and it’s clear that too often claims of diversity are the corporate equivalent of lipstick on a pig.
People of color and white women manage just 1% of assets in the United States, a percentage that hasn’t budged since the early 1970s.15 More than half of college graduates are female, but only 14% of financial advisors are women; the majority are still confined to administrative roles.16 That’s what happened to me when I graduated from Wesleyan in the 1990s. In the World Financial Center, I was trapped in Working Girl while the men were playing Wolf of Wall Street. It wasn’t until I came back to finance with graduate degrees from Northwestern and Harvard that Wall Street hired me into a non-secretarial role.
The appalling diversity statistics in wealth management should alarm anyone with a 401(k) or a financial advisor. There are over 270,000 financial advisors17 managing trillions of dollars in wealth – including yours, either directly or through retirement funds, equity share plans, or any number of financial instruments. These financial advisors are overwhelmingly male and pale, with an investment approach driven by the groupthink of their boy’s club workplaces. Their white male echo chamber leads to myopic investment strategies and investors pay the price. Men make up 90% of portfolio managers and 91% of active fund managers have under performed their benchmark for 15 years.18 MarketWatch reports that men have gotten 85-90% of the new roles in mutual funds even though data shows that women equally or out-perform men and have more credentials like the CFA.19 It makes sense that if women and minorities represent over 50% of the marketplace, that all-white male investment teams cannot run successful investment portfolios given their gigantic blind spots. So how do wealth managers respond? They lower client expectations. They advise clients that it is impossible to beat the market and shift the conversation to “goals-based” planning and their next golf outing.
Given these statistics, investors who actually care about diversity should look more closely at their wealth management teams. Take Morgan Stanley, a firm that paints itself as a leader in ESG. On June 18, former Morgan Stanley Chief of Diversity Marilyn Booker sued the company for racial discrimination and harassment. Booker claims Morgan Stanley offered only superficial support for her diversity efforts, and never took seriously the importance of fostering an inclusive workplace.20
What can you do as an investor?
1) Find an advisor who is truly committed to diversity.
It takes work to research companies that reflect your values and can provide you a substantial return. Find an advisor who shares your commitment and walks the walk, not just talks the talk. Check out the diversity of your financial advisory team and move your money to a more equitable team or a diverse advisor who is likely superior given s/he has been able to survive in a hostile industry without the hand-outs that their white male peers often receive.
2) Encourage your employer to require the financial firms that it does business with to switch to a more diverse wealth management team.
Even companies that claim to care about supplier diversity do not apply that lens to the teams managing their lucrative corporate equity compensation, 401(k) plans, and pension funds. Too often, an investment bank takes a company through its IPO and these lucrative corporate plans fall into the lap of the overwhelmingly all-white male wealth management team that the same firms have anointed to provide these services. Even supposedly socially conscience pension funds have invested to the ~$100 billion with Ken Fisher who has likened attracting clients as akin to trying to get into a woman’s pants and later issued a statement that he often uses such “colorful” language.21
3) Encourage Barron's, Financial Times, CNBC and other "Top Advisor" publications to use diversity and performance in their rankings.
Currently, the good old boys are regaled with awards based on years of service and assets under management, not investment performance. The title of "Top Advisor" is like a modern-day version of the landed gentry. A retiring advisor (almost always a white man) has accumulated accounts over his 40+ year career and anoints someone to take over his accounts and, with it, the title of “Top Financial Advisor.” If it’s not actually his son, it’s usually someone who looks like his him. People of color and women usually get left out of this game of patronage. Even publicly traded firms that tout their diversity continue to give wealth management teams leeway to hire whomever they wish, so they hire people who will “fit” on the team. Why add a woman to your advisory team if you can no longer "let loose" at team drinks? Especially if you already have one woman on your team? Why add a young black man if he doesn't have rich parents to bring on as clients? Firms claim they are acting as fiduciaries to clients but they are not ensuring that the best person gets the job and that clients are best served. All those guys who thrived in Wolf of Wall Street cultures? - they are now rewarded for their "years of experience" while women and minorities were essentially shut out. CNBC just launched its Top Financial Advisors list and its top pick went to Salem Investment Counselors which controls over a $1 trillion and surprise! (not) all of its 10 investment advisors are white men, mostly aged.22
4) Demand that companies post their racial and gender statistics annually across all roles.
The UK government recently successfully launched mandatory gender pay gap reporting for all firms with over 250 employees. This mandatory, uniform reporting exposes financial firms'true data to be held accountable for hires, fires, and promotions across all roles. With mandatory, standardized reporting, firms will find it harder to cherry-pick their numbers to project a diverse image when the reality is overwhelmingly male and pale. Mandatory reporting should extend to race as well as gender across all roles.
5) Ask questions:
“How diverse is the financial advisory team working on my investments?”
“How well did they perform in growing and protecting my savings?”
Keep asking questions until you’re satisfied—because this diligence can pay off for you. It is possible to be a socially responsible investor and outperform the market. I know. My clients have been rewarded for trusting their savings with me despite my non-traditional package.
My clients' portfolios are up 12% for the first half of this year vs. -5% for the US stock market index and -8% for the world index.23 Elite and expensive male-dominated hedge funds continue to trail their benchmarks.24 My clients' portfolio performance is over 25% better than Bridgewater, the world's largest hedge fund—which is now being sued for gender discrimination by its former CIO.25