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Female CFOs Brought in $1.8 Trillion More Than Male Peers

Male CFOs in the Russell 3000 outnumber women about 6.5 to 1.

Female CFOs Brought in $1.8 Trillion More Than Male Peers
Businesswomen leave an office building in downtown Seoul, South Korea, on Tuesday, May 27, 2008. Banks and retailers are rolling out products catering to the needs of the growing number of “Gold Misses,” single professional women in their 30s and 40s. Simply more than an emerging purchasing force, “Gold Misses’’ are setting a trend of breaking away from traditional values like marriage in a country where women are still frowned upon for smoking in public. (Photographer: Nasha Lee/Bloomberg News)

(Bloomberg) -- Companies looking for better financial returns should consider a female chief financial officer.

Within the first 24 months of appointing female CFOs, companies saw, on average, a 6% increase in profits and an 8% better stock return, compared to performance under male predecessors. These women brought in $1.8 trillion of additional cumulative profits, according to a study by S&P Global Market Intelligence. The researchers looked at 6,000 companies on the Russell 3000 over the last 17-years.

One of the reasons female CFOs may be outperforming their male peers is because they’re held to a higher standard, said Daniel Sandberg, senior director of quantitative research at S&P Global, and the author of the report.

“The bar is a little bit higher for females,” he said. “The result is that the male group that is a contender for an executive position is a little over-fished, and the female contingent is under-utilized.” Men outnumber women in the CFO job by about 6.5 to 1, the study found.

Female CFOs Brought in $1.8 Trillion More Than Male Peers

Investors including BlackRock and S&P Global have demanded more gender parity on corporate boards. Women make up half of the workforce but only control about 5% of the CEO jobs at the biggest companies, and a quarter of board seats.

Companies that hired a woman as CFO had about twice as many female directors. After hiring a female CEO, the board tended to increase in diversity the two years after that, too, Sandberg said.

To contact the reporters on this story: Sonali Basak in New York at sbasak7@bloomberg.net;Jeff Green in Southfield, Michigan at jgreen16@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Michael J. Moore at mmoore55@bloomberg.net, Dan Reichl, Rebecca Greenfield

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