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BlackRock, Aberdeen Push for More Women Executives

BlackRock, Aberdeen Push for More Women Executives in Australia

Investment firms managing more than A$1 trillion ($712 billion) are calling on Australia’s biggest companies to appoint more women to executive roles, as they step up pressure for gender diversity.

The eight firms including BlackRock Inc. and Aberdeen Standard Investments want at least 40% of senior leadership roles at S&P/ASX 200 companies to be held by women, 40% by men and the remainder from any gender by 2030, according to the 40:40 Vision Investor Statement published Thursday. The statement’s signatories have committed to pressing companies to set clear and public targets toward achieving the goal.

Should companies not respond to the investor engagement, the jobs of board directors may be on the line, Debby Blakey, chief executive of Health Employees Superannuation Trust Australia and chair of the 40:40 Vision steering group said on Bloomberg TV. “We have actually voted against the appointment of senior directors” in the quest for more diversity on boards, she said.

In Australia, currently only about a third of management roles overseeing a business unit’s profit and loss are held by women, despite 84% of firms saying they’re focused on improving D&I. There’s a heightened investor focus on corporate culture, demonstrated by a shareholder backlash over a sexual harassment scandal at wealth manager AMP Ltd that triggered the resignation of its chairman and the demotion of the executive at the center of the claims.

“We see lack of gender diversity in leadership as a financial risk,” Blakey said in a statement. “Companies that fail to consider 50% of the population for leadership positions risk missing out on the best people and the performance of the organization will eventually suffer.”

While Australian boards have lifted female representation to more than 30% following years of investor pressure, that’s yet to filter into executive ranks. Just 30 firms have a gender balanced leadership team, and only one woman was named a chief executive in the past year out of 25 appointments, according to Chief Executive Women.

“It’s concerning progress has been so slow,” Blakey said. “At this rate it will be another 80 years before we see equal representation of men and women at CEO level – and similarly in executive leadership – unless action is taken now.”

The first signatories to the 40:40 Vision Investor Statement are Aberdeen, BlackRock, Ellerston Capital, Fidelity International, First Sentier Investors, IFM Investors, Pendal Group and WaveStone Capital.

©2020 Bloomberg L.P.