The Most Powerful Women in Banking
Banks must work to attract a diverse workforce through recruiting efforts, and to close the retention gap that sees institutions lose a higher percentage of women leaders compared to those who are men.
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The gender equality police namely, the activists Arjuna, Pax, and Trillium, which targeted Silicon Valley earlier this year is making moves on Wall Street now, starting with Citigroup, Bank of America and Goldman Sachs. Fed governor Lael Brainard encourages fintechs to tackle financial access and Cleveland Fed president Loretta Mester talks about the industry's past and future. Citi FinTech's Carey Kolaja celebrates its first product launch. Plus, people moves at Santander Consumer, Deutsche Bank and Bank of New York Mellon.
December 8 -
Santander Consumer USA Holdings in Dallas has named a former president of Ally Financial and a former Treasury Department official to its board.
December 6 -
Deutsche Bank has hired two executives to fill newly created positions meant to foster development of fintech products.
December 5 -
Mobile could become the one-stop shop that banking companies never quite achieved, blending basic banking, wealth management and other services, if efforts like those underway at Citigroup's fintech unit succeed.
December 5 -
Bank of New York Mellon has named two women executives from the energy and technology sectors to its board.
December 2
The latest news and perspective on women in the industry | The Most Powerful Women in Banking program convenes and empowers the community of female executives in financial services.