The Most Powerful Women in Banking
Like all banks, BMO Harris is trying to keep ahead of demographic and technological shifts that are transforming retail banking, and its female leaders are spearheading many of the initiatives it has underway.
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The statistics are dismal: Last year, just 16% of board seats at S&P 1500 companies were held by women, less than the percentage held by directors named John, Robert, James and William. But plenty of women are working to change that, including quite a few in our rankings.
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KeyCorp's Beth Mooney tops the 25 Most Powerful Women in Banking list; the 25 Most Powerful Women in Finance list is led by Mary Callahan Erdoes at JPMorgan Chase; and Jane Fraser at Citigroup heads the 25 Women to Watch list.
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Marianne Lake has become more prominent at the nation's largest bank, emerging as the voice in discussing its performance and defending its size.
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The highest-ranking woman at the world's largest custody bank is looking to better understand millennial employees. "They are the future," Peetz says.
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As Wells Fargo's head of community banking, Carrie Tolstedt has to grapple with an ever-changing retail landscape and a lot of new technology.
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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.