The Most Powerful Women in Banking
Now three of the largest U.S. banks say their female employees make more than 99 cents for every dollar earned by their male peers.
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In the year since State Street's Fearless Girl statue started her showdown with Wall Street's Charging Bull, the $2.6 trillion asset manager has faced a confrontation of its own in corporate boardrooms: pressing firms to add more women to their boards.
March 7 -
State-level support will give the digital assets industry much needed footing, said Caitlin Long, a former managing director at Morgan Stanley.
March 5 -
A New Hampshire bank CEO argues that the reform bill awaiting a vote in the Senate will free up community banks to focus more on their customers and less on compliance.
March 5Ledyard National Bank -
Natalie Bartholomew, a banker in Oklahoma, has launched a blog designed to promote women's issues and tout her peers' accomplishments.
March 2 - Women in Banking Santander’s growth strategy, a lawsuit over branch closures and suspicious senators
Santander's Ana Botin is plotting to make the global banking giant even bigger. Senators suspect a Wall Street cover-up of sexual harassment, and Capital One gets sued by the NAACP.
March 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.