Has being gender-equal helped these banks’ share price?
Three of Australia’s banks have been listed as being among the most gender-equal financial services firms in the world but has this affected their share price performance?
The annual Equileap survey researched over 3,000 companies in 23 countries on their gender balance at board, executive, senior management and workforce level. Companies were ranked on factors such as gender balance, policies promoting gender equality, and equal compensation.
The three banks included in the survey this year were Big Four firms National Australia Bank (NAB), Westpac and Queensland-based Suncorp.
Looking at their share prices over the last three years, the best-performing of these was Suncorp, which returned 33% over the three years to 30 September, 2019.
Suncorp also had the highest female board representation of the three banks with four of its nine board members being female, including its chair Christine McLoughlin.
However, all three of the banks failed to outperform the ASX 200 index which returned 40% over the same period.
It was a different story though over one year as both NAB and Westpac returned 15.7% over one year to 30 September, 2019, according to FE Analytics, while Suncorp returned just 1.7%. The ASX 200 returned 13.1%.
In May, Suncorp chief executive and managing director Michael Cameron resigned from the firm and was replaced by Steve Johnston.
The banks were among seven Australian financial services firms listed by Equileap as being most gender-equal. Aside from the three banks mentioned, the other firms named were property firms Mirvac and Stockland, health insurer Medibank and the Australian Securities Exchange (ASX).
When all seven firms were considered, the best performer over one year was Mirvac which returned 34% over one year to 30 September, 2019. Mirvac was also a strong performer over three years, having returned 56% which put it in second place, but was beaten by the ASX which returned 89.5% over three years.
Performance of NAB, Westpac and Suncorp over three years to 30 September, 2019 versus the ASX 200.
Recommended for you
Clime Investment Management has faced shareholder backlash around “unsatisfactory” financial results and is enacting cost reductions to return the business to profitability by Q1 2025.
Amid a growing appetite for alternatives, investment executives have shared questions advisers should consider when selecting a private markets product compared to their listed counterparts.
Chief executive Maria Lykouras is set to exit JBWere as the bank confirms it is “evolving” its operations for high-net-worth clients.
Bennelong Funds Management chief executive John Burke has told Money Management that the firm is seeking to invest in boutiques in two specific asset classes as it identifies gaps in its product range.