Morgan Stanley sued for racial bias by former diversity head

Morgan Stanley sued for racial bias by former diversity head
Marilyn Booker, the firm's first global head of diversity, says it refused to adopt her plan to address racial bias
JUN 16, 2020

Morgan Stanley was sued by its former head of diversity for allegedly discriminating against black women who work at the bank.

Marilyn Booker, who joined Morgan Stanley in 1994 and became its first global head of diversity, claims in her lawsuit that senior “White male-centric leadership” refused to adopt her plan to address racial bias at the firm and instead terminated her in December.

The lawsuit, filed Tuesday in federal court in Brooklyn, N.Y., comes as Wall Street and corporate America are facing tough questions about their commitment to diversity in the wake of the Black Lives Matter protests following George Floyd’s death at police hands.

Booker opened her 47-page complaint by describing Morgan Stanley’s response to Floyd’s death, including a large contribution to the NAACP Legal Defense & Education Fund and the promotion of two black women to senior leadership committees.

She noted that Chief Executive James Gorman had described the present moment as a “turning point in race relations.”

But Booker cast the bank’s recent statements and actions as hypocritical in light of its alleged past conduct. “Clearly, Black lives did not matter at Morgan Stanley,” she said.

Morgan Stanley didn’t respond to a request for comment.

Only 2.2% of Morgan Stanley’s U.S. executives are black, according to company data. That number hasn’t budged for the last three years.

Booker seeks a judgment that bars the bank from discriminating against her and other black women at the firm and asks for unspecified damages.

‘LIP SERVICE’

Booker, most recently a managing director at the bank, said she repeatedly voiced her concerns about “irrefutable and appalling patterns” in the firm’s hiring, retention and lack of advancement of black employees. But she claims Morgan Stanley only paid “lip service” to these issues.

“Tirelessly, but to no avail, Ms. Booker tried to force Morgan Stanley’s leadership, including Gorman, to address the systemic racial discrimination rampant at the Firm,” she said.

Morgan Stanley instead hamstrung her efforts by steadily decreasing her budget year over year, according to the complaint, “even though her budget would not amount to a drop in the bucket for Morgan Stanley when compared to the money it threw at other initiatives and the massive revenue the firm generated.”

She claims 14 black managing directors, out of only a few dozen at Morgan Stanley, left between 2017 and 2019, but the bank made no effort to retain them. Gorman’s attitude, she said, was: “If you don’t like it, then leave.”

There was marked contrast with how white managing directors who threatened to leave were treated, she alleges.

‘GOOD RIDDANCE’

“For Black MDs departing Morgan Stanley, the sentiment at the firm was ‘good riddance’ and ‘glad to see you go,’ rather than, ‘why are they leaving us?’ or ‘how could we do better?’” she said. “In contrast, when White MDs left or sought to leave, the Firm made significant efforts to retain them.”

Booker also alleges that throughout her tenure, Morgan Stanley exploited her as a “token response and symbol of its purported commitment to diversity,” having her make public appearances on its behalf, including a 2008 appearance before Congress.

Morgan Stanley isn’t alone on Wall Street in its underrepresentation of African Americans. Of the more than 80 people now listed on the elite executive teams atop the six largest U.S. banks, only one is black: Citigroup Inc. CFO Mark Mason. In 2018, JPMorgan Chase & Co. agreed to pay $24 million to settle a discrimination suit brought by black financial advisers.

In the wake of the Floyd protests, Gorman announced that a commitment to diversity and inclusion would become one of Morgan Stanley’s five core values. He also named Carol Greene-Vincent, the bank’s global audit head, to its operating committee, the most senior leadership board, and current diversity head Susan Reid to the management committee.

According to Booker, prior to Greene-Vincent’s promotion, 14 of the firm’s 16 operating committee members were white and 14 were men.

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