Fidelity has 'real need' to recruit more women, Johnson says

Female clients prefer female advisers, the fund giant has found
SEP 27, 2017
By  Bloomberg

For people well-schooled in the relationship between supply and demand, here's one Fidelity Investments may not have seen coming: The demand for female financial advisers outstrips the supply. Women customers often ask to work with female advisers, Abby Johnson, chief executive officer of the fund giant said in an interview with Carlyle Group LP's David Rubenstein. The problem, for the firm, is that they don't have enough of them. "We have a real need in our business right now to recruit more women," Johnson, 55, said. When women come into Fidelity branches, "very often, the first thing they say when we're trying to get them paired up with a rep is, 'I'd like to work with a woman,' " she said. There may be another reason for this: Women don't feel all that confident in their ability to manage their finances. In studying how female customers differ than men, the Boston-based firm has found women describe themselves as "beginners, even though they actually really know more than they give themselves credit for," she said on The David Rubenstein Show: Peer-to-Peer Conversations. Asset management can be a great career for women, because it allows them to structure their time and ultimately build a personal franchise, said Johnson, who has been CEO since 2014. She took full control of the fund giant from her father, Edward "Ned" Johnson, in November 2016, started with the company in 1988 and is now the third generation to run Fidelity. Johnson said her father never pressured her to join the family business. Ned Johnson's uncle was pushed to work in a family-owned dry goods store and hated it. Johnson said that left a strong impression on her father, who let her to find her own way into Fidelity.

Latest News

Envestnet taps Atria alum Sean Meighan to sharpen RIA focus
Envestnet taps Atria alum Sean Meighan to sharpen RIA focus

The fintech giant is doubling down on its strategy to reach independent advisors through a newly created leadership role.

LPL, Evercore welcome West Coast breakaways
LPL, Evercore welcome West Coast breakaways

The two firms are strengthening their presence in California with advisor teams from RBC and Silicon Valley Bank.

Supreme Court slaps down brokerage's appeal vs. FINRA expulsion case
Supreme Court slaps down brokerage's appeal vs. FINRA expulsion case

The high court's decision rebuffing Alpine Securities marks a setback for a broader challenge to Wall Street's reliance on self-regulatory organizations.

RIA moves: Arax extends Midwestern reach, Steward Partners debuts in Arizona
RIA moves: Arax extends Midwestern reach, Steward Partners debuts in Arizona

Arax acquires a boutique firm's $4 billion RIA business in Michigan as Steward Partners continues its Southwestern expansion.

In this hi-tech world of finance, JPMorgan has an old school strategy to woo HNWs
In this hi-tech world of finance, JPMorgan has an old school strategy to woo HNWs

Wealth management is a key focus for a new service tier.

SPONSORED Beyond the dashboard: Making wealth tech human

How intelliflo aims to solve advisors' top tech headaches—without sacrificing the personal touch clients crave

SPONSORED The evolution of private credit

From direct lending to asset-based finance to commercial real estate debt.