Why we need more (good) female traders

Listened to this interview yesterday, which was interesting…

Hello peeps!

I just found another great interview with Raschke, here on Better System Trader:

049 - Trading Edges with Linda Raschke - Better System Trader


How Wall Street Bro Talk Keeps Women Down - NYTimes.com


The first women-owned bond-trading platform will open soon:

OpenDoor becomes first women-owned bond trading platform | Financial Industry & Algorithmic Trading News | Automated Trader


Here is a little about its co-founder, Susan Estes:

How a Woman on a Bond Desk Deals With the Slights and Rises to the Top - WSJ

With apologies for a slight digression, this article isn’t specifically about traders, but has appeared today on the BBC’s website: [B]Are female leaders disadvantaged by media bias? - BBC News[/B] :8:

Grear article, Lexys, it really says it all!! It makes me so angry.



"Published on 12 Jul 2015
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Meredith Jones is an alternative investment consultant and author of Women of The Street: Why Female Money Managers Generate Higher Returns (And How You Can Too).
In this interview, Meredith discusses her research in alternative investments, pointing to significant outperformance of women investors, both retail and professional. Her 2013 study for Rothstein Kass (now KPMG) showed women had a +6 percentage point differential over a 6.5 year period. She also discusses about other studies that have been done on thousands of brokerage accounts and millions of IRA accounts, among others, both of which also demonstrated significant outperformance from female investors, as additional evidence of what she calls “cognitive and behavioral alpha.”

What explains the outperformance?

According to Meredith, biological factors such as hormones (specifically cortisol and testosterone) and brain structure can impact stress levels and risk taking. In combination with cognitive components like probability weighting, matching expected outcomes with actual outcomes, and confidence levels, these biological and cognitive differences lead to identifiable behavioral patterns that can create higher returns. For example, women investors are generally more likely to trade less, sell into a market drawdown, or follow the investment herd.

In addition, she says that investors are beginning to look for a more diverse group of money managers and that there is a growing recognition of diversification and return generation benefits within women (and minority) run funds.

While alpha has been traditionally viewed as a result of specific strategies/sectors, investing skill, or unfortunately pure dumb luck, investors too often ignore the alpha that can be generated the behavior of their money manager. Like it or not, behavior impacts every investor. Whether it’s individual trading proclivities, an external money manager’s biases, or macro-economic behavioral forces, Meredith argues it’s time to consider how investor behavior impacts returns and portfolio diversification, and we should act to achieve a more behaviorally-balanced portfolio.

Learn more about: How many female run hedge funds actually exist? Do female professional investors outperform, and what can retail investor studies contribute to the discussion? Biological, cerebral, cognitive, and behavioral elements of female money managers in comparison to men. Overconfidence and overtrading studies have proven to be a disadvantage to male investors. Why Wall Street largely ignores women managers, which should change with the realization that a sustainable profit advantage is at stake. On Wall Street, only 5% of professionals taking risk are women. Among hedge funds, there is an 80 to 1 male to female ratio. Using diversification of behavior in selecting managers can help allocators potentially capture significant alpha and minimize volatility.

Meredith began her alternative investment career at Van Hedge Fund Advisors International (VAN), where she was Director of Research. At VAN, Meredith was responsible for manager selection, due diligence, index construction and aggregate industry research for the $500 million fund of funds.

Meredith was then recruited by hedge fund analytics provider PerTrac Financial Solutions. There she focused on industry trends with an eye to providing actionable insights and information. Her research on emerging managers, initiated in 2006, and women and minority-owned funds created new investment categories. It has changed the way investors and money managers behave - both in the way investors allocate and how money managers market to and seek investors.

Meredith then went on to be Director at Barclays Capital Strategic Consulting Group. There she consulted for clients and authored white papers, including her first white paper on women and minority-owned investing.

Until the acquisition of Rothstein Kass by KPMG, Meredith served as Director of the Rothstein Kass Institute, an Alternative Investment Think Tank at the professional services firm Rothstein Kass (RKCO). There she created the first Women in Alternative Investments Hedge Fund Index to measure performance of female hedge fund and private equity managers."

The ‘Billion Dollar Woman’,

RENÉE HAUGERUD

Galtere - Renée Haugerud




Interesting read… Ms Anna Raytcheva will open her own hedge fund next year!


Citigroup’s Last Proprietary Trader Walks Out the Door - WSJ

Thank you, PipNRoll! Here is the story told by Bloomberg, if you do not have a subscription to WSJ:

Citigroup’s Raytcheva Said to Depart to Start Macro Hedge Fund - Bloomberg

It says that macro funds only managed 0.1% gains so far this year… 0.1%!!!

This is not againt women or men but u all as usual dont underdtand **** shes a fututets trader which means in essence shes a bookmaker has a licence that gauranteed she gets paid as long as the weat corn field is in contract to make a product to tender say wall mart wearher corn prices go hi or low she gets affilliate commision hardly rrading and lowest form of exploititing the market intelligence nothing to do with it and no we dont need more women or. Men like this its called financial afffilate marketing

Women rule comoddities brokering futurers trading .e bookmakers cause ther dads own farms there simplybaffilatevmarketingbof tendersvthrew farmsvand commissions ontop of it cause they get the the the tenders

Thanks Fisher …please moderate your tone…

The thread is not exclusivwly about women traders but also about women working within financial institutions.

The Gender Face-Off: Do Females Come Out on Top in Terms of Trading Performance? by Wei Lu, Peter L. Swan, P. Joakim Westerholm :: SSRN

May 2016 paper looking at female stock traders’ performance in Finland, 1995-2011…


Is it connected to “farm payrolls”?

Who knows…

Meet…

Elena Ambrosiadou: