Wall Street's women problem
Women at the biggest US investment banks see few opportunities to advance and none has been made CEO
DeeperDive is a beta AI feature. Refer to full articles for the facts.
New York
THE first woman to run a Wall Street firm could be a behavioural scientist, a mathematician or an engineer.
Three women with these backgrounds - Karen Peetz, president of Bank of New York Mellon; Mary Callahan Erdoes, chief of asset management at JPMorgan Chase; and Avid Modjtabai, head of consumer lending at Wells Fargo - are within striking distance of the CEO suite.
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