
Despite the notable gains made by women in the workforce in recent years, including growth in C-suite positions and average salaries, many women remain hesitant to dive into the unfamiliar waters of financial literacy and investing.
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Click here to purchase a paywall bypass linkDespite the notable gains made by women in the workforce in recent years, including growth in C-suite positions and average salaries, many women remain hesitant to dive into the unfamiliar waters of financial literacy and investing.
Carrie Wagner, among others, wants to change all that. As chief development officer and a wealth advisor with United Iowa Financial, which has offices in Cedar Rapids and Iowa City, sheās working to lower the perceived barriers many women feel when exploring investment options.
āWomen in general have a lot of really great qualities that it takes to become a good investor,ā Ms. Wagner said. āAs a whole, weāre pretty patient and not prone to doing more speculative stuff. So, weāve got the foundation there as a gender, but thereās a huge gap in the general literacy of investing, and itās still really tilted toward that male voice, which has dissuaded women to get involved in investing.ā
A research study on women and finances by Swiss financial firm UBS Wealth Management concurs. According to the study, 58% of married women still defer to their spouses when it comes to long-term planning and investing ā and that applies to women of all ages, education and income levels. The study also indicated single women feel less confident about making long-term financial decisions than single men.
Women have also traditionally had less to invest over their careers. The estimated lifetime earnings of a woman with a bachelorās degree are just 60% of the estimated lifetime earnings of her male counterpart, according to a March special report by Morningstar titled āWomen and Investing.ā Women also reach their wage-earning peak at an average age of 41, as compared to an average age of 52 for men, Ms. Wagner said.
And as with nearly every aspect of modern life, COVID-19 has provided another setback. The Morningstar report revealed the pandemic has worsened the financial situation of many women, with 55% of job losses in 2020 experienced by women and 32% of woman aged 25-44 saying theyāre not working because of childcare demands.
āThe industries that have been most affected, like hospitality, retail and travel, do fall into primarily being women,ā Ms. Wagner said. āI donāt think anybody was prepared for this. Not only were they not prepared to lose their jobs, or be furloughed, or have to work from home, they didnāt have a financial advisor. They didnāt have a partner in their financial decision-making. So, a lot of times, because they didnāt have money coming in, they made careless decisions with their 401(k) or their IRAs without consulting people, which is going to set them back even further.ā
A number of cultural archetypes continue to impact women in the financial sphere, Ms. Wagner said, many centering around household roles in many marriages. Women tend to be responsible for routine family expenses, for example, while men focus on investments and long-term strategies. As a result, many women donāt gain the critical knowledge needed to feel confident in making larger investment decisions.
āFinancial literacy has really been a problem for a long time,ā Ms. Wagner said. āAs a female, money just wasnāt discussed openly when I was growing up. While we were very comfortable, I never learned how to balance a checkbook or use a credit card, so I didnāt have any of those role models to say, āOK, take your financial independence and make it your own.ā I think that thatās a barrier thatās very real for most people.ā
Surveys show many women would feel more comfortable discussing financial issues with a female advisor, but that can be a challenge. According to Ms. Wagner, an estimated 80% of financial advisors are men, and communication often fails to hit its mark. She recounted a recent Zoom discussion with a potential vendor for a new financial service.
āThe language and the references they used ā of course, Iāve been in banking and finance forever, so Iām used to those,ā she said. āBut there were some sports references, one word in particular, and I thought, āI would never use that word.ā It wasnāt a bad word; it was just something that caught me off guard because it was pointed towards the male demographic. Of course, they didnāt pick it up, because it was just part of their dialect. But for me, that phrase sounded foreign in that reference. I pointed that out to him, and he said, āI would have never noticed that.ā Itās just so skewed toward males.ā
United Iowa Financial is fortunate, Ms. Wagner said, in that the firm has twice as many female financial advisers per capita as the national average, and two of the firmās five C-suite members are women. The firmās website actually includes a separate section on women and investing, with advice and resources to help open investment doors that have been closed for generations. Itās all part of a concerted effort to bring more women into the financial sphere.
āI think it all comes back to that confidence and being able to ask the questions,ā Ms. Wagner said. āGenerally speaking, when youāre married and youāre sitting in a meeting with a financial advisor, eight out of 10 times itās a male. And almost always, that financial advisor directs conversation toward the male. Thatās just the way it has always been. Weāre bringing that voice to women and opening it up, so they are comfortable to ask these questions, because they have to start somewhere.ā
It may seem obvious, but Ms. Wagner pointed out it can be helpful to enter the financial world gradually.
āWe actually donāt have account minimums, because we know for people to reach their financial goals and amass wealth, you have to start at zero,ā she said. āYou just have to have a plan in place and stick with it. And that plan starts from the first dollar you invest.
āFirst and foremost, figure out what your savings plan is,ā she noted. āGetting something on an automated plan is really important ā just getting it off your plate, not having to think about it every month. And then, working together with a financial advisor about goals and talking through priorities, having someone to call when life doesnāt go your way, when a pandemic hits, or when your mother gets sick, someone to call to say, āwhatās the best option for me, given this situation?ā You canāt control everything, but you can control some of these things.ā
Having that comfort level with an advisor, particularly a female advisor, can go a long way to bolster the confidence of a first-time female investor.
āIf women want to work with women advisors, seek out women advisors,ā Ms. Wagner said. āMake that a coveted position. Itās hard for female advisors to take that first step and say, āOK, Iām going to take these security licensing tests and hope that I can make a living,ā because itās not easy to start out as a financial adviser, especially as a woman.
āFrankly, I had no intention of getting involved with finance when I was growing up, but I learned very young that the more knowledge I had in this space, the better I was equipped to do a lot more things,ā she added. āSo, just knowing the language, feeling comfortable asking the questions and having a foundation, and then having somebody hold your hand and say, āI know the market dropped 30% in March. It sucks. Itās scary for everybody. Stay the course. Weāve got your back; we know what weāre doing. We know this will come back; we know you have a long time before you retire.ā Having someone to bounce those fears off is almost as important as knowing it yourself.ā