INSIGHTS

STUDIES SHOW WOMEN MAKE BETTER INVESTORS

Mark Lister

It seems more women than ever are taking an active interest in investing. What’s more – they seem to be better at it than their male counterparts.

Fidelity Investments, a large financial services company in the US, released its 2021 Women and Investing Study last month.

It found that 67 per cent of women were investing outside of retirement schemes, up from 44 per cent just three years ago.

One in five reported making their first investment in a new asset class within the last year, with individual shares the most popular.


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Nine out of ten women planned to take steps to help their money work harder in the coming year, with a majority keen to know more about picking individual companies.

However, only a third of women saw themselves as investors and just 19 per cent said they felt confident selecting investments.

That apprehension is almost certainly unfounded, especially given the evidence points to women being better investors than men.

Sorry lads, but in every study I’ve seen, they beat us hands down.

The Fidelity report analysed the investing behaviour of 5.2 million retail customers over the last ten years and found the women outperformed the men by 0.4 per cent a year.

That might not sound like much, but in the world of investing it’s a sizeable gap.

If you don’t believe Fidelity, there’s the Wells Fargo Advisors report from 2016. It found that women not only performed better, but that their returns showed much less variability.

There’s also the extensive research from Barber and Odean (which put the outperformance of women at closer to one per cent annually) as well as studies by Merrill Lynch and more.

They all draw these same conclusions.

There are a range of reasons why women seem to make better investors than men, but in short, they’re simply more sensible.

Women are more likely to follow tried and tested investing principles, while us blokes often think we know better.

Studies show women trade a lot less, are more willing to stick to a long-term plan, and are more open to seeking advice.

In contrast, men tend to overestimate their ability, and believe their more frequent trading will make them money. In truth, all it does is cost them more in fees.

Women are less likely to hold a losing position too long, while men will often persevere, insisting the market doesn’t understand and that one day they will be proved right.

They don’t tend to jump on bandwagons without doing adequate research, nor do they hold such concentrated portfolios.

When reading some of these statistics, it’s surprising there aren’t more women in the financial services or funds management industry.

The company I work for has more than 180 investment advisers across New Zealand. All are talented, hardworking and competent, including the 50 that are women.

Women have the demeanour and temperament to be very good investors. For those who are hesitant to take more control of their finances, my advice would be to educate yourself, do your research, and take action.

The statistics suggest you’ll succeed.

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