Citigroup becomes 1st major US bank to appoint a woman CEO

iStock/violinconcertono3BY: CATHERINE THORBECKE, ABC News

(NEW YORK) — Citigroup became the first major U.S. bank to appoint a woman chief executive, the company announced Thursday, shattering a new glass ceiling in an industry that remains largely male-dominated.

Jane Fraser, who currently serves as the president and chief of global consumer banking, is set to succeed Michael Corbat as CEO of the investment bank when Corbat retires in February 2021.

Fraser is a 16-year veteran of the company with an MBA from Harvard Business School and a masters degree in economics from England’s Cambridge University.

The mom of two joined Citi in 2004 in the corporate and investment banking division.

Fraser said she was “honored” by the appointment in a statement and “excited to join with my colleagues in writing the next chapter.”

“I will do everything I can to make all of our stakeholders proud of our firm as we continue to build a better bank and improve our returns,” Fraser said. “We will invest in our infrastructure, risk management and controls to ensure that we operate in a safe and sound manner and serve our clients and customers with excellence.”

Her appointment comes at a time when women remain significantly underrepresented in leadership roles within the financial services industry.

Banks with female CEOs in 2017 represented just over 4% of the industry, according to an analysis from S&P Global Market Intelligence. The analysis noted that most of the banks with female CEOs tend to be much smaller, or with less than $1 billion in assets.

Moreover, while women and men in the finance industry tend to start at roughly equal representations among entry-level positions, women only account for 19% of positions in the c-suite, according to a 2018 McKinsey report. This is lower than the 22% average for American women overall for women in other industries.

The same report found that women are 24% less likely to attain their first promotion than their male peers in the industry, even though they request them at similar rates. Meanwhile, women of color in the financial services industry are 34% less likely to make their first promotion than men.

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