September 2020
Distribution 5,444
STA Women in Finance Committee is pleased to present

Keynote Address

STA 2020 Market Structure Virtual Conference

Debra Walton
Chief Revenue Officer
Refinitiv
Debra Walton is a tireless advocate of gender equality. She speaks globally
on diversity and leadership, as well as on the importance of environmental,
social and corporate governance, more broadly.

Listen in on Wednesday, Oct. 7 at 12:45 p.m. EDT as Debra shares her insight about diversity and inclusion within financial services, particularly during the time of a global pandemic.
Registration Closes this Monday, Oct. 5!
STA is proud to have a slate of such talented
Women in Finance
represented at next week's Market Structure Conference
Featuring

Dawn DeBerry Stump, CFTC Commissioner
Julie Andress, KeyBanc Capital Markets
Katherine Cooper, Murphy & McGonigle
Melissa Hinmon, Glenmede Investment Management
Manisha Kimmel, Securities and Exchange Commission
Mahlet Makonnen, Williams & Jensen
Ruth Rama-Witt, RRW Consulting Group
Anita Rausch, WisdomTree
Kimberly Russell, State Street Global Advisors
Krista Ryan, Fidelity Capital Markets
Vicky Sanders, Liquidnet
Eden Simmer, PIMCO
Jill Sommers, Patomak Partners
Sonali Theisen, Bank of America Merrill Lynch


#PutHerOnThePanel
More About Debra Walton
Debra Walton leads all sales, client and partner relationship management and
market development activities for Refinitiv. Her global team operating in 65 countries
brings the entire range of Refinitiv solutions to meet the data analytics
and workflow needs of Refinitiv customers.

Ms. Walton has lived and worked on three continents, and has held senior executive positions across product, content, sales and marketing at Refinitiv and the
Financial & Risk business division of Thomson Reuters since she joined the firm in 2003.
Articles of Interest
             
A Quarter of Women Are Considering Scaling Back Careers
Bloomberg
A quarter of women are considering leaving the workforce or scaling back on their career aspirations because of the extra demands created by the Covid-19 pandemic, according to the annual study of women in the workplace released Wednesday by McKinsey & Company and LeanIn.Org.

Women Now Hold a Record 22.6% of Board Seats in the U.S.
AZBigMedia
2020 Women on Boards (2020WOB), the national campaign to advance women to corporate boards of directors, announced that for the first time in history, women hold 22.6% of the board seats among the nation’s largest publicly-traded companies in the Russell 3000 Index, a 2.2 percentage increase from 20.4% in 2019, and a 6.5 percentage increase over four years. 

Banking Is Now Ahead of Other Industries in Promoting Women
The Wall Street Journal
Banking, long dominated by men, now outpaces other industries in promoting women, a point underscored this week when Citigroup Inc. named Jane Fraser as its next chief executive. The industry has made strides in recent years in elevating women, giving them jobs that place them on the executive track —and potentially in the corner office. When Ms. Fraser at Citi succeeds Michael Corbat upon his retirement in February, she will become the first woman to run a major Wall Street bank.

Ruth Bader Ginsburg, Supreme Court’s Feminist Icon, Is Dead at 87
The New York Times
Ruth Bader Ginsburg, the second woman to serve on the Supreme Court and a pioneering advocate for women’s rights, who in her ninth decade became a much younger generation’s unlikely cultural icon, died on Friday at her home in Washington. She was 87.

More Than Work: Finding Focus in the Digital Age
Thrive Global
Do you find yourself having trouble focusing on your work? Do you find it exhausting trying to deal with constant interruptions and distractions? You’re hardly alone, especially now that many of us are working from home amid our partners, children, roommates and pets. According to a study by the McKinsey Global Institute, over 60% of our workday is spent on unproductive busywork, like looking for information or tracking down colleagues.

Why Diversity Matters In The World Of Finance
Forbes
When my youngest daughter was quite little, she asked if we could play a game of doctor with her dolls. I quickly agreed and handed her the toy stethoscope. She immediately frowned and returned the instrument. “Boys are the doctors,” she explained, as she picked up the nurse’s hat.
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