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Broadsheet

Women CEOs in the Coins2Day 1000: By the numbers

By
Caroline Fairchild
Caroline Fairchild
By
Caroline Fairchild
Caroline Fairchild
July 8, 2014, 7:31 AM ET
Photos: Getty Images

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When the  2014 Coins2Day 500 list appeared in June, numbers like $476 billion (Wal-Mart’s 2013 revenue) and 141 (Facebook’s jump in the rankings) received a lot of attention. Another number didn’t make it into the headlines: 51.

That’s how many Coins2Day 1000 companies are led by women. We feature some of these female super-achievers in the Coins2Day Most Powerful Women rankings, but neither that annual list nor the Coins2Day 500 tells you what these leaders have in common, besides big jobs and big paychecks and gender.

So, we took a deep dive into our own numbers numbers. And here’s what we found:

There are 24 women CEOs in the Coins2Day 500 and 27 in the Coins2Day 1000. 

Female51_Number-of-Females

The number of women CEOs in the Coins2Day 500 has been rising steadily since 1998, when the only female chiefs of such corporate giants were Jill Barad of Mattel (MAT) and Marion Sandler, Co-CEO of Golden West Financial. The female Coins2Day 500 CEO population dropped in 2009, resurged, and now it’s at an all-time high of 24.

New York is home to the most Coins2Day 1000 companies with women CEOS.

Female51_2013-Map

Texas boasts the most Coins2Day 1000 companies (103), but New York has the most big corporations led by women (seven). California comes in second, with six women-led companies, followed by Illinois with five.

Specialty retailers lead the list of companies with women chiefs.

Female51_Top3-Industries

CEOs Carol Meyrowitz at TJX (TJX) and Mindy Grossman at Home Shopping Network (HSNI) are among the nine women heading retail giants. The mining and crude oil production industry has no female CEOs, though it has 33 companies in the Coins2Day 500.

Only 5% of Coins2Day 1000 companies have female CEOs, but those giants generate 7% of the Coins2Day 1000’s total revenue.

Female51_2013-Revenues_v2 The biggest woman-led company: Mary Barra’s General Motors. It’s No. 7 on the Coins2Day 500, with $155 billion in 2013 revenue.

Coins2Day 1000 companies with female chiefs outperformed the S&P 500 index over their respective tenures.

Female_Return_PERC

Women-led companies tend to reward investors well. Home Shopping Network’s Mindy Grossman and TJX’s Carol Meyrowitz are among the CEOs who generated the highest returns during their respective tenures.

Fewer women CEOs in the Coins2Day 1000 hold the chairman role than at S&P 500 companies.

Female51_Chairman

More than two-thirds of the women-led companies in the Coins2Day 1000 have split the CEO and chairman roles, vs. 43% of companies in the S&P 500. General Dynamics’ (GD)  Phebe Novakovic and Xerox’s (XRX)  Ursula Burns are among the female Coins2Day 500 CEOs who fill both roles.

More women CEOs in the Coins2Day 1000 are hired internally than at S&P 1500 companies.

Female51_Internally

While a recent study indicated that women CEO are more likely than men to be hired from the outside, the female chiefs of America’s largest companies don’t reflect that trend. Kim Bowers at convenience store retailer CST Brands (CST)  and Meg Whitman at Hewlett Packard (HPQ)  are among the few Coins2Day 1000 women CEOs who were recruited from the outside.

Fewer than half of the women CEOs in the Coins2Day 1000 have MBAs.

Female51_MBAs

Pepsi’s (PEP)  Indra Nooyi, Avon Product’s (AVP)  Sherilyn McCoy and Cracker Barrel’s (CBRL)  Sandra Cochran are among the 39% of Coins2Day 1000 female chiefs with graduate business degrees.

The most common college major among women CEOs in the Coins2Day 1000 is engineering. 

Female51_College-Majors

Engineering degrees fueled the careers of nine of the 51 Coins2Day 1000 female chiefs. Meanwhile, four female Coins2Day 1000 CEOs — Mondelez International’s  (KRFT)   Irene Rosenfeld, William Sonoma CEO (WSM)   Laura Alber, Campbell Soup CEO (CPB)   Denise Morrison and ANN Inc.  (ANN)  chief exec Katherine Krill — majored in psychology. Morrison and Krill both majored in economics as well.

More women CEOs in the Coins2Day 1000 are married and have children, vs. The national average. 

Female51_2013-Married-Children

Female Coins2Day 500 CEOs tend to be wives and moms. Schnitzer Steel Industries (SCHN) chief Tamara Lundgren has the most unusual marital setup: Her husband is Stanley Black & Decker  (SWK) CEO John Lundgren, a fellow Coins2Day 500 CEO.  The Lundgrens don’t have children — but more than 80% of the female CEOs in the Coins2Day 1000 (who would disclose their family status) do.

Graphics designed by Analee Kasudia and Nicolas Rapp. Saskia Jensen contributed reporting to this piece. 

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By Caroline Fairchild
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