How women marched in to the stock market bustle
If there were still men on the London Stock Exchange who objected to women being admitted to the respected institution when it merged with 11 regional competitors in November 1972, the late Queen Elizabeth II soon put them in their place. Her Majesty went off-piste at the after-dinner speech celebrating the merger and the opening of the new headquarters.
These regional bodies were smaller, but were leaps and bounds ahead of the capital in one crucial way – in that several women have already been admitted as members.
Whether this new, larger institution would do the same was not yet confirmed. The Queen noted this and, straying from the subject, said, “I wonder whether the historians will find it more remarkable that this remarkable unity came about, or that you opened your doors to female members on that same day.”
This cleverly timed intervention gave female financiers a much-needed boost in recognition and four months later – 50 years ago today – six women stepped into Europe’s busiest trading pit for the first time.
On March 26, 1973, the town was a very different place, populated mostly by men in pinstripe suits with rolled umbrellas and bowler hats. Electronic calculators did not exist and transactions were conducted through cordial shouts on the open protest floor.
Pioneer: Anthea Gaukroger was one of the first six women to join the London Stock Exchange, circled left
Women were also there, but mostly as secretaries or typists.
But even those who were thoroughly financiers had until then been kept from the top of the Square Mile by the male-only membership system.
While they can become a stockbroker and manage clients’ money, without being a member they cannot reach the top of the career ladder and become a partner in a brokerage.
The rules of the stock exchange, the beating heart of the City, did not explicitly exclude women. But in the past, every time someone signed up to join was voted down by existing members.
From March 26, 1973, those who passed the strict entrance tests could walk in with their heads held high.
Culturally, however, many men were not yet ready for equality on the trading floor. What if female members wore short skirts, distracted men, or used female deceit to make better trades?
A tenacious aspiring floor member was Muriel Bailey, aka Muriel Wood, who pointed out that when the UK’s regional exchanges were merged there would be a two-tier system for women if the LSE didn’t admit them too.
In 1973, a total of 14 women were invited to join the 170-year-old gentlemen’s club, including Anthea Gaukroger, 81, and Hilary Pearson, 77, who remain close friends to this day. Gaukroger, who lives in Clapham, South West London, took the membership examinations in 1972 ‘although at the time I had no prospect of joining.
“My colleagues at work thought it would be a useful experience and improve my professional standing,” she says, adding that she then “standardly” succeeded in admitting women in 1973, as she was already qualified.
But her experience was far from the misogynistic picture many of the era paint. She says, “There was a very conservative view at the time that finance and investment were a man’s business. The idea of women even wanting to join was foreign to many, but once it happened, as with so many things, the unthinkable became normal. There was no animosity—just mild surprise that any woman would want to join.”
She had always been interested in finance and was working at Sheppards and Chase when she was accepted as an LSE member.
Bustle: In 1973 the city was a very different place, populated mostly by men in pinstripe suits with rolled umbrellas and bowler hats
Pearson, who also worked at Sheppards, had always been a go-getter and secured her first job in finance by responding to an ad on the front of The Times looking for male applicants – though they hired her anyway.
Being a member, she points out, didn’t make “the slightest difference” to what they did on a daily basis.
Gaukroger retired in late 2000 after working as an analyst for decades. Her career spanned a series of stock market ups and downs, as well as the heyday of deregulation in the 1980s known as the “Big Bang.” It was at this time that individual membership in the LSE was scrapped altogether.
The old system had empowered women — though many are still competing long overdue — to enter the elite, male-dominated financial elite.
Decades later, membership may no longer be required to reach the top, but women are still vastly underrepresented and paid less than their male counterparts.
They also face more hurdles than men at different points in their careers – although changes to maternity policies announced in the recent budget may make it easier for professional women to continue working once they have children.
Progress has been made, but there is still a way to go.
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