Although the investment industry is largely male-dominated, academic studies have shown time and again that women are better at it. It is generally known that men usually manage the financial affairs of families, but when it comes to choosing stocks and investing in the long term, preference is given to women.
The preference of women over men in the field of investment is due to several reasons mentioned by the Canadian “Financial Post” website in a special report. Here are five of the most prominent:
Patience and care
Women tend to be more patient when it comes to investing. Call it the "maternal instinct" or whatever you like, but women are probably willing enough to give any investment the time it takes to find its way to success. In contrast, men tend to watch quarterly earnings closely, and often abandon their investment project at the first sign of trouble.
On the other hand, women tend to see the long-term picture and can often look beyond short-term problems. This is very important as many of the top performers in stocks have, in the long term, had very low drawdowns on their way to success.
Less need to prove themselves
It comes down to one of the most common stereotypes, and contrary to what you might think, male investors often need to prove themselves. It is the "ego" that stands in the way of investment success. It has been proven through personal experiences that some male managers insist that they are "right and the market is wrong", causing damage to their investment portfolio and sometimes their entire career.
Managers who think this way tend to exaggerate when a stock is hurt, exaggerating losses when things don't go well.
And just for the record: the market is always right.
More willing to admit mistakes
This is important, and somewhat related to the previous point as men generally do not like to admit mistakes, which could be called the "it's not my fault syndrome". Ask any woman, and she'll say: Men will blame the market or the short sellers or the Fed or the CEO or whatever or someone else, rather than admitting what was wrong.
Much less circulation
Men always feel they have to do something in the market. They react to immaterial news, sell if the broker downgrades a stock and buy a lot of speculative stocks with the aim of getting a bigger return, but often the best thing to do is do nothing, and women get that.
There is no rule that says you have to be active all the time, trading adds additional costs, incurs taxes, so you have less capital to invest over the years.
Search more seriously
Men often like to take a flyer on highly speculative stocks, while studies show that women actually do more research before making a purchase. Of course, not all of them are financial analysts, but they do read more, study a company as much as possible, and understand the risks of investing. As for men, they simply don't.