Good morning, Broadsheet readers! This is Paolo Confino, filling in for Emma. Texas governor Greg Abbott sends a bus containing migrants to Vice President Kamala Harris’s D.C. residence, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi will introduce stock trade restrictions for Congress, and Edward Jones managing partner Penny Pennington shares the best advice she’s received in her career. – Career advice. “Every day, do something that terrifies you.” Those words come from Edward Jones CEO Penny Pennington, who considers this the best advice she’s received in her 22-year career. Getting comfortable with new challenges “invited me to raise my own hand from time to time and to say to my sponsors and my mentors, ‘I’ve never been at that table before, but I’ve got something to say,'” she tells Fortune’s Susie Gharib in a wide-ranging interview about how she built her career and Edward Jones’ approach to navigating periods of volatility. It’s an approach to self-advocacythat’s paid off for Pennington who’s one of only 44 women CEOs on the Fortune 500. (That’s a paltry 8.8% of companies headed by women.) Within finance, Pennington is even more of a rarity. She’s just one of five women leading a brokerage firm with at least $1 trillion in assets under management on the Fortune 500. It’s a representational shortcoming that’s prevalent across all leadership levels in financial services. Although women have achieved gender parity at the entry-level, commanding 52% of these jobs, according to a McKinsey study, their representation dips to 45% as soon as they move into their first management roles. The trend only worsens as they advance up the corporate ladder so that by the time they get to the C-suite, women make up only 27% of executive positions. For women of color, the drop-off between entry-level and C-suite jobs is even more drastic at 80%. “There are many women who say stocks, bonds, mutual funds, and math—not my thing,” Pennington tells Gharib. But “this industry is fundamentally about knowledge and empathy. [It’s about] helping families have possibilities…That’s when deep, empathetic people of all genders say, ‘That’s something I want to be a part of.'” Hiring more women is a priority at Edward Jones, she says, where only 22% of financial advisors are women. The company is targeting 30% by 2025. “We need more women in financial services because we need a woman’s perspective on how women are living today and what they’re concerned about. We need it as financial advisors and as senior decision-makers to make the best decision about the guidance we share with our clients and the products and services we want to build,” Pennington explains. Though Pennington, who was appointed CEO in January 2019, hasn’t indicated she is considering stepping down from the firm, she is reflecting on her legacy. “I want to be a purpose-driven, human-centered, courageous leader that helps foster the conditions where people’s minds are blown about the lives they get to have,” she says. Paolo Confino [email protected] @paolo1000_ The Broadsheet is Fortune’s newsletter for and about the world’s most powerful women. Today’s edition was curated by Paige McGlauflin. Subscribe here.
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- Migrant crisis. Two buses carrying migrants arrived outside of Vice President Kamala Harris’s residence in Washington, D.C. on Thursday, apparently sent by Texas Governor Greg Abbott. Their arrival follows Wednesday's news that Abbott unexpectedly directed a plane containing 50 migrants from Venezuela to Martha’s Vineyard in Massachusetts. CNN - Selling stocks. House Democrats will introduce legislation placing new restrictions on lawmakers’ ability to buy and sell stocks this month, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi announced Wednesday. Pelosi declined to provide details on the legislation other than calling it “very strong.” But the announcement comes after months of increased scrutiny on members of Congress and their families trading stocks that could create conflicts of interest with their public duties. New York Times - Dress recode. The Washington State Human Rights Commission has accused Alaska Airlines of discriminating against nonbinary and gender nonconforming employees through its strict policy requiring employees to choose between masculine and feminine uniforms. Reuters - Popular opinion. Over 70% of Americans don’t believe politicians are informed enough about abortion to craft related policies, a recent study from the 19th* and SurveyMonkey found. Over 61% of Americans say abortion should be legal in all or most cases, including 36% of Republicans. Most religious groups surveyed support abortion rights with the exception of Mormons and evangelical Christians. 19th* MOVERS AND SHAKERS: Former Williams Sonoma chief financial officer Julie Whalen is joining Expedia Group as chief financial officer. Pinterest has named Wanji Walcott chief legal officer and general counsel. Health care company Thirty Madison has hired Quan Zhang as chief financial officer. Former Citadel chief communications officer Julie Andreef Jensen has launched advisory firm Jasper Advisors with former 2U chief strategy and engagement officer David Sutphen. Direct-to-customer healthcare company Getlabs has hired Amanda Souders as vice president of people and Karen Maher as general counsel.
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- Funeral arrangements. Wondering how to watch Queen Elizabeth's funeral from across the pond? The funeral will take place in London on Monday, Sept. 19 at 11 a.m. local time (6 a.m. ET/3 a.m. PT). The major networks like NBC News, CNN, ABC, and Fox News will air the funeral. NBC News Now on Peacock, Apple TV, and YouTube will stream the service online. Harper's Bazaar - Indiana abortion ban. The first abortion ban passed by a state legislature post-Roe took effect in Indiana on Thursday. Lawmakers passed legislation banning abortions with limited exemptions for rape, incest, and some medical complications and emergencies in early August. NPR - Sweden elections. Swedish Prime Minister Magdalena Andersson resigned Wednesday after conceding defeat in the country’s tight election. Andersson’s party, the Social Democrats, still holds the most parliamentary seats at 30% but lost to a slim multi-party right-wing coalition led by the far-right Sweden Democrats. Guardian - Out of date. Texas health officials are delaying the publication of the state’s first updated count of pregnancy-related deaths until next summer, after missing a key window. State legislators will likely not be able to use the data in their upcoming biennial session, meaning the analysis won’t be used until 2025. The most recent data available is nine years old. Houston Chronicle
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The shaky future of a post-Roe federal privacy law Wired Rommy Hunt Revson, creator of the scrunchie, dies at 78 New York Times Let the woman rest The Cut Johnson & Johnson and a new war on consumer protection New Yorker |
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