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Recent indicators show that women are increasingly eager to put their money to work outside of traditional portfolio offerings. For instance, women accounted for 31.2% of angel investors in the first two quarters of 2022, a slight increase from 30.3% in the same period in 2021, according to a report by Jeffrey E. Sohl at the Center for Venture Research at the University of New Hampshire. This is "an encouraging sign that women angels are an increasing active segment in the angel market," especially as women are predicted to control the majority of the net worth in the U.S., the report said. If you have the money and inclination, angel investing is "a window to innovation across the economy," Jo Ann Corkran, co-CEO and managing partner of Golden Seeds, said Thursday at CNBC's Financial Advisor Summit. It doesn't depend on the market cycle and innovation is always happening, she added.
Persons: Jeffrey E, Sohl, Jo Ann Corkran Organizations: Center for Venture Research, University of New, Golden, CNBC's Financial Locations: University of New Hampshire, U.S
That's almost half the nearly 6.7 million Latinas who live in those states, representing the largest group of women of color affected by the court's decision. Financially insecure women are more likely to be affected by state bans and restrictions, the report notes, because they are likely to lack funds to travel to another state for abortion care. Roughly 1.4 million Latinas in these 26 abortion-restricted states work in service occupations, according to the report. Twenty-six states have banned or further restricted abortion services by providers such as Planned Parenthood since the Supreme Court overturned the landmark Roe v. Wade case. Michael B. Thomas | Getty Images News | Getty ImagesAt large, Hispanic women or Latinas are over represented in low-wage occupations, such as servers and cleaners.
Persons: Roe, Wade, Lea, That's, Lupe M, Shaina Goodman, Michael B, Thomas, Dobbs, Candace Gibson, Goodman, Rachel Greszler Organizations: National Partnership for Women, National Latina Institute, Reproductive, Getty, U.S . Department of Labor, Heritage Foundation
Tim Robberts | Digitalvision | Getty ImagesWhen it comes to money, women tend to think of themselves as savers rather than investors. "The biggest risk to women's portfolios is that we don't take enough risk," said Nancy Tengler, CEO and chief investment officer of Laffler Tengler Investments in Scottsdale, Arizona. "Women make better investors than men," Tengler said, and are often less benchmark driven, willing to do more research and are open to changing their minds. Women investors tend to achieve positive returns and outperform men by 40 basis points, according to research from Fidelity Investments, based on an analysis of annual performance for 5.2 million accounts. There are reasons why women should stay actively involved in the management of their household finances, according to Tengler.
Persons: Tim Robberts, Nancy Tengler, Tengler, Edward Jones, Lena Haas Organizations: Digitalvision, Investments, Fidelity Investments, Boston Consulting Group, Microsoft, Apple Locations: Scottsdale , Arizona
It's worth being aware of those financial effects, experts say, because caregiving is an important touchstone in Latino culture. Latino caregivers have high financial strainFamily caregivers spend on average 26% of their annual income on caregiving activities, according to a 2021 report by AARP. The organization calls that measure "financial strain," and bases it on the caregiving expenses relative to a caregiver's annual income. Compared to other races and ethnicities, Hispanic and Latino caregivers have the highest financial strain, AARP found, with caregiving expenses that account for 47% of annual income. Explore claiming your family member as a dependentThere can be financial advantages to claiming a family member you are caring for as a dependent on your tax returns.
Persons: Jose Luis Pelaez, , Lea, It's, it's, Marianela, Collado, Roberto, Amanda Corral, Roberto Corral Organizations: Inc, Getty, CFP Louis Barajas, International Private Wealth, AARP, Latina, U.S, CNBC FA, Financial, caregiving, Medicaid Locations: , Florida, Irvine , California, U.S, Mexico, Canada, Barajas, Amanda Corral of California, California
Girls and young women want to be homeowners by the time they're 30 — a higher priority even than getting married or earning a lot of money. About half, 52%, of young women ages 7 to 21 want a house by 30, the most of any goal, according to Girlguiding's Girls' Attitude Survey 2023 . To compare, 48% want to be married by age 30, and 39% said it's a goal to earn a lot of money. The organization polled 2,614 girls and young women in the U.K. between the ages of 7 and 21 earlier this year. Lenders look at your debt-to-income ratio to figure out how much mortgage debt you can take on.
Persons: Fannie Mae, it's, Melissa Cohn, William Raveis, Kamila Elliott, Cohn, Jessica Lautz, Elliott, Roth, Lazetta Rainey Braxton, Braxton Organizations: Fannie, William Raveis Mortgage, Federal Reserve, Wealth Partners, National Association of Realtors, CNBC, Partners, IRA, CNBC FA Council, CNBC FA Locations: New York, Atlanta
Marco Vdm | E+ | Getty ImagesThe wage gap costs women in the U.S. about $1.6 trillion a year, a new report finds. Women earned 78 cents for every dollar that men made in 2022, according to National Partnership for Women and Families. Forty-two percent of the wage gap is the result of occupational segregation, which was exacerbated by the pandemic, the U.S. Department of Labor has found. To that point, half of U.S. adults said women being treated differently by employers contributes to the pay gap, the Pew Research Center found. That pay scale worsens for each major racial or ethnic group in the country, with white female workers paid 74 cents to the dollar; Black female workers, 66 cents; and Latina female workers, 52 cents.
Persons: Marco Vdm, We've, Jocelyn Frye, Mandi Woodruff, Santos, Frye, Woodruff, Jose Luis Pelaez Organizations: National Partnership for Women, U.S . Census Bureau, U.S . Department of Labor, Pew Research Center, Latina, MandiMoney, Jose Luis Pelaez Inc, Getty Locations: U.S
Op-ed: Women, let's talk about money
  + stars: | 2023-09-15 | by ( Anne B. Johnston | Cfp | The Founder | ) www.cnbc.com   time to read: +2 min
"I'm bad with money." As a wealth advisor, I hear statements like this all the time from women, regardless of their age. So why do so many women grow up believing that they're bad at math and, later, bad with money? How can women develop skills and the confidence needed to manage their money effectively, if it isn't even considered to be theirs? Today, we still have a gender pay gap, which can negatively affect women's confidence with money.
Persons: we're, it's, Wells, Janet Hyde, Jane Austen Organizations: Finance, Bank of America, repays Locations: England, U.S
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