Investors are pouring money into initial public offerings like it’s 2021, with this season alone unleashing several new tickers, including FIG, BLSH, and soon, STUB.
For some, the surge is a welcome sign of renewed optimism after tariff-related chaos in the spring threatened a promised IPO revival.
But an analysis of recent filings shows that women leaders
are largely missing from the boards and executive teams at the vast majority of new public companies.
Damion Rallis, co-founder of Free Float Analytics, combed through information about 61 companies that filed IPO-related documents in the first two weeks of August.
He found that nearly 88% of the firms (most of which were in tech) had only one or no women on their board of directors, while 93% had only one or no women in their C-suite.
Only seven of the 61 companies Rallis examined had two or more women on their boards, while only four listed two or more women executives. In total, women represented only 12% of the 349 directors and 11% of 205 executives identified in the filings.
For reference, women represent about 30% of board members at Russell 3000 companies, according to recent studies, and 29% of C-suite roles, according to a 2024 McKinsey survey.
Despite recent policy shifts, most investors have come to expect companies to form diverse boards and C-suites as part of optimizing a leadership team.
Not so for this latest cohort, says Matt Moscardi, cofounder of Free Float Analytics.
“You’d expect them to look and say, ‘Well, you’re going to IPO, what do other publicly traded companies look like?’” he told
Fortune, “and there is basically no effort to do that.”
—Lila MacLellan