How These Women Investors Crushed It In 2020 (2024)

In an investment industry known for big egos, overconfident analysts and “activists” who routinely tell CEOs how to run their companies, investor Nancy Zevenbergen and her team of four portfolio managers differentiate themselves by simply listening.

Zevenbergen, 61, founder of $5.7 billion (assets) Zevenbergen Capital Investments, believes the crucial job of an investor in today’s economy is to uncover the next great entrepreneur or technological innovation early on. The style is about “optimism and a view toward what the future might be,” she says. According to Zevenbergen, her task is to be curious and “understand the ‘crazy’ visions of new leaders and become investors alongside them.” If she likes a company, her Seattle-based firm will load up and watch from the sidelines, tracking the business patiently and holding their shares so long as growth doesn’t stall. Rarely do they worry too much about valuation.

This humble approach to investing has yielded results that make Zevenbergen among the best investors in the world. She has stuck by mercurial Elon Musk and owned Tesla for about a decade; Tesla’s stock is up 730% this year, and is the top performing stock of the ten years. She discovered Ottawa, Canada-based ecommerce company Shopify and its founder CEO Tobi Lütke in late 2016 when it was trading below $50; it now trades for $1,170. Last September, Zillow chief executive Rich Barton decided the real estate platform would begin buying homes, leading to complaints from skeptics who sent its shares cratering 20% to below $30. Zevenbergen’s team liked Barton’s experimentation and built a large position. Fifteen months later, Zillow now trades for $140.

With stock-picks like these, Zevenbergen’s Innovative Growth Fund (SCATX) and Genea Fund (ZVGNX) are up a staggering 126% and 154%, respectively, in 2020. Of over 1,000 peer funds tracked by Morningstar, the two mutual funds rank in the top percentile.

Zevenbergen created her firm from her living room in the late 1980s with just $500,000 in assets while she nursed a young child. Her flagship strategy has beaten the S&P 500 Index by around four percentage points annually since 1987, but 2020 was a watershed. Assets more than doubled soaring towards $6 billion, based on performance and inflows to her mutual funds.

Zevenbergen is not the only woman fund manager who has crushed competition in 2020. Forbes found at least a half a dozen firms led by women-led funds that have blown away their peers and drawn in tens of billions of dollars in assets collectively since the start of January.

For more on top female-run funds, see our table below of outperforming managers. (Source: Morningstar)

Cathie Wood, founder of Ark Investments, had the best year of anyone. In 2014, Wood, 65, created Ark with the idea of packaging stock-picking into tax-efficient exchange traded funds, and focusing exclusively on breakthrough innovations in genomics, robotics, financial technology, autonomous driving, digital services, and artificial intelligence.

Six years later, Ark manages nearly $44 billion in assets, up from just $300 million at the end of 2016. This year, Ark funds have pulled in over $10 billion in new assets, led by extraordinary returns. Her flagship Ark Innovation Fund (ARKK) has seen assets soar to $17 billion, fueled by a 154% gain in 2020 and a 46% average annual return over the past five years. Her $6 billion Ark Genomic revolution ETF is up even more this year.“I wanted individual investors to catch the wave,” says Wood of today’s enormous technological change. Her funds were designed for those “willing to step out and away from fixed income and into some of the most exciting stocks in history.”

Ark publishes its financial models, trading logs, and research to the investing public, and the firm’s analysts are happy to engage in discussion on Twitter, opening themselves to criticism and mockery. Wood’s $4,000 a share valuation of Tesla a year ago drew many scoffs on Wall Street. But her heady valuation was spot on. Short sellers have been burned by Tesla’s rise, while female investors like Zevenbergen and Wood have been patient bulls. On Friday, Tesla was added to the S&P 500 Index.

Female investing success in 2020 extends well beyond soaring growth stocks. Women-run funds are leading the way in everything from small cap stocks, to emerging market debt portfolios, dividend paying companies, and sustainable investments.

Amy Zhang, portfolio manager of the Alger Small Cap Focus Fund (AOFIX) and Mid Cap Focus Fund (AFOIX) was hired in 2015 to expand Alger’s presence in niche small and mid-cap stocks. When Zhang arrived at Alger, the Small Cap Focus Fund had just $16 million in assets. Now, after a 54% return in 2020 and a 30% annual average return over the past five years, Zhang’s Small Cap Focus Fund has $7.5 billion in assets. Top holdings include refrigerated logistics upstart CryoPort and fast casual restaurant Wingstop. Her Mid Cap Focus Fund, launched in mid-2018, has attracted over $500 million in assets as it has soared by 84% in 2020, bolstered by casino operator Penn National Gaming and power equipment manufacturer Generac.

Long before sustainable investments became a prolific buzzword, Karina Funk, an MIT-educated engineer at Baltimore-based mutual fund giant Brown Advisory, was a pioneer in bringing sustainable investments mainstream. Funk, 48, a vegetarian who watches her carbon footprint by biking to work, launched the Brown Advisory Sustainable Growth Fund in June 2012, alongside David Powell, with a goal to back about 35 companies with products improving social and environmental sustainability, or efficient operating footprints.

Its focus on companies like Ball Corp. and American Tower has made it one of the best funds on the planet during down markets. Even in 2020, the fund has gained 38% despite its defensive posture, thanks to savvy picks like life sciences conglomerate Danaher and Etsy, which has empowered many small businesses during the pandemic. Funk can be a tough customer. She exited Facebook in the fall of 2018 due to data privacy concerns.

"Sustainability is a means, not an end in and of itself," she told Forbes as part of a profile three years ago, when the fund’s assets were just $1.1 billion. "Our end goal is performance. We achieve that by finding fundamentally strong companies using sustainability strategies to get even better." The fund’s assets have since soared to $4.6 billion.

Other female-led funds that have done well include Capital Group’s $128 billion American Funds New Perspective (ANWPX), led by a team of managers including Joanna Jonsson and Noriko Chen, and the $36 billion in assets JPMorgan Equity Income Fund (HLIEX), led by Clare Hart. The New Perspectives fund has beaten its benchmark by four percentage points annually over the past decade, while Hart’s Equity Income Fund has returned an annualized 11.65%, two percentage points annually above its benchmark, according to data from Morningstar.

Rebecca Irwin, Natasha Kuhikin and Kathleen McCarragher of the $1.3 billion in assets PGIM Jennison Focused Growth Fund (SPFAX) have returned 68% in 2020 and 25% over the past five years, ranking in the top decile of peer funds. At Alger, Ankur Crawford, co-manager of the Alger Spectra Fund (ASPIX) and Alger Capital Appreciation (ACCAX) has seen returns surpass 40% this year.

In fixed income, Tina Vandersteel of the $4.4 billion in assets GMO Emerging Country Debt Fund (GMCDX) has been able to outperform emerging market bond indices despite underweighting China and many Gulf-states due to her skepticism of the veracity of their economic data.

The bull market of 2020 is also creating new opportunities for female fund managers to shine. Two years ago, Julie Biel of Los Angeles-based Kayne Anderson Rudnick, was a rising star at the $30 billion (assets) firm and excited about the looming public offering of software company DocuSign. Known for investing in established businesses, Kayne had never participated in an IPO. Biel was late in her pregnancy as the IPO progressed and trying to win an allocation. She needed a doctor’s note to fly to the Bay Area to meet with DocuSign’s management. Kayne eventually won a large block of shares, quickly becoming one of its largest outside investors.

Biel also began to manage the firm’s KAR Small Mid- Sustainable Growth strategy around that time and made DocuSign the fund’s top holding. Its shares have risen 225% in 2020. This year, Biel’s fund has returned 42% through November. In December, Kayne decided to launch a mutual fund version, launching the strategy, called the Virtus KAR Small-Mid Cap Growth Fund (VIKSK), with Biel in charge.

Like Zevebergen and Wood, Biel is starting small and manages just $60 million. But the investment industry rewards performance above all, hinting at much larger things to come. Entering 2021, Biel’s portfolio is loaded with hidden gems like Ollie’s Bargain Outlet and MarketAxess that could grow for years to come.

How These Women Investors Crushed It In 2020 (2024)

FAQs

What does research show about women investors? ›

Key findings. As of 2023, around 60% of women invest in the stock market, and 68% save for retirement. Investing is most popular with younger women since 71% of Generation Z women and 63% of millennials invest. Women investors get better investing returns than men, with studies finding differences of 0.4% to nearly 1%.

Why are women investors important? ›

Greater women's economic participation is important because women typically reinvest up to 90 percent of their earnings in their families and communities compared to only 30 to 40 percent among men. This in turn can help expedite development and overcome societal poverty.

Do women investors get better investing returns than men with studies finding differences of 0.4% to nearly 1%? ›

Research from Fidelity Investments has found that women outperformed men by approximately 0.4% every year. The findings were supported by research from Warwick Business School, which saw men fall behind their female investor counterparts by an average of 1.8% over a three-year period.

What are the facts about women investing? ›

As of 2023, around 60% of women in the US are investing in the stock market in some way or another, compared to just 40% in 2017. And with the approach of the Great Wealth Transfer, women are expected to control $30 trillion by 2030. Not bad — considering we got a late start in the financial game.

Why don't women invest more? ›

One is that the investment industry isn't engaging women to the same degree as men, BNY Mellon's research found. According to the global survey, 1 in 10 women feel they don't fully understand investing and only about 28% feel confident about investing some of their money. In the U.S., some 41% of women feel confident.

Why do female entrepreneurs get less funding? ›

Women pursuing revolutionary business ventures are less likely to be funded because of investors' unconscious bias against female entrepreneurs, according to a study by Northeastern University researchers that included an examination of Shark Tank episodes. Novelty is vital to entrepreneurship.

Are women investors better? ›

Women invest less, robbing themselves of returns

Women's average balances have only increased by 3% since January 2022, while men's balances increased by a whopping 88%. That came about even though when women do actually invest, they are better investors than men in terms of the average returns they generate.

What are the characteristics of a woman investor? ›

If I could design the ideal investor, she would, over her saving and investing years, develop five characteristics I have observed in the women I advise in my practice – Resilience, Risk Awareness, Patience, Discipline, and Confidence.

Who is better at financial decisions, men or women? ›

After analyzing more than 5 million customers over a 10-year period, Fidelity found women investors outperformed their male counterparts by 40 basis points, or 0.4%, on average. This number may seem small—but over decades, .

Do women investors outperform men? ›

A 2021 Fidelity study found that women outperform men in investment returns by 0.4%, and an old study from UC Berkeley found that gap was nearly 1%.

Why do women achieve better investment results than men? ›

Women are less prone to emotional reactions to fluctuations in the stock market. This means that women tend to hold their investments for longer rather than having a knee-jerk reaction to a drop in value and selling.

Are women investors more risk averse? ›

Gender-specific risk propensities arise in abstract gambles, with men being more risk-prone toward gains but women more risk-prone toward losses. Moreover, when identical decisions are presented as investment and insurance choices, no gender differences in risk atti- tudes are found.

Who is the best female investor? ›

7 Top Women Investors
  • Liz Ann Sonders.
  • Abigail Johnson.
  • Mellody Hobson.
  • Deborah A. Farrington.
  • Sonal Desai.
  • Suzanne Shank.
  • Cathie Wood.

Why women should invest in themselves? ›

Investing in yourself increases your confidence

The better you feel about yourself the more confidence you will have and so the more you will be able to progress through life in a positive and meaningful way. Investing in yourself demonstrates that you think you are worth it and that you have value in your life.

Who manages money better, men or women? ›

Although men and women have similar financial goals, there's a vast difference between how much money each gender sets aside for those goals. A recent report by Mylo Financial Technologies found that men had set aside nearly twice as much money for their long-term financial goals as women.

What is the significance of research to investors? ›

The primary benefit of investment research is the ability to make well-informed decisions based on financial data. Investors armed with thorough research can better navigate the complexities of financial markets, identify profitable trading strategies, and steer clear of potential market pitfalls.

Why is it important to include women in research? ›

The world benefits from having more female leaders in science as they bring in lived experience, collaborative, and inclusive approaches in their work that simply expand the general knowledge in any field in STEM. Female leaders in science add value in research by bringing in more creativity arising from their social ...

What are the benefits of investing in women? ›

Investing in women also means contributing to an educated, healthier, and wealthier generation. Investing in women benefits society as a whole. The right investments release women's untapped potential and empower them to voice their opinions, share their ideas, and make important decisions.

What is the value of investing in female founders? ›

Studies have consistently shown that women-led businesses tend to outperform those led by men. A report by the Boston Consulting Group titled “Why Women-Owned Start-ups Are a Better Bet” found that women-owned companies deliver more than twice as much per dollar invested compared to businesses founded by men.

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