Legal
Conference Firm Bars Ken Fisher Over Offensive Remarks

The incident comes at a time when the wealth management sector is under pressure to improve career opportunities for women and be more welcoming to female clients.
One of America’s most high-profile investors and commentators on
markets, Ken Fisher, has been barred from attending gatherings
hosted by Tiburon, for
offensive remarks he is reported to have made. The comments come
at a time when the traditionally male-dominated sector is under
pressure to be more welcoming to women and minorities.
Reports said that Fisher, who is the CEO of Fisher
Investments, the eponymous firm he created in 1979, had made
the comments at an exclusive San Francisco investment advisor
summit run by Tiburon. Tiburon Strategic Advisor’s managing
partner, Charles Roame, did not identify Fisher by name but
directly mentioned Fisher’s comments in a 1,500-word note to the
investment sector. The comments had included references to
genitals and compared building client trust to “trying to get
into a girl’s pants”, reports said.
Fisher, reported by Forbes as having a net worth of $3.7
billion, has apologized for the remarks, media reports said.
“Some of the words and phrases I used during a recent conference
to make certain points were clearly wrong and I shouldn’t have
made them. I realize this kind of language has no place in our
company or industry. I sincerely apologize," Fisher later said in
an emailed statement.
Tiburon CEO Summits are held bi-annually in New York and San
Francisco.
In a statement on Tiburon’s website, Roame said: “I do not seek
to, nor could I reasonably, control the narrative in each session
at each Tiburon CEO Summit. I encourage all 50-plus CEO-level
speakers to speak their minds, to each address three critical
industry issues of their choosing. Baby Boomers’ lack of
preparation for retirement, the rapidly declining cost of
investing, the increasing need for financial planning services,
and the lack of women in the industry were some of the key themes
this week.”
“I was extremely disappointed by the comments that I heard in the
way that I understood them. I can, in no way, condone or find
acceptable what I heard in the way that I understood its intent.
These comments lacked the dignity and respect that should be
expected by any Tiburon CEO Summit speaker or attendee,” he
continued.
Ironies
In an ironic twist, Fisher Investments announced yesterday that
it has been “honored with a 2019 BEST Award from the Association
for Talent Development (ATD) and ranks 35th among organizations
worldwide”. ATD is a global talent development association. “The
ATD BEST Award recognizes organizations that leverage talent
development as a strategic business objective to achieve
enterprise-wide success,” Fisher said.
The wealth management industry, and wider financial sector, has
for some time been warned that it has a problem with a
male-dominated culture. With more HNW women rising to the fore,
this imbalance is also a serious business issue.
FWR has addressed this issue here and
here, for
example.
Roame’s letter to investors continued: “These were unacceptable
words at Tiburon, in the wealth and investments industry, and in
society generally. Furthermore, these comments further the
inclusion problem in the wealth and investment management
industry. And on a related note, I am disgusted to be included in
phrases referring to old boys clubs. Tiburon is the
opposite.”
“The wealth and investment management industry has an inclusion
issue…One 2017 study reported that women account for 58 per cent
of employees in financial services, but only 48 per cent of first
and mid-level management roles, and 31 per cent of senior and
executive level management roles. And frankly, that is propped up
by women’s relatively higher success in banking. In investment
management, these numbers are 51 per cent, 41 per cent, and 26
per cent. In brokerage, the numbers are 39 per cent, 34 per cent,
and 19 per cent. Results in wealth and investment management are
horrible. And the participation of minorities may even be a
bigger issue,” he concluded.
Fisher is an author of several books on markets and investing,
and a regular commentator in print, television and conferences.
For example, in 2015 he published Beat the Crowd: How You Can
Out-Invest the Herd by Thinking Differently.