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Hong Kong notches up small win in gender equity as number of all-male boards shrink by 50%

  • The number of Hong Kong-listed companies with all-male boards has decreased to about 400, from 800 in 2022, HKEX CEO Bonnie Chan says

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Bourse operator Hong Kong Exchanges and Clearing’s rule to appoint women directors to company boards has been well-received. Photo: Edmond So
Hong Kong has made tremendous progress to end single-gender boards, with the number of companies with all-male boards falling by half since a new rule was introduced two years ago, according to Bonnie Chan Yiting, the first woman to lead Hong Kong Exchanges and Clearing (HKEX).
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“We were the first global exchange to announce the ending of single gender boards on a mandatory basis,” Chan said in her first media interview since taking up the top post on March 1. All companies listed on the Hong Kong stock exchange have until the end of this year to comply with the rule.

Even though the deadline is still a few months away, the compliance rate has significantly improved since the rule was introduced, she said, noting that the number of Hong Kong-listed companies with an all-male board has decreased to about 400 now, from 800 in 2022.

At present, only 17 per cent of listed companies do not have a single woman on board, compared with 40 per cent when the exchange introduced the rule that required all new listing candidates to have at least one woman on their boards at the time of going public.

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HKEX Chief Executive Bonnie Chan on building a vibrant market in Hong Kong

HKEX Chief Executive Bonnie Chan on building a vibrant market in Hong Kong

Existing listed entities have to appoint at least one woman on their boards by the start of 2025.

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“We are doing it not because I am the first female CEO [of the HKEX], but because it makes sense,” she said. “Diversity, whether it’s gender diversity or any other type of diversity, brings more ideas, more perspectives into boardroom discussions.”

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