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Named and shamed: The FTSE 250 companies with no women at the top

Firms have six months to appoint at least one woman to their board

Laura Chesters
Thursday 09 October 2014 13:54 BST
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All FTSE 100 companies now have at least one female board member
All FTSE 100 companies now have at least one female board member (Getty Images)

Business secretary Vince Cable and Lord Davies are today naming and shaming the 28 FTSE 250 companies that still have all male boards.

The pair have written to the chairmen of the 28 companies, which include pub group Enterprise Inns, sportswear chain JD Sports and miner Petra Diamonds, to warn them they are falling behind peers.

Lord Davies published a report into Women on Boards in 2011 and set a target that boards should be 25 per cent female by next year.

All FTSE 100 companies now have at least one female board member following the appointment of Canadian mining veteran Patrice Merrin as a non-executive at Glencore and Vivianne Blanlot as a non-executive director at Antofagasta earlier this year.

City grandee and former boss of Standard Chartered Lord Davies, added: “Having reached a position where it is unacceptable for the voice of women to be absent from the boardroom, it is disappointing to see there are still 28 all-male boards in the FTSE 250. Every single company needs to address the issue of gender balance in the boardroom and make sure they support UK business in our collective goal.”

The letter sent to the companies today calls for the gender diversity across FTSE company boards to improve in the next six months to meet targets and demands the 28 firms to appoint at least one woman to their board as well as set a date to meet the 25 per cent target.

He added: “Companies need to harness all available talent - better balanced boards are vital to securing the future competitiveness of UK”.

Mr Cable did not want to install quotas to improve the number of women at senior levels and decided that targets were a better option.

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