A Message From Our President

August 22, 2024

The summer is winding down and we have been busy at the FWA preparing for back to school and kicking off all of our fall programming! We recently wrapped up this year’s Wall Street Exchange, our internship augmentation program (since 1976!) – more on that below. Our mentor programs at the High School of Economics and FinanceBaruch College, and Seton Hall University are getting ready to launch. If this sounds exciting to you and you would like to become an FWA Mentor, click here to learn about the opportunities currently available!


The FWA has always been about supporting women in the profession and we have also held a deep and abiding commitment to building the next generation of leaders. Part of the way we do this is by offering powerful events for our community. Register now for the newly announced Economic Outlook Panel and save the dates for these additional upcoming events on your calendar today!




Hope to see you soon!


Sincerely,

Annette Stewart
FWA President 2023-2025

February 11, 2026
In finance, precision, rigor, and discipline are essential, and they will always remain core to how we operate and make decisions. At the same time, there is an important distinction between maintaining high standards and allowing the pursuit of perfection to slow progress, dilute impact, or prevent action altogether, particularly in moments that require speed, adaptability, and judgment. One of the most valuable leadership lessons I have learned is that waiting for perfect conditions often means missing the opportunity to act when it matters most. Markets move quickly, organizations evolve in real time, and the world rarely presents us with complete information or ideal circumstances. If we wait until every variable is known and every detail refined, we often find that the moment has already passed. Perfection is the enemy of the good. Progress, especially in complex and dynamic environments, rarely comes from flawless execution. It comes from informed decision making, from moving forward with intention, and from being willing to adjust as new information emerges. Most meaningful advances are not perfect at the outset, but they are good enough to create momentum, learn from experience, and evolve into something stronger over time. This mindset is particularly important for leaders, and it is especially relevant for women in leadership. Too often, women are conditioned to believe that we must be fully prepared, fully qualified, and fully certain before stepping forward or making decisions. That expectation, often applied more harshly to women than to others, can slow progress and limit both individual and collective impact. Agility is not about lowering standards or acting without care. It is about being responsive, thoughtful, and decisive in the face of uncertainty. It requires confidence in our judgment, trust in the teams we lead, and the willingness to course correct when circumstances change. Moving fast does not mean moving blindly, it means recognizing that learning and improvement often happen through action rather than delay. At the Financial Women’s Association, we strive to lead with this balance in mind. We are committed to excellence, but we also value momentum. We move forward deliberately, but without paralysis. We test new ideas, listen closely to our community, and continuously refine our approach, understanding that progress is an ongoing process rather than a final destination. As leaders, our responsibility is not to eliminate uncertainty, because that is rarely possible, but to navigate it with clarity, courage, and a bias toward action. When we choose progress over perfection, we create space for innovation, growth, and meaningful change.  Let us continue to lead in this way, with confidence, adaptability, and purpose, supporting one another as we move forward together.
February 10, 2026
The UAE is often recognized for its rapid growth, innovation, and global influence - what’s less widely known is the powerful role women play in driving success.
February 3, 2026
When you picture business in the Middle East, what comes to mind? If you suspect the region lacks opportunities for female leadership, the reality may surprise you.
January 28, 2026
by Robert Brown January is National Mentoring Month. In 2026, it also marks a defining moment for the Financial Women’s Association as we celebrate 70 years of advancing women in finance. This milestone matters now. As organizations across industries rethink development, mentorship, and long-term investment in people, FWA stands firm in what has always worked: human connection, shared knowledge, and women lifting one another forward.  For seven decades, FWA has done more than convene women in finance. It has built a community rooted in mentorship, access, and action. Progress here has never been accidental. It has always been intentional. It happens because women, and male allies choose to show up for one another. As current FWA President Albana Theka reminds us, “Mentorship isn’t about who’s ahead of you. It’s about who sees you, and who helps you see yourself.” That belief has shaped FWA from the beginning and continues to guide where we are headed next.
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