- BlackRock is the largest asset management firm, overseeing $9.4 trillion as of June.
- Founder-led BlackRock is molding the next generation of management and seeking out deals.
BlackRock oversees $9.4 trillion in assets as the world's largest money manager, and it's amassed enormous power through its many funds and high-profile chief executive and cofounder, Larry Fink. It's gone from a company mainly known only on Wall Street to one the general public now knows best for two things: its sheer size and ESG investing.
BlackRock's dominance as a passive investment behemoth and a vocal champion of environmental, social, and governance investing has drawn far more mainstream attention in recent years than ever.
That's led to viral conspiracy theories over what BlackRock owns and how it influences decision-making at other companies, attacks on Fink personally, and relentless criticisms by lawmakers primarily on the right who have seized on ESG as a boogeyman. The firm has defended itself, responding to critics that it works as a fiduciary and acts in clients' best interest, not as a force for political activism. It has delayed launching an ESG fund for more than a year against that backdrop, Insider reported in August.
BlackRock manages assets for clients across wealth management, pension plans, insurance companies, governments, and more. Its reach is far and wide for sophisticated and everyday investors: 35 million people invest in BlackRock's 1,300 exchange-traded funds. It sells a powerful portfolio management software called Aladdin, used by virtually all of Wall Street, and it manages some $320 billion of so-called alternative assets like private credit.
At the same time, BlackRock is shaping the next generation of leadership.
Rob Kapito, the president and another cofounder, and Fink lead the New York-based firm. BlackRock has made personnel changes and appointments in the past year that point to who may be positioned to take over once Fink and Kapito leave. For a window into BlackRock's workforce, powerful executives, dealmaking, and more, here is Insider's latest reporting on BlackRock.
Do you have a tip about BlackRock? Contact this reporter at rungarino@insider.com, rungarino@protonmail.com, or at (646) 768-4711 using a non-work phone.
Founder-led BlackRock is shaping the next generation of top management.
"I'm not planning to leave BlackRock anytime soon," Fink said at the firm's investor day earlier this year, "but BlackRock's board and I have no higher priority than developing the next-generational leaders for BlackRock."
Insider reported that a group of top executives, including Mark Wiedman, Martin Small, and Rachel Lord are viewed as contenders to replace Fink. An exclusive org chart that Insider published shows where these executives and other influential employees sit within the firm.
More of Insider's reporting on BlackRock's workforce:
- BlackRock org chart: The 150 most powerful people under CEO Larry Fink as succession planning looms
- BlackRock communications leaders exit as Larry Fink's messaging falls under a microscope
- Larry Fink has a new chief of staff, an under-the-radar position that's become a powerful post at BlackRock
- BlackRock is making management changes as it fights political scrutiny and molds the next generation of leaders
- BlackRock is mandating 4 days in the office, starting in September. Read the memo on the firm's plans.
- BlackRock is cutting up to 500 jobs as the market turndown hits the world's largest money manager
BlackRock is prioritizing the private markets.
Managers typically charge far higher fees to oversee private-markets assets for clients than the traditional stock and bond funds that BlackRock is best known for, and clients' appetite for those assets is growing.
This year the firm set a goal to double the revenue that its private markets business generates, and it's on the hunt for deals to make that happen.
BlackRock announced this month that it is acquiring a London-based private credit manager. Insider reported last year that a prior private credit-focused acquisition BlackRock made in 2018 led to asset growth but departures of some senior employees who were frustrated by the deal's integration.
Last month BlackRock reorganized the executives overseeing private assets — which is no longer structured as a standalone unit — to boost growth. Fink indicated in April that the banking sector turmoil this spring and the market volatility that ensued had presented opportunities for deals, and analysts have pointed to alternatives as one area where BlackRock could seek out M&A.
Read more here: BlackRock just set a goal to double its private-markets business. It's on the hunt for deals to make that happen.
BlackRock — and Fink personally — have become political targets over ESG investing.
BlackRock and Fink himself have faced intense scrutiny over the firm's climate-aware investment strategies. Conservative politicians view BlackRock as promoting liberal ideals in the companies BlackRock's funds own, while progressive politicians say BlackRock isn't doing enough to fight the climate crisis.
BlackRock often responds by reminding each side — and investors at large — that it is a fiduciary and works in the best interest of its clients. Late last year, a small activist hedge fund with a tiny stake in BlackRock even called on the company to replace Fink over the firm's approach to ESG investing.
Insider reported in March that Fink backed off of sustainability talk in his annual letter after a year of political attacks. And during the firm's investor day this month, there was no mention of the term "ESG," according to a 33,000-word transcript of the event from the research provider Sentieo. Executives used different language to discuss sustainable investing, describing "transition capital," or opportunities for investments toward a low-carbon economy, at length.
More of Insider's reporting on BlackRock's climate-focused and ESG investing:
- BlackRock keeps delaying a new fund as the world's largest money manager wrestles with political attacks
- BlackRock's Larry Fink championed ESG investing. Now it's complicating his succession plans.
- BlackRock's private equity arm is looking for climate-focused investments even as it faces political scrutiny in the ESG wars
- How BlackRock is angling to get it on the boom in renewable natural gas, a controversial energy source
- Here are the big money managers Republicans are turning to as they crusade against BlackRock and 'woke capitalism'
Fink says BlackRock is spending a lot of time studying artificial intelligence tech, and the firm continues to push into crypto.
BlackRock is spending "a huge amount of time" on AI, and how it will "reshape" the firm, Fink said at a conference last month. BlackRock has experimented with AI for several years: five years ago it formed a team now called AI Labs that works on the technology.
BlackRock is also pushing to launch a spot bitcoin exchange-traded fund in the US, even as the crypto sector faces a regulatory crackdown. The Securities and Exchange Commission said this week that it was delaying its decisions on those applications for spot bitcoin ETFs, including for BlackRock.
More on Insider's reporting on technology and digital assets at BlackRock:
- BlackRock applied to launch a bitcoin fund. Then came the conspiracy theories.
- BlackRock just sold its robo-advisor to the wealth firm Ritholtz Wealth Management
- BlackRock's mighty tech unit is a silver lining in an awful market. But competition and a recession could test its momentum.
- Behind BlackRock's long road to embrace crypto, from internal employee forums to inking big deals
- Meet 10 BlackRock execs leading the world's largest asset manager's push into digital assets