BlackRock Is The Biggest Investor In The World Read more: http://www.businessinsider

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BlackRock Is The Biggest Investor In The World

http://www.businessinsider.com/blackrock-is-the-biggest-investor-in-the-world-2013-12

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ASK conspiracy theorists who they think really runs the world, and they will probably point to global banks, such as Citigroup, Bank of America and JPMorgan Chase. Oil giants such as Exxon Mobil and Shell may also earn a mention. Or perhaps they would focus on the consumer-goods firms that hold billions in their thrall: Apple, McDonald’s or Nestlé.
One firm unlikely to feature on their list is BlackRock, an investment manager whose name rings few bells outside financial circles. Yet it is the single biggest shareholder in all the companies listed above. It owns a stake in almost every listed company not just in America but globally. (Indeed, it is the biggest shareholder in Pearson, in turn the biggest shareholder in The Economist.) Its reach extends further: to corporate bonds, sovereign debt, commodities, hedge funds and beyond. It is easily the biggest investor in the world, with $4.1 trillion of directly controlled assets (almost as much as all private-equity and hedge funds put together) and another $11 trillion it oversees through its trading platform, Aladdin (see "BlackRock: The monolith and the markets").

Established in 1988 by a group of Wall Streeters led by Larry Fink, BlackRock succeeded in part by offering "passive" investment products, such as exchange-traded funds, which aim to track indices such as the S&P 500. These are cheap alternatives to traditional mutual funds, which often do more to enrich money managers than clients (though BlackRock offers plenty of those, too). The sector continues to grow fast, and BlackRock, partly through its iShares brand, is the largest competitor in an industry where scale brings benefits. Its clients, ranging from Arab sovereign-wealth funds to mom-and-pop investors, save billions in fees as a result.

The other reason for its success is its management of risk in its actively managed portfolio. Early on, for instance, it was a leader in mortgage-backed securities. But because it analysed their riskiness zipcode by zipcode, it not only avoided a bail-out in the chaos that followed the collapse of Lehman, but also advised the American government and others on how to keep the financial system ticking in the darkest days of 2008, and picked up profitable money-management units from struggling financial institutions in the aftermath of the crisis.

Other people’s money
Compared with the many banks which are flourishing only thanks to state largesse, BlackRock’s success--based on providing value to customers and paying attention to detail--is well-deserved. Yet when taxpayers have spent billions rescuing financial institutions deemed too big to fail, a 25-year-old company that has grown so vast so quickly sets nerves jangling. American regulators are therefore thinking about designating BlackRock and some of its rivals as "systemically important". The tag might land them with hefty regulatory requirements.

If the regulators’ concern is to avoid a repeat of the last crisis, they are barking up the wrong tree. Unlike banks, whose loans and deposits go on their balance-sheets as assets and liabilities, BlackRock is a mere manager of other people’s money. It has control over investments it holds on behalf of others--which gives it great influence--but it neither keeps the profits nor suffers the losses on them. Whereas banks tumble if their assets lose even a fraction of their value, BlackRock can pass on any shortfalls to its clients, and withstand far greater shocks. In fact, by being on hand to pick up assets cheaply from distressed sellers, an unleveraged asset manager arguably stabilises markets rather than disrupting them.

But for regulators that want not merely to prevent a repeat of the last blow-up but also to identify the sources of future systemic perils, BlackRock raises another, subtler issue, concerning not the ownership of assets but the way buying and selling decisions are made. The $15 trillion of assets managed on its Aladdin platform amount to around 7% of all the shares, bonds and loans in the world. As a result, those who oversee many of the world’s biggest pools of money are looking at the financial world, at least in part, through a lens crafted by BlackRock. Some 17,000 traders in banks, insurance companies, sovereign-wealth funds and others rely in part on BlackRock’s analytical models to guide their investing.

Aladdin’s genius
That is a tribute to BlackRock’s elaborate risk-management models, but it is also discomfiting. A principle of healthy markets is that a cacophony of diverse actors come to different conclusions on the price of things, based on their own idiosyncratic analyses. The value of any asset is discovered by melding all these different opinions into a single price. An ecosystem which is dominated by a single line of thinking is not healthy, in politics, in nature or in markets. Such groupthink in finance is a recipe for booms (when everyone wants to buy the same thing) and busts (when they all rush to sell). Though Aladdin advises clients on investment decisions rather than making them, it inevitably frames how they think of market risk.

The last crisis had many causes. One of them, which perhaps lay behind all the others, was that investors stopped thinking critically about what they were buying. Too many decided to trust credit-rating agencies, which assured them, for example, that packages of American subprime mortgages were extremely unlikely to default. BlackRock’s models are no doubt better than the clunkers put out by Moody’s or Standard & Poor’s up to 2008: the firm’s relative recent success has proved that. But too many investors relying on a single model spreads an unhealthy orthodoxy and is likely to make the markets more volatile than they otherwise would be.

That is probably not a serious systemic risk, for it will be self-limiting: the more money follows BlackRock, the more money there is to be made betting against it. The real danger is for investors. The more they rely on BlackRock’s analysis, the smaller the upside when it gets things right and the greater the downside when it gets things wrong--as, one day, it eventually will. Until then BlackRock’s single-minded focus on mastering risk is to be commended. If its peers in the financial world had taken the same approach in the run-up to 2008, much of the chaos of the past five years would have been averted.
 
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Re: BlackRock Is The Biggest Investor In The World Read more: http://www.businessins

businessinsider is trying desperately to be purchased by aol.
 




People don't really understand what Blackrock is, or what they do.

So let's go inside...
But first a little about their founder and CEO Larry Fink, since it will be important later


Larry joined Wall St in 1976. He was smart and made money. He pioneered the idea of debt securitization (packaging up different loans as bonds). He then ran the trading desk for those Mortgage Backed Securities (MBS). Yes, those bonds that led to the 2008 GFC

*smiles*


Larry then did a boo-boo and lost >$90mm taking a wrong bet on interest rates. The naughty boy realized:

1) risk management is important
2) client trust is important

So the ambitious Larry decided to start his own firm focused on these 2 principles.

aka. "Trust me bro"
To get started, he went to his mate at Blackstone Group (yes, that one) and got a $5mm line of credit. Thus, Blackstone Financial Management was born. 20 years (and a lot of M&A later) this became Blackrock, which today has ~$9TN of AuM and is the largest AM in the world.

But building a great business isn't enough for our Larry. In 2016 he was being touted as Treasury Secretary under Hillary Clinton.

He is deeply politically connected, a very vocal Democrat, and is often heard saying "As I told Washington..."
now, back to Blackrock, that big asset management firm that some people think will "own all your bitcoins".

Blackrock doesn't own shit, their clients do. Blackrock simply manages the assets. They don't have a custody feature. They are not a bank.
don't believe me? check the FIRST PAGE of their Annual Report

s24.q4cdn.com/856567660/file…

so how does it work then? Simple. Let's say you want to invest in US equities. Rather than going out and buying all the stocks yourself and rebalancing frequently/paying tax on each transaction, you buy a Blackrock ETF or Blackrock actively managed fund and they do it for you.

You get a receipt to confirm your % ownership of the ETF/active fund, which then tracks the value and performance of those underlying assets. Blackrock can't do much with those assets, other than use their custodian banks to hold them

(note: repo only under ISDA/CSA)
Similarly, Blackrock can't do much with the spot bitcoin that goes into the custody account at Coinbase. The $BTC simply does not belong to them. They just provide a service for you to get access to the price/performance.

(image is my own)
BUT, where it does get v interesting is Blackrock's relationship with the US Government and Federal Reserve. In 2008, who did the Fed turn to manage the toxic assets that they took over from Bear Stearns?

Blackrock.
And in 2020, who did J. Powell/Fed turn to when he wanted to start buying some corporate bonds to help backstop the economy?

Blackrock.

and this is where it gets interesting, guess who the FDIC came to wind down the portfolios of Signature and Silicon Valley Bank?

Blackrock.


So, as @EricBalchunas rightly points out, Blackrock filing for a Bitcoin spot ETF *is* a big deal. What does the firm think about Digital Assets more generally?



Look no further than page 19 of their Annual Report.

Blackrock has identified a few things that are interesting to them, but especially Tokenisation of RWA including stocks and bonds!

Remember this is the bloke who bet big and won big on debt securitization - i.e. he fully gets the power of financial innovation (especially wrapping stuff up) and the potential thereof for new products, capital efficiency, cost advantages etc.
but this is not Blackrock's only stance within crypto. They have also put their money where their mouth is and together with Fidelity and a few others invested $400mm into Circle.
and Jeremy loves him back since Circle uses Blackrock to help them manage a portion of their reserves (fees galore!)
What is super interesting to me is that they chose to use Coinbase as the custodian for the spot bitcoin ETF - i.e. a company in the crosshairs of the SEC. They could have gone with the safe option of BNY Mellon, USA's oldest and most trusted bank. Below news was big at the time.
But then again is it really a suprise? Blackrock has its fingers in a few pies with Coinbase already. e.g. the Aladdin network partnership.

You CAN quote me on this - Aladdin is to Blackrock, what AWS is to Amazon.
Clearly there are a few moving parts here. The powers that be don't want spot bitcoin flow to be dominated by @cz_binance, or to have a powerful holder of US Government debt and Bitcoin like Tether. The weak part of the USDT daisy chain is the exchanges that use it for trading

On reflection, this is a coordinated approach to be the owners over the flow and fees generated by $BTC trading. It may get rejected the first time, the ETF approval may get delayed, but one thing is for certain - they are licking their lips.
 
So blackrock is buying into others people's vehicle and they can't do nothing but what everyone else can do is look at the results....they can't put you in or take you out.
 
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