How a Company Called BlackRock Shapes Your News, Your Life, Our Future - Common Reader (2024)

Jeannette Cooperman

How a Company Called BlackRock Shapes Your News, Your Life, Our Future - Common Reader (1)

Photo by jvandoor via Flickr

Lou Grant’s death (okay, Ed Asner’s) left me nostalgic for those Chuckles the Clown days when newsrooms buzzed with idiosyncratic idealism. Five giant corporations now control most of what we see and read. The smallest number of media companies are now reaching the largest number of people in U.S. history, and the strongest critical analysis I can find is not in mainstream media, but in the student newspaper at Vassar. Which gives you some idea of the pickle we are in.

Who controls the corporations who control our news? A helpful index was just compiled—not by mainstream media, but by Harvard researchers exploring media’s future. Skimming the list, I see two names again and again: BlackRock Fund Advisors and Vanguard Group.

BlackRock and Vanguard are two of the Big Three (every industry is clumping) passive fund asset management firms. The third, State Street, is owned by BlackRock. Whose largest shareholder is Vanguard.

Together, BlackRock and Vanguard own:

• Eighteen percent of Fox.

• Sixteen percent of CBS, and therefore also of Sixty Minutes.

• Thirteen percent of Comcast, which owns NBC, MSNBC, CNBC, and the Sky media group.

• Twelve percent of CNN.

• Twelve percent of Disney, which owns ABC and FiveThirtyEight.

• Between ten and fourteen percent of Gannett, which owns more than 250 Gannett daily newspapers plus USA Today.

• Ten percent of the Sinclair local television news, which controls seventy-two percent of U.S. households’ local TV.

• A large unspecified chunk of Graham Media Group, which owns Slate and Foreign Policy.

Maybe media is a better investment than I thought, once it . . . clumps. But passive funds (index mutual funds and exchange-traded funds, not the actively managed ones) are an awfully nerdy setting for a Netflix Originals media conspiracy. International banks would be sexier.

Unless, that is, you find power and wealth sexy. BlackRock, it turns out, is the world’s largest money manager, with $9.5 trillion currently under management. I whistle under my breath—$9.5 trillion is a lot of cash in play, and it makes BlackRock considerably larger than the world’s largest bank (the Industrial and Commercial Bank of China).

How did this happen? The best explanations do not show up on Fox or CNN or CBS or ABC or NBC or USA Today or Sixty Minutes, but in academic journals. Since 2008’s shakeup, more and more investors have focused on passive funds rather than picking and choosing particular stocks. This is an unprecedented shift, one that might even threaten capitalism.

“Some $11 trillion is now invested in index funds, up from $2 trillion a decade ago,” Annie Lowrey reports in The Atlantic. This has “moved the country toward a peculiar kind of financial oligarchy,” decreasing competition because “mega-asset managers control large stakes in multiple competitors in the same industry.” (Like media.)

An investigative reporter I worked with used to mutter “oligarchy” when suspicious. The word is now appropriate. Sen. Elizabeth Warren wants BlackRock put under federal oversight as one of the financial entities designated “too big to fail,” because they would take us all down with them.

“If a $9 trillion investment company failed, would that likely have a significant impact on our economy?” she asked Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen at a hearing this past March.

Yellen danced a bit, then said, “It’s not obvious to me that designation is the correct tool.”

“Wait just a minute,” Warren said. “Designation is what gives the Fed its increased oversight power, is that correct?”

Yellen conceded the point but said the Financial Stability Oversight Council had already looked into the matter.

During the Trump Administration, writes David Dayen, “the Treasury Department official leading efforts to relax that designation and keep asset managers outside its grip [was] Craig Phillips, a former BlackRock executive.”

By then, BlackRock was already working hand in glove with the U.S. government. BlackRock was the firm chosen by the Obama Administration to clean up after the 2008 financial meltdown, buying up toxic assets the Fed was not legally allowed to purchase. BlackRock executives were the ones who proposed the economic reset that went into effect in March 2020, when the central bank forsook its historic independence and agreed to join monetary policy with fiscal policy. BlackRock had proposed this in 2019, but COVID created the perfect opportunity: an emergency for which an “independent expert” could be appointed by the central bank to avoid fiscal crisis. BlackRock was appointed the independent expert. It also won a no-bid contract to manage a $454 billion slush fund, leveraging it for more than $4 trillion in Federal Reserve credit. So BlackRock is playing both sides, buying mainly its own funds on behalf of the central bank.

BlackRock’s CEO, Larry Fink, angled for the position of Treasury Secretary when it looked like Hillary Clinton might be president. He served briefly on an advisory committee for Donald Trump and was heavily promoted to be Treasury Secretary in the Biden Administration. Fink’s former chief of staff at BlackRock, Adewale “Wally” Adeyemo, is now deputy secretary of the U.S. Treasury. Former BlackRock executive Brian Deese is Biden’s top economic advisor; former BlackRock executive Michael Pyle serves as chief economic advisor to Vice President Kamala Harris.

The Vassar article says it flat out: “Interlocking directorates, revolving doors of personnel and financial stakes and holdings connect the corporate media to the state, the Pentagon, defense and arms manufacturers and the oil industry.” One of the world’s largest investors in weapons manufacturers, BlackRock is also heavily invested in tech platforms and, through its investors, has a stake in all the major corporations in the S&P 500.

Big investors do more than vote their shares, concludes a survey published in the Journal of Finance; they also talk directly to management (sixty-three percent of those polled) and to board members (forty-five percent). With $9.5 trillion in assets hanging in the balance, BlackRock feels a responsibility to “monitor and provide feedback to companies.” It promises transparency—but also notes the power of quiet, one-on-one conversations.

Does BlackRock’s opinion matter to a reporter in the field? I doubt it. But BlackRock might matter to a publisher or owner, who might then influence an editor or newsroom director. By the time certain facts are being headlined and others excised, it is hard to tell where the influence originated.

We are living in the realm of oligarchy, and it is naïve to think media can exist unaffected. Until now, I barely knew BlackRock existed—let alone that, with Vanguard, they have enough of an interest in most big media corporations to be considered “insiders” under U.S. law. Critics call BlackRock a “great vampire squid,” a “shadow bank,” and “almost a shadow government”—one that neatly avoids the spotlight.

But any entity this big contains contradictions. BlackRock has just received China’s permission to establish its first foreign-owned mutual fund. Meanwhile, activists are protesting BlackRock’s investment in two blacklisted Chinese companies, both barred from trade with the United States because of their involvement in surveillance and their participation in repressing the Uighurs. George Soros calls BlackRock’s push into China “a tragic mistake” that could risk national security.

Fink comes across as a reasonable man concerned—except for the issues in China and the reluctance to be regulated—with social and environmental responsibility. That is BlackRock’s rhetoric, at least. And we will not hear much beyond the rhetoric, because . . . who would tell us?

Read more by Jeannette Cooperman here.

How a Company Called BlackRock Shapes Your News, Your Life, Our Future - Common Reader (2024)

FAQs

What does BlackRock do in simple terms? ›

What We Do | BlackRock. We're committed to helping people find better financial futures – and finding new ways to open the investment world to more people. We invest in businesses large and small – businesses that drive the local economy, connect and power our cities, and innovate to change the world.

What makes BlackRock so successful? ›

BlackRock is one of the world's largest investment management companies by AUM. The company operates as a single business segment. The firm derives most of its revenue from investment advisory and administration fees. BlackRock said that it has halted purchases of Russian securities amid Russia's invasion of Ukraine.

What are the values of BlackRock company? ›

We work collaboratively, without silos and without turf, to create the best outcomes for our clients, our firm, and the communities where we operate.
  • A diverse workforce is indispensable to our creativity and success. ...
  • An inclusive, equitable environment makes us thrive.

What are some interesting facts about BlackRock? ›

About BlackRock in the U.S.
  • 1.8. BlackRock generated $1.8 trillion of net inflows over the last 5 years3
  • Increase35. We help more than 35 million Americans invest to save for retirement4
  • Increase190,000. More than 190,000 financial advisors in the U.S. choose BlackRock to help build client portfolios5

How does BlackRock control the world? ›

Influence and power

BlackRock invests the funds of its clients (for example, the owners of iShares exchange-traded fund units) in numerous publicly traded companies, some of which compete with each other.

What makes BlackRock stand out? ›

innovation, thirst for technological solutions and focus on risk management, combined with an unwavering fiduciary responsibility to clients and a commitment to client service. We operate our business with a fiduciary responsibility, which means to act in the best interest of our clients.

Why is BlackRock so important? ›

We help millions of people invest to build savings that serve them throughout their lives. We make investing easier and more affordable. We advance sustainable investing. And we contribute to a more inclusive and resilient economy that benefits more people.

What does BlackRock own the most? ›

Latest Holdings, Performance, AUM (from 13F, 13D)

Actual Assets Under Management (AUM) is this value plus cash (which is not disclosed). BlackRock Inc.'s top holdings are Microsoft Corporation (US:MSFT) , Apple Inc. (US:AAPL) , NVIDIA Corporation (US:NVDA) , Amazon.com, Inc. (US:AMZN) , and Meta Platforms, Inc.

Who is BlackRock owned by? ›

BlackRock is publicly owned, with its shares held by various shareholders, including institutional investors like Vanguard Group and State Street Corporation and individual shareholders. The specifics of these shareholders can change over time.

What are the five principles of BlackRock? ›

BlackRock Principles
  • We are fiduciary to our clients. Our clients' interests come first. ...
  • We are One BlackRock. ...
  • We are passionate about our performances. ...
  • We take emotional ownership. ...
  • We are committed to a better future.

What is BlackRock's culture like? ›

Being a part of BlackRock means being a part of a community of smart, ambitious people. We value diversity of thought and background and believe everyone has a voice at the table.

How much money does BlackRock control? ›

As of the first quarter of 2024, the New York City-based asset management company BlackRock had total assets under management (AUM) of around 10.5 trillion U.S. dollars. This compares to 8.59 trillion U.S. dollars of AUM as of 2022. The total assets under management of BlackRock Inc.

What is BlackRock CEO's salary? ›

April 4 (Reuters) - BlackRock (BLK. N) , opens new tab CEO Laurence Fink's total pay for 2023 was $26.9 million, down from $32.7 million a year earlier, according to the company's regulatory filings on Thursday.

Is BlackRock the richest company in the world? ›

Microsoft (NASDAQ: MSFT) was the largest company by market cap in early 2024 at $3.1 trillion. BlackRock clocked in at No. 113 at a $123 billion market cap. Although the investment firm managed $10 trillion in assets, those were client funds, not assets owned by BlackRock.

What is the world's largest hidden company? ›

BlackRock Inc. is a colossal force in the world of finance, with a history dating back to 1988 when it was founded by Larry Fink and several other financial experts. Over the decades, it has grown to become the world's largest asset manager, overseeing a staggering $9.42 trillion in assets as of June 2023.

How does BlackRock Inc make money? ›

The company provides investment advice, financial planning, and consulting services to institutional and individual investors. By offering personalized solutions to meet clients' specific investment needs, BlackRock generates revenue from advisory fees.

Who are BlackRock's biggest clients? ›

Companies using BlackRock Aladdin for Portfolio and Investment Management include: Microsoft, a United States based Professional Services organisation with 221000 employees and revenues of $243.00 billion, MetLife, a United States based Insurance organisation with 45000 employees and revenues of $66.41 billion, Swiss ...

What companies are owned by BlackRock? ›

BlackRock Inc.'s top holdings are Microsoft Corporation (US:MSFT) , Apple Inc. (US:AAPL) , NVIDIA Corporation (US:NVDA) , Amazon.com, Inc. (US:AMZN) , and Meta Platforms, Inc. (US:META) .

What funds do BlackRock manage? ›

Investment funds
TickerNamePerf. as of
XGROiShares Core Growth ETF PortfolioApr 30, 2024
XBALiShares Core Balanced ETF PortfolioApr 30, 2024
CWOiShares Emerging Markets Fundamental Index ETFApr 30, 2024
FIEiShares Canadian Financial Monthly Income ETFApr 30, 2024
30 more rows

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