BlackRock's Fink warns on climate change
THE GREENING OF A HEDGE FUND GREEN CAPITALISM
'Watershed moment': BlackRock pledges tough stance on climate
After activists ramp up pressure, world's biggest investment manager moves to reallocate capital away from fossil fuels.
by Ben Piven
'We believe that sustainable investing is the strongest foundation for client portfolios going forward,' says Larry Fink, chief executive officer of BlackRock Inc [Alex Kraus/Bloomberg]
BlackRock Chief Executive Larry Fink has demanded that corporate boards enhance efforts to address the climate crisis, marking a major transition for the globe's largest investment manager.
In his annual letter to CEOs posted on the BlackRock website on Tuesday, Fink describes a "fundamental reshaping of finance" - following years of pressure by activists unhappy about the company's role in bankrolling fossil fuels.
Fink said firms in the United States and beyond should act now or face the wrath of investors angry about how unsustainable business practices could take a bite out of their wealth. He wrote that BlackRock would "be increasingly disposed" to cast critical proxy votes tied to sustainability.
Eli Kasargod-Staub, executive director of the corporate governance watchdog group Majority Action, called the statement a "watershed moment" and said "advocates have for years been calling on BlackRock to improve its transparency on proxy voting".
Collectively with fellow asset managers State Street Corporation and the Vanguard Group, BlackRock holds about 25 percent of shares across the S&P 500, giving these firms the ability to set rules by how they vote.
"Leading investors realise the risks of climate change are being exacerbated by high-emitting companies, through their own capital expenditures, operations and policy," Kasargod-Staub told Al Jazeera.
Calling for corporations to "set targets aligned with the Paris Agreement", Kasargod-Staub said "net-zero carbon emissions" should be embraced through "trade associations, lobbying and political contributions".
"BlackRock needs to draw a clear, bright line for portfolio companies," he added, referring to the energy, electricity and transportation sectors.
'Beginning to crack'
Fink said in a separate letter to clients that the New York-based firm will sell off from its actively managed client portfolios all stakes in companies that derive more than 25 percent of their revenue from thermal coal production, achieving this goal by the summer of 2020.
BlackRock did not give specific details on which companies it would be divesting, or the size of those positions. At BlackRock and other investment firms, asset managers have clients with a wide range of political views and are careful to represent their actions in terms of investment strategy rather than politics.
Climate activists are praising Fink's stronger stances, though some say the asset manager will need to back up the new rhetoric.
Protesters eat fake money outside the BlackRock office during an Extinction Rebellion demonstration in London [Henry Nicholls/Reuters]
"BlackRock is beginning to crack, that's an enormous deal," said Pete Sikora, climate and inequality campaigns director at New York Communities for Change.
"They control about $7 trillion in assets - eight to 11 percent of every Fortune 500 company," Sikora told Al Jazeera. "[They are] the single biggest owner of basically every financial asset out there, and that includes fossil fuels."
He hailed BlackRock's shift toward holding every board of directors accountable on climate, but also said the company still should "rearrange their passive indexes so that the defaults exclude oil, gas and coal".
Sikora said Fink's gesture "did not come out of thin air" but was the result of "smart, relentless activism".
"Right now Australia is on fire, there's enormous flooding in Indonesia, and last weekend it was 68 degrees [20 degrees Celsius] in New York," he added. "BlackRock is part of what is torching the world."
'Looking at this very closely'
Top index fund managers rarely challenge company management and generally oppose climate resolutions.
At ExxonMobil's annual meeting on May 29, BlackRock backed all but one of 10 directors up for election - but opposed six of seven shareholder proposals.
Historically, BlackRock has said it engages executives behind the scenes, an approach that critics say does not really move the needle.
Banks also have faced pressure to trim fossil-fuel financing, and activists are challenging insurance companies not to cover projects in sectors with stranded asset risk.
Protesters gather outside the ExxonMobil annual shareholder meeting last year to protest the company's climate policies [Jennifer Hiller/Reuters]
Meanwhile, investors have started to put more money into more climate-friendly funds. Investments in sustainable exchange-traded funds grew to $20bn in 2019, nearly four times the previous year's record.
Ben Cushing, a campaign representative at Sierra Club, told Al Jazeera that BlackRock also should address deforestation, "which behind fossil fuels is the second-leading driver of the climate crisis".
He said that "Larry Fink's highly anticipated annual letter in 2019 failed to even mention climate change".
"[BlackRock] peers and competitors are going to be looking at this very closely" in 2020, Cushing added.
"At annual shareholder meetings this spring," said Cushing, "BlackRock has a near-term opportunity to implement these words and put them into action."
SOURCE: AL JAZEERA AND NEWS AGENCIES
Climate change to drive 'massive' investment shift
BlackRock Chief Executive Larry Fink has demanded that corporate boards enhance efforts to address the climate crisis, marking a major transition for the globe's largest investment manager.
In his annual letter to CEOs posted on the BlackRock website on Tuesday, Fink describes a "fundamental reshaping of finance" - following years of pressure by activists unhappy about the company's role in bankrolling fossil fuels.
Fink said firms in the United States and beyond should act now or face the wrath of investors angry about how unsustainable business practices could take a bite out of their wealth. He wrote that BlackRock would "be increasingly disposed" to cast critical proxy votes tied to sustainability.
Eli Kasargod-Staub, executive director of the corporate governance watchdog group Majority Action, called the statement a "watershed moment" and said "advocates have for years been calling on BlackRock to improve its transparency on proxy voting".
Collectively with fellow asset managers State Street Corporation and the Vanguard Group, BlackRock holds about 25 percent of shares across the S&P 500, giving these firms the ability to set rules by how they vote.
"Leading investors realise the risks of climate change are being exacerbated by high-emitting companies, through their own capital expenditures, operations and policy," Kasargod-Staub told Al Jazeera.
Calling for corporations to "set targets aligned with the Paris Agreement", Kasargod-Staub said "net-zero carbon emissions" should be embraced through "trade associations, lobbying and political contributions".
"BlackRock needs to draw a clear, bright line for portfolio companies," he added, referring to the energy, electricity and transportation sectors.
'Beginning to crack'
Fink said in a separate letter to clients that the New York-based firm will sell off from its actively managed client portfolios all stakes in companies that derive more than 25 percent of their revenue from thermal coal production, achieving this goal by the summer of 2020.
BlackRock did not give specific details on which companies it would be divesting, or the size of those positions. At BlackRock and other investment firms, asset managers have clients with a wide range of political views and are careful to represent their actions in terms of investment strategy rather than politics.
Climate activists are praising Fink's stronger stances, though some say the asset manager will need to back up the new rhetoric.
Protesters eat fake money outside the BlackRock office during an Extinction Rebellion demonstration in London [Henry Nicholls/Reuters]
"BlackRock is beginning to crack, that's an enormous deal," said Pete Sikora, climate and inequality campaigns director at New York Communities for Change.
"They control about $7 trillion in assets - eight to 11 percent of every Fortune 500 company," Sikora told Al Jazeera. "[They are] the single biggest owner of basically every financial asset out there, and that includes fossil fuels."
He hailed BlackRock's shift toward holding every board of directors accountable on climate, but also said the company still should "rearrange their passive indexes so that the defaults exclude oil, gas and coal".
Sikora said Fink's gesture "did not come out of thin air" but was the result of "smart, relentless activism".
"Right now Australia is on fire, there's enormous flooding in Indonesia, and last weekend it was 68 degrees [20 degrees Celsius] in New York," he added. "BlackRock is part of what is torching the world."
'Looking at this very closely'
Top index fund managers rarely challenge company management and generally oppose climate resolutions.
At ExxonMobil's annual meeting on May 29, BlackRock backed all but one of 10 directors up for election - but opposed six of seven shareholder proposals.
Historically, BlackRock has said it engages executives behind the scenes, an approach that critics say does not really move the needle.
Banks also have faced pressure to trim fossil-fuel financing, and activists are challenging insurance companies not to cover projects in sectors with stranded asset risk.
Protesters gather outside the ExxonMobil annual shareholder meeting last year to protest the company's climate policies [Jennifer Hiller/Reuters]
Meanwhile, investors have started to put more money into more climate-friendly funds. Investments in sustainable exchange-traded funds grew to $20bn in 2019, nearly four times the previous year's record.
Ben Cushing, a campaign representative at Sierra Club, told Al Jazeera that BlackRock also should address deforestation, "which behind fossil fuels is the second-leading driver of the climate crisis".
He said that "Larry Fink's highly anticipated annual letter in 2019 failed to even mention climate change".
"[BlackRock] peers and competitors are going to be looking at this very closely" in 2020, Cushing added.
"At annual shareholder meetings this spring," said Cushing, "BlackRock has a near-term opportunity to implement these words and put them into action."
SOURCE: AL JAZEERA AND NEWS AGENCIES
BlackRock, world's largest asset manager, changing its focus to climate change
'In the near future … there will be a significant reallocation of capital,' CEO says
Founder and CEO Laurence Fink, who oversees the management of about $7 trillion in funds, said in his influential annual letter to CEOs Tuesday that he believes we are "on the edge of a fundamental reshaping of finance" because of a warming planet.
Climate change has become the top issue raised by clients, Fink said, and will affect everything from municipal bonds to long-term mortgages for homes.
The New York firm is taking immediate action, exiting investments in coal used to generate power, and will begin asking clients to disclose their climate-related risks.
"Because capital markets pull future risk forward, we will see changes in capital allocation more quickly than we see changes to the climate itself," Fink wrote in the letter. "In the near future — and sooner than most anticipate — there will be a significant reallocation of capital."
That shift is already underway.
Investors poured $20.6 billion into sustainable funds last year, nearly quadrupling the record it had set a year earlier, according to Morningstar. The industry has broadened in recent years, after starting with simple funds that bluntly excluded stocks deemed as harmful, such as gun makers or tobacco stocks.
Investors, particularly younger ones, increasingly say they want their money invested with an eye toward sustainability. Fearful of losing out on those dollars — and the fees that they produce — investment companies are rushing to meet the surging demand.
Fund managers increasingly say they consider environmental, social and governance issues in their broad investment strategy. It's known as "ESG" investing in the industry, and it means fund managers measure a company's performance on the environment and other sustainability issues along with its bottom-line financials when choosing which stocks to own.
ESG funds say such an approach can help investors' returns, rather than just their consciences, because it can help avoid risky companies, and the big losses they may have ahead of them in the future. Companies with poor records on the environment are more likely to face big fines, for example.
The European Union plans to dedicate a quarter of its budget to tackling climate change and has set up a scheme to shift 1 trillion euros ($1.4 trillion Cdn) in investment toward making the economy more environmentally friendly over the next 10 years.
The Europe Investment Plan, to be unveiled Tuesday, will be funded by the EU budget and the private sector. It aims to deliver on European Commission president Ursula von der Leyen's Green Deal to make the bloc the world's first carbon-neutral continent by 2050.
The shift by BlackRock is substantial. The firm has long been a target of environmental activists who have staged protests outside of its headquarters in midtown Manhattan. It has been hounded by some members of Congress who believe BlackRock could better address climate change with its vast economic heft.
Because of its size and reach, any shift in focus by BlackRock has the potential for much wider ramifications. The firm has operations in dozens of countries and is often called the world's largest shadow bank.
"Over time, companies and countries that do not respond to stakeholders and address sustainability risks will encounter growing skepticism from the markets, and in turn, a higher cost of capital," Fink wrote. "Companies and countries that champion transparency and demonstrate their responsiveness to stakeholders, by contrast, will attract investment more effectively, including higher-quality, more patient capital."
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