A carbon-free energy future is inevitable, BlackRock today told clients in its annual letter.
The letter, which followed CEO Larry Fink’s comments in January to business leaders about sustainable practices, addresses numerous questions the firm has received from clients about a global move away from hydrocarbons, the company stated.
“Today there is a significant degree of uncertainty about the transition. The issue, however, is no longer whether the net zero transition will happen but how — and what that means for your portfolio,” the letter read. “Our focus on understanding the how of the net zero transition is driven, as always, by our role as a fiduciary. It is based on our abiding conviction that long-term investors must consider the implications on their portfolios of both physical climate risk and the transition to net zero in the real economy.”
The letter was accompanied by a new white paper from BlackRock’s Investment Institute on those issues and managing risk associated with a shift to clean energy.
Beginning this year, the company plans to put more resources into analytics and advice that can “help investors to invest amidst high uncertainty about the pace of change in policy and the real economy.”
BlackRock will also add more ESG investment strategies this year, including retirement-saving fund options, that include broad market exposure, according to the letter. Also on the forthcoming menu are more ESG active strategies and iShares ETFs that will include climate-specific benchmarks, the company stated.
Further, BlackRock’s portfolio consulting and outsourced chief investment officer services will soon include “climate transition analytics” and allow for more customization around sustainability.
Activists said they support the news from the asset manager but cautioned ESG supporters to limit their optimism.
“BlackRock crossed a big hurdle today: it finally acknowledged that a global transition to a decarbonized economy is underway, and began telling clients that they must navigate this transition,” Moira Birss, climate and finance director with Amazon Watch, said in a statement from a group of organizations that are part of the BlackRock’s Big Problem campaign.
“What BlackRock needs to confront next is the fact that the decarbonization it recognizes is needed can’t happen without clear guardrails for the specific activities — including the expansion of oil and gas production and of deforestation-risk commodities — that will prevent us from achieving the Paris goal of limiting global warming to 1.5℃,” Birss said.
Large and mega plans show strongest appetite, but fee confusion persists.
Many people are taking a dangerous gamble with their financial future, new study warns.
Britt is named CFO of Wipfli, a $600 million accounting firm that audits two NFL franchises
The acquisition pairs Zephyr's 21,000-product separately managed account database with YCharts' newly launched AI agent assistant for investment research.
The war for talent continues in the Sunshine State with as Truist and RayJay teams managing a collective $1 billion in client assets defect to other firms.
Northern Trust’s Ken Lassner shows advisors how to convert volatility into after-tax portfolio gains
Dan Biagini of American Equity says the steady decline of pensions, longer lifespans and a reset in interest rates are rewriting how advisors build retirement income