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Date: 2024-12-21 Page is: DBtxt003.php txt00014550

Companies: BlackRock
Communications from Larry Fink, chairman and CEO of BlackRock

CLIMATE & ENVIRONMENT ... BlackRock Preaches Long-Termism, But Some Critics Aren’t Buying the Sermon

Burgess COMMENTARY
My take on this story is that Larry Fink is joining with a lot of other financial and business leaders to talk about the dangerous dysfunction of the modern economy and the way profit performance needs to be balanced with social and environmental performance. This talk started some decades ago (for example John Elkington's Triple Bottom Line in 1994) but nothing much has happened to displace the conventional financial and economic metrics that have been in place for ever. I argue that it is insane to expect the modern complex socio-enviro-economic system to be optimized in a sensible way when metrics like profit, stock prices and GDP growth dominate the analysis and a lot of the headlines. As much as anything else we need really meaningful metrics ... that is numbering ... so that impact on society and impact on the environment are measured as rigorously as profit and impact on financial capital are measured. There is far more conversation about these issues now than 20 years ago ... and a lot of talk about future commitments to make changes ... but virtually no measurement of the actual change in a good direction that is being achieved. The modern way of doing business is dangerously unsustainable ... and probably getting more and more unsustainable as time passes because of the ongoing increase in GDP around the world. It would be wonderful if an organization like BlackRock insisted on every company in its portfolios reporting in numbers on the unsustainability of the business in addition to the profit performance of the business. This would be a game-changer. I am somewhat optimistic that it might be coming ... and then the challenge is actually how to do it! Peter Burgess ... http://truevaluemetrics.org
Peter Burgess

BlackRock Preaches Long-Termism, But Some Critics Aren’t Buying the Sermon


Front and Wall Streets, Manhattan

BlackRock and its founder and CEO, Laurence D. Fink, made waves earlier this week when he said in both an open letter to business leaders and article in the New York Times that it was high time for companies to do more than focus on the bottom line. Fink implored business leaders to take on a challenge usually left to non-profits, the occasional benefit corporation or an outlier brand such as Ben & Jerry’s: contribute to society or do not expect to receive any support from the financial giant that manages a reported $6 trillion in assets.

Reactions in the business press were all over the map, but were generally describing Fink and BlackRock as having a shot at helping to transform the role Corporate America plays in society. “Likely to take notice,” said CNN in assessing the impact of BlackRock’s letter. “A watershed moment,” noted reporter Andrew Ross Sorkin, who interviewed Fink for the Times.

Fink’s letter caps a busy several months for BlackRock, which saw the asset management firm side with activist investors on proxy votes far more than in previous years. “Passive investors are the new shareholder activists,” declared Barron’s last summer, noting that BlackRock and competitors such as Vanguard increasingly voted to approve shareholder resolutions related to contentious issues such as climate change. After all, such an approach is a sharp departure for BlackRock, which usually is not trying to beat the market – the company has historically been more of a passive investor, pitching financial products such as indexed funds or retirement accounts.

BlackRock has become more vocal, and even confrontational, with one notable example being a managing partners declaring last summer that “coal is dead.” In recent years, the company has repeatedly admonished investors that they had to keep climate change risks in mind when evaluating their portfolios. “The longer an asset owner’s time horizon, the more climate-related risks compound,” said a September 2016 report.

Yet not everyone was enamored with the public stance taken by BlackRock and Fink. Some NGOs, for example, have pointed out that the company has ties to oil exploration projects in the Amazonian rainforests of Peru and Ecuador, the results of which have allegedly included environmental degradation and human rights violations. And the stodgy Financial Times was quick to paint BlackRock as a hypocrite last fall when it noted for every climate change-related proposal BlackRock supported, it voted against many others. “The engagement excuse on global warming is wearing thin,” wrote FT’s Attracta Mooney.

Writing for Bloomberg, Stephen Gandel wondered aloud whether BlackRock could have any influence on social and environmental issues when its influence on convincing companies to stop launching stock buybacks – a short-term strategy if there ever were one – has at best been minimal over the years. Gandel also noted that Fink’s annual letter comes around the time of of the World Economic Forum in Davos, which the reporter described as “the ultimate CEO lip service confab.” Finally, if the likes of BlackRock and Vanguard own such huge amounts of equities, why not use that leverage to push financial services companies like Standard & Poor’s to mandate that companies like ExxonMobil disclose their social impact?

But more important than whether or not BlackRock is really walking the talk is the information that the company is sending to its investors time and again. After all, when something is repeated constantly, the other party may eventually listen. As Blackrock reminded investors in the summer of 2016, “Bottom line: our research suggests there can be little downside to gradually incorporating climate factors into the investment process – and even potential upside.”

BlackRock, however, will only be taken seriously by the business community when it finally takes action and sheds some equities tied to companies with dubious environmental and social track records. Then, we would have a real story, one that could spur more financial institutions to follow through on what they do best: issue long reports about trends and risks. Those words, however, have so far not been matched by any forceful follow through.

Image credit: Ken Lund/Flickr

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