BlackRock’s Third Pivot Is Its Most Adventurous Yet

When BlackRock Inc. completed its initial public offering in 1999, it fell a bit flat. There was no first day pop; Founder and Chief Executive Officer Larry Fink didn’t even get to ring the opening bell at the New York Stock Exchange. Valued at just under $900 million, the firm was one of 30 large investment-managers in the US, managing $165 billion of assets.

This month, the firm marks its 25th anniversary on the stock market — and how it’s grown. BlackRock is now the largest player in its field, with assets of almost $11.5 trillion and a market cap of nearly $150 billion; its executives regularly ring the bell to celebrate the launch of another BlackRock-branded exchange-traded fund.

In many ways, the firm has been fortunate: It’s been a good quarter-century to be in the investment management industry. The value of the global stock market has increased by more than 360%, US Treasury 10-year bonds have returned 130% and Baa corporate bonds have delivered returns of more than 350%. In a business where revenues rise as a function of funds under management, asset price inflation blows a profitable tailwind.

But BlackRock’s success isn’t just about beta. The firm executed two major strategic pivots in its time as a public company – and is currently in the midst of a third. Each of these shifts centered on acquisitions that positioned BlackRock at the forefront of emerging trends and ensured it didn’t go the way of Janus or Putnam or others in the top 30 at the time of its IPO.

The first was in 2006, when BlackRock spent $9.3 billion to acquire Merrill Lynch Investment Management (MLIM). As a former bond trader, Fink built the firm to specialize in fixed income. When it listed on the stock market, 89% of assets under management were in fixed income and liquidity instruments. By the beginning of 2006, equity products only contributed 10% of the firm’s assets. The Merrill purchase changed that, giving the group a 34% exposure to equities. The acquisition also gave it a stronger global presence, expanding the share of assets it managed on behalf of international clients to around a third.