Investing
BlackRock’s 2023 Q1 Report Reveals an 18% Drop in Revenue
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BlackRock, the world’s largest asset manager, released its Q1 2023 report last Friday. In this article, we look at how it performed this year and its plans for the future. The firm saw a decline of 5% in annualized assets under management, and its income dropped by 18% annually. However, the financial giant seems to have grand plans for 2023.
For a while, it has been all too common to say that BlackRock holds $10 trillion in assets under management (AuM) as a rounded figure. This is no longer the case, even if one is generous. Compared to Q1 2022, BlackRock’s AuM shrunk by 5%, from $9.56 trillion to $9.09 trillion.
However, from a quarterly perspective, BlackRock’s AuM is up, having increased by +5.7% from Q4 ’22, which was at $8.59 trillion. This exceeded analysts’ expectations. Moreover, BlackRock mitigated annual AuM shrinkage with a 21.7% increase in total net flows, rising to $110.3 billion.
This was primarily driven by fixed-income ETF trading volume, with BlackRock accounting for 60% at $34 billion in bond ETF net inflows. In the last 12 months, from April 2022, BlackRock’s ETF net flows almost entirely came from institutional businesses:
BlackRock’s active institutional investing accounted for $224 billion in net flows in the last 12 months, while institutional index investing accounted for only $2 billion.
With decreased AuM, BlackRock’s annual revenue dropped by 10%, from $4.7 billion in Q1 ‘22 to $4.24 billion. Likewise, year-on-year net income decreased by 18% to $1.15 billion. Much of this downturn came from investment advisory performance fees, going down from $98 billion to $55 billion.
In stock metrics, BlackRock’s net income fell by $7.93 per share, underperforming Bloomberg’s expected $7.67 per share. When it comes to earnings per share, year-on-year, they dropped from $9.46 to $7.64 (diluted). This is lower than FactSet’s polling at $7.78.
Lastly, Blackrock cut total expenses by 4.5% to $2.8 billion. Considering suppressive macro conditions during this hiking cycle, it was no surprise that BlackRock exceeded total net flows while Aladdin’s revenue remains unperturbed.
Despite some Republican ESG pushback, BlackRock is unlikely to lose its central position. Like Microsoft’s deeply rooted Windows, it is challenging to unroot complex systems that facilitate reliance and delicate balancing. BlackRock CEO Larry Fink sees only opportunities moving forward:
“I believe today’s crisis of confidence in the regional banking sector will further accelerate capital markets growth, and BlackRock will be a central player,”
Expectedly, the Fed’s hiking cycle had a deleterious effect on banks’ fixed-income securities. On Monday, BlackRock’s Chief Investment Officer of Global Fixed Income, Rick Rieder, called into question whether the Federal Reserve needs to do any more interest rate hiking. As Wednesday’s CPI report shows, the inflation rate had its sharpest single-month drop, going from 6% to 5%.
At the same time, the more indicative core CPI (minus food/energy) is still at an elevated 5.6%, above the current Fed funds rate. The Fed will likely set two more 25 bps hikes this year to continue the momentum. In either the Fed pivot or recession, investors will seek refuge in BlackRock’s Aladdin to mitigate risk.
This article originally appeared on The Tokenist
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