BlackRock profit falls but matches expectations, fee revenue slips

Reuters

Published Jul 14, 2016 10:11AM ET

BlackRock profit falls but matches expectations, fee revenue slips

By Trevor Hunnicutt

NEW YORK (Reuters) - BlackRock Inc's (N:BLK) profit fell 3.7 percent in the second quarter as global market turmoil spurred investors to shift to stocks from cash and bonds, hurting fee income at the world's largest asset management company.

New York-based BlackRock said on Thursday the revenue it takes in from fees for managing money and lending out securities fell 1.8 percent to $2.49 billion from the same period a year ago, even as the total assets it manages rose to nearly $5 trillion.

On June 23, Britain's shock vote to leave the European Union briefly sent the financial markets into a tailspin. BlackRock's second quarter ended June 30.

"Equity markets have rebounded a lot," BlackRock CEO Larry Fink said in an interview. "We have a lot of wind at our back today."

BlackRock's net income fell to $789 million, or $4.73 per share, from $819 million, or $4.84 per share, a year earlier. Revenue was down 3.5 percent, to $2.8 billion.

On an adjusted basis, the company earned $4.78 per share, roughly in line with the average analyst's estimate, according to Thomson Reuters I/B/E/S.

Analysts said sales of BlackRock funds were lower than they had expected. BlackRock attracted $1.54 billion in "long-term" net flows in the second quarter, compared with outflows of $7.30 billion in the year-earlier quarter.

"People are accustomed to pretty good growth numbers and they didn't get that this quarter," said Edward Jones analyst Kyle Sanders. "We think there's some disappointment for investors in that."

BlackRock shares were up 0.7 percent at $359.92 in early trading, behind the 1 percent gain of its peers in a Dow Jones index tracking U.S. asset managers (DJUSAG).

Money that moved aggressively into bond exchange-traded funds helped the company, accounting for about two-thirds of the $15.67 billion in new cash that moved into the iShares exchange traded fund (ETF) business, up from $10.85 billion a year earlier.

BlackRock's overall assets under management rose to $4.890 trillion from $4.721 trillion a year earlier.

ACTIVE OUTFLOWS

But those strong sales of bond ETFs were offset by the results in its actively managed business, where portfolio managers work to beat the markets. Active outflows totaled $12.8 billion in the quarter.

A key focus for BlackRock has been boosting performance in its active stockpicking business, which generates higher fees than index-tracking ETFs.

The company has focused on integrating new stock fund managers and boosting team performances.

During a reshuffling announced in January, Fink and BlackRock President Rob Kapito combined the "scientific" and more traditional "fundamental" stock team under four managers. In May, BlackRock revealed it recruited Mark Wiseman, the head of Canada's biggest public pension fund, to become the top executive overseeing its stockpicking operations.

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BlackRock's Fink described the performance of the active stockpicking strategies as "a mixed bag."