BlackRock quarterly profit beats, assets under
management top $6 trillion
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[April 16, 2019]
By Saqib Iqbal Ahmed
NEW YORK (Reuters) - BlackRock Inc, the
world's largest asset manager, reported a better-than-expected
first-quarter profit and garnered tens of billions of new investor cash
as global financial markets rebounded from a volatile fourth quarter.
Net income attributable to BlackRock fell to $1.05 billion, or $6.61 per
share, in the three months ended March 31, from $1.09 billion, or $6.68
per share, a year earlier. Analysts expected a profit of $6.13 per
share, according to IBES data from Refinitiv.
Overall, the company sold $59 billion in stock, bond and other
"long-term" investment funds, up from the $43.6 billion sold in the
quarter ended Dec. 31.
"Investment flows look stronger than we anticipated," said Kyle Sanders,
an analyst with St. Louis-based financial services firm Edward Jones.
"BlackRock has a really strong reputation in fixed income management and
it looks like that asset class came back into favor with interest rates
kind of dipping lower. I think that drove better-than-expected asset
flows," said Sanders.
BlackRock's total assets under management rose to $6.52 trillion, up 3%
from the first quarter of 2018. Assets dipped below $6 trillion during
the market slide late last year. Total institutional fund net inflows
grew nearly nine-fold to $29.12 billion in the first quarter from a year
ago.
Total net inflows across all product types were $64.67 billion, up 13.6
percent from a year earlier.
BlackRock said its iShares-branded ETFs took in $30.69 billion of new
money, compared with $81.40 billion in the fourth quarter.
Calmer markets in the first quarter, compared to a year earlier when
volatility had been boosted by U.S. tax cuts, encouraged more people to
return to the markets, particularly after deep losses in December 2018.
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The company logo for BlackRock is displayed on a screen on the floor
of the New York Stock Exchange in New York, U.S., March 30, 2017.
REUTERS/Brendan McDermid/File Photo
The company, however, continued to feel the pinch from fee pressures amid an
ongoing industry-wide shift from high-fee actively managed mutual funds to
low-fee passive-investment products.
There was a 5% drop in base fees year-over-year, mainly due to the negative
markets in the fourth quarter and a stronger dollar affecting the fees they
collect, BlackRock said.
The S&P 500 Index, which fell nearly 14 percent in the fourth quarter, staged a
sharp recovery in the first quarter to rise 13 percent, its best quarterly
performance since the third quarter of 2009.
"I think it was pretty well known that fees would be down, not just for
BlackRock but for any asset manager just because those are based on an average
of market values throughout the quarter and we started the quarter at such a low
point," said Edward Jones' Sanders.
BlackRock shares, which slid 23.5% in price during 2018, its worst performance
since 2008 amid market volatility, have recovered ground to trade up nearly 15
percent for 2019.
(Reporting by Saqib Iqbal Ahmed; Additional reporting by Bharath Manjesh in
Bengaluru; Editing by Sriraj Kalluvila and Bernadette Baum)
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