BlackRock profit misses estimates, hit by lower fees for lending stocks
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[July 20, 2019] By
Trevor Hunnicutt
NEW YORK (Reuters) - BlackRock Inc <BLK.N>,
the world's largest asset manager, took in less cash last quarter as
investors moved into lower-cost bond funds, and it made less money
lending out stocks.
The company, manager of $6.8 trillion in assets, missed analysts'
estimates for quarterly sales and profits on Friday, despite attracting
$151 billion in new money, as much of that cash moved into lower-fee
fixed income funds and accounts used to store cash.
The company's revenue for the three months through June 30 fell 2.2% to
$3.52 billion from a year earlier, affected also by some fee cuts the
company has made and lower fees for attaining performance targets.
"While lower fee rates is a headwind that will likely continue, we
believe BlackRock is happy to accept modest pricing declines in order to
take large amounts of market share," said Kyle Sanders, analyst at
Edward Jones, which maintains its buy rating on BlackRock shares.
Lower demand to borrow stocks also hurt fees. The borrowers are
typically hedge funds that want to "short" those shares, selling the
stocks and hoping to buy them back later at a lower cost.
"I can't control that; that’s more environmental," said BlackRock Chief
Executive Larry Fink in an interview.
Shortseller Andrew Left of Citron Capital said in a recent investment
letter that, because of the market rally, "it has been an
extraordinarily challenging environment to be a short seller." The
benchmark S&P 500 overcame an escalation in the U.S.-China trade fight
to close the first six months of this year up 17%, the best first-half
performance for the index since 1997.
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Larry Fink, Chief Executive Officer of BlackRock, stands at the
Bloomberg Global Business forum in New York, U.S., September 26,
2018. REUTERS/Shannon Stapleton/File Photo
Investors did pour more money into BlackRock's actively managed funds aimed at
beating the market over the low-fee passive-investment products. The company
also reported 20% growth in its business unit that licenses software and other
technology to other financial companies.
"The trend going into the second half is very positive," Fink said. "Things we
can control ... were exceptional. It was probably one of our finest quarters in
years of flows, in terms of engagement, and more importantly, when I talk about
BlackRock, no organization has a combination of passive, active and technology."
Meanwhile, BlackRock said its iShares-branded ETFs took in $36.10 billion of new
money, up from $30.69 billion in the preceding quarter.
Net income attributable to New York-based BlackRock fell to $1 billion, or $6.41
per share, from $1.07 billion, or $6.62 per share, a year earlier. The company
cited expenses related to recent acquisitions and a higher effective tax rate.
Total expenses rose nearly 4% to $2.25 billion. (https://bit.ly/2Ya6YZj)
Analysts had expected a profit of $6.50 per share, according to IBES data from
Refinitiv.
Shares of the company were up slightly in early trading.
(Reporting by Trevor Hunnicutt in New York, C Nivedita and Bharath Manjesh in
Bengaluru; Editing by Jennifer Ablan and Steve Orlofsky)
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