Latest news with #NetZeroAssetManagers


New York Post
29-07-2025
- Business
- New York Post
21 states warn JPMorgan's Jamie Dimon, BlackRock's Larry Fink to scrap ‘woke' environmental goals
Nearly two dozen states on Tuesday warned CEOs of the nation's largest financial firms – including BlackRock's Larry Fink and JPMorgan's Jamie Dimon – to scrap 'woke investing' programs focused on environmental goals if they want to continue doing business in their states. Letters signed by 26 state financial officers hit the desks of top bosses at BNY Mellon, Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley, Fidelity Investments, State Street and Vanguard. State officials ordered these firms to take five concrete actions to demonstrate their 'commitment to a fiduciary model grounded in financial integrity, not political advocacy.' 3 Larry Fink, chairman and CEO of BlackRock, the world's largest asset manager. REUTERS Among these steps is a commitment to abstain from 'international political agendas' like net-zero climate mandates or the EU's Corporate Sustainability Directive, which requires companies to regularly publish reports on the environmental and social risks they face. In the letters, leaders of red states slammed the erosion of 'traditional fiduciary duty' in favor of ESG investing, or the environmental, social and governance goals of financial firms. 'While some firms have recently taken encouraging steps, such as withdrawing from global climate coalitions and scaling back ESG rhetoric and proxy votes, and some states have permitted incremental reintegration, more work must be done,' officials said in a copy of the letter obtained by The Post. 'Our responsibility is to ensure public assets are managed in the best financial interest of beneficiaries and taxpayers. We expect detailed evidence that your firm's investment practices, proxy voting and corporate engagement behavior…align with traditional fiduciary standards.' 3 Texas last month removed BlackRock from its blacklist. REUTERS Officials from 21 states – including Alabama, Arizona, Iowa, Nebraska, Oklahoma, Pennsylvania and Utah – demanded that CEOs respond to the letter's demands by September 1. Some states have more than one official represented on the letters. The letters come after Texas last month removed BlackRock, the world's largest asset manager, from its blacklist. For nearly three years, BlackRock was banned from doing business with Texas state pension and investment funds, which hold an estimated $50 billion in assets, over its climate policies. BlackRock earlier this year rolled back some of its environmental goals, exiting the Climate Action 100+ investor group and withdrawing from the Net Zero Asset Managers initiative. 3 JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon speaks during the Global Markets Conference in Paris, France in May. via REUTERS The company, however, is still engaging in some practices that seek to restrict fossil fuel output, according to a report from the American Energy Institute and Consumers' Research, a conservative nonprofit. While Texas may have let up the pressure on BlackRock, these 21 states are doubling down on calls for financial firms to eradicate ESG goals. 'Requiring America's financial giants to prove their independence from woke ideology with concrete steps before doing business with a state's dollars is fully necessary and just makes sense,' OJ Oleka, CEO of State Financial Officers Foundation, said in a statement. 'For too long, firms like BlackRock have followed the ESG gospel to the legal breaking point of violating their traditional fiduciary duty and putting Americans' retirement savings at risk.'

Business Insider
05-06-2025
- Business
- Business Insider
'We live in a terrarium': Larry Fink on why today's leaders should be 'more guarded'
BlackRock CEO Larry Fink has some words of wisdom for leaders navigating the age of populism and social media: Watch what you say. "You have to be a lot more guarded," Fink said on Thursday. "I can't say everything I really want to say to all of you right now," he joked to the audience attending Forbes's Iconoclast Summit. "The reality is you have to be a lot more systematic in what you say and how you say it internally or externally," he said, adding, "I mean, we live in a terrarium today. We live in a glass bottle." The billionaire cofounder of the world's largest asset manager is no stranger to backlash over the firm's business decisions. Fink's embrace of "ESG" investing, for example, has been derided by Republicans as "woke capitalism," while drawing criticism from climate groups for not going far enough. The state of Texas only recently removed the asset manager from its investment blacklist, allowing the state to reinvest with the firm, after BlackRock withdrew from climate-focused initiatives like the Net Zero Asset Managers initiative. "You have to lead differently," in this era, Frink said. "You have to be a lot more thoughtful in every word you say." He said this holds true when it comes to internal messaging as well. "If you can't get your messaging properly with your employee base, and we have 23,000 employees at BlackRock globally, how are you going to get those messages across to all your clients?" Fink said. Fink told the audience gathered at the Cipriani's restaurant in downtown Manhattan that leaders also need to be led. He gave the example of a trip to the firm's European officers following President Trump's "Liberation Day" trade tariffs were unveiled. "The Europeans were quite frightened," Fink said. They were frightened about the potential for dramatic changes to US policy and the implications this could have on the culture and direction of their US-based employer. "Is BlackRock changing too?" Fink recalled them saying, before he reassured them that it would not. "It was just a wake-up call," Fink said. "Even for me, and I think I'm pretty well experienced in this stuff. Again, when there's great moments of uncertainty, even your top leaders need to be led."
Yahoo
04-06-2025
- Business
- Yahoo
BlackRock's Larry Fink gets a Texas reward for ESG retreat
BlackRock's (BLK) retreat from "ESG" initiatives has it back in good stead with a key Texas official, a victory for CEO Larry Fink, even as the world's largest money manager remains a target of the state's antitrust cops. Texas Comptroller Glenn Hegar announced on Tuesday that the lone star state had struck BlackRock from a list of financial companies that, by law, are mostly prohibited as state contractors and investments. Texas added BlackRock to that list in 2022, restricting state businesses with the Wall Street giant. Hegar said in a statement that BlackRock "has acknowledged the real social and economic costs, both here in Texas and globally, that come from limiting investment in the oil and gas industry." Since 2021, Texas law SB13 has required the comptroller's office to list companies that harm, penalize, or limit commercial relations with companies in the fossil fuel industry, Texas' largest economic driver. It requires state agencies to block and divest state investments in those firms, unless they qualify for an exemption. Hegar said the decision to take BlackRock off the boycott list was "in part because it stepped back from full participation in the Climate Action 100+ and completely exited the Net Zero Asset Managers initiative" and because "dramatically reduced" its fund offerings that boycotted fossil fuel investments. "We appreciate the comptroller's resolution of this matter," Blackrock said in a statement. "BlackRock is proud to help millions of Texans retire with dignity and, on behalf of clients, invests over $400 billion in corporations, local governments, energy infrastructure and other private assets throughout the state." Texas's status change for BlackRock comes after Fink made a series of disengagements from the firm's environmental, social, and governance (ESG) initiatives as bipartisan concerns spread over the financial giant's power to sway US markets. Fink publicly stated in June 2023 that he would cease using the politically sensitive acronym "ESG" because it had been "weaponized" by both the ideological right and the left. In January, the financial giant cut ties with UN-backed Net Zero Asset Managers Initiative (NZAM), an environmental advocacy group that pledged net-zero carbon emissions by 2050. But the comptroller's embrace of BlackRock hasn't yet stopped Texas' Attorney General Ken Paxton from pushing ahead with a legal fight to dilute BlackRock's and two other US financial giants' alleged influence over the fossil fuel industry. Paxton and 10 other Republican-led states filed an antitrust case against the trillion-dollar asset manager and its rivals State Street (STT) and Vanguard, in November, which last week attracted support from the US Justice Department and the US Federal Trade Commission. The case alleges that BlackRock and its rival financial firms coordinated a "left-wing ideological" attack on US coal companies by pressuring coal producers such as Arch Coal, Black Hills (BKH), and Peabody (BTU) to cut coal production in the South Powder River Basin and thermal coal markets. The decreased output, they said, harmed US consumers by artificially inflating energy prices. As large yet minority shareholders, the complaint claims, the defendants have more influence than their formal equity share. With that influence, they claimed, the defendants agreed to reduce output through their commitments to carbon-reduction organizations Net Zero Asset Managers Initiative and Climate Action 100+. AG Paxton's office didn't immediately respond to a request asking if the state's removal of BlackRock's from the comptroller's list will impact the antitrust claims. However, the removal suggests that the state no longer views BlackRock as a company that harms, penalizes, or limits commercial relations with fossil fuel industry companies. BlackRock asked for a judge to dismiss the case and accused the administration of trying to "re-write" antitrust law under an "absurd" theory that the coal companies conspired with them to reduce production outputs. "Forcing asset managers to divest from coal companies will harm their ability to access capital and invest in their businesses and employees, likely leading to higher energy prices," the company said in a statement. Alexis Keenan is a legal reporter for Yahoo Finance. Follow Alexis on X @alexiskweed. Click here for in-depth analysis of the latest stock market news and events moving stock prices
Yahoo
04-06-2025
- Business
- Yahoo
BlackRock's Larry Fink gets a Texas reward for ESG retreat
BlackRock's (BLK) retreat from "ESG" initiatives has it back in good stead with a key Texas official, a victory for CEO Larry Fink, even as the world's largest money manager remains a target of the state's antitrust cops. Texas Comptroller Glenn Hegar announced on Tuesday that the lone star state had struck BlackRock from a list of financial companies that, by law, are mostly prohibited as state contractors and investments. Texas added BlackRock to that list in 2022, restricting state businesses with the Wall Street giant. Hegar said in a statement that BlackRock "has acknowledged the real social and economic costs, both here in Texas and globally, that come from limiting investment in the oil and gas industry." Since 2021, Texas law SB13 has required the comptroller's office to list companies that harm, penalize, or limit commercial relations with companies in the fossil fuel industry, Texas' largest economic driver. It requires state agencies to block and divest state investments in those firms, unless they qualify for an exemption. Hegar said the decision to take BlackRock off the boycott list was "in part because it stepped back from full participation in the Climate Action 100+ and completely exited the Net Zero Asset Managers initiative" and because "dramatically reduced" its fund offerings that boycotted fossil fuel investments. "We appreciate the comptroller's resolution of this matter," Blackrock said in a statement. "BlackRock is proud to help millions of Texans retire with dignity and, on behalf of clients, invests over $400 billion in corporations, local governments, energy infrastructure and other private assets throughout the state." Texas's status change for BlackRock comes after Fink made a series of disengagements from the firm's environmental, social, and governance (ESG) initiatives as bipartisan concerns spread over the financial giant's power to sway US markets. Fink publicly stated in June 2023 that he would cease using the politically sensitive acronym "ESG" because it had been "weaponized" by both the ideological right and the left. In January, the financial giant cut ties with UN-backed Net Zero Asset Managers Initiative (NZAM), an environmental advocacy group that pledged net-zero carbon emissions by 2050. But the comptroller's embrace of BlackRock hasn't yet stopped Texas' Attorney General Ken Paxton from pushing ahead with a legal fight to dilute BlackRock's and two other US financial giants' alleged influence over the fossil fuel industry. Paxton and 10 other Republican-led states filed an antitrust case against the trillion-dollar asset manager and its rivals State Street (STT) and Vanguard, in November, which last week attracted support from the US Justice Department and the US Federal Trade Commission. The case alleges that BlackRock and its rival financial firms coordinated a "left-wing ideological" attack on US coal companies by pressuring coal producers such as Arch Coal, Black Hills (BKH), and Peabody (BTU) to cut coal production in the South Powder River Basin and thermal coal markets. The decreased output, they said, harmed US consumers by artificially inflating energy prices. As large yet minority shareholders, the complaint claims, the defendants have more influence than their formal equity share. With that influence, they claimed, the defendants agreed to reduce output through their commitments to carbon-reduction organizations Net Zero Asset Managers Initiative and Climate Action 100+. AG Paxton's office didn't immediately respond to a request asking if the state's removal of BlackRock's from the comptroller's list will impact the antitrust claims. However, the removal suggests that the state no longer views BlackRock as a company that harms, penalizes, or limits commercial relations with fossil fuel industry companies. BlackRock asked for a judge to dismiss the case and accused the administration of trying to "re-write" antitrust law under an "absurd" theory that the coal companies conspired with them to reduce production outputs. "Forcing asset managers to divest from coal companies will harm their ability to access capital and invest in their businesses and employees, likely leading to higher energy prices," the company said in a statement. Alexis Keenan is a legal reporter for Yahoo Finance. Follow Alexis on X @alexiskweed. Click here for in-depth analysis of the latest stock market news and events moving stock prices Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data

Yahoo
04-06-2025
- Business
- Yahoo
Texas allows state agency investment in BlackRock after firm steps away from climate initiatives
The Texas Comptroller's office removed international investment giant BlackRock Inc. from a list of companies public agencies were required to divest from as the company has realigned with state law by withdrawing from key clean energy initiatives. Senate Bill 13, passed in 2021, requires the comptroller's office to maintain a list of financial firms that 'boycott' the fossil fuel industry, and included BlackRock, several other companies and roughly 350 investment funds before Tuesday's update. Texas Comptroller Glenn Hegar called the removal of BlackRock and over a dozen investment funds a 'meaningful victory' for Texas' energy economy but clarified in a statement that the list or divestment proceedings were not done to intentionally target companies. 'We never set out to punish any of these firms, and the hope was always that any firm we included on the list would eventually take steps to ensure they were removed,' Hegar said. SB 13 defines boycotting as refusing, terminating or penalizing business with a company that works in the fossil fuel industry 'without ordinary business purpose.' Known as an 'anti-ESG (environment, social and governance) law,' the bill led the Teacher Retirement System of Texas and the Texas Permanent School Fund to divest billions from BlackRock in 2023 and 2024. The firm was placed on the initial list in 2022 for its involvement in initiatives like Climate Action 100+, which aims to reduce corporate greenhouse gas emissions. Direct investment into fossil fuel companies does not preclude firms from being considered as boycotting, according to an information sheet from the state comptroller's office. BlackRock has since stepped back from Climate Action 100+ and completely removed itself from another initiative, Net Zero Asset Managers, which the comptroller's office attributed to the company's removal. In a statement to the Texas Tribune, John Kelly, BlackRock global head of corporate affairs, said they appreciated the comptroller's resolution and touted the firm's investment in other state affairs. 'BlackRock is proud to help millions of Texans retire with dignity and, on behalf of clients, invests over $400 billion in corporations, local governments, energy infrastructure and other private assets throughout the state,' Kelly said. 'These investments support the continued growth of the Texas economy.' Among the firm's in-state investments is assistance in creating a Texas-based Stock Exchange, which aims to launch in February 2026 with a boost from new legislation signed by Gov. Greg Abbott in mid-May. BlackRock was one of the initial investors, and Hegar said that while the investment in the stock exchange plan was unrelated to the list update, it represented 'a real commitment to overall policy changes.' BlackRock's removal from the divestment list has not completely withdrawn the business from scrutiny by Texas officials. Attorney General Ken Paxton sued the company and two others in November 2024, claiming they comprised an 'investment cartel' that intentionally bought shares in coal companies to reduce output and achieve clean energy standards. The Federal Trade Commission and the Department of Justice submitted a joint statement of interest in the case in late May. Hegar touched on the suit briefly in his remarks, but said the company's move away from clean energy initiatives is a signal of good favor. 'Even as legislators and state leaders continue to address lingering concerns about proxy voting and other policies that prioritize politics over profits, I am hopeful these actions represent a long-term shift,' Hegar said. Hegar and Paxton are facing their own lawsuit over SB 13 in federal court from the American Sustainable Business Council, a progressive business group. The suit claims the law violates companies' First and Fourteenth Amendment rights by discriminating against firms' viewpoints and circumventing due process. That suit is scheduled for a motion hearing on June 18. First round of TribFest speakers announced! Pulitzer Prize-winning columnist Maureen Dowd; U.S. Rep. Tony Gonzales, R-San Antonio; Fort Worth Mayor Mattie Parker; U.S. Sen. Adam Schiff, D-California; and U.S. Rep. Jasmine Crockett, D-Dallas are taking the stage Nov. 13–15 in Austin. Get your tickets today!