BlackRock CEO Larry Fink reassures investors that this moment of economic anxiety will pass in his annual letter out Monday morning.
Why it matters: Fink runs the world’s biggest asset manager and is hugely influential — his widely read letter typically reflects the business trends of the current moment.
- This year it comes at a time of high market uncertainty, as tariff disruptions rock the business world.
Where it stands: Fink treads cautiously in the 27-page letter, never explicitly mentioning President Trump, and only touches glancingly on politics at the very top.
- “I hear it from nearly every client, nearly every leader—nearly every person—I talk to: They’re more anxious about the economy than any time in recent memory. I understand why. But we have lived through moments like this before. And somehow, in the long run, we figure things out,” he says in a draft of the letter viewed by Axios.
The intrigue: Fink’s letter comes at a politically fraught moment for BlackRock.
- The firm’s deal to buy two Panama Canal ports from Hong Kong’s CK Hutchison has become a political football among the governments of the U.S., Panama and China.
- What looked like an off-ramp for U.S. complaints that China had too much influence at the canal now threatens to become a bargaining chip in a larger geopolitical reordering.
Between the lines: In past years, Fink has used the letter to espouse views on topics that are now toxic flashpoints for the Trump administration — like climate change, flexibility for workers or corporate social responsibility.
- This year, as fierce backlash has grown, the firm joined many others in walking back its DEI policies.
Zoom in: Instead of politics, Fink focuses on private markets, a more opaque area of investment that’s ballooned in popularity in recent years — and where BlackRock has made a series of deals over the past year, trying to become a dominant player.
Some letter highlights:
With deficits ballooning, governments are going to need private-market money to build bridges, power plants and other critical public buildings and utilities, he writes.
- “The markets are eager to step in where governments and corporations are stepping out.”
- Instead of a traditional 60/40 split between stocks and bonds, Fink wants investors to diversify into these private market assets, a mix he calls 50/30/20 (stocks, bonds, private assets like infrastructure and real estate).
“Economic democracy”: Fink says capitalism has worked for “too few people” and wants to give more investors access to those private markets.
- Not coincidentally, bringing more investors into the markets is good for the firm’s bottom line.
Fink endorses the idea of baby bonds, proposed by Sens. Cory Booker (D-N.J.) and Todd Young (R-Ind.). “Imagine a child born today whose personal wealth grows in step with America’s. That’s what an economic democracy could look like: a country where everybody has a new avenue— investing—to pursue happiness and financial freedom.”
Dollar dominance under threat: “The U.S. has benefited from the dollar serving as the world’s reserve currency for decades. But that’s not guaranteed to last forever,” Fink warns.
- “If the U.S. doesn’t get its debt under control, if deficits keep ballooning, America risks losing that position to digital assets like Bitcoin.”
- BlackRock was the first to launch a Bitcoin spot ETF in 2024 — a move that helped legitimize cryptocurrency in the traditional investing world.
Energy pragmatism: The world faces growing demand for energy that can’t be filled with renewables alone, he said.
- Fink makes the case for nuclear power, an idea gaining steam as demand for electricity — fueled by AI — is surging.
- He also joins a bipartisan chorus pushing for permit reform to make it faster and easier to get things built.
💭 Thought bubble, from Axios Generate’s Ben Geman: The annual letter is a sign of the times from Wall Street — light on climate. But that said, Fink makes a competition-based case for clean tech.
- He notes China is aggressively building nuclear plants because “they see decarbonization as a way to own the future of industry.”
- Fink also shouts out Chinese electric vehicle heavyweight BYD’s remarkable rise.
The bottom line: Finance executives like Fink are staying in their lane these days.
Ben Geman contributed.
Go Deeper: Read Larry Fink’s letter to investors