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Source: Bloomberg, January 18, 2022, commentary

BloombergOpinion


Matt Levine is a Bloomberg Opinion columnist covering finance. He was an editor of Dealbreaker, an investment banker at Goldman Sachs, a mergers and acquisitions lawyer at Wachtell, Lipton, Rosen & Katz, and a clerk for the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 3rd Circuit.

Opinion

Matt Levine

 

BlackRock Still Likes Capitalism

 

By

Matt Levine

January 18, 2022, 12:58 PM EST


Larry Fink letter

Well this isn’t very helpful:

Delivering on the competing interests of a company’s many divergent stakeholders is not easy. As a CEO, I know this firsthand. In this polarized world, CEOs will invariably have one set of stakeholders demanding that we do one thing, while another set of stakeholders demand that we do just the opposite.

That is why it is more important than ever that your company and its management be guided by its purpose. If you stay true to your company’s purpose and focus on the long term, while adapting to this new world around us, you will deliver durable returns for shareholders and help realize the power of capitalism for all.

Delivering on the competing interests of a company’s many divergent stakeholders is not easy. As a CEO, I know this firsthand. In this polarized world, CEOs will invariably have one set of stakeholders demanding that we do one thing, while another set of stakeholders demand that we do just the opposite.

That is why it is more important than ever that your company and its management be guided by its purpose. If you stay true to your company’s purpose and focus on the long term, while adapting to this new world around us, you will deliver durable returns for shareholders and help realize the power of capitalism for all.

I suppose if you are the chief executive officer of a public company you will sometimes find yourself in a situation where some of your stakeholders demand that you do one thing while another set of stakeholders demand that you do just the opposite. And you might say, well, one of our important stakeholders — not the most important probably, not up there with customers or employees, but certainly important — is Larry Fink, who runs BlackRock Inc., which is among our biggest shareholders, as it is for almost every public company. And so you might call Larry Fink up and say “hey Larry I got some people who want me to double down on producing thermal coal and I got some other people who want me to get out of the thermal coal business, what do you think I should do?” And Fink will be like … “stay true to your company’s purpose and focus on the long term”? Okay? “Larry, I gotta be honest with you, my company’s purpose is mining thermal coal, that’s just what we do, but the long-term prospects for thermal coal are not so hot; should I stick to our purpose, fulfill it, pay out some dividends and disappear, or should I try to pivot into wind farms?” I feel like Larry Fink has a preference here! But he is just one stakeholder among many.

Anyway here’s Fink’s annual letter to CEOs, which I quoted above. “The Power of Capitalism” is the title? I don’t really know who the audience is here? CEOs? I am not sure how actionable it is, for a CEO. The famous problem of stakeholder capitalism, as Fink says, is that while it is relatively easy to figure out what shareholders are supposed to want — stocks that go up — it is much harder to figure out what all your stakeholders want and how to prioritize them. If as a CEO you say “I work for the shareholders and I do what I can to make the stock go up,” then you pretty much know what you have to do. Memes, is the answer, it turns out: What you have to do is meme stuff. Crypto, electric vehicles, non-fungible tokens, that sort of thing. I’m sorry! I don’t like it either. But this is a question that is subject to empirical analysis. Whereas if you work for the stakeholders then, you know, which stakeholders and when? Your only guidepost is to “stay true to your company’s focus,” which does not necessarily answer all of your practical questions, though it probably will stop you from messing around with NFTs.

Presumably the audience is really BlackRock’s clients, the people and institutions whose trillions of dollars of retirement savings are managed by BlackRock. One model for Fink’s annual letter is that he has cranked up the environmental, social and governance stuff, in the letters and elsewhere, for the past few years, because ESG is hot in the investment-management industry and talking about it attracts clients. But there are vague rumblings of a backlash, of clients and politicians worrying that BlackRock is “too ‘woke,’” so he’s dialing it back like 10% in this letter:

Stakeholder capitalism is not about politics. It is not a social or ideological agenda. It is not “woke.” It is capitalism, driven by mutually beneficial relationships between you and the employees, customers, suppliers, and communities your company relies on to prosper. This is the power of capitalism. 

In today’s globally interconnected world, a company must create value for and be valued by its full range of stakeholders in order to deliver long-term value for its shareholders. It is through effective stakeholder capitalism that capital is efficiently allocated, companies achieve durable profitability, and value is created and sustained over the long-term. Make no mistake, the fair pursuit of profit is still what animates markets; and long-term profitability is the measure by which markets will ultimately determine your company’s success.

One way to read that passage is “we would still like to manage money for Republicans too.”

This is kind of a boring letter? There is something odd about the world’s largest shareholder advocating for stakeholder capitalism, saying to corporate CEOs “no, don’t put shareholders first, prioritize your workers and customers and communities above shareholder profits.” But of course he’s not saying that. The point of this year’s letter is to dispel the idea that he might be saying that. He’s saying that sometimes having good customer service, paying employees enough to motivate them, and not breaking the law can help maximize the long-term value of a company’s cash flows to shareholders, and so companies should do those things. Their executives should run the company, you know, well, like a business. They should make good choices and not bad ones, so that the business is valuable, for its shareholders, who are Fink’s clients. There is nothing here that Milton Friedman could possibly object to.

There are, in the world, investors who specialize in finding companies that make money but spend it wastefully on businesses with poor long-term prospects, buy up shares in those companies and push them to cut that spending and return cash to shareholders who can put it to better uses. There are, in the world, investors who specialize in finding companies that don’t make any money but that have bold and achievable long-term dreams, buy up shares in those companies and give them funding to turn those dreams into reality. There are investors who specialize in some industry and try to pick which firms in that industry will thrive in the long run and which will fail. BlackRock is not one of those investors — or, rather, it does a bit of all of those things, but as a whole it specializes in (1) finding all of the companies, (2) buying like 7% of their stock and (3) holding it forever.1  And then Fink writes an annual letter to all of them at once. How nuanced can that one letter be? “Try to do a good job” is pretty broadly applicable advice, but beyond that situations will differ. Even “try to manage your company for the long term” and “stay true to your company’s purpose,” generic as they sound, can conflict with each other.

Also here’s this:

We see a growing interest among shareholders – including among our own clients – in the corporate governance of public companies.

That is why we are pursuing an initiative to use technology to give more of our clients the option to have a say in how proxy votes are cast at companies their money is invested in. We now offer this option to certain institutional clients, including pension funds that support 60 million people. We are working to expand that universe.

We are committed to a future where every investor – even individual investors – can have the option to participate in the proxy voting process if they choose.

We know there are significant regulatory and logistical hurdles to achieving this today, but we believe this could bring more democracy and more voices to capitalism. Every investor deserves the right to be heard. We will continue to pursue innovation and work with other market participants and regulators to help advance this vision toward reality.

One way to put it is that right now Larry Fink gets to decide how trillions of dollars’ worth of shares are voted at corporate meetings, and he is volunteering to give up that power and hand it back to his clients (eventually). Do you think a fully distributed BlackRock, one where each client votes its own shares rather than delegating that power to Larry Fink, would be as influential as the current actual BlackRock? Would its letters get as much attention?


  1. So this passage sounds strange coming from BlackRock: “BlackRock wants to see the companies we invest in for our clients evolve and grow so that they generate attractive returns for decades to come. As long-term investors, we are committed to working with companies from all industries. But we too must be nimble and ensure our clients’ assets are invested, consistent with their goals, in the most dynamic companies – whether startups or established players – with the best chances at succeeding over time. As capitalists and as stewards, that’s our job. …But access to capital is not a right. It is a privilege. And the duty to attract that capital in a responsible and sustainable way lies with you.” Access to capital from index funds is kind of a right, if you’re in the index!


This column does not necessarily reflect the opinion of the editorial board or Bloomberg LP and its owners.

To contact the author of this story:
Matt Levine at mlevine51@bloomberg.net

To contact the editor responsible for this story:
Brooke Sample at bsample1@bloomberg.net


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