Business Day

BlackRock buys Global Infrastruc­ture in $12.5bn deal

- Jaiveer Singh Shekhawat and Tommy Reggiori Wilkes

BlackRock has agreed to buy Global Infrastruc­ture Partners for $12.5bn in a cash and shares deal that will make the world’s largest asset manager one of the biggest players in alternativ­e assets and private markets.

BlackRock said it would buy GIP for $3bn in cash and about 12-million BlackRock shares to create an infrastruc­ture investing platform with more than $150bn in combined assets.

Founded in 2006, Global Infrastruc­ture Partners manages more than $100bn in assets and its portfolio includes Britain’s Gatwick airport, the Port of Melbourne and offshore wind projects.

“Infrastruc­ture is one of the most exciting long-term investment opportunit­ies, as a number of structural shifts reshape the global economy,” said BlackRock CEO Laurence Fink.

“Bringing these two firms together will create the infrastruc­ture platform to deliver best-in-class investment opportunit­ies for clients globally, and we couldn’t be more excited about the opportunit­ies ahead of us,” Fink said.

BlackRock also announced several management changes. Stephen Cohen becomes chief product officer and will lead a new global product strategy group, while Salim Ramji, global head of iShares and index investment­s, is leaving, according to a company memo seen by Reuters.

The company is also creating a new internatio­nal business structure under Rachel Lord to lead Europe, the Middle East, India, and Asia Pacific, the memo said.

Global Infrastruc­ture Partners chair and managing partner Bayo Ogunlesi will join BlackRock’s board of directors following closure of the deal, it added.

PROFIT RISE

BlackRock posted an 8% rise in quarterly profit, helped by a rebound in markets that boosted its assets under management.

Hopes of a soft landing for the US economy — a scenario where inflation eases without a sharp rise in unemployme­nt

— have cheered markets in recent months.

A dovish tilt from the US Federal Reserve, which has left interest rates unchanged since July, has also boosted sentiment, helping BlackRock end the fourth quarter with $10.01-trillion in assets under management, up from $8.59-trillion a year earlier.

On an adjusted basis, BlackRock earned $1.45bn, or $9.66 per share, for the three months ended December 31, compared with $1.36bn, or $8.93 per share, a year earlier.

Analysts on average had expected a profit of $8.84 per share, according to LSEG data.

GLOBAL INFRASTRUC­TURE’S PORTFOLIO INCLUDES BRITAIN’S GATWICK AIRPORT

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