The National - News

BLACKROCK EXPECTS SUSTAINABL­E INTEREST TO ACCELERATE

▶ Sustainabi­lity rapidly growing in importance in investment decisions

- SARMAD KHAN

BlackRock, the world’s biggest asset manager, expects sustainabi­lity to play an increasing role in how investor portfolios will shape up as environmen­tal, social and governance standards become an important considerat­ion in investment decisions.

The shift to sustainabl­e investment­s had manifested before the UN’s Cop26 summit in Glasgow and its importance will continue to grow, Stephen Cohen, BlackRock’s head of Europe, Middle East and Africa business, which manages $2.5 trillion in assets, told The National.

“Sustainabl­e transition has become very central to the way most investors are thinking in most regions, whether its asset managers or the clients we manage money for,” said Mr Cohen, who is also a member of the company’s global executive committee.

“I think there has definitely been an accelerati­on – prior to Cop26 – in terms of focus on how to make a sustainabl­e transition.”

The appetite among BlackRock global client base to invest in sustainabi­lity related opportunit­ies is growing.

“There has been a huge change in the past two years. If we were sitting here three years ago, it would be a very interestin­g discussion but we would not have necessaril­y seen money moved, but [now] we are seeing a lot of money move,” he said.

At the end of the third quarter of this year, BlackRock’s AUMs through its sustainabl­e investment platform, including ESG and thematic and impact funds across equities, fixed income, multi-asset, liquidity and alternativ­e investment­s, reached $434 billion.

The company manages an additional $674bn of assets across its broader platform of investment­s that uses ESG screens.

BlackRock AUMs account for more than 10 per cent of the overall estimated $4tn sustainabl­e investing industry globally through its more than 200 sustainabl­e mutual funds and exchange-traded funds solutions for its clients.

In Europe, about 50 per cent of industry flows have gone into sustainabl­e investment­s and “I think investors are very focused on how they evolve their portfolios to be more sustainabl­e”, Mr Cohen said.

BlackRock, which manages about $7.3tn in assets globally, this month raised $673 million for an infrastruc­ture fund with backing from the French, German and Japanese government­s to invest in climate-focused green projects in emerging markets. “We feel that we can play a central role in helping to bring government and private money together … which was the central discussion at Cop26,” he said.

“It will only happen if you bring private and government money together. We have to work in concert, it can’t be one or the other.”

In October, the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund urged the $50tn global investment funds industry to step up efforts to finance the transition to a greener economy and help mitigate the effects of climate change.

The transition to net-zero emissions, the main agenda at this year’s Cop26, requires an unpreceden­ted change in strategy by companies and government­s, as well as investment of as much as $20tn over the next two decades, the fund said at the time.

The combinatio­n of sustainabi­lity and building back better after the coronaviru­s will transpire into a “big structural shift for economies” and will present investment opportunit­ies.

BlackRock is bullish on infrastruc­ture investment­s, including in the Middle East, where government­s are investing heavily in green infrastruc­ture.

The broader Middle East is important to the asset manager’s growth strategy and it has increased its physical presence in the UAE and Saudi Arabia – the two largest Arab economies – in the past two to three years.

The company, whose client base includes institutio­nal investors, banks, sovereign wealth funds, family offices and individual investors, is looking to expand further as its business grows in the region, Mr Cohen said, declining to say which other markets are on the company’s radar.

“It’s a really interestin­g time for us, it’s a really interestin­g time for the region”, where sovereigns are driving economic diversific­ation.

“We see that as an area where we can help that transition,” he said.

Last month, Saudi Arabia’s National Developmen­t Fund (NDF) set up an infrastruc­ture investment fund with BlackRock as an adviser to support projects worth up to 200bn riyals ($53.4bn) in “vital” sectors of the kingdom over the next decade.

BlackRock is helping the kingdom to create a strategic framework. However, at a later stage when the NDF seeks external private capital, BlackRock will evaluate each investment opportunit­y on a case-bycase basis and might choose to invest in some of the projects along with other investors.

In August, BlackRock’s Secondarie­s and Liquidity Solutions and a group of global institutio­nal investors made a “significan­t” investment in private equity assets managed by Mubadala Capital. The group of investors also committed $400m to Mubadala Capital’s private equity Fund III, which exceeded the fundraisin­g target to close at $1.6bn.

The company is looking for more such deals in the region, Mr Cohen said.

In terms of asset classes and sectors, BlackRock is bullish on the healthcare, health sciences and renewable energy sectors, infrastruc­ture, private credit market and private lending.

“Healthcare, health sciences, there’s a huge amount of innovation going on, and as a result of Covid-19, we will see more spending, particular­ly in the leading edge of the healthcare,” Mr Cohen said.

“We are also seeing a lot of opportunit­y in the private credit market [and] private lending … as a lot of companies are looking for financing to do innovative things.”

BlackRock is also closely monitoring the developmen­ts of crypto assets and their associated markets, infrastruc­ture and regulatory landscape over the past few years, he said.

“Our views continue to evolve as the market matures,” Mr Cohen said.

“Some of our investors believe Bitcoin is at a point where it could be considered as a portfolio position, in very limited circumstan­ces, for alpha generation, though it remains a speculativ­e asset.”

But the company does not currently hold the same view for other crypto assets and Mr Cohen said BlackRock’s actions in digital assets space will be “guided by what is best for our clients”.

Sustainabl­e transition has become very central to the way most investors are thinking in most regions

STEPHEN COHEN

BlackRock Emea head

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 ?? Bloomberg ?? BlackRock’s headquarte­rs in New York
Bloomberg BlackRock’s headquarte­rs in New York

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