BlackRock CEO Larry Fink warns investors are in for a ‘pretty big shock’ as inflation fears grow
BlackRock chief executive officer Larry Fink said that investors may be underestimating the potential for a spike in inflation.
“Most people haven’t had a forty-plus year career, and they’ve only seen declining inflation over the last 30-plus years,” Fink said at a virtual event hosted by Deutsche Bank. “So this is going to be a pretty big shock.”
BlackRock chief Larry Fink says investors who haven’t experienced periods of high inflation could be in for a “big shock.”Credit:Bloomberg
Concern about higher inflation has already seeped into US markets with the cost of goods including lumber and steel rising this year. Fink began his career at First Boston in 1976, in a period of elevated inflation. The US Consumer Price Index touched a high of 14.8 per cent in March 1980.
Fink, who now runs the world’s biggest asset manager, added that central banks may have to reassess their policies if higher prices become a concern. The Federal Reserve has committed to keep rates near zero in the near term and has indicated it will tolerate inflation above its 2 per cent target to make up for the period where it dipped below that level.
If the Fed were to reconsider that, it could seem discordant with separate fiscal stimulus, Fink said. President Joe Biden has proposed additional measures to stimulate the US economy, including a $US1.7 trillion ($2.2 trillion) infrastructure spending plan.
“That would be pretty odd, raising interest rates at the same time we do this giant fiscal stimulus,” Fink said.
Prices may also rise as companies adapt to the realities of climate change, he said.
BlackRock has advocated for companies disclosing how they plan to adapt to a net zero greenhouse gas emissions economy by 2050.
“If our solution is entirely just to get a green world, we’re going to have much higher inflation, because we do not have the technology to do all this, yet,” Fink said.
“That’s going to be a big policy issue going forward too: Are we going to be willing to accept more inflation if inflation is to accelerate our green footprint?”
BlackRock last week supported a successful push by tiny hedge fund Engine No.1 to overhaul the board of energy giant Exxon Mobil. It was part of a push for Exxon to adopt a more aggressive response to global decarbonising.
Fink also challenged the view that it is good when companies sell their dirtiest assets, particularly given those assets might then be less available to public scrutiny.
“It just goes from a transparent organisation to an opaque organisation that is not going to get us to where we want to go as a society. I don’t believe in divestiture of public companies.”
Bloomberg, Reuters
The Market Recap newsletter is a wrap of the day’s trading. Get it each weekday afternoon.
Most Viewed in Business
From our partners
Source: Read Full Article