Maybe six years is the shelf-life for political gratitude. Remember at the beginning of the financial crisis, when the government and other power-brokers turned to
BlackRock to help clean up their messes?
BlackRock back then had been a friend-indeed for a number of friends-in-need: top officials from
Federal Reserve,
J.P. Morgan Chase's Jamie Dimon,
Morgan Stanley's John Mack, and
A.I.G.'s Robert Willumstad all turned to BlackRock for help. CEO
Larry Fink acted like the godfather of Wall Street to provide advice on solving the debt crisis, including on financing the sale of
Bear Stearns to J.P. Morgan and rescuing
Citigroup.
Yet today, to avoid the potential conflicts of interest, the leading candidate for vice chairman of the Federal Reserve,
Stanley Fischer, who also owns $56.3 million assets, declared that if confirmed he and his wife
would sell their holdings in nine companies including BlackRock.
The move was
Politics 101, inevitable, but it also raises the question of whether CEO
Larry Fink’s political web had gotten too big and whether some strands are beginning to break.
There are few firms that have benefitted from such clout in Washington’s inner power circles. Sure
Pimco has done well in the past, as reported in this
CNBC article. Yet, only Fink, a lifelong Democrat, and BlackRock have garnered the nickname “shadow government” from some. Take, for instance, the contract between BlackRock and Fed, regarding two-month's work on the
Citigroup portfolio, which made the firm $12 million.
In a
feature story about Fink published by
Vanityfair,
Suzanna Andrews sketched the countless key contracts that BlackRock was awarded "with no competitive bidding, in a process enveloped in secrecy, has also raised hackles in Congress and led to questions about Fink’s long-standing relationships with senior government officials, particularly former Treasury secretary Henry Paulson and Geithner, his successor."
Maybe six years is just long enough for the gratitude of the powerful to fade. Maybe BlackRock’s web is untangling.
 
Edited by:
Amy Xie
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