NYC Comptroller Accuses BlackRock of Bailing on Net Zero

Brad Lander says the ‘contradiction between BlackRock’s statements and actions is alarming.’



BlackRock CEO Larry Fink isn’t getting much love these days from public officials. Just a month after 19 Republican attorneys general lashed out at him for focusing too much on sustainable investing, New York City’s comptroller has accused the company of bailing on its commitment to fight climate change.

New York City Comptroller Brad Lander sent a letter to Fink to address what he says are contradictions between the world’s largest asset manager’s climate commitments and its investment actions. What triggered the letter, Lander said, was BlackRock’s response to the complaints from the attorneys general.

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“BlackRock has repeatedly and rightly recognized climate change as an investment risk,” Lander wrote. “Unfortunately, despite these repeated proclamations, in its September 6 response to the attorneys general, BlackRock now abdicates responsibility for driving net zero alignment in its own portfolio by saying that it does not ask companies to set specific emissions targets.”

Lander said BlackRock is the largest asset manager for three of the five New York City pension funds he oversees—the Teachers’ Retirement System, the New York City Employees’ Retirement System and the Board of Education Retirement System. He said the firm manages approximately $43 billion of their investments, and because they rely so much on BlackRock, the pension funds won’t be able to meet their commitment to reach net zero by 2040 if BlackRock doesn’t back its words with action.

“The fundamental contradiction between BlackRock’s statements and actions is alarming,” wrote Lander. “BlackRock cannot simultaneously declare that climate risk is a systemic financial risk and argue that BlackRock has no role in mitigating the risks that climate change poses to its investments by supporting decarbonization in the real economy.”

Landers called on BlackRock to release a plan that shows how its portfolio will reach net-zero greenhouse gas emissions using science-based targets on a specific timeframe, and with regular reports on scopes 1, 2 and 3 emissions for all assets in its portfolio. He also wants the company to provide a detailed approach to “keeping fossil fuel reserves in the ground” and phasing out high-emitting assets. And he wants BlackRock to disclose climate-related lobbying, end lending and insurance for new fossil fuel supply projects, and to push its portfolio companies to reach science-based targets.

BlackRock representatives couldn’t immediately be reached for comment.

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We’ve Entered the Long-Dreaded Earnings Slowdown, Says Strategist

Comerica’s Lynch thinks S&P 500 profits next year will be flat relative to 2022’s blah showing.

The stock market is convinced that a recession is on the way, and with it an earnings slump. That profit problem is about to land, according to John Lynch, chief investment strategist for Comerica Wealth Management.

“The financial markets have struggled with a variety of challenges this year, including inflation, interest rates, slowing economic growth, technical hurdles and geopolitical tensions,” he wrote in a research note. “We believe corporate profits are the next risk for investors.”

The big slowdown will begin in the current quarter, which ends this Friday, Lynch said. He noted that analysts’ consensus for 2022’s third-period average is just 3.2% for the S&P 500, per FactSet research, which is quite a comedown from the previous quarter’s 9.9%. And none of this is very impressive compared with 2021’s double-digit increases.

For next year, Lynch has lowered his earnings per share projection to $225, from $237.50 for the benchmark stock index. That would be flat in comparison with 2021’s expected EPS. He indicated that 10 of the 11 S&P 500 sectors likely will lower their expected earnings for the third quarter. Of course, as many have pointed out—mostly recently Liz Ann Sonders, chief investment strategist at Charles Schwab, and Kevin Gordon, the firm’s senior investment research manager—remove energy earnings and the overall EPS tally would be negative.

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Although the number of S&P 500 companies issuing negative EPS guidance for the third quarter (64) is lower than the amount for the first quarter (68) and the second (72), those are still higher than the five-year average (58), Lynch observed.

Indeed, an analyst at money-management software company Kyriba told Bloomberg that currency fluctuations—the strong dollar is the biggest factor here—likely have lopped $60 billion in sales from U.S. and European companies since January. That, he contended, could trim an annual 6 cents off EPS.  

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