Samantha DeZur Promoted to Head of BlackRock US Public Policy Unit

The asset manager overhauls the leadership of its federal and state policy advocacy group.

BlackRock has overhauled its U.S. public policy team, changing leadership and structure for the division that advocates for public policies beneficial to investors’ long-term interests.

Samantha DeZur

A BlackRock spokesperson confirmed in an email this week that Samantha DeZur was promoted to head of U.S. public policy. The BlackRock U.S. public policy group is part of the global public policy group led by Joanna Cound.

“Under Samantha’s leadership, the U.S. team will be composed of two main pillars: (i) legislative policy and engagement, led by Bryan Wood; and (ii) regulatory policy and engagement, led by Ben Tecmire,” the spokesperson said via email. “In addition, we are growing Bryan and Ben’s teams to support our legislative and regulatory engagement at both the federal and state level.”

For more stories like this, sign up for the CIO Alert newsletter.

With DeZur’s promotion, managing director Kate Fulton “will transition to a new part-time role as senior policy advisor across both pillars and will report in to Samantha,” the spokesperson added.

The public policy team “support[s] the creation of regulatory regimes that increase financial market transparency, protect investors, and facilitate responsible growth of capital markets, while preserving consumer choice and properly balancing benefits versus implementation costs,” BlackRock’s public policy website states.

DeZur was previously a managing director of the global public policy group. DeZur has worked at the firm since 2019 and held previous roles at the U.S. Chamber of Commerce and CME Group, according to LinkedIn.

BlackRock also appointed Sarah Logan to the U.S. public policy team; she had been chief of staff to the head of external affairs.

“Sarah will cover sustainability and stewardship policy for the U.S.,” the spokesperson said.

Tags: , , , , ,

AI Investment Is Booming—What Happens When It Flags?

With tighter regulation on the way and the potential for firms to feign artificial intelligence influence, SocGen recommends a diverse approach.



Artificial intelligence-related stocks are the hot new thing on Wall Street. This year, shares in chip designer Nvidia, for instance, have almost tripled. The SG Rise of the Robots/AI Index, which tracks stocks in the field, has advanced 2.5 times in the same period. AI-oriented exchange-traded funds have seen investment inflows surge 30%.

But every market study shows that popular crazes will eventually peter out, even if the underlying businesses maintain their importance. Example: The mania in web stocks crashed two decades ago, but the internet is now a backbone of civilization.

Société Générale predicts the same fate will befall AI equities, but it has a strategy to avoid the worst of the coming plunge and emerge with solid holdings in the sector.

The French investment firm warns of upcoming “waves of AI regulation.” Talk is rife in Washington and in European capitals about adding rules governing AI to avoid it harming humans. Another likely problem, it admonishes: “AI-washing,” meaning stocks that seek to appear deep into artificial intelligence when they really are not, hoping to benefit from AI’s popularity.

For more stories like this, sign up for the CIO Alert newsletter.

The impact of the AI mania on the market is breathtaking, SocGen found in a research report by Manish Kabra, its head of U.S. equity strategy. If AI boom stocks were excluded, the Nasdaq Composite’s 35% rally this year would be halved, he calculated, and the S&P 500’s 14% climb would be in negative territory.

What’s the best way to invest in AI? Kabra suggested investing in a broad array of AI-linked stocks, some producing the components of the concept, such as software, and others benefiting from it, such as airlines, which can use AI to improve scheduling and route planning, among other things.

As it happens, SocGen originated the Rise of the Robots index, which it holds up as a template for AI investors. Sure, the firm is talking up its own product, but no fund provider has yet licensed it. The index holds 150 stocks, ranging from Nvidia to Delta Air Lines.

Kabra pointed out that Federal Reserve rate hikes almost always result in a recession and recommended AI as a hedge against it, apparently assuming that some of its providers will prove so vital to businesses that they will do OK in a downturn.

 

Related Stories:

Goldman: Artificial Intelligence Will Boost Global GDP by 7%

Why AI Craze Is Eerily Reminiscent of Dot-Com Era

AI Application ChatGPT Beats Stock Market, Study Says

Tags: , , , , , , , , ,

«