Blackrock Group
v1.0.0BlackRock is the world's largest asset manager with $10.5T AUM, dominant iShares ETFs, and the Aladdin platform managing $25T in global financial risk.
BlackRock — The Company That Manages Everything
⏳ History Timeline
- 1988 — Blackstone Financial Management founded by Larry Fink, Robert Kapito, Susan Wagner, Barbara Weeks, and Hugh Frater as part of The Blackstone Group. Fink's motivation: having lost $100M in mortgage bond trades at First Boston due to inadequate risk management, he wanted to build a firm where risk analytics drove every decision.
- 1992 — Blackstone Financial Management separates from The Blackstone Group and becomes BlackRock. Blackstone Group retains a stake initially but fully exits over time.
- 1994 — Introduces Aladdin (Asset, Liability, Debt and Derivative Investment Network), an integrated risk management and portfolio management system. Initially used internally; would become the most important risk platform in global finance.
- 1999 — Goes public on NYSE at $14/share.
- 2000 — Launches iShares, the first ETF family, acquired from Barclays in 2009 for $10.3B. iShares becomes the dominant ETF brand globally.
- 2006 — Acquires Merrill Lynch Investment Managers for $3.7B, merging MLIM's mutual fund business with BlackRock's to create the world's largest asset manager.
- 2008 — During the financial crisis, the Federal Reserve hires BlackRock to manage $2.8T in assets from the failed AIG and Bear Stearns. BlackRock becomes the government's preferred financial "fixer."
- 2009 — Acquires Barclays Global Investors (BGI) for $10.3B, including the iShares ETF business. This transforms BlackRock into the dominant passive investing firm. AUM jumps from $1.3T to $3.4T overnight.
- 2014–2019 — Aladdin is commercialized as "Aladdin Wealth" and "Aladdin for Central Banks." The platform now manages risk for ~$25T in assets (BlackRock's own AUM plus external clients).
- 2020 — Larry Fink's annual CEO letter goes viral for its focus on ESG and stakeholder capitalism. Fink becomes the most influential voice in corporate governance.
- 2022–2025 — AUM crosses $10 trillion. BlackRock launches spot Bitcoin ETF (IBIT) in January 2024, which becomes the fastest ETF to reach $50B in AUM (4 months). AUM reaches $10.5T by mid-2025.
💰 Business Model
BlackRock earns money by charging fees on assets under management and selling technology services.
Revenue Segments (2024):
- Investment Advisory & Administration Fees (~$14.5B, 75% of $19.3B total): AUM-based fees. Average effective fee rate: ~0.12–0.15% for iShares ETFs, ~0.40–0.60% for active strategies.
- Technology Services (Aladdin) (~$1.5B+, 8%): Risk management, portfolio management, trading, and operations technology sold to other financial institutions, pension funds, insurers, and central banks.
- Distribution Fees (~$1.5B, 8%): Third-party distribution and service fees.
- Performance Fees (~$0.5B, 3%): Carried interest and performance fees from alternative investments.
- Other (~$1.3B, 7%): Interest income, administration fees.
AUM Breakdown ($10.5T, mid-2025):
- ETFs (iShares): ~$3.5T (largest ETF provider globally)
- Fixed Income: ~$2.5T
- Equity (Active): ~$1.5T
- Multi-Asset: ~$1.0T
- Alternatives: ~$500B
- Cash & Money Market: ~$1.5T
The Fee Compression Challenge: Average fee rates have declined from ~0.50% in 2010 to ~0.12% for ETFs today. This means BlackRock must grow AUM by 4x to maintain the same fee revenue per dollar. The firm offsets this through: (1) massive AUM growth, (2) Aladdin technology revenue, (3) higher-margin private markets/alternatives.
Aladdin's Strategic Value: Aladdin is not just a product — it's a data network. ~25T in assets are analyzed through Aladdin, giving BlackRock an unparalleled view of global portfolio risk exposures. Central banks use Aladdin to model financial stability scenarios. This data advantage informs BlackRock's investment decisions.
🏰 Moat Analysis
Scale Economics: BlackRock's $10.5T AUM creates cost advantages that are nearly impossible to replicate. ETF fee rates can be cut to 0.03% (iShares Core S&P 500: IVV) and still be profitable because of the scale. Smaller competitors can't match these fees.
iShares Brand Dominance: iShares is the #1 ETF brand globally. The brand is synonymous with ETFs the way Kleenex is with tissues. New ETF issuers face the challenge of competing against iShares' entrenched brand, liquidity, and institutional relationships.
Liquidity Network Effects: iShares ETFs are the most liquid in their categories. Market makers prefer to provide liquidity to iShares ETFs because they have the most volume. Institutional investors choose iShares because they have the tightest bid-ask spreads. This creates a liquidity moat that compounds over time.
Aladdin's Data Network: With $25T+ of assets analyzed on Aladdin, BlackRock has risk data that no competitor can match. The platform becomes smarter as more institutions use it, and institutions use it because it's the smartest. This network effect is similar to Bloomberg Terminal's dominance.
Regulatory Relationship: BlackRock's role as the Federal Reserve's crisis manager (2008, 2020) and its systemic importance give it a unique position with regulators. BlackRock is often consulted on financial stability matters.
Distribution Power: BlackRock has relationships with 100,000+ financial advisors and institutional investors globally. When BlackRock launches a new ETF, it gets instant distribution through its sales force.
📊 Key Data
| Metric | Value |
|---|---|
| Market Cap (mid-2025) | ~$140–160B |
| 2024 Revenue | $19.3B (+12% YoY) |
| Net Income | $6.1B |
| AUM (mid-2025) | $10.5+ trillion |
| iShares ETF AUM | ~$3.5T |
| Aladdin External Clients | 200+ institutions |
| Average Effective Fee Rate | ~0.12–0.15% (blended) |
| Employees | ~20,000 |
| IBIT (Bitcoin ETF) AUM | ~$60B+ (fastest to $50B) |
| Long-Term Net Inflows | $300B+ annually |
Financial Profile: Operating margins ~35–38%. Free cash flow ~$7–8B annually. BlackRock has grown dividends at a 10%+ CAGR over the past decade.
🧠 Interesting Facts
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The $100 Million Mistake That Created BlackRock: Larry Fink's career-defining moment was losing $100M on mortgage-backed securities at First Boston in 1986. The loss wasn't from bad investments — it was from inadequate risk modeling. Fink realized that understanding risk was more important than picking winners. This insight became the founding philosophy of BlackRock and the genesis of Aladdin.
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Aladdin Runs the Financial System: Aladdin manages risk for the largest pension funds, insurance companies, sovereign wealth funds, and central banks. Some estimates suggest Aladdin monitors over 30% of all professionally managed money globally. If Aladdin goes down, global financial risk assessment goes blind.
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The Federal Reserve's Go-To: In both 2008 and 2020, the Federal Reserve hired BlackRock to manage distressed assets. BlackRock managed $2.8T in AIG/Bear Stearns assets in 2008 and $2.3T in Fed credit facilities in 2020. No other private firm has this level of trust from central banks.
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The Bitcoin ETF Flip: For years, BlackRock was cautious about crypto. When Larry Fink reversed course in 2023, IBIT became the fastest ETF in history to reach $50B (4 months). The launch legitimized Bitcoin for institutional investors and changed the crypto industry forever.
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BlackRock Owns Almost Everything: As the largest shareholder in most S&P 500 companies, BlackRock effectively owns a piece of virtually every major American business. This concentration of ownership has sparked debates about the power of index funds and the implications for corporate governance.
