Skip to main content
Open this photo in gallery:

BlackRock reported equity product inflow of US$126.05-billion and fixed-income product inflow of US$83.77-billion during the quarter.BRENDAN MCDERMID/Reuters

BlackRock Inc.’s BLK-N fourth-quarter profit surged past Wall Street estimates on Thursday while a rally in markets boosted fee income and lifted the company’s assets under ‍management ​to a record US$14-trillion.

Shares of the world’s largest asset manager, which also hiked its quarterly dividend by 10 per cent and raised its share buyback authorization, jumped more than 4 per cent on Thursday.

U.S. stocks rallied last year on enthusiasm around artificial intelligence, easing interest rates and steady economic growth, prompting investors to pour money back into lower-cost index strategies.

⁠As inflation eased and the job market cooled, the Federal Reserve turned more dovish, driving strong inflows into BlackRock’s fixed-income products. Equity product inflow was US$126.05-billion, down slightly from a year ago, while fixed-income products saw inflows of US$83.77-billion in the quarter.

Long-term net inflows totaled about US$267.8-billion, led by continued strength in its ETF business, the firm’s ‌main engine of organic growth. BlackRock ‍posted a record US$698.3-billion of full-year net inflows.

ETFs are increasingly popular with investors seeking low-cost, diversified ‍exposure across markets.

The company’s performance fees rose 67 per cent to US$754 -million in the reported period, reflecting higher revenue from private markets.

“BlackRock enters 2026 with ⁠accelerating momentum across our entire platform, coming off the strongest year and quarter of net inflows in our history,” ​BlackRock CEO Larry Fink said in a statement.

BlackRock shares rose just 4.4 per cent in 2025, trailing the benchmark S&P 500 index.

Asset managers have been working to diversify revenue by expanding into higher fee-paying business rather than low-cost index products.

BlackRock has been leaning more heavily into private markets, real estate and infrastructure, with a particular focus on ​AI-linked assets such as data centers and power infrastructure. The AI push is designed to tap larger, longer-term pools of capital and build more stable, higher-margin revenue streams beyond traditional public markets.

Its private markets business drew inflows of US$12.7-billion in the quarter. BlackRock is targeting US$400-billion of cumulative fundraising in private markets by 2030. As part of this effort, it unveiled plans to include private assets in its retirement plans.

Private assets generate significantly ⁠higher fees than exchange-traded funds, a core part of BlackRock’s business through its iShares franchise.

Excluding some one-time ⁠charges, net profit jumped to US$2.18-billion, or US$13.16 per share, for the three months ended December 31, up from US$1.87-billion, or US$11.93 per share, ‌a year earlier. Analysts on average were expecting a profit of US$12.21 per share, according to data compiled by LSEG.

BlackRock’s assets under management rose to US$14.04-trillion in the quarter, up from US$11.55-trillion a year earlier.

Total revenue - most of which is earned as a percentage of assets under management - rose to US$7-billion from US$5.680billion a year ago, exceeded analysts’ expectations of US$6.69-billion.

BlackRock’s ‌total expenses rose to US$5.35-billion from US$3.6-billion last year.

Follow related authors and topics

Authors and topics you follow will be added to your personal news feed in Following.

Interact with The Globe