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22 September 2019

Financial Times: BlackRock executive warns Brexit will hinder global business model


Mark Wiedman, the BlackRock executive regarded as the top contender to succeed Larry Fink at the helm of the financial services group, has warned Brexit is causing big challenges for asset managers that operate on a global scale. 

[...] But speaking at the Financial Times’ inaugural Future of Asset Management conference in New York last week, Mr Wiedman said the UK’s departure would cause the European financial system to become more fragmented.

“[BlackRock] is built on a global business model. What is becoming much less easy to do — at least as we foresee — is to actually implement that model globally,” he said. “Our European operations are centred around a single hub, we have a single operational model, a single set of funds. Post Brexit, that is going to be fractured.” [...]

London remains BlackRock’s biggest operation within Europe, though the fund manager has opened a data and tech centre in Budapest with up to 500 staff.

“It’s not the exit of the UK — that we are prepared for,” said Mr Wiedman. “It’s the fragmentation within the European Union with no dominant financial centre ready to check the efforts of each national actor to try to move jobs into its sector. That’s going to make it much harder for there to be a European common market in financial services.”

He added: “The single market is an unfulfilled dream and it is also slowly taking steps backwards behind the scenes. My concern about Brexit is not so much about the British leaving the EU, it’s having the notion of having an integrated financial market, which is critical to how we run, that starts to crack. That’s not good for us — it’s also not good for the Europeans.” [...]

Manny Roman, chief executive of Pimco, the largest bond fund manager with $1.7tn of assets, also spoke at the FT event. “I find it incredible that London, which clearly was giving New York a run for its money as the most important financial hub in the world, could be jeopardised by what I think is pure politics,” he said.

“There is an issue of competitive advantage. The UK was really, really good at financial services . . . It’s sad that it’s gone the other way.” [...]

Full article on Financial Times (subscription required)



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