Key Points
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BlackRock’s assets under management reached $15.3 trillion in the second quarter, more than any company has ever overseen.
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Clients added $192 billion of net new money during the quarter, up from about $68 billion in the year-ago period.
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Even after jumping on the report, shares trade about 10% below their 52-week high.
BlackRock, the world’s largest asset manager, disclosed second‑quarter results on Wednesday, reporting assets under management of $15.3 trillion — the highest total ever recorded for a single firm. This milestone underscores the company’s dominant position in global finance.
Round numbers typically dominate headlines, but BlackRock’s achievement coincides with robust client inflows, a 31 percent increase in revenue, and the strongest adjusted operating margin the firm has posted in nearly five years.
Image source: Getty Images.
Where the $15 trillion came from
Evaluating an asset manager’s health hinges on net client flows — new capital introduced minus withdrawals — since market gains can artificially inflate assets under management.
By this metric, BlackRock is experiencing accelerated growth. In the second quarter, clients contributed $192 billion of net inflows, surpassing $68 billion recorded a year earlier and the $129 billion generated in the prior quarter.
These inflows propelled first‑half net additions to a record $321 billion. Just three months earlier, at the end of March, AUM was $13.9 trillion.
The inflows were broad‑based. ETFs accounted for $178 billion of second‑quarter net inflows, and the iShares ETF platform surpassed $6 trillion in assets, nearly doubling its size three years ago. By asset class, fixed‑income attracted the largest share, with $92 billion, while active strategies received an additional $53 billion, including a record $7 billion into liquid alternatives.
Larry Fink, BlackRock’s chief executive, noted that the $192 billion of net inflows produced an 8 percent increase in organic base‑fee revenue, which he described as “well above our target.”
Consequently, second‑quarter revenue increased 31 percent year‑over‑year to $7.1 billion, driven by market gains, organic expansion, higher performance fees, and contributions from the 2025 acquisition of HPS Investment Partners, a private‑credit specialist. Operating income rose 42 percent year‑over‑year, or 39 percent on an adjusted basis. Adjusted operating margin improved to 45.9 percent from 43.3 percent a year earlier — the strongest margin recorded in nearly five years. Adjusted earnings per share climbed 15 percent to $13.91.
A notable caveat is that much of the recent AUM growth stemmed from market appreciation rather than fresh client deposits. Over the past year, total assets under management rose by roughly $2.8 trillion, with net inflows contributing $868 billion; the remainder was attributable to market movements.
What the record means for the stock
This caveat is significant because BlackRock’s revenue is tied to the assets it manages; the firm collected $5.7 billion in base fees and securities‑lending revenue during the second quarter alone. Consequently, a rising market boosts fees without requiring additional effort from the company.
Conversely, in a declining market, assets under management shrink, and fees contract accordingly. Investors who purchase the stock after a pronounced market rally should be mindful of this exposure.
Nevertheless, the quarter’s controllable metrics remained robust. Organic base‑fee growth of 8 percent exceeded the company’s target. Technology‑focused services and subscription revenue — anchored by the Aladdin platform — grew 13 percent year‑over‑year, with annual contract value rising 15 percent. Management also announced a $2 billion share‑repurchase program for 2026, reflecting confidence in future growth.
Thus, does the record quarter justify buying the stock following Wednesday’s price increase?
At approximately $1,093 per share, BlackRock trades at roughly 27 times earnings and remains about 10 percent below its 52‑week high of $1,219.94. The stock offers a dividend yield of roughly 2.1 percent at current levels.
Given that the company is delivering 15 percent growth in adjusted earnings per share and outpacing its own organic‑growth targets, the valuation appears reasonable — not a discount, but justifiable. I would feel comfortable acquiring shares at this level. However, because the business is fundamentally tied to AUM, a severe market downturn could compress fees and depress the share price. Investors should therefore size positions prudently.
Investment Outlook for BlackRock
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