Cultura

Carl Icahn calls BlackRock a 'dangerous' company, cites ETF concerns



    By Sam Forgione

    NEW YORK (Reuters) - Billionaire activist investor Carl Icahn on Wednesday lambasted BLACKROCK (BLK.NY)Inc , the world's largest asset manager, as an "extremely dangerous company" because of the prevalence of its exchange-traded fund products, which Icahn deems illiquid.

    "They sell liquidity," Icahn said in reference to BlackRock's ETF business. "There is no liquidity. That?s my point. And that?s what?s going to blow this up."

    Icahn was speaking at the CNBC Institutional Investor Delivering Alpha Conference in New York, sharing the stage with Larry Fink, chief executive of BlackRock. Icahn said he was concerned about the amount of money invested in high-yield ETFs, which he called "overpriced."

    Fink countered that Icahn's characterizations of ETFs were "dead wrong" and that the index funds were just "a tool for buying exposure." Fink also said that ETFs "create more price transparency than anything in the bond market today," especially in high-yield.

    On activist investors, Fink said: "there are good ones and there are some bad ones." Fink said BlackRock would continue to be in "deep dialogue" with companies the firm has issues with.

    Earlier this year, Fink urged the top executives of the 500 largest publicly listed U.S. companies to take a long-term approach to create value for shareholders or risk losing his firm's support.

    In a letter to the chief executive officers of the S&P 500 index dated March 31, Fink asked the companies to avoid short-term pressures created by the increasing activist shareholder activity of recent years.

    In 2014, dividends and buybacks in the United States totaled $900 billion, the highest ever, according to Fink's letter.

    BlackRock had $4.7 trillion in assets under management at the end of the second quarter.

    (Reporting by Sam Forgione; Editing by Chris Reese, Bernard Orr)