Larry Fink is head of the world’s biggest money manager - and has attracted critics and haters. Photo / AP
BlackRock more than tripled its spending on home security for Larry Fink last year, after the asset manager’s chair and chief executive became a target for “anti-woke” activists and conspiracy theorists.
The $10.5 trillion (NZ$17.8t) money manager paid $563,513 to “upgrade the home security systems” at Fink’s residencesduring 2023, on top of $216,837 of protection by bodyguards, according to BlackRock’s disclosure of executive compensation in its proxy filed earlier this month.
The 71-year-old head of the world’s largest money manager has been singled out by conservatives and fringe groups as part of a backlash against BlackRock’s use of investing based on environmental, social and governance factors.
BlackRock was repeatedly referenced in the primary season election debates between Donald Trump’s rivals for the Republican party’s presidential nomination. Vivek Ramaswamy, one of the candidates, called Fink “the king of the woke industrial complex [and] the ESG movement”.
Fink said at the time that the debate references were “a sad commentary on the state of American politics”. BlackRock’s offices have also been targeted for periodic protests by climate activists who say it has not done enough to promote decarbonisation.
In 2022, the asset manager set up personal security plans for Fink and BlackRock president Robert Kapito, following a report by a security group. The company said the security services were “in the interests of the company and its shareholders”, due to the “critical value” the pair provides.
BlackRock is not the only US company to step up security spending on its chief executive.
Disney chief Bob Iger’s 2023 compensation package included $1.2m in costs for “security services and equipment”, the entertainment group said in a filing earlier this year. That was an increase from $830,437 the previous year.
Pharmaceuticals groups Pfizer and Moderna, which have both faced criticism from fringe groups over their Covid-19 vaccines, also spent heavily on security for their CEOs last year. Moderna paid $1,053,767 for security services to Stéphane Bancel, after not disclosing any security payments for him the previous year.
Pfizer paid for $789,495 of “additional security protection” for its chief executive Albert Bourla, citing “heightened security risks including threats made against our executives”. It had spent $800,687 in 2022. The group says the payments cover “appropriate home security systems”, as well as security consultancy and other services.
JPMorgan chief executive Jamie Dimon received $150,645 “for the cost of residential, personal travel, and related security” during 2023, a nearly fourfold increase on the previous year. The lender said the latest figure included “one-time expenditures related to system installations and upgrades”.
David Solomon, chief executive of Goldman Sachs, received $29,990 for personal security during the year, down from $31,610 in 2022.
Electric-car maker Tesla registered expenses of about $2.4m for its chief executive Elon Musk in 2023, with a further $500,000 spent in the first two months of this year.