The worldโs largest asset manager and leading index provider are facing congressional probes for facilitating American dollars into Chinese companies that the United States has deemed to be fueling Chinese military growth or human rights abuses.
The worldโs largest asset manager and a leading investment index provider are facing congressional probes for allegedly facilitating the flow of U.S. dollars into Chinese companies that the United States has deemed to be fueling Chinaโs military or the regimeโs human rights abuses.
In letters dated July 31 to BlackRock CEO Larry Fink and MSCI head Henry Fernandez, the U.S. Houseโs China Select Committee stated that a brief review of MSCI indexes and BlackRock funds showed that the two companies together have directed investments to more than 60 Chinese entities already on the U.S. blacklist.
As a โdirect resultโ of BlackRockโs and MSCIโs decisions, Americans who invested savings in their funds are now โunwittingly fundingโ Chinese companies that build weapons for the Chinese military known as the Peopleโs Liberation Army, giving a hand to โthe CCPโs stated mission of technological supremacy,โ Rep. Mike Gallagher (R-Wis.), the committeeโs chairman, and Rep. Raja Krishnamoorthi (D-Ill.), the ranking Democrat, wrote.
โIt is unconscionable for any U.S. company to profit from investments that fuel the military advancement of Americaโs foremost foreign adversary and facilitate human rights abuses,โ the lawmakers wrote, adding that the โmassive flows of American capitalโ to these entities are โexacerbating an already significant national security threat and undermining American values.โ
In the case of BlackRock, across five funds alone, the asset manager has invested more than $429 million in flagged Chinese firms, while nearly 5 percent of the MSCI China A Index is pegged to blacklisted entities. Such numbers, the lawmakers suspect, are only the tip of the iceberg.
The probe makes up part of the committeeโs ongoing investigation into U.S. investments in China, which, in July, included venture capital firms that have invested in China-based artificial intelligence, semiconductor, and quantum companies.
Byย Eva Fu