
โThis is not a place where we should be investing U.S. dollars, and especially U.S. pension dollars,โ Montanaโs attorney general said.
Attorneys general from 17 states issued a warning letter to BlackRock and other fund managers, alleging that they failed to fully disclose the risks for clients investing in Chinese companies.
The letter, dated Feb. 6, was issued to BlackRock, State Street, Invesco, Morgan Stanley, JPMorgan and Goldman Sachs.
The attorneys general stated that they were โparticularly concerned about BlackRockโs material misstatements and omissions, as BlackRock is the largest issuer of emerging market ETFs and China ETFs.โ Specifically, the attorneys general wrote that โChina is a statutorily designated foreign adversary of the U.S. and has threatened to invade Taiwan,โ yet BlackRock has implied that investments in China were at the same risk level as those in other countries.
โChina is an overt stated enemy of the United States, and thatโs not from our government, thatโs from their government, their internal military documents,โ Montana Attorney General Austin Knudsen, who led the effort, told The Epoch Times.
โThis is a country that does not have our best interests at heart, thatโs been engaged in asymmetric warfare against the U.S. for decades, thatโs been engaged in massive intellectual property theft against our country, and espionage,โ he said. โThis is not a place where we should be investing U.S. dollars, and especially U.S. pension dollars.โ
In their letter, the attorneys general also alleged that โBlackRock euphemistically refers to Uyghur forced labor and genocide as โreligious and nationalist disputes,โ and gives its China fund the same ESG [environmental, social and governance] letter grade as for its U.S. small-cap stocks fund, despite Chinaโs dismal performance on ESG.โ The other asset managers who received the letter โsimilarly misrepresent or conceal the material risks of Chinese investments,โ the attorneys general wrote.
BlackRock disputed the allegations, posting on X on Feb. 7 that the attorneys general were โwrong in at least three significant claims about our China disclosures, all of which are publicly available.โ The asset manager noted its statements that โChina has a complex territorial dispute regarding the sovereignty of Taiwan and has made threats of invasionโ; that investing in China risks, among other things, โexpropriation, nationalization, confiscation of assets and propertyโ; and that accounting and auditing practices in China โmay be less reliable.โ
Byย Kevin Stocklin