- BlackRock has reclaimed the title of Wall Street’s most-valuable publicly traded asset manager — a crown it had ceded to Blackstone for most of the past five years — as private credit fears hammer pure-play alternatives firms
- Blackstone, KKR, Apollo, Ares, and Blue Owl have fallen an average of 31% this year and rank among the S&P 500’s worst performers; BlackRock is down just 6.4%, buoyed by its dominant public-markets business, which drew a record $527 billion in ETF net inflows in 2025
- BlackRock’s Aladdin risk-management platform — bolstered by the 2025 acquisition of private-markets data provider Preqin — has attracted activist investor ValueAct, which is betting BlackRock is “one of the best data and software companies in the industry”
- The jury remains out on BlackRock’s $12.5B acquisition of private lender HPS: when HPS limited withdrawals from a flagship fund in March, BlackRock shares dropped 7.7% — erasing roughly the entire purchase price in market cap — even though net inflows for the quarter were positive
What Happened?
As private credit concerns have clobbered pure-play alternative asset managers — Blackstone, KKR, Apollo, Ares, and Blue Owl have all fallen roughly 31% on average this year — BlackRock has emerged as the relative safe haven in asset management. The world’s largest investment manager recently reclaimed its position as Wall Street’s most-valuable publicly traded asset manager, a title it had ceded to Blackstone for most of the past five years. The key differentiator: BlackRock’s core public-markets business, anchored by its iShares ETF franchise, pulled in a record $527 billion in net inflows in 2025 and continues to generate stable, recurring revenue that private-credit-focused rivals simply don’t have. BlackRock is now trading at a higher forward price-to-earnings ratio than most private-market competitors for the first time in years.
Why It Matters?
The divergence in stock performance reflects a broader repricing of risk in the asset management industry. Private-credit firms had commanded premium valuations on the assumption that the asset class would keep growing and that defaults would remain low — assumptions now under stress as redemption requests mount, borrowers show signs of strain, and the macro environment deteriorates. BlackRock’s diversification across public equities, fixed income, ETFs, and its Aladdin risk-management platform — which sells software to other investment firms — provides revenue stability that pure-play alternatives firms can’t match. Goldman Sachs analyst Alex Blostein captured the dynamic succinctly: with private credit, investors don’t know how the asset class performs through a full cycle; with BlackRock, they do.
What’s Next?
BlackRock reports earnings next week and will update investors on fundraising in its private-markets businesses — including the HPS integration, which had a rocky start when HPS limited withdrawals from a flagship fund in March. Larry Fink has drawn an analogy to BlackRock’s 2009 iShares acquisition from Barclays, which also initially weighed on the stock before proving transformative. Whether the HPS bet follows the same arc — or becomes a cautionary tale about paying 35x forward earnings at the top of the private credit cycle — will be one of the defining stories in asset management over the next few years.
Source: The Wall Street Journal











