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BlackRock's Fink asks whether 'dominoes starting to fall' after 'years of easy money'

BlackRock founder Larry Fink asked in his annual letter released Wednesday whether the "dominoes are starting to fall" after "years of easy money" due to fiscal and monetary policies.

BlackRock CEO Larry Fink asked in his annual letter to shareholders Wednesday whether "the dominoes" are "starting to fall" in the U.S. financial system, pointing to the collapse of Silicon Valley Bank last week and a number of other issues that could emerge following years of "easy money."

The head of the world's largest asset manager said inflation surged to its highest point since the 1980s thanks to the "extraordinarily aggressive" fiscal and monetary policies in place since the Great Recession, and says the Federal Reserve's aggressive rate hikes in the past year "is one price we're already paying for years of easy money – and was the first domino to drop."

Fink then addressed the failure of SVB, calling the situation a "classic asset-liability mismatch" before noting two smaller banks quickly followed suit. He said it is too early to know how widespread the damage is, while wondering whether asset-liability mismatches could be the second domino to fall.

Fink reminded shareholders that tightening monetary policies led to the Savings and Loan Crisis that began in the 1980s, which lasted roughly a decade and saw more than a thousand institutions toppled.

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He wrote, "We don’t know yet whether the consequences of easy money and regulatory changes will cascade throughout the U.S. regional banking sector (akin to the S&L Crisis) with more seizures and shutdowns coming."

The third potential domino, Fink said, could be liquidity mismatches.

"Years of lower rates had the effect of driving some asset owners to increase their commitments to illiquid investments – trading lower liquidity for higher returns," he wrote. "There’s a risk now of a liquidity mismatch for these asset owners, especially those with leveraged portfolios."

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The CEO went on to say government spending – in both the U.S. and abroad – has become unsustainable, noting that the amount the U.S. spent on interest for its debt hit a record last quarter, and how gilts plummeted last year in the U.K. after the government announced significant unfunded tax cuts.

"After years of global growth being driven by record high government spending and record low rates," Fink wrote, "the world now needs the private sector to grow economies and elevate the living standards of people around the globe."

He added, "We need leaders in both government and corporations to recognize this imperative and work together to unleash the potential of the private sector."

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