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BlackRock earnings beat, but AUM decline tells a bigger story

BlackRock reported a better-than-expected first quarter on Tuesday, but the more revealing signal sat beneath the earnings beat.

The world’s largest asset manager posted higher profit on strong exchange-traded fund inflows and a sharp jump in performance fees.

Yet assets under management slipped to $13.89 trillion from the record $14.04 trillion reached at the end of 2025, a reminder that even BlackRock’s powerful fee machine still depends heavily on market levels and asset scale.

The quarter was solid, but the deeper story was more complicated.

Fee strength drove the beat

On the surface, the numbers were strong.

BlackRock’s first-quarter net profit rose to $2.21 billion, or $14.06 a share, from $1.51 billion, or $9.64 a share, a year earlier.

Total net inflows reached $130 billion, with the bulk going into iShares ETFs, while private markets pulled in another $9 billion.

Performance fees, one of the clearest signs that BlackRock is earning more from higher-margin strategies, jumped to $272 million from $60 million a year earlier.

That mix matters because it shows BlackRock is not relying only on market appreciation or traditional index products to lift earnings.

It is also extracting more value from active ETFs, alternatives and other businesses that generate richer fees.

The AUM dip matters more

That is why the decline in assets under management deserves more attention than the headline profit number.

BlackRock’s AUM came in at $13.89 trillion, up sharply from $11.58 trillion a year earlier but down from the $14.04 trillion record set in the fourth quarter of 2025.

The sequential decline was driven by falling markets, which reduced the value of client portfolios even as the firm continued to attract fresh inflows.

In simple terms, clients were still investing with BlackRock, but markets were no longer doing as much of the heavy lifting.

For an asset manager, AUM is not just a vanity metric. It is the basis on which future fees are earned.

Most of BlackRock’s revenue still rises and falls with the level of assets it manages, so even a healthy inflow quarter can look less powerful if market declines offset part of that progress.

That does not mean BlackRock’s business is weakening, but the quarter was less clean than the earnings beat alone suggests.

How long can a fee mix offset softer asset momentum?

That leaves investors with a bigger strategic question.

BlackRock has spent the past several quarters building out businesses that generate better fees per dollar managed.

That gives it a cushion when broad market conditions are less supportive.

It is one reason the company can post stronger earnings even during a quarter when AUM slips from its prior peak.

But there are limits to how far the fee mix can carry the story if market volatility continues and the asset base loses momentum.

BlackRock shares were down 4.4% so far in 2026, slightly better than the S&P 500’s 4.6% decline but still reflecting some caution about the outlook.

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