New York, January 17, 2026, 16:35 (ET) — The market has closed.
BlackRock (BLK) shares ended Friday up 0.56%, settling at $1,163.17. The stock stayed close to its intraday peak, buoyed by recent earnings news. It capped off a hectic couple of days for asset managers and ETF-related stocks. (BlackRock)
U.S. equity and options markets will be closed Monday in observance of Martin Luther King Jr. Day, setting the stage for a key session on Tuesday. This pause is crucial for BLK, as investors await confirmation—or a reversal—after the initial glimpse into asset-management flows this earnings season. (NASDAQ Trader)
The immediate question: was the flow surge driven by genuine risk appetite or merely cash parked amid shifting rates and macro headlines? BlackRock straddles both plays—index and bond funds on one side, and a growing private-markets push on the other.
The shares jumped 5.94% on Thursday, finishing at $1,156.65 ahead of a more modest move on Friday. That Thursday surge set the tone for the week’s trading in the stock. (FinanceCharts)
BlackRock closed 2025 with $14.0 trillion in assets under management, driven by $698 billion in net inflows from clients during the year. The firm raised its quarterly dividend by 10% to $5.73 per share and approved buying back 7 million more shares, the company reported. (BlackRock)
Stripping out one-time items, net profit hit $2.18 billion, or $13.16 per share, for the quarter ending Dec. 31, topping analysts’ $12.21 target, Reuters reported. Revenue climbed to $7.0 billion, while expenses increased to $5.35 billion. Performance fees surged 67% to $754 million. “BlackRock enters 2026 with accelerating momentum across our entire platform,” CEO Larry Fink stated. (Reuters)
BlackRock announced it will shift the primary listing venue for four iShares ETFs to the New York Stock Exchange. The change takes effect on Feb. 23, with trading on the current exchanges ending Feb. 20. The affected tickers are SGOV, SHV, GMMF, and PMMF. Current shareholders aren’t required to take any action.
BlackRock is shifting incentives as it deepens its focus on private markets. According to a regulatory filing cited by Bloomberg, the firm plans to grant some senior executives carried interest — a share of investment profits typical in private equity — linked to a group of flagship private funds. (Bloomberg)
After the earnings came out, brokerage desks reacted fast. Barclays analyst Benjamin Budish bumped his price target up to $1,350 from $1,300 and maintained an “overweight” rating, GuruFocus reports. (GuruFocus)
The downside risk remains intact. BlackRock’s fees depend on asset values, so a broad sell-off would hit revenue fast. On top of that, the firm is still working through integration efforts as it expands its private-markets business. This week, Fink cautioned that if the 10-year U.S. Treasury yield climbs above 5%, it could “shock” equities—a scenario that pressures both stocks and bonds simultaneously. (Business Insider)
The broader market failed to provide a clear lift heading into the close. The S&P 500 edged down 0.1% on Friday, the Dow lost 0.2%, and the Nasdaq dropped 0.1%, according to the Associated Press. (AP News)
Trading picks back up Tuesday, with investors focused on whether BLK can maintain its post-earnings gains amid shifting rates and new analyst commentary. Attention will also turn to Feb. 20–23, when the iShares exchange switch takes place. (Nyse)