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Analysis: Republican officials rethink BlackRock bans after Panama port deal

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By Ross Kerber and Bo Erickson

BOSTON/WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Often a political punching bag for MAGA Republicans, asset manager BlackRock (BLK) may have bought some conservative credibility along with its purchase of two critical ports on both sides of the Panama Canal.

The $22.8 billion deal with Hong Kong-based CK Hutchison (CKHUY) for those and other ports was hailed by U.S. President Donald Trump in his address to Congress Tuesday night, giving BlackRock and its CEO Larry Fink political capital to get back in Republicans' good graces.

BlackRock has been restricted, or outright banned, by a number of Republican-led states from managing retirement or treasury funds over the company's policies on environmental, social and corporate governance (ESG) investing.

Now some red state officials are taking another look.

"BlackRock working with the Trump administration is going to be positive for everybody, I can see that opening up some doors for them," said Indiana Treasurer Daniel Elliott.

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A Republican, Elliott last year helped push BlackRock out of a contract to manage a nearly $1 billion global bond portfolio over concerns about its ESG efforts.

Elliott said he would now be willing to consider BlackRock's eligibility for future contracts if they were presented to him. Republican treasurers in other states have told him they are also encouraged by BlackRock's role in the deal, as well as other recent moves by Fink to diminish ESG efforts.

"They're listening to our issues," Elliott said of BlackRock.

In an e-mailed statement, Texas Comptroller Glenn Hegar called BlackRock's port investment "a positive development for Texas given our status as the nation’s top state for international trade."

Although BlackRock has rejected calls for it to divest from fossil-fuel companies, Hegar had listed BlackRock as "boycotting" the state's energy industry in 2022 because of factors like its participation in industry net-zero groups. He said the canal deal is "not related" to the process of reviewing which firms will stay on the list, which is ongoing.

FILE PHOTO: Larry Fink, Chairman and CEO of BlackRock, at the NYSE in New York
FILE PHOTO: Larry Fink, Chairman and CEO of BlackRock, at the NYSE in New York

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With $11.6 trillion in assets, BlackRock plays an outsized role among shareholders of its portfolio companies. For a brief period starting around 2021, the company cast more proxy votes supporting proposals on topics like requiring companies to disclose their emissions, but then pulled back.

Since Trump won last November's presidential election, BlackRock also has left an industry net-zero group and eliminated a boardroom diversity target.