FDIC eyes pact with BlackRock on passive investing
A sign hangs on the BlackRock offices on January 16, 2014 in New York City. · Banking Dive · Andrew Burton via Getty Images

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The waning days of 2024 showed several regulators in time-crunch mode, aiming to resolve unsettled agenda items and tie loose ends.

The Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, for example, issued enforcement actions in December against USAA and Bank of America. The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau pushed final rules on overdraft fees and open banking and sued three big banks and the peer-to-peer payments platform Zelle. And the Federal Reserve took steps to tweak its stress-testing process.

Amid all of that activity, the first financial regulatory battle of 2025 appears to be taking shape over how to police passive investing by asset managers.

The Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. reached an agreement Dec. 27 with Vanguard prohibiting the asset manager from influencing the nomination of directors to the boards of banks in which the company holds a stake of 10% or more. Vanguard can, however, continue to vote on shareholder resolutions pertaining to those banks. The agreement applies to FDIC-regulated banks and holding companies but not big banks regulated by the Federal Reserve.

With Vanguard more in check, the FDIC is pressuring fellow asset manager BlackRock to sign a similar agreement by Jan. 10. Less than an hour after the Vanguard deal was made public, BlackRock received a proposal from the FDIC with “substantively the same” wording, Reuters reported, citing a source familiar with the matter.

Two FDIC board members in particular – Republican Jonathan McKernan and CFPB Director Rohit Chopra, a Democrat – pushed, throughout 2024, for tougher guidelines governing passivity agreements.

The nation’s three largest asset managers – Vanguard, BlackRock and State Street – have built up passive stakes in banks as investors plow money into index funds that contain bank stock. Index funds are already required to be passive investors. But fund managers like Vanguard and BlackRock have been allowed to self-certify that they will remain passive. (Different rules apply to State Street because it already operates as a bank.)

The deal Vanguard forged with the FDIC last week forces the asset manager to file a passivity agreement, meaning the FDIC will no longer simply take Vanguard at its own word.

The FDIC had given Vanguard and BlackRock until Dec. 31 to sign passivity agreements or risk facing legal fights. That deadline itself was pushed back twice from Oct. 31. BlackRock argued in an October letter that requiring asset managers to get FDIC approval before taking a stake of 10% or more in a bank would “disrupt the flow of capital to the economy and undermine bank safety and soundness.”