Whitney Webb: Why Does BlackRock Keep Showing Up When the System Breaks?

“…Why does BlackRock keep showing up when the system starts breaking?
This video breaks down the fear that BlackRock is becoming more than a company — and getting closer to the controls.

What if one private firm became so large, so connected, and so embedded in the financial system that it kept appearing whenever the system itself started to shake? In this video, we break down why BlackRock has become such a lightning rod — not just because it manages trillions, but because it sits unusually close to the machinery of markets, corporate governance, and crisis response.

Whitney Webb argues that BlackRock keeps surfacing at key turning points, and Reuters documented one of the clearest examples: in 2020, the Federal Reserve hired BlackRock to help execute bond purchases during the COVID market shock. Jerome Powell said BlackRock was “just our agent” and that conflicts were being handled “extremely carefully,” but critics see that episode as part of a larger pattern — a private financial giant repeatedly positioned near public emergency power.

The official story is straightforward: BlackRock is an asset manager and fiduciary. BlackRock says investment stewardship is core to its role, that it engages with companies and votes at shareholder meetings on behalf of clients, and that about 90% of its clients’ public equity assets under management are held in index equity strategies. It also says eligible clients can participate more directly in proxy voting through BlackRock Voting Choice. That may sound dry, but it is exactly why scale becomes influence: when one institution sits between trillions of dollars and thousands of public companies, power often looks less like a command and more like constant proximity.

And now the debate is moving beyond Wall Street into digital money. Circle says it deepened its partnership with BlackRock and began investing a portion of USDC reserves in the Circle Reserve Fund, with reserves expected to remain about 20% cash and 80% short-duration U.S. Treasuries. BlackRock’s site lists the Circle Reserve Fund as a BlackRock-managed product. That does not prove BlackRock “controls crypto,” but it does reinforce the concern that the same institutions dominating traditional finance are positioning themselves around the rails of digital finance too. Circle

This video keeps the nuance intact: BlackRock does not literally own the world, managing client assets is not the same as personally controlling every company in a portfolio, and a reserve partnership is not proof of total control over digital money. But even with all of that said, the core concern survives: when a private institution gets this large, this connected, and this embedded in both markets and public-private crisis response, people stop worrying about one transaction and start worrying about the architecture.

This video uses clips from Whitney Webb on Coin Stories and builds around a bigger question: are we watching innovation, stabilization, and market plumbing — or centralization wearing a new costume?…”

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BlackRock fund limits withdrawals as redemptions rattle private credit

BlackRock said on Friday it has limited withdrawals from a flagship debt fund ​after a surge in redemption requests, as investor worries mount around the $2 trillion private credit industry.

Shares of the world’s largest asset ‌manager fell 6.7% on the New York Stock Exchange, amid a broader market selloff after worse-than-expected U.S. jobs data and escalating U.S.-Israeli war against Iran.

Sentiment has soured around private credit in recent months, and retail investors are increasingly asking for their money back from funds like BlackRock’s $26 billion HPS Corporate Lending Fund (HLEND), which were designed to be open to wealthy ​individuals.

“It should serve as a warning sign for the industry and the rulemakers about the downside of illiquid funds for retail investors,” ​said Greggory Warren, senior stock analyst at Morningstar.

Last year’s bankruptcies of a U.S. auto parts supplier and a subprime auto ⁠lender, along with the collapse of a UK mortgage lender last week, have raised questions about lending standards.

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BlackRock started buying American public utility companies

They buy them with debt, when the purchase goes through the debt goes to the power company, not to BlackRock

This means entire states power bills will instantly rise to pay off the debt. It’s a racket and it’s started

“What if I told you that your electricity bill isn’t just paying for the power you use? It might also be paying off Wall Street’s debt.”

https://x.com/WallStreetApes/status/1987725418045317434

Report: Private equity firms like BlackRock SNAPPING UP Public Utilities & Electric Bills To SKYROCKET

Private equity firms like BlackRock and Blackstone are acquiring U.S. electric utilities, raising concerns about monopolistic control and skyrocketing electricity rates. Historical examples, such as California’s 2000–2001 energy crisis, demonstrate how privatization can lead to price gouging, rolling blackouts, and market manipulation for profit. Critics warn that these acquisitions exploit political influence, labor allies, and clean energy groups to advance deals, while leaving consumers with limited recourse and higher costs.

https://www.climatedepot.com/2025/08/27/report-private-equity-firms-like-blackrock-snapping-up-public-utilities-electric-bills-to-skyrocket/