Finance will be “key to addressing two of the mid-21st century’s biggest economic challenges,” BlackRock boss Larry Fink writes in his annual letter to shareholders, zeroing in on infrastructure in general (and energy infrastructure in particular) and how to pay for retirement when a growing percentage of the world’s population is aging.

Why it matters #1: Fink co-founded and leads a business that he’s grown from an eight-person shop into the world’s largest asset manager. His writing is cogent and he has consistently put a ton of effort into making his annual letter to shareholders into exercises in strategic thinking. He’s not just his generation’s Warren Buffett, in that sense — his notes are now scrutinized at least as carefully as the Oracle of Omaha’s were back at the height of his influence.

Why it matters #2: Fink’s past letters made climate change and “stakeholder capitalism” (as it is now trendy to call ESG investing) mainstream topics on Planet Finance.

What’s in it for folks who live, do business, or invest in our part of the world? The infrastructure piece, right now. And the retirement issue, too — if we’re smart. (More on the retirement bit in another Planet Finance column to come.)

On infrastructure: Fink argues that “as countries decarbonize and digitize their economies, they’re supercharging demand for all sorts of infrastructure, from telecom networks to new ways to generate power. In fact, in my nearly 50 years in finance, I’ve never seen more demand for energy infrastructure.”

Citing trips to nearly 20 countries worldwide, he writes that countries “have twin aims: They want to transition to lower-carbon sources of power while also achieving energy security.”

His solution will sound awfully familiar if you live in Egypt, Saudi Arabia, or the UAE: “The future of infrastructure is public-private partnership,” he writes, and the adoption of an “energy pragmatism” approach — embrace renewables, yes, but don’t abandon the fossil fuels we need to cool our homes and grow our economies until the moment is right.

BlackRock is a big investor in both renewable energy and hydrocarbon companies, and Fink knows that pragmatism will expose him to arrows from both sides. His argument that energy pragmatism is the real “path to decarbonization” will ring true to Saudi ears — and to folks in Germany and Texas, which he cites as examples of the policy in action.

Putting his money where his mouth is: BlackRock said in January that it was going after the USD 1 tn infrastructure market by acquiring Global Infrastructure Partners to create a “world-leading infrastructure private markets investment platform.”

Read for yourself: Fink’s letter is online here.

Read what others are saying: Financial Times | Wall Street Journal | New York Times | Business Insider

THE MARKET THIS MORNING-

Asian markets are mostly in the red this morning, with just the Nikkei bucking the trend. US stock futures are edging higher after the S&P 500 recorded its third straight day of losses, suggesting there’s a chance it will break into the green today. Futures for major European benchmarks trended mostly lower overnight.

TASI

12,586

-0.7% (YTD: +5.2%)

MSCI Tadawul 30

1,590

-0.2% (YTD: +2.5%)

NomuC

26,658

-2% (YTD: +8.7%)

USD : SAR (SAMA)

3.75 Sell

3.75 Buy

Interest rates

6.5% repo

5.5% reverse repo

EGX30

29,058

-1% (YTD: +17%)

ADX

9,319

-0.01% (YTD: -2.7%)

DFM

4,246

-0.8% (YTD: +4.6%)

S&P 500

5,216

+0.04% (YTD: +9.7%)

FTSE 100

7,931

+0.17% (YTD: +2.6%)

Euro Stoxx 50

5,064

+0.4% (YTD: +12%)

Brent crude

USD 86.1

-0.75%

Natural gas (Nymex)

USD 1.6

-2.5%

Gold

USD 2,178

+0.3%

BTC

USD 70,176

+3% (YTD: +160%)

THE CLOSING BELL: TADAWUL-

The TASI fell 0.7% yesterday on turnover of SAR 9.9 bn. The index is up 5.2% YTD.

In the green: Saudi Cable (+9.9%), Mouwasat (+8%) and Al Baha (+7%).

In the red: Alkhaleej Training (-9.9%), Riyad REIT (-7.9%) and Saudi Ground Services (-7.3%).

THE CLOSING BELL: NOMU-

The NomuC fell 2% yesterday on turnover of SAR 656.6 mn. The index is up 9% YTD.

In the green: Tam Development (+9%), Al Babtain Food (+7.5%) and Fadeco (+6.9%).

In the red: Jahez (-10.3%), Ghida AlSultan (-9.9%) and Lana (-9.6%)

CORPORATE ACTIONS-

#1- Alinma Bank will hike its capital to SAR 25 bn, up from SAR 20 bn through issuing one bonus share for every four shares, a statement by the CMA read. This will be financed through retained earnings.

#2- Arab National Bank’s BoD has recommended a share buyback of up to 5 mn shares for allocation to its employee stock ownership program (ESOP), it said in a disclosure to Tadawul. The share buyback will be self-funded.

#3- Budget Saudi’s BoD has recommended a dividend payout of SAR 71.2 mn to its shareholders at SAR 1 per share for 2023, it said in a disclosure to Tadawul. The distribution date is yet to be announced.

#4- Shareholders of Yamama Cement have approved a dividend payout of SAR 202.5 mn at SAR 1 a share for 2023, it said in a disclosure to Tadawul. Dividends will be distributed on Sunday, 21 April.