What You Need to Know
- Firms on the list may struggle to win underwriting work from issuers of municipal debt and to gain access to some retirement systems.
BlackRock Inc. and UBS Group AG are among major financial firms taking steps to be removed from a list of companies that Texas has classified as “boycotting” the fossil fuel industry.
Representatives from at least five companies have asked the office of state Comptroller Glenn Hegar to remove them from the divestment list he published in August, arguing that they shouldn’t have been included to begin with, according to documents Bloomberg obtained through a public records request.
The efforts underscore how crucial Texas’ booming economy and population are as a source of growth for the finance world.
Firms on the Republican comptroller’s list may struggle to win underwriting business from the state’s myriad issuers of municipal debt or gain access to entities like the Teacher Retirement System of Texas.
“We believe your determination is incorrect and is contradicted by verifiable public information,” BlackRock Head of External Affairs Dalia Blass and Chief Client Officer Mark McCombe wrote in an Oct. 3 letter to Hegar. “BlackRock does not boycott energy companies” under the relevant state code.
As mandated by a law that the Texas Republican-controlled legislature passed last year and that took effect in September 2021, Hegar’s office released a divestment list of 10 companies in late August — including UBS and BlackRock — as well as more than 300 individual funds.
Comptroller’s Task
Hegar’s task was to prepare a list of firms that his office deems “boycott energy companies” — a pillar of the state’s economy — under the Texas law. The entities then risk losing access to business with certain state governments and organizations.
The state’s importance for banks and asset managers is only growing. In October, Wells Fargo & Co. chose a Dallas suburb for a new campus, and Goldman Sachs & Co. also plans to expand in the area.
BlackRock’s McCombe scheduled an Oct. 20 meeting with representatives from Hegar’s office in Austin to discuss the investment giant’s inclusion on the list, email records show.
Meanwhile, Tom Naratil, co-president of UBS Global Wealth Management until last month, submitted a clarification letter regarding the list in September.