BlackRock agrees to pay US$12 million over SEC conflicts claim
[NEW YORK] BlackRock Inc agreed to pay US$12 million to settle US regulatory claims that it failed to disclose a conflict of interest of a top portfolio manager.
Daniel Rice III, a former money manager, invested client money in Alpha Natural Resources Inc, which had entered into a joint venture with a company Rice founded, the Securities and Exchange Commission said in a statement Monday. BlackRock knew about and approved Rice's investment and failed to disclose the conflict to investors, the regulator said.
"BlackRock violated its fiduciary obligation to eliminate the conflict of interest created by Rice's outside business activity," Andrew Ceresney, director of the SEC's enforcement division, said in the statement.
The company said in a statement that it has taken additional steps to enhance its policies and procedures regarding employees' outside business activities.
"BlackRock has extensive policies and procedures in place to manage conflicts of interest," the company said in a statement. "As a fiduciary for our clients, we take even the appearance of conflicts of interest extremely seriously." Mr Rice founded shale-gas producer Rice Energy Inc in 2007 when he was managing more than US$1 billion for BlackRock funds and institutional clients. A subsidiary of the company later entered into a joint venture with Alpha Natural Resources, which by June 30, 2011, had become the biggest holding in the largest BlackRock energy fund Rice managed.
Mr Rice, who helped manage five energy and natural resource mutual funds for the US$4.77 trillion money manager, retired in 2012 to avoid the appearance of a conflict of interest.
The SEC also sanctioned Bartholomew Battista, the company's former compliance chief. Mr Battista agreed to pay US$60,000 to settle claims related to his role in the funds' failure to report the information. In resolving the claims, BlackRock also agreed to hire a compliance consultant and conduct an internal review.
A phone call to Jonathan Polkes, an attorney for Battista at law firm Weil Gotshal & Manges, wasn't returned.
Bloomberg
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