BlackRock’s $100 Billion Model Makers Are Betting on Megacaps

The team responsible for assembling BlackRock Inc.’s model portfolios is favoring the stock market’s largest companies, potentially unleashing a flood of billions of dollars into technology shares.

The investing giant, one of the biggest providers of the ready-made strategies followed by asset managers and financial advisers, is “pretty overweight” on megacap tech and growth-oriented names within its model portfolios, according to Tushar Yadava, a strategist with BlackRock’s Multi-Asset Strategies & Solutions. The fact that just a handful of companies have powered this year’s market gains has fanned concern about the rally’s sustainability. Yet it’s these firms that tend to have the strongest fundamentals to weather the Federal Reserve’s tightening campaign, he said.

“Going into year-end now, we’d much rather own the largest-cap names,” Yadava said on Bloomberg Television’s ETF IQ on Monday. “Sector by sector, if you throw a dart, we’d rather own the stock that’s in the larger-cap than the smaller-cap because that’s where we’re seeing the positive earnings revisions, that’s where the balance-sheet strength is, and those are the themes we want to own right now.”

Despite a turbulent few months, the tech-heavy Nasdaq 100 is still about 40% higher in 2023, a dominant performance fueled by the likes of Nvidia Corp., Meta Platforms Inc. and Tesla Inc. That group has powered the S&P 500 roughly 14% higher this year as well.

BlackRock’s model portfolios have about $100 billion tracking them. Salim Ramji, global head of iShares and index investments at the firm, predicted in July that the overall industry could grow to $10 trillion over the next five years, from about $4.2 trillion.

While BlackRock’s models briefly went underweight on equities after Silicon Valley Bank’s meltdown in March and the financial industry stress that followed, they started to “edge back into stocks” during the summer, Yadava said. Although the initial thinking was that the rally in the so-called Magnificent Seven tech stocks would broaden out, that hasn’t happened, he said.

Big Tech Beats Small Caps