BlackRock’s Retirement Lead Ackerley Moving to Senior Adviser Role

The head of the firm’s retirement group will move into an advisory position in July as part of a global restructuring started earlier this year.

BlackRock Inc.’s head of retirement Anne Ackerley is moving into a senior adviser role in July even as the firm has started a public campaign to expand retirement plan savings and services, a spokesperson confirmed.

The shift is part of a restructuring that began in January in which the firm is shifting its global client focus toward “client needs, not product structure” with the formation of its Global Product Solutions, according to the spokesperson. That move has seen iShares be more deeply embedded in the firm’s solutions and will start to further incorporate retirement-related solutions.

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Anne Ackerley

Ackerley’s role will not be replaced, but the U.S. retirement unit will be overseen in an expanded role by Robert Crothers, managing director and head of product and strategy for the retirement group, the spokesperson confirmed. Crothers reports to Jessica Tan, a managing director and head of Americas for global product solutions.

In her new role, Ackerley will continue to advise the firm on retirement-related areas and oversee board service and other responsibilities.

Ackerley has been the public face of many of BlackRock’s retirement-focused investment products and solutions since taking the role five years ago. Her most recent project, an in-plan annuity vehicle called LifePath Paycheck, has been a major focus area for the firm, with a handful of plan sponsors already using the product and Larry Fink citing it as a major innovation in his annual letter.

“Anne has been an industry leader and a highly influential voice in the retirement industry,” Kevin Crain, a senior adviser at the Milken Institute and a non-resident scholar at the Georgetown University Center for Retirement Initiatives said via email. “With her leadership, Blackrock has led progress in the retirement industry on critical issues—target date investing, retirement income solutions, equality in retirement savings, and improving longevity.”

Fink called out the LifePath Paycheck in his annual letter as a major advancement in retirement savings—writing that it may “one day be the default retirement investment strategy.”

In a LinkedIn post when the product went live earlier this year, Ackerley wrote: “I’m so proud of everyone who helped bring this game-changing solution to life. And it’s not just our team at BlackRock. To get LifePath Paycheck off the ground, clients needed to believe in us, recordkeepers needed to build with us, and insurers needed to innovate alongside us. That’s the most important lesson for me over the last six years: when we come together as an industry, we can do big things. I truly believe the new retirement is here. And I’m proud to say we’re making it happen – together.”

Ackerley has been with BlackRock for 25 years and more than 30 in financial services. She held numerous leadership positions at the firm including head of the defined contribution business.

Pensions & Investments first reported the news of Ackerley’s move.

On Wednesday, Vanguard announced that BlackRock’s former head of iShares, Salim Ramji, will be the asset manager’s new CEO as Tim Buckley steps down. Vanguard noted in the announcement Ramji’s experience in “evolving the iShares platform to provide an even broader set of innovate low-cost products for investors globally.”

TDF Flows Bounce Back in Q1

The country’s top ten target date fund providers posted net inflows of $10.5 billion to start 2024, beating a lackluster Q4 that had total outflows.

Target-date funds managed by the top 10 providers in the country bounced back to post net inflows of $10.5 billion in the first quarter of 2024, according to the latest data from ISS Market Intelligence’s Simfund.

It’s the strongest quarter for TDFs since Q1 2023, when the top providers combined for $16.6 billion in net inflows. It also comes after a tough Q4 2024, when they ended with net outflows of $666 million, according to according to data provided by Simfund, which, like PLANADVISER, is owned by Institutional Shareholder Services Inc.

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Quarterly flows since the start of 2023 were:

Q1 2023 $MM

Q2 2023 $MM

Q4 2023 $MM

Q4 2023 $MM

Q1 2024 $MM

16,595.9

10,458.6

9,075.7

-655.0

10,514.2

The U.S. stock market ended Q1 at an all-time high, with the S&P 500 surpassing 5,000 for the first time. April then saw the index drop below that mark, only to overtake it again in May.

The fixed income market, meanwhile, started the year with expectations of a Federal Reserve interest rate cut that never emerged; now, in part due to persistently high inflation, market watchers are waiting to see if and when the Fed can to start reducing rates.

None of the top 10 TDF providers saw outflows in Q1, though the leader board did move around.

The Vanguard Group posted the highest net new flows at $4.2 billion, outpacing Capital Group’s American Funds, which was the Q4 2023 leader, and saw inflows of $2.9 billion. BlackRock Inc. remained in the third position, the same as it ended 2023, with $1 billion in inflows.

Meanwhile, PIMCO LLC swapped places with GuideStone Capital Management LLC for the 10th and 9th spots—with PIMCO posting $109.2 billion in inflows and GuideStone showing $125.7 billion.

Flows by manager were:

TDF Manager

Q1 2024 $MM

The Vanguard Group

4,199.1

American Funds

2,913.8

BlackRock

1,025.8

T. Rowe Price

921.8

State Street Global

386.0

Charles Schwab

310.8

TIAA

291.0

Principal Funds

230.9

GuideStone Capital Management

125.7

PIMCO LLC

109.2

Total assets among the top 10 providers landed at $1.77 trillion.

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