BlackRock CEO Larry Fink is warning that the push by countries around the world toward economic self-reliance carries a hefty price tag, while the AI boom threatens to worsen inequality.
In his 2026 annual letter to shareholders, the head of the world’s largest asset manager addressed the hawkish pivot of global economies to bringing production back onshore.
The 73-year-old money man said retreating from a borderless economy with tighter immigration policies and boosting domestic industries will require massive, localized capital deployment.
“Self-reliance is costly,” Fink wrote in the widely-read 17-page missive. “And that requires more long-term investment.”
The Wall Street titan has repeatedly sounded the alarm on the Trump administration’s tariff policies, saying the far-reaching levies risk stoking inflation.
The duties were aimed, in part, at bringing back production to the United States, though the Supreme Court last month deemed Trump’s core tariffs unconstitutional.
“The old model of global capitalism is fracturing. Countries are spending enormous sums to become self-reliant — in energy, in defense, in technology,” said Fink, who’s worth about $1.2 billion, according to Forbes.
Such policies aim to strengthen national security and bring jobs home, but carry hidden price tags that ordinary people and retirement savers will feel for years, the financier warned.
“We are living through a period where things that would’ve defined a decade have become routine: wars with global repercussions, trillion-dollar companies, a fundamental reordering of international trade, and the advent of the most significant technology since, at least, the computer,” the BlackRock chief wrote.
While Wall Street is eagerly pouring trillions into US technological dynamism, Fink voiced caution about the current AI boom.
Because the most valuable AI companies are remaining private for much longer than the tech giants of previous eras, everyday investors are being locked out of the sector’s most explosive growth, he noted.
“There’s a real risk artificial intelligence could widen wealth inequality if ownership does not broaden alongside it,” Fink wrote.
Those comments come as AI startup Anthropic, at just five years old, is already as valuable as Google was at 15 and Amazon at 22 — long after both of those tech behemoths had held their initial public offerings and allowed retail investors to share in their ascendance.
Fink’s warning about global capitalism echoed comments he made at a late 2024 investment conference in Saudi Arabia, where he laid out possible risks from Trump’s economic policies.
“We have government policy that is much more inflationary, whether it’s immigration, our policies of onshoring. No one is asking the question of: ‘At what cost?’” Fink said at the confab.
In an investor call last April, he told analysts that “the sweeping US tariff announcements went beyond anything I could have imagined in my 49 years in finance.”
The latest data released by the US Bureau of Labor Statistics shows that import prices rose 0.2% in January 2026, while an analysis compiled by the Federal Reserve of New York found that manufacturers had seen goods and materials costs climb 8% in 2025.


