Oil at $150 would trigger global recession, says boss of financial giant BlackRock
Oil at $150 would trigger global recession, says boss of financial giant BlackRock 6 hours ago Simon Jack ,Business editorand Nick Edser ,Business reporter If the price of oil hits $150 a barrel it will trigger a global recession, the boss of US financial giant BlackRock has told the BBC.
In a wide-ranging exclusive interview, he also denied there was an AI bubble, although he said the new technology meant too many people were pursuing university degrees and not enough doing technical training.
BlackRock is a financial colossus, controlling assets worth $14 trillion (£10.
5tn), and is one of the biggest investors in many of the world's largest companies. Its size and spread gives Fink - who is one of the eight co-founders of the business, which started in 1988 - a unique insight into the health of the global economy.
For Fink, it is too early to determine the ultimate scale and outcome of the conflict, but he believes it will be one of two extreme scenarios.
The surge in energy costs has led to some in the UK to argue that it should be focusing more on producing its own oil and gas. On Tuesday, industry body Offshore Energies UK said that without more domestic production, the country risks becoming reliant on imports "at a time of rising global instability".
"Rising energy prices is a very regressive tax.
It affects the poor more than the wealthy. "
Countries should not depend on just one source, he says.
"Use what you have unquestionably, but also aggressively move towards alternative sources too. "
Energy prices are surging and some have flagged signs of cracks in the financial system.
"I don't see any similarities at all," he says. " The issues affecting some funds account for a small fraction of the overall market and investment from institutions remains strong, he says. Fink also rejects suggestions that the surge in investment in AI, which has seen billions of dollars invested in the new technology, has been overblown.
"I do not believe we have a bubble at all," he says.
"Could we have one or two failures in AI? Sure, that I'm fine with. "
"I believe there's a race for technology dominance.
I believe that if we do not invest more, China wins. I believe it's mandatory that we are aggressively building out our AI capabilities. "
While China is investing hugely in solar and nuclear power, in Europe "I just see a lot of talk and no action", he says, while in the US "as much as we are energy independent, we better start focusing on solar.
because we need to have cheap, inexpensive power to move into AI".
'AI will create jobs for plumbers and electricians' Earlier this week, in his annual letter to shareholders, Fink said the boom in artificial intelligence risked widening inequality, with only a small number of firms and investors seeing the benefits.
However, speaking to the BBC, he emphasised AI was going to create an "enormous amount of jobs".
"We really put judgement on so many jobs and so many people who probably should not have gone into banking or media or law, [who] probably should have been a great worker with their hands, and we need to now rebalance that approach," he says. In the US, he says, after World War Two "we built the foundation of education, and we said to all the young people, go to college, go to college, go to college. And we probably overdid it". "We need to balance that out, and we need to be proud that. a career can be just as strong in these fields of plumbing and electricians
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