
7
Robert Goldstein
Chief Operating Officer
BlackRock
Last year: 5
Since becoming chief operating officer of $4.6 trillion-in-assets money manager BlackRock in July 2014, Robert Goldstein has held on to his previous responsibilities as global head of BlackRock Solutions, the technology arm that includes the Aladdin portfolio and risk management systems business and posted $646 million in revenue last year. Goldstein is currently focused on taking BlackRock’s historically institutional technology into the retail realm. The route to mainstream investors goes through FutureAdvisor, a San Francisco–based digital, or “robo,” wealth manager that BlackRock acquired last September, and distribution partnerships with the likes of LPL Financial and RBC Wealth Management. “We’ve taken what we believe is the leading platform for digital advice and we’re institutionalizing it,” says Goldstein, 42, who joined BlackRock as an analyst in 1994, moved to BlackRock Solutions at its start in 1999 and has headed the unit since 2009. “The regulatory environment is helping support an increasing need for risk transparency across all these end-customer portfolios,” Goldstein adds. “We’re delivering best-in-class portfolio construction, risk analytics and content.” He stresses that the New York–based firm is continuing to invest in Aladdin as its core system “while also leveraging new technology to open Aladdin and make its data more accessible in this world of everybody being a data scientist.” Aladdin’s revenue jumped to $528 million in 2015 from $474 million the year before, Goldstein says, with more than half of the total coming from global clients, up from 20 percent in 2010. BlackRock has introduced a version of Aladdin for custodians, fund accountants and other service providers; JPMorgan Chase & Co.’s securities services business is a new client. Goldstein muses that computing advances could significantly change traditional exception-based work flows, which are designed to identify problems needing human intervention. “We never figured out as an industry why the computer can’t do it,” he says. “If technology can identify the problem, why can’t it fix the problem?”
The 2016 Tech 50
![]() Bessant Bank of America Corp. ![]() Intercontinental Exchange ![]() Markit ![]() CME Group ![]() Bloomberg ![]() Goldman Sachs Group |
![]() BlackRock ![]() Nasdaq ![]() Citi Ventures ![]() KCG Holdings ![]() Fidelity Investments ![]() Thomson Reuters |
![]() ICAP ![]() Depository Trust & Clearing Corp. ![]() Hong Kong Exchanges and Clearing ![]() BATS Global Markets ![]() Digital Asset Holdings ![]() R3CEV |
![]() D.E. Shaw & Co. ![]() Tradeweb Markets ![]() MarketAxess Holdings ![]() Liquidnet Holdings ![]() Capital One Financial Corp. ![]() IEX Group |
![]() State Street Corp. ![]() DBS Bank ![]() TMX Group ![]() Deutsche BÖrse ![]() PayPal Holdings ![]() Wells Fargo & Co. |
![]() S&P Global Market Intelligence ![]() Options Clearing Corp. ![]() Fidelity National Information Services ![]() Numerix ![]() Axioma ![]() BT Radianz |
![]() MaplesFS ![]() AQR Capital Management ![]() Winton Capital Management ![]() London Stock Exchange Group ![]() First Derivatives ![]() eVestment |
![]() Xignite ![]() OpenFin ![]() NRI Holdings America ![]() Saxo Bank ![]() Perseus ![]() Broadridge Financial Solutions |
![]() Xenomorph Software ![]() Adyen |