Class |
Ticker
Symbol |
Investor
A Shares |
PCBAX |
Investor
C Shares |
BRBCX |
Institutional
Shares |
PBAIX |
Class
K Shares |
PBAKX |
Service
Shares |
PCBSX |
|
BlackRock
Tactical Opportunities Fund |
Asset-Backed
Securities
|
X |
Asset-Based
Securities
|
X |
Precious
Metal-Related Securities
|
X |
Borrowing
and Leverage
|
X |
Cash
Flows; Expenses |
X |
Cash
Management
|
X |
Collateralized
Debt Obligations |
X |
Collateralized
Bond Obligations |
X |
Collateralized
Loan Obligations |
X |
Commercial
Paper
|
X |
Commodity-Linked
Derivative Instruments and Hybrid Instruments |
|
Qualifying
Hybrid Instruments
|
|
|
BlackRock
Tactical Opportunities Fund |
Hybrid
Instruments Without Principal Protection
|
|
Limitations
on Leverage
|
|
Counterparty
Risk
|
|
Convertible
Securities
|
X |
Corporate
Loans |
X |
Direct
Lending |
|
Credit
Linked Securities |
X |
Cyber
Security Issues |
X |
Debt
Securities
|
X |
Inflation-Indexed
Bonds |
X |
Investment
Grade Debt Obligations |
X |
High
Yield Investments (“Junk Bonds”) |
X |
Mezzanine
Investments |
X |
Pay-in-kind
Bonds |
X |
Supranational
Entities |
X |
Depositary
Receipts (ADRs, EDRs and GDRs)
|
X |
Derivatives
|
X |
Hedging
|
X |
Speculation
|
X |
Risk
Factors in Derivatives |
X |
Correlation
Risk
|
X |
Counterparty
Risk |
X |
Credit
Risk
|
X |
Currency
Risk |
X |
Illiquidity
Risk |
X |
Leverage
Risk |
X |
Market
Risk |
X |
Valuation
Risk |
X |
Volatility
Risk |
X |
Futures |
X |
Swap
Agreements |
X |
Credit
Default Swaps and Similar Instruments |
X |
Interest
Rate Swaps, Floors and Caps
|
X |
Total
Return Swaps |
X |
Options
|
X |
Options
on Securities and Securities Indices
|
X |
Call
Options
|
X |
Put
Options
|
X |
Options
on Government National Mortgage Association (“GNMA”)
Certificates
|
X |
Options
on Swaps (“Swaptions”) |
X |
Foreign
Exchange Transactions
|
X |
Spot
Transactions and FX Forwards |
X |
|
BlackRock
Tactical Opportunities Fund |
Currency
Futures
|
X |
Currency
Options
|
X |
Currency
Swaps |
X |
Distressed
Securities
|
X |
Environmental,
Social and Governance (“ESG”) Integration |
X |
Equity
Securities
|
X |
Real
Estate-Related Securities |
X |
Securities
of Smaller or Emerging Growth Companies |
X |
Exchange-Traded
Notes (“ETNs”)
|
X |
Foreign
Investments |
X |
Foreign
Investment Risks
|
X |
Foreign
Market Risk
|
X |
Foreign
Economy Risk
|
X |
Currency
Risk and Exchange Risk
|
X |
Governmental
Supervision and Regulation/Accounting Standards
|
X |
Certain
Risks of Holding Fund Assets Outside the United States
|
X |
Publicly
Available Information |
X |
Settlement
Risk
|
X |
Sovereign
Debt |
X |
Withholding
Tax Reclaims Risk |
X |
Funding
Agreements |
X |
Guarantees |
X |
Illiquid
Investments |
X |
Index
Funds |
|
Tracking
Error Risk |
|
S&P
500 Index |
|
Russell
Indexes |
|
MSCI
Indexes |
|
FTSE
Indexes |
|
Bloomberg
Indexes |
|
ICE
BofA Indexes |
|
Indexed
and Inverse Securities |
X |
Inflation
Risk |
X |
Initial
Public Offering (“IPO”) Risk |
X |
Interfund
Lending Program |
X |
Borrowing,
to the extent permitted by the Fund’s investment policies and
restrictions |
X |
Lending,
to the extent permitted by the Fund’s investment policies and
restrictions |
X |
Investment
in Emerging Markets
|
X |
Brady
Bonds
|
X |
China
Investments Risk |
X |
Investment
in Other Investment Companies
|
X |
Exchange-Traded
Funds |
X |
|
BlackRock
Tactical Opportunities Fund |
Lease
Obligations |
X |
Life
Settlement Investments |
|
Liquidity
Risk Management
|
X |
Master
Limited Partnerships
|
X |
Merger
Transaction Risk |
|
Money
Market Obligations of Domestic Banks, Foreign Banks and Foreign
Branches
of U.S. Banks
|
X |
Money
Market Securities
|
X |
Mortgage-Related
Securities
|
X |
Mortgage-Backed
Securities
|
X |
Collateralized
Mortgage Obligations (“CMOs”)
|
X |
Adjustable
Rate Mortgage Securities
|
X |
CMO
Residuals
|
X |
Stripped
Mortgage-Backed Securities
|
X |
Tiered
Index Bonds
|
X |
TBA
Commitments |
X |
Mortgage
Dollar Rolls |
X |
Net
Interest Margin (NIM) Securities |
X |
Municipal
Investments
|
X |
Risk
Factors and Special Considerations Relating to Municipal Bonds
|
X |
Description
of Municipal Bonds
|
X |
General
Obligation Bonds
|
X |
Revenue
Bonds
|
X |
Private
Activity Bonds (“PABs”) |
X |
Moral
Obligation Bonds
|
|
Municipal
Notes
|
X |
Municipal
Commercial Paper
|
X |
Municipal
Lease Obligations
|
X |
Tender
Option Bonds
|
X |
Yields
|
X |
Variable
Rate Demand Obligations (“VRDOs”) |
X |
Transactions
in Financial Futures Contracts on Municipal Indexes
|
X |
Call
Rights
|
X |
Municipal
Interest Rate Swap Transactions
|
X |
Insured
Municipal Bonds
|
X |
Build
America Bonds |
X |
Tax-Exempt
Municipal Investments |
X |
Participation
Notes
|
X |
Portfolio
Turnover Rates
|
X |
Preferred
Stock
|
X |
Tax-Exempt
Preferred Shares |
X |
Trust
Preferred Securities
|
|
|
BlackRock
Tactical Opportunities Fund |
Real
Estate Investment Trusts (“REITs”)
|
X |
Recent
Market Events |
X |
Reference
Rate Replacement Risk |
X
|
Repurchase
Agreements and Purchase and Sale Contracts
|
X |
Restricted
Securities |
X |
Reverse
Repurchase Agreements
|
X |
Rights
Offerings and Warrants to Purchase
|
X |
Rule
144A Securities
|
X |
Securities
Lending
|
X |
Short
Sales
|
X |
Special
Purpose Acquisition Companies |
|
Standby
Commitment Agreements
|
|
Stripped
Securities
|
|
Structured
Notes
|
X |
Taxability
Risk |
|
Temporary
Defensive Measures |
X |
U.S.
Government Obligations |
X |
U.S.
Treasury Obligations |
X |
U.S.
Treasury Rolls |
X |
Utility
Industries |
X |
When-Issued
Securities, Delayed Delivery Securities and Forward
Commitments
|
X |
Yields
and Ratings
|
X |
Zero
Coupon Securities |
X |
Trustees |
Experience,
Qualifications and Skills |
Independent
Trustees |
|
Susan
J. Carter |
Susan
J. Carter has over 35 years of experience in investment management. She
has
served
as President & Chief Executive Officer of Commonfund Capital, Inc.
(“CCI”), a
registered
investment adviser focused on non-profit investors, from 1997 to 2013,
Chief
Executive
Officer of CCI from 2013 to 2014 and Senior Advisor to CCI in 2015.
Ms.
Carter also served as trustee to the Pacific Pension Institute from 2014
to 2018,
trustee
to the Financial Accounting Foundation from 2017 to 2021, Advisory Board
Member
for the Center for Private Equity and Entrepreneurship at Tuck School of
Business
from
1997 to 2021, Advisory Board Member for Bridges Fund Management from 2016
to
2018,
and Advisory Board Member for Girls Who Invest from 2015 to 2018 and Board
Member
thereof from 2018 to 2022. She currently serves as Member of the
President’s
Counsel
for Commonfund and Practitioner Advisory Board Member for Private Capital
Research
Institute (“PCRI”). These positions have provided her with insight and
perspective
on the markets and the economy. |
Collette
Chilton |
Collette
Chilton has over 20 years of experience in investment management. She held
the
position
of Chief Investment Officer of Williams College from October 2006 to June
2023.
Prior
to that she was President and Chief Investment Officer of Lucent Asset
Management
Corporation,
where she oversaw approximately $40 billion in pension and retirement
savings
assets for the company. These positions have provided her with insight and
perspective
on the markets and the economy. |
Neil
A. Cotty |
Neil
A. Cotty has more than 30 years of experience in the financial services
industry,
including
19 years at Bank of America Corporation and its affiliates, where he
served, at
different
times, as the Chief Financial Officer of various businesses including
Investment
Banking,
Global Markets, Wealth Management and Consumer and also served ten years
as
the Chief Accounting Officer for Bank of America Corporation. Mr. Cotty
has been
determined
by the Audit Committee to be an audit committee financial expert, as such
term
is defined in the applicable Commission rules. |
Lena
G. Goldberg |
Lena
G. Goldberg has more than 20 years of business and oversight experience,
most
recently
through her service as a senior lecturer at Harvard Business School. Prior
thereto,
she held legal and management positions at FMR LLC/Fidelity Investments as
well
as positions on the boards of various Fidelity subsidiaries over a 12-year
period. She
has
additional corporate governance experience as a member of board and
advisory
committees
for privately held corporations and non-profit organizations. Ms. Goldberg
also
has
more than 17 years of legal experience as an attorney in private practice,
including as
a
partner in a law firm. |
Trustees |
Experience,
Qualifications and Skills |
Henry
R. Keizer |
Henry
R. Keizer brings over 40 years of executive, financial, operational,
strategic and
global
expertise gained through his 35 year career at KPMG, a global professional
services
organization and by his service as a director to both publicly and
privately held
organizations.
He has extensive experience with issues facing complex, global companies
and
expertise in financial reporting, accounting, auditing, risk management,
and
regulatory
affairs for such companies. Mr. Keizer’s experience also includes service
as an
audit
committee chair to both publicly and privately held organizations across
numerous
industries
including professional services, property and casualty reinsurance,
insurance,
diversified
financial services, banking, direct to consumer, business to business and
technology.
Mr. Keizer is a certified public accountant and also served on the board
of the
American
Institute of Certified Public Accountants. Mr. Keizer has been determined
by the
Audit
Committee to be an audit committee financial expert, as such term is
defined in the
applicable
Commission rules. |
Cynthia
A. Montgomery |
Cynthia
A. Montgomery has served for over 20 years on the boards of registered
investment
companies, most recently as a member of the boards of certain
BlackRock-
advised
Funds and predecessor funds, including the legacy Merrill Lynch Investment
Managers,
L.P. (“MLIM”)
funds. The Board benefits from Ms. Montgomery’s more than 20
years
of academic experience as a professor at Harvard Business School where she
taught
courses on corporate strategy and corporate governance. Ms. Montgomery
also
has
business management and corporate governance experience through her
service on
the
corporate boards of a variety of public companies. She has also authored
numerous
articles
and books on these topics. |
Donald
C. Opatrny |
Donald
C. Opatrny has more than 40 years of business, oversight and executive
experience,
including through his service as president, director and investment
committee
chair
for academic and not-for-profit organizations, and his experience as a
partner,
managing
director and advisory director at Goldman Sachs for 32 years. He also has
investment
management experience as a board member of Athena Capital Advisors
LLC. |
Mark
Stalnecker |
Mark
Stalnecker has gained a wealth of experience in investing and asset
management
from
his over 13 years of service as the Chief Investment Officer of the
University of
Delaware
as well as from his various positions with First Union Corporation,
including
Senior
Vice President and State Investment Director of First Investment Advisors.
The
Board
benefits from his experience and perspective as the Chief Investment
Officer of a
university
endowment and from the oversight experience he gained from service on
various
private and non-profit boards. |
Kenneth
L. Urish |
Kenneth
L. Urish has served for over 15 years on the boards of registered
investment
companies,
most recently as a member of the boards of certain BlackRock-advised Funds
and
predecessor funds, including the legacy BlackRock funds. He has over 30
years of
experience
in public accounting. Mr. Urish has served as a managing member of an
accounting
and consulting firm. Mr. Urish has been determined by the Audit Committee
to
be
an audit committee financial expert, as such term is defined in the
applicable
Commission
rules. |
Claire
A. Walton |
Claire
A. Walton has over 25 years of experience in investment management. She
has
served
as the Chief Operating Officer and Chief Financial Officer of Liberty
Square Asset
Management,
LP from 1998 to 2015, an investment manager that specialized in
long/
short
non-U.S. equity investments, and was an owner and General Partner of Neon
Liberty
Capital
Management, LLC from 2003 to 2023, a firm focusing on long/short equities
in
global
emerging and frontier markets. These positions have provided her with
insight and
perspective
on the markets and the
economy. |
Trustees |
Experience,
Qualifications and Skills |
Non-Management
Interested
Trustee |
|
Lori
Richards |
Lori
Richards has more than 30 years of experience in the financial services
industry,
most
notably as the first Director of the Office of Compliance Inspections and
Examinations
(“OCIE”) of the Securities and Exchange Commission (“SEC”) from 1995 to
2009.
During 14 years as the Director of OCIE, she led the SEC’s nationwide
examination
oversight
program for advisers, mutual funds, hedge funds, broker-dealers, stock
exchanges,
and other industry firms. Prior to that, from 1985 to 1995, she held
various
roles
at the SEC, including Associate Director for Enforcement for the SEC’s
Pacific
Regional
Office and executive assistant and senior advisor to then SEC Chairman
Arthur
Levitt.
More recently, Ms. Richards served as Chief Compliance Officer of the
Asset and
Wealth
Management global lines of business at JPMorgan Chase & Co. from 2013
to
2018
where she led its global compliance program, advised business leaders on
compliance
issues, oversaw risk assessment, monitoring, testing and training, and
maintained
relationships with regulators. In addition, Ms. Richards served as a
member
of
the National Adjudicatory Council of the Financial Industry Regulatory
Authority
(FINRA)
from 2019 to 2022 and held the chair and vice chair posts during her
tenure.
Prior
thereto, from 2010 to 2013, she was a Principal at PricewaterhouseCoopers
LLC
(“PwC”)
and co-leader of its Asset Management Regulatory group. At PwC, she
assisted a
broad
range of financial services clients in designing and implementing risk
management
and
compliance programs, and preparing for new regulatory expectations. These
positions
have
provided her with insight and perspective on the markets and the economy,
as well
as
asset management regulation and compliance. |
Interested
Trustees |
|
Robert
Fairbairn |
Robert
Fairbairn has more than 25 years of experience with BlackRock, Inc. and
over 30
years
of experience in finance and asset management. In particular, Mr.
Fairbairn’s
positions
as Vice Chairman of BlackRock, Inc., Member of BlackRock’s Global
Executive
and
Global Operating Committees and Co-Chair of BlackRock’s Human Capital
Committee
provide
the Board with a wealth of practical business knowledge and leadership. In
addition,
Mr. Fairbairn has global investment management and oversight experience
through
his former positions as Global Head of BlackRock’s Retail and
iShares®
businesses,
Head of BlackRock’s Global Client Group, Chairman of BlackRock’s
international
businesses and his previous oversight over BlackRock’s Strategic Partner
Program
and Strategic Product Management Group. Mr. Fairbairn also serves as a
board
member
for the funds in the BlackRock Fixed-Income
Complex. |
John
M. Perlowski |
John
M. Perlowski’s experience as Managing Director of BlackRock, Inc. since
2009, as
the
Head of BlackRock Global Accounting and Product Services since 2009, and
as
President
and Chief Executive Officer of the BlackRock-advised Funds provides him
with a
strong
understanding of the BlackRock-advised Funds, their operations, and the
business
and
regulatory issues facing the BlackRock-advised Funds. Mr. Perlowski’s
prior position
as
Managing Director and Chief Operating Officer of the Global Product Group
at Goldman
Sachs
Asset Management, and his former service as Treasurer and Senior Vice
President
of
the Goldman Sachs Mutual Funds and as Director of the Goldman Sachs
Offshore
Funds
provides the Board with the benefit of his experience with the management
practices
of other financial companies. Mr. Perlowski also serves as a board member
for
the
funds in the BlackRock Fixed-Income
Complex. |
Name
and
Year of Birth1,2
|
Position(s)
Held
(Length
of
Service)3
|
Principal
Occupation(s)
During
Past Five Years |
Number
of
BlackRock-
Advised
Registered
Investment
Companies
(“RICs”)
Consisting
of
Investment
Portfolios
(“Portfolios”)
Overseen |
Public
Company
and
Other
Investment
Company
Directorships
Held
During
Past
Five Years
|
Independent
Trustees |
|
|
|
|
Mark
Stalnecker
1951 |
Chair
of the
Board
(Since
2019)
and
Trustee
(Since
2015) |
Chief
Investment Officer, University of
Delaware
from 1999 to 2013; Trustee and
Chair
of the Finance and Investment
Committees,
Winterthur Museum and
Country
Estate from 2005 to 2016; Member
of
the Investment Committee, Delaware
Public
Employees’ Retirement System since
2002;
Member of the Investment
Committee,
Christiana Care Health System
from
2009 to 2017; Member of the
Investment
Committee, Delaware Community
Foundation
from 2013 to 2014; Director and
Chair
of the Audit Committee, SEI Private
Trust
Co. from 2001 to 2014. |
28
RICs consisting of
164
Portfolios |
None |
Susan
J. Carter 1956 |
Trustee
(Since
2016) |
Trustee,
Financial Accounting Foundation
from
2017 to 2021; Advisory Board
Member,
Center for Private Equity and
Entrepreneurship
at Tuck School of Business
from
1997 to 2021; Director, Pacific Pension
Institute
from 2014 to 2018; Senior Advisor,
CCI
(investment adviser) in 2015; Chief
Executive
Officer, CCI from 2013 to 2014;
President
& Chief Executive Officer, CCI from
1997
to 2013; Advisory Board Member,
Girls
Who Invest from 2015 to 2018 and
Board
Member thereof from 2018 to 2022;
Advisory
Board Member, Bridges Fund
Management
from 2016 to 2018;
Practitioner
Advisory Board Member, PCRI
since
2017; Lecturer in the Practice of
Management,
Yale School of Management
since
2019; Advisor to Finance Committee,
Altman
Foundation since 2020; Investment
Committee
Member, Tostan since 2021;
Member
of the President’s Counsel,
Commonfund
since 2023. |
28
RICs consisting of
164
Portfolios |
None |
Collette
Chilton 1958 |
Trustee
(Since
2015) |
Senior
advisor, Insignia since 2024; Chief
Investment
Officer, Williams College from
2006
to 2023; Chief Investment Officer,
Lucent
Asset Management Corporation from
1998
to 2006; Director, Boys and Girls Club
of
Boston since 2017; Director, B1 Capital
since
2018; Director, David and Lucile
Packard
Foundation since 2020. |
28
RICs consisting of
164
Portfolios |
None |
Neil
A. Cotty 1954 |
Trustee
(Since
2016) |
Bank
of America Corporation from 1996 to
2015,
serving in various senior finance
leadership
roles, including Chief Accounting
Officer
from 2009 to 2015, Chief Financial
Officer
of Global Banking, Markets and
Wealth
Management from 2008 to 2009,
Chief
Accounting Officer from 2004 to 2008,
Chief
Financial Officer of Consumer Bank
from
2003 to 2004, Chief Financial Officer of
Global
Corporate Investment Bank from
1999
to 2002. |
28
RICs consisting of
164
Portfolios |
None |
Name
and
Year of Birth1,2 |
Position(s)
Held
(Length
of
Service)3 |
Principal
Occupation(s)
During
Past Five Years |
Number
of
BlackRock-
Advised
Registered
Investment
Companies
(“RICs”)
Consisting
of
Investment
Portfolios
(“Portfolios”)
Overseen |
Public
Company
and
Other
Investment
Company
Directorships
Held
During
Past
Five Years |
Lena
G. Goldberg 1949 |
Trustee
(Since
2019) |
Director,
Pioneer Public Interest Law Center
since
2023; Director, Charles Stark Draper
Laboratory,
Inc. from 2013 to 2021; Senior
Lecturer,
Harvard Business School from
2008
to 2021; FMR LLC/Fidelity
Investments
(financial services) from 1996
to
2008, serving in various senior roles
including
Executive Vice President – Strategic
Corporate
Initiatives and Executive Vice
President
and General Counsel; Partner,
Sullivan
& Worcester LLP from 1985 to 1996
and
Associate thereof from 1979 to 1985. |
28
RICs consisting of
164
Portfolios |
None |
Henry
R. Keizer 1956 |
Trustee
(Since
2019) |
Director,
Park Indemnity Ltd. (captive insurer)
from
2010 to 2022. |
28
RICs consisting of
164
Portfolios |
GrafTech
International
Ltd.
(materials
manufacturing);
Sealed
Air Corp.
(packaging);
WABCO
(commercial
vehicle
safety
systems) from
2015
to 2020; Hertz
Global
Holdings (car
rental)
from 2015 to
2021. |
Cynthia
A. Montgomery 1952 |
Trustee
(Since
2007) |
Professor,
Harvard Business School since
1989. |
28
RICs consisting of
164
Portfolios |
None |
Donald
C. Opatrny 1952 |
Trustee
(Since
2019) |
Chair
of the Board of Phoenix Art Museum
since
2022 and Trustee thereof since 2018;
Chair
of the Investment Committee of The
Arizona
Community Foundation since 2022
and
Trustee thereof since 2020; Director,
Athena
Capital Advisors LLC (investment
management
firm) from 2013 to 2020;
Trustee,
Vice Chair, Member of the Executive
Committee
and Chair of the Investment
Committee,
Cornell University from 2004 to
2019;
Member of Affordable Housing Supply
Board
of Jackson, Wyoming from 2017 to
2022;
Member, Investment Funds
Committee,
State of Wyoming from 2017 to
2023;
Trustee, Artstor (a Mellon Foundation
affiliate)
from 2010 to 2015; Member of the
Investment
Committee, Mellon Foundation
from
2009 to 2015; President, Trustee and
Member
of the Investment Committee, The
Aldrich
Contemporary Art Museum from
2007
to 2014; Trustee and Chair of the
Investment
Committee, Community
Foundation
of Jackson Hole since 2014. |
28
RICs consisting of
164
Portfolios |
None |
Name
and
Year of Birth1,2 |
Position(s)
Held
(Length
of
Service)3 |
Principal
Occupation(s)
During
Past Five Years |
Number
of
BlackRock-
Advised
Registered
Investment
Companies
(“RICs”)
Consisting
of
Investment
Portfolios
(“Portfolios”)
Overseen |
Public
Company
and
Other
Investment
Company
Directorships
Held
During
Past
Five Years |
Kenneth
L. Urish 1951 |
Trustee
(Since
2007) |
Managing
Partner, Urish Popeck & Co., LLC
(certified
public accountants and
consultants)
since 1976; Past-Chairman of
the
Professional Ethics Committee of the
Pennsylvania
Institute of Certified Public
Accountants
and Committee Member thereof
since
2007; Member of External Advisory
Board,
The Pennsylvania State University
Accounting
Department since 2001,
Emeritus
since 2022; Principal, UP Strategic
Wealth
Investment Advisors, LLC since
2013;
Trustee, The Holy Family Institute from
2001
to 2010; President and Trustee,
Pittsburgh
Catholic Publishing Associates
from
2003 to 2008; Director, Inter-Tel from
2006
to 2007; Member, Advisory Board,
ESG
Competent Boards since 2020. |
28
RICs consisting of
164
Portfolios |
None |
Claire
A. Walton 1957 |
Trustee
(Since
2016) |
Advisory
Board Member, Grossman School
of
Business at the University of Vermont
since
2023; Advisory Board Member,
Scientific
Financial Systems since 2022;
General
Partner of Neon Liberty Capital
Management,
LLC from 2003 to 2023; Chief
Operating
Officer and Chief Financial Officer
of
Liberty Square Asset Management, LP
from
1998 to 2015; Director, Boston Hedge
Fund
Group from 2009 to 2018; Director,
Massachusetts
Council on Economic
Education
from 2013 to 2015; Director,
Woodstock
Ski Runners from 2013 to 2022. |
28
RICs consisting of
164
Portfolios |
None |
Non-Management
Interested
Trustee
4
|
|
|
|
|
Lori
Richards 1960 |
Trustee
(Since
2024) |
Director,
PharmaCann, Inc. since 2021;
Trustee,
SEC Historical Society since 2018;
Trustee,
Garrett College Foundation since
2019;
Director, Wahed Invest from 2022 to
2024. |
28
RICs consisting of
164
Portfolios |
None |
Interested
Trustees5
|
|
|
|
|
Robert
Fairbairn 1965 |
Trustee
(Since
2018) |
Vice
Chairman of BlackRock, Inc. since
2019;
Member of BlackRock’s Global
Executive
and Global Operating Committees;
Co-Chair
of BlackRock’s Human Capital
Committee;
Senior Managing Director of
BlackRock,
Inc. from 2010 to 2019; oversaw
BlackRock’s
Strategic Partner Program and
Strategic
Product Management Group from
2012
to 2019; Member of the Board of
Managers
of BlackRock Investments, LLC
from
2011 to 2018; Global Head of
BlackRock’s
Retail and iShares®
businesses
from
2012 to 2016. |
96
RICs consisting of
265
Portfolios |
None |
John
M. Perlowski6
1964 |
Trustee
(Since
2015)
President
and
Chief
Executive
Officer
(Since
2010) |
Managing
Director of BlackRock, Inc. since
2009;
Head of BlackRock Global Accounting
and
Product Services since 2009; Advisory
Director
of Family Resource Network
(charitable
foundation) since 2009. |
98
RICs consisting of
267
Portfolios |
None |
Name
and
Year of Birth1,2
|
Position(s)
Held
(Length
of Service) |
Principal
Occupation(s)
During
Past Five Years |
Officers
Who Are Not Trustees
|
|
|
Roland
Villacorta 1971 |
Vice
President
(Since
2022) |
Managing
Director of BlackRock, Inc. since 2002; Head of Global Cash
Management
and Head of Securities Lending within BlackRock’s
Global
Markets Group since 2022; Member of BlackRock’s Global
Operating
Committee since 2016 and Human Capital Committee since
2023. |
Jennifer
McGovern 1977 |
Vice
President
(Since
2014) |
Managing
Director of BlackRock, Inc. since 2016. |
Trent
Walker 1974 |
Chief
Financial
Officer
(Since
2021) |
Managing
Director of BlackRock, Inc. since September 2019; Executive
Vice
President of PIMCO from 2016 to 2019. |
Jay
M. Fife 1970 |
Treasurer
(Since
2007) |
Managing
Director of BlackRock, Inc. since 2007. |
Aaron
Wasserman 1974 |
Chief
Compliance Officer
(Since
2023) |
Managing
Director of BlackRock, Inc. since 2018; Chief Compliance
Officer
of the BlackRock-advised funds in the BlackRock Multi-Asset
Complex,
the BlackRock Fixed-Income Complex and the iShares
Complex
since 2023; Deputy Chief Compliance Officer for the
BlackRock-advised
funds in the BlackRock Multi-Asset Complex, the
BlackRock
Fixed-Income Complex and the iShares Complex from 2014
to
2023. |
Lisa
Belle 1968 |
Anti-Money
Laundering
Compliance
Officer
(Since
2019) |
Managing
Director of BlackRock, Inc. since 2019; Global Financial
Crime
Head for Asset and Wealth Management of JP Morgan from
2013
to 2019. |
Janey
Ahn 1975 |
Secretary
(Since
2019) |
Managing
Director of BlackRock, Inc. since
2018. |
Name |
Dollar
Range
of
Equity Securities
in
the Fund |
Aggregate
Dollar Range
of
Equity Securities
in
Supervised Funds
|
Independent
Trustees |
|
|
Susan
J. Carter |
None |
Over
$100,000 |
Collette
Chilton |
None |
Over
$100,000 |
Neil
A. Cotty |
None |
Over
$100,000 |
Name |
Dollar
Range
of
Equity Securities
in
the Fund |
Aggregate
Dollar Range
of
Equity Securities
in
Supervised Funds |
Lena
G. Goldberg |
None |
Over
$100,000 |
Henry
R. Keizer |
None |
Over
$100,000 |
Cynthia
A. Montgomery |
None
|
Over
$100,000 |
Donald
C. Opatrny |
None |
Over
$100,000 |
Mark
Stalnecker |
None |
Over
$100,000 |
Kenneth
L. Urish |
None
|
Over
$100,000 |
Claire
A. Walton |
None |
Over
$100,000 |
Non-Management
Interested Trustee |
|
|
Lori
Richards |
None |
None |
Interested
Trustees |
|
|
Robert
Fairbairn |
None
|
Over
$100,000 |
John
M. Perlowski |
None |
Over
$100,000 |
Name
|
Compensation
from
the
Fund |
Estimated
Annual
Benefits
upon
Retirement |
Aggregate
Compensation
from
the Fund
and
Other
BlackRock-
Advised
Funds1
|
Independent
Trustees |
|
|
|
Susan
J. Carter |
$1,558 |
None |
$425,000 |
Collette
Chilton |
$1,558 |
None |
$425,000 |
Neil
A. Cotty |
$1,558 |
None |
$425,000 |
Lena
G. Goldberg2 |
$1,683 |
None |
$470,000 |
Henry
R. Keizer3 |
$1,683 |
None |
$470,000 |
Cynthia
A. Montgomery4 |
$1,683 |
None |
$470,000 |
Donald
C. Opatrny5 |
$1,683 |
None |
$470,000 |
Mark
Stalnecker6 |
$1,976 |
None |
$575,000 |
Kenneth
L. Urish |
$1,558 |
None |
$425,000 |
Claire
A. Walton |
$1,558 |
None |
$425,000 |
Non-Management
Interested Trustee |
|
|
|
Lori
Richards7 |
N/A |
None |
N/A |
Interested
Trustees |
|
|
|
Robert
Fairbairn |
None |
None |
None |
John
M. Perlowski |
None |
None |
None |
|
Fees
Paid to
BlackRock |
Fees
Waived
by
BlackRock |
Fees
Reimbursed
by
BlackRock |
Fiscal
Year Ended April 30, 2024 |
$8,220,953 |
$53,174 |
$0 |
Fiscal
Year Ended April 30, 2023 |
$8,168,521 |
$64,874 |
$19,888 |
Fiscal
Year Ended April 30, 2022 |
$8,494,045 |
$18,671 |
$8 |
|
Fees
Paid to
the
Administrator |
Fees
Waived by
the
Administrator |
Fiscal
Year Ended April 30, 2024 |
$925,410 |
$0 |
Fiscal
Year Ended April 30, 2023 |
$919,379 |
$43,810 |
Fiscal
Year Ended April 30, 2022 |
$956,799 |
$190 |
|
Fees
Paid to BlackRock |
Fees
Waived by BlackRock |
|
|
|
Fiscal
Year Ended April 30, 2024 |
$71,156 |
$0 |
Fiscal
Year Ended April 30, 2023 |
$123,361 |
$1,004 |
Fiscal
Year Ended April 30, 2022 |
$43,592 |
$3 |
|
Number
of Other Accounts Managed
and
Assets by Account Type |
Number
of Other Accounts and Assets
for
Which Advisory Fee is Performance-Based | ||||
Name
of Portfolio Manager |
Other
Registered
Investment
Companies |
Other
Pooled
Investment
Vehicles |
Other
Accounts |
Other
Registered
Investment
Companies |
Other
Pooled
Investment
Vehicles |
Other
Accounts |
Thomas
Becker |
11 |
25 |
3 |
0 |
2 |
0 |
|
$5.15
Billion |
$5.68
Billion |
$1.46
Billion |
$0 |
$1.00
Billion |
$0 |
Philip
Green |
27 |
48 |
12 |
0 |
3 |
6 |
|
$16.13
Billion |
$15.91
Billion |
$12.20
Billion |
$0 |
$1.18
Billion |
$6.47
Billion |
Richard
Murrall, CFA |
3 |
18 |
6 |
0 |
2 |
2 |
|
$2.78
Billion |
$9.68
Billion |
$8.05
Billion |
$0 |
$1.00
Billion |
$3.63
Billion |
Michael
Pensky, CFA |
29 |
36 |
1 |
0 |
4 |
0 |
|
$16.14
Billion |
$9.29
Billion |
$845.33
Million |
$0 |
$1.32
Billion |
$0 |
Portfolio
Manager
|
Benchmarks |
Thomas
Becker |
A
combination of market-based indices (MSCI EAFE, ICE BofA 3-Month U.S.
Treasury Bill
Index),
certain customized indices and certain fund industry peer
groups. |
Philip
Green |
A
combination of market based indices (Russell 1000, MSCI All Country World
Index, ICE
BofA
3-Month US T Bill), certain custom indices and certain fund industry peer
groups. |
Richard
Murrall, CFA |
A
combination of market-based indices (MSCI IMI, BBG Global Agg, ICE BofA
3-Month U.S.
Treasury
Bill Index), certain customized indices and certain fund industry peer
groups. |
Michael
Pensky, CFA |
A
combination of market-based indices (MSCI EAFE, Russell 3000, Bloomberg
U.S.
Aggregate
Bond Index, ICE BofA 3-Month US T Bill), certain customized indices and
certain
fund industry peer groups. |
Portfolio
Manager |
Dollar
Range of Equity
Securities
Beneficially Owned |
Philip
Green |
$100,001 -
$500,000 |
Thomas
Becker |
$100,001 -
$500,000 |
Michael
Pensky, CFA |
$50,001 -
$100,000 |
Richard
Murrall, CFA |
$50,001 -
$100,000 |
|
Fees
Paid to JPM |
Fiscal
Year Ended April 30, 2024 |
$245,040 |
Fiscal
Year Ended April 30, 2023 |
$232,624 |
Fiscal
Year Ended April 30, 2022 |
$255,806 |
|
Investor
A Shares | |||
|
Gross
Sales
Charges
Collected
|
Sales
Charges
Retained
by
BRIL
|
Sales
Charges
Paid
To
Affiliates
|
CDSCs
Received
on
Redemption
of
Load-Waived
Shares |
Fiscal
Year Ended April 30, 2024 |
$62,170 |
$4,335 |
$4,335 |
$241 |
Fiscal
Year Ended April 30, 2023 |
$65,203 |
$4,560 |
$4,560 |
$526 |
Fiscal
Year Ended April 30, 2022 |
$41,868 |
$2,933 |
$2,933 |
$90 |
|
Investor
C Shares
| |
|
CDSCs
Received
by
BRIL
|
CDSCs
Paid
to
Affiliates |
Fiscal
Year Ended April 30, 2024 |
$671 |
$671 |
Fiscal
Year Ended April 30, 2023 |
$120 |
$120 |
Fiscal
Year Ended April 30, 2022 |
$221 |
$221 |
Class
Name |
Fees
Paid to BRIL |
Investor
A Shares |
$471,602 |
Investor
C Shares |
$88,048 |
Service
Shares |
$3,314 |
Investor
A Shares
| |
Net
Assets |
$185,827,266 |
Number
of Shares Outstanding |
13,270,688 |
Net
Asset Value Per Share (net assets divided by number of shares
outstanding) |
$14.00 |
Sales
Charge (5.25% of offering price; 5.54% of net asset value per
share)1 |
$0.78 |
Offering
Price . |
$14.78 |
|
Aggregate
Brokerage
Commissions
Paid |
Brokerage
Commissions
Paid
to Affiliates |
Fiscal
Year Ended April 30, 2024 |
$2,041,159 |
$0 |
Fiscal
Year Ended April 30, 2023 |
$2,473,363 |
$0 |
Fiscal
Year Ended April 30, 2022 |
$2,111,039 |
$0 |
|
Amount
of Commissions
Paid
to Brokers for Providing
28(e)
Eligible Research Services |
Amount
of Brokerage
Transactions
Involved |
|
|
$0 |
$0 |
|
Regular
Broker/Dealer
|
Debt
(D)/Equity (E) |
Aggregate
Holdings (000s) |
J.P.
Morgan Securities LLC |
E |
$7,714
|
Regular
Broker/Dealer |
Debt
(D)/Equity (E) |
Aggregate
Holdings (000s) |
BofA
Securities, Inc. |
E |
$6,579
|
HSBC
Securities (USA) Inc. |
E |
$2,959 |
BNP
Paribas Securities Corp. |
E |
$1,526 |
Citigroup
Global Markets Inc. |
E |
$780
|
Wells
Fargo Securities LLC |
E |
$746 |
Barclays
Capital, Inc. |
E |
$641 |
UBS
Securities LLC |
E |
$577
|
Deutsche
Bank Securities, Inc. |
E |
$569 |
Gross
income from securities lending activities |
$277,888 |
Fees
and/or compensation for securities lending activities and related
services |
|
Securities
lending income paid to BIM for services as securities lending agent
|
$40,593 |
Cash
collateral management expenses not included in securities lending income
paid to BIM |
$739 |
Administrative
fees not included in securities lending income paid to
BIM |
$0 |
Indemnification
fees not included in securities lending income paid to
BIM |
$0 |
Rebates
(paid to borrowers) |
$63,291 |
Other
fees not included in securities lending income paid to
BIM |
$0 |
Aggregate
fees/compensation for securities lending activities |
$104,623 |
Net
income from securities lending activities |
$173,265 |
Name
|
Address
|
Percentage
|
Class |
National
Financial Services LLC
|
499
Washington Boulevard
5th
Floor
Jersey City,
NJ 07310-2010 |
17.79%
|
Investor A
Shares |
Pershing
LLC
|
1 Pershing
Plaza
Jersey City,
NJ 07399-0001 |
5.87% |
Investor A
Shares |
Merrill
Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith
Incorporated |
4800 Deer
Lake Drive East
3rd
Floor
Jacksonville,
FL 32246-6484 |
5.40% |
Investor A
Shares |
Raymond
James |
880 Carillon
Parkway
St,
Petersburg, FL 33716-1102 |
33.80% |
Investor C
Shares |
Wells
Fargo Clearing Services, LLC |
2801 Market
Street
St. Louis, MO
63103 |
21.28%
|
Investor C
Shares |
National
Financial Services LLC |
499
Washington Boulevard
5th
Floor
Jersey City,
NJ 07310-2010 |
10.14% |
Investor C
Shares |
National
Financial Services LLC |
499
Washington Boulevard
5th
Floor
Jersey City,
NJ 07310-2010 |
20.49% |
Institutional
Shares |
LPL
Financial |
4707
Executive Drive
San Diego, CA
92121-3091 |
14.95% |
Institutional
Shares |
Charles
Schwab & Co. Inc. |
101
Montgomery Street
San
Francisco, CA 94104-4122 |
14.06% |
Institutional
Shares |
Merrill
Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith
Incorporated |
4800 Deer
Lake Drive East
3rd
Floor
Jacksonville,
FL 32246-6484 |
12.53%
|
Institutional
Shares |
Power
Trust FBO |
8515 East
Orchard Road
2T2
Greenwood
Village, CO 80111 |
9.01% |
Institutional
Shares |
American
Enterprise Investment SVC |
707
2nd Ave
South
Minneapolis,
MN 55402-2405 |
5.44% |
Institutional
Shares |
National
Financial Services LLC |
499
Washington Boulevard
5th
Floor
Jersey City,
NJ 07310-2010 |
55.10% |
Service
Shares |
JP
Morgan Securities LLC
|
4 Chase
Metrotech Center
Brooklyn, NY
11245 |
28.35% |
Service
Shares |
Pershing
LLC |
2801 Market
Street
St. Louis, MO
63103 |
9.18% |
Service
Shares |
SEI
Private Trust Company C/O Regions
Bank |
1 Freedom
Valley Drive
Oaks, PA
19456 |
39.51% |
Class K
Shares |
Great
West Trust Company LLC |
8515 E.
Orchard Road
2T2
Greenwood
Village, CO 80111 |
13.17% |
Class K
Shares |
JP
Morgan Securities LLC
|
4 Chase
Metrotech Center
Brooklyn, NY
11245 |
6.14% |
Class K
Shares |
|
Time
Periods for Portfolio Holdings
| |
Prior
to 20 Calendar Days After Month-End |
20
Calendar Days After Month-End To Public
Filing | |
Portfolio
Holdings |
Cannot
disclose without non-disclosure or
confidentiality
agreement and Chief
Compliance
Officer (“CCO”) approval.
|
May
disclose to shareholders, prospective
shareholders,
intermediaries, consultants
and
third-party data providers (e.g., Lipper,
Morningstar
and Bloomberg), except with
respect
to Global Allocation funds*,
BlackRock
Core Bond Portfolio and
BlackRock
Strategic Income Opportunities
Portfolio
of BlackRock Funds V, BlackRock
Strategic
Global Bond Fund, Inc., Master
Total
Return Portfolio of Master Bond LLC,
BlackRock
Total Return V.I. Fund of
BlackRock
Variable Series Funds II, Inc.,
BlackRock
Sustainable Total Return Fund of
BlackRock
Bond Fund, Inc., BlackRock
Unconstrained
Equity Fund and BlackRock
Systematic
Multi-Strategy Fund (each of
whose
portfolio holdings may be disclosed
60
calendar days after month-end).
BlackRock
generally discloses portfolio
holdings
information on the lag times
established
herein on its public website. If
Portfolio
Holdings are disclosed to one party,
they
must also be disclosed to all other
parties
requesting the same information. |
|
Time
Periods for Portfolio Characteristics
| |
Portfolio
Characteristics
(Excluding
Liquidity
Metrics)
|
Prior
to 5 Calendar Days After Month-End |
5
Calendar Days After Month-End |
Cannot
disclose without non-disclosure or
confidentiality
agreement and CCO
approval.*,**
|
May
disclose to shareholders, prospective
shareholders,
intermediaries, consultants
and
third-party data providers (e.g., Lipper,
Morningstar
and Bloomberg). If Portfolio
Characteristics
are disclosed to one party,
they
must also be disclosed to all other
parties
requesting the same information. | |
Portfolio
Characteristics
—
Liquidity
Metrics |
Prior
to 60 Calendar Days After Calendar
Quarter-End |
60
Calendar Days After Calendar Quarter-
End |
Cannot
disclose without non-disclosure or
confidentiality
agreement and CCO approval. |
May
disclose to shareholders, prospective
shareholders,
intermediaries and
consultants;
provided portfolio management
has
approved. If Liquidity Metrics are
disclosed
to one party, they must also be
disclosed
to all other parties requesting the
same
information. |
|
Time
Periods
| |
Prior
to 5 Calendar Days
After
Month-End |
5
Calendar Days After
Month-End
to Date of Public Filing | |
Portfolio
Holdings |
Cannot
disclose without non-disclosure or
confidentiality
agreement and CCO approval
except
the following portfolio holdings
information
may be released as follows:
•Weekly
portfolio holdings information
released
on the website at least one
business
day after week-end except: —
Other information as may be required
under
Rule 2a-7 (e.g., name of issuer,
category
of investment, principal amount,
maturity
dates, yields).
—
For Government money market funds,
daily
portfolio holdings are released on
the
website the following business day. |
May
disclose to shareholders, prospective
shareholders,
intermediaries, consultants
and
third-party data providers. If portfolio
holdings
are disclosed to one party, they
must
also be disclosed to all other parties
requesting
the same information. |
Portfolio
Characteristics |
Cannot
disclose without non-disclosure or
confidentiality
agreement and CCO approval
except
the following information may be
released
on the Fund’s website daily:
•Historical
NAVs calculated based on market
factors
(e.g., marked-to-market)
•Percentage
of fund assets invested in daily
and
weekly liquid assets (as defined under
Rule
2a-7)
•Daily
net inflows and outflows
•Yields,
SEC yields, WAM, WAL, current
assets
•Other
information as may be required by
Rule
2a-7 |
May
disclose to shareholders, prospective
shareholders,
intermediaries, consultants
and
third-party data providers. If Portfolio
Characteristics
are disclosed to one party,
they
must also be disclosed to all other
parties
requesting the same
information. |
$1
million but less than $3 million |
1.00
% |
$3
million but less than $15 million |
0.50
% |
$15
million and above |
0.25
% |
$250,000
but less than $3 million |
1.00
% |
$3
million but less than $15 million |
0.50
% |
$15
million and above |
0.25
% |
$1
million but less than $3 million |
0.75
% |
$3
million but less than $15 million |
0.50
% |
$15
million and above |
0.25
% |
$1
million but less than $3 million |
0.50
% |
$3
million but less than $15 million |
0.25
% |
$15
million and above |
0.15
% |
$250,000
but less than $3 million |
0.50
% |
$3
million but less than $15 million |
0.25
% |
$15
million and above |
0.15
% |
$1
million but less than $3 million |
0.15
% |
$3
million but less than $15 million |
0.10
% |
$15
million and above |
0.05
% |
$500,000
but less than $3 million |
0.75
% |
$3
million but less than $15 million |
0.50
% |
$15
million and above |
0.25
% |
$250,000
and above |
0.50
% |
$100,000
and above |
0.25
% |
$250,000
and above |
0.25
% |
$250,000
but less than $4 million |
1.00
% |
$4
million but less than $10 million |
0.50
% |
$10
million and above |
0.25
% |
$250,000
but less than $3 million |
0.75
% |
$3
million but less than $15 million |
0.50
% |
$15
million and above |
0.25
% |
$1,000,000
and above |
0.10
% |
$1,000,000
and above |
0.15
% |
Aaa |
Obligations
rated Aaa are judged to be of the highest quality, subject to the lowest
level of credit
risk. |
Aa |
Obligations
rated Aa are judged to be of high quality and are subject to very low
credit risk. |
A |
Obligations
rated A are judged to be upper-medium grade and are subject to low credit
risk. |
Baa |
Obligations
rated Baa are judged to be medium-grade and subject to moderate credit
risk and as
such
may possess certain speculative characteristics. |
Ba |
Obligations
rated Ba are judged to be speculative and are subject to substantial
credit risk. |
B |
Obligations
rated B are considered speculative and are subject to high credit
risk. |
Caa |
Obligations
rated Caa are judged to be speculative of poor standing and are subject to
very high
credit
risk. |
Ca |
Obligations
rated Ca are highly speculative and are likely in, or very near, default,
with some
prospect
of recovery of principal and interest. |
C |
Obligations
rated C are the lowest rated and are typically in default, with little
prospect for recovery
of
principal or interest. |
P-1 |
Ratings
of Prime-1 reflect a superior ability to repay short-term
obligations. |
P-2 |
Ratings
of Prime-2 reflect a strong ability to repay short-term
obligations. |
P-3 |
Ratings
of Prime-3 reflect an acceptable ability to repay short-term
obligations. |
NP |
Issuers
(or supporting institutions) rated Not Prime do not fall within any of the
Prime rating
categories. |
MIG
1 |
This
designation denotes superior credit quality. Excellent protection is
afforded by established
cash
flows, highly reliable liquidity support, or demonstrated broad-based
access to the market for
refinancing. |
MIG
2 |
This
designation denotes strong credit quality. Margins of protection are
ample, although not as
large
as in the preceding group. |
MIG
3 |
This
designation denotes acceptable credit quality. Liquidity and cash-flow
protection may be
narrow,
and market access for refinancing is likely to be less
well-established. |
SG |
This
designation denotes speculative-grade credit quality. Debt instruments in
this category may
lack
sufficient margins of
protection. |
VMIG
1 |
This
designation denotes superior credit quality. Excellent protection is
afforded by the superior
short-term
credit strength of the liquidity provider and structural and legal
protections that ensure
the
timely payment of purchase price upon demand. |
VMIG
2 |
This
designation denotes strong credit quality. Good protection is afforded by
the strong short-term
credit
strength of the liquidity provider and structural and legal protections
that ensure the timely
payment
of purchase price upon demand. |
VMIG
3 |
This
designation denotes acceptable credit quality. Adequate protection is
afforded by the
satisfactory
short-term credit strength of the liquidity provider and structural and
legal protections
that
ensure the timely payment of purchase price upon
demand. |
SG |
This
designation denotes speculative-grade credit quality. Demand features
rated in this category
may
be supported by a liquidity provider that does not have a sufficiently
strong short-term rating or
may
lack the structural or legal protections necessary to ensure the timely
payment of purchase
price
upon demand. |
AAA |
An
obligation rated ‘AAA’ has the highest rating assigned by S&P. The
obligor’s capacity to meet its
financial
commitments on the obligation is extremely
strong. |
AA |
An
obligation rated ‘AA’ differs from the highest-rated obligations only to a
small degree. The
obligor’s
capacity to meet its financial commitments on the obligation is very
strong. |
A |
An
obligation rated ‘A’ is somewhat more susceptible to the adverse effects
of changes in
circumstances
and economic conditions than obligations in higher-rated categories.
However, the
obligor’s
capacity to meet its financial commitments on the obligation is still
strong. |
BBB |
An
obligation rated ‘BBB’ exhibits adequate protection parameters. However,
adverse economic
conditions
or changing circumstances are more likely to weaken the obligor’s capacity
to meet its
financial
commitments on the obligation. |
BB,
B,
CCC,
CC,
and
C |
Obligations
rated ‘BB’, ‘B’, ‘CCC’, ‘CC’, and ‘C’ are regarded as having significant
speculative
characteristics.
‘BB’ indicates the least degree of speculation and ‘C’ the highest. While
such
obligations
will likely have some quality and protective characteristics, these may be
outweighed by
large
uncertainties or major exposure to adverse
conditions. |
BB |
An
obligation rated ‘BB’ is less vulnerable to nonpayment than other
speculative issues. However, it
faces
major ongoing uncertainties or exposure to adverse business, financial, or
economic
conditions
that could lead to the obligor’s inadequate capacity to meet its financial
commitments
on
the obligation. |
B |
An
obligation rated ‘B’ is more vulnerable to nonpayment than obligations
rated ‘BB’, but the obligor
currently
has the capacity to meet its financial commitments on the obligation.
Adverse business,
financial,
or economic conditions will likely impair the obligor’s capacity or
willingness to meet its
financial
commitments on the
obligation. |
CCC |
An
obligation rated ‘CCC’ is currently vulnerable to nonpayment and is
dependent upon favorable
business,
financial, and economic conditions for the obligor to meet its financial
commitments on
the
obligation. In the event of adverse business, financial, or economic
conditions, the obligor is
not
likely to have the capacity to meet its financial commitments on the
obligation. |
CC |
An
obligation rated ‘CC’ is currently highly vulnerable to nonpayment. The
‘CC’ rating is used when
a
default has not yet occurred but S&P expects default to be a virtual
certainty, regardless of the
anticipated
time to default. |
C |
An
obligation rated ‘C’ is currently highly vulnerable to nonpayment, and the
obligation is expected
to
have lower relative seniority or lower ultimate recovery compared with
obligations that are rated
higher. |
D |
An
obligation rated ‘D’ is in default or in breach of an imputed promise. For
non-hybrid capital
instruments,
the ‘D’ rating category is used when payments on an obligation are not
made on the
date
due, unless S&P believes that such payments will be made within five
business days in the
absence
of a stated grace period or within the earlier of the stated grace period
or 30 calendar
days.
The ‘D’ rating also will be used upon the filing of a bankruptcy petition
or the taking of similar
action
and where default on an obligation is a virtual certainty, for example due
to automatic stay
provisions.
A rating on an obligation is lowered to ‘D’ if it is subject to a
distressed debt
restructuring. |
A-1 |
A
short-term obligation rated ‘A-1’ is rated in the highest category by
S&P. The obligor’s capacity to
meet
its financial commitments on the obligation is strong. Within this
category, certain obligations
are
designated with a plus sign (+). This indicates that the obligor’s
capacity to meet its financial
commitments
on these obligations is extremely strong. |
A-2 |
A
short-term obligation rated ‘A-2’ is somewhat more susceptible to the
adverse effects of changes
in
circumstances and economic conditions than obligations in higher rating
categories. However,
the
obligor’s capacity to meet its financial commitments on the obligation is
satisfactory. |
A-3 |
A
short-term obligation rated ‘A-3’ exhibits adequate protection parameters.
However, adverse
economic
conditions or changing circumstances are more likely to weaken an
obligor’s capacity to
meet
its financial commitments on the obligation. |
B |
A
short-term obligation rated ‘B’ is regarded as vulnerable and has
significant speculative
characteristics.
The obligor currently has the capacity to meet its financial commitments;
however,
it
faces major ongoing uncertainties that could lead to the obligor’s
inadequate capacity to meet its
financial
commitments. |
C |
A
short-term obligation rated ‘C’ is currently vulnerable to nonpayment and
is dependent upon
favorable
business, financial, and economic conditions for the obligor to meet its
financial
commitments
on the obligation. |
D |
A
short-term obligation rated ‘D’ is in default or in breach of an imputed
promise. For non-hybrid
capital
instruments, the ‘D’ rating category is used when payments on an
obligation are not made
on
the date due, unless S&P believes that such payments will be made
within any stated grace
period.
However, any stated grace period longer than five business days will be
treated as five
business
days. The ‘D’ rating also will be used upon the filing of a bankruptcy
petition or the taking
of
a similar action and where default on an obligation is a virtual
certainty, for example due to
automatic
stay provisions. A rating on an obligation is lowered to ‘D’ if it is
subject to a distressed
debt
restructuring. |
SP-1 |
Strong
capacity to pay principal and interest. An issue determined to possess a
very strong
capacity
to pay debt service is given a plus (+)
designation. |
SP-2 |
Satisfactory
capacity to pay principal and interest, with some vulnerability to adverse
financial and
economic
changes over the term of the notes. |
SP-3 |
Speculative
capacity to pay principal and interest. |
D |
‘D’
is assigned upon failure to pay the note when due, completion of a
distressed debt
restructuring,
or the filing of a bankruptcy petition or the taking of similar action and
where default
on
an obligation is a virtual certainty, for example due to automatic stay
provisions. |
AAA |
Highest
Credit Quality. ‘AAA’ ratings denote the lowest expectation of credit
risk. They are assigned
only
in cases of exceptionally strong capacity for payment of financial
commitments. This capacity
is
highly unlikely to be adversely affected by foreseeable
events. |
AA |
Very
High Credit Quality. ‘AA’ ratings denote expectations of very low credit
risk. They indicate very
strong
capacity for payment of financial commitments. This capacity is not
significantly vulnerable
to
foreseeable events. |
A |
High
Credit Quality. ‘A’ ratings denote expectations of low credit risk. The
capacity for payment of
financial
commitments is considered strong. This capacity may, nevertheless, be more
vulnerable
to
adverse business or economic conditions than is the case for higher
ratings. |
BBB |
Good
Credit Quality. ‘BBB’ ratings indicate that expectations of credit risk
are currently low. The
capacity
for payment of financial commitments is considered adequate, but adverse
business or
economic
conditions are more likely to impair this
capacity. |
BB |
Speculative.
‘BB’ ratings indicate an elevated vulnerability to credit risk,
particularly in the event of
adverse
changes in business or economic conditions over time; however, business or
financial
alternatives
may be available to allow financial commitments to be
met. |
B |
Highly
Speculative. ‘B’ ratings indicate that material credit risk is
present. |
CCC |
Substantial
Credit Risk. ‘CCC’ ratings indicate that substantial credit risk is
present. |
CC |
Very
High Levels of Credit Risk. ‘CC’ ratings indicate very high levels of
credit risk. |
C |
Exceptionally
High Levels of Credit Risk. ‘C’ indicates exceptionally high levels of
credit risk. |
F1 |
Highest
Short-Term Credit Quality. Indicates the strongest intrinsic capacity for
timely payment of
financial
commitments; may have an added “+” to denote any exceptionally strong
credit feature. |
F2 |
Good
Short-Term Credit Quality. Good intrinsic capacity for timely payment of
financial
commitments. |
F3 |
Fair
Short-Term Credit Quality. The intrinsic capacity for timely payment of
financial commitments is
adequate. |
B |
Speculative
Short-Term Credit Quality. Minimal capacity for timely payment of
financial
commitments,
plus heightened vulnerability to near term adverse changes in financial
and
economic
conditions. |
C |
High
Short-Term Default Risk. Default is a real
possibility. |
RD |
Restricted
Default. Indicates an entity that has defaulted on one or more of its
financial
commitments,
although it continues to meet other financial obligations. Typically
applicable to entity
ratings
only. |
D |
Default.
Indicates a broad-based default event for an entity, or the default of a
short-term
obligation. |
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The
purpose of this document is to provide an overarching explanation of
BlackRock’s approach globally to our
responsibilities
as a shareholder on behalf of our clients, our expectations of companies,
and our
commitments
to clients in terms of our own governance and
transparency. |