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BlackRock tells its 16,000 staff they must reveal romances with anyone linked to the company, not just colleagues

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FILE PHOTO: A sign for BlackRock Inc hangs above their building in New York U.S., July 16, 2018. To match Special Report USA-FUNDS/INDEX  REUTERS/Lucas Jackson/File Photo

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BlackRock, the world's largest asset manager, has told staff to disclose all sexual relationships they have with anyone linked to the firm, not just with their colleagues.

Employees were already expected to tell managers about sexual, romantic, or other personal relationships with other staff, but a new internal policy, seen by The Times, covers relationships with anyone that works "within a group that interacts with BlackRock." 

This includes "employees of a service provider, vendor, or other third party (including a client)," an internal memo said.

Extending relationship disclosure policies beyond a single company is an unusual move. The size of the business — BlackRock employs 16,000 people — means the policy could have wide-reaching implications.

The company policy defines a personal relationship as one that could be perceived as "impropriety, bias, favoritism, and/or abuse of authority within a work environment." It does not include friendships.

If a BlackRock employee discloses a personal relationship, "alternative work arrangements" may be put in place, if the relationship could create a conflict of interest, the policy states.

BlackRock, which has nearly $6.5 trillion assets under management,  sacked two male executives last year who failed to disclose consensual relationships with colleagues. 

Mark Wiseman, who was head of active equities and chair of alternatives, said in December that he engaged in a consensual relationship with a fellow employee without reporting it. "I regret my mistake and I accept responsibility for my actions," he said. BlackRock's human resources head, Jeffrey Smith, was fired in July 2019 for breaking company rules on disclosing relationships, the Wall Street Journal reported.

Other high-profile business figures to fall foul of workplace relationship rules include McDonald's former CEO Steve Easterbrook, who left last year over a consensual workplace relationship with a colleague, and Intel's former CEO Brian Krzanich, who resigned after the tech company discovered he had a "past consensual relationship" with an employee.

BlackRock did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

SEE ALSO: Meet the 17 BlackRock power players carrying out CEO Larry Fink's vision to turbocharge private equity and alternative investments growth

SEE ALSO: The US government has pitched a policy that would allow private equity into your retirement fund. BlackRock is salivating at the possibility — here's how the $7 trillion manager would benefit.

SEE ALSO: A top BlackRock exec was fired for having a relationship with a subordinate

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