‘No Phones In China’: World’s Largest Asset Manager BlackRock Warn Employees – Check Why

In response to rising US-China tensions and intensifying data security laws, BlackRock, the world’s largest asset manager, has implemented strict new rules for employees traveling to China. The policy, effective 16 July, prohibits the use of company-issued devices and network access during both business and personal travel, signalling growing corporate unease over regulatory unpredictability in the world’s second-largest economy.

Although BlackRock did not publicly comment, the new policy underlines how data sovereignty rules introduced by Beijing in 2021 are forcing foreign asset managers to reevaluate compliance strategies and digital infrastructure.

On 16 July 2025, BlackRock Inc., which manages over $10 trillion in global assets, introduced a new internal travel protocol that bars employees from using company-issued iPhones, iPads, laptops, or accessing the company’s network while in China, according to internal memos reviewed by Bloomberg and Reuters.
Instead, travelling employees must rely on temporary “loaner” devices and are not permitted to access BlackRock systems via VPN or any remote access methods while in the country—even during personal visits. The move reflects increasing operational caution in a climate marked by tightened data laws and geopolitical volatility.

Risk Mitigation or Strategic Signalling?

A BlackRock official, speaking off record due to sensitivity, said the firm is acting “out of an abundance of caution,” following mounting evidence of Western executives facing mobility restrictions in China. In recent weeks, Wells Fargo suspended travel to the region after a senior banker, Chenyue Mao, was barred from leaving. Separately, a US Patent and Trademark Office employee and a US Commerce Department worker have faced similar obstacles.
Although BlackRock did not publicly comment, the new policy underlines how data sovereignty rules introduced by Beijing in 2021 are forcing foreign asset managers to reevaluate compliance strategies and digital infrastructure. Firms now often operate onshore data centres at considerable cost to ensure sensitive client information remains within Chinese borders.

A Broader Industry Shift

“While BlackRock’s move may appear abrupt, it’s entirely aligned with a trend we’re seeing across global financial institutions,” said Rajiv Biswas, Asia-Pacific Chief Economist at S&P Global Market Intelligence. “The reality is that operating in China today requires recalibrating every aspect of your risk posture—from IT and HR to governance.”

Even technology firms are pulling back. Amazon is reportedly shutting down its AI research lab in Shanghai, launched in 2018, which had contributed to more than 100 academic papers and helped generate $1 billion in global sales via its neural network work. Sources say the exit is part of a broader de-risking strategy in light of supply chain tensions and surveillance concerns.

Why It Matters

China is central to BlackRock’s long-term growth strategy. The firm maintains a wholly owned mutual fund arm in China and holds a wealth management joint venture with China Construction Bank Corp. However, the new restrictions suggest that even the most entrenched global players are no longer immune to geopolitical headwinds.

“Multinationals are walking a tightrope in China,” said Emily Parker, a former policy adviser at the US Treasury and now a fellow at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. “They must simultaneously comply with Chinese regulatory demands while protecting corporate IP and respecting home-country compliance rules.”
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