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BlackRock Inc.’s plan to buy major private-equity firm Global Infrastructure Partners for $12.5 billion will help the asset-management giant’s stock reach the $1,000 mark, TD Cowen analyst Bill Katz said in a fresh upgrade of the stock.

Katz said Tuesday he sees a “pathway toward $1,000” for BlackRock’s
BLK,
-1.38%
stock price as he upgraded the fund manager to outperform from market perform and raised its 12-month price target to $938 a share from $819 a share.

The upgrade comes just a few days after BlackRock announced plans to pay $3 billion in cash and about 12 million shares for Global Infrastructure Partners.

“GIP adds flow/margin/fee rate building blocks, with greater confidence [BlackRock] can increasingly tap into retail alternatives democratization,” Katz said, referring to efforts by private-equity firms to grow by making their investments more accessible to individuals, rather than just institutions.

Also read: Why wealthy investors put $125 billion into this new type of private-equity fund last year

Like TPG Inc.’s
TPG,
-0.58%
deal to buy private-equity firm Angelo Gordon in 2023, the GIP acquisition “alters the narrative on [BlackRock] … shifting investor focus onto multi-vectored growth post combination while providing short term/long term valuation support,” Katz said.

Investors may also be more comfortable about BlackRock’s legacy asset-management platform, Katz said, together with the firm’s stronger-than-expected fourth-quarter results on Friday,

Katz said private-equity giant Blackstone Inc.
BX,
-2.00%
may be a better comparable stock to BlackRock Rock than fellow asset manager T. Rowe Price Group Inc.
TROW,
-0.38%
once the GIP deal closes as expected in the third quarter.

BlackRock’s stock is up about 41% in the past year, while T. Rowe’s stock has fallen 10.4% over the same period. BlackRock’s stock has risen 3.5% in the past year.

Global Infrastructure Partners manages about $100 billion and is led by Bayo Ogunlesi, who is also lead director of Goldman Sachs Group Inc.
GS,
-0.35%.

Also read: Private equity: Everything you always wanted to know about this $12 trillion asset class but were afraid to ask

Also read: ‘They have shattered barriers’: On Wall Street, the new biggest private equity firms are run by Black and Latino billionaires, and people of color

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