🔥 Gate Square Event: #PostToWinNIGHT 🔥
Post anything related to NIGHT to join!
Market outlook, project thoughts, research takeaways, user experience — all count.
📅 Event Duration: Dec 10 08:00 - Dec 21 16:00 UTC
📌 How to Participate
1️⃣ Post on Gate Square (text, analysis, opinions, or image posts are all valid)
2️⃣ Add the hashtag #PostToWinNIGHT or #发帖赢代币NIGHT
🏆 Rewards (Total: 1,000 NIGHT)
🥇 Top 1: 200 NIGHT
🥈 Top 4: 100 NIGHT each
🥉 Top 10: 40 NIGHT each
📄 Notes
Content must be original (no plagiarism or repetitive spam)
Winners must complete Gate Square identity verification
Gat
Larry Fink was born in the suburbs of Los Angeles,
His father sold shoes.
An ordinary student, he studied Political Science at UCLA—nothing special.
He understood one thing early on:
Education won't save you; skills will.
So he switched to an MBA, and joined First Boston.
There, he did something that later changed the history of finance:
Participated in creating MBS (Mortgage-Backed Securities).
Once at the height of success.
Helped the company earn $1 billion,
Became the youngest managing director in history.
Then, 1986.
Interest rates fluctuated slightly.
His trading desk lost $100 million in one quarter.
Not a slow decline,
But an outright crash.
From a Wall Street god,
He became someone no one dared to use.
That humiliation made him remember one thing:
Risk isn't what you didn't think of,
It's what you didn't see.
He left.
In an office on Blackstone that resembled a storage room,
He founded BlackRock.
Soon, he completely turned against Schwarzman,
Divorced the company and took it apart.
Blackstone sold its shares, taking in $240 million.
Had he kept them, they'd be worth over $100 billion today.
Fink didn't care.
He was doing something bigger:
Making risk quantifiable, visible, and manageable in advance.
He built Aladdin.
Not a fund,
But a machine that understands global financial risks.
In the 2008 financial crisis,
The Federal Reserve called him:
“Larry, how much is this junk worth?”
He said:
“I can tell you, but it will cost.”
After that,
He bought the distressed assets of Merrill Lynch,
Swallowed iShares,
Unintentionally monopolizing the ETF market.
Today, Aladdin monitors $21 trillion in risk.
Exceeding U.S. GDP.
BlackRock manages $10 trillion in assets,
Holding voting rights in nearly all S&P 500 companies.
Disobedient CEO?
ESG will directly freeze you out.
He doesn't own the world.
The world just handed him the steering wheel.
And all of this,
Comes from someone who was once humiliated by risk,
Decided—
Never to be humiliated by risk a second time.
He hasn't conquered the world.
He just makes everyone believe:
Let him handle it, and it will be safer.