KEY POINTS
  • "Unquestionably, as central banks keep rates low, or negative in Europe, the savers are getting slammed," BlackRock's Larry Fink told CNBC on Wednesday.
  • Fink said he believes people are increasingly beginning to put money to work in the stock market instead of keeping it in lower-risk investments or savings accounts.
  • People "may have to work longer because they're not earning the same returns on their savings," Fink added.

The chairman and CEO of the world's largest asset manager told CNBC on Wednesday that he worries about a "silent crisis of retirement," citing global monetary policies that create disincentives for savers.

"Unquestionably, as central banks keep rates low, or negative in Europe, the savers are getting slammed," BlackRock co-founder Larry Fink said on "Squawk Box."