Top universities Harvard and Brown are the latest institutions to buy exposure to Bitcoin, according to regulatory filings. The Harvard Management Company, a wholly owned subsidiary of the university, has a $116 million position in BlackRock’s iShares Bitcoin Trust, a 13F form filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission shows. Not one to be left out, Brown University—which first bought exposure to Bitcoin in May—upped its position in BlackRock’s ETF and now holds $13 million worth of shares, a similar filing shows.
Neither Brown nor Harvard immediately responded to Decrypt‘s request for comment. The filings are the latest examples of traditional institutions seeking exposure to the biggest cryptocurrency by market cap. Crypto ETFs like BlackRock’s Bitcoin Trust—which trades as IBIT—allow investors to buy exposure to the leading cryptocurrency without having to own and store the digital coin directly.
BlackRock’s IBIT is the most successful crypto ETF: The fund has received more cash than any other crypto ETF and currently has $86.3 billion in assets under management. Other major institutions have bought exposure to Bitcoin, once an arcane and obscure asset, since the January 2024 approval of the ETFs.
A flood of capital has entered the crypto space since the funds started trading, with investors previously too intimidated by things like storing digital coins in crypto wallets now able to easily buy a position. Pension funds and U.S. states have all bought exposure to Bitcoin via the ETFs over the past year, along with more traditional investments like tech stocks and other U.S. equities.
- Digital Assets Dip: Bitcoin Plunges 7% to $42,000 in Flash Crash as Bull Run Falters
- Intel Spikes 23% on Deal with Nvidia to Develop AI Hardware
- Peter Thiel, Tech Billionaires to Form Bank for Crypto, AI Startups
- Bitcoin Logs Rare 8-Day Winning Streak—But History Signals Caution
- ProShares Launches First Stablecoin-Ready Money Market ETF, The GENIUS ACT ETF
- BlackRock Looking to Tokenize Shares of Its $150B Treasury Trust Fund, SEC Filing Shows































































































































