Harvard Supercharges Bitcoin Bet With 257% Surge in ETF Holdings

By José Oramas November 17, 2025 In Bitcoin, Blackrock, ETF
Bitcoin ETF, Exchange traded fund and cryptocurrencies isometric concept. Bitcoin gold coin on white background.
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  • Harvard University’s endowment tripled its exposure to Bitcoin, disclosing a $443 million stake (6.8 million shares) in BlackRock’s iShares Bitcoin Trust (IBIT).
  • The large investment is considered a significant validation for the crypto ETF, though the holding represents less than 1% of Harvard’s total $55+ billion endowment.
  • The disclosure was made as the broader crypto market faced a sharp downturn, with US spot Bitcoin ETFs seeing over $860 million in net outflows and the Bitcoin Fear and Greed Index signaling “extreme fear.”

Harvard University’s endowment has sharply increased its exposure to Bitcoin via BlackRock’s iShares Bitcoin Trust (IBIT).

The university disclosed a position worth US$443 million (AU$664.5 million) in its latest 13F filing with the US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC). That stake corresponds to about 6.8 million IBIT shares and marks roughly a tripling of its previously reported holdings.

The IBIT position now accounts for just over 20% of Harvard’s reported US-listed equity portfolio, but still represents less than 1% of the university’s total endowment, which exceeds US$55 billion (AU$82.5 billion), according to Bloomberg ETF analyst Eric Balchunas. 

It’s super rare/difficult to get an endowment to bite on an ETF- esp a Harvard or Yale, it’s as good a validation as an ETF can get. That said, half a billion is a mere 1% of total endowment. Big enough to rank 16th among IBIT holders.

Eric Balchunas, Bloomberg ETF analyst.

Endowments of Harvard’s size typically favor private equity, venture capital, and direct stakes in operating companies rather than listed funds, hence why Balchunas described it as “super rare” for a top-tier endowment to allocate capital to an ETF at all.

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But it makes more sense than just buying the asset and putting it in a managed portfolio; the ETF gives Harvard exposure to BTC through a regulated, exchange-traded vehicle rather than managing coins directly.

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It’s Not Looking Good for Spot Bitcoin ETFs

The disclosure comes at a weak moment for the broader market. Spot Bitcoin ETFs have seen more than US$860 million (AU$1.29 billion) in net outflows as investors cut risk, according to SoSo Value data.

Sentiment has deteriorated sharply. The Fear and Greed Index, which swung from “greed” to “extreme greed” during the October rally, has now fallen to around 18, a level labeled “extreme fear” and the lowest reading since late February. 

Bitcoin is currently trading near US$93,000 (AU$139,500), down about 2% over the past 24 hours and more than 25% below its recent peak around US$126,000 (AU$189,000), erasing the gains it had built earlier in the year.

Read more: XRP’s XPRC ETF Smashes 2025 Records With Biggest Day-One Debut on Wall Street

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José Oramas
Author

José Oramas

José is a journalist and translator with a keen interest in blockchain and cryptocurrencies.

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