Who is Selling, Who is Holding, Who is Still Buying? The Divergence of U.S. Old Money's Crypto ETF Holdings

marsbitPublished on 2026-05-22Last updated on 2026-05-22

Abstract

"American Institutional Crypto ETF Holdings Show Divergence in Q1 2026. Amidst a quarter of market pullback, major institutional 13F filings reveal distinct strategies towards crypto ETFs. Key sell-offs/trimming: Harvard Management cut its iShares Bitcoin Trust (IBIT) holdings by ~43% and fully exited its iShares Ethereum Trust (ETHA) position, reallocating some funds toward AI/tech stocks. Goldman Sachs reduced its overall crypto ETF exposure, notably clearing its XRP and Solana ETF holdings while adding to selected crypto-related equities like Circle and Galaxy Digital. Hedge funds Millennium Management and Capula Management also significantly reduced or fully exited major Bitcoin and Ethereum ETF positions. Holders maintaining positions: Brown University kept its IBIT stake unchanged, demonstrating a long-term allocation approach. Dartmouth College maintained its core Bitcoin ETF holding while shifting some Ethereum exposure to a staking ETF and initiating a position in a Bitwise Solana Staking ETF. Strategic buyers increasing exposure: Sovereign wealth fund Mubadala increased its IBIT holdings by ~16%. JPMorgan significantly boosted its IBIT stake by 174%, while Wells Fargo raised its Ethereum ETF allocations. Market maker Jane Street rebalanced, cutting Bitcoin ETF holdings but adding ~$82 million in Ethereum ETF exposure. The filings indicate institutions are actively sorting crypto assets by perceived risk and liquidity, with Bitcoin often treated as a 'core' holding, ...

Original Author: KarenZ, Foresight News

The most noteworthy aspect of Q1 is not how much the price fell, but how institutions navigated through this pullback.

If you only look at the market performance, crypto ETFs in Q1 2026 did not have it easy. Bitcoin and Ethereum faced pressure during the quarter, the book value of spot ETFs generally declined, and many positions, even if not sold, would look difficult by the quarter's end. However, the truly interesting part of a downturn is never the NAV curve itself, but what different types of institutions did on the same pullback chart.

By the latest round of 13F filings disclosed as of mid-May 2026, the market can already see a group of institutions' holdings as of the quarter-end, March 31, 2026. University endowments, large investment banks, sovereign wealth funds, market makers, and wealth management firms have provided several starkly different answers.

Those Reducing Holdings: Risk Contraction First

First, let's look at the reducers.

Harvard Management, which manages Harvard University's endowment and related financial assets, is one of the most typical examples in this round. According to its filed 13F report, its holdings in IBIT (iShares Bitcoin Trust ETF) decreased from 5,353,612 shares at the end of Q4 2025 to 3,044,612 shares at the end of Q1 2026, a reduction of approximately 43%, with the corresponding book value dropping from about $266 million to about $117 million. Meanwhile, its holdings in ETHA (iShares Ethereum Trust), which it still held last quarter, were completely exited this quarter. This indicates that Harvard is not merely reacting to price pullbacks but is actively compressing its public exposure to Bitcoin and Ethereum spot ETFs.

This change in holdings carries another layer of meaning. Harvard did not turn entirely defensive overall but instead reallocated part of its portfolio to assets related to the AI and computing power chain, increasing holdings in stocks like NVIDIA, Broadcom, and TSMC. Taken together, these moves look more like a structural rebalancing act of "reducing crypto, adding AI," rather than a comprehensive risk reduction.

Goldman Sachs's strategy is broadly similar, albeit with more complex tactics. Comparing the latest two 13F reports, Goldman Sachs still held approximately $690 million worth of IBIT and about $25.18 million worth of FBTC (Fidelity Wise Origin Bitcoin Fund) at the end of Q1 2026, with both showing reductions from the previous quarter. More noteworthy than the simple reduction is its position structure: Goldman holds spot, call options, and put options on IBIT simultaneously, indicating this is not merely a directional bet but carries clear trading and hedging characteristics.

Goldman's handling of Ethereum was even more aggressive. It not only completely exited its position in the Fidelity Ethereum Fund (holding a value of $394 million at the end of Q4 2025) but also significantly reduced its spot position in iShares Ethereum Trust (ETHA) by about 74%, leaving a remaining position of about $114 million. Additionally, it newly acquired a position worth approximately $66.885 million in the iShares Staked Ethereum Trust ETF.

Meanwhile, Goldman Sachs has liquidated all its XRP and Solana-related ETFs. By the end of Q4 2025, it held a combined value of about $152 million in XRP ETFs from Bitwise, Franklin Templeton, Grayscale, and 21shares, and also liquidated all Solana ETFs/Trusts from Grayscale, Bitwise, and Fidelity (valued at $109 million at the end of Q4 2025).

Regarding crypto-related stocks, Goldman Sachs increased its position in Circle by 249% to around $140 million, and its position in Galaxy Digital also rose by 205% (to $41.48 million). Holdings in Coinbase (+65%), Robinhood (+35%), and PayPal also increased. Meanwhile, it reduced holdings in Strategy and Riot Platforms. Overall, this resembles an internal rotation of "compressing ETF risk and shifting to selected individual stocks."

Among hedge funds, Millennium Management also gave a similar signal. Publicly compiled data shows its IBIT holdings decreased from 34.334 million shares to 19.287 million shares, a reduction of approximately 43.8%. Its ETHA holdings also declined synchronously (by about 34.3%), indicating a clear reduction in exposure to both Bitcoin and Ethereum spot ETFs.

London-based hedge fund manager Capula Management Ltd went even further. As of December 30, 2025, it held $470 million worth of IBIT, $160 million worth of FBTC, $207 million worth of ETHA, and $61.43 million worth of FETH. However, its latest 13F report shows these ETFs have been completely liquidated. Concurrently, Capula Management Ltd has also completely liquidated its Coinbase position (retaining a small options position).

Standing Pat Is Also an Attitude

The second category is those standing pat.

Brown University's IBIT holdings remain at 212,500 shares, with no increase or decrease. Calculated by disclosed market value, this position fell from about $10.551 million at the end of 2025 to about $8.164 million at the end of Q1 2026. Such university endowments do not directly convert a quarter's price volatility into trading instructions, instead emphasizing portfolio discipline and long-term allocation rhythm.

Dartmouth College's handling of crypto assets in Q1 2026 resembles a mild expansion rather than an aggressive rotation. Comparing its 13F with the previous quarter, the college retained its core Bitcoin ETF positions. The share count of IBIT remained largely unchanged, though the book value dropped from over $10 million to about $7.7 million due to the Q1 price pullback. For Ethereum exposure, it performed a product switch, replacing the previous Grayscale Ethereum Mini Trust with the staking-enabled Grayscale Ethereum Staking ETF, holding about 178,100 shares. It also newly established a position in the Bitwise Solana Staking ETF, approximately 304,803 shares, with a book value of about $3.3 million.

A Different Playbook: Buying the Dip

The third category consists of those increasing their holdings against the trend.

The Abu Dhabi sovereign wealth fund Mubadala is one of the most prominent names. Its IBIT holdings increased from 12,702,323 shares to 14,721,917 shares, a rise of about 15.9%. However, even though the share count increased, the quarter-end holding value still fell from about $631 million to about $566 million. This set of numbers is quite telling. The act of increasing holdings does not automatically lead to profits, especially when the market is still in a downtrend. Adding to positions first brings greater exposure, and only secondly might it bring higher future elasticity.

The moves by JPMorgan Chase can also be understood within this logic. The latest 13F data shows JPMorgan increased its IBIT holdings from about 3.028 million shares to about 8.30 million shares, a surge of 174%. It also increased exposure to some FBTC, BITB, and Ethereum ETFs. Judging by the share count change, it has clearly become more active; but this does not mean it has locked in excess returns during this volatility. For major banks, increasing ETF holdings is often about expanding the product shelf, meeting client allocation needs, and balancing liquidity and book risk, not just a one-way bullish bet.

The position changes at Wells Fargo are also worth examining separately. Comparing the two periods, the bank retained its core IBIT position while increasing allocations to products like BITB and the Grayscale Bitcoin Mini Trust. More notably, it significantly increased its Ethereum ETF exposure. Its ETHA holdings rose from about 672.6k shares to about 1.10 million shares, and its ETHW holdings also increased. In other words, Wells Fargo adopted a strategy of "retaining Bitcoin core positions and increasing Ethereum weight."

Market maker Jane Street showcases another typical style. Comparing the two 13F periods, it significantly reduced its Bitcoin spot ETF exposure in Q1, with IBIT holdings dropping from about 20.30 million shares to about 5.90 million shares, and FBTC also showing a clear decline. However, concurrently, it newly added about $82 million in Ethereum ETF exposure. On the crypto stock side, Jane Street increased holdings in Galaxy Digital (8746%), Circle (1162%), Coinbase (+14%), BitMine (+47%), and others. This combination looks more like a typical trading rebalancing: reducing Bitcoin ETFs, adding Ethereum ETFs, while seeking higher elasticity on the individual stock side.

Bitcoin, Ethereum, and Solana: Institutions Are Making Finer Risk Rankings

Another signal worth unpacking from this round of 13Fs is that institutional attitudes towards BTC ETFs, ETH ETFs, and even Solana ETFs are no longer uniform. The more pertinent question now is: which crypto asset are institutions prepared to keep as a core position, which one to place in an elastic position, and which one to simply remove for now.

Taking Harvard Management as an example, while it reduced IBIT, it completely exited ETHA. This resembles a risk ranking. The Bitcoin ETF still retains a relatively core position, while the Ethereum ETF was prioritized for reduction in the portfolio rebalancing.

Goldman Sachs's approach also indicates that large financial institutions are taking this ranking to an even more refined level. It still maintained a relatively large Bitcoin ETF exposure in Q1, but its contraction of Ethereum-related products was noticeably faster, while it essentially liquidated XRP and Solana-related ETFs. Taken together, Goldman is re-concentrating its portfolio onto the layer of assets it considers most liquid, easiest to hedge, and most easily incorporated into institutional risk models. Bitcoin here looks more like a "base position," Ethereum falls into the compressible category, and products like Solana and XRP are closer to peripheral experimental positions. Once market volatility amplifies, these are often the first to be cut.

On the other hand, Wells Fargo and Dartmouth College present completely different answers. Wells Fargo actively increased the weight of Ethereum ETFs, suggesting that within its internal framework, Ethereum is more like a secondary position worth increasing allocation during a pullback to capture potential upside. Dartmouth College's strategy is even more representative: it left its Bitcoin ETF core untouched but extended its new elastic exposure to Solana-related ETFs, especially those with staking attributes.

13F Gives the Market a Snapshot, But Also Leaves Blanks

This is also where the most restraint is needed when looking at institutional holdings.

13F filings allow the outside world to see, under a unified standard, how mainstream institutions allocate to crypto ETFs. But they also have very clear boundaries. First, there is a time lag. What investors see in May is only a snapshot of institutions' positions as of March 31, the quarter-end. If significant adjustments were made in Q2, the tables won't show it in advance. Second, 13F only shows holdings, not the actual purchase cost. A decline in an institution's holding value over a quarter does not necessarily mean an overall loss, as it might have bought earlier, or may have reduced and re-added positions during the quarter.

Furthermore, for institutions like Goldman Sachs, positions in spot ETFs are often overlaid with options, hedging, and market-making related positions. Looking at the table alone can easily mistake trading behavior for a long-term stance.

Yet, precisely because it is incomplete, the 13F is more like a window into institutional sentiment, not a conclusion table. Seeing Abu Dhabi's Mubadala increase holdings while its book value declined shows the patience of sovereign wealth. Seeing Brown University stand pat while enduring a pullback shows long-term allocation discipline. Seeing Harvard University reduce Bitcoin and exit Ethereum ETFs reveals the real sensitivity of university endowments to volatility. And seeing JPMorgan, Wells Fargo, and Jane Street continue to adjust exposure on certain products indicates that Wall Street still treats crypto ETFs as a category that needs to remain on the shelf and be constantly repriced.

Related Questions

QWhat does the article reveal about the different strategies of major institutional investors regarding crypto ETF holdings during the first quarter of 2026?

AThe article reveals a clear divergence in strategies among U.S. institutional investors during the Q1 2026 market pullback. Some, like Harvard Management and Goldman Sachs, actively reduced their exposure to crypto ETFs, particularly those tied to Ethereum and altcoins like XRP and Solana, often reallocating towards assets like AI and selected crypto equities. Others, such as Brown University, maintained their holdings, reflecting a long-term discipline. Conversely, institutions like the Abu Dhabi sovereign fund Mubadala and JPMorgan increased their holdings, viewing the dip as an opportunity to expand exposure, though not necessarily signaling immediate bullishness but rather actions related to client servicing and portfolio rebalancing.

QHow did Harvard Management adjust its crypto and AI-related investments in Q1 2026, according to the 13F filings?

AAccording to 13F filings, Harvard Management significantly reduced its exposure to crypto ETFs. It cut its holdings in the iShares Bitcoin Trust (IBIT) by approximately 43% and completely exited its position in the iShares Ethereum Trust (ETHA). Concurrently, it reallocated capital into AI and computing-related assets, increasing its holdings in companies like NVIDIA, Broadcom, and TSMC. This indicates a strategic portfolio rebalancing, shifting away from crypto assets towards the AI sector, rather than a broad-based risk reduction.

QWhat specific actions did Goldman Sachs take regarding its Ethereum and altcoin ETF holdings in the reported quarter?

AGoldman Sachs took aggressive actions on its Ethereum and altcoin ETF holdings. It completely exited its position in the Fidelity Ethereum Fund and significantly reduced its holding in the iShares Ethereum Trust (ETHA) by about 74%. It also introduced a new position in the iShares Staked Ethereum Trust ETF. Furthermore, Goldman Sachs completely liquidated all its holdings in XRP and Solana-related ETFs from various issuers like Bitwise, Franklin Templeton, Grayscale, and 21Shares, which were valued at hundreds of millions of dollars at the end of Q4 2025.

QWhich institutions were cited as examples of "buying the dip" or increasing their crypto ETF exposure in Q1 2026, and what does the article suggest about their motivation?

AInstitutions cited as increasing their crypto ETF exposure include the Abu Dhabi sovereign fund Mubadala, JPMorgan, and Wells Fargo. Mubadala increased its IBIT holdings by about 15.9%, while JPMorgan dramatically boosted its IBIT position by 174%. Wells Fargo increased its holdings in Ethereum ETFs. The article suggests that for these large institutions, such increases are not solely a directional bullish bet on price. Motivations are more complex, involving expanding product offerings for clients, meeting allocation demands, balancing liquidity, managing book risk, or strategically increasing exposure to assets perceived to have higher future elasticity during a market downturn.

QWhat are the key limitations of 13F filings as a tool for understanding institutional investment behavior, as highlighted in the article?

AThe article highlights several key limitations of 13F filings. First, they have a significant time lag, showing only a snapshot of holdings at the quarter's end (e.g., March 31st), which may not reflect subsequent trades within the new quarter. Second, 13Fs show only holdings, not the actual purchase cost or the profitability of positions. A decline in reported value doesn't necessarily mean an overall loss. Third, for firms like Goldman Sachs, the reported ETF holdings are often part of a complex strategy involving options, hedging, and market-making activities. Therefore, viewing the static data alone can lead to misinterpreting tactical trades as long-term investment convictions.

Related Reads

Trading

Spot
Futures

Hot Articles

Discussions

Welcome to the HTX Community. Here, you can stay informed about the latest platform developments and gain access to professional market insights. Users' opinions on the price of S (S) are presented below.

活动图片