Harvard University increased its holdings of BlackRock’s iShares Bitcoin Trust (IBIT) by 257% compared to its June position, with a reported 6,813,612 shares valued at $442.9 million as of September 30. The allocation rose from 1,906,000 shares worth about $116 million earlier this year.
“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.”
The university’s IBIT allocation, which now ranks as Harvard’s top holding, comes amid historical volatility and a period of record-breaking outflows from Bitcoin ETFs.
Yet, the November 14 flows tell a different story. Momentum in ETF outflows abruptly slowed to nearly a halt, suggesting institutional risk tolerance or strategic rebalancing.
“What does Harvard see coming? Along with the sovereign wealth activity… these are the types of important long-term flows happening with BTC despite short-term price moves.”
Sovereign wealth funds and billionaire-led hedge funds, such as Abu Dhabi’s entity ($500M in IBIT), are likewise amplifying their allocations. The IBIT ETF has become the second-largest Bitcoin holder on the planet, trailing only behind Satoshi Nakamoto’s address.
Why are these behemoths allocating capital while retail shakes out and ETF outflows grab headlines? Harvard’s investment committee, like its peers, is likely reading several converging signals.
Long-term Bitcoin supply constraint: With ETFs holding over 7% of all Bitcoin, institutional buyers exert real influence over supply-demand dynamics.
Harvard’s doubled gold position alongside Bitcoin also suggests a broader inflation hedge or currency risk strategy, echoed by fund managers worldwide allocating to hard assets.
Regulatory and market infrastructure are also reaching maturity. BlackRock’s ETF and similar vehicles mark a normalization of crypto access for U.S.-based institutions, lowering operational risk and compliance hurdles.
In the asset management playbook, Harvard’s actions show thesis conviction rather than short-term market timing. When flows turn negative, only those with the longest time-horizons (and the clearest mandates) are buying in size. As Bitwise CEO Hunter Horsley remarked:
“Your friend: thinking about selling their Bitcoin in the middle of one of the most bullish moments in the history of the space. Harvard’s Endowment: doubling down.”
Harvard University’s endowment remains at the center of the digital asset debate, even as retail and momentum traders react to the latest price swings. The real question isn’t just what Harvard sees coming; it’s whether the rest of the world is watching closely enough.