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Abu Dhabi sovereign wealth fund Mubadala Investment Company holds more than $565 million worth of BlackRock’s spot Bitcoin ETF, according to a regulatory filing, making it one of the largest known institutional holders of the fund.
The position was disclosed through an SEC EDGAR filing, which requires large institutional investors to report their U.S. equity holdings on a quarterly basis. The filing identifies Mubadala’s stake in BlackRock’s iShares Bitcoin Trust (IBIT), the largest spot Bitcoin ETF by assets under management.
A sovereign wealth fund holding a position of this size in a spot Bitcoin ETF is notable because it reflects a deliberate allocation decision by a state-backed entity. Mubadala manages hundreds of billions of dollars across global asset classes, and a stake exceeding half a billion dollars in a single Bitcoin vehicle suggests meaningful institutional conviction rather than a token allocation.
The disclosure also adds to a growing pattern of large institutional investors using regulated ETF wrappers to gain Bitcoin exposure. Earlier this year, Mubadala’s Bitcoin ETF holdings first drew attention when the scale of the position became clear relative to other institutional filers.
For context, other institutional investors have also disclosed meaningful positions in spot Bitcoin ETFs through SEC filings. Dartmouth College reported a $3.37 million position in a Solana staking ETF during Q1, illustrating how a range of institutional types, from university endowments to sovereign funds, are entering digital asset markets through regulated products.
SEC 13F filings are one of the few windows into how large institutions allocate capital to Bitcoin. Because spot Bitcoin ETFs only launched in the U.S. in January 2024, each quarterly disclosure cycle reveals whether early institutional interest is deepening or fading.
A position of this magnitude from a sovereign-linked investor carries weight beyond the dollar figure. It signals that compliance, risk, and investment committees at a major state fund evaluated Bitcoin ETF exposure and approved it at scale. That kind of institutional validation is closely tracked by allocators who benchmark against peers.
However, filings reflect holdings at a single point in time. Without subsequent disclosures, it is not possible to confirm whether Mubadala has increased, reduced, or maintained the position since the reporting date. The SEC’s EDGAR system will show any updates when the next quarterly filing is published.
The next round of 13F filings will clarify whether Mubadala adjusted its IBIT position and whether other large sovereign or institutional investors have entered or exited spot Bitcoin ETFs. These disclosures typically arrive within 45 days of each quarter’s end.
Broader ETF flow data will also matter. BlackRock’s IBIT has consistently led spot Bitcoin ETF inflows since launch, and whether that trend holds alongside large holder disclosures will shape the institutional adoption narrative through the rest of 2025. Meanwhile, events across the broader crypto market, including recent security incidents like the THORChain exploit, continue to test institutional risk appetite for digital assets.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial or investment advice. Cryptocurrency and digital asset markets carry significant risk. Always do your own research before making decisions.
The article Mubadala Holds $565M+ of BlackRock Bitcoin ETF first featured on theccpress.com.