Harvard University has substantially expanded its bitcoin exposure through BlackRock’s spot bitcoin exchange-traded fund. The Ivy League institution now holds 6.8 million shares of the iShares Bitcoin Trust ETF (IBIT), according to a regulatory filing submitted Friday.
The investment represents a 257% increase from Harvard’s previous position of 1.9 million shares disclosed in August. Harvard Management Company, which oversees the university’s $57 billion endowment, valued the holdings at $442.8 million as of September 30, 2025.
The IBIT position now stands as Harvard’s largest declared U.S. investment. It surpasses the university’s holdings in major technology companies including Microsoft and Amazon. The bitcoin ETF investment also exceeds Harvard’s position in SPDR Gold Shares.
The bitcoin ETF holdings represent approximately 0.6% of Harvard’s total endowment value. Harvard first disclosed its IBIT position in August when it held $116.6 million worth of shares. The university has not publicly commented on its investment strategy or rationale.
Emory University in Atlanta also increased its bitcoin ETF exposure during the same period. The institution now holds over one million shares of Grayscale’s Bitcoin Mini Trust ETF (BTC), representing a 91% increase from June.
Emory’s total bitcoin ETF holdings, which include 4,450 shares of IBIT, are valued at $42.9 million. Emory was the first U.S. university to publicly disclose spot bitcoin ETF investments. Associate professor Matthew Lyle previously explained the university chose established fund managers to reduce custody risks.
Al Warda Investments, an Abu Dhabi sovereign wealth fund, reported holding 7.96 million IBIT shares worth $517.6 million. This represents a 230% increase from its June position of 2.4 million shares. The fund is managed by the Abu Dhabi Investment Council within the Mubadala group.
BlackRock’s IBIT remains the leading spot bitcoin ETF by assets under management. The fund has experienced recent volatility along with bitcoin’s price movements. SoSoValue data shows bitcoin ETFs recorded net outflows of $1.11 billion in the trading week ending Friday.
Bitcoin (BTC) Price
Bitcoin’s price fell below $95,000 after dropping to $93,029 in a 24-hour period. The decline temporarily erased year-to-date gains for the cryptocurrency. IBIT’s share price has decreased since September 30, reducing Harvard’s position value to approximately $364.4 million.
Harvard also expanded other investment positions during the third quarter. The university nearly doubled its gold exposure through SPDR Gold Shares, increasing holdings to 661,391 shares worth $235.1 million. The institution added new positions in fintech company Klarna worth $16.8 million and Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company valued at $59.1 million.
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