Around 2,000 institutional investors reported Bitcoin holdings in their Q1 2026 filings, up from roughly 1,975 in the prior quarter. This suggests that two years after the launch of U.S. spot Bitcoin ETFs, they have become a popular option among professional investors seeking exposure to the largest cryptocurrency.
The introduction of spot ETFs in January 2024 removed many regulatory and operational barriers that had previously made pension funds, asset managers, endowments, and financial advisors hesitant to invest at scale. Instead of setting up their own custody infrastructure for digital assets, investors can now buy Bitcoin through the same brokerage accounts they have used for years.
Spot Bitcoin ETFs hold actual Bitcoin and issue shares that track its price closely, minus management fees. This structure allows institutions to fit Bitcoin into their existing frameworks for investing, compliance, and reporting. Holdings can be disclosed in quarterly 13F filings alongside equities, settled through traditional market structures, and supervised under established institutional policies.
Before spot ETFs: challenges with custody and private keys
Before spot ETFs existed, institutions that wanted to invest in Bitcoin had to hold their own private keys, which control access to digital assets. Losing those keys meant losing access to the cryptocurrency. Firms also had to deal with changing accounting standards, custody requirements, and compliance policies that were not designed for cryptocurrency ownership.
Alternative investment vehicles had their own problems. The Grayscale Bitcoin Trust often traded at large premiums or discounts to the actual value of its Bitcoin holdings. Futures-based ETFs offered only indirect exposure and came with costs from rolling futures contracts. Neither gave institutions a regulated way to access spot Bitcoin.
Spot ETFs solve the custody problem, but concentrate risk
Spot ETFs solved one of the industry’s biggest challenges: custody. Instead of safeguarding private keys themselves, investors rely on qualified custodians that keep Bitcoin in “cold” wallets, which are offline and less vulnerable to cyber threats.
However, this has led to a concentration of custodial services among a few firms. SatsIntel, a research company, reports that Coinbase Custody holds assets for nine of the twelve U.S. spot Bitcoin ETFs, accounting for about 84% of the Bitcoin owned by these funds.
Fidelity is an exception, using its own Fidelity Digital Assets as custodian for its FBTC fund. BlackRock has also diversified, adding Anchorage Digital, the first federally chartered crypto bank, as an additional custodian for its IBIT ETF. SatsIntel believes this reduces reliance on a single provider.
Survey shows institutional confidence growing, but cautious
The results align with regulatory filings. A January 2026 survey by Coinbase and EY-Parthenon of 351 institutional decision-makers found that two-thirds already own cryptocurrency through spot exchange-traded products. Notably, 81% prefer to get spot exposure via regulated investment vehicles.
The survey also revealed growing confidence, tempered by discipline. Almost three-quarters of respondents said they are prepared to allocate more to crypto within a year, while 49% felt their risk management, liquidity control, and position sizing had improved. However, the continued lack of clear regulation may be holding back further allocation increases. Clearer rules could lead to more institutional participation.
Trade activity and global ownership signal wider acceptance
Trading data confirms spot ETF acceptance. BlackRock’s IBIT makes up about 75% of the trading volume in the U.S. spot Bitcoin ETF market, giving institutions enough liquidity to execute large trades during regular market hours.
Evidence of institutional ownership extends beyond the U.S. By May 2025, Bitcoin ETFs had over $109 billion in assets. Notable investors include Mubadala, Abu Dhabi’s sovereign wealth fund, which owns $408.5 million in Bitcoin ETFs; Hong Kong’s Avenir with about $700 million; and Brown University’s endowment with roughly $5 million. While small compared to major asset managers, Brown’s investment is notable because it shows conservative institutional investors are starting to feel comfortable with Bitcoin as a market option.
Future regulatory filings will reveal whether more institutions surpass the current 2,000-plus investors. Fund issuers will also watch custody changes closely, aiming to balance operational efficiency with risks from over-reliance on one custodian. These two trends together will paint a clearer picture of how institutional adoption of Bitcoin is evolving through the spot ETF market.
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