BlackRock added more than $1 billion in digital assets to its treasury this week. The world’s largest asset manager purchased approximately $1.027 billion in Bitcoin and Ethereum between January 6 and 8. The acquisition occurred as the broader U.S. spot ETF market recorded its largest net outflows since November 2025.
On-chain data from analytics platform Lookonchain shows the firm acquired 9,619 Bitcoin (BTC) valued at $878 million. BlackRock also added 46,851 Ether (ETH) worth $149 million.
Coinbase Prime settled the transfers as the institutional custody partner for the iShares digital asset suite. The activity coincided with a 1.5% dip in Bitcoin prices, which traded near $91,257 on Wednesday.
The Flow Divergence
The accumulation occurred against a backdrop of heavy selling in the ETF sector. Data from SoSoValue indicates that U.S. spot Bitcoin ETFs collectively saw $486 million in net outflows on Wednesday. Fidelity’s FBTC led the redemptions with $248 million exiting the fund.
Notably, BlackRock’s own iShares Bitcoin Trust (IBIT) recorded $130 million in net outflows on the same day it was actively acquiring assets on-chain. Market analysts suggest this divergence indicates the firm may be rebalancing its portfolio or executing strategic entry orders distinct from daily retail redemption flows.
Institutional Consolidation
The purchases solidify BlackRock’s status as a dominant entity in the crypto supply chain. The firm now holds an estimated 780,410 BTC, positioning it as one of the largest single holders of the asset globally.
Jay Jacobs, BlackRock’s U.S. head of equity ETFs, told CNBC this week that the sector remains in its “very early days,” noting that many financial advisors are only just gaining platform access to these products.
Blockchain analytics firm Glassnode supported the bullish structural view in a recent report, stating that the early-January market action reflects a “reset” in profit-taking pressure that has cleared the way for renewed accumulation.
Chain Street’s Take
The divergence between ETF outflows and on-chain buying reveals the true function of the institutional wrapper: it is a liquidity siphon. While retail investors panic-sold $486 million in paper claims on Wednesday, BlackRock used the liquidity to absorb $1 billion in physical assets.
This is not a contradiction but a transfer of wealth. The asset manager is systematically consolidating the world’s scarcest collateral into the “Fortress of Finance” under the cover of temporary price weakness. When the retail window closes, the institutional vault door locks.



