Professional Bitcoin ETF holdings fell 17% in Q1 as hedge funds and brokerages reduced exposure, while major banks expanded positions.
Bitcoin ETF News
US banks quietly doubled their Bitcoin (BTC) ETF exposure in Q1 2026, even as the broader professional investor base reduced its holdings by 17%, according to a CoinShares analysis of quarterly 13F regulatory filings published June 4. The divergence between trading-oriented institutions and long-term allocators was the defining feature of the quarter. It revealed that the composition of professional BTC ownership shifted materially during a period of sustained price decline.
Hedge Funds and Brokerages Drive the Reduction
The bank gains ran against the direction of the overall professional cohort. Total 13F filer holdings fell from 313,000 BTC to 261,000 BTC across Q1 2026. The combined dollar value of those positions dropped 35% to $17.8 billion. The share of total US Bitcoin ETF assets held by 13F filers declined from 24.7% to 20.8%. Hedge funds and brokerages together accounted for roughly 96% of that reduction. #BitcoinETF #CoinShares
Hedge funds cut their BTC exposure by 31,400 BTC, a 39% contraction. Brokerages reduced holdings by 18,800 BTC, marking a 53% decline. Morgan Stanley fully exited an 8,300 BTC position during the quarter. CoinShares linked that exit to the April 2026 launch of MSBT, the firm's proprietary Bitcoin ETF, which had not yet appeared in 13F filings at the time the report was compiled. Jane Street reduced its exposure by 10,800 BTC, consistent with activity expected from a major ETF market maker during a quarter marked by net outflows. #13F
Investment advisors held 150,300 BTC by the end of Q1 2026, making them the largest professional cohort by holdings. They trimmed positions by just 5.9% despite the sustained market decline, and added 159 new filers even as 321 fully exited. CoinShares called their relative stability the most significant data point of the filing season, interpreting it as evidence that advisor-held positions represent structural, long-term allocations rather than trade-driven entries. At 58% of all 13F Bitcoin ETF holdings, the advisor cohort's behavior shaped the aggregate picture considerably. #InstitutionalBitcoin
Price Decline and Regulatory Progress Run in Parallel
BTC's price fell 22% during Q1 2026, briefly dropping below $60,000 during a single-day decline of 14% in early February. That low marked a roughly 50% drawdown from Bitcoin's October 2025 all-time high above $126,000. On-chain data recorded the largest realized losses since July 2023. The Fear and Greed Index fell to its lowest recorded levels during the same period. #BitcoinPrice
Government-linked funds added exposure through the quarter. The Emirate of Abu Dhabi's Mubadala Fund contributed 1,100 BTC, bringing the total sovereign cohort to 8,300 BTC. Among university endowments, Harvard reduced its position by 1,300 BTC but retained 1,700 BTC. Dartmouth held 114 BTC and Brown held 120 BTC. Private equity grew 24% quarter-over-quarter and 124% year-over-year.
The SEC recently designated digital assets as a strategic priority through 2030, committing in a draft plan released June 4 to establishing a coherent regulatory framework for digital assets and distributed ledger technologies. The Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) worked alongside the SEC during Q1 2026 on a clearer division of oversight responsibilities. The Department of Labor also proposed new rules governing how digital assets may be treated in retirement accounts.
BlackRock published research during the quarter arguing that elevated stock-bond correlations since 2020 had weakened the traditional 60/40 portfolio model, and that BTC and gold can improve outcomes when used as diversifiers. The CLARITY Act, a market structure bill further defining the roles of the SEC and CFTC over digital assets, cleared the Senate Banking Committee markup, with prediction markets placing odds of its 2026 passage above 50% at the time of the CoinShares report's publication.
