News

Goldman Sachs Increases Bitcoin ETF Holdings to $710M

Key Points:

  • Goldman Sachs has significantly increased its Bitcoin ETF investments, signaling growing institutional interest in cryptocurrencies.
  • This move comes amid record inflows into spot Bitcoin ETFs, driven by expectations of a pro-crypto regulatory environment.
Goldman Sachs has significantly boosted its Bitcoin ETF holdings, highlighting the rising interest in digital assets among traditional financial institutions.

Goldman Sachs’ Bitcoin ETF Holdings Surge to $710 Million

According to the 13F filing submitted to the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) for the quarter ending September 30, 2024, Goldman Sachs, a Wall Street giant, holds $710 million in crypto assets through various Bitcoin ETFs.

A 13F filing is a quarterly report required by the SEC for institutional investment managers with over $100 million in assets under management.

Specifically, the report to the SEC shows that Goldman Sachs has increased its positions in major Bitcoin ETFs, including:

  • The bank’s largest holding is in BlackRock’s iShares Bitcoin Trust (IBIT), with 12.7 million shares (valued at $461 million at the time the filing was prepared). This represents an 83% increase from the previous report in August when the bank announced holdings of 6.9 million shares, equivalent to $281 million.
  • Over 1.7 million shares in Fidelity’s Wise Origin Bitcoin ETF (FBTC), worth $95.5 million, marking a 13% rise.
  • Increased holdings in Grayscale Bitcoin Trust (GBTC) by 116%, bringing the total number of shares to over 1.4 million, equivalent to $71.8 million.
  • Increased holdings in Bitwise Bitcoin ETF (BITB) by 156%, reaching a total of 650,961 shares worth $22.5 million.
  • Smaller investments in Bitcoin ETFs from Invesco Galaxy, WisdomTree, and ARK 21Shares were also reported.

With this increase, Goldman Sachs has become the second-largest holder of IBIT, trailing only the hedge fund Millennium Management, which leads with $844 million in holdings.

Read more: Bitcoin Spot ETF Outflows Hit $401M Despite BlackRock Inflows

Goldman Sachs’ Bitcoin ETF Investments Signal Growing Institutional Adoption

For investors and market observers, Goldman Sachs expanding its Bitcoin ETF holdings is a strong signal that institutional interest in digital assets is growing.

The surge in Goldman Sachs’ Bitcoin ETF investments comes amid record inflows into spot Bitcoin ETFs. Last week, BlackRock’s IBIT surpassed its long-held iShares Gold ETF (IAU) in net assets, a notable achievement considering IBIT was only launched in January of this year.

The market rally is attributed to expectations of a crypto-friendly regulatory environment under the Trump administration, with promises to support cryptocurrency mining and establish Bitcoin reserves.

Harry

Recent Posts

Elon Musk Lawsuit Over Dogecoin Manipulation Comes to an End

Investors withdrew their appeal and motions in Elon Musk lawsuit over Dogecoin manipulation and fraud.

1 hour ago

Kraken Layer 2 Ink Launched Fault Proof and First Stage

Kraken Layer 2 Ink introduced self-withdrawal to Ethereum, transaction review capabilities, and a security committee…

3 hours ago

Ethereum Rolls Out Mekong Testnet, SOL Rallies as Solana ETF Hype Grows with Trump’s Election, Rexas Finance to Soar 26x in Coming Weeks

Rexas Finance is expected to grow very quickly, with a 26x increase expected in the…

4 hours ago

From Presale to Potential: Why Qubetics ($TICS) Could Revolutionize the Crypto Space in 2024 Alongside Solana and Ethereum

The crypto market is always buzzing with fresh opportunities, and in November 2024, there’s one…

6 hours ago

Stability Showdown: Mog Coin & POPCAT Price Forecasts vs. BlockDAG’s 200K+ Strong X1 Miner User Base

Discover the latest on POPCAT and Mog Coin, alongside insights into BlockDAG's market impact with…

8 hours ago

Prosper enters into long-term agreement with BITMAIN to provide Bitcoin miner hosting services

George Town, Cayman Islands, 15th November 2024, Chainwire

8 hours ago

This website uses cookies.