BlackRock Embraces Bitcoin: 1-2% Allocation in Model Portfolios

Generado por agente de IACoin World
viernes, 28 de febrero de 2025, 2:27 pm ET1 min de lectura
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BlackRock, the world's largest asset manager, has incorporated Bitcoin (BTC) into its model portfolio offerings through the iShares Bitcoin Trust ETF (IBIT). The move, announced on Feb. 28, allocates 1% to 2% of its target allocation portfolios to the cryptocurrency, according to a Bloomberg News report.

The asset manager's decision comes as the IBIT has registered over $36 billion in net flows since its launch, making it the most successful ETF launch since 2014. BlackRock's Investment Institute has defined a 1% to 2% allocation to Bitcoin as a "reasonable range," acknowledging the cryptocurrency's inherent volatility. Exceeding a 2% allocation could disproportionately increase the cryptocurrency's impact on overall portfolio risk.

Michael Gates, lead portfolio manager for BlackRock's Target Allocation ETF model portfolio suite, stated, "We believe Bitcoin has long-term investment merit and can potentially provide unique and additive sources of diversification to portfolios." Eve Cout, head of portfolio design and solutions for US Wealth at BlackRockSHYM--, noted that investors want to allocate more to alternatives but need guidance on the position's size, scale, and rebalance.

The decision comes amid recent market turmoil, with IBIT registering $930 million in outflows over the past four days. On Feb. 26, BlackRock's Bitcoin ETF experienced its largest daily outflow, with $418 million in capital leaving the fund. Despite these recent challenges, IBIT currently holds over $48 billion in assets and displays nearly $40 billion in net flows.

Notably, BlackRock doubled its Bitcoin exposure in its Global Allocation Fund last year, reporting 430,770 shares of IBIT in its third-quarter 13F Form, an increase of 117% from the second quarter. BlackRock's addition of Bitcoin to its model portfolio is a positive development that could boost market sentiment amid falling prices.

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