Harvard Management Company, which runs the university's roughly $57 billion endowment, fully exited its position in BlackRock's spot Ethereum ETF and cut its spot Bitcoin ETF stake by about 43% during the first quarter of 2026. The moves show up in the firm's latest Form 13F, filed with the SEC on May 14.
Here is the part that has crypto Twitter talking. Harvard sits on one of the deepest benches of economists, quants, and Nobel-grade talent anywhere, and its in-house money managers just zeroed out Ethereum after holding it for a single quarter. Do those people know something the rest of the market does not?
What did Harvard actually sell?
The endowment held zero shares of BlackRock's iShares Ethereum Trust (ETHA) as of March 31, 2026. That position was worth about $86.8 million when Harvard first built it in late 2025. One quarter in, it is gone.
On the Bitcoin side, Harvard still owns BlackRock's iShares Bitcoin Trust (IBIT), but a lot less of it. The endowment reported 3,044,612 IBIT shares worth roughly $117 million at quarter-end, down about 43% from the prior period.
These were ETF share sales reported through standard 13F disclosures, not direct on-chain transactions. A 13F is a snapshot of holdings on the last day of the quarter, so it does not show when or at what price Harvard sold. The filing also does not explain why, and Harvard Management Company has not commented, which is normal for these disclosures.
How big was the pullback?
The Q1 cut was not a one-off. It was a sharp retreat from a position that had grown to roughly $443 million by the third quarter of 2025:
Mid-2025: Harvard first discloses an IBIT stake, around 1.9 million shares.
Q3 2025: position scaled up to about $443 million.
Q4 2025: Bitcoin ETF position trimmed roughly 21%. Ethereum ETF stake opened at about $86.8 million.
Q1 2026: Bitcoin ETF cut another 43% to 3,044,612 shares. Ethereum ETF fully exited.
IBIT is no longer Harvard's largest disclosed U.S. equity holding. It now sits behind names like TSMC, Alphabet, Microsoft, and even the SPDR Gold Trust.
Why the BlackRock angle matters
Both funds Harvard sold are @BlackRock products. ETHA and IBIT are the flagship spot crypto ETFs from the world's largest asset manager, and IBIT is still the biggest spot Bitcoin ETF by assets. That is what gives this story its weight. This is not a small fund dumping an obscure token. It is the most prestigious endowment in the country that is stepping back from the most prominent regulated crypto vehicles on the market.
Is everyone heading for the exit?
No, and that is the part worth holding onto. The same batch of 13F filings shows Abu Dhabi's Mubadala moving the other way. The sovereign wealth fund lifted its IBIT stake by about 16% to 14,721,917 shares, worth roughly $566 million, extending a buying streak that has run for several straight quarters.
So the institutional read on crypto ETFs is split, not unanimous. University endowments and some trading firms are taking profits or rotating out. Sovereign funds and several large banks are still adding. Harvard's exit is a sentiment signal, but it is not the only signal.
The market backdrop
The timing did not help. Over the past week the total crypto market cap slipped to around $2.56 trillion. $BTC trades near $77,000 after a weekly drop of more than 5%, and $ETH fell below $2,200, down over 8%. Spot Ether ETFs saw more than $255 million in net weekly outflows over the same stretch. Spot Bitcoin ETFs took an even harder hit, losing about $1 billion in net outflows for the week ending May 15 after pulling in roughly $623 million the week before.
The next data point is the Q2 2026 13F filing, due by August 14. That will show whether @Harvard keeps trimming Bitcoin, holds steady, rebuilds Ethereum, and whether Mubadala's accumulation streak runs on.
Sources:
U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission Harvard Management Company's Q1 2026 Form 13F (CIK 0001082621), the primary filing behind the share counts and dollar values.
Yahoo Finance Reporting on Harvard's Bitcoin ETF cut, the Ethereum exit, the position's path from the $443 million peak, and Mubadala's contrasting increase.
SoSoValue Spot Bitcoin ETF weekly net flow data, showing the roughly $1 billion outflow for the week ending May 15, 2026.
Crowdfund Insider Detail on the IBIT share-count change and Mubadala's multi-quarter accumulation.
Wu Blockchain Widely shared post with the filing screenshot that surfaced the story.
