Harvard University’s endowment fund completely liquidated its position in BlackRock’s spot Ethereum ETF (ETHA) during the first quarter of 2026, according to recent disclosure filings. The university, which manages a $56.9 billion endowment as of June 2025, exited the $86.8 million stake just months after establishing it in late 2025. While the Ivy League institution pulled back, Abu Dhabi’s Mubadala Investment Company moved in the opposite direction, increasing its holdings in the iShares Bitcoin Trust (IBIT) by 16% to reach a total value of over $565 million.
The exit from the iShares Ethereum Trust (ETHA) marks a swift conclusion to Harvard’s direct exposure to the second-largest cryptocurrency through this specific vehicle. Harvard Management Company initially purchased 3.87 million shares of the fund in the fourth quarter of 2025. At that time, its combined exposure to Bitcoin and Ether ETFs stood at approximately $352.6 million, representing 0.62% of its total assets under management. This total divestment suggests a significant pivot in how the university views the short-term role of Ethereum within its portfolio.
The university’s retreat was not limited to Ethereum. Harvard also slashed its stake in the iShares Bitcoin Trust (IBIT) by 43% during the first quarter of 2026. This follows a separate 21% reduction that occurred in the fourth quarter of 2025, when holdings dropped from 6.81 million shares to 5.35 million shares. Following the most recent Q1 2026 reduction, the university now holds 3,044,612 shares of IBIT with an estimated value of $117 million. This systematic scaling back comes even as some analysts suggest Ether enters rare accumulation phase amid broader market cooling.
Harvard endowment shifts focus toward traditional equity holdings
As of the end of the first quarter of 2026, the iShares Bitcoin Trust is no longer Harvard’s largest publicly disclosed equity holding. This is a notable departure from the end of 2025, when the Bitcoin ETF sat at the top of the university’s priority list, exceeding its stakes in Alphabet, Microsoft, and Amazon. At that peak in December, the IBIT position alone was valued at $265.8 million.
The latest filings indicate that several established names and safe-haven assets have moved ahead of Bitcoin in Harvard’s portfolio. IBIT has been surpassed by holdings in Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company (TSMC), Alphabet, Microsoft, and the SPDR Gold Trust. This reallocation mirrors a broader trend of institutional caution, as Bitcoin faces sharp correction risk that may be prompting large-scale managers to de-risk their positions in favor of traditional tech or metal assets.
The university’s investment committee has not publicly commented on the reasons for these specific trades. However, the data confirms a clear trend toward reducing crypto-linked volatility in favor of the university’s larger, multi-billion dollar diversified strategy. Despite the sharp 43% cut in IBIT shares, the $117 million remaining stake ensures Harvard maintains a presence in the digital asset space, albeit at a much lower concentration than previously seen.
Mubadala Investment Company increases exposure to Bitcoin
In contrast to the pullback in Cambridge, Abu Dhabi’s sovereign wealth fund, Mubadala Investment Company, demonstrated continued interest in the sector. During the first quarter of 2026, the fund increased its position in BlackRock’s iShares Bitcoin Trust (IBIT) by 16%. This move involved adding approximately 2 million shares to its existing portfolio, bringing its total to 14,721,917 shares by March 31, 2026.
The market value of Mubadala’s IBIT holdings was recorded at $565,616,051 at the end of the quarter. This steady accumulation highlights a diverging philosophy between academic endowments and sovereign wealth entities. While endowments often prioritize capital preservation and liquidity for annual budget distributions, sovereign funds frequently manage assets with decade-long horizons and sovereign-level risk tolerances. This trend aligns with moves by other major institutions, such as when Morgan Stanley expanded Bitcoin access for its wealth clients earlier in the year.
The difference in scale between the two institutions is stark. Mubadala’s half-billion-dollar commitment to a single Bitcoin product effectively dwarfs Harvard’s remaining $117 million stake. This divergence may reflect varying degrees of confidence in the long-term institutionalization of Bitcoin, or simply different internal mandates regarding the maximum allowable concentration of digital assets within a diversified fund.
Institutional landscape shows mixed sentiment as 2026 progresses
These portfolio adjustments coincide with broader shifts in global financial regulation and institutional sentiment. While university endowments like Harvard scale back, other players await further clarity on market oversight. For instance, according to official reports from the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC), regulators continue to refine their approach to digital asset oversight to provide the certainty many large-scale investors demand.
The first quarter of 2026 has clearly illustrated that the “ETF era” of crypto is not a one-way street of institutional inflows. The exit from the Ethereum ETF was particularly decisive for Harvard, liquidating the entire $86.8 million position rather than trimming it incrementally as they did with Bitcoin. This could suggest a specific lack of conviction in Ethereum’s near-term performance relative to Bitcoin or other asset classes.
Ultimately, the market data from 13F filings reveals a maturing institutional environment where major players are making independent, data-driven decisions rather than following a unified trend. As Harvard pivots back toward gold and semiconductor leaders, and Abu Dhabi increases its bet on Bitcoin, the path for digital assets remains defined by a complex tug-of-war between traditional capital preservation and the search for new-age macro hedges.
