In less than two years, BlackRock has established its Bitcoin and Ethereum exchange-traded funds (ETFs) as a multi-million-dollar business line. According to data shared by Leon Waidmann, research director at the Onchain Foundation, the firm’s crypto ETF business generates $260 million in annualized revenue, comprising $218 million from Bitcoin ETFs and $42 million from Ethereum products.
Blockchain analytics platform Dune, corroborates the firm’s dominance, reporting that BlackRock has close to $85 billion in assets under management (AUM), representing over 57% of the U.S. spot Bitcoin ETF market. Fidelity’s ETF takes in $22.8 billion, capturing only 15.34% of the market.
BlackRock’s dominance is reinforced by consistent ETF flows. According to Farside, IBIT has attracted over $60B and ETHA $13B since launch. On September 22nd, IBIT flows were flat while ETHA saw a $15.1M outflow. Even with daily fluctuations, BlackRock’s market share remains unchallenged.
Institutional Benchmark and Market Impact
BlackRock’s release of the size of revenue represents a significant change. Cryptocurrency ETFs are no longer a novelty. They are core profit generators for those in asset management and investment management. To put it in perspective, many fintech unicorns take ten years to generate a similar amount of revenue.
Waidmann argued that such profitability could be a jumping point for pension plans, sovereign funds, and insurance companies, pushing the TradFi to see a digital asset as a legitimate business line rather than as a novel opportunity.
BlackRock’s large market share might demonstrate to other financial platforms that regulated crypto ETFs can be profitable revenue streams as well as prudent and long-term value to traditional long-established institutional portfolios.
Looking Ahead: Beyond ETFs
At the start of the month, we reported that BlackRock is in fact exploring tokenized ETFs shortly after the success of their Bitcoin fund. If their existing products can generate $260M annually, tokenization would drive further profitability while creating access to even more investors across global markets.
This trajectory also establishes BlackRock as the leader in crypto ETFs, and perhaps a model for introducing digital assets into traditional finance.
The implications are obvious: crypto has transitioned from being a speculative asset class to being a mainstream revenue producer at the heart of global finance.
BlackRock’s crypto ETFs now play the role of a profitability benchmark for institutions across the globe. Their leadership shows that digital assets are no longer on the fringes of the financial world but are entrenched in mainstream institutional strategy.
As the ETFs open the door, the next stage of BlackRock’s approach could move to tokenized funds and/or broader digital asset participation, changing the way traditional finance intersects with crypto in the coming years.
Also Read: Maple Finance Hits $4B AUM, Overtakes BlackRock’s BUIDL
