Bitcoin Magazine
BlackRock Tells Investors to Put Bitcoin in Their Portfolios
BlackRock, the world’s largest asset manager with $14 trillion under management, now recommends that investors allocate 1–2% of their portfolios to Bitcoin — a position the firm says can boost return potential without destabilizing overall risk.
The guidance came from Michael Gates, BlackRock’s lead portfolio manager for model portfolios, who framed Bitcoin as a “complementary diversifier” in multi-asset contexts. “A modest allocation could potentially have an impact on portfolio returns without dominating day-to-day risk,” Gates said.
In a traditional 60/40 portfolio, BlackRock notes that a 1–2% Bitcoin position carries risk comparable to a single large-cap technology stock.
Bitcoin’s low correlation to equities and fixed income means the exposure can lift risk-adjusted returns without a proportionate expansion of volatility — a consideration that matters for advisors managing conservative to moderate mandates.
The firm is clear that the recommendation is not a speculative call; it is a structural one rooted in diversification logic.
BlackRock’s bitcoin investment vehicles
To act on the recommendation, BlackRock points to its own iShares Bitcoin Trust ETF (IBIT), which it has added to its model portfolios for the first time. Launched in January 2024, IBIT has become one of the most successful ETF debuts in years, accumulating nearly $49 billion in assets under management and holding over 765,000 BTC in custody.
IBIT now commands close to 50% of all RIA-allocated crypto ETF capital. That market share reflects both the trust institutional investors place in BlackRock’s custody arrangements and the absence of a credible rival at scale. The fund carries a 25 basis point annual fee as of 2026.
BlackRock’s Bitcoin ambitions reach beyond IBIT. The firm recently launched the iShares Bitcoin Premium Income ETF (BITA), a covered-call product that holds IBIT exposure while selling options on 25–35% of the portfolio to generate monthly income. BITA gives risk-conscious investors a yield-oriented path into Bitcoin — and signals that BlackRock sees the asset as “too big to ignore” inside institutional allocations.
The firm also operates a Bitcoin ETP on the London Stock Exchange, extending its Bitcoin infrastructure into global markets and giving European investors access to the same thesis.
Back in February, a BlackRock executive said that if financial advisors across Asia allocated just 1% of client portfolios to crypto, it could drive nearly $2 trillion of new capital into digital assets, citing the region’s roughly $108 trillion in household wealth. He also noted strong Asian participation in U.S. spot Bitcoin ETFs, as markets like Hong Kong, Japan, and South Korea moved toward broader crypto ETF adoption.
This post BlackRock Tells Investors to Put Bitcoin in Their Portfolios first appeared on Bitcoin Magazine and is written by Micah Zimmerman.
“A modest allocation could potentially have an impact on portfolio returns without dominating day-to-day risk”