Abu Dhabi’s sovereign wealth capital has expanded its bet on regulated digital assets, with filings to the US Securities and Exchange Commission showing that Mubadala Investment Company held 12.7 million shares of BlackRock’s iShares Bitcoin Trust at the end of December, valued at about $630.6 million.
The position, disclosed in a fourth-quarter Form 13F submission, marks a 46 per cent increase from the 8.7 million shares the fund reported three months earlier. The iShares Bitcoin Trust, trading under the ticker IBIT, is BlackRock’s flagship spot bitcoin exchange-traded fund and has emerged as one of the largest vehicles globally offering institutional exposure to the cryptocurrency through a US-listed product.
The filings also revealed that Al Warda Investments RSC, another Abu Dhabi-based investment firm, held 8.2 million IBIT shares worth roughly $408 million as of December 31. Together, the disclosures underscore how Gulf capital is positioning itself within the expanding ecosystem of regulated crypto investment products.
Mubadala Investment Company, which manages assets exceeding $250 billion across a diversified global portfolio, has historically allocated capital across technology, infrastructure, private equity and alternative assets. Its decision to scale up exposure to a spot bitcoin ETF aligns with a broader pattern among institutional investors who have moved into crypto-linked securities following the approval of spot bitcoin ETFs by US regulators in January 2024.
BlackRock’s iShares Bitcoin Trust quickly became a dominant player in that market segment. Since launch, IBIT has attracted tens of billions of dollars in net inflows, reflecting demand from asset managers, hedge funds and wealth platforms seeking exposure to bitcoin without direct custody of the underlying token. The ETF structure allows investors to gain price exposure within traditional brokerage and custodial frameworks, mitigating some operational and regulatory concerns associated with holding cryptocurrencies directly.
Market data through the final quarter of 2025 show that IBIT consistently ranked among the largest spot bitcoin ETFs by assets under management. BlackRock, the world’s biggest asset manager, has argued that digital assets represent a structural shift in finance, with its leadership pointing to growing institutional acceptance and the integration of tokenised products into mainstream portfolios.
Mubadala’s increased stake comes amid a period of heightened volatility in digital asset markets. Bitcoin prices fluctuated sharply during 2025, influenced by global monetary policy expectations, regulatory developments and flows into exchange-traded products. Despite price swings, institutional allocations to regulated crypto vehicles have held firm, with several pension funds, endowments and sovereign entities reporting positions in spot bitcoin ETFs.
Analysts note that sovereign wealth funds often approach emerging asset classes incrementally, testing exposure through liquid, regulated instruments before considering more direct investments. The ETF route offers daily liquidity and transparent pricing, features that appeal to large state-backed investors subject to governance and risk controls.
Abu Dhabi has positioned itself as a regional hub for digital finance and blockchain innovation. The Abu Dhabi Global Market, an international financial centre, has developed a regulatory framework for virtual assets and licensed several crypto-related businesses. That policy backdrop provides context for local institutions’ willingness to allocate capital to digital asset strategies, particularly through vehicles overseen by US regulators.
The 13F disclosures provide only a snapshot of long US-listed equity holdings and do not capture positions in derivatives or non-US instruments. Nonetheless, they are closely watched by market participants as indicators of institutional sentiment. A 46 per cent quarter-on-quarter increase in IBIT shares suggests a deliberate portfolio adjustment rather than passive appreciation alone.
For BlackRock, continued inflows into IBIT reinforce its early-mover advantage in the US spot bitcoin ETF space. The firm competes with other issuers including Fidelity and Ark Invest, yet IBIT has consistently led in daily trading volumes and cumulative inflows. Its scale has translated into tighter spreads and deep liquidity, factors that further attract large investors.
Digital asset advocates view sovereign participation as a signal of maturation for the sector, arguing that state-backed funds bring credibility and longer investment horizons. Critics, however, caution that bitcoin remains a highly speculative asset with limited intrinsic cash flow and significant price volatility. They point to regulatory uncertainties in multiple jurisdictions and the potential for abrupt policy shifts affecting crypto markets.
Mubadala has not publicly detailed the strategic rationale behind its IBIT allocation, but its broader investment approach emphasises diversification and long-term value creation. The fund has invested in advanced technology sectors ranging from semiconductors to artificial intelligence, suggesting a willingness to engage with transformative themes while managing risk across a wide asset base.
Al Warda Investments RSC’s disclosed stake further highlights the scale of capital from Abu Dhabi entering US-listed crypto products. With a holding valued at $408 million at year-end, the firm ranks among the more significant institutional investors in IBIT based on publicly available filings.
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