BlackRock's digital asset products shrank to $48.8 billion at the end of Q2 from $79.6 billion a year earlier — a 39% decline — despite $15.1 billion in net inflows over the same 12-month period, according to the firm's Wednesday earnings release. The math is stark: investors added $15.1 billion while $45.8 billion in market depreciation erased those gains and then some. Q2 alone saw $3.1 billion in net outflows as Bitcoin fell more than 14% and Ether dropped 25% in the quarter. BLK shares rose 4.15% in pre-market trading as the broader business posted record AUM of $15.3 trillion and beat earnings estimates at $13.91 adjusted EPS on $7.08 billion in revenue.
The $45.8 Billion Depreciation Gap — Price Risk Dominates Crypto AUM
The relationship between net inflows and AUM performance in BlackRock's digital asset business illustrates the fundamental challenge of managing crypto ETF products: the price-sensitivity of AUM means strong inflow periods can still produce shrinking headline figures when underlying asset prices fall sharply. Over the past 12 months, $15.1 billion in net inflows — representing genuine investor demand and sustained institutional interest in crypto ETF products — was overwhelmed by $45.8 billion in market depreciation as Bitcoin fell from its October 2025 all-time high of $126,080 and the broader crypto market posted its worst first half since 2022.
The 3:1 ratio of depreciation to inflows is the most precise single illustration of how dependent BlackRock's digital asset business remains on crypto price performance — a dependency that the firm itself acknowledged in framing its 2030 revenue targets around building a business model that generates fee income regardless of directional price moves.
Q2's $3.1 billion in net outflows represents a sharper deterioration than the prior three quarters' positive flow trends. The outflows coincided with the same period that produced the record $4.06 billion in June Bitcoin ETF outflows across the broader industry — the most severe single-month institutional redemption since spot Bitcoin ETFs launched in January 2024. BlackRock's IBIT, which had been the dominant product in the Bitcoin ETF complex with the strongest inflow track record, was not immune to the June correction's institutional selling pressure.
The 2030 Target — $500 Million in Crypto Revenue From $40 Million Today
BlackRock is targeting $500 million in annual revenue from its digital asset business under its 2030 plan — a more than tenfold increase from the approximately $40 million the firm currently generates in base fees and securities lending, which accounts for less than 1% of total fee revenue. The target is ambitious but grounded in a specific strategic logic: BlackRock's crypto business is currently priced primarily through AUM-based management fees, meaning revenue scales directly with crypto prices. The $500 million target implies either a substantial crypto price recovery, a dramatic expansion of AUM through new products and distribution, or both.
The iShares Bitcoin Income ETF — BITY — represents the first concrete step toward a more sophisticated fee model. By writing covered call options on Bitcoin exposure to generate income, BITY creates a product that generates revenue through volatility and options premium rather than simple price appreciation tracking. If Bitcoin continues trading in the $60,000-$70,000 range — now the third longest $10,000 consolidation in Bitcoin's history at 307 days — BITY's covered call strategy is precisely the product design that generates fee income in a sideways market where pure tracking products accumulate no new premium.
Circle Reserves, 5 Billion Crypto Wallets, and the Digital-Native Asset Manager Vision
BlackRock's earnings call revealed the full scope of the firm's crypto ambition beyond ETFs. The firm manages $60 billion of Circle's stablecoin reserves — approximately one-quarter of the $300 billion stablecoin market — and explicitly wants to become the industry's reserve manager of choice as stablecoin adoption accelerates globally. Bolivia's evaluation of USDT for its national payments system, announced the same week, is precisely the kind of stablecoin adoption expansion that would increase Circle's reserve management needs and therefore BlackRock's reserve management revenue.
CFO Martin Small pointed to 5 billion crypto wallets as a new distribution channel for traditional investment products during the earnings call — a figure that reframes crypto's addressable market from the institutional investors who use IBIT to the global population of crypto wallet holders as potential users of model portfolios, SME accounts, managed accounts, and tokenized investment products. "We want to build a digital wallet native asset manager," Small said — a strategic statement that positions BlackRock not as a traditional asset manager selling crypto products but as a financial infrastructure provider embedding traditional investment products into crypto-native distribution channels.
The Broader Business — $15.3 Trillion AUM, Record Quarter
BlackRock's broader business performance provides the context for why the digital asset decline — significant in percentage terms — is not threatening to the firm's overall position. Record AUM of $15.3 trillion, $192 billion in Q2 net inflows, adjusted EPS of $13.91 beating consensus estimates of $12.55, and $7.08 billion in revenue collectively describe a business that is growing robustly across its traditional product lines even as the crypto segment contracts on price weakness. BLK shares' 4.15% pre-market gain reflects the market's assessment that the record overall AUM and earnings beat outweigh the digital asset AUM decline.
Crypto News: BlackRock Digital Asset AUM Falls 39% to $48.8 Billion Despite $15.1 Billion in Net Inflows — Targets $500M Crypto Revenue by 2030
2026-07-15 12:39:53
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