
Under CEO Larry Fink’s leadership, BlackRock aims to turn digital assets and sectors like private markets, insurance, and ETFs into sources of $500 million in annual revenue for the company within the next five years. However, progress in the crypto ETF sector could be faster than expected.
BlackRock’s iShares Bitcoin Trust (IBIT) has surpassed $100 billion in assets, growing at a much faster rate than previous ETFs, becoming the most profitable fee-generating fund among the company’s over 1,000 funds. IBIT is projected to earn about $47.5 million in net management fees in 2024 and approximately $174.6 million in 2025; combined with Ethereum funds (ETHA, ETHB), the total net fees for the first two years could reach around $241.4 million.
With a fee rate of 0.25%, every $1 billion in assets generates about $2.5 million in annual revenue. Therefore, to reach $500 million annually, BlackRock’s crypto ETF system would need about $200 billion in fee-bearing assets. As of the report, the total assets of BlackRock’s crypto ETF portfolio are approximately $61.6 billion (IBIT ~ $54.64 billion, ETHA ~ $6.70 billion, ETHB ~ $0.26 billion), corresponding to an annual revenue of about $153.7 million — still far from the $200 billion mark.
Two key factors will determine the trajectory: crypto price volatility (rising prices will increase current asset value) and new fund inflows. The combination of these factors will shorten the gap toward the $200 billion threshold.
The rapid growth of IBIT raises questions about the sustainability of fee streams and concentration risks. A fund of this size could influence supply-demand dynamics in the spot market and make fee income a significant factor in valuation for asset management firms and investors.