A little-known offshore entity has stepped into the spot bitcoin exchange-traded fund (ETF) arena with a $436 million position, instantly becoming one of the largest new institutional shareholders in Blackrock’s Ishares Bitcoin Trust (IBIT).
According to a Form 13F-HR filed with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) on Jan. 28, 2026, Laurore Ltd. disclosed ownership of 8,786,279 shares of IBIT as of Dec. 31, 2025, valued at $436,238,752 at the time. The filing marks the firm’s first and only reported holding, making the bet both deliberate and highly concentrated.
Laurore Ltd. is incorporated in the British Virgin Islands (BVI) and lists a Hong Kong business address in Central district office towers. Beyond that, the corporate profile is thin. No public website, no prior investment disclosures, and no visible operating history accompany the filing. Its Central Index Key, 0002082507, shows a single 13F entry and little else.

The 13F indicates Laurore exercises sole investment discretion and sole voting authority over the entire IBIT position. No shared managers. No diversified basket. Just one ETF, and a sizable one at that.
At the time of filing, the valuation reflected IBIT’s year-end 2025 pricing. With shares trading near $38 in early 2026, the stake’s market value would sit closer to $334 million, implying an unrealized loss of roughly $102 million if the position remained unchanged. That shift mirrors bitcoin’s broader fourth-quarter decline of roughly 23% to 24% during 2025.
In 2026, the leading crypto asset shed another 20% against the greenback. The backdrop is crucial. While bitcoin cooled in Q4 and into Q1 2026, institutional ownership of spot ETFs persisted. Overall, IBIT counts roughly 384 million shares held by 1,690 entities, representing a significant slice of the fund’s assets under management (AUM). In other words, even as price action wobbled, institutions kept writing checks.
Laurore’s structure has sparked speculation. Offshore incorporation in the British Virgin Islands, paired with a Hong Kong address, resembles a classic cross-border access vehicle. Analysts and market observers have floated the possibility that such structures allow capital from regions with direct crypto restrictions to gain exposure via U.S.-regulated products.
Still, there is no direct evidence tying Laurore to any specific jurisdictional workaround, but the opacity has fueled debate on social media. The filing was signed by director Zhang Hui, an extremely common name that offers few clues about beneficial ownership. That anonymity, combined with the single-asset portfolio, has prompted some to label Laurore less a traditional asset manager and more a purpose-built bitcoin access conduit.
Meanwhile, IBIT’s broader shareholder base reads like a who’s who of institutional finance. Millennium Management, Jane Street, Susquehanna International Group, Citadel Advisors, and sovereign-linked entities such as Mubadala Investment Company all hold significant positions. Aside from the usuals, Laurore’s entry stands out as the most substantial new addition in Q4.
The timing is notable. Bitcoin’s market structure in late 2025 echoed late-2022 conditions, with analysts describing extended consolidation and cautious sentiment. Yet Laurore did not nibble; it went all in. A single, nine-figure ETF allocation during a downturn signals either strong conviction or strategic positioning — perhaps both.
Social media chatter has amplified the intrigue. Some users estimated that the stake equates to indirect exposure to roughly 4,984 BTC at an average acquisition price of around $87,500 per coin, based on share equivalents and fund structure. Others see it as a signal that offshore capital continues to seek regulated bitcoin exposure despite policy constraints in certain jurisdictions.
Ultimately, Laurore Ltd.’s IBIT position highlights two themes shaping the ETF era: growing global appetite for regulated bitcoin access and enduring opacity around certain capital flows. Whether Laurore proves to be a long-term holder or a tactical entrant remains to be seen. For now, it has planted a large, unmistakable flag inside one of the market’s most closely watched bitcoin vehicles.
Laurore Ltd. is a British Virgin Islands-incorporated entity with a Hong Kong address that disclosed an 8.79 million-share stake in IBIT.
The firm reported $436.2 million in IBIT shares as of Dec. 31, 2025.
Yes, the 13F filing lists IBIT as its sole disclosed asset.
Because Laurore’s offshore structure and concentrated bet have fueled speculation about cross-border capital seeking regulated Bitcoin exposure.
Related Articles
Bitcoin to Zero Searches Hit Record. What Now?
The value of Strategy assets is approximately six times the liabilities, with cash reserves sufficient to pay dividends for over 30 months.