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#JaneStreetReducesBitcoinETFHoldings
When the latest SEC 13F filing dropped on Tuesday, May 13, 2026, the crypto community's immediate reaction was alarm: Jane Street, one of the world's most sophisticated quantitative trading firms, had slashed its Bitcoin ETF exposure by staggering margins. The headline numbers were dramatic — a 71% cut in BlackRock's iShares Bitcoin Trust (IBIT), a 60% reduction in Fidelity Wise Origin Bitcoin Fund (FBTC), and an 86% decrease in Grayscale's Bitcoin products. Combined, Jane Street's holdings across IBIT and FBTC fell from roughly $1.25 billion in Q4 2025 to approximately $340 million in Q1 2026. The firm's stake in Strategy (formerly MicroStrategy, MSTR) fell 78%, from about 968,000 shares worth $145.9 million to roughly 210,000 shares valued at just $27 million. On social media, commentators immediately declared that TradFi was cooling on Bitcoin, that smart money was exiting, and that the bull cycle was over.
But that surface-level interpretation misses the more revealing story buried in the same filing. While Jane Street was cutting Bitcoin ETF shares, it was simultaneously nearly doubling its position in BlackRock's iShares Ethereum Trust (ETHA) and sharply raising its stake in Fidelity Ethereum Fund (FETH), adding approximately $82 million combined across the two Ether products over the quarter. This is not the behavior of a firm turning bearish on crypto. It is the behavior of a firm rotating capital within crypto — shifting from the asset that had already delivered massive returns (Bitcoin surged through late 2025 and into Q1 2026) toward the asset whose ETF narrative is earlier in its lifecycle and may offer more upside from the current base.
Understanding Jane Street's motivations requires understanding what Jane Street actually is. The firm is not a directional investment manager making bets on where Bitcoin will go next. It is a global liquidity provider and market maker that takes positions partly to facilitate client flow, partly to manage its own inventory, and partly to capture relative-value opportunities across correlated instruments. The 13F filing captures equity positions as of a single date — March 31, 2026 — and cannot show the intra-quarter trading activity that generated those positions. Some of the IBIT reduction likely reflects client-driven flow: as Bitcoin ETFs attracted record inflows through Q4 2025 and early Q1 2026, Jane Street's inventory naturally expanded. When inflows moderated and spreads narrowed, paring that inventory is standard market-maker behavior, not a directional signal.
The options book tells an even more nuanced story. Jane Street still held enormous options positions on Strategy (MSTR) as of March 31: long puts worth $1.837 billion (equivalent to roughly 14.72 million shares) and long calls worth $1.604 billion (equivalent to about 12.85 million shares). These positions — a massive straddle-like structure — mean Jane Street is positioned for significant MSTR price movement in either direction, not just downside. The puts provide downside protection (or profit if MSTR falls), while the calls retain upside participation. This structure is characteristic of volatility trading, not directional bearishness. Jane Street is effectively saying: "We think MSTR will move a lot; we are less opinionated about which direction."
Three dynamics are therefore happening simultaneously in this filing, and conflating them leads to the wrong conclusion. First, inventory management: some ETF cuts reflect normal market-maker housekeeping as client flow patterns shift. Second, profit-taking: Jane Street loaded up on MSTR aggressively in Q4 2026 (increasing its position by 473%) and sold most of that position in Q1 2026 as the trade matured. Third, strategic rotation: the Ether ETF additions and the large options book suggest Jane Street sees more relative opportunity in Ethereum and in volatility itself than in simply holding more Bitcoin ETF shares at current prices.
The firm also increased other crypto-linked positions. Its Riot Platforms (RIOT) stake rose from about 5 million shares to 7.4 million, increasing in value from roughly $63 million to $91 million. Its Coinbase (COIN) position grew from about 778,000 shares to 888,000 shares, valued near $155 million. These moves are consistent with a rotation away from pure Bitcoin-holding vehicles toward infrastructure and ecosystem companies — miners and exchanges — that benefit from broader crypto market growth rather than Bitcoin price alone.
The most important takeaway is not "Jane Street is exiting crypto." It is that the smartest trading firms in the world are treating crypto as a multi-asset, multi-strategy arena where capital allocation shifts constantly across Bitcoin, Ethereum, mining equities, exchange stocks, and derivatives structures. A 71% cut in IBIT sounds dramatic, but when the same firm holds $3.4 billion in MSTR options and adds $82 million in Ether ETFs, the narrative is not retreat — it is evolution. Jane Street is not leaving the table; it is rebalancing its chips across a wider set of bets.