ARK: Bitcoin’s institutional role is shifting as ETFs reshape demand
ARK Invest is out with a new research note arguing that bitcoin’s “institutional era” is no longer theoretical — and that the market structure is starting to look different because of it. In the piece, ARK’s David Puell and Matthew Mena point to the growth of spot bitcoin ETFs in 2024–2025, broader public-company exposure in major equity indices, and what they describe as improving regulatory clarity as forces pulling bitcoin out of the “crypto fringe” and into portfolio construction conversations.
ETFs and corporate treasuries: the new structural buyers
ARK’s core claim is that ETFs and corporate-style digital asset treasuries are changing bitcoin’s supply-demand profile. The note says that in 2025, U.S. spot bitcoin ETFs and “DATs” absorbed 1.2x the combination of newly mined supply plus dormant coins re-entering circulation — and that by the end of 2025, ETFs and DATs held more than 12% of total bitcoin outstanding.
ARK also highlights what it sees as a “mainstreaming” moment in distribution: it says Morgan Stanley and Vanguard added bitcoin exposure on their platforms during Q4, with Vanguard’s move framed as notable given its historical stance on crypto and commodities.
On corporates, the note points to bitcoin-adjacent public companies appearing in major indices (citing examples like Coinbase and Block) and singles out Strategy (formerly MicroStrategy) as a large treasury holder, which ARK says represents about 3.5% of total supply. It adds that bitcoin DAT companies now hold more than 1.1 million BTC (about 5.7% of supply), valued at roughly $89.9 billion as of end-January 2026.
Policy signals: from “clarity” to reserves talk
On the policy front, ARK argues that clearer rules could act as a catalyst for institutional allocation. It specifically references the proposed U.S. CLARITY Act, describing it as a framework that would split oversight between the CFTC (digital commodities) and the SEC (digital securities), with a “maturity test” that could allow assets to transition as they decentralize.
ARK also lists bitcoin-specific policy developments it says are emerging in the U.S., including discussions about adding bitcoin to government reserves, the management of seized bitcoin holdings, and state-level adoption — naming Texas as a leader in that narrative.
Bitcoin vs gold: same trade, different beta
A big chunk of the note tries to anchor bitcoin inside a familiar “store-of-value” frame. ARK points to 2025 as an unusual divergence year: it says gold rose 64.7% while bitcoin fell 6.2%, and argues that historically gold has sometimes led bitcoin — with bitcoin acting as a “high-beta” extension of the same macro trade.
It also emphasizes that bitcoin’s correlation with gold has been low in the post-2020 cycle, while still suggesting gold could function as a leading indicator in certain macro regimes.
“Maturing market” argument: smaller drawdowns, deeper liquidity
Finally, ARK leans on market behavior. The note claims bitcoin’s drawdowns have moderated versus prior cycles — saying that since 2022, as of Feb. 8, 2026, no downswing from record all-time highs exceeded roughly 50%, compared with historical peak-to-trough declines of 70–80% in earlier cycles.
ARK also includes a “time in the market vs timing the market” illustration using Glassnode data, arguing that even a hypothetical investor who bought at yearly peaks from 2020–2025 would still be up over that window — positioning holding period and sizing as more important than perfect entry timing (presented as analysis, not advice).
Why it matters for crypto
- If ARK’s framing holds, ETFs and treasury buyers are turning bitcoin into a more structurally “owned” asset — potentially reducing the market’s dependence on purely cyclical retail flows.
- The note shows how the industry is trying to rebrand bitcoin as macro infrastructure (store-of-value continuum, gold comparisons), not just a tech trade.
- Policy narratives (like proposed market-structure bills and reserve discussions) are becoming part of how institutions evaluate operational and compliance risk, not just price upside.
- A sustained shift toward moderated drawdowns (if it continues) would change how allocators think about risk budgeting, even if volatility remains high.
What to watch next
- Whether spot bitcoin ETFs keep acting as steady accumulators through volatile weeks, or if flows turn more momentum-driven.
- Any concrete movement on the U.S. market-structure track ARK highlights (including the CLARITY Act concept and how oversight lines are drawn).
- Additional large platform decisions (brokerages, retirement platforms, banks) that expand regulated access — the distribution layer matters as much as price.
- Signs that bitcoin’s “store-of-value” narrative is translating into measurable portfolio behavior (allocations, rebalancing patterns, and hedging use).
Source: ARK Invest research: Bitcoin’s Evolving Institutional Role