Vanguard Group, Inc. is one of the world’s largest investment firms, with $7.7 trillion in assets under management (AUM). The finance giant shocked the market by refusing to offer the recently approved Bitcoin ETFs to its brokerage’s customers.
On January 11, Vanguard prevented its customers from gaining exposure to Bitcoin (BTC) through the now legally approved ETFs. As reported by The Block, a company’s spokesperson explained that crypto-related products do not align with its investment vision.
“We also have no plans to offer Vanguard Bitcoin ETFs or other crypto-related products – our perspective is long-standing that cryptocurrencies’ high volatility runs counter to our goal of helping investors generate positive real returns over the long term.”
— Vanguard’s spokesperson to The BlockTop 10 owners of Marathon Digital Holdings Inc (NASDAQ: MARA). Source: CNN Business
Secondly, Vanguard has a massive position on Riot Platforms Inc. (NASDAQ: RIOT), with 9.12% of all shares worth $236.45 million. Notably, Vanguard is followed by BlackRock Inc. (NYSE: BLK) as the second-largest shareholder, with a little over 5% of shares. The same scenario exists in MARA’s ownership.
Top 10 owners of Riot Platforms Inc (NASDAQ: RIOT). Source: CNN Business
In this context, something similar happens for the other leading U.S. Bitcoin mining companies. Vanguard is one of the top shareholders of CleanSpark (NASDAQ: CLSK), Cipher Mining (NASDAQ: CIFR), and TeraWulf (NASDAQ: WULF).
After publicly stating its opposing views to Bitcoin and cryptocurrencies, Vanguard has put itself in a controversial position. Some well-known cryptocurrency investors reported they would be closing their Vanguard retirement accounts in some sort of boycott.
Now, investors await Vanguard’s following public report to see if anything has changed in its Bitcoin mining companies’ positions.