Passive investing has become one of the most powerful forces reshaping equity markets, and the evidence is accumulating in the returns data.

Bloomberg Intelligence data compiled by ETF analyst James Seyffart shows stocks with rising passive ownership have dramatically outperformed those losing passive ownership over the past three years.

The market has been rewarding inclusion, ownership, and flow alongside fundamentals. The chart’s most uncomfortable implication is that the anti-passive trade has often resembled a junk drawer with small, volatile, newly listed, low-quality names that structural flows have left behind.

Ownership concentration compounds over time, and the stocks inside the passive machine tend to stay there.

Bitcoin is now building a similar infrastructure. The SEC approved spot Bitcoin ETF listings in January 2024, and the two years since have redrawn how institutional capital reaches BTC.

US spot Bitcoin ETFs have accumulated roughly $58.4 billion in cumulative net inflows as of late Apr. 28, with BlackRock’s IBIT carrying approximately $61.9 billion in net assets.

Euronext listed BlackRock’s iShares Bitcoin ETP in Europe in March 2025, describing it as giving investors access to Bitcoin without the complexity of directly trading and holding it.

Deutsche Börse’s Clearstream extended its institutional crypto custody and settlement services to include Bitcoin alongside conventional assets.

Bitcoin has become a wrapper investment accessible through standard brokerage rails, and that access has reshaped who can own it.

Bloomberg Intelligence data shows US stocks with rising passive ownership returned up to 224.8% over three years, while those losing passive ownership fell 41.4%.

The wrapper changes the market

Recurring flows into funds holding the same names create a persistent, price-insensitive bid that compounds over time, and that is the engine behind passive equity outperformance.

Bitcoin ETFs work through investor demand, with purchases arriving as creation flows and sales clearing through redemptions on a discretionary timeline, independent of any reconstitution schedule or index mandate.

A BlackRock portfolio note from December 2024 described a 1% to 2% Bitcoin allocation as a reasonable range for multi-asset portfolios for investors who accept the risk of rapid price plunges and believe in wider adoption.

When the world’s largest asset manager frames a volatile asset in allocation-sizing terms, it becomes a line item that advisors can discuss in portfolio construction terms.

A 2025 Fed note found that crypto ETP bid-ask spreads are comparable to those of other ETFs and ETPs of similar size. It argued that NAV premiums in crypto funds warrant monitoring as a measure of the extent to which crypto and equity markets have become interconnected.

The flows confirm the plumbing works, as from Apr. 14 through Apr. 24, US spot Bitcoin ETFs added about $2 billion in net inflows, based on Farside Investors’ daily totals. Then Apr. 27 produced a $263.2 million single-day outflow.

In two weeks, the same vehicle demonstrated both its capacity to build a structural bid and its capacity to reverse it with institutional speed.

Allocation math becomes the driver

If April PCE and May CPI print near or softer than Cleveland Fed nowcasts, which put April CPI at 3.56% and April PCE at 3.60% year-over-year as of Apr. 28, April payrolls cool without triggering recession fears, the Fed can stay data-dependent through its June 16-17 meeting.

That keeps the 2-year Treasury yield anchored near its late-April level of 3.78%, holds the VIX below 20, and allows advisor and institutional allocations to accumulate through the June Fed window.

In that environment, Bitcoin trades as a portfolio sleeve, receiving recurring flows from model portfolios, registered investment advisors, and institutional mandates that size a position once and let it ride.

BlackRock’s Spring 2026 outlook frames the current macro setup as a mild stagflationary trade-off, with the Fed on pause and moving toward gradual easing only if inflation continues to cool or growth moderates.

That is the backdrop where the wrapper bid can compound through steady accumulation by buyers watching portfolio weights, with allocation math as the driver.

If Bitcoin’s weight in discretionary model portfolios continues to expand, the next leg could resemble what happens when an asset earns a permanent seat in a standard allocation framework.

The bull scenario puts BTC in an $88,000-$105,000 range into the summer, driven by allocation math alone. IBIT’s cumulative net flows stand at $65.37 billion, while GBTC has bled $26.26 billion in cumulative outflows.

The allocation battle inside the Bitcoin wrapper market has already produced a winner, and the winner controls the institutional distribution network.

Metric Figure Why it matters
U.S. spot Bitcoin ETF cumulative net inflows ~$58.4B Shows scale of institutional adoption through the wrapper
IBIT net assets ~$61.9B Shows BlackRock’s dominance in institutional distribution
IBIT cumulative net flows $65.37B Indicates where the structural bid is concentrating
GBTC cumulative outflows -$26.26B Shows legacy-wrapper capital rotation
Apr. 14–24 ETF net inflows ~$2B Evidence of a fast-building institutional bid
Apr. 27 ETF net outflow -$263.2M Evidence the same vehicle can reverse quickly

The machine institutionalizes selling

The same wrapper that built a $2 billion bid in ten days produced a $263.2 million outflow in one.

If inflation re-accelerates beyond nowcasts, as Cleveland Fed models already put April PCE at 3.60% year-over-year, Treasury yields back up, the dollar strengthens, and risk appetite contracts, ETF outflows can clear Bitcoin’s order book at institutional speed and scale.

March CPI already came in at 3.3% year-over-year, core CPI at 2.6%, February PCE at 2.8%, and core PCE at 3.0%.

The inflation data has consistently held above target, and if April’s prints land above the nowcasts, the Fed’s Apr. 28-29 meeting sets a hawkish tone that runs through June.

In that environment, Bitcoin trades as a high-beta macro asset with a very efficient sell button. The 10-year Treasury yield was 4.31% as of late April, and a move toward or above 4.5% would compress equity multiples and remove the liquidity backdrop that makes small portfolio allocations to Bitcoin comfortable to hold.

Advisory models that sized a 1% to 2% position when risk appetite was supportive face the same rebalancing logic. Whether Bitcoin falls far enough relative to the portfolio, the allocation comes out.

The bear scenario puts BTC in a $60,000-$72,000 range, pulled lower by the same institutional machinery that had been carrying it higher.

The passive equity analogy carries a corresponding implication for the broader crypto market. The anti-passive bucket in Seyffart’s data, stocks losing ownership share, has often been home to thinner, more volatile names dependent on stock-picking narratives, with structural flows consolidating around the dominant wrapper.

Bitcoin holds the dominant ETF wrapper and the institutional distribution. The long tail of tokens instead competes for discretionary attention.

A two-path chart maps Bitcoin’s ETF machine as either a structural bid reaching $88,000-$105,000 or a sell mechanism pushing toward $60K–$72K.

If passive logic is genuinely migrating into crypto through the ETF channel, Bitcoin concentrates the structural bid while everything else competes for a shrinking pool of discretionary allocation.

The ETF machine amplifies whatever liquidity the macro environment supplies and directs it through a cleaner, more visible channel into Bitcoin’s order book.

If Bitcoin’s next move comes from allocation math compounding in a patient macro environment or from institutional exits clearing the book in a hawkish one, it depends on the same sequence of inflation prints, payroll data, and Fed language that governs every other risk asset in the portfolio.

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