BlackRock’s Chief Executive Larry Fink told shareholders this year that digital assets, alongside private markets, insurance, and active ETFs, could each become $500 million revenue generators for the firm within five years.
According to him:
“Private markets to insurance, private markets to wealth, digital assets, and active ETFs, we think these can all be $500 million revenue generators in the next five years.”
For at least one of those categories, the runway may be shorter than that timeline suggests.
BlackRock’s crypto ETF business has already generated enough fee income in its first two years that Fink’s five-year target, when viewed on a cumulative basis, looks conservative.
BlackRock’s most profitable fund in a 1,000-deep lineup
The iShares Bitcoin Trust ETF, which trades as IBIT, sits at the top of BlackRock’s fee-revenue rankings.
Out of more than 1,000 exchange-traded funds the firm operates worldwide, IBIT generates more sponsor fees per dollar of assets than any of its peers, according to fund filings.
The fund crossed $100 billion in assets at a pace roughly five times faster than any ETF before it, drawing capital from institutional investors and retail buyers alike.
Among the 20 largest ETFs domiciled in the United States, IBIT is the clear outlier by age. Every other fund on that list spent years building the asset base that IBIT reached in less than two years.
That ascent was aided by Bitcoin’s rapid rise following Donald Trump’s 2024 election victory, culminating in an all-time high above $126,000 last October.
Since then, prices have pulled back, and IBIT’s net asset value fell 18.82% for the year through March 23 on a total-return basis.
Even so, the decline has reduced assets without breaking the fee engine.
BlackRock’s filings show IBIT collected about $47.5 million in net sponsor-fee revenue during its 2024 launch year and about $174.6 million in 2025. The iShares Ethereum Trust ETF, or ETHA, added about $0.9 million in 2024 and about $18.4 million in 2025.
Together, the two funds have generated roughly $241.4 million in cumulative net sponsor-fee revenue across their first two calendar years.
How BlackRock can earn $500 million a year from crypto ETFs
Reaching $500 million in a single year, rather than over several years, requires a different scale.
At a 0.25% sponsor fee, each $1 billion in assets produces $2.5 million in annual revenue. On that math, BlackRock’s crypto ETF complex would need roughly $200 billion in fee-bearing assets to generate $500 million in one calendar year.
As of press time, BlackRock’s crypto ETF complex held about $61.6 billion in assets. IBIT accounted for $54.64 billion, ETHA for $6.70 billion, and the iShares Staked Ethereum Trust ETF, or ETHB, for $261.8 million.
ETHB launched on March 12 and offers exposure to Ethereum’s price and staking rewards from a portion of the fund’s holdings. At that combined asset level, annualized revenue stood at about $153.7 million.
That leaves roughly $138.4 billion still to be added before the firm reaches the $200 billion threshold.
The route from here depends on two variables. Higher crypto prices would lift the value of existing holdings, while new inflows would add fresh capital. In practice, a path to $500 million a year likely requires both.
Price appreciation on its own does not appear sufficient under most sell-side forecasts.
Standard Chartered’s base case called for Bitcoin at $100,000 and ETH at $4,000 by the end of 2026. Repricing BlackRock’s current holdings to those levels, with no new inflows, would lift the complex to about $91.8 billion, still less than half the target.
A more bullish setup, using Bernstein’s reiterated $150,000 Bitcoin forecast alongside $4,000 ETH, narrows the gap but does not close it. Under that scenario, BlackRock would still be about $68.9 billion short.
The remaining distance, on that basis, has to come from new investor money.
Data from SoSoValue show cumulative net inflows of about $63.4 billion into IBIT, $11.87 billion into ETHA, and $163 million into ETHB.


Since IBIT’s launch, the three funds have attracted combined creations at a pace of roughly $34 billion a year. If that rate held and prices stayed flat, BlackRock could close the remaining asset gap in a little over four years.
$500 million in cumulative fees point to a 2027 crossover
On the other hand, BlackRock’s crypto ETF complex could reach $500 million in cumulative fees as early as next year.
IBIT holds about $55.6 billion in net assets, while ETHA holds about $6.85 billion. Each fund charges a 0.25% annual sponsor fee, putting their combined annualized revenue run rate at roughly $156 million.
Add that run rate to the $241.4 million the funds have already generated, and the road to $500 million becomes mostly a matter of time.
If combined assets remain near current levels, the annual fee stream stays close to $156 million, and BlackRock would pass $500 million in total sponsor-fee revenue around mid-2027. If assets rise 40% to 50%, that crossover could move into early 2027.
| Scenario | Asset assumption | Estimated annual fee run rate | Estimated timing to reach $500 million cumulative fees |
|---|---|---|---|
| Base case | Assets remain near current levels of about $62.5 billion | About $156 million | Around mid-2027 |
| Higher-asset case | Assets rise by 40% to 50% | About $218 million to $234 million | Early 2027 |
| Moderate downturn | Assets fall by about 30% | About $109 million | Late 2027 to early 2028 |
| Severe downturn | Assets are cut in half and stay there for an extended period | About $78 million | Materially later than early 2028 |
A weaker market would slow the pace, but not by much. A decline of about 30% in the asset base would still leave BlackRock on track to reach the mark by late 2027 or early 2028.
To meaningfully delay the timeline, assets would likely need to be cut in half and kept at that level for an extended period.
Putting the number in proportion
BlackRock’s plan to earn $500 million in fees from crypto ETFs should be compared with established ETF fee pools to gauge scale.
SPDR Gold Shares, the largest US gold ETF, held about $151.1 billion and charges a 0.40% expense ratio, implying roughly $604 million in fees annually.
For BlackRock’s crypto ETF complex to produce $500 million annually at a 0.25% fee rate, it would need to grow to about 132% of GLD’s current size.
Within BlackRock’s financials, revenue at such margins would also be meaningful, though still far from central.
The firm ended 2025 with $14 trillion in total assets under management. It reported $24.216 billion in revenue and $19.179 billion in investment advisory, administration fees, and securities-lending income. A $500 million crypto ETF fee stream would amount to about 2.1% of total revenue and 2.6% of the fee-based line.
That would not shift the company’s financial center of gravity. It would, however, place crypto ETFs more firmly among the established revenue lines inside BlackRock’s fund business.
Viewed that way, the endpoint is less about any single forecast than about scale. The path does not rest on one price target, one week of inflows, or one product launch. It rests on reaching about $200 billion in assets.



