BlackRock's (NYSE: BLK) crypto business just showed investors what a bear market does to even the biggest player in the game. According to the firm's second-quarter earnings release published
BlackRock's (NYSE: BLK) crypto business just showed investors what a bear market does to even the biggest player in the game.
According to the firm's second-quarter earnings release published July 15, the asset manager's digital assets under management (AUM) fell to $48.8 billion as of June 30. It is down 39% from $79.6 billion a year earlier, even as clients poured $15.1 billion of net new money into its crypto products over the same 12 months.
The math is stark because market declines wiped $45.8 billion off BlackRock's digital asset ETFs over the year, swamping every dollar of inflows three times over.
Related: BlackRock 'closing in' on $17 billion bitcoin competitor
Inflows couldn't outrun the crypto winter
The damage tracks the broader market. Bitcoin (BTC) closed the first half of 2026 down roughly 37%, sliding from near $95,000 in January to below $59,000 by the end of June, more than 53% below its October 2025 all-time high of $126,000.
And investor behavior has turned. After a year of net buying, BlackRock's digital asset funds bled $3.1 billion in the second quarter alone, on top of falling prices that erased another $8.7 billion. Year-to-date outflows also stand at $2.2 billion.
The crypto slump was added to an otherwise blowout report.
BlackRock's total assets hit a record $15.3 trillion, second-quarter net inflows reached $192 billion, and revenue jumped 31% year-over-year to $7.1 billion. Digital assets now generate just $40 million in quarterly base fees, about 1% of the firm's fee revenue, and round to 0% of total AUM.
"I've never been more optimistic about the growth ahead," CEO Larry Fink said in the release.
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The Circle stake swings from gain to loss
The filing reveals a second crypto bruise: BlackRock booked a roughly $37 million noncash pre-tax loss on its minority stake in stablecoin issuer Circle Internet Group (NYSE: CRCL) in the quarter.
This is a sharp reversal from the approximately $330 million gain that same stake delivered a year earlier.
Related: Jim Cramer has a blunt warning to Circle over BlackRock