ARK Invest CEO Cathie Wood said BlackRock CEO Larry Fink’s shift from a long-time Bitcoin skeptic to an advocate of tokenization is helping clear the way for more institutional investors to enter the digital asset space. Speaking on The Rollup podcast, Wood described Fink’s evolving stance as “entry permission” for pension funds, sovereign wealth funds, and large asset managers that typically wait for signals from major players in traditional finance before moving into new asset classes. Fink leads BlackRock, the world’s largest asset manager with more than $14 trillion in assets under management. In a post on X on May 4, BlackRock said “crypto investing is entering a new phase,” pointing to a discussion at its LAIF26 conference that explored Bitcoin’s role in portfolios. From early conviction to institutional adoption, #crypto investing is entering a new phase. Host of The Bid #podcast , Oscar Pulido, sits down with Robbie Mitchnick of BlackRock and Dan Morehead of Pantera Capital at #LAIF26 to discuss bitcoin’s unique role, market cycles, and… pic.twitter.com/zZPasl0tMp — BlackRock (@BlackRock) May 4, 2026 Aladdin is the lever Wood is pointing at The mechanism Wood identified is not sentiment. It is BlackRock’s Aladdin platform, which serves virtually every major institutional asset manager globally. “BlackRock has Aladdin. If Fink says tokenization is important, then all asset management companies using Aladdin must follow suit,” Wood said. Cathie Wood says the current Bitcoin drawdown is exactly the entry signal institutions have been waiting for. https://t.co/tnGKEvWWDX pic.twitter.com/2AOarveIc7 — The Rollup (@therollupco) May 3, 2026 When BlackRock declares tokenization as core infrastructure, every allocator using Aladdin gets a default nudge in the same direction. That is not a Bitcoin price thesis. It is a distribution thesis. As Cryptopolitan reported in early 2024, BlackRock had already begun pitching a 28% portfolio allocation to Bitcoin for conservative institutional investors at private events. The structural push was underway before Wood’s “permission granted” framing caught up to it. From “index of money laundering” to $62 billion AUM Fink’s reversal is documented in his own words. On October 13, 2017, he told an Institute of International Finance audience that Bitcoin was “an index of money laundering.” BTC traded at $5,685 that day. By late April 2026, BlackRock’s iShares Bitcoin Trust held approximately 810,000 BTC at roughly $62 billion AUM, making it the largest Bitcoin fund on Earth by a factor of three. Fink’s 2026 annual letter to shareholders devoted an entire section to tokenization, arguing that every financial asset, from bonds to private credit, will eventually live on-chain. He compared the moment to the internet in 1996. Institutions are already 38% of the spot ETF market Wood frames institutions as still on the sidelines, but the holdings data tells a different story. Institutional allocators now account for roughly 38% of total spot Bitcoin ETF holdings, up from approximately 24% a year earlier. US spot Bitcoin ETFs hold approximately $100 billion in AUM combined, with IBIT commanding approximately 49% market share. The Q1 2026 inflow data is sharper. IBIT recorded positive inflows on 48 of 62 trading days, pulling in $8.4 billion in net inflows even as BTC dropped from above $90,000 to the low $70,000s. Retail sold the dip. Institutions absorbed it. ARK first bought Bitcoin in 2015 at around $250, when the asset’s market cap was about $6 billion. The firm’s modeling now puts tokenized financial assets at more than $10 trillion in scale by 2030 under higher-adoption scenarios. Wood says institutions need to act quickly to avoid missing out. Spot ETF holdings show they are already 38% of the market and absorbing dips through drawdowns. If you're reading this, you’re already ahead. Stay there with our newsletter .