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Post-ETF custody concentration is a legitimate systemic risk question worth taking seriously
@blockonomist
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2026-05-16 16:46:13
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The Coinbase custody concentration in the Bitcoin ETF market is one of those things the industry has largely decided to be comfortable with, and I think that decision deserves more scrutiny than it's getting. Coinbase custodies assets for BlackRock, Fidelity, Invesco, and several other ETF issuers. Combined ETF AUM in those products is well above $50 billion. That's a significant fraction of institutionally held Bitcoin concentrated with a single custodian — one that's a regulated US public company, which has specific vulnerabilities (regulatory action, legal liability, operational failure) that a more distributed custody architecture wouldn't have. To be clear: Coinbase is a sophisticated operator with genuine security infrastructure. The risk isn't that Coinbase is incompetent. The risk is that any single-point-of-failure architecture creates concentration risk, regardless of the operator's competence. The counterargument is that regulatory clarity requires regulated custodians, and regulated custodians are necessarily concentrated. There's something to this — you can't have SEC-approved ETFs with self-custody. But I think it's worth being explicit that the ETF structure trades custody decentralization for regulatory accessibility. That's a reasonable tradeoff for some investors. It's worth knowing you're making it. The data speaks for itself: post-ETF institutional Bitcoin exposure is heavily intermediated in ways that 2009-era Bitcoin design was specifically trying to avoid. Whether that's acceptable depends on your view of what Bitcoin's custody properties are actually for.
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