
A previously unknown Hong Kong-linked entity called Laurore Ltd. surfaced as a major new buyer of BlackRock’s iShares Bitcoin Trust (IBIT) in the latest 13F disclosures, triggering a scramble among ETF watchers to identify who’s behind it and why the position appears purpose-built.
The catalyst was a post from ProCap CIO and Bitwise adviser Jeff Park late Tuesday, who highlighted Laurore as the “biggest new entrant into IBIT” from what he described as “a brand new entity” with “no website. No press. No footprint.” The only public breadcrumbs, Park said, are that “the filer’s name is Zhang Hui and it’s HK based.”
A Bloomberg terminal snapshot shared alongside the thread shows Laurore Ltd. reporting an IBIT position of 8,786,279 shares (worth approximately $337,3 million), amounting to roughly 0.65% of shares outstanding. The entry sits above a roster of recognizable allocators and intermediaries in the same view, underscoring how quickly the entity landed among top reported holders.
Park’s thesis leaned heavily on structure and signaling rather than confirmed identity. “Zhang Hui is the Chinese equivalent of John Smith. It’s what I like to call a ‘non-anonymous anonymous’ name, something hiding in plain sight buried under the statistical weight of millions to make it untraceable,” he wrote. “The ‘Ltd’ suffix suggests a Cayman or BVI structure, the classic offshore wrapper for accessing US markets. And the portfolio? A single holding. Nothing but IBIT.”
He then framed the position as something closer to a bespoke access rail than a conventional manager allocation. “This isn’t a diversified fund. It’s a $436 million Bitcoin access vehicle dressed in institutional clothing,” Park wrote, before pivoting to motive: “Because Chinese investors can’t hold Bitcoin.”
Park argued that if the read is correct, it could point to Chinese institutional capital seeking exposure “not through crypto exchanges or gray market channels, but through a BlackRock ETF,” using a jurisdiction he called “the most ‘transparent non-transparent’ place imaginable.”
Others in the ETF research orbit offered less romance and more uncertainty. Bloomberg Intelligence analyst James Seyffart replied that he had already tried to chase the trail. “I spent almost an hour trying to figure this out earlier this morning… I got absolutely nowhere. Lol,” he wrote, capturing a broader point: public filings can reveal size and timing while still keeping beneficial ownership largely opaque.
A response by COO and CIO of DeFi Development Corporation (NASDAQ: DFDV) Parker White claimed Laurore Ltd. “appears to be a wholly-owned subsidiary of Hao Advisors Management,” citing a shared address and what he described as overlapping signatory names.
Parker added that the address sits in “one of the most prestigious office complexes in HK,” a building he said is “widely know[n] for the largest hedge funds,” and argued the setup “seems to be very well structured and very professional.”
Park pushed back on equating name similarity with shared control, but agreed that a shared office address may not be a smoking gun. After another commenter suggested the possibility of a “fund hq” or registered address arrangement where “none of the people actually work there,” Park responded: “Bingo.”
However, none of this is confirmed. It’s informed speculation, and the underlying ownership remains opaque for now.
At press time, BTC traded at $67,713.
