Harvard Management Company has sold its entire $87 million position in BlackRock’s iShares Ethereum ETF during the first quarter of 2026, according to its latest 13F filing with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. The move ended a short-lived exposure to Ethereum through an exchange-traded product that had been opened in the fourth quarter of 2025. The filing shows that Harvard exited the Ethereum ETF position during a weak period for the broader crypto market. Ethereum fell sharply in early 2026, reaching the $1,800 area in February as investors reduced exposure to risk assets. ETH has also remained under pressure in recent weeks, declining over the past month as sentiment toward the asset weakened. Harvard did not provide a public explanation for the sale in the filing. The move may reflect portfolio rebalancing, risk management, or a decision to reduce exposure after Ethereum’s price decline. The transaction involved ETF shares rather than Ethereum held directly onchain, meaning the sale did not represent a direct transfer of ETH from Harvard-controlled crypto wallets. Harvard Cuts Ethereum ETF Exposure Harvard Management Company manages Harvard University’s endowment fund and regularly reports certain public holdings through quarterly 13F filings. The latest filing showed a full exit from the Ethereum ETF position only one quarter after it appeared in the portfolio. The sale came as Ethereum ETF demand weakened across the market. Spot Ethereum ETFs recorded total net outflows of $32.57 million in the latest data cited, extending their outflow streak to nine days. A strong inflow day above $50 million, once more common for the category, has not been recorded for several weeks. The Ethereum ETF exit was not Harvard’s only portfolio change. The endowment also reduced exposure to gold, Nvidia, TSMC and Broadcom. It also cut part of its Bitcoin ETF position, selling 2.3 million shares of BlackRock’s iShares Bitcoin Trust. Despite that reduction, Harvard still held about $117 million in Bitcoin ETF exposure. Harvard’s Bitcoin ETF position had previously reached about $442 million in the third quarter of 2025. The remaining position shows the endowment did not fully exit crypto-linked ETF exposure, even as it sold all of its Ethereum ETF shares. Ethereum Sentiment Weakens in May Ethereum’s market performance has weighed on investor sentiment. ETH has declined over several time frames, including the past week, the past two weeks, and the past month. According to data, ETH is down about 10% over the previous month. Social data has also reflected a weaker mood among traders. Ethereum discussion has risen while the price has fallen, suggesting that attention has shifted toward frustration and concern rather than price strength. A decline in the ratio of bullish to bearish comments has shown that optimism around ETH has narrowed. The ETF outflow trend has added to that pressure. Traders often use fund flows as a signal of institutional demand, even though ETF flows can lag price action. Persistent outflows may reinforce negative market views when prices are already falling. Source: Santiment Ethereum has also faced other sources of concern, including weaker onchain activity compared with prior cycle highs. Daily active addresses and network growth have cooled from the stronger levels seen in 2024 and 2025. Lower participation can affect how traders assess demand for ETH. Bitcoin ETFs Still Attract Large Buyers Harvard’s Ethereum ETF sale occurred while other large investors continued adding Bitcoin exposure. Abu Dhabi’s Mubadala reportedly raised its Bitcoin holdings to $566 million after six straight quarters of buying. JPMorgan also increased its IBIT position by 174%, according to the data cited. This contrast has drawn attention because some institutions appear to favor Bitcoin ETFs over Ethereum ETFs during the current market phase. Bitcoin has retained stronger institutional demand, while Ethereum has faced more pressure from ETF outflows and weaker relative performance. Ethereum remains one of the largest developer ecosystems in crypto. Network development activity continues across infrastructure, scaling, and applications. However, retail and institutional attention has shifted more toward price performance, fund flows, and competing ecosystems such as Solana and BNB Chain. Harvard’s exit does not confirm a permanent view on Ethereum. The filing only shows that the endowment no longer held the ETHA position at the end of the first quarter. It remains unclear whether Harvard plans to re-enter Ethereum ETF exposure later.