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New Jersey State Pension Fund holds $16.2M in Strategy shares for Bitcoin exposure

New Jersey State Pension Fund holds $16.2M in Strategy shares for Bitcoin exposure

The Garden State's pension system is betting on Bitcoin without actually buying Bitcoin, joining a growing wave of institutional investors using public equities as a crypto backdoor.

New Jersey’s state pension fund now holds roughly $16.2M worth of MicroStrategy shares, giving one of America’s largest public retirement systems indirect exposure to Bitcoin through the company formerly known as a business intelligence firm and now known as the world’s most enthusiastic corporate Bitcoin buyer.

The quiet crypto play hiding in plain sight

MicroStrategy, which rebranded to “Strategy” earlier this year, has become the de facto proxy trade for institutions that want Bitcoin on their balance sheet without the regulatory headache of holding the asset directly.

The company holds over 250,000 BTC, a stash worth north of $20B at recent prices. That means buying MSTR stock is, in effect, buying a leveraged bet on Bitcoin wrapped in a Nasdaq-listed equity.

New Jersey’s $16.2M position represents less than 0.02% of the fund’s total portfolio, which is estimated to manage somewhere between $70B and $95B in assets.

A pattern, not an anomaly

New Jersey isn’t doing this in isolation. New York’s state pension fund, which manages around $284B, has also acquired MSTR stock.

Strategy’s stock price tracks Bitcoin’s movements with amplified volatility, giving institutional investors exposure to crypto upside while staying within the guardrails of traditional portfolio management. When Bitcoin drops, MSTR tends to drop harder. When Bitcoin rallies, MSTR tends to rally harder.

New Jersey’s pension fund learned this lesson in a slightly different context back in 2022, when it invested around $7M in Bitcoin mining equities. Those positions declined by an estimated 12-15% shortly after purchase.

Why pension funds are warming up to Bitcoin, slowly

The broader context here is a slow-motion shift in how institutional allocators think about Bitcoin. The maturation of crypto infrastructure, from regulated exchanges to institutional custodians to now a full suite of spot ETFs that launched in early 2024, has lowered the perceived risk of adjacent investments.

The risk to watch is concentration. Strategy is essentially a single-asset vehicle at this point. If Bitcoin enters another prolonged drawdown, MSTR’s premium to its Bitcoin holdings could compress or even flip to a discount, amplifying losses for shareholders.

Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy.

New Jersey State Pension Fund holds $16.2M in Strategy shares for Bitcoin exposure

New Jersey State Pension Fund holds $16.2M in Strategy shares for Bitcoin exposure

The Garden State's pension system is betting on Bitcoin without actually buying Bitcoin, joining a growing wave of institutional investors using public equities as a crypto backdoor.

New Jersey’s state pension fund now holds roughly $16.2M worth of MicroStrategy shares, giving one of America’s largest public retirement systems indirect exposure to Bitcoin through the company formerly known as a business intelligence firm and now known as the world’s most enthusiastic corporate Bitcoin buyer.

The quiet crypto play hiding in plain sight

MicroStrategy, which rebranded to “Strategy” earlier this year, has become the de facto proxy trade for institutions that want Bitcoin on their balance sheet without the regulatory headache of holding the asset directly.

The company holds over 250,000 BTC, a stash worth north of $20B at recent prices. That means buying MSTR stock is, in effect, buying a leveraged bet on Bitcoin wrapped in a Nasdaq-listed equity.

New Jersey’s $16.2M position represents less than 0.02% of the fund’s total portfolio, which is estimated to manage somewhere between $70B and $95B in assets.

A pattern, not an anomaly

New Jersey isn’t doing this in isolation. New York’s state pension fund, which manages around $284B, has also acquired MSTR stock.

Strategy’s stock price tracks Bitcoin’s movements with amplified volatility, giving institutional investors exposure to crypto upside while staying within the guardrails of traditional portfolio management. When Bitcoin drops, MSTR tends to drop harder. When Bitcoin rallies, MSTR tends to rally harder.

New Jersey’s pension fund learned this lesson in a slightly different context back in 2022, when it invested around $7M in Bitcoin mining equities. Those positions declined by an estimated 12-15% shortly after purchase.

Why pension funds are warming up to Bitcoin, slowly

The broader context here is a slow-motion shift in how institutional allocators think about Bitcoin. The maturation of crypto infrastructure, from regulated exchanges to institutional custodians to now a full suite of spot ETFs that launched in early 2024, has lowered the perceived risk of adjacent investments.

The risk to watch is concentration. Strategy is essentially a single-asset vehicle at this point. If Bitcoin enters another prolonged drawdown, MSTR’s premium to its Bitcoin holdings could compress or even flip to a discount, amplifying losses for shareholders.

Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy.