Your IBIT shares are not Bitcoin. This morning made that impossible to ignore.
BlackRock moved roughly $226 million of Bitcoin to Coinbase Prime, and the timeline split in half. One side is screaming "they're selling." The other is insisting it's fresh inflows. Both sides are arguing about the wrong thing.
It doesn't matter which one is right. Either way, not a single IBIT holder got a vote, a notice, or a key. The coins behind the largest Bitcoin ETF on earth sit on a custodian's books, get moved on the custodian's schedule, for the custodian's reasons. You own a share of a fund that owns coins Coinbase holds. Two layers of intermediary between you and a key you will never touch.
That's the trade the ETF asks you to make. Convenience now, control never. BlackRock spent decades getting between people and their assets, because the gap is where the fees live. Bitcoin was built to delete the gap. The ETF quietly sells it back to you, $226 million at a time.
A fund share rises and falls with the price. It cannot send one satoshi without permission.
Let BlackRock move their coins. While you hold yours.