BlackRock, the biggest asset manager in the world, is pursuing its global effort to expand into digital assets. Reports indicate that BlackRock eyes a launch of its iShares Bitcoin ETF (IBIT) on the Australian Securities Exchange (ASX) in mid-November 2025. This will extend the company’s hugely successful Bitcoin strategy in the United States into the Asia-Pacific region and will give Australian investors a local, regulated, and direct opportunity to access Bitcoin.
This launch, from one of the world’s largest and most credible money managers, sends a powerful signal to the broader investment community about growing institutional demand for Bitcoin in the region and follows a series of similar successful U.S. and European listings by the ‘asset manager'”
A ‘Wrapper’ for a U.S. Sensation
The new Australian fund, which will trade under the ticker ASX: IBIT, is not a standalone fund. Instead, it is structured as a “wrapper” that invests directly into the U.S.-listed iShares Bitcoin Trust (NASDAQ: IBIT).
This structure provides a simple and powerful benefit for Australian investors. It allows them to buy into one of the most successful ETF launches in history—the U.S. IBIT has amassed tens of billions in assets since its January 2024 debut—through a familiar, local, and regulated structure. Investors can use their existing ASX brokerage accounts without the complexity of opening offshore accounts or managing their own crypto custody.
The Price of Admission
BlackRock is making its way into the Australian market with a remarkably competitive fee schedule. The Australian IBIT is estimated to have a management fee of about 0.39%. This puts it as a new sort of low-cost leader, and it is expected to substantially undercut the current competition. For reference in comparison to IBIT’s management fee, the Monochrome Asset Management Bitcoin ETF (IBTC) was launched in June 2024 as the first Bitcoin ETF to be offered in Australia but is charging 0.98% management fee. BlackRock pricing aggressively is reflective of the “fee war” BlackRock began in the U.S. market, and will ultimately benefit retail investors.
The Global Domino Effect
The Australian launch is the most recent step in BlackRock’s measured global approach. This decision comes only a month or so after the company listed its iShares Bitcoin ETP (IB1T) on the London Stock Exchange.
With this announcement, Australia joins a rapidly growing list of major financial jurisdictions around the world, including the US, Germany, and Switzerland, where investors can now access regulated Bitcoin products. This trend demonstrates both a clear and accelerating level of institutional acceptance for Bitcoin as a jusitifiable asset class, particularly seen by the legitimacy of BlackRock as leader in this global movement.
Why an ETF? The Appeal of Simplicity
The main attraction of a Bitcoin ETF, for many investors, is its ease of use. You can get exposure to Bitcoin price movements without dealing with the technicalities and security risks of holding the Bitcoin itself.
Instead of managing digital wallets, private keys, and accounts on cryptocurrency exchanges, an investor can simply buy shares of IBIT just as they would shares of any major Australian company. The fund, through its United States counterpart, is responsible for the complex, high-stakes activity of securely-custodying the underlying Bitcoin, as managed by institutional custodians such as Coinbase.
A Timed Launch in a Changing Regulatory Framework
The introduction of the fund is opportunely aligned with Australia’s changing regulatory environment. The Australian Securities and Investments Commission (ASIC) has recently updated its guidance, establishing a new, revised category for most digital assets as “financial products.”
Even though Bitcoin itself is not considered a financial product under the new rules, the funds and other platforms that provide exposure to Bitcoin would be considered financial products under the new rules; as such, any provider of those products will need to obtain an Australian Financial Services Licence by June 2026. BlackRock’s entry as a provider under this new framework would establish a considerably higher level of investor protection and market discipline than existing unregulated alternatives, as it provides a regulated avenue for investors who may have been on the sidelines waiting for a credible entry point into the market.




