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Just caught wind of this wild mystery that's been brewing in the bitcoin ETF space, and honestly, it's one of those stories that gets more confusing the deeper you dig.
So there's this shell company called Laurore Ltd. that quietly filed a massive $436 million position in BlackRock's IBIT—their first and only filing ever. But here's where it gets interesting: they listed an address in Hong Kong and a director named Zhang Hui. Now, if you know anything about common Chinese names, Zhang Hui is basically the Asian equivalent of John Smith. CoinDesk actually found over 100 Zhang Huis registered as directors across different companies in the Hong Kong Company Registry alone.
The crypto community immediately started losing it. Capital flight? Chinese wealth moving offshore? The speculation spiraled fast. Even Bloomberg's ETF analysts admitted they spent hours trying to figure out who was behind this.
When CoinDesk actually visited the Hong Kong address listed in the filing, things got even weirder. The building directory showed the suite was occupied by a completely different company—Avecamour Advice Ltd. Laurore, the one actually holding the IBIT shares, isn't even incorporated in Hong Kong. So you've got this layered structure: Laurore holds the bitcoin ETF stake, Avecamour Advice appears to be the actual occupant of the address, and both are connected through Zhang Hui somehow.
After weeks of radio silence, Laurore finally broke their silence through a spokesperson. Their response? The owner "prefers to keep a low profile" and the position "reflects personal investment conviction." That's it. No details about who Zhang Hui actually is, no explanation of the corporate structure.
Digging into the Hong Kong Company Registry records reveals that Avecamour Advice is wholly owned by Avecamour Ltd., a British Virgin Islands entity. Zhang Hui shows up again as the sole director, with a mainland China passport prefix. Avecamour was incorporated in March 2025. But beyond that? Nothing. No public information about stakeholders, no transparency.
The spokesperson did mention that "the owner of Laurore is also a director of Avecamour," which basically confirms Zhang Hui is the mysterious principal. But they stopped there, claiming it's all "private businesses" and they don't disclose further ownership details.
So what's actually happening here? There are basically two scenarios. Either this is capital flight—funds moving out of mainland China into offshore assets like U.S.-listed bitcoin ETFs to diversify wealth beyond domestic capital controls. Or it's simply a Hong Kong-based fund or family office that decided U.S.-listed bitcoin ETFs offer way better liquidity and lower fees than HKEX-listed alternatives, so they allocated capital accordingly.
The reality is, 13F filings don't require disclosure of ultimate beneficial owners, just reporting managers. Institutional investors regularly use multiple legal vehicles for structuring, custody, or privacy. So while the mystery is compelling, the structure itself isn't necessarily unusual.
But here's the thing—the Hong Kong Company Registry shows all these layers, yet we still can't figure out who's actually behind it. It's like the crypto equivalent of Satoshi Nakamoto. The position is real, the filings are real, but the identity? That remains completely opaque. And honestly, that's probably exactly how whoever set this up wanted it to be.
BTC is currently trading around $73.88K, and whether this mystery investor bought in at higher or lower prices, their conviction in bitcoin ETFs is pretty clear. Whether we ever find out who they actually are though? That's a different story.