Wealth Management

Public companies’ Bitcoin holdings jumped nearly 40% in Q3 2025, even as the cryptocurrency’s price stayed below $115,000. According to Bitwise, 172 firms now collectively hold about 1.02 million BTC—roughly 4.8% of total supply—driven by large additions from players like Strategy and Japan’s Metaplanet. 

 

Despite this record accumulation, enthusiasm across crypto equities has cooled, with companies such as Metaplanet seeing share prices tumble more than 70% from their peaks. 

 

Analysts suggest Bitcoin’s muted response reflects low market liquidity and the nature of institutional buying, which mostly occurs off exchanges and doesn’t immediately move prices. Broader macroeconomic uncertainty, from renewed trade tensions to shifting Fed policy expectations, has also dampened risk appetite. 


Finsum: Many market observers remain optimistic, expecting Bitcoin to regain upward momentum once retail demand and liquidity return later in the year.

Cybersecurity stocks have surged in 2025, fueled by rising global hacking incidents and enthusiasm for AI-driven protection tools. Firms like Zscaler, Cloudflare, and CrowdStrike have gained between 50% and 77% this year, far outpacing broader software benchmarks such as the iShares Expanded Tech-Software ETF. 

 

The sector’s strength is being reinforced by record corporate spending, highlighted by Alphabet’s $32 billion acquisition of Wiz and growing demand for cloud-based security solutions. 

 

Despite heightened competition from tech giants like Microsoft and Google, cybersecurity remains a top enterprise priority, with identity and cloud security expected to drive double-digit growth for years. Investors see continued consolidation and platform integration as key to sustaining momentum across the sector.


Finsum: Both attackers and defenders are increasingly using generative AI, creating new markets for firms specializing in identity and AI security like CyberArk and Okta.

Although the term “ESG” has become controversial and sometimes viewed as a marketing label, about 69% of institutional asset owners still report using it—primarily for consistency. Many prefer alternative labels: 57% use “sustainable investment,” 53% “sustainability,” and 52% “responsible investment.” 

 

ESG considerations now apply to an average of 44% of asset owners’ AUM globally, up from 42% last year. In 2025, 20% of respondents said they apply ESG to more than 75% of their portfolios, and 10% said ESG applies to 100% of their assets. 

 

Asset owners increasingly see ESG as aligned with fiduciary duty: 61% agree ESG supports that role, up from 53% in 2024. 


Finsum: The biggest barrier to broader ESG adoption is concern over impacts on investment returns or a lack of standardized data and reporting. 

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