For 89 years, T. Rowe Price has been the definition of careful money. The firm manages about $1.9 trillion, most of it in retirement accounts and pension plans, and it built that business by staying away from anything that looks like a gamble. On Thursday, July 16, that same firm launched a crypto fund on NYSE Arca holding Bitcoin (CRYPTO:BTC), Ethereum (CRYPTO:ETH), XRP (CRYPTO:XRP), and more.
The fund trades under the ticker TKNZ, and it is the first crypto ETF where a team of managers picks the coins and decides how much of each to hold, rather than tracking a single coin or following a fixed index. So why is a firm this cautious choosing crypto by hand, how much of each coin did it buy, and what does that mean for Bitcoin, Ethereum, and XRP?
How T. Rowe Price’s New Crypto ETF Works

An ETF is a fund you buy like a share. Rather than opening an account on a crypto exchange, moving money into it, and holding the coins yourself, you buy a slice of a fund that does all of that for you. It appears in your normal brokerage account next to your stocks, and you can sell it the same way you’d sell a stock.
Every crypto ETF on the market works one of two ways. Most ETFs hold a single coin, so a Bitcoin ETF buys Bitcoin and nothing else, and your money tracks only BTC. The other ETF types hold a basket of coins, and the size of each holding is decided by how big that coin is. These are called passive or index ETFs, because they follow a fixed rule rather than anyone’s judgment. Every crypto has a total value, and the fund copies those proportions exactly.
Bitcoin is about 55% of all crypto by value, so it gets about 55% of the fund, and a coin worth 1% of the market gets 1% of the fund. T. Rowe Price has now built the first crypto ETF that works differently. The ETF trades under the ticker TKNZ, and it holds between five and 15 cryptocurrencies at a time—and five managers decide which coins get in and how much money each one receives. They can add to a coin that’s running, cut one they think has gone too far, or sell out of it entirely as their research changes.
The firm says the fund is built to catch momentum-driven rallies and rotations between crypto assets, which is a polite way of saying the team will chase whatever is working. TKNZ charges 0.75% a year, and that’s a discounted rate running until May 31, 2027, after which it rises to 0.90%. BlackRock’s Bitcoin ETF charges 0.25%, so users are paying roughly three times as much for the same fund structure.
The fund owns the actual coins rather than futures contracts, with a crypto bank called Anchorage Digital holding them. There’s also no leverage or staking yet, although the prospectus leaves room to add it later. The SEC cleared the fund in June, and it began trading on July 16 with about $15 million.
Why a $1.9 Trillion Retirement Manager Is Picking Its Own Coins

T. Rowe Price was founded in 1937 by Thomas Rowe Price Jr., the investor credited with pioneering growth investing. The firm built its business managing retirement money through patient, research-heavy stock picking, and it kept that approach even through the decade when cheap index funds took over the industry. T. Rowe Price has always picked its investments by hand.
So when the firm finally moved on crypto, it didn’t copy the passive trackers everyone else built. Blue Macellari, who runs the fund, said at launch that active management plays “an incredibly meaningful role” in an asset class this volatile.
Macellari has led the firm’s digital assets desk since 2022, and her four co-managers bring 60 years of investing experience between them. T. Rowe Price launched a crypto index in October 2025 as a test run, then filed for TKNZ the same month, while the crypto market was crashing around it.
Bitcoin has fallen roughly 45% over the past year, and most firms don’t launch a crypto product into a market like that. Bloomberg ETF analyst Eric Balchunas said the timing was deliberate, with T. Rowe Price waiting for the dust from October’s selloff to settle before going live.
How Much of Each Crypto TKNZ Holds

The fund’s opening portfolio puts 40.75% in Bitcoin and 18.42% in Ethereum, with BNB at 11.01%, Solana at 9.44%, and XRP at 9.37%. Hyperliquid takes 6.45%, Stellar gets 3%, and Dogecoin rounds out the crypto holdings at 1.28%, alongside slivers of the USDC stablecoin and cash.
Starting with Bitcoin, a passive ETF would have given it about 55%, because that’s Bitcoin’s share of the crypto market. TKNZ managers held BTC at 40.75% instead, which is roughly 14 points less than a passive fund would hold. That’s a team betting the next stretch of returns comes from somewhere other than Bitcoin. At 41%, the fund still mostly moves wherever Bitcoin goes, so the rest of the portfolio is where the decisions show.
Hyperliquid is the most surprising case. HYPE makes up about 0.66% of the crypto market, and the managers gave it 6.45%, roughly ten times what a passive ETF would hold. The coin is up around 150% this year while Bitcoin fell, so its easy to see why it gets the higher proportion. Balchunas summed the whole portfolio up as “underweight Bitcoin and overweight most of the rest, especially HYPE.”
Then there’s XRP at 9.37%, which is about three times its share of the crypto market. Five professionals looked at every coin on their list and made XRP a top-five holding, ahead of Dogecoin, Stellar, and Hyperliquid, and just behind Solana. None of that was possible in a passive fund.
What TKNZ Means for Bitcoin, Ethereum, and XRP
TKNZ opened with about $15 million, which is nothing next to a $2 trillion crypto market. What makes it worth watching is that a firm this cautious looked at the whole market and decided Bitcoin deserved less than its share, XRP deserved three times more, and Hyperliquid deserved ten times more.
The SEC requires TKNZ to publish those weights every day, so anyone can see what five professional investors think each coin is worth holding. Right now they are telling users that Bitcoin is where the least amount of crypto money should go, that XRP is worth holding at three times what the market says, and that Ethereum is worth exactly what everyone already thinks it is.
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