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Remember this story about the Hong Kong investor who silently bought a Bitcoin ETF worth $436 million? Here, Laurore Ltd. finally decided to break the silence, and it turned out that behind all this intrigue was a rather boring answer.
When information about a little-known firm investing hundreds of millions in BlackRock IBIT surfaced earlier this year, the crypto community went crazy with speculation. The director named Zhang Hui, office in Hong Kong, structure through the British Virgin Islands — all of this looked like a veil of secrecy. People on Twitter immediately started guessing: is this Chinese capital? Capital outflow from the mainland? Maybe a large fund is behind this scheme?
As it turned out, the company is linked to Avecamour Advice Limited, registered in Hong Kong and fully owned by a parent company in BVI. All documents point to one person — the same Zhang Hui with a mainland Chinese passport. But when CoinDesk finally got a comment, a Laurore representative simply stated that the owner prefers to stay in the shadows, and the investment reflects his personal beliefs. That’s all. No further details.
This is where the most interesting part for analysis begins. If you dig deeper, such a structure makes sense from a currency market perspective in the context of current restrictions. Hong Kong is traditionally used as an intermediary point for moving capital from the mainland into offshore assets. Bitcoin ETFs in the US offer significantly better liquidity and lower fees than local alternatives on HKEX. So, from a financial point of view, the decision is logical.
But there’s also another option: Laurore is simply part of a larger structure — a family office or a fund cluster that diversifies its portfolio through several legal entities. Such schemes are perfectly normal for large investors. Form 13F requires disclosure of managers but does not require information about ultimate beneficiaries, so multiple layers of structures are standard practice.
What’s striking is how quickly the crypto community created an entire conspiracy theory around an ordinary investment. Zhang Hui is one of the most common names in China; CoinDesk found over a hundred people with that name in the Hong Kong registry. No secret, just coincidence.
In the end, Laurore’s identity remains as mysterious as Satoshi Nakamoto’s for Bitcoin. But sometimes, the most boring answer is the right one. Just an investor who wants to stay in the shadows and invests in Bitcoin through a convenient channel. Nothing unusual when looking at how real financial flows are arranged.