Amplify Insights

BLOK-Chain Monthly February 2026

Written by Amplify ETFs | Feb 17, 2026 10:19:11 PM

Blockchain Convergence with AI

As of January 31st, BLOK is up 4.48% year-to-date for 2026 (NAV returns, see standardized performance) but headwinds surrounding the uncertainty around the Market Structure bill or also known as Clarity Act1 and the U.S. government brief shut down gave investors a reason to pause and suddenly go risk off.  We acknowledge that this volatility is hard to stomach but believe that long-term investors will be rewarded by owning the companies building out the infrastructure. Moreover, whether crypto trades like it is in a bear market (aka, a “Winter”) we see the technology buildout on blockchain rails as accelerating in 2026 and converging further with Artificial Intelligence (AI).

Skeptics around the benefits of blockchain should read the explanation by Mike Cagney, CEO of Figure (FIGR) why Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac with their legacy systems are challenged to structure a $300,000 loan due to $13,000 of costs. In contrast, on Figure’s (FIGR) platform loans are originated with a shared revenue benefit to the regional banks which are able to fund the loans off their balance sheets at meaningful lower cost than the platforms built on legacy bureaucratic government infrastructure. Bottomline, as Cagney stated on February 9, 2026, “lawmakers or regulators” should support crypto progress as blockchain has the potential to solve the affordability problem for home ownership. The legacy infrastructure needs an upgrade.2

We believe the technology stack that will enable the convergence between AI and blockchain will lead to the integration between blockchain and data centers, but admittedly this buildout will take years and trillions of capital. Based upon recent earnings calls, we know that some $700 billion has been committed by Amazon (AMZN), Alphabet (GOOG), Microsoft (MSFT), Nvidia (NVDA), Oracle (ORCL), but there are many that are also privately supporting this buildout; and, arguably these large companies leading this buildout cannot afford to be poorly positioned for this transition. The scale of these projects is so large and the transformation of business by AI is so evolutionary that even at the expense of dilution there is little choice but to embrace the change. Larry Ellison speaks to the importance of this technological evolution broadly, but the action to tap the equity markets for the first time in 40 years demonstrates that this transformation is about the firm’s ability to thrive in the new world as he envisions it.

The integration between AI and blockchain involves the security of data integrity on the chain. Blockchain provides a secure, tamper-proof environment for AI data which foundationally can be trusted because it is more traceable from the transparent logs of the ledger on the blockchain. To this point, as AI models are run on a distributed decentralized network as smart contracts, self-executing program on a blockchain that automatically enforces an agreement when present conditions are met, they provide more data control and privacy.

The performance data quoted represents past performance and does not guarantee future results. Investment return and principal value of an investment will fluctuate so that an investor’s shares, when sold or redeemed, may be worth more or less than their original cost. Current performance may be lower or higher than the performance quoted. For most recent month-end performance, visit BLOKETF.com.

In our December letter we referred to Regulation, Adoption and Capital (RACs) as a framework to track the investment conditions. Reporting on RACs progress on a monthly basis has its challenges, as monthly metrics can foster short-term thinking, but we hope the acronym helps frame honest engagement and education around this space.

Regulation

The Market Structure Bill, otherwise known as the Clarity Act, was openly debated throughout January, culminating in a visit by Crypto leaders at the White House. Key issues remain focused on:

Stablecoin Yield Restrictions: A central conflict involves a proposal to prohibit digital asset ser-vice providers from offering interest or "yield" to users for simply holding stablecoins. Traditional banks argue that yield-bearing stablecoins function as unregulated deposits that could drain funds from the traditional banking system while the crypto industry argues that such rewards benefit the consumer and should not just be entitlements for the banks.
Regulatory Jurisdiction (SEC vs. CFTC): The bill attempts to resolve long-standing jurisdictional disputes by granting the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) primary oversight over "digital commodity" spot markets, while maintaining the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC’s) jurisdiction over investment contract assets.
DeFi and Software Developer Liability: Debates center on defining the extent to which decentral-ized finance (DeFi) protocols, software developers, and platforms should be regulated. There is concern that an over-restrictive framework could hinder web3 development, with disagreements on when a decentralized protocol becomes a regulated financial intermediary.
Illicit Finance and Compliance: The bill aims to close national security gaps by applying stricter Anti-Money Laundering (AML) and Know Your Customer (KYC) requirements to centralized digital asset intermediaries interacting with DeFi.

Adoption

New Survey from PayPal and the National Cryptocurrency Association shows accelerating merchant adoption driven by customer demand.3

Customer interest is a major driver behind merchant adoption, nearly nine in ten merchants (88%) report receiving customer inquiries about paying with crypto, and more than two-thirds (69%) say customers want to use crypto at least once a month. Four in five merchants (79%) agree that accepting crypto could help them attract new customers, highlighting its perceived value as both a payment method and a growth lever.
Cryptocurrency payments are quickly moving into the mainstream of U.S. commerce. Nearly 4 out of 10 (39%) merchants already accept cryptocurrency at checkout, and more than four in five merchants (84%) believe crypto payments will become common within the next five years.

Capital

Markets were open for business, but admittedly the BitGo IPO proved disappointing. Nevertheless, we remain constructive on the capital markets and see Cipher (CIFR) raising $2 billion through the debt markets as contrasting support within our portfolio. Our understanding was that the deal was heavily oversubscribed. 

Oracle (ORCL) recently raised $25 billion in an overnight bond and preferred deal and announced an at‑the‑market (ATM) equity offering, which allows it to sell shares gradually at current market prices rather than all at once at a fixed price. We are not long ORCL, but we view this access to capital markets as a statement of the importance of the company’s future business transformation.
BitGo went public in January as the first pure play crypto company to do so. The stock was initially priced above the range at $18 but failed and as of January 31, 2026, trades around $12-$13. The company is a pure play trusted custodian of about $100 billion of crypto which has been battle tested through multiple bear markets.

Attribution

In January, BLOK’s NAV returns were up 4.48% year to date (YTD), remaining meaningfully ahead of the broad indexes, Bitcoin, and other thematic portfolios; however, performance was choppy. We highlight two points in our outlook for 2026.

Diversification does not assure a profit or protect against a loss in a declining market.

Headwinds in January came from companies like BitGo (BTGO), which declined approximately 30% to around $12.60. Obviously not a strong start for an IPO priced at $18. Other weak-performing names included Roblox (RBLX) and Circle Internet Group (CRCL), both of which declined approximately 19%; however, neither of which had a meaningful impact on the portfolio return since they were sized small. Platform companies like Robinhood (HOOD), Coinbase (COIN), eTORO (ETOR) in aggregate were headwinds of about 1% all together.

Transactions and Repositing

As a matter of discipline, we trimmed our position in Figure Technology (FIGR) by about 0.5% following a move of over 150% from the IPO price. As a reminder, the company went public back in September and is currently working through the tokenization of its own stock and the unlocking of insider shares. We also sold out of 100% of our position in GameStop (GME). In the absence of additional clarity by Management around its business prospects, their ownership of Bitcoin and the board’s irresponsible decision to provide an audacious compensation package we just did not see an alignment in interests.

 

 

1Clarity Act is a bill designed to create regulatory framework for digital assets
2Mike Cagney Twitter https://x.com/mcagney/status/2020966025228156975?s=20 
3https://newsroom.paypal-corp.com/2026-01-27-Crypto-Goes-Mainstream-4-in-10-US-Merchants-Accept-Digital-Assets