Bitcoin ETF Essential Facts: Prices, Winners, Losers, Tickers and Fees
Updated January 12, 2024, 07:00 UTC
BlackRock’s iShares Bitcoin Trust took an early lead in trading volume as 10 spot bitcoin ETFs open their doors to the investing public. The nine trillion dollar asset manager attracted trading volume of 17.9 million in the first minutes.
Close behind it was ‘crypto native’ asset manager Grayscale, which was allowed to convert its closed-ended trust into an ETF. It was the court case Grayscale brought against the US Securities and Exchange Commission to contest the regulator’s refusal to allow it to convert, that arguably got the party started.
The Grayscale Bitcoin Trust already has $28 billion in assets under management, so the converted vehicle had an enviable headstart on its new competitors, ringing up early volumes of 16.7 million.
Spot Bitcoin ETF trading volume at closing bell reaches $4 billion
By the end of the day $4 billion had been traded across the 10 active spot Bitcoin ETFs, although some of that will have been rotation out of the high-fee (1.5%) Grayscale Bitcoin Trust ETF.
By contrast, the ProShares Bitcoin Strategy ETF (BITO) which holds CME traded bitcoin futures contracts, pulled in$1 billion over two days, so the spot products are off to a flying start.
Losers were to be found among the smaller players, as was perhaps to be expected. At the bottom of the trading volume table for the first hour of price action was the WidomTree Bitcoin Fund (BTCW).
The Hashdex Bitcoin Futures ETF (DEFI) volume refers to the futures product, as its name suggests. The Brazilian-based fund issuers failed to meet all SEC requirements for its conversion. However, the last laugh may be with the minnows.
Excluding Hashdex, the only fund in the green at the time of writing was Grayscale Bitcoin Trust (GBTC), up 0.75% at $40.80.
The table directly below shows prices later in the day, while the volume data referenced in this article draws on the data in the infographic at the foot of the article compiled in the first minutes of trading.
A number of issuers have waived their management fee in an attempt to grab market share, effectively reducing some fees to 0%. ARK, Bitwise, Fidelity, Valkyrie and Invesco have all waived their fees for an introductory period varying between three and six months.
Other issuers, like BlackRock, have trimmed their charge to entice buyers. BlackRock’s iShares Bitcoin Trust (IBIT) is charging 0.12% for 12 months up to assets of $5 billion, after which the fee rises to 0.25%.
Early ETF buyers were warned – bitcoin is volatile
It is early days and the price of bitcoin has been volatile to say the least. The price of the leading digital asset challenged for $49k, reaching $48,922 but then gave up its gains for the day to return to the price it was consolidating at when the SEC waved its magic wand of approval, to rest back at $46,300.
Strong inflation figures that saw price rises starting to accelerate again hit the broader stock market today, although the Fed is still expected to start reducing interest rates later this year, but perhaps not as soon as some would have hoped. That slight souring in sentiment hurts risk assets like stocks and of course crypto. CPI inflation year on year came in at 3.4% compared to estimates forecasting 3.2%.
Anyone who bought into a spot bitcoin ETF in the first hour of trading is currently probably sitting on a loss, although there are a few hours to go before the bell rings. Volatility is of course the lifeblood of bitcoin, so buyer’s remorse would be misplaced, or at any rate a case of not doing your due diligence.
Bitcoin to $100,000 this year says Standard Chartered
However, those taking a longer-term view will be happy to have got in now assuming Standard Chartered’s price target of $100,000 by year-end and $200,000 in 2025 comes to pass.
Whichever way you look at launch day, it is bitcoin that is the winner. Trading volumes in the spot market are up 40%.
If you are new to crypto and researching whether the nascent digital asset class is right for you, check out our article 5 best cryptocurrencies to hold in a traditional investment portfolio.
Alternatively, those of a more speculative persuasion could try their luck with Bitcoin Minetrix, a project whose unique selling point is in bringing tokenized bitcoin cloud mining to market in a first for the industry.
The native token $BTCMTX is in presale now and has so far raised an impressive $8.2 million from contributors. Stake the token and you earn cloud mining credits entitling the owner to a proportionate share of bitcoin mining rewards.
As bitcoin BTC block reward halving draws closer and the ETF approvals are now behind us, Bitcoin Minetrix provides a novel way of gaining exposure to the bitcoin growth story as mining becomes more profitable and bitcoin more scarce and valuable.
Below we provide a breakdown of the essential information you need to navigate the spot bitcoin ETF market: