On December 29, the contenders in the race for a Bitcoin exchange-traded fund (ETF) spot waited until the eleventh hour to submit their final S-1 form applications.
Throughout the day, these applications trickled into the United States Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), following earlier submissions by BlackRock, Van Eck, and Valkyrie.
Notable names in the crypto industry, including Invesco Galaxy, Bitwise, WisdomTree, and Fidelity, joined the fray.
In the latest filings, Fidelity, WisdomTree, and Invesco Galaxy revealed their authorized participants. Invesco Galaxy chose Virtu and JPMorgan, while WisdomTree and Fidelity opted for Jane Street Capital.
Interestingly, WisdomTree decided to stick with in-kind share creation and redemption, despite the SEC’s encouragement to switch to cash-based mechanisms.
Furthermore, it seems a price war has ignited among competitors. Invesco Galaxy, for instance, announced a waiver of fees for the first six months and the first $5 billion in assets.
Fidelity, on the other hand, set its fee at 0.39%.
Bitwise, though yet to disclose its authorized participants, mentioned in its S-1 filing that an undisclosed entity expressed interest in purchasing up to $200 million worth of the ETF shares.
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It’s worth noting that several major players in the industry have thrown their hats into the ring.
BlackRock, Van Eck, Grayscale, Bitwise, WisdomTree, Invesco Galaxy, Fidelity, ARK Invest, Valkyrie, Franklin, Hashdex, Global X ETFs, and Pando Asset have all submitted S-1 applications for spot Bitcoin ETFs.
The SEC had set December 29 as the deadline for amendments to spot BTC ETF S-1 filings.
Grayscale made a last-minute submission on December 27 with a new S-3 filing, following the resignation of Barry Silbert from the board of directors.
In this filing, Grayscale announced its intention to convert its Grayscale Bitcoin Trust into a cash-only spot ETF, mirroring similar moves by Van Eck and BlackRock in earlier revisions.
Barry Silbert and his company, the Digital Currency Group, are currently under investigation by the SEC, adding another layer of complexity to the evolving landscape of Bitcoin ETF applications.
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