Subscribe

Bitcoin ETF review delayed again by SEC

The regulator has paused decisions ahead of a government shutdown.

The Securities and Exchange Commission further delayed its review of applications from BlackRock Inc., Invesco Ltd. and others seeking to list the first Bitcoin exchange-traded fund in the U.S.

The regulator, whose three-part mandate includes investor protection, also postponed decisions on applications from Bitwise and Valkyrie, according to documents posted to its website. 

The delays come even though the SEC had until mid-October to weigh in on the applications. Regulators earlier this week had postponed a decision on a similar application from 21Shares and Cathie Wood’s Ark Investment Management.

Industry watchers are closely monitoring the race for a U.S. spot Bitcoin ETF, given the winner is expected to enjoy a significant first-mover advantage. At least 10 firms currently have applications pending with the SEC, according to a tally from Bloomberg Intelligence. The ETFs would be physically backed by the largest virtual currency.

The SEC had already postponed decisions on applications from BlackRock, Invesco, Bitwise and Valkyrie in August. It has also denied numerous past applications, citing scams and market manipulation among reasons as to why such ETFs shouldn’t trade in the U.S.

But a recent legal victory in federal court by Grayscale Investments, another firm seeking to debut a Bitcoin ETF, has fueled speculation among market watchers that such a structure would soon be approved. 

Bitcoin, the largest cryptocurrency, on Thursday traded around $27,000. It hit a record high of around $69,000 in 2021. 

Related Topics: , , ,

Learn more about reprints and licensing for this article.

Recent Articles by Author

Ether ETF aspirants take the starting blocks ahead of anticipated July approval

Earlier whispers of a fourth-of-July greenlight now look premature as the SEC gives applicants a new deadline.

Hints of jobs slowdown put Fed on the alert

Hints of impending weakness in the labor market add to the central bank's list of risks to manage.

Wall Street weighs impact on bonds if Trump wins

Strategists urge investors to hedge against inflation.

More American homeowners locked into mortgage rates above 5%

Older loans at lower rates are being replaced by costlier borrowing.

Take profits on five-year Treasuries now says JPMorgan

Selling pressures are elevated due to multiple risk events.

X

Subscribe and Save 60%

Premium Access
Print + Digital

Learn more
Subscribe to Print