Bitcoin ETF hopefuls eye this week for long-awaited SEC greenlight

A logo sits on the windows of the offices of La Maison du Bitcoin bank in Paris, France.
Christophe Morin/Bloomberg

A series of high-stakes deadlines this week will mark the culmination of a years-long push to launch exchange-traded funds backed by Bitcoin in the U.S.

Would-be bitcoin ETF issuers have been given until Monday morning in Washington, D.C. to submit any last-minute revisions to their pending applications, Bloomberg News has reported. The SEC itself has until Jan. 10 to take action on at least one of those applications, and crypto insiders have speculated the regulator will use that date to announce a slew of decisions at once. 

There are two technical requirements that must be fulfilled before a spot-backed bitcoin ETF can start trading. First, the SEC must sign off on so-called 19b-4 filings by the exchanges that would list the ETFs. Second, the regulator must approve the relevant S-1 forms, which are the registration applications from the would-be issuers — a list that includes BlackRock and Fidelity.

READ MORE: With spot-crypto ETFs on the horizon, here's what advisors need to know

The SEC is planning to vote on the exchanges' filings, the 19b-4s, in the coming days, Bloomberg News has reported. The regulator may or may not then take action on the issuers' applications, the S-1s, around the same time. If the SEC grants both sets of required approvals, the ETFs could start trading as soon as the next business day. 

An SEC representative declined to comment on the status of the applications.

ETF impact
Bitcoin's boosters say ETFs backed by the largest crypto token would represent a watershed moment for digital assets. Billions of dollars are at stake, representing potential inflows from retail and institutional investors alike. 

"The market is still seriously underestimating the potential impact of a bitcoin ETF approval," said Michael Anderson, co-founder of crypto venture firm Framework Ventures. 

But the SEC, under the Democrat Gary Gensler and his Trump-era predecessor Jay Clayton, has previously refused to allow such a product to launch, citing concerns about investor protection and the potential for market manipulation. 

READ MORE: The SEC needs to provide more clarity around crypto ETFs

However, speculation has been mounting since August, when the SEC lost a key legal fight against crypto asset manager Grayscale Investments, that the regulator will have to acquiesce to the growing clamor for the product.

Market wagers that regulatory approval is on the horizon fueled a jump of approximately 160% in bitcoin last year. That still wasn't enough to re-attain the record highs set in November 2021, when bitcoin hit almost $69,000. 

The token has stayed in a relatively tight range around $44,000 since the start of 2024. It slipped about 1.5% to $43,640 as of 6:02 a.m. on Monday in London, part of a wider dip in crypto markets at the start of the working week. 

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Industry News Regulation and compliance Cryptocurrency Bitcoin SEC
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