Spot bitcoin ETF approval: What it means for investors, crypto

In This Article:

US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) regulators approved the offering of spot bitcoin ETFs on Wednesday, January 10, giving the go-ahead to all 11 firms who applied to list these funds.

Yahoo Finance's Rachelle Akuffo underlines what this means for general crypto and bitcoin (BTC-USD) traders in comparison to fund investors, including ETF fees, accessibility into crypto, and overall competition between firms' bitcoin ETFs.

For more expert insight and the latest market action, click here to watch this full episode of Yahoo Finance Live.

Editor's note: This article was written by Luke Carberry Mogan.

Video Transcript

BRAD SMITH: Well, a milestone moment for Bitcoin regulators have given money managers the approval to launch 11 Spot Bitcoin exchange-traded funds. Now, every day investors can get exposure to the world's largest cryptocurrency without having to own it. There's a lot of optimism around the news that we heard from Coinbase CFO Alesia Haas last night. Here's what she had to say.

ALESIA HAAS: I believe very strongly that crypto is the future of money. And this is going to introduce more people to crypto, and eventually, the crypto economy. And we think it's a first step of many on their journey into the crypto economy.

BRAD SMITH: Yahoo Finance's Rachelle Akuffo is here to weigh in. Rachelle, so what does this mean for investors and for the next crypto ETF on deck?

RACHELLE AKUFFO: Well, certainly a lot of potential here. I want to set the stage here by saying FOMO is not a strategy. Don't get caught up in this.

If you weren't already a Bitcoin enthusiast, don't feel like you have to launch into this. But now that we do have these approved ETFs holding physical Bitcoin as their underlying asset, investors do have some comparing to do. So launching 11 spot Bitcoin ETFs means competition for fees.

You see Grayscale has the highest fees. They actually did have first mover advantage by having their trust set up back in 2013. You also have other factors, including liquidity and fund trading costs.

Now, if you're a buy-and-hold investor, you'll likely focus on the fees. Active traders more likely to focus on liquidity. Something to note, though, ETFs traditionally haven't had as much volatility as an asset like Bitcoin. But this is a very important first step.

As you mentioned there, in that sound bite there, Bitcoin's ETF custodian Coinbase laid that out when we spoke to their CFO. But for context, according to Morningstar US market index, they found that over the past five years, Bitcoin's standard deviation of returns is nearly four times that of the US stock market. But now, you have these floodgates that are open, and, of course, all eyes then on the next biggest crypto asset in terms of value and trading volume, and that is Ethereum.