Showing posts with label ethereum etf. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ethereum etf. Show all posts

Wall Street May Soon Have 4X Leveraged ETF's for Bitcoin and Ethereum...

ProShares 4x Leveraged BTC/ETH ETFs

Wall Street Looked At Bitcoin Volatility And Said: “Needs More.” Enter The 4x ETFs...

The SEC hasn’t even finished digesting the first wave of spot crypto ETFs, and ProShares is already back with a fresh dare: new funds that aim to deliver four times the daily move of Bitcoin and Ethereum. If spot ETFs are training wheels for TradFi, these are the downhill racing bike with questionable brakes.

In early February, ProShares filed for a set of 4x leveraged products that would track daily moves in BTC and ETH futures. The idea is simple on paper and chaotic in practice: if Bitcoin goes up 5% in a day, the ETF tries to go up around 20%. If Bitcoin drops 5%, you do not need a calculator to know it hurts.

How A 4x Crypto ETF Actually Works

These funds do not hold Bitcoin or Ethereum directly. Instead, they use futures, swaps, and other derivatives so the portfolio can target a specific daily multiple of the underlying index. That means lots of rebalancing, which traders love to front‑run and long‑term investors usually regret.

Because the target is a daily multiple, returns compound over time in weird ways. In a choppy market, you can get “volatility decay,” where repeated up‑and‑down moves eat away at the fund’s value even if the underlying asset ends up roughly flat. Retail holders who treat these like long‑term HODL vehicles are basically paying to learn path‑dependency the hard way.

Why ProShares Smells Opportunity Here

ProShares already launched the first U.S. Bitcoin futures ETF back in 2021, so it knows there is demand for packaged speculation. The pitch this time is that if traders are already using offshore perpetuals with 10x or 20x leverage, giving them a 4x product inside U.S. brokerages is almost a harm‑reduction move.

There is also a fee story hiding in the background. Spot ETFs are turning into a fee war with razor‑thin margins, while exotic products and leveraged funds usually charge more and have higher turnover. If you run an ETF business and your plain‑vanilla funds slowly become a commodity, you look for edges where complexity justifies a fatter fee.

Who Uses This Stuff Without Blowing Up?

Used carefully, 4x ETFs are tools for short‑term positioning. Day traders and some funds can use them to express tactical views without moving collateral back and forth to a derivatives exchange.You can crank up exposure for a few hours, then flatten out before funding costs or volatility decay chew through your gains.

The trouble starts when people stretch that use case. The history of leveraged equity ETFs is full of stories where retail investors held them for weeks or months, then wondered why their “4x bull” fund went nowhere while the index marched up. Apply that dynamic to Bitcoin and Ethereum, which already swing double‑digit percentages in a week, and you get a product that can vaporize badly timed conviction.

The Bigger Picture For Crypto And ETFs

On one side, this is a pretty strong signal that crypto is now part of the regular Wall Street product cycle. First you get spot exposure, then futures, then options, then leverage, then income funds, and eventually some late‑cycle monstrosity that shows up in a Senate hearing. Crypto has officially reached the “high‑octane ETF” stage.

On the other side, regulators and risk teams are going to have a lot of questions. When you stack spot ETFs, futures‑based products, options markets, and now 4x leverage on top of the same underlying asset, stress events can move faster than most people are used to.

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Author: Oliver Redding
Seattle Newsdesk  / Breaking Crypto News

Ethereum ETFs - Why This is Different Than Bitcoin ETF's...

Ethereum ETH ETF

Late yesterday the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) officially approved Ethereum spot exchange-traded funds (ETFs) to begin trading today! Following in Bitcoin's footsteps, the world's second-largest cryptocurrency will now be accessible to investors through traditional markets.

Here's the list of the newly approved Ethereum ETFs and where you can find them:

  • Grayscale Ethereum Mini Trust (ETH) - New York Stock Exchange
  • Franklin Ethereum ETF (EZET) - CBOE Exchange
  • VanEck Ethereum ETF (ETHV) - CBOE Exchange
  • Bitwise Ethereum ETF (ETHW) - New York Stock Exchange
  • 21Shares Core Ethereum ETF (CETH) - CBOE Exchange
  • Fidelity Ethereum Fund (FETH) - CBOE Exchange
  • iShares Ethereum Trust (ETHA) - Nasdaq
  • Invesco Galaxy Ethereum ETF (QETH) - CBOE Exchange

In addition to these, the SEC has also given the green light for Grayscale to convert its Grayscale Ethereum Trust (ETHE) to a spot ETF, which is a big deal for those tracking crypto investments.

For those of you who are new to ETFs, or exchange-traded fund, is an investment fund that owns the underlying asset it represents—in this case, Ethereum. When you buy shares of an Ethereum ETF, you are essentially buying a portion of the Ethereum owned by the ETF, which is managed by a financial company. This way, you can invest in Ethereum without needing to buy, store, or manage the cryptocurrency yourself.

Major BULL RUN Coming?!

What caught my eye is when looking back to May when the SEC approved Ethereum ETFs (said they will allow them, but did not yet have a launch date) Ethereum made some gains but, but there were multiple positive news stories that month, mainly US traders receiving conformation ETH 2.0 will not be viewed as a Security, and Ethereum's gains in May were mostly credited to news that US exchanges wouldn't have to de-list it.

When Bitcoin ETF's received the same approval investors responded in such large numbers it was actually credited with brining back the bull market. So by the time Bitcoin ETF's launched, most investors reacting to the news did so days/weeks earlier. This also likely had investors assuming 

I don't make price predictions, but I will make a suggestion that you take a look - when the market doesn't react to the announcement, it often means it will react to the launch. 

Those offering the ETH ETF are mostly the same companies that already offer the Bitcoin ETF, and they've done quite well, bringing in hundreds of millions of dollars.  They will now promote the ETH ETF to those same investors - and selling a token via an ETF requires the company to actually buy and own the asset. 

So, just something to consider.  

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Author: Oliver Redding
Seattle Newsdesk  / Breaking Crypto News



Ethereum ETFs Next to Be Approved?

ETH ETF

As BTC ETF anticipation gripped the market last year, traders have been looking at ether as the next likely candidate to get spot ETF approval in the U.S.

Will the SEC Approve an ETH ETF? Let's look at the arguments both ways...

Why Some Believe the SEC will DENY The Applications...

JPMorgan's analysts are skeptical. “While we are sympathetic... we are skeptical that the SEC will classify ether as a commodity as soon as May” lead analyst Nikolaos Panigirtzoglou said in a note to clients on Jan. 18, adding that the chances of approval of a spot ether ETF by May this year is “not higher than 50%.”

The main reason - Ethereum’s transition from the proof-of-work to proof-of-stake consensus mechanism in 2022 and the negative impact this has had on decentralization.  

Ether now looks similar to altcoins the SEC has classified as securities.

Why Some Think an ETH ETF Will Soon be APPROVED...

The SEC recently sued virtually every major US crypto exchange for selling unlicensed securities, providing all with a list of which coins they believe violate regulations - Ethereum was missing from all of them. 

Another potentially positive sign is the approval of ether futures-based ETFs in September last year, which implies the SEC has officially deemed Ethereum a commodity.

Note that the ETH Futures ETF's that were approved last year are generally used for speculative or hedging purposes - with a 'futures' ETF no party involved needs to actually purchase any crypto. Investors instead buy contracts where they attempt to guess what the price will be on preset dates the contract expires. A true ETF, like what was just approved for bitcoin, requires the company selling shares of the ETF it to truly own the coins the ETF represents, and the only price that matters is the actual price it is trading at.

What You Can Do Now...

Both sides have some very valid points/concerns, so what does that mean? In my opinion, the main takeaway is that there are legitimate reasons to speculate ETH ETF's may be approved.

Sure, same goes for it being denied, however, current ETH holders did not invest because they believed an ETF was eventually coming, so the potential of one being denied won't cause current investors to sell. However, the potential an ETF being approved brings in new buyers and causes existing investors to buy more.

This scenario where existing investors see no reason to sell if the ETF news is bad, while the potential for good news becomes a reason for people to buy, can only result in gains as anticipation builds. Of course, a non-ETF related story that overshadows everything could happen as well - but unless it does, there may be a great short-term opportunity regardless of the final outcome.

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Author: Justin Derbek
New York News Desk
Global Crypto Press Association / Breaking Crypto News