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Castle Funds’ COO Exclusive: Just Because Bitcoin ETFs Are Allowed Doesn’t Mean They’ll Succeed
Sead Fadilpašić
Last updated:
January 21, 2024 23:03 EST | 9 min read
These include how valuable Bitcoin ETF trading volume information really is, what it takes for ETFs to succeed, why TradFi market minutiae are “very foreign” to most crypto market participants, and much more.
This is what he had to say.
When is Trading Volume a Valuable Information?
The spot Bitcoin ETFs’ initial trading volumes suggest that the supporting players in any successful exchange-traded product (ETP) launch are not yet up and running in volume, Hoover told Cryptonews. (Note: ETFs are a subset of ETPs as a broader category.)
Therefore, he said,
Otherwise, it just shows that the same shares are changing hands repeatedly.
Typically, this means that:
As an investor in the bitcoin markets, said Hoover, he would prefer that the BTC held in an ETP be purchased in the market and belong only to the fund or Trust, instead of being borrowed from another party that keeps a claim on the coins.
Spot Bitcoin ETFs come with a set of benefits. These include fewer access challenges for investors and a competitor for the poorly-performing futures-based Bitcoin ETFs, Hoover argued.
Over the next few months, the launch issues “will ease a bit.” There will be an opportunity for the market participants – APs, broker-dealers, and options market-makers – to resell ETPs to individual investors, Hoover said.
Long-term, however, while ETPs are “a reasonable solution” to the regulatory ambiguity constraining access for most US investors,
Nonetheless, it took nearly three decades for ETFs to become fully regulated in the USA, so Hoover finds it unlikely that “the current suite of products will lose their regulatory reasons to exist any time soon.”
Furthermore, the COO explained that the Bitcoin markets are “understandably very concerned” about several large market participants trading BTC on a continuous market – while the supply and demand are constrained to a single specific point in time five days a week.
Meanwhile, Shane Rodgers, the Chairman and Co-founder of the PDX platform, argued that there aren’t downsides to the Bitcoin ETFs. The only thing is that, in the short term, investors continue to be “overly exposed to the vagaries of unsophisticated small money in the spot retail space.”
On the other hand, said Rodgers,
Issuing is one thing, but whether an ETP, including the spot Bitcoin ETF, will actually succeed is another. Hoover noted that success depends on several key questions. These include:
Rodgers opined that the only real differentiating factor so far in the approved BTC spot ETFs are the fees.
Additionally, crypto is still a speculative and volatile asset class. “The fact you can participate via an ETF does not mitigate the safety or volatility of the underlying spot asset,” he said.
TradFi Market Details Are Foreign to Crypto Market Participants
Hoover noted that it is essential to understand how demand for “exposure” to Bitcoin through an ETP actually impacts the “flows” or value of assets within that ETP.
Importantly,
Hoover gave an example of an investor who wants to purchase ETP shares. They place the order with their broker. Then, the order could be filled from any or several sources.
Here are four scenarios, and only one results in ETP seeing additional assets under management (AUM):
However, given the costs of hedging in the futures market and the regulatory difficulties when it comes to broker-dealers owning spot BTC themselves, Hoover said he wouldn’t find it surprising if some hedgers choose the Grayscale product, shares of mining companies, or MicroStrategy as better accessible BTC substitutes than the spot BTC.
BTC Settles Every 15 Minutes, Bitcoin ETF Shares Only on Business Days
Hoover also commented on the initial selling pressure in spot BTC, saying “there are some reasonable explanations” there.
There was some “sell the news” pressure, but also what he described as the release of pent-up demand to close out the GBTC arbitrage trade carried by certain participants for years.
The CEO mentioned that the broader pressure on the markets was likely related to the early stages of setting up efficient hedging operations to keep market-making profitable and the trading costs reasonable.
He again noted the differences between trading these product shares and trading digital assets 24/7.
First, he said, there is the above-discussed “long path” between market demand for ETP shares and flows measured by new ETP shares being issued.
Then, Hoover said,
A trade creating new ETP shares (“flow”) on Thursday would not need to be paid for with cash until next Tuesday. Therefore, there is no efficient hedging of any price action until Tuesday morning.
Bitcoin settles with each block or approximately every 10-15 minutes. However, the Bitcoin ETF shares settle on T+2 New York business days. It does not include weekends and holidays.
The APs who bought the new Trust shares on Thursday and Friday, said Hoover, had a responsibility to manage their exposure to the price of BTC while the equity markets and the banks do not work.
Hence, BlackRock, for example, was obligated to help its customers (the APs) meet that responsibility.
Per Hoover, agreeing to issue new shares of the iShares IBIT trust on Friday, lock in an amount of BTC due in exchange for those shares based on the Friday 4:00p price in New York, and then wait to buy in the BTC until the following Wednesday when the shares were issued and settled – would have been “very irresponsible.”
ETP Is an Institutional Product, It Can’t Be a Retail One
Lastly, Hoover explained that the market for ETP shares is ultimately an institutional market. All ETPs are institutional products by definition.
The US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) requires companies to issue new shares of these products in expensive blocks. iShares IBIT, for example, is targeting a block size of $1 million, said Hoover.
BlackRock and the other Bitcoin ETF sponsors have consistently marketed their products to the “advisor” and “buy-side” markets.
This includes managers of model portfolios (e.g., Edelman Financial Engines), “robo-advisors” (such as Schwab’s Intelligent Portfolios product), and professional asset managers (hedge funds, mutual funds, pension funds, and the like).
There are regulatory restrictions, but also the margins on ETP fees “simply aren’t large enough to support the massive cost of mass-marketing to retail investors.”
The business relies on economies of scale, Hoover said. A few flagship products provide enough fees to support marketing the sponsor’s brand across all of the products on the platform.
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Read more: Expert Opinions: Massive Inflows to Follow Spot Bitcoin ETF Approval, Bull Market Questionable
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