What’s next for crypto ETFs?


Happy New Year, advisors! We look forward to bringing you cryptocurrency news for advisors every Thursday this year!

In today’s edition, our first newsletter of 2025, TMX VettaFi’s Roxanna Islam provides a comprehensive guide to the world of crypto ETFs, looking at what happened in 2024 and what’s expected in 2025.

Then, The Daily Upside’s Griffin Kelly answers questions about ETFs on Ask an Expert.

– Sara Morton

In the broader crypto industry, exchange-traded funds (ETFs) have taken a backseat as other tailwinds (e.g., a possible strategic reserve of bitcoins, increased interest in tokenization, and greater intersection between energy and cryptocurrencies) take center stage. But for advisors, retail investors, and many institutional investors, ETFs are our bridge between TradFi and DeFi and will continue to be a relevant part of the digital asset story in 2025. If innovation in crypto is expected to continue, then the ecosystem of crypto ETFs will continue. also continue to grow. Here’s where crypto ETFs stood in 2024 and what to expect in 2025.

To put the impact of cryptocurrency ETFs into perspective, here are some interesting figures for 2024 (YTD as of December 26):

ETFs generated more than $1 trillion in net inflows in 2024. Of nearly 4,000 ETFs, the iShares Bitcoin Trust (IBIT) had the third-highest inflows ($37.2 billion) after US large-cap ETFs, the ETF Vanguard S&P 500 (VOO). and the iShares Core S&P 500 ETF (IVV).

The iShares Bitcoin Trust (IBIT) has $52.7 billion in assets, more than the iShares Gold Trust (IAU), which has only $33 billion in assets. IBIT is now the 35th largest ETF in the US.

The Fidelity Wise Origin Bitcoin Fund (FBTC) is now Fidelity’s largest ETF by assets, with more than $19.6 billion. The next largest Fidelity ETF is the Fidelity Total Bond ETF (FBND), at $16.6 billion.

Excluding leveraged ETFs, the Grayscale Bitcoin Trust ETF was the second-best performing ETF (up 145.4% year-to-date).

In 2024, there were 43 crypto ETF launches (including conversions). With around 77 US crypto ETFs, that means more than half of the universe launched this year.

About half of the 43 crypto ETFs launched were spot: twelve were Bitcoin and nine were Ether ETFs.

Twelve of the newly launched ETFs were leveraged ETFs and five were options income ETFs. The remaining five were a mix of covered stocks, crypto stocks, and multi-asset ETFs.

Five single-share Microstrategy ETFs (MSTR) are not included in this total count, but are still relevant.

Looking ahead to 2025, several ETF applications are already in various stages of approval. With the new crypto-friendly US administration (including a change in SEC leadership), issuers are filling the pipeline with potential new products. There will probably be three main areas to consider.

By Admin

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