BlackRock, has introduced a transformative approach to its proposed spot bitcoin ETF, one that could significantly involve Wall Street’s banking giants. The innovative structure permits Authorized Participants (APs), crucial cogs in the ETF machinery, to create new shares using cash instead of bitcoin. This is a notable shift from the traditional requirement where APs needed to use the actual cryptocurrency.
The adaptation is particularly advantageous for heavily regulated U.S. banks like JPMorgan and Goldman Sachs, which due to regulatory constraints, cannot directly hold bitcoin. The new cash creation option allows these financial behemoths, with their massive balance sheets, to partake as APs in BlackRock’s ETF. Their participation, however, remains a point of speculation.
A memorandum from a recent meeting with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, BlackRock, and Nasdaq revealed that the cash provided by APs would be converted into bitcoin by intermediaries and then held by the ETF’s custody provider. This suggests a strategy to integrate traditional finance’s liquidity with the burgeoning crypto asset class while adhering to regulatory standards.
The crypto community is optimistic about the SEC’s potential approval of spot bitcoin ETFs, a development poised to revolutionize the digital asset sector by potentially drawing substantial retail investment. Previously, the expectation was that APs would primarily be large crypto-experienced market-making firms. However, BlackRock’s adjustment opens the possibility for banks to also become liquidity providers, thereby expanding the potential market depth.
Sui Chung, CEO of CF Benchmarks, a Kraken-owned benchmarks administrator for several spot bitcoin ETF applications including BlackRock’s, commented on the implications of the SEC accepting this cash and physical dual model. He stated that it would enhance the liquidity underpinning the ETF shares’ market tradeability, given the broader range of potential APs and the considerable financial capacity of large American banks compared to trading firms.
In essence, BlackRock’s strategic move has the potential to bridge the gap between traditional banking and the crypto world, offering a new avenue for the integration of institutional financial power into the crypto market infrastructure.