Bitcoin
First UK Crypto ETPs to Launch on May 28
Stay informed with free updates
Simply sign up for myFT Digest of exchange-traded funds – delivered straight to your inbox.
Latest news about ETFs
Visit our ETF Center to learn more and explore our in-depth data and comparison tools
The UK’s first cryptocurrency exchange-traded products will finally begin trading next week, almost a decade after the first such vehicles appeared in Sweden.
Tree of Wisdom and 21Shares received the green light from the Financial Conduct Authority, the City’s regulator, to list ETPs that invest in “physical” Bitcoin and Ether, the two most popular digital tokens, on the London Stock Exchange on May 28.
However, ETPs — which are part of a flurry of similar vehicles expected to be listed on the LSE — will will only be available to professional investors because the FCA ruled that “crypto derivatives are unsuitable for retail consumers due to the harm they pose.”
The stance contrasts sharply with stock exchanges in much of continental Europe, as well as Australia, Brazil, Canada, Hong Kong and the US, which offer crypto ETPs to retail and institutional investors.
US-listed bitcoin spot ETFs already have combined assets of $50 billion despite only being launched in January, with about 80% of that held by retail investors, according to regulatory filings.
It is understood that a number of other crypto ETP managers, including ETC Group and CoinShares, have filed to list on the LSE, ideally also on May 28, if they receive regulatory approval from the LSE. FCA in time.
“The FCA’s approval of the prospectus for our crypto ETPs is a significant step forward for the industry and UK-based professional investors seeking exposure to the asset class,” said Alexis Marinof, head of Europe at WisdomTree, which has U.S. $111 billion under management globally.
“While UK-based professional investors have been able to allocate crypto ETPs through overseas exchanges, they will soon have a more convenient access point. FCA approval in this regard could result in greater institutional adoption of the asset class, as many professional investors have been unable to gain exposure to bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies due to regulatory limitations and uncertainty,” he added.
WisdomTree’s Physical Bitcoin (BTCW) and Physical Ethereum (ETHW) ETPs will have fees of 0.35 percent, the same as equivalent vehicles listed on several continental European exchanges.
Ophelia Snyder, co-founder of 21 Shares, which will list its existing Bitcoin and Ethereum staking ETPs in the UK, with fees of 1.49 percent, said: “London hosts one of the deepest and most liquid capital markets in the world – where there is proven institutional interest in cryptocurrencies.”
All UK-listed crypto funds will be constructed as exchange-traded notes, a common structure across the European cryptocurrency market. The FCA has only approved vehicles that invest in bitcoin and ether and that are unleveraged and have physical support.
Despite the ban on retail investors, issuers remain hopeful that there will be enough interest among UK-based professional investors to make it worth listing their ETPs in London.
Recommended
More than 900 institutional investors have built stakes in U.S.-listed bitcoin ETFs, SEC filings show, suggesting there may be an audience even for ETNs that are off-limits to retail investors.
“Hedge funds and small family offices have always had an appetite [for crypto ETFs]. Private banks and discretionary fund managers are a little more hesitant, but want to look at this asset class. Multi-asset managers are also looking at this,” said Ravinder Azad, UK head of sales at WisdomTree. The company attracted 14 institutional investors to a crypto webinar in the UK earlier this year, but already had more than 140 registrations for a follow-up event in June, according to Azad.
Brown Brothers Harriman’s 2024 Global ETF Investor Survey, released this week, found that in the US, Europe and Greater China, more institutional investors said they were optimistic about the outlook for digital assets than any other asset class in the US. next 12 months.
However, one crypto ETF issuer that has no plans to list a product in the UK while retail investors remain off limits told the FT: “You are launching a product that is not universal. It needs to be universal. This is the principle underlying ETFs everywhere.”
Bitcoin
Bitcoin (BTC), Stocks Bleed as China’s Surprise Rate Cut Signals Panic, Treasury Yield Curve Steepens
Risk assets fell on Thursday as China’s second rate cut in a week raised concerns of instability in the world’s second-largest economy.
Bitcoin (BTC)the leading cryptocurrency by market cap, is down nearly 2% since midnight UTC to around $64,000 and ether (ETH) fell more than 5%, dragging the broader altcoin market lower. The CoinDesk 20 Index (CD20), a measure of the broader cryptocurrency market, lost 4.6% in 24 hours.
In equity markets, Germany’s DAX, France’s CAC and the euro zone’s Euro Stoxx 50 all fell more than 1.5%, and futures linked to the tech-heavy Nasdaq 100 were down slightly after the index’s 3% drop on Wednesday, according to the data source. Investing.com.
On Thursday morning, the People’s Bank of China (PBoC) announced a surprise, cut outside the schedule in its one-year medium-term lending rate to 2.3% from 2.5%, injecting 200 billion yuan ($27.5 billion) of liquidity into the market. That is the biggest reduction since 2020.
The movement, together with similar reductions in other lending rates earlier this week shows the urgency among policymakers to sustain growth after their recent third plenary offered little hope of a boost. Data released earlier this month showed China’s economy expanded 4.7% in the second quarter at an annualized pace, much weaker than the 5.1% estimated and slower than the 5.3% in the first quarter.
“Equity futures are flat after yesterday’s bloody session that shook sentiment across asset classes,” Ilan Solot, senior global strategist at Marex Solutions, said in a note shared with CoinDesk. “The PBoC’s decision to cut rates in a surprise move has only added to the sense of panic.” Marex Solutions, a division of global financial platform Marex, specializes in creating and distributing custom derivatives products and issuing structured products tied to cryptocurrencies.
Solot noted the continued “steepening of the US Treasury yield curve” as a threat to risk assets including cryptocurrencies, echoing CoinDesk Reports since the beginning of this month.
The yield curve steepens when the difference between longer-duration and shorter-duration bond yields widens. This month, the spread between 10-year and two-year Treasury yields widened by 20 basis points to -0.12 basis points (bps), mainly due to stickier 10-year yields.
“For me, the biggest concern is the shape of the US yield curve, which continues to steepen. The 2- and 10-year curve is not only -12 bps inverted, compared to -50 bps last month. The recent moves have been led by the rise in back-end [10y] yields and lower-than-expected decline in yields,” Solot said.
That’s a sign that markets expect the Fed to cut rates but see tighter inflation and expansionary fiscal policy as growing risks, Solot said.
Bitcoin
How systematic approaches reduce investor risk
Low liquidity, regulatory uncertainty and speculative behavior contribute to inefficiency in crypto markets. But systematic approaches, including momentum indices, can reduce risks for investors, says Gregory Mall, head of investment solutions at AMINA Bank.
Low liquidity, regulatory uncertainty and speculative behavior contribute to inefficiency in crypto markets. But systematic approaches, including momentum indices, can reduce risks for investors, says Gregory Mall, head of investment solutions at AMINA Bank.
Low liquidity, regulatory uncertainty and speculative behavior contribute to inefficiency in crypto markets. But systematic approaches, including momentum indices, can reduce risks for investors, says Gregory Mall, head of investment solutions at AMINA Bank.
July 24, 2024, 5:30 p.m.
Updated July 24, 2024, 5:35 p.m.
(Benjamin Cheng/Unsplash)
Fuente
Bitcoin
India to Release Crypto Policy Position by September After Consultations with Stakeholders: Report
“The policy position is how one consults with relevant stakeholders, so it’s to go out in public and say here’s a discussion paper, these are the issues and then stakeholders will give their views,” said Seth, who is the Secretary for Economic Affairs. “A cross-ministerial group is currently looking at a broader policy on cryptocurrencies. We hope to release the discussion paper before September.”
Bitcoin
Bitcoin (BTC), Ether (ETH) slide as risk aversion spreads to crypto markets
Ether, the second-largest token, fueled a slide in digital assets after a stock rout spread unease across global markets.
Ether fell about 6%, the most in three weeks, and was trading at $3,188 as of 6:45 a.m. Thursday in London. Market leader Bitcoin fell about 3% to $64,260.
-
Videos9 months ago
Bitcoin Price AFTER Halving REVEALED! What’s next?
-
Bitcoin8 months ago
Bitcoin Could Test Record Highs Next Week in ETF Flows, Says Analyst; Coinbase appears in the update
-
Videos9 months ago
Are cryptocurrencies in trouble? Bitcoin Insider Reveals “What’s Next?”
-
Videos9 months ago
Cryptocurrency Crash Caused by THIS…
-
Videos8 months ago
The REAL reason why cryptocurrency is going up!
-
Altcoin8 months ago
The best Altcoins to buy before they rise
-
Videos9 months ago
BlackRock Will Send Bitcoin to $116,000 in the Next 51 Days (XRP News)
-
Videos9 months ago
Donald Trump: I like Bitcoin now! Joe Biden HATES cryptocurrencies.
-
Videos8 months ago
Solana Cryptocurrencies: the future WILL SHOCK you | What comes next?
-
News9 months ago
TON, AKT, AR expect increases of 15%+ as the market stabilizes
-
Videos8 months ago
Bitcoin Whale REVEALS: The 5 Best Coins to Make You a Millionaire!
-
Videos8 months ago
BREAKING NEWS: The 19 best cryptocurrencies ready to skyrocket!