Financial Times writer Pan Kwan Yuk makes the case that markets are too immature for a bitcoin exchange-traded fund (ETF). There have been dozens of proposals put forward, beginning with the Winklevoss twinsâ failed bid eight years ago, which have all been summarily rejected. Typically the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission cites limited trading activity and the potential risk of market manipulation as reason for shooting down these proposals.
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Bitcoin ETFs stand as the âHoly Grailâ for the crypto industry because they provide a âlow-cost way for investors to access bitcoins without the hassle of dealing with digital wallets and custodians,â Kwan Yuk notes. Without writing off the possibility entirely â the industry is âtoo big to ignoreâ â she suggests the SEC take its time in determining now is the right time to introduce these financial products to U.S. investors.
She says, inexplicably, that bitcoinâs liquidity problem stems from its design. There will only ever be 21 million BTC â meaning in a supply crunch, âinvestors could find themselves locked into the shares.â
Real liquidity concerns exist in bitcoin markets. Itâs an asset that most frequently trades behind the walls of centralized exchanges. Each exchange is essentially its own market, and those markets can have liquidity issues depending on the time of day or number of active traders.
But, taken as a whole, bitcoin is remarkably liquid. Tesla CEO Elon Musk recently tweeted his auto manufacturer sold 10% of its BTC stash to âproveâ it was a liquidity alternative to cash (perhaps to convince skeptical board members.) Meanwhile, as The Blockâs Frank Chaparro noted, bitcoinâs spot activity (just on a dozen or so trusted exchanges) is well over $1 trillion this month alone.
When looking at the type of institutions looking to put forward a BTC ETF, like Fidelity and VanEck, itâs unlikely they would choose custodians with limited access to the market. Things can happen. The March 2020 âBlack Thursdayâ event saw massive liquidations across the board, made worse from a supply crunch in particular assets. But that wasnât unique to crypto alone.
Finally, look just to our northern neighbor Canada, whose three bitcoin ETFs immediately became among the most active financial products on the Toronto stock exchange. They had no issue hoovering up BTC either.
Itâs hard to call any market immature that is now worth more than $2 trillion.