BlackRock is a new fund designed to turn asset volatility into investor yields, expanding its push to Bitcoin.
On September 25th, Bloomberg ETF analyst Eric Bulknass revealed that the company had applied for a product called iShares Bitcoin Premium ETF, a cover call fund made up of under the ’33 Act.
Unlike traditional spot ETFs that passively track Bitcoin prices, new products stack their income strategies on top of BTC exposure. To win premiums, we plan to hold Bitcoin or related equipment while writing a phone cover for those holdings.
These premiums are then distributed to investors as income, allowing the fund to acquire value from the frequent price movements of Bitcoin, rather than simply mirroring them.
Meanwhile, Balchunas noted that the move could destabilize rival publishers who already build revenue-based Bitcoin products, given BlackRock’s dominant position in the Spot ETF market.
Since its launch last year, its flagship ISHARES Bitcoin Trust (IBIT) has managed tens of billions of assets and has grown into the world’s largest crypto ETF.
Focus on Bitcoin and Ethereum
Balchunas noted that the latest filing shows a strategic focus on BlackRock’s Bitcoin and Ethereum rather than joining competitors pursuing ETFs related to smaller Altcoins.
Over the past few months, several publishers, including Grayscale, have applied for products related to assets such as XRP and Solana.
However, BlackRock displays content that doubles the proven market leader.
That strong belief appears to be rewarded as the company’s early Bitcoin and Ethereum ETFs generate more than $260 million in annual revenue.
Speaking about these numbers, Onchain Foundation research director Leon Waidman said:
“(BlackRock built) $15 billion business, almost overnight. For comparison, many fintech unicorns don’t make it in 10 years. This is no longer an experiment. The world’s largest asset manager has proven that Crypto is a serious profit center.”
However, Robbie Mitchnick, the company’s global head of digital assets, suggests that institutional participation in crypto ETFs remains in the early stages, with more capital likely to flow as regulated products mature.
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