Spot Bitcoin ETF is the catalyst crypto investors need

A spot Bitcoin ETF would be an “inflection point” with crypto adoption — and a potential catalyst for’s price.
Getting one approved has been challenging, but recent developments are getting crypto execs excited.
Futures-based Bitcoin ETFs can cost investors an extra 5-10% compared to holding Bitcoin directly. The difference between them:
Since last October, the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) approved several futures-based ETFs — rejecting all spot Bitcoin ETF applications to date. But a recent approval is giving the industry hope:
Why does it matter? Approving the ‘33 Act product signals that the SEC is getting comfortable with a structure to approve a spot ETF — per the Head of ETFs at Grayscale Investments (Insider).
At this point, it’s anyone’s guess.
Canada launched their first spot Bitcoin ETF over a year ago. Australia is launching their first Bitcoin and Ethereum spot ETFs this week. Per Blockworks, Australia previously saw Bitcoin and other digital assets as too volatile and unfit for its financial markets.
The largest futures Bitcoin ETF has $1.1B in assets. Nic Carter of Castle Island Ventures expects a spot ETF to be “the hottest commodity ETF launch of all time.”
He thinks it can reach $100B+ in assets within months (BBG). In comparison, the three largest spot gold ETFs have $108B in assets.
The most significant influx of demand could come from financial advisors:
By June 29, the SEC is expected to decide on Bitwise Asset Management’s spot Bitcoin ETF application.