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    Home » SEC Approves Spot Bitcoin ETFs: What That Means for Investors
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    SEC Approves Spot Bitcoin ETFs: What That Means for Investors

    WebDesk10 January 2024No Comments5 Mins Read
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    SEC Approves Spot Bitcoin ETFs: What That Means for Investors
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    Bitcoin prices have been soaring amid reports that spot bitcoin ETFs (exchange-traded funds) could soon hit the market.

    The price of the largest cryptocurrency by market value climbed as high as $47,900 Tuesday evening after a tweet on the Securities and Exchange Commission’s (SEC) suggested the regulatory agency approved a spot bitcoin ETF. However, the SEC immediately issued a follow-up tweet that indicated its X page was hacked and that the tweet was fake. Bitcoin prices quickly turned tail.

    Still, Bitcoin has more than doubled over the past 12 months – effectively ending the crypto winter from 2022 – and is now trading at levels not seen in nearly two years. “Bitcoin has stormed higher again … on the back of more ETF chat,” says Craig Erlam, senior market analyst at OANDA. “There’s clearly a lot of excitement about the prospect of a bitcoin spot ETF, as is evident by such a surge on speculation of something that was already expected to eventually get over the line.”

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    Bitcoin was little changed late Wednesday after the SEC actually did approve rule changes that will allow for spot bitcoin ETFs to begin trading in U.S. markets, paving the way for institutional investors and retail traders to more easily access exposure to the cryptocurrency. 

    This follows a major ruling last summer from a federal appeals court that overturned the SEC’s attempt to block Grayscale Investments’ application for a spot bitcoin ETF. Judge Neomi Rao said the SEC’s decision to approve two bitcoin future ETFs but reject the application for the spot market fund was “arbitrary and capricious.” This effectively paved the way for today’s decision.

    What’s the difference between a spot vs futures ETF? 

    In 2021, cryptocurrency traders scored a win when the SEC approved the ProShares Bitcoin Strategy ETF (BITO) – the first crypto ETF on the market that was not tied to stocks. The fund was so popular it accumulated more than $1 billion in assets under management by its second day.

    There are plenty of other Bitcoin and crypto ETFs on the market, but none that are tied to a digital asset’s spot price – or where it is trading at right now so that it can be bought for immediate delivery. This differs from futures prices, which are where the cryptocurrency is expected to be trading in the future. Futures traders buy contracts that lock in this price for a delivery of the asset at a later date.