Cryptocurrency asset manager Grayscale has filed an amended application with the United States Securities Exchange Commission for its Bitcoin (BTC) exchange-traded fund (ETF), without listing authorized participant details.
Bloomberg senior ETF analyst Eric Balchunas flagged the amended filing on X (formerly Twitter), noting that the company had clarified that authorized participants in its proposed ETF could only pay and receive cash for shares.
New Grayscale amendment just dropped. Clear language on cash only but still no AP named, just blanks where name should go. Not sure why since SEC wants to see it and they have been pretty cocksure about having one. Also, nothing on fee (that I could see). That's big open q too. https://t.co/tQ9MTBlvg8 pic.twitter.com/id8Tb8ImaP
— Eric Balchunas (@EricBalchunas) January 2, 2024
Authorized participants are financial institutions or companies that can create and redeem shares of an ETF.
Balchunas highlighted that Grayscale left the names of its authorized participants blank in the amended documentation:
“Not sure why since SEC wants to see it and they have been pretty cocksure about having one. Also, nothing on fee (that I could see). That’s big open [question] too.”
Cointelegraph reported on Dec. 29 that seven companies vying to launch the first U.S. spot Bitcoin ETF products filed the latest versions of Form S-1 applications on Dec. 29.
Related: Countdown to US spot ETF: 5 things to know in Bitcoin this week
Fidelity, WisdomTree and Invesco Galaxy listed their authorized participants in the new filings. Invesco Galaxy selected Virtu and JPMorgan, while WisdomTree and Fidelity listed Jane Street Capital.
Grayscale had indicated in June 2022 that it intended to list Jane Street and Virtu Financial as its authorized participants as it looked to convert its Grayscale Bitcoin Trust into an ETF.
I thought Grayscale announced they would work with Jane Street and Virtu? This was last year though. https://t.co/Sbpm8NM2zS
— Eleanor Terrett (@EleanorTerrett) January 2, 2024
Balchunas commented further, indicating that it was unclear why Grayscale had deliberately omitted its authorized participants while other firms had clarified these details.
“Yes, and they even tweeted that of course they have one, but alls I know (in philly accent) it isn’t in doc yet (which SEC wants) and until we see we aren’t counting any horse as official. Also, BlackRock, Fidelity et al did it, so why not be done [with] it?” Balchunas wrote.
Grayscale submitted an amended S-3 filing with the SEC on Dec. 27, the same day Barry Silbert — the CEO of its parent company, Digital Currency Group — announced his resignation from Grayscale’s board of directors.
The deadline for the SEC to deliver its verdict on the latest filings from prospective Bitcoin ETF issuers is set for Jan. 10. Industry experts have been suggesting that the SEC could deliver answers to the applying firms by the end of the first week of 2024.
Magazine: 10 best long reads about crypto in 2023