NewsBite

Bitcoin price reaches $US60,000 as traders anticipate ETF

Securities and Exchange Commission could rule on proposals for bitcoin-futures fund as soon as this week.

Approval of an ETF that will buy bitcoin futures contracts – though not the coins themselves – would increase the cryptocurrency’s legitimacy and make it easier for institutional investors to get exposure. Picture: Bloomberg
Approval of an ETF that will buy bitcoin futures contracts – though not the coins themselves – would increase the cryptocurrency’s legitimacy and make it easier for institutional investors to get exposure. Picture: Bloomberg

Bitcoin hit $US60,000 Friday for the first time since April, as traders anticipate US regulators will approve the first exchange-traded fund to track the cryptocurrency.

Approval of an ETF that will buy bitcoin futures contracts – though not the coins themselves – would increase the cryptocurrency’s legitimacy and make it easier for institutional investors to get exposure. Four applications for bitcoin futures ETFs, submitted in August, are pending approval from the Securities and Exchange Commission.

Bitcoin’s price has chugged higher ahead of a regulatory deadline this week for the SEC to act on some of those applications. On Thursday night, a tweet from an SEC Twitter subaccount was seen as hinting at an approval, urging investors to weigh the potential risks and benefits before investing in such a fund.

Noelle Acheson, head of market insights at crypto lender Genesis Global Trading, said it would be a sentiment boost if a bitcoin futures ETF was approved.

The cryptocurrency’s backers have been trying since 2013 to get approval for a bitcoin-based ETF. The SEC has repeatedly denied applications, saying that crypto exchanges are too opaque to ascertain whether prices are reached fairly.

No mainstream securities exchange overseen by the SEC trades directly in bitcoins. However, several, including the Chicago Mercantile Exchange, trade bitcoin futures, which allow investors to bet on the direction of the cryptocurrency’s price without holding the volatile coins themselves. These contracts are transparent in price and easily traded in larger sizes, which may allow the SEC to get comfortable with an ETF owning them, backers say.

“All of us know it’s going to happen. The question is when,” said Tim Grant, head of European operations at cryptocurrency exchange Galaxy Digital.

Analysts and investors say that bitcoin’s recent gains could reverse if approved funds don’t see strong inflows, and it is unclear how much pent-up demand there is among institutional investors. Those who want exposure to cryptocurrencies already have indirect ways to do so, such as buying shares of cryptocurrency exchange Coinbase, which went public in April, or shares of several listed bitcoin-mining companies.

Bitcoin has been typically volatile this year. The price rose as high as $US63,381 in April, bolstered by Coinbase’s initial public offering. It then fell more than 50 per cent through July, pulled down by souring sentiment, snarky tweets from Tesla CEO Elon Musk about the cryptocurrency, and China’s ban on bitcoin transactions.

It hit $US60,327 on Friday, according to CoinDesk, bringing its gains this year to about 106 per cent.

The Wall Street Journal

Add your comment to this story

To join the conversation, please Don't have an account? Register

Join the conversation, you are commenting as Logout

Original URL: https://www.theaustralian.com.au/business/the-wall-street-journal/bitcoin-price-reaches-us60000-as-traders-anticipate-etf/news-story/83eecde3809694582b5804a4e9593fbd