The Gary Gensler-led Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) has repeatedly aired its concerns about spot Bitcoin Exchange Traded Funds (ETFs). In fact, the Chairman believes there is a lack of infrastructure designed to prevent fraudulent and manipulative acts and practices. According to the agency, this wouldn’t serve the SEC’s intent to protect investors and public interest.
In a recent interview with Fox Business, Gensler again put forward his perspective given the growing uncertainty on the regulatory front. Especially since different applicants or funds including Grayscale, VanEck, etc. haven’t satisfied the requirements of the regulatory watchdogs.
Gensler reiterated his position this time around, stating, “I continue to say, come in work with the SEC, register under the securities laws.”
“It’s probability-weighted, but you’ve got 75 or 500 or 1000s of tokens on your platform. It’s pretty unlikely none of them are (a) security.”
For a Bitcoin ETF to win the day, its issuer must establish what the SEC calls a “surveillance sharing agreement” with another major, compliance-minded market upon which the asset trades. Bitcoin Futures trading on the Chicago Mercantile Exchange (CME) seemingly fit this model.
CME has had a regulated market since 2017, as per Gensler. On the contrary, the latter (Spot ETF) apparently doesn’t quite possess the “framework for underlying”.
Having said that, different critics of BTC Futures ETFs have pointed the possibility of using them for pricing — as opposed to spot Bitcoin. This could lead to underperformance. Futures tend to trade at a premium to the underlying asset, though they could trade at a discount.
The SEC have pursued Ripple over claims that XRP is an ‘unregistered security‘. On the
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