‘Thousands’ of New ETFs Seen in $8 Trillion Market’s Next Leap

Outside the Fontainebleau Hotel in Miami, Florida last week, dozens of drones moved slowly through the night sky, projecting the Bitcoin symbol far and wide above one of the largest ETF gatherings of the year.

But inside the annual Exchange conference, industry insiders were obsessing over an event that could prove a far bigger deal for the $8.4 trillion business than the long-awaited launch of spot Bitcoin ETFs: Regulatory approval of new share-class structures.

It’s arcane stuff compared to the boom-crash-boom of crypto — no one ever launched drones to celebrate different investor classes, as Grayscale Investments did for its $23 billion Bitcoin fund. But the question of whether the US Securities and Exchange Commission would allow firms to replicate the fund model used exclusively by Vanguard Group for more than two decades was the hot topic among the industry professionals in attendance.

For good reason. That structure would permit an ETF to be listed as a share class of a broader mutual fund — effectively bringing the famous tax efficiency of the exchange-traded fund to the whole vehicle. Vanguard’s patent that prevented copycat funds expired in May. Now, the only barrier is SEC approval.

Grayscale uses drones to create the Bitcoin symbol at the Exchange conference in Miami, Florida.

Grayscale uses drones to create the Bitcoin symbol at the Exchange conference in Miami, Florida.