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Bitwise Is Latest to Nix Bitcoin Futures ETF Plan Over Costs

Another investment firm is tapping the brakes on a futures-backed Bitcoin ETF as expensive roll costs loom large.

Bitwise Is Latest to Nix Bitcoin Futures ETF Plan Over Costs
A bitcoin logo sign outside a cryptocurrency exchange kiosk in Istanbul, Turkey. (Photographer: Moe Zoyari/Bloomberg)

Another investment firm is tapping the brakes on a futures-backed Bitcoin exchange-traded fund as expensive roll costs loom large. 

Bitwise Asset Management is dropping its application to list a Bitcoin futures ETF, while keeping its filing for a physically backed fund, Chief Investment Officer Matt Hougan tweeted Wednesday. That follows a similar move by Invesco Ltd., which announced it wouldn’t pursue its futures-based ETF just hours before the first one launched last month. 

The decision boils down to the structure of the Bitcoin futures curve, according to Hougan. The inherent scarcity of Bitcoin means that longer-dated contracts typically trade at a premium to the spot price -- a structure known as contango. That dynamic eats into returns, given that futures-backed funds must continually roll forward the exposure as the contracts expire, paying a fee to do so along the way.

“Bitcoin futures have historically traded in contango. As a result, a rolling Bitcoin futures ETF will generally underperform spot Bitcoin,” Hougan tweeted. “Sure enough, that’s what we’re seeing: Contango today is running a bit over 6%/year.”

The ProShares Bitcoin Strategy ETF (BITO) launched in October in one of the most successful debuts on record. Pent-up demand for Bitcoin exposure in an ETF wrapper sent the fund bumping up futures position limits, forcing BITO to invest in further-dated contracts. The ProShares fund has trailed the world’s largest cryptocurrency as a result. BITO has gained about 0.9% since its mid-October launch, while the Bloomberg Galaxy Bitcoin Index has returned 2.8% in that period. The world’s largest cryptocurrency hit a record high just below $69,000 on Wednesday before cooling. 

Another wrinkle is stretched capacity at futures commission merchants, which act as an intermediaries between derivatives-backed funds and exchanges, Hougan wrote. The flood of demand for BITO quickly ate up the balance sheet of the firm acting as an FCM for the fund at its launch, according to a person familiar with the matter, rattling other firms and contributing to delays in other U.S. Bitcoin futures ETF launches.

“This will ease over time, but for now, it’s added yet another expense,” Hougan tweeted. “The result? Costs on top of costs, plus added complexity.”

©2021 Bloomberg L.P.