Lethbridge Herald

Bitcoin-based traded funds get go-ahead

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Bitcoin-based exchange traded funds are getting the go-ahead from Canadian regulators, creating a path for a fund structure that investment managers say is unique in the industry.

Toronto-based Purpose Investment­s says its Bitcoin ETF will likely start trading this week under the symbol “BTCC,” after the fund worked with regulators to make sure it could create something that follows the rules for both the ETF market and the digital asset industry.

An Ontario Securities Commission spokespers­on says the regulator finished reviewing Purpose Investment­s’ final plan to offer securities last Thursday and gave the fund a receipt that makes it a reporting issuer in Ontario.

After Purpose Investment­s announced the milestone, another Canadian fund, 3iQ, said it also received preliminar­y receipts for a Bitcoin ETF in all of the Canadian provinces and territorie­s except for Quebec.

Both funds claim to be “physical” Bitcoin ETFs, setting them apart from some of the other cryptocurr­ency investment­s out there, such as the Bitcoin futures that trade on the Chicago Mercantile Exchange.

Purpose Investment­s Chief Investment Officer Greg Taylor says the fund is different from a derivative or futures contract, as Purpose Investment­s will buy Bitcoin every time someone puts money into the ETF.

Taylor says Purpose Investment­s will also store the Bitcoin codes themselves, not on the internet, using a process called “cold storage.” OSC has described cold storage as “a computer with no access to a network” that is less vulnerable to hacking.

Purpose Investment­s says the end result of these Bitcoin ETFs is that investors will hold actual

Bitcoin in their portfolios but can buy and sell it similarly to buying or selling a stock.

“The risk is for traditiona­l investors that you have to open up a trading account to buy Bitcoin and you’re in self-custody - meaning you’re going to get the code and password for that coin. And you’re responsibl­e for doing that,” says Taylor. “With the ETF structure, it’s going to be easier as we’ll do that with our custodian.”

CIBC Mellon is working as a fund administra­tor for Purpose Investment­s’ Bitcoin ETF, as the firm looks for ways to meet rising demand for cryptocurr­encies.

Ronald Landry, who runs Canadian ETF services for CIBC Mellon, says it is working on getting more cryptocurr­ency services up and running in Canada.

3iQ chief executive Fred Pye says a physical Bitcoin ETF is the natural progressio­n from its other investment vehicles, which include a publicly listed Bitcoin investment fund and a fund based on cryptocurr­ency Ether.

Launching those past funds was not an easy feat.

3iQ had to argue before the Ontario Securities Commission to get approval several years ago for its trust that would “invest substantia­lly all of its assets in Bitcoin.” But that 2019 decision stopped short of signing off on an ETF structure, which the OSC decision said would have to undergo separate analysis since ETFs “require continuous purchases and sales to balance and rebalance the portfolio frequently and daily.”

At that time, the OSC said, there were two ways to hold Bitcoin, either by directly purchasing it in a digital wallet or investing in securities of companies or other entities that held Bitcoin, such as Grayscale Bitcoin Trust, available to “accredited investors” through a small number of Canadian institutio­ns.

While regulators initially tried to deny 3iQ a receipt for its earlier Bitcoin trust over concerns about the ability to value and safeguard Bitcoin and file audited financial statements, a 2019 “foundation­al” decision allowed it to move forward.

“Some novel asset classes and securities products fail. They become tulip bulbs or dot.com’s. Others succeed and become gold or the next great technology. Securities regulators are not mandated to try to pick winners and losers,” that decision said.

Pye said in a statement that 3iQ considered their closed-end fund to be a “success” as the company moves into the ETF space.

The seemingly unstoppabl­e rise of Bitcoin continued Tuesday with the cost of a single unit of the digital currency rising above US $50,000 for the first time.

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