The SEC’s approval of 11 U.S.-based spot Bitcoin ETFs means that many different kinds of investors will suddenly take interest in the asset class and start investing in Bitcoin through this new availability. Bringing more investors to the table when it comes to Bitcoin means increased legitimacy for Bitcoin and cryptocurrency in general, especially since there’s now an avenue to invest through which is regulated and trusted by the mainstream financial sector.
Some Bitcoin aficionados may not be fans of this development, since Bitcoin was initially created as a response to mistrust in the financial system. However, given the recent scandals plaguing the cryptocurrency sector—the bankruptcy of FTX and the arrest of its founder Sam Bankman-Fried, the hacking of several exchanges over the years and the use of Bitcoin by criminals for money-laundering—this announcement creates some stability that will likely reduce some of Bitcoins volatility in the market and take away some of the criminal element associated with crypto. However, it may still introduce more volatility than many typically-conservative Canadian investors can stomach, especially for their retirement accounts.
If you are an investor who already has their money in Canada’s Bitcoin ETFs, the resulting demand will likely raise prices on those Bitcoin ETFs. Since the price of Bitcoin will likely go up, this is good for Canadian investors looking to “sell high” on the Bitcoin ETFs already in their portfolio. At the same time, the price of admission for new investors may become more expensive than it once was with Bitcoin’s predicted rise in price. Of course, Canadian investors may have already seen deep drops in their Bitcoin ETFs thanks to earlier Bitcoin volatility, but if they were able to hold on, spikes in volatility usually have more upside than downside over the long-term.
Canadian Bitcoin ETFs will also be facing some price pressure, as they charge higher fees than the ETFs that have approval in the U.S. For example, Purpose Bitcoin ETF—the first Bitcoin ETF to be launched in the world in February 2021—has a Management Expense Ratio (MER) of 1.49%, while the U.S.-listed and SEC-approved Fidelity Wise Origin Bitcoin Fund has an MER of 0.25% that is being waived until August 1, 2024.
To their credit, Fidelity Investments Canada ULC has announced they will reduce the MER on their Fidelity Advantage Bitcoin ETF to 0.39% from 0.44%. Conversely, the Purpose Bitcoin ETF will not be waiving or reducing its MER.