Bitcoin Exchange-Traded Funds (ETFs) are investment vehicles that track the price of Bitcoin and trade on traditional stock exchanges. They allow investors to gain exposure to Bitcoin without needing to buy, store, or secure the cryptocurrency directly — making Bitcoin accessible to pension funds, wealth managers, and retail investors who use conventional brokerage accounts.
Since the approval of spot Bitcoin ETFs in January 2024, they have become one of the most successful ETF launches in financial history, with record inflows reaching $3.8 billion in March 2026 alone.
Spot vs Futures ETFs
Spot Bitcoin ETFs hold actual Bitcoin in custody. When investors buy shares, the fund purchases real BTC, creating direct price correlation. This is considered the "pure" ETF model.
Futures Bitcoin ETFs hold Bitcoin futures contracts rather than the asset itself. These can suffer from "contango" — a situation where futures prices exceed spot prices, creating a performance drag over time.
Major Spot Bitcoin ETFs
- BlackRock iShares Bitcoin Trust (IBIT) — The largest by AUM, with over $35 billion in assets. Fee: 0.25% (reduced from 0.30%)
- Fidelity Wise Origin Bitcoin Fund (FBTC) — $18 billion AUM. Custodies its own Bitcoin through Fidelity Digital Assets
- Grayscale Bitcoin Trust (GBTC) — The converted former trust product with $12 billion AUM. Higher fee at 1.50%
- ARK 21Shares Bitcoin ETF (ARKB) — $4.2 billion AUM at a competitive 0.21% fee
Impact on Crypto Markets
Bitcoin ETFs have fundamentally changed market dynamics:
- Institutional adoption — Institutional holdings have reached record levels, with corporate treasuries and sovereign wealth funds now collectively holding an estimated 1.2 million BTC
- Price discovery — ETF flows have become a primary driver of Bitcoin's price during US trading hours
- Volatility reduction — The presence of long-term institutional holders has dampened short-term volatility, contributing to the current consolidation pattern
- Regulatory clarity — The SEC's approval of spot ETFs, followed by the commodity classification of major crypto assets, has created a clearer regulatory framework for the industry
How to Invest in Bitcoin ETFs
Bitcoin ETFs can be purchased through any standard brokerage account — the same platforms used for stocks and bonds. For investors who prefer direct crypto ownership, exchanges like Binance,
Kraken, and Independent Reserve offer spot Bitcoin trading.
ETFs vs Direct Ownership: Trade-offs
- Custody — ETFs handle custody for you; direct ownership requires securing your own crypto wallet
- Fees — ETFs charge annual management fees (0.20-1.50%); direct ownership has no ongoing fees but involves transaction costs
- 24/7 trading — Crypto markets never close; ETFs only trade during stock exchange hours
- DeFi access — Only direct ownership allows participation in DeFi protocols, staking, and lending
- Tax treatment — ETF shares may be treated differently from crypto in some jurisdictions
Alongside the ETF boom, the SEC faces a record 91 pending crypto ETF applications for products tracking everything from Ethereum to Solana. The market is evolving rapidly, and AXT News will continue to provide independent coverage of these developments.

