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JPMorgan Says $36B Capital Transfer From Crypto Platforms to Bitcoin ETFs Underway

A recent report suggests that the newly established ETFs may draw in up to $36 billion in investments from other crypto products, such as Grayscale Bitcoin Trust (GBTC).

Tue, 16 Jan 2024, 22:01 pm UTC

As the cryptocurrency market experiences subtle shifts, JPMorgan analysts foresee a noteworthy migration of capital from existing crypto products into recently established spot Bitcoin exchange-traded funds (ETFs).

While the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission's (SEC) cautious approval of spot Bitcoin ETFs has not caused a significant market uproar, attention now focuses on the potential capital infusion into these novel investment vehicles.

Analysts Express Cautious Optimism

In a recent research report, analysts led by Nikolaos Panigirtzoglou expressed skepticism regarding the widespread optimism that the approval of spot Bitcoin ETFs would usher in a substantial influx of fresh capital into the crypto space.

According to CoinDesk, JPMorgan anticipates a substantial rotation of funds from existing crypto products into the newly introduced ETFs. Even without an injection of entirely new capital, these ETFs could attract inflows amounting to $36 billion.

Potential Capital Movements

JPMorgan identifies potential sources of this capital migration, estimating that approximately $3 billion could exit the Grayscale Bitcoin Trust (GBTC) as investors secure profits from discounted GBTC shares acquired in the secondary market over the past year.

According to The Crypto Basic, the bank envisions up to $20 billion migrating from retail investors' digital wallets held at crypto exchanges to the new ETFs.

Factors Influencing Capital Flow

The bank points to Grayscale's relatively high fees as a possible trigger for outflows, suggesting that unless it aligns its rates with industry standards set by Blackrock and other providers, an additional $5 billion to $10 billion could rapidly exit GBTC in favor of more cost-effective spot Bitcoin ETFs.

Institutional investors, particularly those employing fund formats to hold their crypto assets, are expected to shift from futures-based ETFs and GBTC to more economical spot ETFs. The pace of this shift may accelerate if GBTC is slow to adjust its fees, according to the report.

As the crypto landscape evolves, these potential capital movements underscore the dynamic nature of investor sentiment and the evolving role of novel investment instruments like spot Bitcoin ETFs.

Photo: Dmytro Demidko/Unsplash

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