Japan · Bitcoin · Wall Street · CryptoSlate
Bitcoin is being packaged for income investors, but the yield comes with a trade-off
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Bitcoin's protocol rewards miners through block subsidies and transaction fees, leaving holders who sit on coins with no claim on the network's output, no interest, no dividend, no staking reward of any kind.
Key facts
- IBIT itself provides BITA with a substantial base to write against, with $48.64 billion in net assets and 36.5 million shares traded daily as of June 12
- Bloomberg ETF analyst Eric Balchunas confirmed the launch on June 16 with the Nasdaq, adding that BITA targets 15%-25% annual yield while aiming to capture at least 70% of Bitcoin's upside, figures
- BlackRock's iShares Bitcoin Premium Income ETF (BITA) is set to begin trading on Nasdaq on June 16, while in Japan, Metaplanet signed a share-transfer agreement on June 12 to acquire all outstanding
- The SEC approved Nasdaq's proposal to list BITA shares on May 29, and BlackRock filed a Form 8-A on June 11 registering the shares for Nasdaq listing
Summary
01 BlackRock's BITA ETF and Metaplanet's Siiibo acquisition show Bitcoin income products moving into mainstream finance. 02 These products matter because they let advisers and issuers package Bitcoin exposure with yield for brokerage and bond investors. 03 The unresolved question is whether that yield can stay attractive once option premiums, credit risk, or capped upside bite. Wall Street is building income products around it anyway, and two events landing within days of each other show how far that shift has progressed.