According to Bloomberg ETF analyst Eric Balchunas, BlackRock’s new Bitcoin Premium Income ETF, which trades as BITA, could begin trading as early as this Thursday. The move comes after BlackRock submitted a significant Form 8-A with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission last week.
On June 10, Balchunas noted that BlackRock had filed the 8-A registration for the iShares Bitcoin Premium Income ETF. He wrote on X that such a filing “typically means launch in one week,” adding, “So if I had to bet I’d say next Thur $BITA goes live.” The ETF is expected to list on Nasdaq once the final green light arrives.
BlackRock has already secured the BITA ticker and amended its S-1 registration, which suggests that it has mostly set the product specifications. Recent filings also disclosed a 0.65% sponsor fee, which undercuts competitor Bitcoin covered-call ETFs that charge between 0.95% and 0.99% Watchers think the cheap charge combined with near-final documentation makes a June launch quite plausible.
How BITA Aims to Generate Income
BITA is designed to give investors Bitcoin exposure while also paying regular income from an options strategy. The fund will hold spot Bitcoin, cash, and shares of BlackRock’s existing spot ETF, IBIT, which already manages tens of billions of dollars.
To generate yield, the ETF will sell covered call options on IBIT shares and sometimes on Bitcoin-linked indices. BITA will pass the option premiums it collects through to investors as monthly income distributions. Although some analysts estimate similar strategies can reach double-digit yields in volatile markets, investors will not know BITA’s own distribution rate until after launch.
BlackRock is pitching BITA as a follow-up to its successful spot fund that focuses on turning Bitcoin’s volatility into cash flow. The trade-off is that selling calls can cap upside during sharp rallies because the fund gives up some future gains in exchange for premium income. Even so, the structure may appeal to investors who want Bitcoin exposure but prefer a smoother ride and regular payouts.
If BITA launches this week as Balchunas expects, it will join a growing group of options-based crypto ETFs that sit between pure spot exposure and more complex derivatives products. Its reception could signal how much demand there is for income-focused Bitcoin funds at a time when spot ETFs have already attracted massive inflows.
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