Australia is set to list its first three cryptocurrency exchange-traded funds (ETFs) on Thursday, May 12th. The first-ever Austrailian crypto ETFs will go live on the CBOE exchange network, and will be managed by Cosmos Asset Management and ETF Securities. The three freshly made ETFs are based on BTC and ETH, and will be known as ‘Cosmos Purpose Bitcoin Access ETF’, ‘ETFs 21Shares Bitcoin ETF’ and ‘ETFs 21Shares Ethereum ETF’.
Australiaโs first cryptocurrency ETFs are expected to list on Thursday after โdownstream issues are resolved" https://t.co/Kk1s9w5NdL
— Bloomberg Australia (@BloombergAU) May 9, 2022
An ETF consists of funds that are traded on exchanges. When traders invest in an ETF, they get a bundle of assets that can be bought or sold during active market hours. For a lot of long-term investors, ETFs are considered safer than stocks because of the possibility of broad portfolio diversification.
Sponsored
The three ETFs were supposed to see be listed in April, but had to be postponed as one of the primary brokers decided not to list the ETFs due to the โvolatile nature of cryptocurrenciesโ. However, his skepticism didn’t pay off. Though his colleagues werenโt able to change his mind, the ETFs found a new lease of life with a new different broker a month later.
First Cryptocurrency ETFs Approved in Canada and Switzerland
Canada and Switzerland are both working to keep up with innovations in the industry, and will soon release their own crypto-based ETFs. Canadian company 3iQ Digital Asset Management seized the opportunity, taking advantage of the delay to Australiaโs ETFs to offer two of their own ETFs to the Australian public. BT3Q’ and ‘ET3Q’ offer Bitcoin and Ethereum funds respectively, and represent strong challengers.
Crypto ETF race in Australia led by Canada's 3iQ Digital Asset Management ahead of ETF Securities and Cosmos Asset Management - The Australian Financial Review https://t.co/wU5pMUkZ1k
— Stockexamen - RIT@Work - AKA (MoneyBags) (@stockexamen) May 1, 2022
On the Flipside
By contrast, The U.S. is still struggling to accept physically backed Bitcoin EFTs, but the new crypto bill signed by President Joe Bidden may be the catalyst needed to push things forward.