
- Major brokerage firms refuse to offer Bitcoin ETF products.
- The crypto community is calling for a boycott of firms that refuse to offer BTC ETFs.
- Bitcoin price action failed to meet expectations of a โGod candle.โ
On January 10, the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission approved spot Bitcoin ETF products, marking a major milestone for the crypto industry. However, the launch of trading the next day was met with confusion and outrage as several major brokerages, including Vanguard, announced that they would not offer spot Bitcoin ETF products to their customers.
Some Major Brokerages Say No to Bitcoin ETFs
Leading the retreat, Vanguard announced that they had no plans to offer spot Bitcoin ETF products due to these investment vehicles not aligning with the companyโs core investment focus.
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โOur perspective is that these products do not align with our offer focused on asset classes such as equities, bonds, and cash, which Vanguard views as the building blocks of a well-balanced, long-term investment portfolio,โ read a statement from Vanguard.
Reading between the lines, Adam Cochran, partner at Cinneamhain Ventures, interpreted Vanguardโs snub as a misguided take on morality, which contradicts the firmโs position on offering bonds from countries with appalling human rights abuses.
Rip VanWinkle, managing director at Swan Bitcoin, highlighted that other major brokerages have followed Vanguardโs lead in refusing to offer spot Bitcoin ETF products, including Citi, Merrill Lynch, and UBS, with another ๐ user adding Bank of America into the mix.
In response to the snub, prominent crypto voices, including crypto YouTuber Scott Melker, have called on Bitcoiners to boycott these brokerages by moving their assets to more progressive platforms willing to facilitate Bitcoin ETF products.
While the brokerage boycotts represent another roadblock to crypto adoption, the lackluster Bitcoin price performance post ETF approval has only added to investor frustrations.
BTC Price Fizzles Out
Rather than surge on expected ETF-driven inflows, Bitcoin recorded a lackluster performance on the first day of ETF trading. January 11 saw BTC top out at $49,000 to record a two-year high. However, the widely expected โGod candleโ did not materialize, leading to Bitcoin sinking to $45,500 by 17:00 UTC.
Pondering what happened, Chris Burniske, partner at VC firm Placeholder, drew parallels with the Coinbase IPO in April 2021, which was also a major milestone moment for the industry but resulted in a multi-quarter top for the Bitcoin price.
Samson Mow, founder of Jan3, called for patience as it takes time for the effects of ETF buying to impact the underlying asset.
On the Flipside
- Compliance requirements mean brokerage firms can take weeks and months to make new products available.
- British HODL predicts Vanguard will reverse its decision to snub BTC ETC products.
Why This Matters
The reluctance of major brokerages to embrace SEC-approved Bitcoin ETFs highlights the continued barriers cryptocurrencies face in being truly accepted in the mainstream financial system. The denial of access due to perceptions of risk and uncertainty may stagnate broader adoption and integration of digital assets. The resultant customer boycotts are expected to light a fire under slow-to-adapt institutions.
Read about calls for an investigation into the SECโs mishandling of Bitcoin ETF approvals here:
SECโs Bitcoin ETF Handling Draws Criticism, FBI Probe
Discover Andrew Baileyโs opinion on cryptoโs impact on mainstream adoption here:
Crypto Adoption โNot Taking Off:โ Bank of England Governor