Franklin Templeton joins bid for spot Bitcoin ETF

The $1.5 trillion asset manager submitted its own filing to secure regulatory approval for Americaโ€™s first spot Bitcoin ETF.

Franklin Templeton became the latest fund manager to declare interest in listing a spot Bitcoin exchange-traded fund (ETF) following a Sep. 12 filing with the US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC).

The financial giant with over $1.5 trillion in assets under management (AUM) asked the SEC for permission to list shares of its Franklin Bitcoin ETF on the Cboe BZX Exchange.

In the Form S-1 filing, the company named the publicly-traded company Coinbase as its brokerage partner and custodian for its Bitcoin (BTC). The firm proposed the Bank of New York Mellon to hold the fundโ€™s cash capital.

Franklin Templeton has now joined a list of Wall Street stalwarts like BlackRock and Fidelity in filing for a spot Bitcoin ETF, a product that would allow US residents to invest directly in BTC without actually holding cryptoโ€™s leading token by market cap.

The SEC has historically rejected spot Bitcoin ETF applications citing market manipulation concerns while conversely approving Bitcoin future ETFs, a move that has puzzled crypto proponents and courts alike.

In a lawsuit against the SEC, a trio of judges ruled that the commission had been โ€œarbitrary and capriciousโ€ in denying Grayscaleโ€™s application to convert the GBTC fund into a spot Bitcoin ETF.

Judge Neomi Rao, in particular, ruled that the SEC failed to โ€œexplain its different treatment of similar products,โ€ pointing to approval of future ETFs.

Notably, the ruling does not automatically approve Grayscaleโ€™s bid to launch a spot Bitcoin ETF.ย 

The SEC must now re-review Grayscaleโ€™s bid and either approve the filing or deny/delay a decision on new grounds.

During a US Senate hearing on Sep. 12, SEC Chair Gary Gensler was questioned about the Grayscale ruling and what the commission would like to see before approving a spot Bitcoin ETF.

Gensler responded saying:ย 

Weโ€™re reviewing that decision. There are multiple spot ETP filings that weโ€™re also reviewing, and Iโ€™m looking forward to the staffโ€™s recommendations.

Gary Gensler, SEC Chair

Gensler accused the nascent digital asset industry of โ€œwide-ranging non-complianceโ€ in written testimony ahead of the hearing. The SEC chair reaffirmed this stance while speaking to policymakers at the hearing.

At press time, there are over a dozen Bitcoin ETF filings from issuers awaiting the SECโ€™s decision, including a deluge of bids for both spot Ethereum and Ethereum futures funds.


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