Market Watch

Bitwise Files for Dogecoin ETF Amid Shifting US Regulations

Crypto asset manager Bitwise has applied to launch a Dogecoin exchange-traded fund amid further signs U.S. policymakers are warming to crypto. The application, filed with federal regulators on Tuesday, marks the issuer’s latest step toward rolling out a Dogecoin ETF, which it laid the legal groundwork for last week. The fund, if approved, would expose investors to the price movements of the eighth-largest crypto by market capitalization.

Dogecoin is trading at $0.32 at writing time, CoinGecko data shows. The asset touched a three-year-high price of $0.475 last November—roughly around the time Elon Musk ramped up his tweeting about launching his eponymous extra-governmental agency, D.O.G.E. Exchange-traded funds are investment vehicles that enable investors to gain exposure to assets without directly investing in them. 

Federal regulators in the U.S. approved Bitcoin and Ethereum-based ETFs in the first half of 2024, leading to a rush of institutional dollars into digital assets. Such digital asset-based funds have so far attracted more than $4 billion in investments in 2025, according to a Coin Shares report released Monday.   And now, as a new crop of regulators takes the helm at the Securities Exchange Commission under President Donald Trump, some speculate approvals for other crypto-based funds will soon follow. 

Bitwise’s application to offer the Dogecoin ETF with the SEC comes just days after the firm registered a statutory trust for the fund. That trust, registered last week through CSC Delaware Trust Company in Wilmington, laid the legal groundwork for the asset manager to file for its ETF. The meme coin-based fund would add to the issuers’ two existing offerings that trade on U.S. stock exchanges—The Bitwise Bitcoin ETF and Bitwise Ethereum ETF.

Meanwhile, the asset manager also filed for Solana and XRP-based ETFs late last year in a bid to expand its digital asset-based investment offerings. Other issuers have followed Bitwise’s lead, applying to roll out funds in the U.S. that would hold cryptocurrencies as vast and varied as Official Trump, Bonk, and HBAR

The SEC generally has 45 days from the filing date to make an initial decision to approve, deny, or extend its review of ETF applications. This timeframe can be extended multiple times, with the final deadline for a decision usually set within 240 days of the initial filing.

Terron Gold

Recent Posts

Coinbase Brings Bitcoin Collateral to Fannie Mae Mortgages, Expanding Crypto’s Role in Homeownership

Coinbase is helping bring cryptocy deeper into the U.S. housing market through a partnership with Better Home…

5 days ago

Republican Lawmaker Wants Prediction Markets Added to Congressional Stock Trading Ban

A growing bipartisan effort to curb financial conflicts of interest in Washington is expanding beyond…

5 days ago

ElmonX Brings Piet Mondrian Into Web3 Through New Doodles Collaboration

The worlds of fine art and digital collectibles are colliding once again as ElmonX prepares to launch…

5 days ago

VeVe Launches Stickerverse With Telegram Integration, Bringing Digital Sticker Collecting to Web3

VeVe is expanding beyond digital collectibles and comics with the launch of Stickerverse, a new social…

5 days ago

Kalshi Expands Into Ethereum Perpetual Futures Following Bitcoin Launch

Kalshi is moving quickly to expand its newly approved crypto derivatives business after announcing plans to…

6 days ago

Andrew Yang’s Noble Mobile Acquires Crypto-Powered Helium Mobile

Former U.S. presidential candidate Andrew Yang is expanding his presence in the telecommunications industry after Noble Mobile announced the…

6 days ago