BlackRock, Fidelity and other applicants to list a spot bitcoin exchange-traded fund (ETF) in the U.S. revealed their fees as the crypto industry awaits approval from the Securities and Exchange Commission.
BlackRock said in its final S-1 filing that its fee will start at 0.20%for the first 12 months until the fund reaches $5 billion and then settles at 0.30%. The figure is lower than that predicted by Bloomberg Intelligence’s ETF analyst James Seyffart, who said last week he expected BlackRock and Fidelity to charge 0.39%. Fidelity announced fees in line with Seyffart’s prediction. With as many as 13 ETFs possibly set to list in the U.S. in the coming days, providers are seeking ways of differentiating themselves from their rivals and setting enticing fees is one of their main tools in doing so.
As previously reported, Invesco and Galaxy are waiving their fee entirely for the first six months until its fund reaches $5 billion in assets. Thereafter, a fee of 0.59% will apply.
- Trump Media & Technology Group Files Two New Crypto ETF Proposals After SEC Delay
- OpenSea Gets ‘Wells Notice’ From SEC, Which Calls NFTs Sold on Platform ‘Securities’
- U.S. Government Seizes Crypto Funds, 145 Domains Tied to Darknet Marketplace BidenCash
- Sean ‘Diddy’ Combs Moved into Same Federal Brooklyn Jail Housing Unit as Sam Bankman-Fried
- CFTC Advisory Committee Votes to Advance Pioneering Digital Assets Taxonomy For Agency Review
- Pro-Crypto Advocate Ammon Simon Appointed Chief Counsel to Senate Banking Committee






























































































































