Investors interested in crypto may understand that they may need to wait a while for the crypto winter to thaw, but it’s fair to say that the FTX drama and bankruptcy has rattled the industry. Those investors may be interested by the idea of keeping their Bitcoin in “cold” storage via the Bitcoin futures ETF pairing of the ProShares Bitcoin Strategy ETF (BITO ) and the ProShares Short Bitcoin Strategy ETF (BITI ).
Bitcoin holders may not know what it means to put their exposures in “cold” storage, which involves trading on the Bitcoin futures market as an alternative to strategies that directly hold cryptocurrencies like Bitcoin or Ethereum which are trading at steep NAV discounts, according to Simeon Hyman, global investment strategist at ProShares.
BITO currently trades at an average discount of -0.01%, while the direct Bitcoin holder Grayscale Bitcoin Trust (GBTC) is trading at an average discount of -29.7%, suggesting that the futures market may be less exposed to the risk contagion spreading from FTX’s collapse.
BITO builds capital appreciation mainly through its Bitcoin futures contract use, having added $13.2 million in five day net inflows. BITO has seen its returns rise over the last month compared to the last three months, from -31.2% over three months to -13.9% over one month.
BITI, meanwhile, seeks a return that is -1x of the S&P CME Bitcoin Futures Index for a given day. BITI has also seen notable net inflows over the last five days, with $13.4 million in that time. The ETF has returned 7.5% over one month, with returns of 27.5% over the last three months.
With neither BITI nor BITO directly invested in Bitcoin, crypto investors who still believe in the long-term value of decentralized currencies and the power of the blockchain may be interested in the appeal of a “cold” storage approach. If so, it may make sense to follow a Bitcoin futures ETF like BITO or its sibling BITI.
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