Just days after BlackRock filed for the iShares Ethereum Trust, asset management firm Fidelity has submitted an application for its own Ethereum exchange-traded fund (ETF).
Fidelity, an asset management firm overseeing $4.5 trillion in assets, has become the latest firm to seek approval for a spot Ethereum (ETH) exchange-traded fund (ETF).
In a filing with the United States Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) on November 17, Fidelity proposes to list and trade shares of the Fidelity Ethereum Fund on the Cboe BZX Exchange.
"According to the Registration Statement, each Share will represent a fractional undivided beneficial interest in the Trust’s net assets. The Trust’s assets will consist of ETH held by the Custodian on behalf of the Trust."
Update: @Fidelity joins the spot #ethereum ETF race by filing a 19b-4 with @CBOE https://t.co/rxNEzpzh3g pic.twitter.com/o96XspPDEP
— James Seyffart (@JSeyff) November 17, 2023
The filing declared that United States citizens lack a low-risk avenue to expose themselves to ETH:
"U.S. retail investors have lacked a U.S. regulated, U.S. exchange- traded vehicle to gain exposure to ETH."
It further argued that the existing methods for accessing the digital asset involve encountering counter-party risk, legal uncertainty, and technical risk.
Meanwhile, it noted that investors across Europe have access to products which trade on regulated exchanges and provide exposure to a broad array of spot crypto assets.
Related: BlackRock argues SEC has no grounds to treat crypto futures and spot ETFs differently
On August 15, Cointelegraph reported that the first European spot Bitcoin ETF, the Jacobi Bitcoin ETF, was approved to go live on the Euronext Amsterdam stock exchange.
Moreover, the filing proposes that if an Ether ETF had been available to U.S. citizens, the losses incurred from now ban firms like FTX, Celsius Network, and BlockFi would be considerably lower:
"If a Spot ETH ETP was available, it is likely that at least a portion of the billions of dollars tied up in those proceedings would still reside in the brokerage accounts of U.S. investors."
Fidelity's filing comes after recent news that BlackRock officially filed for a spot Ether ETF, the iShares Ethereum Trust, with the SEC on Nov. 16.
BlackRock's filing comes nearly a week after it registered the iShares Ethereum Trust with Delaware’s Division of Corporations and almost six months after it filed its spot Bitcoin ETF application.
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