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SEC Slams Brakes on Grayscale’s Multi-Asset Crypto ETF Launch – Despite Earlier Approval

SEC Slams Brakes on Grayscale’s Multi-Asset Crypto ETF Launch – Despite Earlier Approval

Published:
2025-07-02 21:00:15
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SEC temporarily halts Grayscale’s multi-asset crypto ETF debut despite conversion greenlight

Regulators hit pause on Wall Street's hottest crypto play.

The SEC just yanked Grayscale's multi-asset ETF debut off the runway—hours after clearing its conversion from a trust. Classic bureaucratic whiplash.

Behind the regulatory curtain

Insiders whisper about 'procedural concerns' (read: someone didn't dot an i). The move comes as crypto markets flirt with 2025 highs—because nothing fuels volatility like regulatory uncertainty.

Grayscale's chess move

The firm converted its flagship trust to an ETF structure in record time. Now? Stuck watching the ticker while SEC lawyers nitpick filings. Just another Tuesday in crypto finance—where the house always wins.

Market impact: minimal. Investor frustration: maximal. The SEC's signature move—approve, then reverse, then study for another three years. At this rate, we'll get crypto ETFs right around the time quantum computing makes blockchain obsolete.

Two theories

Seyffart shared two working theories for the temporary block that came with the approval. The first is that staff in another division may still vet GDLC’s structure, or the SEC may prefer to keep every crypto listing on hold until it finishes a broader.

Meanwhile, Bloomberg senior ETF analyst Eric Balchunas assessed that the SEC could be waiting for the first spot ETFs tracking Solana, Cardano, and XRP to hit the market before allowing Grayscale to trade its multi-asset fund.

The approval amended NYSE Arca Rule 8.500-E, allowing the trust’s units to trade on the exchange once the operational details are cleared. 

GDLC holds Bitcoin, Ethereum, Solana, XRP, and Cardano. Grayscale reports roughly $775 million in assets under management for the product. 

When the stay is lifted, the fund will transition to an in-kind creation and redemption format, replacing the current closed-end structure.

Standardized framework

Recent reports suggested that the  SEC and US exchanges are working on drafting a generic listing standard for token ETFs. 

Under the proposal, an issuer WOULD file only a Form S-1, wait the customary 75 days, and launch if the registration becomes effective. The framework would allow issuers to sidestep the current Rule 19b-4 change each product now needs. 

Seyffart called the prospect “very good news” because a single standard would shorten timelines and supply clear thresholds for market capitalization, trading volume, and liquidity.

Other crypto basket funds, including filings submitted by Bitwise, Hashdex, and Franklin Templeton, are awaiting SEC approval.

Based on one of Seyffart’s theories, the regulator might be waiting to give GDLC full clearance so it can approve the other ETFs under the same standards.

Notably, the deadline for a decision on Bitwise’s filing expires on July 31, which could be a key date to watch and expect for the rumored framework.

|Square

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