• Home
  • News
  • Personal Finance
    • Savings
    • Banking
    • Mortgage
    • Retirement
    • Taxes
    • Wealth
  • Make Money
  • Budgeting
  • Burrow
  • Investing
  • Credit Cards
  • Loans

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest finance news and updates directly to your inbox.

Top News

Should You Cosign A Loan For Your Adult Child In Retirement?

April 25, 2026

Children’s Electric Toothbrush Boxes Recalled Over Battery Hazard

April 25, 2026

‘Spray and Pray’ Is the New Go-To for Job Seekers (and Employers Are to Blame)

April 25, 2026
Facebook Twitter Instagram
Trending
  • Should You Cosign A Loan For Your Adult Child In Retirement?
  • Children’s Electric Toothbrush Boxes Recalled Over Battery Hazard
  • ‘Spray and Pray’ Is the New Go-To for Job Seekers (and Employers Are to Blame)
  • ETFs vs mutual funds in 2026: Which is right for your portfolio?
  • More Americans Plan To Claim Social Security Benefits Early
  • Why a Lack of a Home Budget Is a Financial Time Bomb — and How to Fix It
  • 5 Ways Inflation and Taxes Are Quietly Cutting a $250,000 Retirement in Half
  • The Decline Of Social Security, Medicare Trust Funds Is Accelerating
Sunday, April 26
Facebook Twitter Instagram
FintechoPro
Subscribe For Alerts
  • Home
  • News
  • Personal Finance
    • Savings
    • Banking
    • Mortgage
    • Retirement
    • Taxes
    • Wealth
  • Make Money
  • Budgeting
  • Burrow
  • Investing
  • Credit Cards
  • Loans
FintechoPro
Home » Grayscale Bitcoin Trust Looks Cheap, but Isn’t Without Risk
Investing

Grayscale Bitcoin Trust Looks Cheap, but Isn’t Without Risk

News RoomBy News RoomSeptember 2, 20234 Views0
Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn WhatsApp Reddit Email Tumblr Telegram

Grayscale Bitcoin Trust
(ticker: GBTC), the world’s largest Bitcoin fund at about $16.3 billion under management, won a major court victory this week, increasing the likelihood it will convert into an exchange-traded fund.

The market, on the other hand, is pricing the fund largely as it did before the U.S. Court of Appeals decision. GBTC for now trades like a closed-end fund, with a market price that deviates from the value of the Bitcoin it holds. On Aug. 24, GBTC closed at $17.68, a 24.6% discount to the underlying Bitcoin. On Thursday, it closed at a 20.6% discount.

That doesn’t make sense. If an investor can stomach the volatility and is looking for Bitcoin exposure anyway, it is worth betting the discount will close further.

Grayscale for years has sought to convert GBTC into an ETF, which would completely erase the difference. The Securities and Exchange Commission consistently shot down the applications, along with those of other fund providers, arguing the Bitcoin market has insufficient surveillance to detect fraud and manipulation.

After being rebuffed in 2022, Grayscale sued, arguing the SEC unfairly rejected its bid while also approving Bitcoin futures products such as ProShares Bitcoin Strategy (BITO), whose prices are tied to the same underlying market.

In a unanimous decision on Tuesday, three judges appointed by presidents from both political parties agreed with Grayscale. The decision doesn’t order the SEC to approve the application, but it does leave the agency with little room to reject it again.

Analysts for Bloomberg Intelligence, for example, earlier this week put the odds of the SEC approving Bitcoin ETFs this year at 75% and the odds for such funds being approved by the end of 2024 at 95%.

There will likely be bumps in the road.

The day of the court decision, GBTC’s discount moved as low as 11%, and some hedge funds and other investors that had bet on a favorable ruling closed their trades, said Steven McClurg, chief investment officer of Valkyrie Investments, which manages a hedge fund that owns GBTC and has separately applied to launch its own spot Bitcoin ETF.

The discount widened back out over the next couple of days, as investors better understood it could take some time for the GBTC conversion and the approval of other ETFs to occur.

One disappointment came Thursday, when the SEC officially put off a decision on the Bitcoin ETF applications of
BlackRock
(ticker: BLK),
WisdomTree
(WT), Fidelity, and others. The decision likely helped sink the price of Bitcoin, which has fallen around 4% over the last 24 hours to about $26,000.

“This isn’t an instantaneous conversion,” added McClurg, who said his fund traded around the court ruling but still owns shares.

The SEC’s real tell will be what it does, or doesn’t do, in court. With the decision issued, the SEC has 45 days to request for its case to be heard again by a broader panel of judges. The agency also can ask the Supreme Court to take up the case, but it might need buy-in from the Justice Department to go that route. Neither avenue, however, looks very promising given the ruling was unanimous.

The SEC declined to comment on Friday. The day of the court decision, the agency said it was reviewing the decision to determine its next steps.

Grayscale this week also said it was reviewing the court’s opinion and would pursue its next steps with the SEC.

Rather than fight the appellate decision, the SEC could also try to reject the GBTC application on other grounds, though the basis it would lean on is unclear. The agency could even try to roll back the approval of Bitcoin futures ETFs, but that would entail unwinding products that already have hundreds of millions of dollars invested in them.

It would still seem the easiest path, both practically and politically, is for the agency to eventually allow spot Bitcoin ETFs to come to market.

“The odds of the SEC rejecting the application this time are limited because the court’s decision was so firmly worded, and we believe it knows it would lose again in court if it did deny the application,” wrote analysts for Compass Point Research & Trading in a research note on Wednesday.

There are risks in buying GBTC. Without also shorting the token itself, buying the fund means taking on not just the risk the discount won’t close soon but the risk Bitcoin itself drops for other reasons. Already the token trades at about the level it was at before the court decision, continuing a malaise that has lasted for months. While investors wait, they have to pay GBTC’s high annual fee of 2% of assets under management.

“I do see the discount narrowing, but that does not mean underlying spot won’t fall by 20% over some period of time,” said James Elbaor, founder of Marlton LLC, which manages a hedge fund focused on closed-end funds.

Elbaor in the past ran an activist campaign that tried to force Grayscale’s management to hold a tender offer for shares, and argues there is a risk Grayscale won’t take the necessary steps for GBTC to convert.

“There is a world where BlackRock gets approved and Grayscale has an investor unfriendly filing that gets denied by the SEC,” said Elbaor, whose fund doesn’t currently own GBTC.

A Grayscale spokeswoman said, “Unwaveringly, we remain 100% committed to converting GBTC to an ETF.”

The GBTC discount also isn’t what it once was. Early this year, the discount was near 50%. During oral arguments in the Grayscale case, the judges strongly tipped they were leaning against the SEC, and the surprise applications for Bitcoin ETFs from BlackRock and others squeezed the discount even further.

But a 20% discount still seems high.

“Eventually this will happen. It’s just a matter of when,” McClurg said.

Write to Joe Light at [email protected]

Read the full article here

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email

Related Articles

Even Time-Strapped Business Owners Can Share an Engaging Reading Experience with Their Kids

Investing September 20, 2025

Turnover Is Costing You More Than You Think — Here’s the Fix

Investing September 19, 2025

How Pana Food Truck Started Selling Arepas

Investing September 18, 2025

Amazon CEO Andy Jassy Is Fighting Against Bureaucracy

Investing September 17, 2025

Here Are the Top 50 Mistakes I’ve Seen Kill New Companies

Investing September 16, 2025

Google Parent Alphabet Reaches $3T Market Cap

Investing September 15, 2025
Add A Comment

Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Demo
Top News

Children’s Electric Toothbrush Boxes Recalled Over Battery Hazard

April 25, 20261 Views

‘Spray and Pray’ Is the New Go-To for Job Seekers (and Employers Are to Blame)

April 25, 20262 Views

ETFs vs mutual funds in 2026: Which is right for your portfolio?

April 25, 20262 Views

More Americans Plan To Claim Social Security Benefits Early

April 24, 20261 Views
Don't Miss

Why a Lack of a Home Budget Is a Financial Time Bomb — and How to Fix It

By News RoomApril 24, 2026

Editor’s Note: This story originally appeared on The Penny Hoarder. Home improvement projects aren’t nearly…

5 Ways Inflation and Taxes Are Quietly Cutting a $250,000 Retirement in Half

April 24, 2026

The Decline Of Social Security, Medicare Trust Funds Is Accelerating

April 23, 2026

Elon Musk Says Tesla’s Optimus Robot Could Be Its ‘Biggest Product Ever’

April 23, 2026
Facebook Twitter Instagram Pinterest Dribbble
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of use
  • Press Release
  • Advertise
  • Contact
© 2026 FintechoPro. All Rights Reserved.

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.