Volatility Shares, a monetary agency providing a spread of exchange-traded fund (ETF) merchandise, canceled its plans to launch an Ether (ETH) futures ETF on Oct. 2, citing adjustments available in the market.
In an e-mail with Cointelegraph, the corporate’s co-founder and president, Justin Younger, confirmed the cancellation:
“You’re right — we didn’t launch at the moment. We didn’t see the chance at this time limit.”
Nonetheless, when requested if the corporate nonetheless deliberate to launch an ETH futures ETF at a later date, Younger responded, “After all,” including that “plans are TBD.”
Ether futures ETFs observe the costs of ETH futures contracts — agreements to commerce the asset at a selected time and value sooner or later. Basically, they permit traders to be concerned in ETH buying and selling with out having to truly maintain any of the cryptocurrency.
Associated: SEC continues to delay choices on crypto ETFs: Regulation Decoded
Volatility Shares was beforehand positioned to be the primary agency to supply an ETH futures ETF. The US Securities and Alternate Fee was anticipated to approve the primary such product on Oct. 12, however considerations over the beforehand impending Oct. 1 U.S. authorities shutdown reportedly prompted the SEC to maneuver the timeline for approval up.
As of Oct. 2, a number of corporations have begun buying and selling ETH futures ETFs, together with Valkyrie, VanEck, ProShares and Bitwise.
Fairly meh quantity for the Ether Futures ETFs as a gaggle, a little bit beneath $2m, about regular for a brand new ETF however vs $BITO (which did $200m in first 15min) it’s low. Tight race bt VanEck and ProShares within the single eth lane. pic.twitter.com/F9AHtrVcVf
— Eric Balchunas (@EricBalchunas) October 2, 2023
As Cointelegraph’s Turner Wright just lately wrote, “Bills for the good or ill of digital assets would be halted amid a shutdown, and financial regulators, including the Securities and Exchange Commission and Commodity Futures Trading Commission, would be running on a skeleton crew.”
In a twist, the U.S. government managed to avoid the shutdown by passing a stopgap measure to keep services funded through Nov. 17, with the Senate voting 88-9 to pass the measure. U.S. President Joe Biden signed it into law immediately.