Goldman Sachs has filed to launch a Bitcoin Premium Income ETF that would gain exposure through existing spot Bitcoin ETPs and related options, rather than holding Bitcoin directly.
The filing comes days after Morgan Stanley’s MSBT Bitcoin ETF debuted with roughly $34 million in first-day trading volume, adding to signs that large Wall Street firms are pushing deeper into Bitcoin fund products.
Goldman Sachs is preparing a new way for investors to access Bitcoin, though not by holding the asset outright.
The bank filed on Tuesday for the Goldman Sachs Bitcoin Premium Income ETF, a proposed fund that would invest in spot Bitcoin exchange-traded products, options tied to those products, and options on indices tracking them. In effect, Goldman is trying to offer Bitcoin-linked exposure through the ETF wrapper market that already exists, rather than through direct ownership of the cryptocurrency itself.
That matters because the fund is not designed as a plain spot Bitcoin product. The filing shows Goldman leaning into an income-oriented structure, one that seeks exposure to Bitcoin price moves through other listed vehicles while also using options as part of the strategy.
The prospectus also makes the core linkage explicit. Because the underlying spot Bitcoin ETPs rise and fall with Bitcoin price, the Goldman fund would still participate in both gains and losses in Bitcoin through those holdings. Goldman has not yet disclosed the fund’s fee.
The filing lands just after Morgan Stanley’s MSBT entered the market. That fund drew about $34 million in trading volume on its first day, according to reports, giving another large bank a visible early foothold in the category.
Taken together, the launches suggest a shift in tone. The largest banks are no longer only allocating to Bitcoin products behind the scenes. They are increasingly willing to put their own names on the front of them, even if the structures remain carefully designed to manage how that exposure is delivered.
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