BlackRock just took Bitcoin investing to a new level. The iShares Bitcoin Premium Income ETF, ticker $BITA, officially began trading on Nasdaq today, on June 16, 2026. This spot product is designed to pay monthly income while keeping exposure to Bitcoin's price movement.
Source: Eric Balchunas (Bloomberg Senior ETF Analyst)
With this movement it's clear that Wall Street isn't just buying Bitcoins anymore. It's building an entire financial ecosystem around it.
Think of BITA as a two-in-one product. It holds Bitcoins exposure through $IBIT — BlackRock's existing spot Bitcoin ETF, and then sells covered call options on 25–35% of that portfolio.
Covered calls are a common income strategy. Basically, BITA agrees to sell some of its BTC upside at a fixed price in exchange for cash upfront, called a premium. Those premiums get paid out to investors every month.
The target? A 15–25% annualized yield, while still capturing at least 70% of Bitcoin's price gains. The sponsor fee is 0.65%, higher than IBIT's 0.25%, because this strategy takes active management to run.
These two funds come from the same firm but serve different goals entirely.
$IBIT is pure and simple. It tracks Bitcoin's spot price using the CME CF Bitcoin Reference Rate. Whatever Bitcoin does, IBIT follows. No income, no cap on gains, just direct price exposure.
$BITA adds a layer on top. It still follows Bitcoin's price, but gives up some of the extreme upside in exchange for monthly cash payouts. If the crypto coin shoots up 50% in a month, the premium product might only capture part of that move on the covered portion. But it keeps sending earning either way.
Both funds carry full downside risk. If Bitcoin's price drops, both drop with it. BITA-ETF does not protect against losses.
This strategy tends to work best when Bitcoin moves sideways or moderately, the sweet spot where premiums collect steadily and price gains don't outrun the calls that were sold.
BITA is brand new, small in size but built on IBIT's massive foundation of over $50 billion in assets and 700,000+ BTC under management.
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BlackRock $IBIT |
BlackRock $BITA |
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Fund Launch: January 5, 2024 |
Fund Inception: June 9, 2026 |
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NAV (Jun 15, 2026): $37.75 |
NAV (Jun 15, 2026): $53.25 |
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Net Assets: $50,991,500,232 |
Net Assets: $10,649,844 |
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Shares Outstanding: 1,350,600,000 |
Shares Outstanding: 200,000 |
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Sponsor Fee: 0.25% |
Sponsor Fee: 0.65% |
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YTD Return: –27.19% |
Distribution: Monthly |
The BlackRock product enters a space where several Bitcoin-based income ETFs already trade actively:
BTCI (NEOS-Bitcoin High Income ETF) charges 0.98–0.99% and focuses heavily on maximizing distributions
YBTC (Roundhill-Bitcoin Covered Call ETF) pays out weekly but has lagged spot BTC significantly during price rallies
BTCC (Grayscale) offers another existing covered call structure in this category
Goldman Sachs is also reportedly preparing a rival product, which would bring even more institutional weight into this space.
BlackRock's new product edge comes down to three things — lower fees than most rivals, direct access to IBIT's deep liquidity, and BlackRock's brand pulling in institutional trust that newer names simply don't have yet.
When BlackRock moves from a simple spot product to a yield-generating strategy, it signals confidence in Bitcoin's infrastructure, its options market depth, and its long-term staying power in traditional portfolios.
The Bitcoin income ETF space is still young. BITA enters with seed capital of around $10 million and very limited trading history. Early yield figures and AUM growth over the coming weeks will be the real test of investor appetite.
If inflows follow the pattern set by IBIT's historic launch, the BTC yield ETF category could become one of the fastest-growing corners of the ETF market in 2026.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only. The content does not make any claims, guarantees, or investment recommendations.

