Key Highlights
CoinShares formally pulled SEC registration filings for its XRP, Solana, and Litecoin spot ETFs.
The company intends to launch new US products, including crypto equity vehicles, thematic baskets, and actively managed strategies.
CoinShares International Ltd. has withdrawn its applications with the US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) to launch spot exchange-traded funds (ETFs) for XRP, Solana, and Litecoin. The reversal concludes CoinShares’ bid to compete in the US spot market, a sector that has seen rapid consolidation around giants such as BlackRock Inc. and Fidelity Investments.
The decision comes as Europe’s largest digital asset manager prepares for a US public listing, following its $1.2 billion merger deal with Vine Hill Capital Investment Corp.
Key Developments:
Filings Pulled: Registration statements for the CoinShares XRP ETF, Solana Staking ETF, and Litecoin ETF have been formally withdrawn.
Product Winding Down: The firm is also closing its CoinShares Bitcoin Futures Leveraged ETF (Ticker: BTFX).
Strategic Pivot: The firm is exiting the “fee war” over commoditized single-asset products to focus on higher-margin, actively managed strategies and thematic baskets.
Shifting strategy
While CoinShares dominates the European market with approximately $10 billion in assets under management and a 34% market share, its leadership has expressed reluctance to engage in the aggressive “fee wars” characterizing the US landscape. In the US, issuers have slashed management fees to near-zero to capture inflows, severely compressing profit margins for late entrants.
By scrapping the plans for single-asset products—which have become commoditized—CoinShares is expected to focus on higher-margin offerings, such as active management strategies and digital asset equity exposure, to differentiate itself from US incumbents.
Competitive landscape
The exit leaves a narrower field of applicants vying for SEC approval on altcoin ETFs. Competitors, including Bitwise Asset Management, Canary Capital, and Grayscale Investments, continue to pursue spot products for XRP and Solana. These funds have already accumulated collectively over $800 million in assets, intensifying the challenge for new issuers to gain market share.
CoinShares’ decision effectively removes a major international player from the US regulatory queue, streamlining its operations as it courts US equity investors for its upcoming SPAC merger.
Also Read: 21Shares to List U.S. Spot XRP ETF on Monday