Exchange-traded fund (ETF) issuer Direxion wants to short the price of a bitcoin futures contract. According to a filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) on Tuesday, the Direxion Bitcoin Strategy Bear ETF will maintain short exposure to bitcoin futures contracts issued by the CME exchange. The product will not directly invest in bitcoin. […]
Exchange-traded fund (ETF) issuer Direxion wants to short the price of a bitcoin futures contract.
According to a filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) on Tuesday, the Direxion Bitcoin Strategy Bear ETF will maintain short exposure to bitcoin futures contracts issued by the CME exchange. The product will not directly invest in bitcoin.
Shorting is a bet that the price of something – in this case, bitcoin futures contracts – will go down over some period of time.
In addition, the ETF might invest in other bitcoin futures ETFs or money market funds, deposit accounts or short-term debt instruments.
“The Fund will generally maintain its short exposure to Bitcoin Futures during periods in which the value of bitcoin is flat or declining as well as during periods in which the value of bitcoin is rising,” the filing said.
This is Direxion’s first bitcoin ETF filing in three years, after the SEC rejected past efforts.
Direxion isn’t the only issuer hoping to put a creative spin on bitcoin futures ETFs. Tuesday, Valkyrie investments filed to offer an ever-so-slightly leveraged bitcoin futures ETF. It was one of two firms to launch the first bitcoin futures ETF products last week.
While the SEC has proven receptive to a narrow class of bitcoin ETFs – after years of stonewalling – it has not yet weighed in on these more ambitious follow-ups. The agency has 75 days to respond before Direxion’s ETF would automatically take effect.