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Goldman Sachs has filed paperwork with the Securities and Exchange Commission for a Bitcoin Premium Income ETF, a fund designed to provide investors with Bitcoin exposure while generating regular income through options trading.
Goldman plans to allocate at least 80% of the fund’s assets to products tied to Bitcoin’s price. Those holdings would include shares of existing spot Bitcoin ETFs and options on those funds, rather than buying Bitcoin outright.
To generate income, the bank intends to sell call options on its Bitcoin ETF holdings at a premium. The approach allows the fund to collect fees from options buyers, while limiting how much upside investors can capture if Bitcoin’s price rises sharply.
Goldman’s filing follows a similar push from Morgan Stanley, which launched its own spot Bitcoin ETF last week—described as the first bank-issued Bitcoin ETF on record.
Goldman’s registration statement was submitted to the SEC as Bitcoin was already moving. The leading cryptocurrency climbed as high as $76,000 on the day of the filing before pulling back to around $75,000.
In the SEC document, Goldman indicates the fund may hold spot Bitcoin ETF shares and Bitcoin ETF options directly. The prospectus states that the fund’s income mechanism centers on selling covered call options against those holdings.
No fee details or a launch date have been disclosed. The SEC has not yet approved the fund.
Goldman Sachs manages roughly $3.6 trillion in assets across its operations.
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