Former BlackRock managing director Steven Schoenfield, who’s now the CEO of MarketVector Indexes, gives the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission “three to six months” before it approves a Bitcoin spot ETF.
Schoenfield gave his estimate during a panel discussion on ETFs at CCData’s Digital Asset Summit in London yesterday, where he was joined by another ex-BlackRock director Martin Bednall, now CEO of Jacobi Asset Management.
Schoenfield was responding to comments made earlier by Bednall that “the SEC will probably approve [all ETF applications] at the same time; I don’t think they want to give anybody first mover advantage.”
Previously the MarketVector CEO said he would have given the industry “nine to twelve months” before an approval, but the SEC’s recent decision to delay giving verdicts on several pending ETF applications is unlike previous delaying tactics by the regulator.
“Instead of completely rejecting the whole list, they’ve asked for comments, which is a marginal but significant improvement in the dialogue,” says Shoenfield. “There’s also the Grayscale lawsuit, which the SEC lost, which means they’re most likely going to have to allow the Grayscale Bitcoin Trust to be converted into an ETF.”
Through its pending ETF application, traditional finance’s top asset manager, BlackRock—shepherding $9.42 trillion in assets-under-management (AUM)—seems the likeliest contender to get a Bitcoin spot ETF approved.
After all, it has a winning score of 575-1 when it comes to getting ETFs through the SEC.
Nobody would have seen it coming back in 2017 when BlackRock chief Larry Fink called Bitcoin an “index of money laundering.”
Fast forward to summer 2023: Fink appeared on FOX News and said that crypto “is digitizing gold in many ways.”