In brief
Trump Media & Technology Group has withdrawn its Bitcoin and Bitcoin-Ethereum ETF applications.
Sponsor and investment advisor Yorkville America said that it will pursue a different regulatory framework under the '40 Act instead of the '33 Act.
The withdrawal highlights intense fee pressure in the $57.4 billion U.S. spot Bitcoin ETF market, following the launch of Morgan Stanley's MSBT.
The firm behind Donald Trump's social media platform Truth Social has filed to withdraw its applications for crypto exchange-traded funds, abandoning plans for both Bitcoin and Bitcoin-Ethereum ETFs.In its filing, Trump Media & Technology Group stated that “The Company has determined to withdraw the Registration Statement and not to pursue the public offering at this time.”The firm cited a shift in regulatory strategy for the withdrawal. Steve Neamtz, president of Yorkville America, the sponsor and investment advisor for Truth Social funds, said in a statement that the decision would allow more flexibility."Our focus has always been on delivering the right strategies through the right structures," Neamtz claimed, noting that “the '40 Act structure allows us to bring more differentiated investment strategies to our investors that are not possible under the '33 Act framework.”Competition ramps upBloomberg Research Analyst James Seyffart offered a different interpretation in a tweet, pointing to a “more competitive landscape” for spot Bitcoin ETFs following the launch of Morgan Stanley’s MSBT in April, which has already accumulated $266.72 million in total net assets.Morgan Stanley’s Bitcoin ETF has undercut competitors with a market-leading 0.14% annual expense ratio, versus Grayscale's Bitcoin Mini Trust at 15 basis points and both BlackRock's iShares Bitcoin Trust and Fidelity's Wise Origin Bitcoin Fund at 25 basis points.







