Grayscale Bitcoin Trust share has widened its discount relative to the underlying cryptocurrency held in the fund. The development comes even as some crypto influencers and legal experts suggest that Grayscale now has greater chances to win the lawsuit to overturn the SEC’s decision on its spot bitcoin ETF.
Digital Currency Group’s flagship GBTC shares traded at a discount of 48% to net asset value (NAV) today, the highest margin ever since its debut in 2013. The $2-billion Grayscale Bitcoin Trust currently offers exposure to 0.00093 BTC per share, an amount that trades for around $22.94 at time of writing. Through shares of GBTC, however, that same amount of Bitcoin trades at $11.92 at market close on February 21.
UPDATE: More chatter that @Grayscale could be poised to win its appeal/case against the SEC on March 7th; turning $GBTC into a proper spot #Bitcoin ETF.
**legal minds believe their brief is powerful and the court may be prone to pushing back on regulatory overreach.
— Andrew (@AP_Abacus) February 20, 2023
A Columbia court has scheduled a date to hear oral arguments in Grayscale’s appeal contesting the SEC’s decision to deny the conversion of its Grayscale Bitcoin Trust to an exchange-traded fund. While Grayscale has continued to fight the decision, both sides will present their case to the court on March 7.
A proverbial #Bitcoin example of biting off your nose to spite your own face. I will never understand this kind of toxic maximalism. On top of everything wrong with it, its just plain stupid. https://t.co/AYugEEtxID
— John E Deaton (@JohnEDeaton1) February 21, 2023
In June 2022, the company running the world’s biggest bitcoin fund sued the SEC after the agency rejected a bid to turn its investment vehicle into a fund that trades on major Wall Street exchanges.
The Grayscale Bitcoin Trust (GBTC), which owns 3.5 per cent of the world’s bitcoin, had traded at a substantial premium to NAV for much of its existence. However, it has significantly widened its discount since its sister company Genesis Global Capital, the lending arm of the crypto investment bank Genesis Global Trading, suspended redemptions and new loan originations in the wake of FTX’s collapse. The latter is a subsidiary of Barry Silbert’s Digital Currency Group, owner of Grayscale Investments, which manages GBTC. Genesis owner Digital Currency Group (DCG) is also the parent company of CoinDesk.
GBTC is a closed-end fund with a six-month lock-up of initial investments, which means it cannot easily add or remove shares to deal with inflows and outflows. As a result, the fund subscribers are unable for some time to redeem their shares in reaction to the spot price of bitcoin. Thus, its share price tends to trade at either a premium or a discount, rather than being tied to the underlying value of its assets.
In 2021, Grayscale Investments said it plans to convert its Grayscale Bitcoin Trust into a spot bitcoin ETF. But the US Securities and Exchange Commission delayed decisions on Grayscale’s exchange-traded fund proposal.
The negative premium is possibly a sign that things are not looking good on the spot ETF front or that buyers are no longer interested in using the vehicle to bet on a future rally in cryptocurrency markets. In other words, the margins can serve as a proxy for determining what the SEC’s decision would be. If the agency approves the conversion of the fund into a spot ETF, then traders would see the discounts/premiums convert to zero.