Crypto was initiated as a grassroots revolution mainly influenced by individual developers, early adopters, and retail traders. However, in the last 10 years, the industry has gradually evolved into an asset class that is difficult to avoid
Although institutions did not quickly adopt crypto, their adoption followed years of work to make the custody, regulation, and investment structures they were willing to trust
The head of global research at 21Shares, Eliezer Ndinga, gave an interview to TheStreet in which he mentioned that the past few years have been spent preparing the infrastructure and regulatory framework required to make institutions comfortable investing in digital assets
He mentioned that for the last eight years, the world has spent a lot of time making institutional readiness for these institutions to come in and feel comfortable investing in this asset class
The largest barrier wasn’t technology, but the investment vehicles used to access it. Eli mentioned institutions mostly prioritise the structure around an asset just as much as the asset itself
He further mentioned that the underlying is as significant as the vehicle that you invest in, and we have witnessed hacks, bankruptcies and fraud since 2011, initiating from Mt Gox to FTX, Celsius and Terra Luna
For a lot of traditional investors, familiar products such as exchange-traded funds have aided in bridging that gap. Those vehicles permit investors to have exposure to crypto in a similar way they might purchase shares of firms like Nvidia or Apple
In the US the journey of crypto ETFs has been rooted for over a decade. Early filings from companies like Gemini weren’t accepted, and it took a lot of years of regulatory discussions before a group of issuers finally rolled out spot Bitcoin ETFs in early 2024
21Shares itself played a significant role in the evolution outside the United States, rolling out one of the world’s first physically supported Bitcoin exchange-traded products (ETP) in Europe in 2019
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