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Key Takeaways:
- The offerings include physically backed Bitcoin and Ethereum products, including one that distributes staking rewards.
- These products are designed to align with institutional compliance standards, using regulated custody and trustee safeguards.
- Bitwise positions these ETPs as tools for long-term exposure, seeking to normalize crypto in mainstream investment channels.
Bitwise has listed four of its crypto exchange-traded products on the London Stock Exchange, widening institutional access to Bitcoin and Ethereum without requiring direct custody of assets.
The listings, announced April 16, mark a further push into European markets following the firm’s acquisition of ETC Group last year.
Bitwise Taps London as European Crypto Hub
The suite includes two Bitcoin products and two Ethereum products, each structured as physically backed ETPs. The Bitwise Core Bitcoin ETP emphasizes long-term, cost-efficient exposure, while the Bitwise Physical Bitcoin ETP is geared toward active trading, with five years of track record.
Ethereum-focused offerings include a standard physical ETP and a staking-linked version that distributes rewards.
These products remain available only to professional investors in the UK, but listing on the LSE—Europe’s largest venue for ETP trading—offers a foothold in one of the continent’s most active financial centers.
Each product is fully backed by the corresponding crypto asset, held in cold storage and safeguarded by independent trustees.
Bradley Duke, managing director of Bitwise Europe, said the firm is responding to growing institutional demand for regulated exposure. “Investing in crypto is rapidly becoming mainstream and institutional investors increasingly allocate digital assets to their portfolios,” he said.
“We will continue to innovate our product range, in dialogue with investors to bring products that suit their needs in this rapidly developing asset class,” Duke added.
Expanding Institutional Access Through Regulated Channels
The firm’s expansion into London is part of a broader strategy to integrate crypto allocations within traditional portfolios.
Rather than speculate on price swings, these products present digital assets as long-term holdings—settled, secured, and formatted for institutional systems still catching up to the asset class itself.
In place of bespoke wallets and unregulated exchanges, firms are creating wrappers that mimic the structure and custody models of existing financial instruments—removing operational hurdles for institutional allocators.
As crypto matures into a recognized part of global markets, the question is no longer whether institutions will participate, but how they will access exposure while staying within compliance rails.
The design of ETPs, especially those listed on regulated exchanges like the LSE, offers one answer by folding crypto into the existing architecture, not around it.
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs):
Bitwise’s ETPs are physically backed, meaning they hold actual Bitcoin or Ethereum in cold storage. This contrasts with synthetic products, offering more transparency and reducing counterparty and credit risk.
UK regulators restrict crypto ETPs to institutional or professional investors due to concerns over volatility and consumer protection. Retail access is currently limited under FCA guidelines.
The LSE is one of Europe’s most liquid and trusted exchanges. Listing there allows institutional investors to gain exposure through a regulated, familiar platform which helps incorporate crypto into traditional portfolios.