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What is a Bitcoin ETF? Spot, futures, and income ETFs explained

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What is a Bitcoin ETF? Spot, futures, and income ETFs explained

A Bitcoin ETF lets you own Bitcoin’s price through an ordinary brokerage account, with no wallet, no keys, and no crypto exchange. But there are three different kinds, and they behave very differently. Here is the complete guide to what they are, how they work, and which one fits.

Summary

  • Spot Bitcoin ETFs hold actual Bitcoin and offer the closest tracking to the cryptocurrency’s market price.
  • Futures Bitcoin ETFs rely on derivative contracts, while income ETFs generate yield by selling options and sacrificing part of Bitcoin’s upside potential.
  • Bitcoin ETFs simplify access through traditional brokerage accounts but investors give up direct ownership, self custody, and 24/7 market access.

A Bitcoin ETF is an exchange-traded fund that gives you exposure to Bitcoin’s price through a regular stock brokerage account, without you ever having to buy, store, or secure actual Bitcoin yourself. 

When you buy shares of a Bitcoin ETF, you are buying into a fund, and the fund handles the Bitcoin, whether by holding it directly or through related instruments, so that the value of your shares moves with the price of Bitcoin while the fund manages the complexity behind the scenes. 

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This matters because it lets anyone with a brokerage account gain Bitcoin exposure as easily as buying a share of a company, with no wallets, no private keys, no seed phrases, and no crypto exchange, which removed one of the biggest barriers that kept traditional investors and institutions out of Bitcoin for years.

When US regulators approved spot Bitcoin ETFs in early 2024 after more than a decade of rejections, these funds attracted tens of billions of dollars within months, one of the most successful launches in the history of exchange-traded funds.

This guide explains Bitcoin ETFs in plain English: what an ETF is to begin with, the three distinct types of Bitcoin ETF, spot, futures, and the newer income ETFs, and exactly how each works and differs, the mechanism that keeps an ETF’s price tracking Bitcoin, the advantages that made these funds so popular, the real tradeoffs including fees and the things you give up versus holding Bitcoin yourself, and how to think about whether a Bitcoin ETF fits your needs. 

It assumes no background in either crypto or investing, and it pays special attention to the differences among the three types, because they behave differently in ways that matter enormously depending on what you are trying to do, and confusing them is the most common and costly mistake a new ETF buyer makes.

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What an ETF is, to start

Before the Bitcoin part, it helps to understand what an exchange-traded fund is in general, because the Bitcoin versions are a specific application of a familiar structure.

An exchange-traded fund, or ETF, is an investment fund that holds a collection of assets and trades on a stock exchange like an ordinary share. When you buy a share of an ETF, you are buying a slice of whatever the fund holds, and the share’s price moves with the value of those underlying holdings. ETFs are popular because they make it easy to gain exposure to something, an index, a sector, a commodity, through a single, liquid, regulated share you can buy and sell in any brokerage account during market hours, without having to buy the underlying assets individually. 

A gold ETF, for example, lets you gain exposure to the price of gold without buying and storing gold bars, by holding gold on your behalf and issuing shares that track its value. The ETF structure is trusted, well-understood, and accessible through the same accounts people use to buy stocks, which is exactly why wrapping Bitcoin in an ETF was so significant.

A Bitcoin ETF applies this familiar structure to Bitcoin. Instead of holding gold or a basket of stocks, the fund holds Bitcoin or Bitcoin-related instruments, and it issues shares that track Bitcoin’s price, letting investors gain Bitcoin exposure through the same brokerage account and the same simple buy-and-sell process they use for any other ETF. The fund handles the parts that make owning Bitcoin directly intimidating for many people, the custody, the security, the technical complexity, and packages the price exposure into a regulated share. 

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The shares trade during stock-market hours, settle like normal securities, and fit into retirement accounts and brokerage portfolios alongside everything else, which is why the Bitcoin ETF became the bridge that brought a great deal of traditional and institutional money into Bitcoin. The whole appeal is taking something that lived in the unfamiliar world of crypto exchanges and wallets and making it available through the thoroughly familiar wrapper of an ETF.

The three types of Bitcoin ETF

This is the most important section, because there are three fundamentally different kinds of Bitcoin ETF, and they work and behave so differently that treating them as interchangeable is the central mistake to avoid. Understanding the distinction is understanding Bitcoin ETFs.

The first and most important type is the spot Bitcoin ETF, which holds actual Bitcoin. When you buy a share of a spot Bitcoin ETF, the fund owns real Bitcoin, stored with a custodian, and your share represents a claim on that Bitcoin, so the share price tracks Bitcoin’s price directly and closely. 

This is the most straightforward and the most popular type, the one approved in the United States in early 2024 after years of rejections, and it offers the most direct price exposure available through a brokerage: when Bitcoin rises ten percent, a spot ETF rises roughly ten percent, minus small costs. Spot ETFs are what most people mean now when they say “Bitcoin ETF,” and they are generally the best fit for an investor who simply wants their share to mirror Bitcoin’s price as closely as possible, because the fund literally holds the asset it tracks.

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The second type is the futures Bitcoin ETF, which does not hold Bitcoin at all but instead holds Bitcoin futures contracts, agreements to buy or sell Bitcoin at a set price on a future date, traded on a regulated exchange. Futures ETFs track Bitcoin’s price indirectly through these contracts, and they were actually approved earlier than spot ETFs, with the first launching in 2021 before spot funds were permitted. 

The crucial complication is that futures contracts expire, so the fund must continually sell expiring contracts and buy new ones, a process called rolling, and this rolling carries costs, particularly when longer-dated contracts are more expensive than near-dated ones, a condition called contango. These roll costs create a persistent drag that can cause a futures ETF to underperform Bitcoin over time, meaning that over a long holding period, a futures ETF may noticeably lag the actual price of Bitcoin even as it broadly follows it. Futures ETFs were an important early bridge, but for most investors wanting straightforward Bitcoin exposure, the roll-cost drag makes them inferior to spot ETFs for long-term holding.

The third type is the newer income, or covered-call, Bitcoin ETF, which is built to generate income, not to track Bitcoin’s price directly from Bitcoin’s volatility. These funds hold Bitcoin exposure, often through a spot ETF, and then sell options against that exposure, collecting the premiums other traders pay and distributing them to shareholders as regular income, targeting yields that can be substantial. 

The catch is that selling those options caps the fund’s upside: in exchange for the income, the fund gives up some of Bitcoin’s gains in a sharp rally, so an income ETF can pay a steady yield while capturing less of Bitcoin’s price appreciation than a spot ETF would. Income ETFs suit investors who want a yield from their Bitcoin exposure and expect a choppy or moderately rising market, while they are a poor fit for investors who want full participation in Bitcoin’s upside. 

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The three types, spot for direct price exposure, futures for indirect exposure with roll-cost drag, and income for yield with capped upside, serve genuinely different purposes, and choosing among them depends entirely on what an investor is trying to achieve.

How a Bitcoin ETF keeps tracking Bitcoin’s price

It is worth understanding the mechanism that keeps an ETF’s share price aligned with the value of what it holds, because it is clever and it explains why a well-built spot ETF tracks Bitcoin so closely.

The alignment comes from a process called creation and redemption, carried out by large financial firms called authorized participants. If demand pushes an ETF’s share price above the value of the Bitcoin it holds per share, authorized participants can create new shares by delivering the appropriate amount of Bitcoin or cash to the fund, increasing the supply of shares and pushing the price back down toward the value of the underlying Bitcoin. 

If the share price falls below the value of the underlying Bitcoin, they can redeem shares, taking Bitcoin or cash out of the fund and reducing the share supply, pushing the price back up. This constant creation and redemption, driven by the profit authorized participants make from any gap between the share price and the underlying value, continuously keeps the ETF’s price closely tracking the value of the Bitcoin it holds, which is the same arbitrage mechanism that keeps all ETFs aligned with their underlying assets.

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This mechanism is why a spot Bitcoin ETF tracks Bitcoin so faithfully, because any meaningful divergence between the share price and the value of the held Bitcoin creates a profit opportunity that authorized participants act on, closing the gap. Some small tracking differences still occur, because the fund charges a management fee that slightly reduces returns over time, and there can be minor timing and cash-management effects, so a spot ETF tracks Bitcoin very closely but not perfectly. 

Futures ETFs track less closely because of the roll costs described earlier, which the creation-redemption mechanism cannot eliminate since they are inherent to holding expiring contracts. Understanding the creation-redemption process demystifies how an ETF share stays tied to Bitcoin’s price without the fund needing to constantly adjust prices manually, and it explains why the spot structure, holding the actual asset, produces the tightest tracking, while the futures structure introduces a persistent gap.

The explosive success of spot Bitcoin ETFs, attracting tens of billions of dollars quickly, came from a set of real advantages over buying Bitcoin directly, and understanding them explains the appeal.

The first advantage is simplicity and accessibility. A Bitcoin ETF lets you gain Bitcoin exposure through the brokerage account you may already have, with no need to open a crypto exchange account, set up a wallet, manage private keys, or worry about the security of self-custody, which are exactly the steps that intimidate many would-be Bitcoin owners and keep institutions out. Buying a Bitcoin ETF is as easy as buying any stock, which dramatically lowers the barrier to entry. 

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The second advantage is security and custody handled for you: the fund stores the Bitcoin with professional custodians, removing the risk that you lose your coins by mishandling a wallet or losing a seed phrase, a real and common way people lose Bitcoin directly. For an investor uncomfortable with the responsibility of securing crypto themselves, having a regulated fund handle custody is a real benefit.

The third set of advantages is institutional and structural. Many institutions, funds, and retirement accounts can only or much more easily hold regulated securities like ETFs, not crypto held directly, so the ETF wrapper opened Bitcoin to enormous pools of capital that were effectively barred from buying it before, which is a large part of why the launches drew so much money. ETFs also fit cleanly into the existing financial system, into tax-advantaged accounts, into portfolios managed by advisors, into the familiar reporting and brokerage infrastructure, making Bitcoin exposure a normal portfolio holding, not an exotic outside asset. 

These advantages, simplicity, handled custody, and seamless integration into traditional finance and institutional portfolios, are why the spot Bitcoin ETF was such a watershed, because it made Bitcoin exposure available and respectable to a vast audience that direct ownership had excluded, and the flood of money that followed reflected how much demand had been waiting for exactly this kind of access.

The tradeoffs: fees and what you give up

A Bitcoin ETF is not free and not identical to owning Bitcoin, and an honest accounting requires understanding the costs and the things you give up in exchange for the convenience.

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The most direct cost is fees. ETFs charge an annual management fee, expressed as an expense ratio, and while spot Bitcoin ETF fees are relatively low, they are not zero, and over time they slightly reduce your returns compared to holding Bitcoin directly with no ongoing fee. Income and futures ETFs typically charge higher fees than plain spot ETFs, reflecting their more active management, so the type of ETF affects the cost. 

These fees are usually modest, but they compound over long holding periods and are a real, if small, drag on returns that direct ownership avoids. The second cost is tracking imperfection: even a good spot ETF tracks Bitcoin very closely but not perfectly because of fees and minor effects, and futures ETFs track noticeably less well because of roll costs, so an ETF’s return can lag Bitcoin’s actual return, especially for futures funds over time.

The more fundamental tradeoff is what you give up by owning exposure instead of owning Bitcoin. With a Bitcoin ETF, you own shares in a fund, not Bitcoin itself, which means you do not hold the keys and cannot use the Bitcoin in the ways direct ownership allows: you cannot send it to someone, use it in decentralized finance, hold it in self-custody beyond the reach of any institution, or transact with it on the Bitcoin network, because you have exposure to the price, not the asset. 

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You are also subject to the ETF’s structure and the traditional market’s constraints: ETF shares trade only during stock-market hours, so you cannot react to Bitcoin’s around-the-clock price moves on weekends or overnight when the market is closed, whereas Bitcoin itself trades every hour of every day. And you carry a degree of counterparty reliance on the fund and its custodian, trusting that they hold and manage the Bitcoin properly, which is different from the self-reliance of holding your own keys. 

None of these tradeoffs makes the ETF a bad choice, but they define what it is: a convenient, regulated wrapper for price exposure that deliberately trades away the control, utility, and round-the-clock access of owning Bitcoin directly, in exchange for the simplicity and safety of the familiar ETF structure.

ETF versus holding Bitcoin yourself

The choice between a Bitcoin ETF and direct ownership comes down to what you value, and laying out the comparison clarifies which suits whom.

A Bitcoin ETF is the better fit for an investor who wants Bitcoin price exposure with maximum simplicity and minimum responsibility, who prefers to hold it inside a regular brokerage or retirement account, who values having custody and security handled by professionals, and who does not need to use Bitcoin for anything beyond investment exposure. 

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This describes many traditional investors and institutions, for whom the ETF removes every barrier and fits their existing systems, and for whom the small fees and the loss of direct control are an acceptable price for the convenience and integration. If your goal is simply to have Bitcoin’s price movement represented in your investment portfolio, an ETF accomplishes that cleanly and is often the most sensible route.

Direct ownership is the better fit for someone who wants the full properties of Bitcoin, not just its price. Holding Bitcoin yourself, in your own wallet with your own keys, means you truly own the asset: you can send it, use it, hold it in self-custody beyond any institution’s reach, transact on the network, and access it at any hour, and you pay no ongoing management fee. The cost is responsibility, you must secure your keys and bear the risk of self-custody, and complexity, you must navigate wallets and exchanges. 

The deeper point is that the two are not really the same thing: an ETF gives you exposure to Bitcoin’s price within the traditional financial system, while direct ownership gives you Bitcoin itself with all its capabilities and all its responsibilities. Many people sensibly use both, an ETF for convenient portfolio exposure and direct ownership for the Bitcoin they want to truly control, and the right choice depends entirely on whether you want the price or the asset. None of this is investment advice; it is a frame for understanding what each option actually gives you.

The risks worth understanding

A Bitcoin ETF removes some risks of owning crypto directly while introducing others, and an honest picture requires naming the risks that remain, because the ETF wrapper makes Bitcoin easier to hold but does not make it safe.

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The first and largest risk is simply Bitcoin’s own volatility, which the ETF does nothing to soften. A spot Bitcoin ETF tracks Bitcoin’s price, so when Bitcoin falls thirty or fifty percent, as it has many times, the ETF falls with it, and the convenience of the wrapper can obscure how volatile the underlying asset is. 

Buying a Bitcoin ETF is buying exposure to one of the most volatile major assets in existence, and the familiar, regulated packaging does not change that, which is why a Bitcoin ETF is not a safe or conservative holding despite trading like an ordinary share. Anyone buying one should understand they are taking on Bitcoin’s full price risk, only through a different door. 

The second risk is the type-specific danger already discussed: futures ETFs carry roll-cost drag that erodes returns over time, and income ETFs cap your upside in exchange for yield, so choosing the wrong type for your goal is itself a risk that can cost you returns even when Bitcoin performs well.

Further risks are structural. There is counterparty and custodial risk: you are trusting the fund and its custodian to hold and manage the Bitcoin properly, and while reputable funds use professional custodians, this is a different risk profile from holding your own keys, where no institution stands between you and your asset. There is regulatory risk: ETFs operate under the oversight of financial regulators, and changes to rules, fees, or structures could affect a fund’s operation or availability. 

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There is the trading-hours limitation, which is also a risk: because ETF shares trade only during market hours while Bitcoin trades around the clock, a sharp move over a weekend or overnight can leave you unable to act until the market reopens, potentially at a much-changed price. And there is the subtle risk of fees compounding over long holding periods, quietly reducing returns relative to direct ownership. 

None of these risks makes a Bitcoin ETF a bad choice, but together they show that the ETF trades crypto’s self-custody risks for a different set of traditional-finance risks, and that the wrapper’s convenience does not eliminate risk so much as change its shape. Understanding both the risks it removes and the ones it keeps or adds is the difference between buying a Bitcoin ETF with clear eyes and mistaking its familiar form for safety.

The wrapper that brought Bitcoin to Wall Street

A Bitcoin ETF is, at its core, a way to own Bitcoin’s price through an ordinary brokerage account, packaging the asset that once required wallets, keys, and crypto exchanges into the familiar, regulated wrapper of an exchange-traded fund. 

That simple act of translation, taking Bitcoin out of the unfamiliar world of self-custody and into the thoroughly familiar world of stock-market shares, is why spot Bitcoin ETFs drew tens of billions of dollars within months of their 2024 approval, opening Bitcoin to a vast audience of investors and institutions that direct ownership had kept out.

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But “a Bitcoin ETF” is really three different things, and the distinction is the most important thing to carry away. A spot ETF holds actual Bitcoin and tracks its price most closely, the best fit for straightforward exposure. A futures ETF holds expiring contracts and suffers roll-cost drag that can make it lag Bitcoin over time. And the newer income ETF sells options to generate yield while capping upside, suiting an income goal rather than full participation in Bitcoin’s gains. All three trade away something for the convenience they offer: fees, perfect tracking, and the control, utility, and round-the-clock access of owning Bitcoin directly. 

The ETF gives you exposure to Bitcoin’s price inside the traditional financial system; holding Bitcoin yourself gives you the asset itself with all its powers and responsibilities. Which is right depends on whether you want the price or the thing, and understanding the difference, between the three ETF types and between an ETF and real Bitcoin, is understanding what these funds actually are: a powerful bridge to Bitcoin’s price, and deliberately not Bitcoin itself.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is a Bitcoin ETF in simple terms?

A Bitcoin ETF is an exchange-traded fund that lets you gain exposure to Bitcoin’s price through a regular brokerage account, without buying, storing, or securing actual Bitcoin yourself. You buy shares of the fund, the fund handles the Bitcoin, and your shares move with Bitcoin’s price. It removes the need for wallets, private keys, and crypto exchanges, which is why spot Bitcoin ETFs drew tens of billions of dollars after US regulators approved them in early 2024.

What is the difference between a spot and a futures Bitcoin ETF?

A spot Bitcoin ETF holds actual Bitcoin, so its share price tracks Bitcoin’s price directly and closely. A futures Bitcoin ETF holds Bitcoin futures contracts instead of Bitcoin, tracking the price indirectly. Because futures contracts expire and must be “rolled” into new ones, futures ETFs incur roll costs that create a drag, causing them to underperform Bitcoin over time. For straightforward long-term exposure, spot ETFs are generally better; futures ETFs were an earlier, less efficient bridge.

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What is a Bitcoin income or covered-call ETF?

It is a newer type of Bitcoin ETF built to generate income, not to track Bitcoin’s price directly. It holds Bitcoin exposure and sells options against it, collecting premiums and paying them to shareholders as regular income, often at substantial yields. The tradeoff is capped upside: in exchange for the income, the fund gives up some of Bitcoin’s gains in a sharp rally. These suit investors who want yield and expect a choppy or moderately rising market, not those wanting full participation in Bitcoin’s upside.

How does a Bitcoin ETF track Bitcoin’s price?

Through creation and redemption by large firms called authorized participants. If the ETF’s share price rises above the value of its Bitcoin per share, they create new shares by delivering Bitcoin or cash, increasing supply and lowering the price; if it falls below, they redeem shares, reducing supply and raising the price. This arbitrage continuously keeps the share price closely aligned with the underlying Bitcoin. Spot ETFs track most closely; futures ETFs track less well due to roll costs.

What are the downsides of a Bitcoin ETF versus owning Bitcoin?

ETFs charge annual fees that slightly reduce returns over time, and they track Bitcoin closely but not perfectly, especially futures ETFs. More fundamentally, you own shares in a fund, not Bitcoin itself, so you cannot send it, use it in DeFi, self-custody it, or transact on the network, you have exposure to the price, not the asset. ETF shares also trade only during market hours, so you cannot react to Bitcoin’s weekend or overnight moves, and you rely on the fund and custodian.

Should I buy a Bitcoin ETF or Bitcoin directly?

It depends on what you want. A Bitcoin ETF suits investors who want simple price exposure with custody and security handled, inside a regular brokerage or retirement account, accepting small fees and the loss of direct control. Direct ownership suits those who want the full properties of Bitcoin, the ability to send, use, self-custody, and transact with it at any hour, accepting the responsibility of securing their own keys. Many use both. The choice comes down to whether you want Bitcoin’s price or the asset itself. This is not investment advice.

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This guide is educational information, not investment advice. Bitcoin and Bitcoin ETFs are volatile and carry risk. Understand the differences among ETF types and verify current fees and details before investing.

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Crypto Kidnappers Admit Role in $8M Robbery of Minnesota Family

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Crypto Breaking News

Two brothers accused of kidnapping a Minnesota family at gunpoint to steal cryptocurrency have pleaded guilty in federal court, according to the US Attorney’s Office for the District of Minnesota. The case centers on an alleged $8 million theft from the victim’s online accounts and hardware wallets.

The guilty pleas, entered on Thursday by Isiah Angelo Garcia and Raymond Christian Garcia, underline how “wrench attacks” — violent robberies targeting crypto holders — are increasingly prompting coordinated law-enforcement action. The development also comes as analysts report a sharp rise in crypto-related assaults and kidnappings in recent years.

Key takeaways

  • Garcia brothers pleaded guilty to Interference with Commerce by Robbery, a federal charge carrying a maximum penalty of 20 years in prison.
  • Prosecutors say the kidnapping was used to force a victim to transfer $8 million in cryptocurrency from online accounts and hardware wallets.
  • Both defendants admitted using firearms to threaten victims and agreed to pay more than $8 million in restitution.
  • Sentencing has not yet been scheduled, leaving the timeline for final penalties still open.
  • The case adds to a growing US and international crackdown on violent robberies aimed at crypto owners.

Guilty pleas in Minnesota kidnapping-for-crypto case

According to the US Attorney’s Office of the District of Minnesota, Isiah Angelo Garcia and Raymond Christian Garcia entered guilty pleas on Thursday in connection with an armed robbery in Minnesota. The charge is Interference with Commerce by Robbery, with prosecutors noting a maximum possible federal prison term of 20 years.

US Attorney Daniel Rosen said the pleas reflect the government’s effort to hold defendants accountable for the choices they made.

The criminal conduct prosecutors describe began when the two men allegedly traveled from Texas to Minnesota in September 2025. Prosecutors said their aim was to seize cryptocurrency by holding a victim and his family at gunpoint.

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How prosecutors say the $8 million theft unfolded

In an earlier filing, the US Attorney’s Office stated that on Sept. 19, 2025, the brothers allegedly held the victim’s family at gunpoint and forced the victim to transfer cryptocurrency. Prosecutors said the robbery involved both online accounts and hardware wallets.

The alleged kidnapping lasted for hours. Prosecutors said the victim’s wife and son were held in their family home for about nine hours, while the victim was taken to a cabin roughly three hours away.

Police involvement began after the victim’s son was able to make an emergency call. Washington County sheriff’s deputies responded, and investigators later found a rifle and a shotgun. Prosecutors also pointed to surveillance footage and other evidence connecting the brothers to the burglary.

What the pleas mean legally and financially

In their guilty pleas, both defendants admitted to using firearms to threaten the victims as part of the robbery, according to the US Attorney’s Office. The plea agreement also includes restitution obligations exceeding $8 million.

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Although the guilty pleas mark a major procedural step, the case is not yet at sentencing. The US Attorney’s Office said sentencing hearings have not been scheduled, meaning the final duration of prison terms remains uncertain.

For crypto owners and the broader market, cases like this are not only about criminal punishment. They also signal that investigators are willing and able to pursue federal charges in violent schemes tied to crypto custody and transfers, rather than treating them solely as isolated robberies.

Part of a wider pattern of crypto wrench attacks

The Minnesota case lands amid growing concerns about violent crimes specifically targeting cryptocurrency. In February, CertiK reported that the number of crypto-related assaults and kidnappings increased 75% in 2025 compared with the prior year. CertiK also estimated that losses from such attacks in the first four months of 2026 had already reached $101 million, according to a Cointelegraph report referencing CertiK’s findings.

This broader context helps explain why authorities appear to be pursuing multiple cases in parallel. Earlier in the year, US authorities unsealed an indictment involving three men accused of stealing at least $6.5 million in what prosecutors described as a violent robbery spree targeting cryptocurrency owners. In that case, prosecutors alleged the defendants posed as delivery drivers to enter residences and use violence to extract cryptocurrency.

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Outside the US, the issue has also drawn official attention. During Paris Blockchain Week in April, Jean-Didier Berger, a minister delegate to the interior minister of France, said his office has taken “preventive measures” against crypto wrench attacks, including launching a prevention platform that generated thousands of sign-ups, according to a Cointelegraph report.

What to watch next

With the brothers now pleading guilty and restitution agreed, the next key development will be sentencing scheduling and the terms the court imposes. More broadly, investors and users should watch whether prosecutors continue to expand federal cases in wrench-attack schemes and how prevention efforts evolve as reported losses rise.

Risk & affiliate notice: Crypto assets are volatile and capital is at risk. This article may contain affiliate links. Read full disclosure

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Texas Brothers Plead Guilty After Minnesota Crypto Kidnapping, $8M

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Crypto Breaking News

Two brothers accused of holding a Minnesota family at gunpoint to steal approximately $8 million worth of cryptocurrency have entered guilty pleas in connection with the armed robbery, according to the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the District of Minnesota. The case underscores how crypto-related thefts increasingly intersect with traditional violent crime—raising distinct enforcement and compliance challenges for financial institutions and regulated crypto businesses.

On Thursday, Isiah Angelo Garcia and Raymond Christian Garcia pleaded guilty to Interference with Commerce by Robbery. Prosecutors said the brothers traveled to Minnesota from Texas and used firearms to coerce a victim and his family into facilitating transfers from online accounts and hardware wallets.

Key takeaways

  • Garcia brothers pleaded guilty in federal court to robbery-related interference with commerce, facing a maximum of 20 years in prison.
  • Prosecutors allege the attack relied on threats with firearms to force cryptocurrency transfers, including from hardware wallets.
  • The defendants agreed to pay more than $8 million in restitution; sentencing dates were not yet scheduled at the time of the announcement.
  • The case reflects broader efforts by U.S. authorities to prosecute violent crypto thefts under federal criminal statutes.
  • European policymakers have also moved toward targeted prevention measures amid rising reported “wrench attacks.”

Minnesota kidnapping case ends in guilty pleas

Federal prosecutors said that on Sept. 19, 2025, the brothers traveled to Minnesota with the intent to kidnap and threaten a victim and his family. According to the U.S. Attorney’s Office of the District of Minnesota, the confrontation involved firearms and was aimed at compelling the victim to move cryptocurrency held in digital accounts.

The indictment and related filings described a sustained period of coercion at the family’s home, followed by transportation of the victim to a separate location. Prosecutors said the victim was ultimately forced to transfer $8 million in cryptocurrency, while the victim’s wife and son were held for approximately nine hours inside their residence.

Authorities reported that the kidnapping was identified after the victim’s son managed to make an emergency call. Deputies responded and later located firearms—reported as a rifle and a shotgun—along with surveillance footage and other evidence that prosecutors said linked the brothers to the burglary and robbery.

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What the guilty pleas cover—and the compliance angle

In their pleas, both defendants admitted to using firearms to threaten the victims as part of a robbery. The U.S. Attorney’s Office stated that the brothers agreed to pay more than $8 million in restitution. Prosecutors also noted that sentencing hearings had not yet been scheduled.

From a regulatory and compliance perspective, the case highlights a recurring pattern: violent actors frequently attempt to obtain crypto through coercion of individuals’ credentials and access pathways, rather than purely exploiting market or technical weaknesses. This distinction matters for firms implementing risk controls around customer protection, incident response, and red-flag monitoring, as well as for banks and other regulated intermediaries that may be asked to support law enforcement requests or freeze assets tied to criminal activity.

For institutional stakeholders, it also reinforces the importance of clearly documented processes to distinguish between:

  • voluntary customer transfers that occurred under threat or duress, and
  • criminally directed movements involving stolen or coerced assets.

While a guilty plea does not automatically answer restitution allocation mechanics or any downstream asset recovery questions, it does strengthen the evidentiary record used by prosecutors and may affect how regulated entities handle subpoenas, restraining orders, and asset-freezing requests tied to the same conduct.

Broader enforcement and policy context for “wrench attacks”

The Minnesota case comes amid growing attention to incidents in which perpetrators use weapons to obtain cryptocurrency. In a separate context, Cointelegraph reported on findings from blockchain security and intelligence firm CertiK. The reporting referenced an increase in crypto-related assaults and kidnappings and cited estimated losses associated with such attacks.

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U.S. authorities have continued to use federal criminal tools to address violent theft of digital assets. For example, prosecutors have previously unsealed indictments involving alleged “violent robbery sprees” targeting cryptocurrency owners and described tactics such as coercing victims through home entry and physical threats.

Internationally, French officials have also signaled that governments are treating these crimes as a public safety issue requiring targeted prevention. During Paris Blockchain Week, a French interior ministry delegate described “preventive measures” against crypto wrench attacks, including a prevention platform that attracted sign-ups.

For compliance programs, these cross-border developments have practical implications: legal thresholds for information sharing, consumer protection obligations, and licensing regimes can vary substantially between jurisdictions, but the underlying risk mechanism—coercion of access to wallets and accounts—tends to be consistent. As a result, firms may need harmonized training and controls across jurisdictions, even where regulatory frameworks differ.

What happens next

Sentencing is the next key step in the Garcia brothers’ case, and it will likely clarify the final penalties and restitution terms. More broadly, as enforcement actions accumulate and governments pursue prevention initiatives, regulated crypto firms and their banking counterparts will want to review whether their customer safeguarding, incident response, and law-enforcement workflow policies adequately address the realities of coercion-driven theft, including duress-related transfer scenarios.

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Risk & affiliate notice: Crypto assets are volatile and capital is at risk. This article may contain affiliate links. Read full disclosure

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Crypto Kidnappers Plead Guilty in $8M Minnesota Robbery

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Crypto Kidnappers Plead Guilty in $8M Minnesota Robbery

Two brothers accused of kidnapping a Minnesota family at gunpoint last year to steal $8 million in cryptocurrency pleaded guilty in connection with the armed robbery. 

Isiah Angelo Garcia and Raymond Christian Garcia, on Thursday, entered guilty pleas for Interference with Commerce by Robbery, facing a maximum of 20 years in federal prison, according to the US Attorney’s Office of the District of Minnesota. 

“The guilty pleas entered today reflect our commitment to holding the defendants accountable for the choices they made,” US Attorney Daniel Rosen said.  

Global crypto wrench attacks have skyrocketed in recent years. In February, CertiK found that the number of crypto-related assaults and kidnappings increased 75% in 2025 from the previous year. Estimated losses in the first four months of 2026 from such attacks have already reached $101 million. 

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Garcia brothers steal $8 million in crypto

Prosecutors said on Sept. 19, 2025, the two brothers traveled to Minnesota from Texas to hold a victim and his family at gunpoint, forcing him to transfer cryptocurrency from his online accounts and hardware wallets. 

The ordeal left the victim’s wife and son held for nine hours in their family home, while the victim was taken to a family cabin about three hours away and was ultimately forced to transfer $8 million in cryptocurrency. 

Isiah Angelo Garcia (left) and Raymond Christian Garcia (right). Source: Waller County, Texas, Sheriff’s Office

Police were alerted to the kidnapping after the victim’s son was able to make an emergency call, which was answered by Washington County sheriff’s deputies. Deputies later found a rifle and a shotgun, which, along with surveillance footage and other evidence, connected the brothers to the burglary. 

Crypto attackers plead guilty 

In their guilty pleas, both defendants admitted to using firearms to threaten the victims in order to rob them. They have agreed to pay more than $8 million in restitution. Sentencing hearings have not yet been scheduled. 

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The latest development adds a win for US prosecutors in a global fight against criminals who target crypto owners

Related: Accused attackers of Sandbox exec’s wife tried to flee via Uber

In May, US authorities unsealed an indictment against three men accused of stealing at least $6.5 million in a “violent robbery spree targeting cryptocurrency owners.” 

The robberies involved the three defendants allegedly posing as delivery drivers to force their way into residences and use violence to extract cryptocurrency from their victims. 

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 The increase in global attacks has drawn the attention of the French government

During Paris Blockchain Week in April, Jean-Didier Berger, minister delegate to the interior minister of France, said his office has taken “preventive measures” against crypto wrench attacks, including launching a prevention platform that has drawn thousands of sign-ups.  

Magazine: The end of anon? AI could unmask crypto’s hidden identities

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S Token Slumps 5% After Sonic Labs Board Shake-Up and CEO Change

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Crypto Breaking News

Sonic Labs’ board shake-up has spilled over into the market, with the network’s native token, S, sliding after the company announced that three former executives are stepping down from its board. The move comes as Sonic continues an overhaul of leadership and governance amid ongoing criticism from sections of its community.

On Friday, S fell to around 0.031, down 5% over 24 hours. The resignations include Michael Kong, previously CEO of the Fantom Foundation and a director at Sonic Labs; David Richardson, who served as executive chairman of Sonic Labs; and Andre Cronje, the project’s former chief technology officer, who had earlier posted a statement about his board resignation at andrecronje.info.

Key takeaways

  • Sonic Labs announced the resignations of three board members, prompting a 5% drop in the S token over 24 hours.
  • The departures include Michael Kong, David Richardson, and Andre Cronje; Sonic is naming new top roles including Matt Visser as CEO.
  • Sonic said outgoing leaders will remain invested but will no longer make organizational business decisions.
  • The changes are positioned alongside promises of more transparent governance, clearer updates, and new risk/compliance oversight.
  • The leadership transition targets dissatisfaction linked to S’s long-running decline since Sonic’s January 2025 network upgrade.

Token drop follows board changes

The immediate market reaction to Sonic Labs’ announcement reflects how quickly governance headlines can influence token sentiment. S moved lower after the company said three former executives resigned from its board, while also detailing a broader leadership restructuring.

In its announcement, Sonic Labs emphasized continuity in a way that tries to address trust concerns. Outgoing board members “built what Sonic is today,” the company said, adding that they will “remain invested in Sonic’s success” and are transferring responsibilities “the right way.” Sonic’s statement also stressed that, after the transition, they “will no longer make business decisions for the organization.”

Sonic simultaneously named Matt Visser as its new CEO and Kosta Kourkoumelis as chief operating officer, framing the board exit as part of an attempt to reset how the organization is run and communicated.

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Why the resignations matter for investors and users

For S holders, governance isn’t just corporate housekeeping—it can shape development priorities, treasury decisions, and the pace of execution. Sonic Labs’ own messaging suggests it is responding to mounting dissatisfaction in the community, while also acknowledging that the token’s performance has deteriorated since launch.

According to the article, Sonic Labs tied its governance overhaul to the “growing community dissatisfaction” and to what it called the prolonged decline in S. The token, launched in January 2025 as part of the Sonic network upgrade, is reported to have fallen 97% since that launch.

Rather than contesting the narrative, Sonic Labs said it would not present the situation as a success story. “We are not going to open with a victory lap. The token is down. Community sentiment is down. We see both clearly, we are not spinning it, and we are not asking anyone to pretend otherwise,” Sonic Labs stated.

This kind of direct acknowledgement matters because it can affect how quickly stakeholders believe management actions are aligned with delivered outcomes. It also sets a clear expectation: any subsequent improvements—whether in protocol development, ecosystem growth, or risk controls—will be judged against the backdrop of a steep drawdown.

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Governance commitments and new oversight structures

Sonic Labs said the leadership change will be paired with governance and communications reforms. The company pointed to:

  • More transparent governance processes.
  • Clear communication around project updates.
  • The creation of a dedicated risk and compliance committee.

Those promises reflect a broader trend in crypto over the past year: when markets doubt project stewardship, teams often respond by formalizing accountability mechanisms and improving how information is shared with token holders.

However, governance changes also leave open a key question for investors: what will actually change operationally? Sonic’s restructuring indicates an intention to change decision-making and oversight, but readers will likely want to watch for concrete deliverables—particularly around how the new committee will function and how update cadence and transparency will be measured.

From Fantom to Sonic—and the leadership reorientation

Sonic Labs is the research and development organization behind the Sonic layer-1 blockchain. The network positions itself as an EVM-compatible chain designed for high performance, claiming 10,000 transactions per second and subsecond finality.

Sonic’s identity shift is also part of the context. As described in the article, the project rebranded from Fantom to Sonic and introduced a major structural and technical upgrade, replacing the legacy Fantom Opera network.

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Against that backdrop, the board reshuffle signals a second-phase transition: an evolution from building and migration into managing ongoing expectations. Sonic’s approach appears to be attempting to restore credibility by tightening governance and aligning leadership roles with a new operating structure.

The timing is also notable in relation to wider industry developments. The article notes that this comes just days after Ethereum Foundation co-executive director Hsiao-Wei Wang announced she had stepped down, adding to a series of departures and layoffs reported earlier in the year. While that is a separate organization, it underscores that governance and leadership volatility is not unique to Sonic.

For now, the most important question is whether Sonic’s promised governance and oversight reforms translate into measurable progress that can stabilize community confidence and improve the token’s outlook. Investors should watch for how the new leadership structure operates in practice—especially update transparency, risk/compliance committee actions, and the project milestones that follow the board transition.

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Franklin Templeton Files ETFs Linking Stock Dividends to Bitcoin Exposure

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Crypto Breaking News

Franklin Templeton has filed with the US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) to launch two exchange-traded funds designed to turn dividend income from US stocks into Bitcoin exposure. The proposal, disclosed in a June 18 SEC filing, targets investors who want a rules-based path to add Bitcoin exposure without abandoning an equity allocation.

The funds—titled the Franklin US Equity Bitcoin DRIP Index ETF and Franklin US Innovation Bitcoin DRIP Index ETF—would follow indexes that reinvest dividends from selected US stocks into a predetermined Bitcoin allocation. According to the filing, the initial allocation framework would place 5% into Bitcoin exposure and 95% into equities, with the index methodology governing how that balance is maintained over time.

Key takeaways

  • Franklin Templeton filed for two dividend-reinvestment ETFs that convert stock dividends into Bitcoin exposure through proprietary index rules.
  • The proposed funds would start with a 5% Bitcoin exposure and 95% US equities allocation, then keep that target within limits through periodic rebalancing.
  • Bitcoin exposure could be gained through multiple instruments, including Bitcoin exchange-traded products, futures, options, and Bitcoin-backed depositary receipts, as described in the SEC filing.
  • The “Equity” fund would track a broad US large-cap benchmark, while the “Innovation” version would focus on the 100 largest non-financial companies listed on Nasdaq.
  • The filing arrives as at least several issuers continue experimenting with Bitcoin strategies beyond traditional spot ETF wrappers, amid reported softness in US spot ETF flows.

How Franklin Templeton’s “DRIP into Bitcoin” approach would work

In its SEC filing, Franklin Templeton describes two ETFs that use a Dividend Reinvestment Plan (DRIP) concept—but with the reinvestment redirected toward Bitcoin exposure. The indexes underlying each fund would systematically direct regular and special dividends from the equity holdings into Bitcoin within the index’s allocation framework.

Per the filing, the funds would launch with the same starting mix: 5% Bitcoin exposure and 95% US equities. The mechanism is intended to create a structured way to accumulate Bitcoin exposure over time as dividends are generated by the equity portfolio.

The SEC filing also outlines how the funds would maintain the allocation. It states that the indexes would be rebalanced quarterly to keep the Bitcoin allocation inside predefined boundaries, and that the indexes would be reconstituted semiannually.

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Where the Bitcoin exposure could come from

One of the more practical details in the filing is how the funds plan to access Bitcoin exposure. Rather than relying on a single instrument, Franklin Templeton indicates that the proposed ETFs could gain Bitcoin exposure using a range of options. These include:

  • Bitcoin exchange-traded products
  • Bitcoin futures contracts
  • Bitcoin options
  • Bitcoin-backed depositary receipts

In addition, the filing states that the funds may hold certain Bitcoin-related investments through a wholly owned Cayman Islands subsidiary. The inclusion of a subsidiary structure signals that the issuer is planning for operational flexibility in how it sources or holds the relevant Bitcoin-linked instruments.

Two equity universes, one Bitcoin reinvestment rule

The two proposed ETFs differ in the equity set used to generate dividend income, even though both would follow the same dividend-to-Bitcoin investment concept.

According to the filing, the Franklin US Equity Bitcoin DRIP Index ETF would track an index built around a US large-cap equity benchmark. The Franklin US Innovation Bitcoin DRIP Index ETF, meanwhile, would track an index composed of the 100 largest non-financial companies listed on Nasdaq.

Both funds would be passive index ETFs tracking proprietary VettaFi indexes. Franklin Templeton’s filing also indicates that those indexes would be managed with quarterly rebalancing and semiannual reconstitution, meaning the reinvestment-to-Bitcoin process would remain rule-bound even as the underlying equity constituents potentially change.

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Why this filing matters as issuers test income-focused Bitcoin products

Franklin Templeton’s proposal adds to a growing trend among asset managers: developing Bitcoin strategies designed to generate or enhance returns through structured rules, including income-focused methods. The filing comes after other major players explored Bitcoin-related products aimed at harvesting yield characteristics rather than relying solely on spot price appreciation.

Earlier this year, BlackRock filed for the iShares Bitcoin Premium Income ETF, which would use an options strategy tied to Bitcoin and its spot ETF to pursue additional returns. In April, Goldman Sachs outlined plans for a Bitcoin income ETF that would invest in spot Bitcoin exchange-traded products and sell call options against those holdings—aimed at generating yield while reducing sensitivity to price swings. Hamilton ETFs also moved toward a covered-call-style approach in Canada with a proposed leveraged Bitcoin income fund, as described in earlier reporting.

At the same time, the filing appears amid concerns about the near-term demand picture for US spot Bitcoin ETFs. CoinShares data cited that spot products have seen persistent outflows—though the source provided in the text points to SoSoValue, noting six consecutive weeks of net outflows between May 15 and June 18.

That backdrop helps explain why dividend-reinvestment mechanics could be appealing. By funneling cash generated from equity holdings into Bitcoin exposure on an ongoing basis, the strategy may offer a different “behavioral” path into Bitcoin—one anchored to equity dividends and disciplined index rules, rather than investor timing decisions alone.

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What to watch next

Investors should watch how the SEC evaluates the proposed index methodology, particularly the practical implementation of Bitcoin exposure via futures, options, or Bitcoin-linked instruments, and whether the issuer specifies any additional constraints as part of the review. If approved, the funds would represent another step in Bitcoin ETF design—shifting the conversation from “spot access” to “systematic, income-linked allocation.”

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Ethereum Foundation hit by fresh exit as Hsiao-Wei Wang steps down

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What wiped out $1.7 billion?

Hsiao-Wei Wang has stepped down as co-executive director and board member of the Ethereum Foundation, effective immediately. 

Summary

  • Wang said her sabbatical helped her decide to leave Ethereum Foundation leadership effective immediately.
  • Her exit follows Tomasz Stańczak’s February departure and Bastian Aue’s interim leadership appointment this year.
  • Ethereum Foundation still funds protocol research as Glamsterdam and wider roadmap work continue this year.

She announced the decision on X after returning from a sabbatical. Wang said the break gave her time to review her priorities and the next phase of her life. She said she came to feel it was the “right moment” to step back from her formal role.

She thanked Bastian Aue for guiding the transition while she was away. Wang did not announce a new job or project, but said she expects to spend more time closer to home. She also said she remains a member of the Ethereum community.

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Buterin credits Wang’s research and community work

Ethereum co-founder Vitalik Buterin also responded to Wang’s exit, saying she had been a “steadfast contributor” to the Ethereum ecosystem for a decade. He recalled her early role in the Ethereum research community and said she helped make research and consensus work more organized.

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Buterin also pointed to Wang’s work outside protocol research. He said she helped build a strong Ethereum community in Taipei through people and events. He added that Wang handled her foundation leadership role “skillfully and gracefully” during a difficult period for Ethereum and the wider industry.

His comments add context to Wang’s departure by placing her work across both technical coordination and community building. Wang has not announced her next role, but Buterin said he looks forward to her next steps.

Exit follows earlier leadership change

Wang’s exit comes months after another change at the top of the Ethereum Foundation. In February, Tomasz Stańczak stepped down as co-executive director, and the board appointed Aue as interim co-executive director.

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The Ethereum Foundation said at the time that Aue had deep knowledge of its structure and values. It also said he had worked with Wang and Stańczak on decisions across grants, enterprise work, and operations.

Wang and Stańczak had been named co-executive directors in March 2025. The foundation said then that Wang brought seven years of research experience, including work tied to the Beacon Chain and Ethereum’s wider research process. The appointment created a dual-leadership model after Aya Miyaguchi moved into the president role.

Ethereum work continues across teams

Wang used her message to point to the Ethereum community beyond the foundation. She said Ethereum has always been “bigger than any one role” and credited builders, researchers, educators, node operators, validators, and users.

As previously reported by crypto.news, the Ethereum Foundation has continued to fund protocol and infrastructure work. Its Q1 2026 grants supported Geth, Erigon, Lighthouse, validator security tools, zero-knowledge research, and public infrastructure.

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Crypto.news also reported that the foundation has faced other staff changes in 2026. The Protocol Cluster transition included exits or sabbaticals involving Barnabé Monnot, Tim Beiko, and Alex Stokes, while new leads took over key areas. That transition came as core teams kept work moving across scaling, security, and client development.

Roadmap remains under watch

The leadership change lands as Ethereum developers prepare for major roadmap work. Crypto.news earlier reported that the Glamsterdam upgrade focuses on Enshrined Proposer-Builder Separation and Block-Level Access Lists.

Those changes aim to make block building more transparent and help clients process data more efficiently. Ethereum teams are also tracking gas repricing, Layer 1 scaling, privacy, and future security work.

The change also comes as the foundation narrows its role. Crypto.news recently reported Vitalik Buterin’s view that the Ethereum Foundation should act as one node in the wider Ethereum system, not as Ethereum’s parent or permanent steward.

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Custodia and Vantage test dual purpose token for bank deposits and stablecoins

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ING Germany opens crypto ETP trading for Bitcoin, Ethereum, Solana, XRP

Custodia Bank and Vantage Bank have unveiled a tokenized payments model that has combined bank deposits and stablecoins into a single asset, with plans to make the network available to banks and customers in the fourth quarter of 2026.

Summary

  • Custodia and Vantage Bank have proposed a token that functions as a bank deposit inside the Hazel network and as a stablecoin when transferred outside it.
  • The Ethereum based system has been running since March and is being tested by participating banks ahead of a planned launch in late 2026.
  • The proposal comes as banks seek blockchain payment solutions that keep customer deposits within the banking system amid rising stablecoin adoption.

According to a white paper published on June 18, the proposed token changes its legal and operational form depending on where it is held. Inside the Hazel banking network, it functions as a bank deposit issued by a participating institution. Once transferred to external users or platforms outside the consortium, it becomes a stablecoin backed by cash and short-term U.S. Treasury securities.

Custodia and Vantage said the system has been operating on Ethereum since March and is currently undergoing testing with participating banks ahead of a planned launch later this year. The companies said Hazel is designed to support tokenized deposits, stablecoins and other blockchain-based financial assets through shared banking infrastructure.

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Rather than requiring banks to overhaul existing systems, the white paper stated that Hazel operates alongside current core banking software, payment rails and ledger infrastructure. Participating institutions can continue using their existing systems while offering blockchain-based payment services.

The proposal arrives as banks search for ways to enter tokenized payments while retaining customer deposits within the regulated banking sector. Custodia and Vantage said the platform is intended for institutions of all sizes, including community banks and credit unions, allowing them to participate in digital asset payments without moving deposits to third-party stablecoin issuers.

Banks advance tokenized deposit plans

Across the banking sector, financial institutions have increasingly explored tokenized deposits as an alternative to traditional stablecoin models.

Earlier this month, The Wall Street Journal reported that The Clearing House, whose owners include JPMorgan Chase, Bank of America and Citigroup, is preparing a tokenized deposit network that could launch in the first half of 2027. According to the report, the system would allow banks to settle payments using blockchain-based representations of customer deposits.

At the same time, banking groups have opposed proposals that would permit stablecoin issuers to offer yield-bearing products. JPMorgan CEO Jamie Dimon recently said banks would continue challenging provisions in the CLARITY Act, a U.S. crypto market structure bill that he argued could allow crypto firms to compete for deposits without obtaining bank charters.

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DefiLlama data shows the stablecoin sector has grown to roughly $315 billion from about $251 billion a year earlier, underscoring the increasing role of blockchain-based dollar assets in payments and settlement activity.

For Custodia, the Hazel initiative also arrives after years of regulatory disputes over access to the traditional banking system. In March, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit declined to revive the bank’s challenge against the Federal Reserve after regulators denied its application for a master account. 

Custodia had argued that direct access to Federal Reserve payment infrastructure would allow it to provide settlement services without relying on intermediary banks, while regulators cited concerns related to its crypto-focused business model.

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Ethereum price prediction: Will ETH crash to $1,580 or rebound?

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Ethereum price prediction: Will ETH crash to $1,580 or rebound?


Ethereum trades near $1,696 as ETF outflows, Fed caution, weak whale activity and rare RSI signals shape the next ETH price move.

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Bittensor validator warns Root Reborn proposal carries “substantial” risks

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Bittensor validator warns Root Reborn proposal carries "substantial" risks

Yuma, one of Bittensor’s largest contributors and the network’s third-largest validator, has published a detailed critique of the proposed “Root Reborn” upgrade, arguing that the design introduces governance, regulatory, and market structure risks that outweigh its potential benefits.

Summary

  • Yuma has opposed Bittensor’s proposed Root Reborn upgrade, warning that it could introduce conflicts of interest, regulatory concerns, and new risks for stakers.
  • The proposal would allow validators to allocate root staking rewards across subnet tokens instead of automatically converting rewards into TAO.
  • Yuma said subnets backed by validator allocations could benefit from additional demand, but called for more testing, risk analysis, and a formal upgrade roadmap before deployment.

The proposal, currently under review and not yet active on mainnet, would overhaul how root staking rewards are handled. Under the existing system, root dividends are effectively paid by automatically converting subnet alpha emissions back into TAO. The new design would stop those automatic sales.

Instead, validators would set allocation weights across subnets. Root emissions would then be deployed into validator-selected baskets of subnet tokens, with stakers receiving redeemable claims on those positions rather than direct TAO rewards.

The proposal states that the change would reduce automatic sell pressure on subnet assets and make validator allocation decisions a more important part of the network economy. It would also introduce new tools to track validator basket net asset value, subnet allocations, staker liabilities, and network-wide basket performance.

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Yuma said the proposal changes the role of validators from infrastructure operators into active allocators of capital.

“In its current form, the Root Reborn proposal carries substantial unmitigated risk that outweighs its benefits,” the validator group wrote.

Yuma warns of conflicts and regulatory exposure

Yuma argued that validators would gain significant influence over capital flows inside the Bittensor ecosystem, creating incentives that may not always align with the interests of delegators.

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The group said validators could direct allocations toward subnets in which they already hold positions or accept external incentives from subnet operators seeking additional capital. Yuma compared the structure to the lessons of the LIBOR scandal, where a small group of participants held influence over key financial benchmarks.

“Moral hazard is acute,” Yuma wrote, adding that validators should be expected to maximize their own financial returns.

The organization also questioned whether validator performance could be measured effectively under the proposed system. It said validators would not control redemption timing, making it difficult to maintain target portfolio allocations as users enter and exit positions.

Over time, Yuma argued, new emissions would represent an increasingly small portion of large validator baskets, limiting a validator’s ability to materially influence performance through future allocation decisions.

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The report also raised concerns about regulatory treatment. Yuma said validators currently direct blockchain emissions, but Root Reborn would place them in a position where they actively determine subnet token exposure for delegators.

“Validators are no longer simply providing a neutral technological service due to the requirement to also set weights for subnet token rewards,” the group wrote.

Proposal seeks to reduce sell pressure on subnet assets

Supporters of the proposal have presented the upgrade as a mechanism to keep more value inside the subnet economy.

A summary accompanying the Subtensor pull request stated that root yield would move away from automatic subnet token sales and toward reinvestment across validator-selected subnets. The proposal described the change as a way to make validator selection depend on capital allocation decisions rather than primarily on fees or staking yields.

The proposal also said delegators would gain additional transparency through dashboard tools that display basket composition, net asset value, and outstanding liabilities owed to stakers.

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Yuma acknowledged that subnets receiving validator allocations could benefit from increased demand and stronger token prices. The group wrote that subnets awarded meaningful weights would likely experience net-positive price effects, while subnets receiving little or no allocation could see neutral outcomes.

At the same time, Yuma warned that the structure could encourage lobbying efforts by subnet operators seeking validator support. The report said new projects may face greater barriers to entry if relationships with validators become an important factor in attracting capital.

The validator group also identified operational risks. Its report cited escrow concentration in a single coldkey, redemption dynamics that could create losses for late redeemers during periods of heavy withdrawals, repeated slippage costs from basket rebalancing, and execution challenges if network activity scales significantly.

Yuma urged the OpenTensor Foundation and network stakeholders to consider alternative approaches that allow stakers to express subnet preferences directly through opt-in mechanisms rather than concentrating allocation decisions among validators.

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The group also called for a published upgrade roadmap, a defined release process, additional testing, and formal risk evaluation before any implementation proceeds.

The debate arrives days after Bittensor attracted renewed market attention following comments from Grayscale Head of Research Zach Pandl, who argued that recent U.S. restrictions on Anthropic’s advanced AI models could strengthen demand for decentralized AI networks. Pandl wrote that investors may increasingly look toward alternatives such as Bittensor as access to frontier AI systems becomes subject to centralized controls.

TAO (TAO) climbed roughly 30% within 12 hours after those developments, as per previous coverage on crypto.news. However, as of press time, TAO is down over 6% as traders weigh the recent concerns around the Root Rebor proposal.

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AllUnity launches Swedish krona stablecoin SEKAU under MiCA

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AllUnity launches Swedish krona stablecoin SEKAU under MiCA

AllUnity has launched SEKAU, a Swedish krona-backed stablecoin issued under the European Union’s Markets in Crypto-Assets Regulation. 

Summary

  • SEKAU is backed 1:1 by Swedish krona reserves and structured as a MiCA e-money token.
  • AllUnity launched SEKAU across Ethereum, Solana, Base, Tempo and Polygon for institutional settlement use cases.
  • The rollout expands AllUnity’s EURAU and CHFAU strategy as Europe builds regulated local stablecoins markets.

In a Friday announcement, the company said the token is structured as an e-money token and backed 1:1 by Swedish krona reserves.

The launch gives Sweden a regulated private stablecoin linked to its national currency. AllUnity said SEKAU targets institutional settlement, cross-border payments, treasury flows, and digital asset market use.

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The company said SEKAU is fully reserved and supported by segregated fiat reserves. Holders also have a statutory right of redemption at par value under MiCA rules, according to AllUnity’s legal notice.

Banking partners support reserves

Banking Circle will act as the designated reserve and transaction bank for SEKAU. AllUnity said Banking Circle will hold and manage the fiat reserves backing the Swedish krona stablecoin.

Marginalen Bank is also supporting the rollout as a banking partner. Trust Anchor Group will provide digital asset infrastructure and integration support for broader access to SEKAU.

AllUnity CEO Alexander Höptner said the launch gives the Swedish krona “a native place in the digital economy.” He said the token can support instant settlement, programmable money, and cross-border payments.

Token launches on five networks

SEKAU debuts on Ethereum, Solana, Base, Tempo, and Polygon. AllUnity said the multi-chain rollout is designed to improve access, liquidity, and use across several blockchain ecosystems.

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The company also plans to expand SEKAU to more networks later in 2026. The stablecoin will initially be available through the AllUnity Business Mint Account for onboarded institutional clients.

AllUnity said those clients can mint and redeem SEKAU through the platform. The company also said expansion to centralized and decentralized trading venues is already underway.

AllUnity expands European stablecoin lineup

The SEKAU launch extends AllUnity’s multi-currency stablecoin strategy. The company already operates EURAU, a euro-backed stablecoin, and CHFAU, a Swiss franc-backed stablecoin.

As previously reported by crypto.news, AllUnity planned a June launch for SEKAU after earlier announcing its Swedish krona stablecoin push. That report noted that dollar-backed stablecoins still dominate global supply, leaving limited room for regulated non-dollar options.

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The Riksbank said earlier this year that stablecoins linked to one national currency are regulated like e-money under MiCA. It also said there were no stablecoins in Swedish kronor at that time.

Crypto.news earlier reported that European banks and companies are moving from research to rollout in stablecoins. MiCA has given issuers a clearer rulebook, while payment demand has pushed projects tied to euro, Swiss franc, and now Swedish krona settlement.

SEKAU does not replace Sweden’s e-krona research. A central bank digital currency would be public money issued by the Riksbank, while SEKAU is private money issued by a regulated company.

For AllUnity, the launch adds a third currency to its regulated stablecoin portfolio. For Europe, it adds another local-currency option at a time when banks, fintechs, and crypto firms are building payment tools under MiCA.

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