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Portfolio > Alternative Investments > Cryptocurrencies

Bitcoin ETF Inflows Are Skyrocketing. Do Advisors Care?

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What You Need to Know

  • Investors have purchased roughly $12 billion in cryptocurrency ETFs in the first four months.
  • Cetera and Wells Fargo are already offering bitcoin ETFs to advisors.
  • While many advisors and clients are still staying away, others are jumping in.

Even after a historic launch for bitcoin exchange-traded funds, financial advisors have been skittish about investing in the new products, weighing the need for them in their portfolios and the potential risks associated with recommending them to clients.

The first funds got the regulatory green light in January and have been off to a record-shattering start. Investors sunk roughly $12 billion into cryptocurrency ETFs in the first four months with the bulk of trading coming in products from household names like BlackRock Inc. or Fidelity.

The far-and-away frontrunners, the iShares Bitcoin Trust (IBIT) and Fidelity Wise Origin Bitcoin Fund (FBTC), crossed the $1 billion asset threshold in under five days — a feat accomplished by just two other funds in history, according to a Bloomberg analysis.

The new products have certainly impressed Wall Street and softened cryptocurrency’s bad-boy image in the industry. More than one in three financial advisors now say they are planning to recommend digital assets to clients in the next six months, according to recently released data from the Digital Assets Council of Financial Professionals.

That’s up from just one in five financial advisors considering crypto in December.

After a quarter of trading, recent regulatory filings from wealth managers are now providing a better look at institutional investors’ adoption.

According to an analysis by Bitwise, 563 professional investment firms reported owning $3.5 billion worth of bitcoin ETFs as of the first week in May. That includes top wealth management companies like Hightower Advisors, Brown Advisory and Sequoia Financial Advisors.  

To be sure, some wealth management titans are standing pat on the idea that crypto is not a suitable investment to reach their clients’ goals. The Vanguard Group said in a January blog post that while crypto has been classified as a commodity, it has “no inherent economic value” and “can create havoc within a portfolio.” 

The next major step for bitcoin ETFs will hinge on how the funds are adopted at the highest levels of the wealth management industry. 

“Bitcoin assets put you out on a bit of a ledge,” said Robert Pagliarini, founder of Pacifica Wealth Advisors in Irvine, California. “There are a lot of very smart and successful financial folks out there saying, basically, it’s a joke.” 

Pacifica Wealth has prospective clients asking for help managing crypto investments, he said. But the unknown risks to Pagliarini’s practice — including the potential costs of lawsuits or litigation that may come with handling those digital assets — are keeping him on the sidelines. 

“Even if the advisor thinks it’s going up, you’re taking a bit of a gamble,” he said. “Good financial advisors are not in the business of gambling with clients’ money.” 

As the products mature in the marketplace, financial advisors are taking a wait-and-see approach and letting some of the largest U.S. wealth managers take the lead on how to handle the controversial new products.

While bitcoin ETFs have roughly $50 billion in assets, professional investors make up no more than 10% of that total, according to the filings cited by Bitwise.

Noah Damsky, principal of Marina Wealth Advisors in Los Angeles, said he helps clients invest in crypto ETFs because it’s easier than owning bitcoin directly and can be safer than using an exchange.

His crypto-invested clients are all under the age of 40, high-earning and have a high appetite for risk, he said. The majority of his clients have no interest in crypto at all.  

“We use it when a client insists on having exposure to bitcoin,” Damsky said. 

The firm generally invests clients in FBTC since it is one of the most liquid options and because Fidelity is the custodian rather than another exchange. A major benefit is that the tax reporting rolls up into the client’s brokerage portfolio, rather than separate tax documents, which means tax preparation fees are kept low, he said.

Bitcoin Momentum

Cetera became one of the first independent brokers to jump on the bandwagon after recognizing increased demand from their clients. The regional BD approved four bitcoin ETFs in March, along with guidelines for advisors, and set limits on the amount clients can purchase based on their risk profile.

“We are taking a balanced approach,” Cetera’s head of investment products, Matt Fries, said in an email. “Brokerage clients with a more aggressive investment objective and risk tolerance [can] invest a portion of their money in these products, in accordance with defined concentration limits.”

Wells Fargo’s brokerage unit also confirmed it has opened up access to ETFs that invest directly in bitcoin, including to some wealth management clients that specifically request the products. Merrill Lynch, and other wirehouses, are reportedly offering crypto products to clients only if they inquire about the products. 

Better Than ‘Digital Gold’

For Svetlin Krastev, an advisor with New York-based Black Sea Gold Advisors, investment ideas that can diversify an overall portfolio, and bring down the correlation between asset classes, are a top priority. Bitcoin ETFs fit the bill. 

“It’s really cheap and very liquid,” Krastev said. While clients may have a Coinbase account and they can invest by themselves, most of his clients don’t want to be hands-on with their investment, especially money saved for retirement, he said. “ETFs become very suitable instruments.”

More than half of his New-York based clients have asked about bitcoin ETFs and he has clients that are currently invested. Those demographics tend to skew younger, and a 3% allocation in bitcoin ETFs is reasonable for clients in their 30s, he said.

Krastev likened cryptocurrency to digital gold, and while he has never invested clients in physical gold, he sees significant benefits to investing his clients in bitcoin — especially in an easy-to-use ETF wrapper. 

“You can’t eat gold. You can’t drink it. Outside of jewelry and some very limited applications in some industries, there’s really nothing special about that metal,” Krastev said. “I see a lot more potential in bitcoin.”

How Are Advisors Using Bitcoin ETFs?

One of the steepest barriers to adoption for some advisors is determining how cryptocurrency fits into their clients’ investing goals. Advocates say bitcoin ETFs are an effective tool to diversify portfolios with little correlation to the overall market — not to mention, potentially exponential upside.

However, the dangers are well documented, including cybersecurity or fraud concerns and wild price fluctuations.

That’s not stopping Gregory Corneille, a registered investment advisor with Choice Wealth Management in Atlanta, who is considering opening bitcoin ETFs investing to his clients. 

“Clients are coming to us because they don’t have strong opinions about buying this or buying that, but they want crypto,” he said.

He has his eye on Bitwise 10 Crypto Index Fund (BITW), whixh tracks an index of the 10 most highly valued cryptocurrencies weighted by market capitalization and is rebalanced monthly. 

While investors are getting the most exposure to bitcoin, other potentially viable crypto investments — like ether, solana, cardano and a handful of others — are also built into the fund. 

“You’re not going to be able to use bitcoin at a Starbucks tomorrow,” Corneille said. “But as the other currencies start to gain traction and momentum — if someone figures out a better mousetrap — then you’re going to have exposure. It’s a piece of an overall strategy.”

Credit: Bloomberg


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