Trump Media filed SEC registrations for Cronos, Bitcoin, Ether ETFs with staking
According to CoinCentral, Truth Social Funds, affiliated with Trump Media & Technology Group (DJT), filed a registration statement with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission to launch crypto exchange-traded funds centered on Cronos (CRO), Bitcoin, and Ether, with an explicit focus on staking rewards where applicable. A registration filing does not confer approval; the proposals remain subject to SEC review and potential amendment.
The Cronos-focused ETF is described as providing exposure to CRO, while the proposed Bitcoin and Ether products are framed around incorporating staking to enhance total returns if permitted by regulation. Final structures, including custody, validator arrangements, and distribution mechanics, would be determined during the SEC’s comment-and-amendment process and any subsequent approvals.
How staking would function inside the proposed ETF structures
In a staking-enabled ETF, the fund would hold native tokens and either delegate them to validators or operate validators through service providers to earn on-chain rewards. Fund documentation would need to address how rewards are treated for net asset value (income versus capital), the cadence of accrual and distribution, and the handling of slashing risk and other validator penalties.
Operationally, custody and staking need to be tightly controlled to meet registered-fund standards. That typically means using qualified custodians, segregated wallets, and staking agents with defined service-level agreements, while ensuring liquidity management for creations/redemptions given potential unbonding or lock-up periods on staked assets.
As a reference point outside the ETF filings, Trump Media previously arranged to acquire and stake a large balance of CRO held in Crypto.com Custody as part of a strategic partnership, reflecting a treasury approach that emphasizes staking-driven revenue generation, as reported by GlobeNewswire. While not determinative for an ETF’s design, that transaction illustrates how staking and third-party custody can be paired in a compliant operating model.
SEC hurdles, timelines, and investor implications for staking-enabled ETFs
According to CoinDesk, the SEC has delayed decisions on key features for spot Ether ETFs, including whether staking is permitted and whether in-kind creations/redemptions are acceptable, extending timelines and leaving unresolved questions about yield, liquidity, and investor protections. Until the agency provides clarity, any staking component in registered products remains uncertain.
As reported by The Block, several market participants expect institutional demand for spot Ether ETFs to be constrained without staking, and a JPMorgan analysis cited there found non-staking structures less compelling versus alternatives that offer yield. This dynamic suggests that the inclusion of staking could materially affect the addressable buyer base and the competitive positioning of any approved products.
Industry commentary underscores that point, noting the operational and regulatory complexity but also the potential impact on total return. Robert Mitchnick, head of digital assets at BlackRock, said Ether ETFs without staking are “less perfect,” adding that staking yield is a “meaningful part” of returns and that permission to stake would be a “step change.”
At the time of this writing, DJT shares trade around $11.20, up 2.86% intraday, with a one-year decline of roughly 63.48%, based on data from Yahoo Finance. This market snapshot is provided for context only and may reflect delayed quotations.
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