Miami Beach, FL — “The market is the market… it’s not crypto and traditional anymore,” said Dave LaValle, President of CoinDesk Indices and Data, on a panel at Consensus Miami Tuesday, capturing a shift echoed across issuers and asset managers.
As traditional finance firms pour in, Douglas Yones of Direxion argued that institutional participation is “good for the industry,” bringing standardization and discipline to processes that were once fragmented.
That institutional layer is also unlocking global access. In regions where spot crypto remains restricted, particularly across parts of Asia, ETFs have emerged as the primary on-ramp.
“ETFs are a plug-and-play solution,” said Krista Lynch, SVP of ETF Capital Markets at Grayscale, noting they fit seamlessly into existing risk systems that can’t accommodate direct bitcoin exposure.
The result is rapid adoption. Lynch points to surging demand for features like in-kind redemptions and collateral usage, while Steven McClurg, CEO of Canary Capital, highlights a simpler appeal: security and liquidity. “Some investors would rather hold an ETF and let issuers handle custody,” he said.
Where the market goes next is already taking shape. Index-based products are poised to organize a growing universe of assets, while staking and income-generating strategies could define the next wave. Tokenization, though promising, remains in its early stages, according to McClurg.
Still, the direction is clear: ETFs aren’t just expanding crypto access, they’re redefining how the asset class is structured, distributed, and owned globally.
Read more: Recovery in bitcoin ETF inflows is real. It is just not complete yet.
