Canary’s Litecoin, HBAR ETFs Ready to Launch After Shutdown

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Asset manager Canary Capital appears to be on the cusp of having its Litecoin and HBAR exchange-traded funds (ETF) approved after filing key final details, but they’re unlikely to launch while the US government is shut down.

Canary filed amendments to its Litecoin (LTC) and Hedera (HBAR) spot ETFs on Tuesday, which each added a fee of 0.95% and the tickers LTCC and HBR.

Bloomberg ETF analyst Eric Balchunas said in an X post on Tuesday that the additions are “typically the last thing updated [before] go-time.”

He added that with the US government shut down and the Securities and Exchange Commission largely dark, it’s unknown when they’d be approved, but the filings “look pretty finalized to me.”

Fellow Bloomberg ETF analyst James Seyffart also thought the amendments are a good sign that an approval would happen and said it “feels like Litecoin and HBAR ETFs are at the goal line here.”

Source: James Seyffart

Analysts from the crypto exchange Bitfinex predicted in August that the approval of altcoin-tied ETFs could spark a new altcoin rally, as the product would open up investors to the tokens.

Fees higher than spot Bitcoin ETF, but “pretty normal”

Spot Bitcoin ETFs fees average between 0.15% and 0.25%, according to Ledger, far more expensive than Canary’s 0.95% fees, but Balchunas said that is not out of the ordinary.

“My take on the 95bp fee. It’s pricey vs spot BTC, but pretty normal to see higher fees for areas that are new to being ETF-ed and increasingly niche,” he said.

Source: Eric Balchunas

However, he also noted that if the LTC and HBAR ETFs attract decent flows and interest from investors, other issuers could try to undercut Canary and compete with cheaper products.

Issuers’ “spaghetti cannon” 3x ETFs despite shutdown

The US government might be in shutdown, but companies are still filing for new ETFs, according to Balchunas and Seyffart, with a focus on funds with 3x leverage.