Self-Regulatory Organizations; Cboe BZX Exchange, Inc.; Notice of Filing of Proposed Rule Change To List and Trade Shares of SolidX Bitcoin Shares Issued by the VanEck SolidX Bitcoin Trust, 31014-31028 [2018-14114]
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Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 127 / Monday, July 2, 2018 / Notices
not result in dilution of an investment
in shares, and (b) to the extent different
prices exist during a given trading day,
or from day to day, such variances occur
as a result of third-party market forces,
such as supply and demand. Therefore,
applicants assert that secondary market
transactions in shares will not lead to
discrimination or preferential treatment
among purchasers. Finally, applicants
represent that share market prices will
be disciplined by arbitrage
opportunities, which should prevent
shares from trading at a material
discount or premium from NAV.
6. With respect to Funds that effect
creations and redemptions of Creation
Units in kind and that are based on
certain Underlying Indexes that include
foreign securities, applicants request
relief from the requirement imposed by
section 22(e) in order to allow such
Funds to pay redemption proceeds
within fifteen calendar days following
the tender of Creation Units for
redemption. Applicants assert that the
requested relief would not be
inconsistent with the spirit and intent of
section 22(e) to prevent unreasonable,
undisclosed or unforeseen delays in the
actual payment of redemption proceeds.
7. Applicants request an exemption to
permit Funds of Funds to acquire Fund
shares beyond the limits of section
12(d)(1)(A) of the Act; and the Funds,
and any principal underwriter for the
Funds, and/or any broker or dealer
registered under the Exchange Act, to
sell shares to Funds of Funds beyond
the limits of section 12(d)(1)(B) of the
Act. The application’s terms and
conditions are designed to, among other
things, help prevent any potential (i)
undue influence over a Fund through
control or voting power, or in
connection with certain services,
transactions, and underwritings, (ii)
excessive layering of fees, and (iii)
overly complex fund structures, which
are the concerns underlying the limits
in sections 12(d)(1)(A) and (B) of the
Act.
8. Applicants request an exemption
from sections 17(a)(1) and 17(a)(2) of the
Act to permit persons that are Affiliated
Persons, or Second-Tier Affiliates, of the
Funds, solely by virtue of certain
ownership interests, to effectuate
purchases and redemptions in-kind. The
deposit procedures for in-kind
purchases of Creation Units and the
redemption procedures for in-kind
redemptions of Creation Units will be
the same for all purchases and
redemptions and Deposit Instruments
and Redemption Instruments will be
valued in the same manner as those
investment positions currently held by
the Funds. Applicants also seek relief
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from the prohibitions on affiliated
transactions in section 17(a) to permit a
Fund to sell its shares to and redeem its
shares from a Fund of Funds, and to
engage in the accompanying in-kind
transactions with the Fund of Funds.3
The purchase of Creation Units by a
Fund of Funds directly from a Fund will
be accomplished in accordance with the
policies of the Fund of Funds and will
be based on the NAVs of the Funds.
9. Section 6(c) of the Act permits the
Commission to exempt any persons or
transactions from any provision of the
Act if such exemption is necessary or
appropriate in the public interest and
consistent with the protection of
investors and the purposes fairly
intended by the policy and provisions of
the Act. Section 12(d)(1)(J) of the Act
provides that the Commission may
exempt any person, security, or
transaction, or any class or classes of
persons, securities, or transactions, from
any provision of section 12(d)(1) if the
exemption is consistent with the public
interest and the protection of investors.
Section 17(b) of the Act authorizes the
Commission to grant an order
permitting a transaction otherwise
prohibited by section 17(a) if it finds
that (a) the terms of the proposed
transaction are fair and reasonable and
do not involve overreaching on the part
of any person concerned; (b) the
proposed transaction is consistent with
the policies of each registered
investment company involved; and (c)
the proposed transaction is consistent
with the general purposes of the Act.
For the Commission, by the Division of
Investment Management, under delegated
authority.
Eduardo A. Aleman,
Assistant Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2018–14191 Filed 6–29–18; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE P
3 The requested relief would apply to direct sales
of shares in Creation Units by a Fund to a Fund of
Funds and redemptions of those shares. Applicants
are not seeking relief from section 17(a) for, and the
requested relief will not apply to, transactions
where a Fund could be deemed an Affiliated
Person, or a Second-Tier Affiliate, of a Fund of
Funds because an Adviser or an entity controlling,
controlled by or under common control with an
Adviser provides investment advisory services to
that Fund of Funds.
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SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE
COMMISSION
[Release No. 34–83520; File No. SR–
CboeBZX–2018–040]
Self-Regulatory Organizations; Cboe
BZX Exchange, Inc.; Notice of Filing of
Proposed Rule Change To List and
Trade Shares of SolidX Bitcoin Shares
Issued by the VanEck SolidX Bitcoin
Trust
June 26, 2018.
Pursuant to Section 19(b)(1) of the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934
(‘‘Act’’) 1 and Rule 19b–4 thereunder,2
notice is hereby given that on June 20,
2018, Cboe BZX Exchange, Inc. (‘‘BZX’’
or the ‘‘Exchange’’) filed with the
Securities and Exchange Commission
(‘‘Commission’’) the proposed rule
change as described in Items I, II, and
III below, which Items have been
prepared by the Exchange. The
Commission is publishing this notice to
solicit comments on the proposed rule
change from interested persons.
I. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement of the Terms of Substance of
the Proposed Rule Change
The Exchange filed a proposal to list
and trade shares of SolidX Bitcoin
Shares (the ‘‘Fund’’) issued by the
VanEck SolidX Bitcoin Trust (the
‘‘Trust’’), under BZX Rule 14.11(e)(4),
Commodity-Based Trust Shares.
The text of the proposed rule change
is available at the Exchange’s website at
www.markets.cboe.com, at the principal
office of the Exchange, and at the
Commission’s Public Reference Room.
II. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement of the Purpose of, and
Statutory Basis for, the Proposed Rule
Change
In its filing with the Commission, the
Exchange included statements
concerning the purpose of and basis for
the proposed rule change and discussed
any comments it received on the
proposed rule change. The text of these
statements may be examined at the
places specified in Item IV below. The
Exchange has prepared summaries, set
forth in Sections A, B, and C below, of
the most significant parts of such
statements.
1 15
2 17
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A. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement of the Purpose of, and the
Statutory Basis for, the Proposed Rule
Change
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1. Purpose
The Exchange proposes to list and
trade the Shares under BZX Rule
14.11(e)(4),3 which governs the listing
and trading of Commodity-Based Trust
Shares on the Exchange.4 SolidX
Management LLC is the sponsor of the
Trust (‘‘Sponsor’’). The Trust will be
responsible for custody of the Trust’s
bitcoin. SolidX Management LLC is a
wholly-owned subsidiary of SolidX
Partners Inc. Delaware Trust Company
is the trustee (‘‘Trustee’’). The Bank of
New York Mellon will be the
administrator (‘‘Administrator’’),
transfer agent (‘‘Transfer Agent’’) and
the custodian, with respect to cash,
(‘‘Cash Custodian’’) of the Trust.
Foreside Fund Services, LLC will be the
marketing agent (‘‘Marketing Agent’’) in
connection with the creation and
redemption of ‘‘Baskets’’ 5 of Shares.
Van Eck Securities Corporation
(‘‘VanEck’’) provides assistance in the
marketing of the Shares.
The Trust was formed as a Delaware
statutory trust on September 15, 2016
and is operated as a grantor trust for
U.S. federal tax purposes. The Trust has
no fixed termination date.
According to the Registration
Statement, each Share will represent a
fractional undivided beneficial interest
in the Trust’s net assets. The Trust’s
assets will consist of bitcoin 6 held by
the Trust utilizing a secure process as
described below in ‘‘bitcoin Security
and Storage for the Trust’’. The Trust
will not normally hold cash or any other
assets, but may hold a very limited
amount of cash in connection with the
3 The Commission approved BZX Rule 14.11(e)(4)
in Securities Exchange Act Release No. 65225
(August 30, 2011), 76 FR 55148 (September 6, 2011)
(SR–BATS–2011–018).
4 All statements and representations made in this
filing regarding (a) the description of the portfolio,
(b) limitations on portfolio holdings or reference
assets, or (c) the applicability of Exchange rules and
surveillance procedures shall constitute continued
listing requirements for listing the Shares on the
Exchange.
5 The Trust will issue and redeem ‘‘Baskets’’, each
equal to a block of 5 Shares, only to ‘‘Authorized
Participants’’. See ‘‘Creation and Redemption of
Shares’’ below.
6 A ‘‘bitcoin’’ is an asset that can be transferred
among parties via the internet, but without the use
of a central administrator or clearing agency
(‘‘bitcoin’’). The asset, bitcoin, is generally written
with a lower case ‘‘b’’. The asset, bitcoin, is
differentiated from the computers and software (or
the protocol) involved in the transfer of bitcoin
among users, which constitute the ‘‘Bitcoin
Network’’. The asset, bitcoin, is the intrinsically
linked unit of account that exists within the Bitcoin
Network. See ‘‘bitcoin and the Bitcoin Industry’’
below.
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creation and redemption of Baskets and
to pay Trust expenses, as described
below.
According to the Registration
Statement, the Trust will invest in
bitcoin only. The activities of the Trust
are limited to: (1) Issuing Baskets in
exchange for the cash and/or bitcoin
deposited with the Cash Custodian or
Trust, respectively, as consideration; (2)
purchasing bitcoin from various
exchanges and in OTC transactions; (3)
selling bitcoin (or transferring bitcoin, at
the Sponsor’s discretion, to pay the
Management Fee) as necessary to cover
the Sponsor’s Management Fee, bitcoin
Insurance Fee, Trust principals’ and
employees’ salaries, expenses associated
with securing the Trust’s bitcoin and
Trust expenses not assumed by the
Sponsor and other liabilities; (4) selling
bitcoin as necessary in connection with
redemptions; (5) delivering cash and/or
bitcoin in exchange for Baskets
surrendered for redemption; (6)
maintaining insurance coverage for the
bitcoin held by the Trust; and (7)
securing the bitcoin held by the Trust.
According to the Registration
Statement, the Trust is neither an
investment company registered under
the Investment Company Act of 1940, as
amended,7 nor a commodity pool for
purposes of the Commodity Exchange
Act (‘‘CEA’’),8 and neither the Trust nor
the Sponsor is subject to regulation as
a commodity pool operator or a
commodity trading adviser in
connection with the Shares.
Investment Objective
According to the Registration
Statement and as further described
below, the investment objective of the
Trust is for the Shares to reflect the
performance of the price of bitcoin, less
the expenses of the Trust’s operations.
The Trust intends to achieve this
objective by investing substantially all
of its assets in bitcoin traded primarily
in the over-the-counter (‘‘OTC’’)
markets, though the Trust may also
invest in bitcoin traded on domestic and
international bitcoin exchanges,
depending on liquidity and otherwise at
the Trust’s discretion. The Trust is not
actively managed. It does not engage in
any activities designed to obtain a profit
from, or to ameliorate losses caused by,
changes in the price of bitcoin.
Investment in bitcoin
Subject to certain requirements and
conditions described below and in the
Registration Statement, the Trust, under
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8 17
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normal market conditions,9 will use
available offering proceeds to purchase
bitcoin primarily in the OTC markets,
without being leveraged or exceeding
relevant position limits.
bitcoin and the bitcoin Industry
General
The following is a brief introduction
to the global bitcoin market. The data
presented below are derived from
information released by various thirdparty sources, including white papers,
other published materials, research
reports and regulatory guidance.
The bitcoin Network
A bitcoin is an asset that can be
transferred among parties via the
internet, but without the use of a central
administrator or clearing agency. The
term ‘‘decentralized’’ is often used in
descriptions of bitcoin, in reference to
bitcoin’s lack of necessity for
administration by a central party. The
Bitcoin Network (i.e., the network of
computers running the software
protocol underlying bitcoin involved in
maintaining the database of bitcoin
ownership and facilitating the transfer
of bitcoin among parties) and the asset,
bitcoin, are intrinsically linked and
inseparable. Bitcoin was first described
in a white paper released in 2008 and
published under the name ‘‘Satoshi
Nakamoto’’, and the protocol underlying
bitcoin was subsequently released in
2009 as open source software.
bitcoin Ownership and the Blockchain
To begin using bitcoin, a user may
download specialized software referred
to as a ‘‘bitcoin wallet’’. A user’s bitcoin
wallet can run on a computer or
smartphone. A bitcoin wallet can be
used both to send and to receive bitcoin.
Within a bitcoin wallet, a user will be
able to generate one or more ‘‘bitcoin
addresses’’, which are similar in
concept to bank account numbers, and
each address is unique. Upon generating
a bitcoin address, a user can begin to
transact in bitcoin by receiving bitcoin
at his or her bitcoin address and sending
it from his or her address to another
user’s address. Sending bitcoin from one
bitcoin address to another is similar in
concept to sending a bank wire from one
person’s bank account to another
person’s bank account.
9 The term ‘‘under normal circumstances’’
includes, but is not limited to, the absence of
extreme volatility or trading halts in the price of
bitcoin or the financial markets generally;
operational issues causing dissemination of
inaccurate market information; or force majeure
type events such as systems failure, natural or manmade disaster, act of God, armed conflict, act of
terrorism, riot or labor disruption or any similar
intervening circumstance.
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Balances of the quantity of bitcoin
associated with each bitcoin address are
listed in a database, referred to as the
‘‘blockchain’’. Copies of the blockchain
exist on thousands of computers on the
Bitcoin Network throughout the
internet. A user’s bitcoin wallet will
either contain a copy of the blockchain
or be able to connect with another
computer that holds a copy of the
blockchain.
When a bitcoin user wishes to transfer
bitcoin to another user, the sender must
first request a bitcoin address from the
recipient. The sender then uses his or
her bitcoin wallet software, to create a
proposed addition to the blockchain.
The proposal would decrement the
sender’s address and increment the
recipient’s address by the amount of
bitcoin desired to be transferred. The
proposal is entirely digital in nature,
similar to a file on a computer, and it
can be sent to other computers
participating in the Bitcoin Network.
Such digital proposals are referred to as
‘‘bitcoin transactions’’. Bitcoin
transactions and the process of one user
sending bitcoin to another should not be
confused with buying and selling
bitcoin, which is a separate process (as
discussed below in ‘‘bitcoin Trading On
Exchanges’’ and ‘‘bitcoin Trading Overthe-Counter’’).
A bitcoin transaction is similar in
concept to an irreversible digital check.
The transaction contains the sender’s
bitcoin address, the recipient’s bitcoin
address, the amount of bitcoin to be
sent, a confirmation fee and the sender’s
digital signature. The sender’s use of his
or her digital signature enables
participants on the Bitcoin Network to
verify the authenticity of the bitcoin
transaction.
A user’s digital signature is generated
via usage of the user’s so-called ‘‘private
key’’, one of two numbers in a so-called
cryptographic ‘‘key pair’’. A key pair
consists of a ‘‘public key’’ and its
corresponding private key, both of
which are lengthy numerical codes,
derived together and possessing a
unique relationship.
Public keys are used to create bitcoin
addresses. Private keys are used to sign
transactions that initiate the transfer of
bitcoin from a sender’s bitcoin address
to a recipient’s bitcoin address. Only the
holder of the private key associated with
a particular bitcoin address can digitally
sign a transaction proposing a transfer of
bitcoin from that particular bitcoin
address.
A user’s bitcoin address (which is
derived from a public key) may be safely
distributed, but a user’s private key
must remain known solely by its
rightful owner. The utilization of a
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private key is the only mechanism by
which a bitcoin user can create a digital
signature to transfer bitcoin from him or
herself to another user. Additionally, if
a malicious third party learns of a user’s
private key, that third party could forge
the user’s digital signature and send the
user’s bitcoin to any arbitrary bitcoin
address (i.e., the third party could steal
the user’s bitcoin).
When a bitcoin holder sends bitcoin
to a destination bitcoin address, the
transaction is initially considered
unconfirmed. Confirmation of the
validity of the transaction involves
verifying the signature of the sender, as
created by the sender’s private key.
Confirmation also involves verifying
that the sender has not ‘‘double spent’’
the bitcoin (e.g., confirming Party A has
not attempted to send the same bitcoin
both to Party B and to Party C). The
confirmation process occurs via a
process known as ‘‘bitcoin mining’’.
Bitcoin mining utilizes a combination
of computer hardware and software to
accomplish a dual purpose: (i) To verify
the authenticity and validity of bitcoin
transactions (i.e., the movement of
bitcoin between addresses) and (ii) the
creation of new bitcoin. Neither the
Sponsor nor the Trust intends to engage
in bitcoin mining.
Bitcoin miners do not need
permission to participate in verifying
transactions. Rather, miners compete to
solve a prescribed and complicated
mathematical calculation using
computers dedicated to the task. Rounds
of the competition repeat approximately
every ten minutes. In any particular
round of the competition, the first miner
to find the solution to the mathematical
calculation is the miner who gains the
privilege of announcing the next block
to be added to the blockchain.
A new block that is added to the
blockchain serves to take all of the
recent-yet-unconfirmed transactions and
verify that none are fraudulent. The
recent-yet-unconfirmed transactions
also generally contain transaction fees
that are awarded to the miner who
produces the block in which the
transactions are inserted, and thereby
confirmed. The successful miner also
earns the so-called ‘‘block reward’’, an
amount of newly created bitcoin. Thus,
bitcoin miners are financially
incentivized to conduct their work. The
financial incentives received by bitcoin
miners are a vital part of the process by
which the Bitcoin Network functions.
Upon successfully winning a round of
the competition (winning a round is
referred to as mining a new block), the
miner then transmits a copy of the
newly-formed block to peers on the
Bitcoin Network, all of which then
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update their respective copies of the
blockchain by appending the new block,
thereby acknowledging the confirmation
of the transactions that had previously
existed in an unconfirmed state.
A recipient of bitcoin must wait until
a new block is formed in order to see the
transaction convert from an
unconfirmed state to a confirmed state.
According to the Registration Statement,
with new rounds won approximately
every ten minutes, the average wait time
for a confirmation is five minutes.
The protocol underlying bitcoin
provides the rules by which all users
and miners on the Bitcoin Network
must operate. A user or miner
attempting to operate under a different
set of rules will be ignored by other
network participants, thus rendering
that user’s or miner’s behavior moot.
The protocol also lays out the block
reward, the amount of bitcoin that a
miner earns upon creating a new block.
The initial block reward when Bitcoin
was introduced in 2009 was 50 bitcoin
per block. That number has and will
continue to halve approximately every
four years until approximately 2140,
when it is estimated that block rewards
will go to zero. The most recent halving
occurred on July 9, 2016, which reduced
the block reward from 25 to 12.5
bitcoin. The next halving is projected
for June 2020, which will reduce the
block reward to 6.25 bitcoin from its
current level of 12.5. The halving
thereafter will occur in another four
years and will reduce the block reward
to 3.125 bitcoin, and so on. As of May
2018, there are approximately 17
million bitcoin that have been created,
a number that will grow with certainty
to a maximum of 21 million, estimated
to occur by the year 2140. Bitcoin
mining should not be confused with
buying and selling bitcoin, which, as
discussed below, is a separate process.
Use of bitcoin and the Blockchain
Beyond using bitcoin as a value
transfer mechanism, applications
related to the blockchain technology
underlying bitcoin have become
increasingly prominent.10 Blockchainfocused applications take advantage of
certain unique characteristics of the
blockchain such as secure time
stamping (secure time stamps are on
newly created blocks), highly redundant
storage (copies of the blockchain are
distributed throughout the internet) and
10 Additional applications based on blockchain
technology—both the blockchain underlying bitcoin
as well as separate public blockchains incorporating
similar characteristics of the blockchain underlying
bitcoin—are currently in development by numerous
entities, including financial institutions like banks.
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tamper-resistant data secured by secure
digital signatures.
According to the Registration
Statement, blockchain-focused
applications in usage and under
development include, but are not
limited to asset title transfer, secure
timestamping, counterfeit and fraud
detection systems, secure document and
contract signing, distributed cloud
storage and identity management.
Although value transfer is not the
primary purpose for blockchain-focused
applications, the usage of bitcoin, the
asset, is inherently involved in
blockchain-focused applications, thus
linking the growth and adoption of
bitcoin to the growth and adoption of
blockchain-focused applications.
bitcoin Trading Over-the-Counter
As referenced above, OTC trading of
bitcoin is generally accomplished via
bilateral agreements on a principal-toprincipal basis. All risks and issues of
credit are between the parties directly
involved in the transaction. The OTC
market provides a relatively flexible
market in terms of quotes, price, size
and other factors. The OTC market has
no formal structure and no open-outcry
meeting place. Parties engaging in OTC
transactions will agree upon a price—
often via phone or email—and one of
the two parties would then initiate the
transaction. For example, a seller of
bitcoin could initiate the transaction by
sending the bitcoin to the buyer’s
bitcoin address. The buyer would then
wire U.S. dollars to the seller’s bank
account.
Based on its observations and
experience in the market, the Sponsor
estimates that the U.S. dollar OTC
bitcoin trading volume globally
represents on average approximately
fifty percent of the trading volume of
bitcoin traded globally in U.S. dollars
on U.S. dollar-denominated bitcoin
exchanges.
According to the Registration
Statement, transaction costs in the OTC
market are negotiable between the
parties and therefore vary with some
participants willing to offer competitive
prices for larger volumes, although this
will vary according to market
conditions. Cost indicators can be
obtained from OTC trading platforms as
well as various information service
providers, such as the bitcoin price
indexes and bitcoin exchanges. OTC
trading tends to be in large blocks of
bitcoin and between institutions.
The Trust intends to buy and sell
bitcoin in the OTC bitcoin market. The
Sponsor currently expects that often it
will be more cost efficient for the Trust
to effect large trades (e.g., $500,000 or
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greater) in the OTC market rather than
on a bitcoin exchange. The Trust
therefore expects to conduct most of its
trading in the OTC bitcoin market,
primarily on the OTC platforms that
comprise the MVIS® Bitcoin OTC Index
(‘‘MVBTCO’’).
When buying and selling bitcoin in
the OTC market, the Trust will consider
various market factors, including the
total U.S. dollar size of the trade, the
volume of bitcoin traded across the
various U.S. dollar-denominated bitcoin
exchanges during the preceding 24-hour
period, available liquidity offered by
OTC market participants, and the bid
and ask quotes offered by OTC market
participants. The Trust’s goal is to fill an
order at the best possible price.
While the Trust intends to conduct
the majority of its trading in the OTC
market on the OTC platforms that
comprise the MVBTCO, the Trust also
maintains an internal proprietary
database, which it does not share with
anyone, of potential OTC bitcoin trading
counterparties, including hedge funds,
family offices, private wealth managers
and high-net-worth individuals. All
such potential counterparties will be
subject to the Trust’s anti-money
laundering (‘‘AML’’) and know your
customer (‘‘KYC’’) compliance
procedures. The Trust will begin trading
with such potential OTC counterparties
as their trading capabilities become
viable. The Trust will also add
additional potential counterparties to its
internal proprietary database as it
becomes aware of additional market
participants. The Trust will decide
which OTC counterparties it will trade
with based on its ability to fill orders at
the best available price amongst OTC
market participants.
To the extent a Basket creation or
redemption order necessitates the
buying or selling of a large block of
bitcoin (e.g., an amount that if an order
were placed on an exchange would
potentially move the price of bitcoin),
the Sponsor represents that placing such
a trade in the OTC market may be
advantageous to the Trust. OTC trades
help avoid factors such as potential
price slippage (causing the price of
bitcoin to move as the order is filled on
the exchange), while offering speed in
trade execution and settlement (an OTC
trade can be executed immediately upon
agreement of terms between
counterparties) and privacy (to avoid
other market participants entering
trades in advance of a large block order).
OTC bitcoin trading is typically private
and not regularly reported. The Trust
does not intend to report its OTC
trading. The Trust has established
delivery-versus-payment like (‘‘DVP’’)
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31017
and receive-versus-payment like
(‘‘RVP’’) trading arrangements with its
trading counterparties pursuant to
which the Trust will be able to
minimize counterparty risk. These
arrangements are on a trade-by-trade
basis and do not bind the Trust to
continue to trade with any counterparty.
The Trust expects to take custody of
bitcoin within one business day of
receiving an order from an Authorized
Participant to create a Basket (as defined
in ‘‘Creation and Redemption of Shares’’
below).
bitcoin Price Index
MVBTCO Index. The MVBTCO
represents the value of one bitcoin in
U.S. dollars at any point in time. The
index also generates a closing price as
of 4:00 p.m., Eastern time (‘‘E.T.’’), each
weekday, which is used to calculate the
Trust’s NAV. The index price and the
closing price are calculated using the
same methodology. The intra-day levels
of the MVBTCO incorporate the realtime price of bitcoin based on
executable bids and asks derived from
constituent bitcoin OTC platforms that
have entered into an agreement with
MV Index Solutions GmbH (‘‘MVIS’’) to
provide such information. The intra-day
price and closing level of the MVBTCO
is calculated using a proprietary
methodology collecting executable bid/
ask spreads and calculating a mid-point
price from several U.S.-based bitcoin
OTC platforms and is published at or
after 4:00 p.m., E.T., each weekday. The
MVBTCO is published to two decimal
places rounded on the last digit.
MVIS is the index sponsor and
calculation agent for the MVBTCO. The
Sponsor has entered into a licensing
agreement with MVIS to use the
MVBTCO. The Trust is entitled to use
the MVBTCO pursuant to a sublicensing arrangement with the Sponsor.
The MVBTCO calculates the intra-day
price of bitcoin every 15 seconds,
including the closing price as of 4:00
p.m. E.T. The bitcoin OTC platforms
included in the MVBTCO are U.S.-based
entities. These platforms are well
established institutions that comply
with AML and KYC regulatory
requirements with respect to trading
counterparties and include entities that
are regulated by the SEC and FINRA as
registered broker-dealers and affiliates
of broker-dealers.
The logic utilized for the derivation of
the intra-day and daily closing index
level for the MVBTCO is intended to
analyze actual executable bid/ask
spread data, verify and refine the data
set and yield an objective, fair-market
value of one bitcoin throughout the day
and as of 4:00 p.m. E.T. each weekday,
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priced in U.S. dollars. As discussed
herein, the MVBTCO intra-day price
and the MVBTCO closing price are
collectively referred to as the MVBTCO
price, unless otherwise noted.
The key elements of the algorithm
underlying the MVBTCO include:
• Equal Weighting of OTC Platforms:
This mitigates the impact of spikes at
single platforms.
• Using executable bid/ask spreads
and the respective mid-point prices,
which are consistently available.
The Sponsor is not aware of any
bitcoin derivatives currently trading
based on the MVBTCO.
bitcoin Exchanges
Bitcoin exchanges operate websites
that facilitate the purchase and sale of
bitcoin for various government-issued
currencies, including the U.S. dollar,
the euro or the Chinese yuan. Activity
on bitcoin exchanges should not be
confused with the process of users
sending bitcoin from one bitcoin
address to another bitcoin address, the
latter being an activity that is wholly
within the confines of the Bitcoin
Network and the former being an
activity that occurs entirely on private
websites.
Bitcoin exchanges operate in a
manner that is unlike the traditional
capital markets infrastructure in the
U.S. and in other developed nations.
Bitcoin exchanges combine the process
of order matching, trade clearing, trade
settlement and custody into a single
entity. For example, a user can send
U.S. dollars via wire to a bitcoin
exchange and then visit the exchange’s
website to purchase bitcoin. The
entirety of the transaction—from trade
to clearing to settlement to custody (at
least temporary custody)—is
accomplished by the bitcoin exchange
in a matter of seconds. The user can
then withdraw the purchased bitcoin
into a wallet to take custody of the
bitcoin directly.
According to the Registration
Statement, there are currently several
U.S.-based regulated entities that
facilitate bitcoin trading and that
comply with state and/or U.S. AML and
KYC regulatory requirements. While the
Commodity Futures Trading Commision
(the ‘‘CFTC’’) is responsible for
regulating the bitcoin spot market with
respect to fraud and manipulation—in
the same way that it regulates the spot
market for gold, silver or other exempt
commodities—there is no direct,
comprehensive federal oversight of
bitcoin exchanges or trading platforms
in the United States and no U.S.
exchanges are registered with the
Commission or the CFTC.
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• GDAX (f/k/a Coinbase), which is
based in California, is a bitcoin
exchange that maintains money
transmitter licenses in over thirty states,
the District of Columbia and Puerto
Rico. GDAX is subject to the regulations
enforced by the various State agencies
that issued their respective money
transmitter licenses to GDAX. The New
York Department of Financial Services
(‘‘NYDFS’’) granted a BitLicense to
GDAX in January 2017.
• itBit is a bitcoin exchange that was
granted a limited purpose trust
company charter by the NYDFS in May
2015. Limited purpose trusts, according
to the NYDFS, are permitted to
undertake certain activities, such as
transfer agency, securities clearance,
investment management, and custodial
services, but without the power to take
deposits or make loans.
• Gemini is a bitcoin exchange that is
also regulated by the NYDFS. In October
2015, NYDFS granted Gemini an
Authorization Certificate, which allows
Gemini to operate as a limited purpose
trust company.
• Genesis Global Trading is a FINRA
member firm that makes a market in
bitcoin by offering two-sided liquidity
(‘‘Genesis Global Trading’’). In May
2018, NYDFS granted Genesis Global
Trading a BitLicense.
• bitFlyer is a virtual currency
exchange that is registered in Japan. In
November 2017, NYDFS granted Tokyobased bitFlyer a BitLicense.
Bitcoin are traded with publicly
disclosed valuations for each
transaction, measured by one or more
government currencies such as the U.S.
dollar, the euro or the Chinese yuan.
Bitcoin exchanges typically report
publicly on their site the valuation of
each transaction and bid and ask prices
for the purchase or sale of bitcoin.
Although each bitcoin exchange has its
own market price, it is expected that
most bitcoin exchanges’ market prices
should be relatively consistent with the
bitcoin exchange market average since
market participants can choose the
bitcoin exchange on which to buy or sell
bitcoin (i.e., exchange shopping).
bitcoin Trading on Exchanges
According to the Registration
Statement, to the extent the Trust
conducts bitcoin trading on an
exchange, it expects to do so on the
following U.S. dollar-denominated
bitcoin exchanges: Bitstamp (located in
Slovenia and with an office in the U.K.),
GDAX (f/k/a Coinbase) (located in
California), Gemini (located in New
York), itBit (located in New York),
bitFlyer (located in New York) and
Kraken (located in San Francisco). All of
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these exchanges follow AML and KYC
regulatory requirements.
bitcoin Price Transparency
In addition to the price transparency
of the MVBTCO, with respect to the
OTC market, and the bitcoin exchange
market itself, the Trust will provide
information regarding the Trust’s
bitcoin holdings as well as additional
data regarding the Trust. The Sponsor
expects that the dissemination of
information on the Trust’s website,
along with quotations for and last-sale
prices of transactions in the Shares and
the intra-day indicative value (‘‘IIV’’)
and net asset value (‘‘NAV’’) of the Trust
will help to reduce the ability of market
participants to manipulate the bitcoin
market or the price of the Shares and
that the Trust’s arbitrage mechanism
will facilitate the correction of price
discrepancies in bitcoin and the Shares.
The Sponsor believes that demand from
new, larger investors accessing bitcoin
through investment in the Shares will
broaden the investor base in bitcoin,
which could further reduce the
possibility of collusion among market
participants to manipulate the bitcoin
market. The Sponsor expects that the
Shares will be purchased primarily by
institutional and other substantial
investors (such as hedge funds, family
offices, private wealth managers and
high-net-worth individuals), which will
provide additional liquidity and
transparency to the bitcoin market in a
regulated vehicle such as the Trust.
According to the Sponsor, the
MVBTCO’s methodology decreases the
influence on the MVBTCO of any
particular OTC platform that diverges
from the rest of the data points used by
the MVBTCO, which reduces the
possibility of an attempt to manipulate
the price of bitcoin as reflected by the
MVBTCO.
Historical Price of bitcoin
The price of bitcoin is volatile and
fluctuations are expected to have a
direct impact on the value of the Shares.
However, movements in the price of
bitcoin in the past are not a reliable
indicator of future movements.
Movements may be influenced by
various factors, including supply and
demand, geo-political uncertainties,
economic concerns such as inflation
and real or speculative investor interest.
Additional bitcoin Trading Products
Certain U.S. platforms and non-U.S.
based bitcoin exchanges offer derivative
products on bitcoin such as options,
swaps and futures.
According to the Registration
Statement, BitMex, based in the
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Republic of Seychelles, CryptoFacilites,
based in the United Kingdom, 796
Exchange, based in China, and OKCoin
Exchange China all offer futures
contracts settled in bitcoin. Coinut,
based in Singapore, offers bitcoin binary
options and vanilla options based on the
Coinut index. Deribit, based in the
Netherlands, offers vanilla options and
futures contracts settled in bitcoin.
IGMarkets, based in the United
Kingdom, Avatrade, based in Ireland,
and Plus500, based in Israel, all offer
bitcoin derivative products.
In July 2017, the CFTC issued an
order granting LedgerX, LLC
(‘‘LedgerX’’) registration as a derivatives
clearing organization under the CEA.
Under the order, LedgerX is authorized
to provide clearing services for fullycollateralized digital currency swaps.
LedgerX, which was also granted an
order of registration as a Swap
Execution Facility in July 2017, is the
first federally-regulated exchange and
clearing house for derivatives contracts
settling in digital currencies. LedgerX
began trading options and swaps on its
platform in October 2017.
The CFTC commissioners have
expressed publicly that derivatives
based on bitcoin are subject to
regulation by the CFTC, including
oversight to prevent market
manipulation of the price of bitcoin. In
addition, the CFTC has stated that
bitcoin and other virtual currencies are
encompassed in the definition of
commodities under the CEA.11 While
the CFTC does not regulate the bitcoin
spot market—in the same way that it
does not regulate the spot market for
gold, silver or other exempt
commodities—it is nevertheless
responsible for overseeing and enforcing
the CEA as it applies to trading in
bitcoin derivatives. Further to this
point, Cboe Futures Exchange, LLC and
Chicago Mercantile Exchange, Inc. selfcertified bitcoin futures contracts with
the CFTC and began offering trading in
December 2017 and Cantor Futures
Exchange L.P. self-certified bitcoin
swaps in December 2017.
In May 2015, the Swedish FSA
approved the prospectus for ‘‘Bitcoin
11 See ‘‘In the Matter of Coinflip, Inc.’’
(‘‘Coinflip’’) (CFTC Docket 15–29 (September 17,
2015)) (order instituting proceedings pursuant to
Sections 6(c) and 6(d) of the CEA, making findings
and imposing remedial sanctions), in which the
CFTC stated the following:
‘‘Section 1a(9) of the CEA defines ‘commodity’ to
include, among other things, ‘all services, rights,
and interests in which contracts for future delivery
are presently or in the future dealt in.’ 7 U.S.C.
1a(9). The definition of a ‘commodity’ is broad. See,
e.g., Board of Trade of City of Chicago v. SEC, 677
F. 2d 1137, 1142 (7th Cir. 1982). Bitcoin and other
virtual currencies are encompassed in the definition
and properly defined as commodities.’’
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Tracker One’’, an open-ended exchangetraded note that tracks the price of
bitcoin in U.S. dollars. The Bitcoin
Tracker One initially traded in Swedish
krona on the Nasdaq Nordic in
Stockholm, but is now also available to
trade in euro. The Bitcoin Tracker One
is available to retail investors in the
European Union and to those investors
in the U.S. who maintain brokerage
accounts with Interactive Brokers.
Founded in 2013, Bitcoin Investment
Trust, a private, open-ended trust
available to accredited investors, is
another investment vehicle that derives
its value from the price of bitcoin.
Eligible shares of the Bitcoin Investment
Trust are quoted on the OTCQX
marketplace under the symbol ‘‘GBTC’’.
In May 2016, the Gibraltar Financial
Services Commission approved the
BitcoinETI, which in July 2016 was
listed on the Gibraltar Stock Exchange
¨
and on Deutsche Borse Frankfurt in
August 2016. The BitcoinETI is a
bitcoin-backed exchange-traded
instrument that is euro denominated.
bitcoin Security and Storage for the
Trust
According to the Sponsor, given the
novelty and unique digital
characteristics (as set forth above) of
bitcoin as an innovative asset class,
traditional custodians who normally
custody assets do not currently offer
custodial services for bitcoin.
Accordingly, the Trust will secure
bitcoin using multi-signature ‘‘cold
storage wallets’’, an industry best
practice. A cold storage wallet is created
and stored on a computer with no
access to a network, i.e., an ‘‘airgapped’’ computer with no ability to
access the internet. Such a computer is
isolated from any network, including
local or internet connections. A multisignature address is an address
associated with more than one private
key. For example, a ‘‘2 of 3’’ address
requires two signatures (out of three)
from two separate private keys (out of
three) to move bitcoin from a sender
address to a receiver address.
The Trust will utilize bitcoin private
keys that are generated and stored on
air-gapped computers. The movement of
bitcoin will require physical access to
the air-gapped computers and use of
multiple authorized signers. For backup
and disaster recovery purposes, the
Trust will maintain cold storage wallet
backups in locations geographically
distributed throughout the United
States, including in the Northeast and
Midwest.
In addition to its security system, the
Trust will maintain comprehensive
insurance coverage underwritten by
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31019
various insurance carriers. The purpose
of the insurance is to protect investors
against loss or theft of the Trust’s
bitcoin. The insurance will cover loss of
bitcoin by, among other things, theft,
destruction, bitcoin in transit, computer
fraud and other loss of the private keys
that are necessary to access the bitcoin
held by the Trust. The coverage is
subject to certain terms, conditions and
exclusions, as discussed in the
Registration Statement. The insurance
policy will carry initial limits of $25
million in primary coverage and $100
million in excess coverage, with the
ability to increase coverage depending
on the value of the bitcoin held by the
Trust. To the extent the value of the
Trust’s bitcoin holdings exceeds the
total $125,000,000 of insurance
coverage, the Sponsor has made
arrangements for additional insurance
coverage with the goal of maintaining
insurance coverage at a one-to-one ratio
with the Trust’s bitcoin holdings valued
in U.S. dollars such that for every dollar
of bitcoin held by the Trust there is an
equal amount of insurance coverage.
The Sponsor expects that the Trust’s
auditor will verify the existence of
bitcoin held in custody by the Trust. In
addition, the Trust’s insurance carriers
will have inspection rights associated
with the bitcoin held in custody by the
Trust.
bitcoin Market Price
In the ordinary course of business, the
Administrator will value the bitcoin
held by the Trust based on the closing
price set by the MVBTCO or one of the
other pricing sources set forth below
(each, a ‘‘bitcoin Market Price’’) as of
4:00 p.m. E.T., on the valuation date on
any day that the Exchange is open for
regular trading. For further detail, see (i)
below. If for any reason, and as
determined by the Sponsor, the
Administrator is unable to value the
Trust’s bitcoin using the procedures
described in (i), the Administrator will
value the Trust’s bitcoin using the
cascading set of rules set forth in (ii)
through (iv) below. For the avoidance of
doubt, the Administrator will employ
the below rules sequentially and in the
order as presented, should the Sponsor
determine that one or more specific
rule(s) fails. The Sponsor may
determine that a rule has failed if a
pricing source is unavailable or, in the
judgment of the Sponsor, is deemed
unreliable. To the extent the
Administrator uses any of the cascading
set of rules, the Sponsor will make
public on the Trust’s website the rule
being used.
(i) Except as further described below,
the bitcoin Market Price will be: The
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price set by the MVBTCO as of 4:00 p.m.
E.T., on the valuation date. The
MVBTCO is a real-time U.S. dollardenominated composite reference rate
for the price of bitcoin. The MVBTCO
calculates the intra-day price of bitcoin
every 15 seconds, including the closing
price as of 4:00 p.m. E.T. The intra-day
price and closing price are based on a
methodology that consists of collecting
actual executable bid/ask spreads and
calculating a mid-point price from
constituent bitcoin OTC platforms that
have entered into an agreement with
MVIS. The logic utilized for the
derivation of the daily closing index
level for the MVBTCO is intended to
analyze actual executable bid/ask
spread data, verify and refine the data
set, and yield an objective, fair-market
value of one bitcoin throughout the day
and as of 4:00 p.m. E.T. each weekday,
priced in U.S. dollars.
(ii) In the event that rule (i) above
fails, the bitcoin Market Price will be:
The mid-point price between the bid/
ask obtained by the Sponsor from any
one of the bitcoin OTC platforms
included within the MVBTCO index as
of 4:00 p.m. E.T., on the valuation date.
(iii) In the event that rules (i) and (ii)
above fail, the bitcoin Market Price will
be: The volume weighted average
bitcoin price for the immediately
preceding 24-hour period at 4:00 p.m.
E.T. on the valuation date as published
by an alternative third party’s public
data feed that the Sponsor determines is
reasonably reliable, subject to the
requirement that such data is calculated
based upon a volume weighted average
bitcoin price obtained from the major
U.S. dollar-denominated bitcoin
exchanges (‘‘Second Source’’). Subject
to the next sentence, if the Second
Source becomes unavailable (e.g., data
sources from the Second Source for
bitcoin prices become unavailable,
unwieldy or otherwise impractical for
use), or if the Sponsor determines in
good faith that the Second Source does
not reflect an accurate bitcoin price,
then the Sponsor will, on a best efforts
basis, contact the Second Source in an
attempt to obtain the relevant data. If
after such contact the Second Source
remains unavailable or the Sponsor
continues to believe in good faith that
the Second Source does not reflect an
accurate bitcoin price, then the
Administrator will employ the next rule
to determine the bitcoin Market Price.
(iv) In the event that rules (i), (ii), and
(iii) above fail, the bitcoin Market Price
will be: The Sponsor will use its best
judgment to determine a good faith
estimate of the bitcoin Market Price.
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The Trust
According to the Registration
Statement, the Trust will invest in
bitcoin only. The Trust will either (i)
cause the Sponsor to receive bitcoin
from the Trust in such quantity as may
be necessary to pay the Management Fee
or (ii) sell bitcoin in such quantity as
may be necessary to permit payment in
cash of the Management Fee and other
Trust expenses and liabilities not
assumed by the Sponsor, such as the
bitcoin Insurance Fee, bitcoin storage
fees and salaries of Trust principals and
employees. As a result, the amount of
bitcoin sold will vary from time to time
depending on the level of the Trust’s
expenses and the market price of
bitcoin.
The Trust will pay the Sponsor a
management fee as compensation for
services performed on behalf of the
Trust and for services performed in
connection with maintaining the Trust.
The Sponsor’s fee will be payable
monthly in arrears and will be accrued
daily. The bitcoin Insurance Fee will be
payable by the Trust monthly in
advance, as described in the
Registration Statement. Bitcoin storage
fees and salaries of Trust principals and
employees will be payable monthly in
arrears and will be accrued daily.
In exchange for the Management Fee,
the Sponsor has agreed to assume the
following administrative and marketing
expenses incurred by the Trust: Each of
the Trustee’s, Administrator’s, Cash
Custodian’s, Transfer Agent’s and
Marketing Agent’s monthly fee and outof-pocket expenses and expenses
reimbursable in connection with such
service provider’s respective agreement;
the marketing support fees and
expenses; exchange listing fees; SEC
registration fees; index license fees;
printing and mailing costs; maintenance
expenses for the Trust’s website; audit
fees and expenses; and up to $100,000
per annum in legal expenses. The Trust
will be responsible for paying, or for
reimbursing the Sponsor or its affiliates
for paying, all the extraordinary fees and
expenses, if any, of the Trust. The
management fee to be paid to the
Sponsor, the bitcoin Insurance Fee, the
salaries of the Trust’s principals and
employees and the expenses associated
with custody of the Trust’s bitcoin are
expected to be the only ordinary
recurring operating expense of the
Trust.
Net Asset Value
The NAV for the Trust will equal the
market value of the Trust’s total assets,
including bitcoin and cash, less
liabilities of the Trust, which include
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estimated accrued but unpaid fees,
expenses and other liabilities. Under the
Trust’s proposed operational
procedures, the Administrator will
calculate the NAV on each business day
that the Exchange is open for regular
trading, as promptly as practicable after
4:00 p.m. E.T. To calculate the NAV, the
Administrator will use the closing price
set for bitcoin by the MVBTCO or one
of the other bitcoin Market Prices set
forth above. The Administrator will also
determine the NAV per Share by
dividing the NAV of the Trust by the
number of the Shares outstanding as of
the close of trading on Regular Trading
Hours, i.e., 9:30 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. E.T.
(which includes the net number of any
Shares deemed created or redeemed on
such day).
According to the Registration
Statement, Authorized Participants (as
defined in ‘‘Creation and Redemption of
Shares’’ below), or their clients or
customers, may have an opportunity to
realize a riskless profit if they can create
a Basket (as defined in ‘‘Creation and
Redemption of Shares’’ below) at a
discount to the public trading price of
the Shares or can redeem a Basket at a
premium over the public trading price
of the Shares. The Sponsor expects that
the exploitation of such arbitrage
opportunities by Authorized
Participants and their clients and
customers will tend to cause the public
trading price to track NAV per Share
closely over time. Such arbitrage
opportunities will not be available to
holders of Shares who are not
Authorized Participants.
While the Trust’s investment
objective is for the Shares to reflect the
performance of the price of bitcoin, less
expenses of the Trust’s operations, the
Shares may trade in the secondary
market at prices that are lower or higher
relative to their NAV per Share for a
number of reasons, including price
volatility, trading volume, and closing
of bitcoin trading platforms due to
fraud, failure, security breaches or
otherwise.
The NAV per Share may fluctuate
with changes in the market value of the
bitcoin held by the Trust. The value of
the Shares may be influenced by nonconcurrent trading hours between the
Exchange and the various bitcoin OTC
platforms comprising the MVBTCO. As
a result, there will be periods when the
Exchange is closed and the bitcoin OTC
platforms continue to trade. Significant
changes in the price of bitcoin during
such time periods could result in a
difference between the value of bitcoin
as measured by the MVBTCO and the
most recent NAV per Share or closing
trading price. The Exchange, however,
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expects that any meaningful divergence
in the intraday price of the Shares and
the MVTCO will be quickly arbitraged
away when trading is available on the
Exchange because when such a discount
or premium exists, Authorized
Participants will generally be able to
create or redeem a Basket of Shares at
a discount or a premium to the public
trading price per Share.
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Impact on Arbitrage
Investors and market participants are
able throughout the trading day to
compare the market price of the Shares
and the Share’s IIV. If the market price
of the Shares diverges significantly from
the IIV, Authorized Participants will
have strong economic incentive to
execute arbitrage trades. Because of the
potential for arbitrage inherent in the
structure of the Trust, the Sponsor
believes that the Shares will not trade at
a material discount or premium to the
underlying bitcoin held by the Trust. If
the price of the Shares deviates enough
from the price of bitcoin to create a
material discount or premium, an
arbitrage opportunity is created. If the
Shares are inexpensive compared to the
bitcoin that underlies them, an
arbitrageur may buy the Shares at a
discount, immediately redeem them in
exchange for bitcoin, and sell the
bitcoin in the cash market at a profit. If
the Shares are expensive compared to
the bitcoin that underlies them, an
arbitrageur may sell the Shares short,
buy enough bitcoin to acquire the
number of Shares sold short, acquire the
Shares through the creation process, and
deliver the Shares to close out the short
position. To facilitate the arbitrage
process, Authorized Participants may
source bitcoin through the OTC market
or on exchanges; alternatively,
Authorized Participants may create or
redeem for cash and the Trust will
source buyers and sellers of bitcoin in
the OTC market. The arbitrage process,
which in general provides investors the
opportunity to profit from differences in
prices of assets, increases the efficiency
of the markets, serves to prevent
potentially manipulative efforts, and
can be expected to operate efficiently in
the case of the Shares and bitcoin.
Creation and Redemption of Shares
According to the Registration
Statement, the Trust will issue and
redeem ‘‘Baskets’’, each equal to a block
of 5 Shares, only to ‘‘Authorized
Participants’’ (as described below). The
size of a Basket is subject to change. The
creation and redemption of a Basket
require the delivery to the Trust, or the
distribution by the Trust, of the number
of whole and fractional bitcoins or the
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U.S. dollar equivalent represented by
each Basket being created or redeemed,
the number of which is determined by
dividing the number of bitcoins owned
by the Trust at such time by the number
of Shares outstanding at such time
(calculated to one one-hundredmillionth of one bitcoin), as adjusted for
the number of whole and fractional
bitcoins constituting accrued but unpaid
fees and expenses of the Trust and
multiplying the quotient obtained by 5
(‘‘bitcoin Basket Amount’’). The bitcoin
Basket Amount will gradually decrease
over time as the Trust’s bitcoin are used
to pay the Trust’s expenses. According
to the Registration Statement, as of the
date of the Registration Statement, each
Share currently represents
approximately 25 bitcoin.
Orders to create and redeem Baskets
may be placed only by Authorized
Participants.12 A transaction fee will be
assessed on all creation and redemption
transactions effected in-kind. In
addition, the Trust reserves the right to
charge a variable transaction fee to the
Authorized Participants for creations
and redemptions effected in cash to
cover the Trust’s expenses related to
purchasing and selling bitcoin in the
OTC market or on bitcoin exchanges if
such expenses should exceed the fixed
$1,000 transaction fee. The variable
transaction fee would cover actual
expenses paid for the purchase and sale
of bitcoin in order that such expenses
do not decrease the NAV of the Trust.
Such expenses may vary, but the Trust
expects such expenses, should they
occur in the future, to constitute 1% or
less of the value of a Basket. The
creation and redemption of a Basket
requires the delivery to the Trust, or the
distribution by the Trust, of the bitcoin
Basket Amount (that is, the number of
bitcoins represented by each Basket or
the U.S. dollar equivalent), for each
Basket to be created or redeemed. The
bitcoin Basket Amount multiplied by
the number of Baskets being created or
redeemed is the ‘‘Total bitcoin Basket
Amount.’’
Creation Procedures
On any business day, an Authorized
Participant may place an order with the
Transfer Agent to create one or more
12 An Authorized Participant must: (1) Be a
registered broker-dealer and a member in good
standing with the Financial Industry Regulatory
Authority (‘‘FINRA’’); (2) be a participant in
Depository Trust Company (‘‘DTC’’). To become an
Authorized Participant, a person must enter into an
‘‘Authorized Participant Agreement’’ with the
Sponsor and the Transfer Agent. The Authorized
Participant Agreement provides the procedures for
the creation and redemption of Baskets and for the
delivery of the cash (and, potentially, bitcoin inkind) required for such creations and redemptions.
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Baskets. For purposes of processing both
purchase and redemption orders, a
‘‘business day’’ means any day other
than a day when the Exchange is closed
for regular trading. Cash purchase
orders must be placed by 3:00 p.m. E.T.,
or the close of regular trading on the
Exchange, whichever is earlier, and inkind purchase orders must be placed by
4:00 p.m. E.T., or the close of regular
trading on the Exchange, whichever is
earlier. The day on which the Transfer
Agent receives a valid purchase order,
as approved by the Marketing Agent, is
the purchase order date. Purchase
orders are irrevocable. By placing a
purchase order, and prior to delivery of
such Baskets, an Authorized
Participant’s DTC account will be
charged the non-refundable transaction
fee due for the purchase order.
Determination of Required Payment
The total payment required to create
each Basket is determined by
calculating the NAV of 5 Shares of the
Trust as of the closing time of the
Exchange on the purchase order date.
Baskets are issued as of 2:00 p.m., E.T.,
on the business day immediately
following the purchase order date at the
applicable NAV as of the closing time of
the Exchange on the purchase order
date, but only if the required payment
has been timely received.
Orders to purchase Baskets for cash
must be placed no later than 3:00 p.m.
E.T., or the close of regular trading on
the Exchange, whichever is earlier, and
orders to purchase Baskets in-kind must
be placed no later than 4:00 p.m. E.T.,
or the close of regular trading on the
Exchange, whichever is earlier. For cash
creation orders, the total cash payment
required to create a Basket will not be
determined until approximately 4:00
p.m., E.T. (the time at which the Trust’s
NAV for that day is expected to be
calculated) on the date the purchase
order is received by the Transfer Agent
and approved by the Marketing Agent.
Authorized Participants therefore will
not know the total amount of the
payment required to create a Basket at
the time they submit an irrevocable
purchase order for the Basket. Valid
cash orders to purchase Baskets
received after 3:00 p.m. E.T., and valid
in-kind orders to purchase Baskets
received after 4:00 p.m. E.T., are
considered received on the following
business day. The NAV of the Trust, and
thus the total amount of the payment
required to create a Basket for cash
could rise or fall substantially between
the time an irrevocable purchase order
is submitted and the time the amount of
the purchase price in respect thereof is
determined. Changes to the price of
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bitcoin between the time an order is
placed and the time the final price is
determined by the Trust will be borne
by the Authorized Participant and not
by the Trust.
The Sponsor makes available through
the National Securities Clearing
Corporation (‘‘NSCC’’) on each business
day, prior to the opening of business on
the Exchange (a) the amount of cash
required for a cash creation of a Basket
(the ‘‘Cash Basket Amount’’), based on
100% of the NAV of the Shares per
Basket as of the prior business day,
which amount is applicable in order to
effect cash purchases of Baskets until
such time as the next announced
amount is made available and (b) the
bitcoin Basket Amount.
The payment required to create a
Basket typically will be made in cash,
but it may also be made partially or
wholly in-kind at the discretion of the
Sponsor if the Authorized Participant
requests to convey bitcoin directly to
the Trust. For a cash order to create, the
Authorized Participant must deliver the
Cash Basket Amount to the Cash
Custodian on the day the order is placed
and accepted and, potentially, an
amount of cash on the business day after
the order is placed and approved
referred to as the ‘‘Balancing Amount,’’
computed as described below. Upon
delivery of the Cash Basket Amount and
the Balancing Amount to the Cash
Custodian, the Transfer Agent will
cause the Trust to issue a Basket to the
Authorized Participant. Expenses
incurred by the Trust relating to
purchasing bitcoin in assembling a cash
creation Basket, such as OTC market
fees, bitcoin exchange-related fees and/
or transaction fees, will be borne by
Authorized Participants, rather than the
Trust, through the transaction fee
charged by the Trust.
The Balancing Amount is an amount
equal to the difference between the NAV
of the Shares (per Basket) at the end of
the business day the order is placed and
approved and the Cash Basket Amount.
The Balancing Amount serves to
compensate for any difference between
the NAV per Basket and the Cash Basket
Amount. The Balancing Amount may be
positive (in which case the Authorized
Participant will be required to transfer
the corresponding amount of cash to the
Cash Custodian) or negative (in which
case the amount of cash required to be
transferred by the Authorized
Participant will be less than the Cash
Basket Amount, and if the Authorized
Participant has already delivered the
full Cash Basket Amount, the
corresponding amount of cash will be
returned to the Authorized Participant).
Authorized Participants will be notified
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of the Balancing Amount that must be
paid to the Cash Custodian or refunded
by the Cash Custodian, if any, by
approximately 4:00 p.m., E.T. on the
business day the order is placed and
approved. The Balancing Amount must
be paid to the Cash Custodian no later
than 2:00 p.m. E.T. on the business day
following the date the order was placed
and approved. Upon delivery of the
Cash Basket Amount and Balancing
Amount to the Cash Custodian, the
Transfer Agent will cause the Trust to
issue a Basket to the Authorized
Participant the following business day
by 2:00 p.m., E.T.
To the extent the Authorized
Participant places an in-kind order to
create, the Authorized Participant must
deliver the Bitcoin Basket Amount
directly to the Trust (i.e., to the security
system that holds the Trust’s bitcoin) no
later than 4:00 p.m. E.T. on the date the
purchase order is received and
approved. Upon delivery of the bitcoin
to the Trust’s security system, the
Transfer Agent will cause the Trust to
issue a Basket to the Authorized
Participant the following business day
by 2:00 p.m., E.T. Payment of any tax or
other fees and expenses payable upon
transfer of bitcoin shall be the sole
responsibility of the Authorized
Participant purchasing a Basket.
Expenses incurred by Authorized
Participants relating to purchasing
bitcoin in assembling an in-kind
creation Basket, such as OTC market
fees, bitcoin exchange-related fees and/
or transaction fees, will be borne by
Authorized Participants.
The Administrator, by email or
telephone correspondence, shall notify
the Authorized Participant of the NAV
of the Trust and the corresponding
amount of cash (in the case of a cash
purchase order) to be included in a
Balancing Amount by approximately
4:00 p.m. E.T. on the day the purchase
order is placed and approved.
Redemption Procedures
The procedures by which an
Authorized Participant can redeem one
or more Baskets mirror the procedures
for the creation of Baskets. On any
business day, an Authorized Participant
may place an order with the Transfer
Agent to redeem one or more Baskets.
Cash redemption orders must be placed
no later than 3:00 p.m. E.T., or the close
of regular trading on the New York
Stock Exchange, whichever is earlier,
and redemption orders submitted inkind must be placed by 4:00 p.m. E.T.,
or the close of regular trading on the
Exchange, whichever is earlier. The day
on which the Transfer Agent receives a
valid redemption order, as approved by
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the Marketing Agent, is the ‘‘redemption
order date.’’ Redemption orders are
irrevocable. The redemption procedures
allow only Authorized Participants to
redeem Baskets. A shareholder may not
redeem Baskets other than through an
Authorized Participant.
By placing a redemption order, an
Authorized Participant agrees to deliver
the Baskets to be redeemed through
DTC’s book-entry system to the Trust
not later than 4:00 p.m. E.T. on the
business day immediately following the
redemption order date. By placing a
redemption order, and prior to receipt of
the redemption proceeds, an Authorized
Participant’s DTC account will be
charged the non-refundable transaction
fee due for the redemption order.
Determination of Redemption Proceeds
The redemption proceeds from the
Trust consist of the ‘‘cash redemption
amount’’ or, if making an in-kind
redemption, bitcoin. The cash
redemption amount is equal to the U.S.
dollar equivalent of the Total bitcoin
Basket Amount requested in the
Authorized Participant’s redemption
order as of the end of Regular Trading
Hours on the redemption order date.
The Cash Custodian will distribute the
cash redemption amount at 4:00 p.m.,
E.T., on the business day immediately
following the redemption order date
through DTC to the account of the
Authorized Participant as recorded on
DTC’s book-entry system. The bitcoin
redemption amount will be the Total
bitcoin Basket Amount. At the
discretion of the Sponsor and if the
Authorized Participant requests to
receive bitcoin directly, some or all of
the redemption proceeds may be
distributed to the Authorized
Participant in-kind by the Trust.
Orders to redeem Baskets must be
placed no later than 3:00 p.m. E.T. for
cash redemption orders and 4:00 p.m.
E.T. for in-kind redemptions orders, but
the total amount of redemption
proceeds typically will not be
determined until after 4:00 p.m. E.T. on
the date the redemption order is
received. Authorized Participants
therefore will not know the total amount
of the redemption proceeds at the time
they submit an irrevocable redemption
order.
Delivery of Redemption Proceeds
The redemption proceeds due from
the Trust are delivered to the
Authorized Participant at 4:00 p.m. E.T.
on the business day immediately
following the redemption order date if,
by such time on such business day
immediately following the redemption
order date, the Trust’s DTC account has
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been credited with the Baskets to be
redeemed. If the Trust’s DTC account
has not been credited with all of the
Baskets to be redeemed by such time,
the redemption distribution is delivered
to the extent of whole Baskets received.
The Sponsor may, but is not obligated
to, extend the redemption date with
respect to a redemption order for which
whole Baskets have not been delivered
by the Authorized Participant. In such
event, the Sponsor may charge the
Authorized Participant a fee for such
extension to reimburse the Trust for any
losses incurred from the Authorized
Participant’s failure to deliver whole
Baskets (including, but not limited to,
expenses incurred in selling bitcoin in
respect of the redemption order and/or
buying bitcoin back following the
failure of the Authorized Participant to
deliver whole Baskets, as well as losses
to the Trust from movements in the
market value of bitcoin between selling
the bitcoin and buying it back). If the
Sponsor extends the redemption date,
any remainder of the redemption
distribution is delivered on the next
business day to the extent of remaining
whole Baskets received if the Sponsor
receives the fee applicable to the
extension of the redemption distribution
date and the remaining Baskets to be
redeemed are credited to the Trust’s
DTC account by 4:00 p.m. E.T. on such
next business day. Any further
outstanding amount of the redemption
order shall be cancelled.
The Sponsor makes available through
the NSCC, prior to the opening of
business on the Exchange on each
business day, (a) for in-kind
redemptions, the amount of bitcoin per
Basket and (b) for cash redemptions, the
amount of cash per Basket that will be
applicable to redemption requests
received in proper form.
As with creation orders, the NAV of
the Shares per Basket as of the day on
which a redemption request is received
and approved will be calculated after
the deadline for redemption orders. The
amount of cash payable per Basket for
a cash redemption order accordingly
will be calculated after the redemption
order is received. The Administrator, by
email or telephone correspondence,
shall notify the Authorized Participant
of the NAV of the Trust and the
corresponding amount of cash (in the
case of a cash redemption order) to be
payable per Basket by approximately
4:00 p.m. E.T. on the day the purchase
order is placed and approved.
To the extent the Authorized
Participant places an in-kind order to
redeem a Basket, the Trust will deliver,
on the business day immediately
following the day the redemption order
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is received, the Total bitcoin Basket
Amount. Expenses relating to
transferring bitcoin to an Authorized
Participant in a redemption Basket will
be borne by Authorized Participants via
the redemption transaction fee.
Availability of Information
The Trust’s website will provide an
IIV per Share updated every 15 seconds,
as calculated by the Exchange or a third
party financial data provider during the
Exchange’s Regular Trading Hours (9:30
a.m. to 4:00 p.m. E.T.). The IIV will be
calculated by using the prior day’s
closing NAV per Share as a base and
updating that value during Regular
Trading Hours to reflect changes in the
value of the Trust’s bitcoin holdings
during the trading day.
The IIV disseminated during Regular
Trading Hours should not be viewed as
an actual real-time update of the NAV,
which will be calculated only once at
the end of each trading day. The IIV will
be widely disseminated on a per Share
basis every 15 seconds during the
Exchange’s Regular Trading Hours by
one or more major market data vendors.
In addition, the IIV will be available
through on-line information services.
The website for the Trust, which will
be publicly accessible at no charge, will
contain the following information: (a)
The current NAV per Share daily and
the prior business day’s NAV and the
reported closing price; (b) the mid-point
of the bid-ask price 13 in relation to the
NAV as of the time the NAV is
calculated (‘‘Bid-Ask Price’’) and a
calculation of the premium or discount
of such price against such NAV; (c) data
in chart form displaying the frequency
distribution of discounts and premiums
of the Bid-Ask Price against the NAV,
within appropriate ranges for each of
the four previous calendar quarters (or
for the life of the Trust, if shorter); (d)
the prospectus; and (e) other applicable
quantitative information. The Trust will
also disseminate the Trust’s holdings on
a daily basis on the Trust’s website. The
price of bitcoin will be made available
by one or more major market data
vendors, updated at least every 15
seconds during Regular Trading Hours.
Information about the MVBTCO,
including key elements of how the
MVBTCO is calculated, will be publicly
available at www.mvis-indices.com/.
The NAV for the Trust will be
calculated by the Administrator once a
day and will be disseminated daily to
all market participants at the same time.
13 The bid-ask price of the Trust is determined
using the highest bid and lowest offer on the
Consolidated Tape as of the time of calculation of
the closing day NAV.
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31023
To the extent that the Administrator has
utilized the cascading set of rules
described in ‘‘bitcoin Market Price’’
above, the Trust’s website will note the
valuation methodology used and the
price per bitcoin resulting from such
calculation. Quotation and last-sale
information regarding the Shares will be
disseminated through the facilities of
the Consolidated Tape Association
(‘‘CTA’’).
Quotation and last sale information
for bitcoin is widely disseminated
through a variety of major market data
vendors, including Bloomberg and
Reuters, as well as the MVBTCO.
Information relating to trading,
including price and volume
information, in bitcoin is available from
major market data vendors and from the
exchanges on which bitcoin are traded.
Depth of book information is also
available from bitcoin exchanges. The
normal trading hours for bitcoin
exchanges are 24 hours per day, 365
days per year.
The Trust will provide website
disclosure of its bitcoin holdings daily.
The website disclosure of the Trust’s
bitcoin holdings will occur at the same
time as the disclosure by the Sponsor of
the bitcoin holdings to Authorized
Participants so that all market
participants are provided such portfolio
information at the same time. Therefore,
the same portfolio information will be
provided on the public website as well
as in electronic files provided to
Authorized Participants. Accordingly,
each investor will have access to the
current bitcoin holdings of the Trust
through the Trust’s website.
Rule 14.11(e)(4)—Commodity-Based
Trust Shares
The Shares will be subject to BZX
Rule 14.11(e)(4), which sets forth the
initial and continued listing criteria
applicable to Commodity-Based Trust
Shares. The Exchange will obtain a
representation that the Trust’s NAV will
be calculated daily and that these values
and information about the assets of the
Trust will be made available to all
market participants at the same time.
The Exchange notes that, as defined in
Rule 14.11(e)(4)(C)(i), the Shares will be:
(a) Issued by a trust that holds a
specified commodity 14 deposited with
the trust; (b) issued by such trust in a
specified aggregate minimum number in
return for a deposit of a quantity of the
underlying commodity; and (c) when
14 For purposes of Rule 14.11(e)(4), the term
commodity takes on the definition of the term as
provided in the Commodity Exchange Act. As noted
above, the CFTC has opined that Bitcoin is a
commodity as defined in Section 1a(9) of the
Commodity Exchange Act. See Coinflip.
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aggregated in the same specified
minimum number, may be redeemed at
a holder’s request by such trust which
will deliver to the redeeming holder the
quantity of the underlying commodity.
The Exchange notes that in addition to
the in-kind creation and redemption
processes described in Rule
14.11(e)(4)(C)(i), the Trust will also offer
creations and redemptions of Shares for
cash in addition to creating and
redeeming in-kind. The Trust represents
that the ability to create and redeem for
cash will allow APs that may otherwise
be unwilling or unable to source bitcoin
on their own behalf to participate in the
creation and redemption of Shares.
Upon termination of the Trust, the
Shares will be removed from listing.
The Trustee, Delaware Trust Company,
is a trust company having substantial
capital and surplus and the experience
and facilities for handling corporate
trust business, as required under Rule
14.11(e)(4)(E)(iv)(a) and that no change
will be made to the trustee without prior
notice to and approval of the Exchange.
The Exchange also notes that, pursuant
to Rule 14.11(e)(4)(F), neither the
Exchange nor any agent of the Exchange
shall have any liability for damages,
claims, losses or expenses caused by
any errors, omissions or delays in
calculating or disseminating any
underlying commodity value, the
current value of the underlying
commodity required to be deposited to
the Trust in connection with issuance of
Commodity-Based Trust Shares;
resulting from any negligent act or
omission by the Exchange, or any agent
of the Exchange, or any act, condition or
cause beyond the reasonable control of
the Exchange, its agent, including, but
not limited to, an act of God; fire; flood;
extraordinary weather conditions; war;
insurrection; riot; strike; accident;
action of government; communications
or power failure; equipment or software
malfunction; or any error, omission or
delay in the reports of transactions in an
underlying commodity. Finally, as
required in Rule 14.11(e)(4)(G), the
Exchange notes that any registered
market maker (‘‘Market Maker’’) in the
Shares must file with the Exchange in
a manner prescribed by the Exchange
and keep current a list identifying all
accounts for trading in an underlying
commodity, related commodity futures
or options on commodity futures, or any
other related commodity derivatives,
which the registered Market Maker may
have or over which it may exercise
investment discretion. No registered
Market Maker shall trade in an
underlying commodity, related
commodity futures or options on
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commodity futures, or any other related
commodity derivatives, in an account in
which a registered Market Maker,
directly or indirectly, controls trading
activities, or has a direct interest in the
profits or losses thereof, which has not
been reported to the Exchange as
required by this Rule. In addition to the
existing obligations under Exchange
rules regarding the production of books
and records (see, e.g., Rule 4.2), the
registered Market Maker in CommodityBased Trust Shares shall make available
to the Exchange such books, records or
other information pertaining to
transactions by such entity or registered
or non-registered employee affiliated
with such entity for its or their own
accounts for trading the underlying
physical commodity, related commodity
futures or options on commodity
futures, or any other related commodity
derivatives, as may be requested by the
Exchange.
The Trust currently expects that there
will be at least 100 Shares outstanding
at the time of commencement of trading
on the Exchange, which the Exchange
believes to be sufficient to provide
adequate market liquidity. Assuming a
bitcoin price of $8,000 and
approximately 25 bitcoin per Share, the
Shares would be approximately
$200,000 each. With a minimum of 100
Shares outstanding, the market value of
all Shares outstanding would be
approximately $20,000,000. Rules
14.11(e)(4)(C)(ii)(b) [sic] and (c) provide
that the Exchange will commence
delisting proceedings for a series of
Commodity-Based Trust Shares where
the applicable trust has fewer than
50,000 receipts or the market value of
all receipts issued and outstanding is
less than $1,000,000, respectively,
following the initial 12 month period
following commencement of trading on
the Exchange. These rules are designed
to ensure that there are sufficient shares
and market value outstanding to
facilitate the creation and redemption
process and ensure that the arbitrage
mechanism will keep the price of a
series of Commodity-Based Trust Shares
in line with its NAV and prevent
manipulation in the shares. The
Exchange is proposing that Rule
14.11(e)(4)(C)(ii)(b) [sic] would not
apply to the Shares because the
Exchange believes that such policy
concerns are otherwise mitigated. The
lower number of Shares is merely a
function of price that will have no
impact on the creation and redemption
process and the arbitrage mechanism.
Whether the Shares are priced equal to
25 bitcoin with a Basket of 5 Shares or
the Shares are priced equal to .025
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bitcoin with a Basket of 5,000 Shares,
the cost to an AP to create or redeem
will be the exact same and such a
creation and redemption will have the
same proportional impact on Shares and
market value outstanding. Because the
creation units and redemption units for
most exchange-traded products are
between 5,000 and 50,000 shares, it
makes sense to apply a minimum
number of shares outstanding to such
products. Where a creation unit is 5
shares, the policy concerns that Rule
14.11(e)(4)(C)(ii)(b) [sic] is designed to
address are mitigated even where there
are significantly fewer shares
outstanding. As such, the Exchange is
proposing that it would not commence
delisting proceedings for the Shares if
the Shares do not satisfy Rule
14.11(e)(4)(C)(ii)(b) [sic].
Trading Halts
With respect to trading halts, the
Exchange may consider all relevant
factors in exercising its discretion to
halt or suspend trading in the Shares.
The Exchange will halt trading in the
Shares under the conditions specified in
BZX Rule 11.18. Trading may be halted
because of market conditions or for
reasons that, in the view of the
Exchange, make trading in the Shares
inadvisable. These may include: (1) The
extent to which trading is not occurring
in the bitcoin underlying the Shares; or
(2) whether other unusual conditions or
circumstances detrimental to the
maintenance of a fair and orderly
market are present. Trading in the
Shares also will be subject to Rule
14.11(e)(4)(E)(ii), which sets forth
circumstances under which trading in
the Shares may be halted.
Trading Rules
The Exchange deems the Shares to be
equity securities, thus rendering trading
in the Shares subject to the Exchange’s
existing rules governing the trading of
equity securities. BZX will allow trading
in the Shares from 8:00 a.m. until 5:00
p.m. Eastern Time. The Exchange has
appropriate rules to facilitate
transactions in the Shares during all
trading sessions. As provided in BZX
Rule 11.11(a) the minimum price
variation for quoting and entry of orders
in securities traded on the Exchange is
$0.01 where the price is greater than
$1.00 per share or $0.0001 where the
price is less than $1.00 per share.
Surveillance
The Exchange believes that its
surveillance procedures are adequate to
properly monitor the trading of the
Shares on the Exchange during all
trading sessions and to deter and detect
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violations of Exchange rules and the
applicable federal securities laws.
Trading of the Shares through the
Exchange will be subject to the
Exchange’s surveillance procedures for
derivative products, including
Commodity-Based Trust Shares. The
issuer has represented to the Exchange
that it will advise the Exchange of any
failure by the Trust or the Shares to
comply with the continued listing
requirements, and, pursuant to its
obligations under Section 19(g)(1) of the
Exchange Act, the Exchange will surveil
for compliance with the continued
listing requirements. If the Trust or the
Shares are not in compliance with the
applicable listing requirements, the
Exchange will commence delisting
procedures under Exchange Rule 14.12.
The Exchange may obtain information
regarding trading in the Shares and
listed bitcoin derivatives via the
Intermarket Surveillance Group (‘‘ISG’’),
from other exchanges who are members
or affiliates of the ISG, or with which
the Exchange has entered into a
comprehensive surveillance sharing
agreement.15 In addition, the Exchange
may obtain information about bitcoin
transactions, trades and market data
from bitcoin exchanges with which the
Exchange has entered into a
comprehensive surveillance sharing
agreement as well as certain additional
information that is publicly available
through the Bitcoin blockchain. The
Exchange notes that it has entered into
a comprehensive surveillance sharing
agreement with Gemini Exchange.
Information Circular
Prior to the commencement of
trading, the Exchange will inform its
members in an Information Circular of
the special characteristics and risks
associated with trading the Shares.
Specifically, the Information Circular
will discuss the following: (i) The
procedures for the creation and
redemption of Baskets (and that the
Shares are not individually redeemable);
(ii) BZX Rule 3.7, which imposes
suitability obligations on Exchange
members with respect to recommending
transactions in the Shares to customers;
(iii) how information regarding the IIV
and the Trust’s NAV are disseminated;
(iv) the risks involved in trading the
Shares during the Pre-Opening 16 and
After Hours Trading Sessions 17 when
an updated IIV will not be calculated or
publicly disseminated; (v) the
15 For a list of the current members and affiliate
members of ISG, see www.isgportal.com.
16 The Pre-Opening Session is from 8:00 a.m. to
9:30 a.m. Eastern Time.
17 The After Hours Trading Session is from 4:00
p.m. to 5:00 p.m. Eastern Time.
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requirement that members deliver a
prospectus to investors purchasing
newly issued Shares prior to or
concurrently with the confirmation of a
transaction; and (vi) trading
information.
In addition, the Information Circular
will advise members, prior to the
commencement of trading, of the
prospectus delivery requirements
applicable to the Shares. Members
purchasing the Shares for resale to
investors will deliver a prospectus to
such investors. The Information Circular
will also discuss any exemptive, noaction and interpretive relief granted by
the Commission from any rules under
the Act.
Policy Considerations
The Exchange recognizes that certain
policy concerns exist as it relates to any
series of Commodity-Based Trust Shares
that are listed on the Exchange, but that
these concerns, as well as certain other
concerns raised by this proposal
specifically, are mitigated as it relates to
the Trust and its holdings for the
reasons enumerated below.
First, the Exchange believes that the
policy concerns related to an underlying
reference asset and its susceptibility to
manipulation are mitigated as it relates
to bitcoin because the very nature of the
bitcoin ecosystem makes manipulation
of bitcoin difficult. Particularly, in the
OTC markets, the dual elements of
principal to principal trading combined
with the large size at which trades are
effected should effectively eliminate the
ability of market participants to
manipulate the market with small trades
as may be the case on any individual
exchange. As noted above, the OTC
desks that comprise the MVBTCO with
which the Trust intends to effect
transactions are well established
institutions that comply with AML and
KYC regulatory requirements with
respect to trading counterparties and
include entities that are regulated by the
SEC and FINRA as registered brokerdealers and affiliates of broker-dealers.
It is the Sponsor’s position that the OTC
desks have a better measure of the
market than any exchange-specific
reference price, whether individually or
indexed across multiple exchanges. The
geographically diverse and continuous
nature of bitcoin trading makes it
difficult and prohibitively costly to
manipulate the price of bitcoin and, in
many instances, the bitcoin market is
generally less susceptible to
manipulation than the equity, fixed
income, and commodity futures
markets. There are a number of reasons
this is the case, including that there is
not inside information about revenue,
PO 00000
Frm 00117
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
31025
earnings, corporate activities, or sources
of supply; it is generally not possible to
disseminate false or misleading
information about bitcoin in order to
manipulate; manipulation of the price
on any single venue would require
manipulation of the global bitcoin price
in order to be effective; a substantial
over-the-counter market provides
liquidity and shock-absorbing capacity;
bitcoin’s 24/7/365 nature provides
constant arbitrage opportunities across
all trading venues; and it is unlikely that
any one actor could obtain a dominant
market share.
Further, bitcoin is arguably less
susceptible to manipulation than other
commodities that underlie ETPs; there
may be inside information relating to
the supply of the physical commodity
such as the discovery of new sources of
supply or significant disruptions at
mining facilities that supply the
commodity that simply are inapplicable
as it relates to bitcoin. Further, the
Exchange believes that the
fragmentation across bitcoin platforms,
the relatively slow speed of
transactions, and the capital necessary
to maintain a significant presence on
each trading platform make
manipulation of bitcoin prices through
continuous trading activity unlikely.
Moreover, the linkage between the
bitcoin markets and the presence of
arbitrageurs in those markets means that
the manipulation of the price of bitcoin
price on any single venue would require
manipulation of the global bitcoin price
in order to be effective. Arbitrageurs
must have funds distributed across
multiple trading platforms in order to
take advantage of temporary price
dislocations, thereby making it unlikely
that there will be strong concentration
of funds on any particular bitcoin
exchange or OTC platform. As a result,
the potential for manipulation on a
trading platform would require
overcoming the liquidity supply of such
arbitrageurs who are effectively
eliminating any cross-market pricing
differences. For all of these reasons,
bitcoin is not particularly susceptible to
manipulation, especially as compared to
other approved ETP reference assets.
Second, the Trust maintains crime,
excess crime and excess vault risk
insurance coverage underwritten by
various insurance carriers that will
cover the entirety of the Trust’s bitcoin
holdings. While the Trust remains fully
confident in its system for securing its
bitcoin, insurance coverage of all of the
Trust’s bitcoin holdings eliminates
exposure to the risk of loss to investors
through fraud or theft, which in turn
eliminates most of the custodial issues
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02JYN1
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daltland on DSKBBV9HB2PROD with NOTICES
associated with a series of CommodityBased Trust Shares based on bitcoin.
Finally, the Sponsor expects that the
Shares will be purchased primarily by
institutional and other substantial
investors (such as hedge funds, family
offices, private wealth managers and
high-net-worth individuals), which will
provide additional liquidity and
transparency to the bitcoin market in a
regulated vehicle such as the Trust.
With an estimated initial per-share price
equivalent to 25 bitcoin, the Shares will
be cost-prohibitive for smaller retail
investors while allowing larger and
generally more sophisticated
institutional investors to gain exposure
to the price of bitcoin through a
regulated product while eliminating the
complications and reducing the risk
associated with buying and holding
bitcoin.
2. Statutory Basis
The Exchange believes that the
proposal is consistent with Section 6(b)
of the Act 18 in general and Section
6(b)(5) of the Act 19 in particular in that
it is designed to prevent fraudulent and
manipulative acts and practices, to
promote just and equitable principles of
trade, to foster cooperation and
coordination with persons engaged in
facilitating transactions in securities, to
remove impediments to and perfect the
mechanism of a free and open market
and a national market system and, in
general, to protect investors and the
public interest.
The Exchange believes that the
proposed rule change is designed to
prevent fraudulent and manipulative
acts and practices in that the Shares will
be listed on the Exchange pursuant to
the initial and continued listing criteria
in Exchange Rule 14.11(e)(4). The
Exchange believes that its surveillance
procedures are adequate to properly
monitor the trading of the Shares on the
Exchange during all trading sessions
and to deter and detect violations of
Exchange rules and the applicable
federal securities laws. Trading of the
Shares through the Exchange will be
subject to the Exchange’s surveillance
procedures for derivative products,
including Commodity-Based Trust
Shares. The issuer has represented to
the Exchange that it will advise the
Exchange of any failure by the Trust or
the Shares to comply with the
continued listing requirements, and,
pursuant to its obligations under
Section 19(g)(1) of the Exchange Act, the
Exchange will surveil for compliance
with the continued listing requirements.
18 15
19 15
U.S.C. 78f.
U.S.C. 78f(b)(5).
VerDate Sep<11>2014
17:40 Jun 29, 2018
Jkt 244001
If the Trust or the Shares are not in
compliance with the applicable listing
requirements, the Exchange will
commence delisting procedures under
Exchange Rule 14.12. The Exchange
may obtain information regarding
trading in the Shares and listed bitcoin
derivatives via the ISG, from other
exchanges who are members or affiliates
of the ISG, or with which the Exchange
has entered into a comprehensive
surveillance sharing agreement. In
addition, the Exchange may obtain
information about bitcoin transactions,
trades and market data from bitcoin
exchanges with which the Exchange has
entered into a comprehensive
surveillance sharing agreement as well
as certain additional information that is
publicly available through the Bitcoin
blockchain. The Exchange notes that it
has entered into a comprehensive
surveillance sharing agreement with
Gemini Exchange.
The proposal is designed to perfect
the mechanism of a free and open
market and, in general, to protect
investors and the public interest in that
it will facilitate the listing and trading
of Commodity-Based Trust Shares based
on the price of bitcoin that will enhance
competition among market participants,
to the benefit of investors and to the
marketplace, and will allow institution
and other substantial investors access to
bitcoin exposure without requiring
direct access to the bitcoin market and
the associated complications. Despite
the growing investor interest in bitcoin,
the primary means for investors to gain
access to bitcoin exposure remains
either through direct investment
through bitcoin exchanges, over-thecounter trading, or bitcoin derivatives
contracts. For investors simply wishing
to express an investment viewpoint in
bitcoin, investment through derivatives
is complex and requires active
management and direct investment in
bitcoin brings with it significant
inconvenience, complexity, expense,
and risk. The Shares would therefore
represent a significant innovation in the
bitcoin market by providing an
inexpensive and simple vehicle for
investors to gain exposure to bitcoin in
a secure and easily accessible product
that is familiar and transparent to
investors. Such an innovation would
help to perfect the mechanism of a free
and open market and, in general, to
protect investors and the public interest
by improving investor access to bitcoin
exposure through efficient and
transparent exchange-traded derivative
products.
As noted above, the Sponsor expects
that the Shares will be purchased
primarily by institutional and other
PO 00000
Frm 00118
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
substantial investors (such as hedge
funds, family offices, private wealth
managers and high-net-worth
individuals), which will provide
additional liquidity and transparency to
the bitcoin market in a regulated vehicle
such as the Trust. With an estimated
initial per-share price equivalent to 25
bitcoin, the Shares will be costprohibitive for smaller retail investors
while allowing larger and generally
more sophisticated institutional
investors to gain exposure to the price
of bitcoin through a regulated product
while eliminating the complications and
reducing the risk associated with buying
and holding bitcoin.
The Exchange also believes that
allowing cash creations and
redemptions, in addition to the in-kind
creations described in Rule
14.11(e)(4)(C)(i), will allow APs that
may otherwise be unwilling or unable to
source bitcoin on their own behalf to
participate in the creation and
redemption of Shares, further acting to
perfect the mechanism of a free and
open market and, in general, to protect
investors and the public interest.
The Exchange also believes that not
commencing delisting proceedings for
the Shares if the Shares do not satisfy
Rule 14.11(e)(4)(C)(ii)(b) [sic] is
consistent with the Act because where
a creation unit is 5 shares, the policy
concerns that Rule 14.11(e)(4)(C)(ii)(b)
[sic] is designed to address related to
minimum receipts outstanding
following the 12 month period
following commencement of trading on
the Exchange are mitigated even where
there are significantly fewer shares
outstanding. The Exchange believes that
the lower number of Shares is merely a
function of price that will have no
impact on the creation and redemption
process and the arbitrage mechanism.
The Exchange also believes that the
proposal promotes market transparency
in that a large amount of information is
currently available about bitcoin and
will be available regarding the Trust and
the Shares. The Exchange will obtain a
representation that the Trust’s NAV will
be calculated daily and that these values
and information about the assets of the
Trust will be made available to all
market participants at the same time.
Quotation and last sale information for
bitcoin is widely disseminated through
a variety of major market data vendors,
including Bloomberg and Reuters. The
spot price of bitcoin is available on a 24hour basis from major market data
vendors, including Bloomberg and
Reuters, as well as the MVBTCO.
Information relating to trading,
including price and volume
information, in bitcoin is available from
E:\FR\FM\02JYN1.SGM
02JYN1
daltland on DSKBBV9HB2PROD with NOTICES
Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 127 / Monday, July 2, 2018 / Notices
major market data vendors and from the
exchanges on which bitcoin are traded.
Depth of book information is also
available from bitcoin exchanges. The
normal trading hours for bitcoin
exchanges are 24 hours per day, 365
days per year. The Trust will provide
website disclosure of its bitcoin
holdings daily. The website disclosure
of the Trust’s bitcoin holdings will
occur at the same time as the disclosure
by the Sponsor of the bitcoin holdings
to Authorized Participants so that all
market participants are provided such
portfolio information at the same time.
The website for the Trust, which will be
publicly accessible at no charge, will
contain the following information: (a)
The current NAV per Share daily and
the prior business day’s NAV and the
reported closing price; (b) the Bid-Ask
Price and a calculation of the premium
or discount of such price against such
NAV; (c) data in chart form displaying
the frequency distribution of discounts
and premiums of the Bid-Ask Price
against the NAV, within appropriate
ranges for each of the four previous
calendar quarters (or for the life of the
Trust, if shorter); (d) the prospectus; and
(e) other applicable quantitative
information. The Trust will also
disseminate the Trust’s holdings on a
daily basis on the Trust’s website. The
price of bitcoin will be made available
by one or more major market data
vendors, updated at least every 15
seconds during Regular Trading Hours.
Information about the MVBTCO,
including key elements of how the
MVBTCO is calculated, will be publicly
available at www.mvis-indices.com/.
The IIV will be widely disseminated on
a per Share basis every 15 seconds
during the Exchange’s Regular Trading
Hours by one or more major market data
vendors. In addition, the IIV will be
available through on-line information
services.
The Exchange also recognizes that
certain broader policy concerns exist as
it relates to any series of CommodityBased Trust Shares that are listed on the
Exchange, but that these concerns, as
well as certain other concerns raised by
this proposal and related to bitcoin
specifically, are mitigated as it relates to
the Trust and its holdings for the
reasons enumerated below.
First, the Exchange believes that the
policy concerns related to an underlying
reference asset and its susceptibility to
manipulation are mitigated as it relates
to bitcoin because the very nature of the
bitcoin ecosystem makes manipulation
of bitcoin difficult. Particularly, in the
OTC markets, the dual elements of
principal to principal trading combined
with the large size at which trades are
VerDate Sep<11>2014
17:40 Jun 29, 2018
Jkt 244001
effected should effectively eliminate the
ability of market participants to
manipulate the market with small trades
as may be the case on any individual
exchange. As noted above, the OTC
desks that comprise the MVBTCO with
which the Trust intends to effect
transactions are well established
institutions that comply with AML and
KYC regulatory requirements with
respect to trading counterparties and
include entities that are regulated by the
SEC and FINRA as registered brokerdealers and affiliates of broker-dealers.
It is the Sponsor’s position that the OTC
desks have a better measure of the
market than any exchange-specific
reference price, whether individually or
indexed across multiple exchanges. The
geographically diverse and continuous
nature of bitcoin trading makes it
difficult and prohibitively costly to
manipulate the price of bitcoin and, in
many instances, the bitcoin market is
generally less susceptible to
manipulation than the equity, fixed
income, and commodity futures
markets. There are a number of reasons
this is the case, including that there is
not inside information about revenue,
earnings, corporate activities, or sources
of supply; it is generally not possible to
disseminate false or misleading
information about bitcoin in order to
manipulate; manipulation of the price
on any single venue would require
manipulation of the global bitcoin price
in order to be effective; a substantial
over-the-counter market provides
liquidity and shock-absorbing capacity;
bitcoin’s 24/7/365 nature provides
constant arbitrage opportunities across
all trading venues; and it is unlikely that
any one actor could obtain a dominant
market share.
Further, bitcoin is arguably less
susceptible to manipulation than other
commodities that underlie ETPs; there
may be inside information relating to
the supply of the physical commodity
such as the discovery of new sources of
supply or significant disruptions at
mining facilities that supply the
commodity that simply are inapplicable
as it relates to bitcoin. Further, the
Exchange believes that the
fragmentation across bitcoin platforms,
the relatively slow speed of
transactions, and the capital necessary
to maintain a significant presence on
each trading platform make
manipulation of bitcoin prices through
continuous trading activity unlikely.
Moreover, the linkage between the
bitcoin markets and the presence of
arbitrageurs in those markets means that
the manipulation of the price of bitcoin
price on any single venue would require
PO 00000
Frm 00119
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
31027
manipulation of the global bitcoin price
in order to be effective. Arbitrageurs
must have funds distributed across
multiple trading platforms in order to
take advantage of temporary price
dislocations, thereby making it unlikely
that there will be strong concentration
of funds on any particular bitcoin
exchange or OTC platform. As a result,
the potential for manipulation on a
trading platform would require
overcoming the liquidity supply of such
arbitrageurs who are effectively
eliminating any cross-market pricing
differences. For all of these reasons,
bitcoin is not particularly susceptible to
manipulation, especially as compared to
other approved ETP reference assets.
Second, the Trust maintains crime,
excess crime and excess vault risk
insurance coverage underwritten by
various insurance carriers that will
cover the entirety of the Trust’s bitcoin
holdings. While the Trust remains fully
confident in its system for securing its
bitcoin, insurance coverage of all of the
Trust’s bitcoin holdings eliminates
exposure to the risk of loss to investors
through fraud or theft, which in turn
eliminates most of the custodial issues
associated with a series of CommodityBased Trust Shares based on bitcoin.
For the above reasons, the Exchange
believes that the proposed rule change
is consistent with the requirements of
Section 6(b)(5) of the Act.
B. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement on Burden on Competition
The Exchange does not believe that
the proposed rule change will impose
any burden on competition that is not
necessary or appropriate in furtherance
of the purpose of the Act. The Exchange
notes that the proposed rule change,
rather will facilitate the listing and
trading of an additional exchange-traded
product that will enhance competition
among both market participants and
listing venues, to the benefit of investors
and the marketplace.
C. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement on Comments on the
Proposed Rule Change Received From
Members, Participants, or Others
The Exchange has neither solicited
nor received written comments on the
proposed rule change.
III. Date of Effectiveness of the
Proposed Rule Change and Timing for
Commission Action
Within 45 days of the date of
publication of this notice in the Federal
Register or within such longer period (i)
as the Commission may designate up to
90 days of such date if it finds such
longer period to be appropriate and
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31028
Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 127 / Monday, July 2, 2018 / Notices
publishes its reasons for so finding or
(ii) as to which the Exchange consents,
the Commission will: (a) By order
approve or disapprove such proposed
rule change, or (b) institute proceedings
to determine whether the proposed rule
change should be disapproved.
IV. Solicitation of Comments
Interested persons are invited to
submit written data, views, and
arguments concerning the foregoing,
including whether the proposed rule
change is consistent with the Act.
Comments may be submitted by any of
the following methods:
daltland on DSKBBV9HB2PROD with NOTICES
Electronic Comments
• Use the Commission’s internet
comment form (https://www.sec.gov/
rules/sro.shtml); or
• Send an email to rule-comments@
sec.gov. Please include File Number SR–
CboeBZX–2018–040 on the subject line.
Paper Comments
• Send paper comments in triplicate
to Secretary, Securities and Exchange
Commission, 100 F Street NE,
Washington, DC 20549–1090.
All submissions should refer to File
Number SR–CboeBZX–2018–040. This
file number should be included on the
subject line if email is used. To help the
Commission process and review your
comments more efficiently, please use
only one method. The Commission will
post all comments on the Commission’s
internet website (https://www.sec.gov/
rules/sro.shtml). Copies of the
submission, all subsequent
amendments, all written statements
with respect to the proposed rule
change that are filed with the
Commission, and all written
communications relating to the
proposed rule change between the
Commission and any person, other than
those that may be withheld from the
public in accordance with the
provisions of 5 U.S.C. 552, will be
available for website viewing and
printing in the Commission’s Public
Reference Room, 100 F Street NE,
Washington, DC 20549 on official
business days between the hours of
10:00 a.m. and 3:00 p.m. Copies of such
filing also will be available for
inspection and copying at the principal
office of the Exchange. All comments
received will be posted without change.
Persons submitting comments are
cautioned that we do not redact or edit
personal identifying information from
comment submissions. You should
submit only information that you wish
to make available publicly. All
submissions should refer to File
Number SR–CboeBZX–2018–040, and
VerDate Sep<11>2014
17:40 Jun 29, 2018
Jkt 244001
should be submitted on or before July
23, 2018.
For the Commission, by the Division of
Trading and Markets, pursuant to delegated
authority.20
Eduardo A. Aleman,
Assistant Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2018–14114 Filed 6–29–18; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8011–01–P
SMALL BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION
[Disaster Declaration #15576 and #15577;
MARYLAND Disaster Number MD–00036]
Presidential Declaration of a Major
Disaster for Public Assistance Only for
the State of Maryland
U.S. Small Business
Administration.
ACTION: Notice.
AGENCY:
The Interest Rates are:
Percent
PO 00000
CFR 200.30–3(a)(12).
Frm 00120
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
2.500
2.500
2.500
The number assigned to this disaster
for physical damage is 155766 and for
economic injury is 155770.
(Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance
Number 59008)
James Rivera,
Associate Administrator for Disaster
Assistance.
BILLING CODE 8025–01–P
This is a Notice of the
Presidential declaration of a major
disaster for Public Assistance Only for
the State of Maryland (FEMA–4374–
DR), dated 06/25/2018.
Incident: Severe Storms and Flooding.
Incident Period: 05/15/2018 through
05/19/2018.
DATES: Issued on 06/25/2018.
Physical Loan Application Deadline
Date: 08/24/2018.
Economic Injury (EIDL) Loan
Application Deadline Date: 03/25/2019.
ADDRESSES: Submit completed loan
applications to: U.S. Small Business
Administration, Processing and
Disbursement Center, 14925 Kingsport
Road, Fort Worth, TX 76155.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: A.
Escobar, Office of Disaster Assistance,
U.S. Small Business Administration,
409 3rd Street SW, Suite 6050,
Washington, DC 20416, (202) 205–6734.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Notice is
hereby given that as a result of the
President’s major disaster declaration on
06/25/2018, Private Non-Profit
organizations that provide essential
services of a governmental nature may
file disaster loan applications at the
address listed above or other locally
announced locations.
The following areas have been
determined to be adversely affected by
the disaster:
Primary Counties: Frederick,
Washington
20 17
Non-Profit Organizations with
Credit Available Elsewhere ...
Non-Profit Organizations without Credit Available Elsewhere .....................................
For Economic Injury:
Non-Profit Organizations without Credit Available Elsewhere .....................................
[FR Doc. 2018–14164 Filed 6–29–18; 8:45 am]
SUMMARY:
For Physical Damage:
Percent
SMALL BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION
[Disaster Declaration #15574 and #15575;
Oklahoma Disaster Number OK–00122]
Presidential Declaration of a Major
Disaster for Public Assistance Only for
the State of Oklahoma
U.S. Small Business
Administration.
ACTION: Notice.
AGENCY:
This is a Notice of the
Presidential declaration of a major
disaster for Public Assistance Only for
the State of Oklahoma (FEMA–4373–
DR), dated 06/25/2018.
Incident: Wildfires.
Incident Period: 04/11/2018 through
04/20/2018.
DATES: Issued on 06/25/2018.
Physical Loan Application Deadline
Date: 08/24/2018.
Economic Injury (EIDL) Loan
Application Deadline Date: 03/25/2019.
ADDRESSES: Submit completed loan
applications to: U.S. Small Business
Administration, Processing and
Disbursement Center, 14925 Kingsport
Road, Fort Worth, TX 76155.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: A.
Escobar, Office of Disaster Assistance,
U.S. Small Business Administration,
409 3rd Street SW, Suite 6050,
Washington, DC 20416, (202) 205–6734.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Notice is
hereby given that as a result of the
President’s major disaster declaration on
06/25/2018, Private Non-Profit
organizations that provide essential
services of a governmental nature may
file disaster loan applications at the
address listed above or other locally
announced locations.
SUMMARY:
E:\FR\FM\02JYN1.SGM
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 83, Number 127 (Monday, July 2, 2018)]
[Notices]
[Pages 31014-31028]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2018-14114]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
[Release No. 34-83520; File No. SR-CboeBZX-2018-040]
Self-Regulatory Organizations; Cboe BZX Exchange, Inc.; Notice of
Filing of Proposed Rule Change To List and Trade Shares of SolidX
Bitcoin Shares Issued by the VanEck SolidX Bitcoin Trust
June 26, 2018.
Pursuant to Section 19(b)(1) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934
(``Act'') \1\ and Rule 19b-4 thereunder,\2\ notice is hereby given that
on June 20, 2018, Cboe BZX Exchange, Inc. (``BZX'' or the ``Exchange'')
filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission (``Commission'') the
proposed rule change as described in Items I, II, and III below, which
Items have been prepared by the Exchange. The Commission is publishing
this notice to solicit comments on the proposed rule change from
interested persons.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ 15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(1).
\2\ 17 CFR 240.19b-4.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
I. Self-Regulatory Organization's Statement of the Terms of Substance
of the Proposed Rule Change
The Exchange filed a proposal to list and trade shares of SolidX
Bitcoin Shares (the ``Fund'') issued by the VanEck SolidX Bitcoin Trust
(the ``Trust''), under BZX Rule 14.11(e)(4), Commodity-Based Trust
Shares.
The text of the proposed rule change is available at the Exchange's
website at www.markets.cboe.com, at the principal office of the
Exchange, and at the Commission's Public Reference Room.
II. Self-Regulatory Organization's Statement of the Purpose of, and
Statutory Basis for, the Proposed Rule Change
In its filing with the Commission, the Exchange included statements
concerning the purpose of and basis for the proposed rule change and
discussed any comments it received on the proposed rule change. The
text of these statements may be examined at the places specified in
Item IV below. The Exchange has prepared summaries, set forth in
Sections A, B, and C below, of the most significant parts of such
statements.
[[Page 31015]]
A. Self-Regulatory Organization's Statement of the Purpose of, and the
Statutory Basis for, the Proposed Rule Change
1. Purpose
The Exchange proposes to list and trade the Shares under BZX Rule
14.11(e)(4),\3\ which governs the listing and trading of Commodity-
Based Trust Shares on the Exchange.\4\ SolidX Management LLC is the
sponsor of the Trust (``Sponsor''). The Trust will be responsible for
custody of the Trust's bitcoin. SolidX Management LLC is a wholly-owned
subsidiary of SolidX Partners Inc. Delaware Trust Company is the
trustee (``Trustee''). The Bank of New York Mellon will be the
administrator (``Administrator''), transfer agent (``Transfer Agent'')
and the custodian, with respect to cash, (``Cash Custodian'') of the
Trust. Foreside Fund Services, LLC will be the marketing agent
(``Marketing Agent'') in connection with the creation and redemption of
``Baskets'' \5\ of Shares. Van Eck Securities Corporation (``VanEck'')
provides assistance in the marketing of the Shares.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\3\ The Commission approved BZX Rule 14.11(e)(4) in Securities
Exchange Act Release No. 65225 (August 30, 2011), 76 FR 55148
(September 6, 2011) (SR-BATS-2011-018).
\4\ All statements and representations made in this filing
regarding (a) the description of the portfolio, (b) limitations on
portfolio holdings or reference assets, or (c) the applicability of
Exchange rules and surveillance procedures shall constitute
continued listing requirements for listing the Shares on the
Exchange.
\5\ The Trust will issue and redeem ``Baskets'', each equal to a
block of 5 Shares, only to ``Authorized Participants''. See
``Creation and Redemption of Shares'' below.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Trust was formed as a Delaware statutory trust on September 15,
2016 and is operated as a grantor trust for U.S. federal tax purposes.
The Trust has no fixed termination date.
According to the Registration Statement, each Share will represent
a fractional undivided beneficial interest in the Trust's net assets.
The Trust's assets will consist of bitcoin \6\ held by the Trust
utilizing a secure process as described below in ``bitcoin Security and
Storage for the Trust''. The Trust will not normally hold cash or any
other assets, but may hold a very limited amount of cash in connection
with the creation and redemption of Baskets and to pay Trust expenses,
as described below.
According to the Registration Statement, the Trust will invest in
bitcoin only. The activities of the Trust are limited to: (1) Issuing
Baskets in exchange for the cash and/or bitcoin deposited with the Cash
Custodian or Trust, respectively, as consideration; (2) purchasing
bitcoin from various exchanges and in OTC transactions; (3) selling
bitcoin (or transferring bitcoin, at the Sponsor's discretion, to pay
the Management Fee) as necessary to cover the Sponsor's Management Fee,
bitcoin Insurance Fee, Trust principals' and employees' salaries,
expenses associated with securing the Trust's bitcoin and Trust
expenses not assumed by the Sponsor and other liabilities; (4) selling
bitcoin as necessary in connection with redemptions; (5) delivering
cash and/or bitcoin in exchange for Baskets surrendered for redemption;
(6) maintaining insurance coverage for the bitcoin held by the Trust;
and (7) securing the bitcoin held by the Trust.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\6\ A ``bitcoin'' is an asset that can be transferred among
parties via the internet, but without the use of a central
administrator or clearing agency (``bitcoin''). The asset, bitcoin,
is generally written with a lower case ``b''. The asset, bitcoin, is
differentiated from the computers and software (or the protocol)
involved in the transfer of bitcoin among users, which constitute
the ``Bitcoin Network''. The asset, bitcoin, is the intrinsically
linked unit of account that exists within the Bitcoin Network. See
``bitcoin and the Bitcoin Industry'' below.
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According to the Registration Statement, the Trust is neither an
investment company registered under the Investment Company Act of 1940,
as amended,\7\ nor a commodity pool for purposes of the Commodity
Exchange Act (``CEA''),\8\ and neither the Trust nor the Sponsor is
subject to regulation as a commodity pool operator or a commodity
trading adviser in connection with the Shares.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\7\ 15 U.S.C. 80a-1.
\8\ 17 U.S.C. 1.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Investment Objective
According to the Registration Statement and as further described
below, the investment objective of the Trust is for the Shares to
reflect the performance of the price of bitcoin, less the expenses of
the Trust's operations. The Trust intends to achieve this objective by
investing substantially all of its assets in bitcoin traded primarily
in the over-the-counter (``OTC'') markets, though the Trust may also
invest in bitcoin traded on domestic and international bitcoin
exchanges, depending on liquidity and otherwise at the Trust's
discretion. The Trust is not actively managed. It does not engage in
any activities designed to obtain a profit from, or to ameliorate
losses caused by, changes in the price of bitcoin.
Investment in bitcoin
Subject to certain requirements and conditions described below and
in the Registration Statement, the Trust, under normal market
conditions,\9\ will use available offering proceeds to purchase bitcoin
primarily in the OTC markets, without being leveraged or exceeding
relevant position limits.
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\9\ The term ``under normal circumstances'' includes, but is not
limited to, the absence of extreme volatility or trading halts in
the price of bitcoin or the financial markets generally; operational
issues causing dissemination of inaccurate market information; or
force majeure type events such as systems failure, natural or man-
made disaster, act of God, armed conflict, act of terrorism, riot or
labor disruption or any similar intervening circumstance.
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bitcoin and the bitcoin Industry
General
The following is a brief introduction to the global bitcoin market.
The data presented below are derived from information released by
various third-party sources, including white papers, other published
materials, research reports and regulatory guidance.
The bitcoin Network
A bitcoin is an asset that can be transferred among parties via the
internet, but without the use of a central administrator or clearing
agency. The term ``decentralized'' is often used in descriptions of
bitcoin, in reference to bitcoin's lack of necessity for administration
by a central party. The Bitcoin Network (i.e., the network of computers
running the software protocol underlying bitcoin involved in
maintaining the database of bitcoin ownership and facilitating the
transfer of bitcoin among parties) and the asset, bitcoin, are
intrinsically linked and inseparable. Bitcoin was first described in a
white paper released in 2008 and published under the name ``Satoshi
Nakamoto'', and the protocol underlying bitcoin was subsequently
released in 2009 as open source software.
bitcoin Ownership and the Blockchain
To begin using bitcoin, a user may download specialized software
referred to as a ``bitcoin wallet''. A user's bitcoin wallet can run on
a computer or smartphone. A bitcoin wallet can be used both to send and
to receive bitcoin. Within a bitcoin wallet, a user will be able to
generate one or more ``bitcoin addresses'', which are similar in
concept to bank account numbers, and each address is unique. Upon
generating a bitcoin address, a user can begin to transact in bitcoin
by receiving bitcoin at his or her bitcoin address and sending it from
his or her address to another user's address. Sending bitcoin from one
bitcoin address to another is similar in concept to sending a bank wire
from one person's bank account to another person's bank account.
[[Page 31016]]
Balances of the quantity of bitcoin associated with each bitcoin
address are listed in a database, referred to as the ``blockchain''.
Copies of the blockchain exist on thousands of computers on the Bitcoin
Network throughout the internet. A user's bitcoin wallet will either
contain a copy of the blockchain or be able to connect with another
computer that holds a copy of the blockchain.
When a bitcoin user wishes to transfer bitcoin to another user, the
sender must first request a bitcoin address from the recipient. The
sender then uses his or her bitcoin wallet software, to create a
proposed addition to the blockchain. The proposal would decrement the
sender's address and increment the recipient's address by the amount of
bitcoin desired to be transferred. The proposal is entirely digital in
nature, similar to a file on a computer, and it can be sent to other
computers participating in the Bitcoin Network. Such digital proposals
are referred to as ``bitcoin transactions''. Bitcoin transactions and
the process of one user sending bitcoin to another should not be
confused with buying and selling bitcoin, which is a separate process
(as discussed below in ``bitcoin Trading On Exchanges'' and ``bitcoin
Trading Over-the-Counter'').
A bitcoin transaction is similar in concept to an irreversible
digital check. The transaction contains the sender's bitcoin address,
the recipient's bitcoin address, the amount of bitcoin to be sent, a
confirmation fee and the sender's digital signature. The sender's use
of his or her digital signature enables participants on the Bitcoin
Network to verify the authenticity of the bitcoin transaction.
A user's digital signature is generated via usage of the user's so-
called ``private key'', one of two numbers in a so-called cryptographic
``key pair''. A key pair consists of a ``public key'' and its
corresponding private key, both of which are lengthy numerical codes,
derived together and possessing a unique relationship.
Public keys are used to create bitcoin addresses. Private keys are
used to sign transactions that initiate the transfer of bitcoin from a
sender's bitcoin address to a recipient's bitcoin address. Only the
holder of the private key associated with a particular bitcoin address
can digitally sign a transaction proposing a transfer of bitcoin from
that particular bitcoin address.
A user's bitcoin address (which is derived from a public key) may
be safely distributed, but a user's private key must remain known
solely by its rightful owner. The utilization of a private key is the
only mechanism by which a bitcoin user can create a digital signature
to transfer bitcoin from him or herself to another user. Additionally,
if a malicious third party learns of a user's private key, that third
party could forge the user's digital signature and send the user's
bitcoin to any arbitrary bitcoin address (i.e., the third party could
steal the user's bitcoin).
When a bitcoin holder sends bitcoin to a destination bitcoin
address, the transaction is initially considered unconfirmed.
Confirmation of the validity of the transaction involves verifying the
signature of the sender, as created by the sender's private key.
Confirmation also involves verifying that the sender has not ``double
spent'' the bitcoin (e.g., confirming Party A has not attempted to send
the same bitcoin both to Party B and to Party C). The confirmation
process occurs via a process known as ``bitcoin mining''.
Bitcoin mining utilizes a combination of computer hardware and
software to accomplish a dual purpose: (i) To verify the authenticity
and validity of bitcoin transactions (i.e., the movement of bitcoin
between addresses) and (ii) the creation of new bitcoin. Neither the
Sponsor nor the Trust intends to engage in bitcoin mining.
Bitcoin miners do not need permission to participate in verifying
transactions. Rather, miners compete to solve a prescribed and
complicated mathematical calculation using computers dedicated to the
task. Rounds of the competition repeat approximately every ten minutes.
In any particular round of the competition, the first miner to find the
solution to the mathematical calculation is the miner who gains the
privilege of announcing the next block to be added to the blockchain.
A new block that is added to the blockchain serves to take all of
the recent-yet-unconfirmed transactions and verify that none are
fraudulent. The recent-yet-unconfirmed transactions also generally
contain transaction fees that are awarded to the miner who produces the
block in which the transactions are inserted, and thereby confirmed.
The successful miner also earns the so-called ``block reward'', an
amount of newly created bitcoin. Thus, bitcoin miners are financially
incentivized to conduct their work. The financial incentives received
by bitcoin miners are a vital part of the process by which the Bitcoin
Network functions.
Upon successfully winning a round of the competition (winning a
round is referred to as mining a new block), the miner then transmits a
copy of the newly-formed block to peers on the Bitcoin Network, all of
which then update their respective copies of the blockchain by
appending the new block, thereby acknowledging the confirmation of the
transactions that had previously existed in an unconfirmed state.
A recipient of bitcoin must wait until a new block is formed in
order to see the transaction convert from an unconfirmed state to a
confirmed state. According to the Registration Statement, with new
rounds won approximately every ten minutes, the average wait time for a
confirmation is five minutes.
The protocol underlying bitcoin provides the rules by which all
users and miners on the Bitcoin Network must operate. A user or miner
attempting to operate under a different set of rules will be ignored by
other network participants, thus rendering that user's or miner's
behavior moot. The protocol also lays out the block reward, the amount
of bitcoin that a miner earns upon creating a new block. The initial
block reward when Bitcoin was introduced in 2009 was 50 bitcoin per
block. That number has and will continue to halve approximately every
four years until approximately 2140, when it is estimated that block
rewards will go to zero. The most recent halving occurred on July 9,
2016, which reduced the block reward from 25 to 12.5 bitcoin. The next
halving is projected for June 2020, which will reduce the block reward
to 6.25 bitcoin from its current level of 12.5. The halving thereafter
will occur in another four years and will reduce the block reward to
3.125 bitcoin, and so on. As of May 2018, there are approximately 17
million bitcoin that have been created, a number that will grow with
certainty to a maximum of 21 million, estimated to occur by the year
2140. Bitcoin mining should not be confused with buying and selling
bitcoin, which, as discussed below, is a separate process.
Use of bitcoin and the Blockchain
Beyond using bitcoin as a value transfer mechanism, applications
related to the blockchain technology underlying bitcoin have become
increasingly prominent.\10\ Blockchain-focused applications take
advantage of certain unique characteristics of the blockchain such as
secure time stamping (secure time stamps are on newly created blocks),
highly redundant storage (copies of the blockchain are distributed
throughout the internet) and
[[Page 31017]]
tamper-resistant data secured by secure digital signatures.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\10\ Additional applications based on blockchain technology--
both the blockchain underlying bitcoin as well as separate public
blockchains incorporating similar characteristics of the blockchain
underlying bitcoin--are currently in development by numerous
entities, including financial institutions like banks.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
According to the Registration Statement, blockchain-focused
applications in usage and under development include, but are not
limited to asset title transfer, secure timestamping, counterfeit and
fraud detection systems, secure document and contract signing,
distributed cloud storage and identity management. Although value
transfer is not the primary purpose for blockchain-focused
applications, the usage of bitcoin, the asset, is inherently involved
in blockchain-focused applications, thus linking the growth and
adoption of bitcoin to the growth and adoption of blockchain-focused
applications.
bitcoin Trading Over-the-Counter
As referenced above, OTC trading of bitcoin is generally
accomplished via bilateral agreements on a principal-to-principal
basis. All risks and issues of credit are between the parties directly
involved in the transaction. The OTC market provides a relatively
flexible market in terms of quotes, price, size and other factors. The
OTC market has no formal structure and no open-outcry meeting place.
Parties engaging in OTC transactions will agree upon a price--often via
phone or email--and one of the two parties would then initiate the
transaction. For example, a seller of bitcoin could initiate the
transaction by sending the bitcoin to the buyer's bitcoin address. The
buyer would then wire U.S. dollars to the seller's bank account.
Based on its observations and experience in the market, the Sponsor
estimates that the U.S. dollar OTC bitcoin trading volume globally
represents on average approximately fifty percent of the trading volume
of bitcoin traded globally in U.S. dollars on U.S. dollar-denominated
bitcoin exchanges.
According to the Registration Statement, transaction costs in the
OTC market are negotiable between the parties and therefore vary with
some participants willing to offer competitive prices for larger
volumes, although this will vary according to market conditions. Cost
indicators can be obtained from OTC trading platforms as well as
various information service providers, such as the bitcoin price
indexes and bitcoin exchanges. OTC trading tends to be in large blocks
of bitcoin and between institutions.
The Trust intends to buy and sell bitcoin in the OTC bitcoin
market. The Sponsor currently expects that often it will be more cost
efficient for the Trust to effect large trades (e.g., $500,000 or
greater) in the OTC market rather than on a bitcoin exchange. The Trust
therefore expects to conduct most of its trading in the OTC bitcoin
market, primarily on the OTC platforms that comprise the MVIS[supreg]
Bitcoin OTC Index (``MVBTCO'').
When buying and selling bitcoin in the OTC market, the Trust will
consider various market factors, including the total U.S. dollar size
of the trade, the volume of bitcoin traded across the various U.S.
dollar-denominated bitcoin exchanges during the preceding 24-hour
period, available liquidity offered by OTC market participants, and the
bid and ask quotes offered by OTC market participants. The Trust's goal
is to fill an order at the best possible price.
While the Trust intends to conduct the majority of its trading in
the OTC market on the OTC platforms that comprise the MVBTCO, the Trust
also maintains an internal proprietary database, which it does not
share with anyone, of potential OTC bitcoin trading counterparties,
including hedge funds, family offices, private wealth managers and
high-net-worth individuals. All such potential counterparties will be
subject to the Trust's anti-money laundering (``AML'') and know your
customer (``KYC'') compliance procedures. The Trust will begin trading
with such potential OTC counterparties as their trading capabilities
become viable. The Trust will also add additional potential
counterparties to its internal proprietary database as it becomes aware
of additional market participants. The Trust will decide which OTC
counterparties it will trade with based on its ability to fill orders
at the best available price amongst OTC market participants.
To the extent a Basket creation or redemption order necessitates
the buying or selling of a large block of bitcoin (e.g., an amount that
if an order were placed on an exchange would potentially move the price
of bitcoin), the Sponsor represents that placing such a trade in the
OTC market may be advantageous to the Trust. OTC trades help avoid
factors such as potential price slippage (causing the price of bitcoin
to move as the order is filled on the exchange), while offering speed
in trade execution and settlement (an OTC trade can be executed
immediately upon agreement of terms between counterparties) and privacy
(to avoid other market participants entering trades in advance of a
large block order). OTC bitcoin trading is typically private and not
regularly reported. The Trust does not intend to report its OTC
trading. The Trust has established delivery-versus-payment like
(``DVP'') and receive-versus-payment like (``RVP'') trading
arrangements with its trading counterparties pursuant to which the
Trust will be able to minimize counterparty risk. These arrangements
are on a trade-by-trade basis and do not bind the Trust to continue to
trade with any counterparty.
The Trust expects to take custody of bitcoin within one business
day of receiving an order from an Authorized Participant to create a
Basket (as defined in ``Creation and Redemption of Shares'' below).
bitcoin Price Index
MVBTCO Index. The MVBTCO represents the value of one bitcoin in
U.S. dollars at any point in time. The index also generates a closing
price as of 4:00 p.m., Eastern time (``E.T.''), each weekday, which is
used to calculate the Trust's NAV. The index price and the closing
price are calculated using the same methodology. The intra-day levels
of the MVBTCO incorporate the real-time price of bitcoin based on
executable bids and asks derived from constituent bitcoin OTC platforms
that have entered into an agreement with MV Index Solutions GmbH
(``MVIS'') to provide such information. The intra-day price and closing
level of the MVBTCO is calculated using a proprietary methodology
collecting executable bid/ask spreads and calculating a mid-point price
from several U.S.-based bitcoin OTC platforms and is published at or
after 4:00 p.m., E.T., each weekday. The MVBTCO is published to two
decimal places rounded on the last digit.
MVIS is the index sponsor and calculation agent for the MVBTCO. The
Sponsor has entered into a licensing agreement with MVIS to use the
MVBTCO. The Trust is entitled to use the MVBTCO pursuant to a sub-
licensing arrangement with the Sponsor.
The MVBTCO calculates the intra-day price of bitcoin every 15
seconds, including the closing price as of 4:00 p.m. E.T. The bitcoin
OTC platforms included in the MVBTCO are U.S.-based entities. These
platforms are well established institutions that comply with AML and
KYC regulatory requirements with respect to trading counterparties and
include entities that are regulated by the SEC and FINRA as registered
broker-dealers and affiliates of broker-dealers.
The logic utilized for the derivation of the intra-day and daily
closing index level for the MVBTCO is intended to analyze actual
executable bid/ask spread data, verify and refine the data set and
yield an objective, fair-market value of one bitcoin throughout the day
and as of 4:00 p.m. E.T. each weekday,
[[Page 31018]]
priced in U.S. dollars. As discussed herein, the MVBTCO intra-day price
and the MVBTCO closing price are collectively referred to as the MVBTCO
price, unless otherwise noted.
The key elements of the algorithm underlying the MVBTCO include:
Equal Weighting of OTC Platforms: This mitigates the
impact of spikes at single platforms.
Using executable bid/ask spreads and the respective mid-
point prices, which are consistently available.
The Sponsor is not aware of any bitcoin derivatives currently
trading based on the MVBTCO.
bitcoin Exchanges
Bitcoin exchanges operate websites that facilitate the purchase and
sale of bitcoin for various government-issued currencies, including the
U.S. dollar, the euro or the Chinese yuan. Activity on bitcoin
exchanges should not be confused with the process of users sending
bitcoin from one bitcoin address to another bitcoin address, the latter
being an activity that is wholly within the confines of the Bitcoin
Network and the former being an activity that occurs entirely on
private websites.
Bitcoin exchanges operate in a manner that is unlike the
traditional capital markets infrastructure in the U.S. and in other
developed nations. Bitcoin exchanges combine the process of order
matching, trade clearing, trade settlement and custody into a single
entity. For example, a user can send U.S. dollars via wire to a bitcoin
exchange and then visit the exchange's website to purchase bitcoin. The
entirety of the transaction--from trade to clearing to settlement to
custody (at least temporary custody)--is accomplished by the bitcoin
exchange in a matter of seconds. The user can then withdraw the
purchased bitcoin into a wallet to take custody of the bitcoin
directly.
According to the Registration Statement, there are currently
several U.S.-based regulated entities that facilitate bitcoin trading
and that comply with state and/or U.S. AML and KYC regulatory
requirements. While the Commodity Futures Trading Commision (the
``CFTC'') is responsible for regulating the bitcoin spot market with
respect to fraud and manipulation--in the same way that it regulates
the spot market for gold, silver or other exempt commodities--there is
no direct, comprehensive federal oversight of bitcoin exchanges or
trading platforms in the United States and no U.S. exchanges are
registered with the Commission or the CFTC.
GDAX (f/k/a Coinbase), which is based in California, is a
bitcoin exchange that maintains money transmitter licenses in over
thirty states, the District of Columbia and Puerto Rico. GDAX is
subject to the regulations enforced by the various State agencies that
issued their respective money transmitter licenses to GDAX. The New
York Department of Financial Services (``NYDFS'') granted a BitLicense
to GDAX in January 2017.
itBit is a bitcoin exchange that was granted a limited
purpose trust company charter by the NYDFS in May 2015. Limited purpose
trusts, according to the NYDFS, are permitted to undertake certain
activities, such as transfer agency, securities clearance, investment
management, and custodial services, but without the power to take
deposits or make loans.
Gemini is a bitcoin exchange that is also regulated by the
NYDFS. In October 2015, NYDFS granted Gemini an Authorization
Certificate, which allows Gemini to operate as a limited purpose trust
company.
Genesis Global Trading is a FINRA member firm that makes a
market in bitcoin by offering two-sided liquidity (``Genesis Global
Trading''). In May 2018, NYDFS granted Genesis Global Trading a
BitLicense.
bitFlyer is a virtual currency exchange that is registered
in Japan. In November 2017, NYDFS granted Tokyo-based bitFlyer a
BitLicense.
Bitcoin are traded with publicly disclosed valuations for each
transaction, measured by one or more government currencies such as the
U.S. dollar, the euro or the Chinese yuan. Bitcoin exchanges typically
report publicly on their site the valuation of each transaction and bid
and ask prices for the purchase or sale of bitcoin. Although each
bitcoin exchange has its own market price, it is expected that most
bitcoin exchanges' market prices should be relatively consistent with
the bitcoin exchange market average since market participants can
choose the bitcoin exchange on which to buy or sell bitcoin (i.e.,
exchange shopping).
bitcoin Trading on Exchanges
According to the Registration Statement, to the extent the Trust
conducts bitcoin trading on an exchange, it expects to do so on the
following U.S. dollar-denominated bitcoin exchanges: Bitstamp (located
in Slovenia and with an office in the U.K.), GDAX (f/k/a Coinbase)
(located in California), Gemini (located in New York), itBit (located
in New York), bitFlyer (located in New York) and Kraken (located in San
Francisco). All of these exchanges follow AML and KYC regulatory
requirements.
bitcoin Price Transparency
In addition to the price transparency of the MVBTCO, with respect
to the OTC market, and the bitcoin exchange market itself, the Trust
will provide information regarding the Trust's bitcoin holdings as well
as additional data regarding the Trust. The Sponsor expects that the
dissemination of information on the Trust's website, along with
quotations for and last-sale prices of transactions in the Shares and
the intra-day indicative value (``IIV'') and net asset value (``NAV'')
of the Trust will help to reduce the ability of market participants to
manipulate the bitcoin market or the price of the Shares and that the
Trust's arbitrage mechanism will facilitate the correction of price
discrepancies in bitcoin and the Shares. The Sponsor believes that
demand from new, larger investors accessing bitcoin through investment
in the Shares will broaden the investor base in bitcoin, which could
further reduce the possibility of collusion among market participants
to manipulate the bitcoin market. The Sponsor expects that the Shares
will be purchased primarily by institutional and other substantial
investors (such as hedge funds, family offices, private wealth managers
and high-net-worth individuals), which will provide additional
liquidity and transparency to the bitcoin market in a regulated vehicle
such as the Trust.
According to the Sponsor, the MVBTCO's methodology decreases the
influence on the MVBTCO of any particular OTC platform that diverges
from the rest of the data points used by the MVBTCO, which reduces the
possibility of an attempt to manipulate the price of bitcoin as
reflected by the MVBTCO.
Historical Price of bitcoin
The price of bitcoin is volatile and fluctuations are expected to
have a direct impact on the value of the Shares. However, movements in
the price of bitcoin in the past are not a reliable indicator of future
movements. Movements may be influenced by various factors, including
supply and demand, geo-political uncertainties, economic concerns such
as inflation and real or speculative investor interest.
Additional bitcoin Trading Products
Certain U.S. platforms and non-U.S. based bitcoin exchanges offer
derivative products on bitcoin such as options, swaps and futures.
According to the Registration Statement, BitMex, based in the
[[Page 31019]]
Republic of Seychelles, CryptoFacilites, based in the United Kingdom,
796 Exchange, based in China, and OKCoin Exchange China all offer
futures contracts settled in bitcoin. Coinut, based in Singapore,
offers bitcoin binary options and vanilla options based on the Coinut
index. Deribit, based in the Netherlands, offers vanilla options and
futures contracts settled in bitcoin. IGMarkets, based in the United
Kingdom, Avatrade, based in Ireland, and Plus500, based in Israel, all
offer bitcoin derivative products.
In July 2017, the CFTC issued an order granting LedgerX, LLC
(``LedgerX'') registration as a derivatives clearing organization under
the CEA. Under the order, LedgerX is authorized to provide clearing
services for fully-collateralized digital currency swaps. LedgerX,
which was also granted an order of registration as a Swap Execution
Facility in July 2017, is the first federally-regulated exchange and
clearing house for derivatives contracts settling in digital
currencies. LedgerX began trading options and swaps on its platform in
October 2017.
The CFTC commissioners have expressed publicly that derivatives
based on bitcoin are subject to regulation by the CFTC, including
oversight to prevent market manipulation of the price of bitcoin. In
addition, the CFTC has stated that bitcoin and other virtual currencies
are encompassed in the definition of commodities under the CEA.\11\
While the CFTC does not regulate the bitcoin spot market--in the same
way that it does not regulate the spot market for gold, silver or other
exempt commodities--it is nevertheless responsible for overseeing and
enforcing the CEA as it applies to trading in bitcoin derivatives.
Further to this point, Cboe Futures Exchange, LLC and Chicago
Mercantile Exchange, Inc. self-certified bitcoin futures contracts with
the CFTC and began offering trading in December 2017 and Cantor Futures
Exchange L.P. self-certified bitcoin swaps in December 2017.
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\11\ See ``In the Matter of Coinflip, Inc.'' (``Coinflip'')
(CFTC Docket 15-29 (September 17, 2015)) (order instituting
proceedings pursuant to Sections 6(c) and 6(d) of the CEA, making
findings and imposing remedial sanctions), in which the CFTC stated
the following:
``Section 1a(9) of the CEA defines `commodity' to include, among
other things, `all services, rights, and interests in which
contracts for future delivery are presently or in the future dealt
in.' 7 U.S.C. 1a(9). The definition of a `commodity' is broad. See,
e.g., Board of Trade of City of Chicago v. SEC, 677 F. 2d 1137, 1142
(7th Cir. 1982). Bitcoin and other virtual currencies are
encompassed in the definition and properly defined as commodities.''
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In May 2015, the Swedish FSA approved the prospectus for ``Bitcoin
Tracker One'', an open-ended exchange-traded note that tracks the price
of bitcoin in U.S. dollars. The Bitcoin Tracker One initially traded in
Swedish krona on the Nasdaq Nordic in Stockholm, but is now also
available to trade in euro. The Bitcoin Tracker One is available to
retail investors in the European Union and to those investors in the
U.S. who maintain brokerage accounts with Interactive Brokers.
Founded in 2013, Bitcoin Investment Trust, a private, open-ended
trust available to accredited investors, is another investment vehicle
that derives its value from the price of bitcoin. Eligible shares of
the Bitcoin Investment Trust are quoted on the OTCQX marketplace under
the symbol ``GBTC''.
In May 2016, the Gibraltar Financial Services Commission approved
the BitcoinETI, which in July 2016 was listed on the Gibraltar Stock
Exchange and on Deutsche B[ouml]rse Frankfurt in August 2016. The
BitcoinETI is a bitcoin-backed exchange-traded instrument that is euro
denominated.
bitcoin Security and Storage for the Trust
According to the Sponsor, given the novelty and unique digital
characteristics (as set forth above) of bitcoin as an innovative asset
class, traditional custodians who normally custody assets do not
currently offer custodial services for bitcoin. Accordingly, the Trust
will secure bitcoin using multi-signature ``cold storage wallets'', an
industry best practice. A cold storage wallet is created and stored on
a computer with no access to a network, i.e., an ``air-gapped''
computer with no ability to access the internet. Such a computer is
isolated from any network, including local or internet connections. A
multi-signature address is an address associated with more than one
private key. For example, a ``2 of 3'' address requires two signatures
(out of three) from two separate private keys (out of three) to move
bitcoin from a sender address to a receiver address.
The Trust will utilize bitcoin private keys that are generated and
stored on air-gapped computers. The movement of bitcoin will require
physical access to the air-gapped computers and use of multiple
authorized signers. For backup and disaster recovery purposes, the
Trust will maintain cold storage wallet backups in locations
geographically distributed throughout the United States, including in
the Northeast and Midwest.
In addition to its security system, the Trust will maintain
comprehensive insurance coverage underwritten by various insurance
carriers. The purpose of the insurance is to protect investors against
loss or theft of the Trust's bitcoin. The insurance will cover loss of
bitcoin by, among other things, theft, destruction, bitcoin in transit,
computer fraud and other loss of the private keys that are necessary to
access the bitcoin held by the Trust. The coverage is subject to
certain terms, conditions and exclusions, as discussed in the
Registration Statement. The insurance policy will carry initial limits
of $25 million in primary coverage and $100 million in excess coverage,
with the ability to increase coverage depending on the value of the
bitcoin held by the Trust. To the extent the value of the Trust's
bitcoin holdings exceeds the total $125,000,000 of insurance coverage,
the Sponsor has made arrangements for additional insurance coverage
with the goal of maintaining insurance coverage at a one-to-one ratio
with the Trust's bitcoin holdings valued in U.S. dollars such that for
every dollar of bitcoin held by the Trust there is an equal amount of
insurance coverage.
The Sponsor expects that the Trust's auditor will verify the
existence of bitcoin held in custody by the Trust. In addition, the
Trust's insurance carriers will have inspection rights associated with
the bitcoin held in custody by the Trust.
bitcoin Market Price
In the ordinary course of business, the Administrator will value
the bitcoin held by the Trust based on the closing price set by the
MVBTCO or one of the other pricing sources set forth below (each, a
``bitcoin Market Price'') as of 4:00 p.m. E.T., on the valuation date
on any day that the Exchange is open for regular trading. For further
detail, see (i) below. If for any reason, and as determined by the
Sponsor, the Administrator is unable to value the Trust's bitcoin using
the procedures described in (i), the Administrator will value the
Trust's bitcoin using the cascading set of rules set forth in (ii)
through (iv) below. For the avoidance of doubt, the Administrator will
employ the below rules sequentially and in the order as presented,
should the Sponsor determine that one or more specific rule(s) fails.
The Sponsor may determine that a rule has failed if a pricing source is
unavailable or, in the judgment of the Sponsor, is deemed unreliable.
To the extent the Administrator uses any of the cascading set of rules,
the Sponsor will make public on the Trust's website the rule being
used.
(i) Except as further described below, the bitcoin Market Price
will be: The
[[Page 31020]]
price set by the MVBTCO as of 4:00 p.m. E.T., on the valuation date.
The MVBTCO is a real-time U.S. dollar-denominated composite reference
rate for the price of bitcoin. The MVBTCO calculates the intra-day
price of bitcoin every 15 seconds, including the closing price as of
4:00 p.m. E.T. The intra-day price and closing price are based on a
methodology that consists of collecting actual executable bid/ask
spreads and calculating a mid-point price from constituent bitcoin OTC
platforms that have entered into an agreement with MVIS. The logic
utilized for the derivation of the daily closing index level for the
MVBTCO is intended to analyze actual executable bid/ask spread data,
verify and refine the data set, and yield an objective, fair-market
value of one bitcoin throughout the day and as of 4:00 p.m. E.T. each
weekday, priced in U.S. dollars.
(ii) In the event that rule (i) above fails, the bitcoin Market
Price will be: The mid-point price between the bid/ask obtained by the
Sponsor from any one of the bitcoin OTC platforms included within the
MVBTCO index as of 4:00 p.m. E.T., on the valuation date.
(iii) In the event that rules (i) and (ii) above fail, the bitcoin
Market Price will be: The volume weighted average bitcoin price for the
immediately preceding 24-hour period at 4:00 p.m. E.T. on the valuation
date as published by an alternative third party's public data feed that
the Sponsor determines is reasonably reliable, subject to the
requirement that such data is calculated based upon a volume weighted
average bitcoin price obtained from the major U.S. dollar-denominated
bitcoin exchanges (``Second Source''). Subject to the next sentence, if
the Second Source becomes unavailable (e.g., data sources from the
Second Source for bitcoin prices become unavailable, unwieldy or
otherwise impractical for use), or if the Sponsor determines in good
faith that the Second Source does not reflect an accurate bitcoin
price, then the Sponsor will, on a best efforts basis, contact the
Second Source in an attempt to obtain the relevant data. If after such
contact the Second Source remains unavailable or the Sponsor continues
to believe in good faith that the Second Source does not reflect an
accurate bitcoin price, then the Administrator will employ the next
rule to determine the bitcoin Market Price.
(iv) In the event that rules (i), (ii), and (iii) above fail, the
bitcoin Market Price will be: The Sponsor will use its best judgment to
determine a good faith estimate of the bitcoin Market Price.
The Trust
According to the Registration Statement, the Trust will invest in
bitcoin only. The Trust will either (i) cause the Sponsor to receive
bitcoin from the Trust in such quantity as may be necessary to pay the
Management Fee or (ii) sell bitcoin in such quantity as may be
necessary to permit payment in cash of the Management Fee and other
Trust expenses and liabilities not assumed by the Sponsor, such as the
bitcoin Insurance Fee, bitcoin storage fees and salaries of Trust
principals and employees. As a result, the amount of bitcoin sold will
vary from time to time depending on the level of the Trust's expenses
and the market price of bitcoin.
The Trust will pay the Sponsor a management fee as compensation for
services performed on behalf of the Trust and for services performed in
connection with maintaining the Trust. The Sponsor's fee will be
payable monthly in arrears and will be accrued daily. The bitcoin
Insurance Fee will be payable by the Trust monthly in advance, as
described in the Registration Statement. Bitcoin storage fees and
salaries of Trust principals and employees will be payable monthly in
arrears and will be accrued daily.
In exchange for the Management Fee, the Sponsor has agreed to
assume the following administrative and marketing expenses incurred by
the Trust: Each of the Trustee's, Administrator's, Cash Custodian's,
Transfer Agent's and Marketing Agent's monthly fee and out-of-pocket
expenses and expenses reimbursable in connection with such service
provider's respective agreement; the marketing support fees and
expenses; exchange listing fees; SEC registration fees; index license
fees; printing and mailing costs; maintenance expenses for the Trust's
website; audit fees and expenses; and up to $100,000 per annum in legal
expenses. The Trust will be responsible for paying, or for reimbursing
the Sponsor or its affiliates for paying, all the extraordinary fees
and expenses, if any, of the Trust. The management fee to be paid to
the Sponsor, the bitcoin Insurance Fee, the salaries of the Trust's
principals and employees and the expenses associated with custody of
the Trust's bitcoin are expected to be the only ordinary recurring
operating expense of the Trust.
Net Asset Value
The NAV for the Trust will equal the market value of the Trust's
total assets, including bitcoin and cash, less liabilities of the
Trust, which include estimated accrued but unpaid fees, expenses and
other liabilities. Under the Trust's proposed operational procedures,
the Administrator will calculate the NAV on each business day that the
Exchange is open for regular trading, as promptly as practicable after
4:00 p.m. E.T. To calculate the NAV, the Administrator will use the
closing price set for bitcoin by the MVBTCO or one of the other bitcoin
Market Prices set forth above. The Administrator will also determine
the NAV per Share by dividing the NAV of the Trust by the number of the
Shares outstanding as of the close of trading on Regular Trading Hours,
i.e., 9:30 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. E.T. (which includes the net number of any
Shares deemed created or redeemed on such day).
According to the Registration Statement, Authorized Participants
(as defined in ``Creation and Redemption of Shares'' below), or their
clients or customers, may have an opportunity to realize a riskless
profit if they can create a Basket (as defined in ``Creation and
Redemption of Shares'' below) at a discount to the public trading price
of the Shares or can redeem a Basket at a premium over the public
trading price of the Shares. The Sponsor expects that the exploitation
of such arbitrage opportunities by Authorized Participants and their
clients and customers will tend to cause the public trading price to
track NAV per Share closely over time. Such arbitrage opportunities
will not be available to holders of Shares who are not Authorized
Participants.
While the Trust's investment objective is for the Shares to reflect
the performance of the price of bitcoin, less expenses of the Trust's
operations, the Shares may trade in the secondary market at prices that
are lower or higher relative to their NAV per Share for a number of
reasons, including price volatility, trading volume, and closing of
bitcoin trading platforms due to fraud, failure, security breaches or
otherwise.
The NAV per Share may fluctuate with changes in the market value of
the bitcoin held by the Trust. The value of the Shares may be
influenced by non-concurrent trading hours between the Exchange and the
various bitcoin OTC platforms comprising the MVBTCO. As a result, there
will be periods when the Exchange is closed and the bitcoin OTC
platforms continue to trade. Significant changes in the price of
bitcoin during such time periods could result in a difference between
the value of bitcoin as measured by the MVBTCO and the most recent NAV
per Share or closing trading price. The Exchange, however,
[[Page 31021]]
expects that any meaningful divergence in the intraday price of the
Shares and the MVTCO will be quickly arbitraged away when trading is
available on the Exchange because when such a discount or premium
exists, Authorized Participants will generally be able to create or
redeem a Basket of Shares at a discount or a premium to the public
trading price per Share.
Impact on Arbitrage
Investors and market participants are able throughout the trading
day to compare the market price of the Shares and the Share's IIV. If
the market price of the Shares diverges significantly from the IIV,
Authorized Participants will have strong economic incentive to execute
arbitrage trades. Because of the potential for arbitrage inherent in
the structure of the Trust, the Sponsor believes that the Shares will
not trade at a material discount or premium to the underlying bitcoin
held by the Trust. If the price of the Shares deviates enough from the
price of bitcoin to create a material discount or premium, an arbitrage
opportunity is created. If the Shares are inexpensive compared to the
bitcoin that underlies them, an arbitrageur may buy the Shares at a
discount, immediately redeem them in exchange for bitcoin, and sell the
bitcoin in the cash market at a profit. If the Shares are expensive
compared to the bitcoin that underlies them, an arbitrageur may sell
the Shares short, buy enough bitcoin to acquire the number of Shares
sold short, acquire the Shares through the creation process, and
deliver the Shares to close out the short position. To facilitate the
arbitrage process, Authorized Participants may source bitcoin through
the OTC market or on exchanges; alternatively, Authorized Participants
may create or redeem for cash and the Trust will source buyers and
sellers of bitcoin in the OTC market. The arbitrage process, which in
general provides investors the opportunity to profit from differences
in prices of assets, increases the efficiency of the markets, serves to
prevent potentially manipulative efforts, and can be expected to
operate efficiently in the case of the Shares and bitcoin.
Creation and Redemption of Shares
According to the Registration Statement, the Trust will issue and
redeem ``Baskets'', each equal to a block of 5 Shares, only to
``Authorized Participants'' (as described below). The size of a Basket
is subject to change. The creation and redemption of a Basket require
the delivery to the Trust, or the distribution by the Trust, of the
number of whole and fractional bitcoins or the U.S. dollar equivalent
represented by each Basket being created or redeemed, the number of
which is determined by dividing the number of bitcoins owned by the
Trust at such time by the number of Shares outstanding at such time
(calculated to one one-hundred-millionth of one bitcoin), as adjusted
for the number of whole and fractional bitcoins constituting accrued
but unpaid fees and expenses of the Trust and multiplying the quotient
obtained by 5 (``bitcoin Basket Amount''). The bitcoin Basket Amount
will gradually decrease over time as the Trust's bitcoin are used to
pay the Trust's expenses. According to the Registration Statement, as
of the date of the Registration Statement, each Share currently
represents approximately 25 bitcoin.
Orders to create and redeem Baskets may be placed only by
Authorized Participants.\12\ A transaction fee will be assessed on all
creation and redemption transactions effected in-kind. In addition, the
Trust reserves the right to charge a variable transaction fee to the
Authorized Participants for creations and redemptions effected in cash
to cover the Trust's expenses related to purchasing and selling bitcoin
in the OTC market or on bitcoin exchanges if such expenses should
exceed the fixed $1,000 transaction fee. The variable transaction fee
would cover actual expenses paid for the purchase and sale of bitcoin
in order that such expenses do not decrease the NAV of the Trust. Such
expenses may vary, but the Trust expects such expenses, should they
occur in the future, to constitute 1% or less of the value of a Basket.
The creation and redemption of a Basket requires the delivery to the
Trust, or the distribution by the Trust, of the bitcoin Basket Amount
(that is, the number of bitcoins represented by each Basket or the U.S.
dollar equivalent), for each Basket to be created or redeemed. The
bitcoin Basket Amount multiplied by the number of Baskets being created
or redeemed is the ``Total bitcoin Basket Amount.''
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\12\ An Authorized Participant must: (1) Be a registered broker-
dealer and a member in good standing with the Financial Industry
Regulatory Authority (``FINRA''); (2) be a participant in Depository
Trust Company (``DTC''). To become an Authorized Participant, a
person must enter into an ``Authorized Participant Agreement'' with
the Sponsor and the Transfer Agent. The Authorized Participant
Agreement provides the procedures for the creation and redemption of
Baskets and for the delivery of the cash (and, potentially, bitcoin
in-kind) required for such creations and redemptions.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Creation Procedures
On any business day, an Authorized Participant may place an order
with the Transfer Agent to create one or more Baskets. For purposes of
processing both purchase and redemption orders, a ``business day''
means any day other than a day when the Exchange is closed for regular
trading. Cash purchase orders must be placed by 3:00 p.m. E.T., or the
close of regular trading on the Exchange, whichever is earlier, and in-
kind purchase orders must be placed by 4:00 p.m. E.T., or the close of
regular trading on the Exchange, whichever is earlier. The day on which
the Transfer Agent receives a valid purchase order, as approved by the
Marketing Agent, is the purchase order date. Purchase orders are
irrevocable. By placing a purchase order, and prior to delivery of such
Baskets, an Authorized Participant's DTC account will be charged the
non-refundable transaction fee due for the purchase order.
Determination of Required Payment
The total payment required to create each Basket is determined by
calculating the NAV of 5 Shares of the Trust as of the closing time of
the Exchange on the purchase order date. Baskets are issued as of 2:00
p.m., E.T., on the business day immediately following the purchase
order date at the applicable NAV as of the closing time of the Exchange
on the purchase order date, but only if the required payment has been
timely received.
Orders to purchase Baskets for cash must be placed no later than
3:00 p.m. E.T., or the close of regular trading on the Exchange,
whichever is earlier, and orders to purchase Baskets in-kind must be
placed no later than 4:00 p.m. E.T., or the close of regular trading on
the Exchange, whichever is earlier. For cash creation orders, the total
cash payment required to create a Basket will not be determined until
approximately 4:00 p.m., E.T. (the time at which the Trust's NAV for
that day is expected to be calculated) on the date the purchase order
is received by the Transfer Agent and approved by the Marketing Agent.
Authorized Participants therefore will not know the total amount of the
payment required to create a Basket at the time they submit an
irrevocable purchase order for the Basket. Valid cash orders to
purchase Baskets received after 3:00 p.m. E.T., and valid in-kind
orders to purchase Baskets received after 4:00 p.m. E.T., are
considered received on the following business day. The NAV of the
Trust, and thus the total amount of the payment required to create a
Basket for cash could rise or fall substantially between the time an
irrevocable purchase order is submitted and the time the amount of the
purchase price in respect thereof is determined. Changes to the price
of
[[Page 31022]]
bitcoin between the time an order is placed and the time the final
price is determined by the Trust will be borne by the Authorized
Participant and not by the Trust.
The Sponsor makes available through the National Securities
Clearing Corporation (``NSCC'') on each business day, prior to the
opening of business on the Exchange (a) the amount of cash required for
a cash creation of a Basket (the ``Cash Basket Amount''), based on 100%
of the NAV of the Shares per Basket as of the prior business day, which
amount is applicable in order to effect cash purchases of Baskets until
such time as the next announced amount is made available and (b) the
bitcoin Basket Amount.
The payment required to create a Basket typically will be made in
cash, but it may also be made partially or wholly in-kind at the
discretion of the Sponsor if the Authorized Participant requests to
convey bitcoin directly to the Trust. For a cash order to create, the
Authorized Participant must deliver the Cash Basket Amount to the Cash
Custodian on the day the order is placed and accepted and, potentially,
an amount of cash on the business day after the order is placed and
approved referred to as the ``Balancing Amount,'' computed as described
below. Upon delivery of the Cash Basket Amount and the Balancing Amount
to the Cash Custodian, the Transfer Agent will cause the Trust to issue
a Basket to the Authorized Participant. Expenses incurred by the Trust
relating to purchasing bitcoin in assembling a cash creation Basket,
such as OTC market fees, bitcoin exchange-related fees and/or
transaction fees, will be borne by Authorized Participants, rather than
the Trust, through the transaction fee charged by the Trust.
The Balancing Amount is an amount equal to the difference between
the NAV of the Shares (per Basket) at the end of the business day the
order is placed and approved and the Cash Basket Amount. The Balancing
Amount serves to compensate for any difference between the NAV per
Basket and the Cash Basket Amount. The Balancing Amount may be positive
(in which case the Authorized Participant will be required to transfer
the corresponding amount of cash to the Cash Custodian) or negative (in
which case the amount of cash required to be transferred by the
Authorized Participant will be less than the Cash Basket Amount, and if
the Authorized Participant has already delivered the full Cash Basket
Amount, the corresponding amount of cash will be returned to the
Authorized Participant). Authorized Participants will be notified of
the Balancing Amount that must be paid to the Cash Custodian or
refunded by the Cash Custodian, if any, by approximately 4:00 p.m.,
E.T. on the business day the order is placed and approved. The
Balancing Amount must be paid to the Cash Custodian no later than 2:00
p.m. E.T. on the business day following the date the order was placed
and approved. Upon delivery of the Cash Basket Amount and Balancing
Amount to the Cash Custodian, the Transfer Agent will cause the Trust
to issue a Basket to the Authorized Participant the following business
day by 2:00 p.m., E.T.
To the extent the Authorized Participant places an in-kind order to
create, the Authorized Participant must deliver the Bitcoin Basket
Amount directly to the Trust (i.e., to the security system that holds
the Trust's bitcoin) no later than 4:00 p.m. E.T. on the date the
purchase order is received and approved. Upon delivery of the bitcoin
to the Trust's security system, the Transfer Agent will cause the Trust
to issue a Basket to the Authorized Participant the following business
day by 2:00 p.m., E.T. Payment of any tax or other fees and expenses
payable upon transfer of bitcoin shall be the sole responsibility of
the Authorized Participant purchasing a Basket. Expenses incurred by
Authorized Participants relating to purchasing bitcoin in assembling an
in-kind creation Basket, such as OTC market fees, bitcoin exchange-
related fees and/or transaction fees, will be borne by Authorized
Participants.
The Administrator, by email or telephone correspondence, shall
notify the Authorized Participant of the NAV of the Trust and the
corresponding amount of cash (in the case of a cash purchase order) to
be included in a Balancing Amount by approximately 4:00 p.m. E.T. on
the day the purchase order is placed and approved.
Redemption Procedures
The procedures by which an Authorized Participant can redeem one or
more Baskets mirror the procedures for the creation of Baskets. On any
business day, an Authorized Participant may place an order with the
Transfer Agent to redeem one or more Baskets. Cash redemption orders
must be placed no later than 3:00 p.m. E.T., or the close of regular
trading on the New York Stock Exchange, whichever is earlier, and
redemption orders submitted in-kind must be placed by 4:00 p.m. E.T.,
or the close of regular trading on the Exchange, whichever is earlier.
The day on which the Transfer Agent receives a valid redemption order,
as approved by the Marketing Agent, is the ``redemption order date.''
Redemption orders are irrevocable. The redemption procedures allow only
Authorized Participants to redeem Baskets. A shareholder may not redeem
Baskets other than through an Authorized Participant.
By placing a redemption order, an Authorized Participant agrees to
deliver the Baskets to be redeemed through DTC's book-entry system to
the Trust not later than 4:00 p.m. E.T. on the business day immediately
following the redemption order date. By placing a redemption order, and
prior to receipt of the redemption proceeds, an Authorized
Participant's DTC account will be charged the non-refundable
transaction fee due for the redemption order.
Determination of Redemption Proceeds
The redemption proceeds from the Trust consist of the ``cash
redemption amount'' or, if making an in-kind redemption, bitcoin. The
cash redemption amount is equal to the U.S. dollar equivalent of the
Total bitcoin Basket Amount requested in the Authorized Participant's
redemption order as of the end of Regular Trading Hours on the
redemption order date. The Cash Custodian will distribute the cash
redemption amount at 4:00 p.m., E.T., on the business day immediately
following the redemption order date through DTC to the account of the
Authorized Participant as recorded on DTC's book-entry system. The
bitcoin redemption amount will be the Total bitcoin Basket Amount. At
the discretion of the Sponsor and if the Authorized Participant
requests to receive bitcoin directly, some or all of the redemption
proceeds may be distributed to the Authorized Participant in-kind by
the Trust.
Orders to redeem Baskets must be placed no later than 3:00 p.m.
E.T. for cash redemption orders and 4:00 p.m. E.T. for in-kind
redemptions orders, but the total amount of redemption proceeds
typically will not be determined until after 4:00 p.m. E.T. on the date
the redemption order is received. Authorized Participants therefore
will not know the total amount of the redemption proceeds at the time
they submit an irrevocable redemption order.
Delivery of Redemption Proceeds
The redemption proceeds due from the Trust are delivered to the
Authorized Participant at 4:00 p.m. E.T. on the business day
immediately following the redemption order date if, by such time on
such business day immediately following the redemption order date, the
Trust's DTC account has
[[Page 31023]]
been credited with the Baskets to be redeemed. If the Trust's DTC
account has not been credited with all of the Baskets to be redeemed by
such time, the redemption distribution is delivered to the extent of
whole Baskets received. The Sponsor may, but is not obligated to,
extend the redemption date with respect to a redemption order for which
whole Baskets have not been delivered by the Authorized Participant. In
such event, the Sponsor may charge the Authorized Participant a fee for
such extension to reimburse the Trust for any losses incurred from the
Authorized Participant's failure to deliver whole Baskets (including,
but not limited to, expenses incurred in selling bitcoin in respect of
the redemption order and/or buying bitcoin back following the failure
of the Authorized Participant to deliver whole Baskets, as well as
losses to the Trust from movements in the market value of bitcoin
between selling the bitcoin and buying it back). If the Sponsor extends
the redemption date, any remainder of the redemption distribution is
delivered on the next business day to the extent of remaining whole
Baskets received if the Sponsor receives the fee applicable to the
extension of the redemption distribution date and the remaining Baskets
to be redeemed are credited to the Trust's DTC account by 4:00 p.m.
E.T. on such next business day. Any further outstanding amount of the
redemption order shall be cancelled.
The Sponsor makes available through the NSCC, prior to the opening
of business on the Exchange on each business day, (a) for in-kind
redemptions, the amount of bitcoin per Basket and (b) for cash
redemptions, the amount of cash per Basket that will be applicable to
redemption requests received in proper form.
As with creation orders, the NAV of the Shares per Basket as of the
day on which a redemption request is received and approved will be
calculated after the deadline for redemption orders. The amount of cash
payable per Basket for a cash redemption order accordingly will be
calculated after the redemption order is received. The Administrator,
by email or telephone correspondence, shall notify the Authorized
Participant of the NAV of the Trust and the corresponding amount of
cash (in the case of a cash redemption order) to be payable per Basket
by approximately 4:00 p.m. E.T. on the day the purchase order is placed
and approved.
To the extent the Authorized Participant places an in-kind order to
redeem a Basket, the Trust will deliver, on the business day
immediately following the day the redemption order is received, the
Total bitcoin Basket Amount. Expenses relating to transferring bitcoin
to an Authorized Participant in a redemption Basket will be borne by
Authorized Participants via the redemption transaction fee.
Availability of Information
The Trust's website will provide an IIV per Share updated every 15
seconds, as calculated by the Exchange or a third party financial data
provider during the Exchange's Regular Trading Hours (9:30 a.m. to 4:00
p.m. E.T.). The IIV will be calculated by using the prior day's closing
NAV per Share as a base and updating that value during Regular Trading
Hours to reflect changes in the value of the Trust's bitcoin holdings
during the trading day.
The IIV disseminated during Regular Trading Hours should not be
viewed as an actual real-time update of the NAV, which will be
calculated only once at the end of each trading day. The IIV will be
widely disseminated on a per Share basis every 15 seconds during the
Exchange's Regular Trading Hours by one or more major market data
vendors. In addition, the IIV will be available through on-line
information services.
The website for the Trust, which will be publicly accessible at no
charge, will contain the following information: (a) The current NAV per
Share daily and the prior business day's NAV and the reported closing
price; (b) the mid-point of the bid-ask price \13\ in relation to the
NAV as of the time the NAV is calculated (``Bid-Ask Price'') and a
calculation of the premium or discount of such price against such NAV;
(c) data in chart form displaying the frequency distribution of
discounts and premiums of the Bid-Ask Price against the NAV, within
appropriate ranges for each of the four previous calendar quarters (or
for the life of the Trust, if shorter); (d) the prospectus; and (e)
other applicable quantitative information. The Trust will also
disseminate the Trust's holdings on a daily basis on the Trust's
website. The price of bitcoin will be made available by one or more
major market data vendors, updated at least every 15 seconds during
Regular Trading Hours. Information about the MVBTCO, including key
elements of how the MVBTCO is calculated, will be publicly available at
www.mvis-indices.com/.
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\13\ The bid-ask price of the Trust is determined using the
highest bid and lowest offer on the Consolidated Tape as of the time
of calculation of the closing day NAV.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The NAV for the Trust will be calculated by the Administrator once
a day and will be disseminated daily to all market participants at the
same time. To the extent that the Administrator has utilized the
cascading set of rules described in ``bitcoin Market Price'' above, the
Trust's website will note the valuation methodology used and the price
per bitcoin resulting from such calculation. Quotation and last-sale
information regarding the Shares will be disseminated through the
facilities of the Consolidated Tape Association (``CTA'').
Quotation and last sale information for bitcoin is widely
disseminated through a variety of major market data vendors, including
Bloomberg and Reuters, as well as the MVBTCO. Information relating to
trading, including price and volume information, in bitcoin is
available from major market data vendors and from the exchanges on
which bitcoin are traded. Depth of book information is also available
from bitcoin exchanges. The normal trading hours for bitcoin exchanges
are 24 hours per day, 365 days per year.
The Trust will provide website disclosure of its bitcoin holdings
daily. The website disclosure of the Trust's bitcoin holdings will
occur at the same time as the disclosure by the Sponsor of the bitcoin
holdings to Authorized Participants so that all market participants are
provided such portfolio information at the same time. Therefore, the
same portfolio information will be provided on the public website as
well as in electronic files provided to Authorized Participants.
Accordingly, each investor will have access to the current bitcoin
holdings of the Trust through the Trust's website.
Rule 14.11(e)(4)--Commodity-Based Trust Shares
The Shares will be subject to BZX Rule 14.11(e)(4), which sets
forth the initial and continued listing criteria applicable to
Commodity-Based Trust Shares. The Exchange will obtain a representation
that the Trust's NAV will be calculated daily and that these values and
information about the assets of the Trust will be made available to all
market participants at the same time. The Exchange notes that, as
defined in Rule 14.11(e)(4)(C)(i), the Shares will be: (a) Issued by a
trust that holds a specified commodity \14\ deposited with the trust;
(b) issued by such trust in a specified aggregate minimum number in
return for a deposit of a quantity of the underlying commodity; and (c)
when
[[Page 31024]]
aggregated in the same specified minimum number, may be redeemed at a
holder's request by such trust which will deliver to the redeeming
holder the quantity of the underlying commodity. The Exchange notes
that in addition to the in-kind creation and redemption processes
described in Rule 14.11(e)(4)(C)(i), the Trust will also offer
creations and redemptions of Shares for cash in addition to creating
and redeeming in-kind. The Trust represents that the ability to create
and redeem for cash will allow APs that may otherwise be unwilling or
unable to source bitcoin on their own behalf to participate in the
creation and redemption of Shares.
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\14\ For purposes of Rule 14.11(e)(4), the term commodity takes
on the definition of the term as provided in the Commodity Exchange
Act. As noted above, the CFTC has opined that Bitcoin is a commodity
as defined in Section 1a(9) of the Commodity Exchange Act. See
Coinflip.
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Upon termination of the Trust, the Shares will be removed from
listing. The Trustee, Delaware Trust Company, is a trust company having
substantial capital and surplus and the experience and facilities for
handling corporate trust business, as required under Rule
14.11(e)(4)(E)(iv)(a) and that no change will be made to the trustee
without prior notice to and approval of the Exchange. The Exchange also
notes that, pursuant to Rule 14.11(e)(4)(F), neither the Exchange nor
any agent of the Exchange shall have any liability for damages, claims,
losses or expenses caused by any errors, omissions or delays in
calculating or disseminating any underlying commodity value, the
current value of the underlying commodity required to be deposited to
the Trust in connection with issuance of Commodity-Based Trust Shares;
resulting from any negligent act or omission by the Exchange, or any
agent of the Exchange, or any act, condition or cause beyond the
reasonable control of the Exchange, its agent, including, but not
limited to, an act of God; fire; flood; extraordinary weather
conditions; war; insurrection; riot; strike; accident; action of
government; communications or power failure; equipment or software
malfunction; or any error, omission or delay in the reports of
transactions in an underlying commodity. Finally, as required in Rule
14.11(e)(4)(G), the Exchange notes that any registered market maker
(``Market Maker'') in the Shares must file with the Exchange in a
manner prescribed by the Exchange and keep current a list identifying
all accounts for trading in an underlying commodity, related commodity
futures or options on commodity futures, or any other related commodity
derivatives, which the registered Market Maker may have or over which
it may exercise investment discretion. No registered Market Maker shall
trade in an underlying commodity, related commodity futures or options
on commodity futures, or any other related commodity derivatives, in an
account in which a registered Market Maker, directly or indirectly,
controls trading activities, or has a direct interest in the profits or
losses thereof, which has not been reported to the Exchange as required
by this Rule. In addition to the existing obligations under Exchange
rules regarding the production of books and records (see, e.g., Rule
4.2), the registered Market Maker in Commodity-Based Trust Shares shall
make available to the Exchange such books, records or other information
pertaining to transactions by such entity or registered or non-
registered employee affiliated with such entity for its or their own
accounts for trading the underlying physical commodity, related
commodity futures or options on commodity futures, or any other related
commodity derivatives, as may be requested by the Exchange.
The Trust currently expects that there will be at least 100 Shares
outstanding at the time of commencement of trading on the Exchange,
which the Exchange believes to be sufficient to provide adequate market
liquidity. Assuming a bitcoin price of $8,000 and approximately 25
bitcoin per Share, the Shares would be approximately $200,000 each.
With a minimum of 100 Shares outstanding, the market value of all
Shares outstanding would be approximately $20,000,000. Rules
14.11(e)(4)(C)(ii)(b) [sic] and (c) provide that the Exchange will
commence delisting proceedings for a series of Commodity-Based Trust
Shares where the applicable trust has fewer than 50,000 receipts or the
market value of all receipts issued and outstanding is less than
$1,000,000, respectively, following the initial 12 month period
following commencement of trading on the Exchange. These rules are
designed to ensure that there are sufficient shares and market value
outstanding to facilitate the creation and redemption process and
ensure that the arbitrage mechanism will keep the price of a series of
Commodity-Based Trust Shares in line with its NAV and prevent
manipulation in the shares. The Exchange is proposing that Rule
14.11(e)(4)(C)(ii)(b) [sic] would not apply to the Shares because the
Exchange believes that such policy concerns are otherwise mitigated.
The lower number of Shares is merely a function of price that will have
no impact on the creation and redemption process and the arbitrage
mechanism. Whether the Shares are priced equal to 25 bitcoin with a
Basket of 5 Shares or the Shares are priced equal to .025 bitcoin with
a Basket of 5,000 Shares, the cost to an AP to create or redeem will be
the exact same and such a creation and redemption will have the same
proportional impact on Shares and market value outstanding. Because the
creation units and redemption units for most exchange-traded products
are between 5,000 and 50,000 shares, it makes sense to apply a minimum
number of shares outstanding to such products. Where a creation unit is
5 shares, the policy concerns that Rule 14.11(e)(4)(C)(ii)(b) [sic] is
designed to address are mitigated even where there are significantly
fewer shares outstanding. As such, the Exchange is proposing that it
would not commence delisting proceedings for the Shares if the Shares
do not satisfy Rule 14.11(e)(4)(C)(ii)(b) [sic].
Trading Halts
With respect to trading halts, the Exchange may consider all
relevant factors in exercising its discretion to halt or suspend
trading in the Shares. The Exchange will halt trading in the Shares
under the conditions specified in BZX Rule 11.18. Trading may be halted
because of market conditions or for reasons that, in the view of the
Exchange, make trading in the Shares inadvisable. These may include:
(1) The extent to which trading is not occurring in the bitcoin
underlying the Shares; or (2) whether other unusual conditions or
circumstances detrimental to the maintenance of a fair and orderly
market are present. Trading in the Shares also will be subject to Rule
14.11(e)(4)(E)(ii), which sets forth circumstances under which trading
in the Shares may be halted.
Trading Rules
The Exchange deems the Shares to be equity securities, thus
rendering trading in the Shares subject to the Exchange's existing
rules governing the trading of equity securities. BZX will allow
trading in the Shares from 8:00 a.m. until 5:00 p.m. Eastern Time. The
Exchange has appropriate rules to facilitate transactions in the Shares
during all trading sessions. As provided in BZX Rule 11.11(a) the
minimum price variation for quoting and entry of orders in securities
traded on the Exchange is $0.01 where the price is greater than $1.00
per share or $0.0001 where the price is less than $1.00 per share.
Surveillance
The Exchange believes that its surveillance procedures are adequate
to properly monitor the trading of the Shares on the Exchange during
all trading sessions and to deter and detect
[[Page 31025]]
violations of Exchange rules and the applicable federal securities
laws. Trading of the Shares through the Exchange will be subject to the
Exchange's surveillance procedures for derivative products, including
Commodity-Based Trust Shares. The issuer has represented to the
Exchange that it will advise the Exchange of any failure by the Trust
or the Shares to comply with the continued listing requirements, and,
pursuant to its obligations under Section 19(g)(1) of the Exchange Act,
the Exchange will surveil for compliance with the continued listing
requirements. If the Trust or the Shares are not in compliance with the
applicable listing requirements, the Exchange will commence delisting
procedures under Exchange Rule 14.12. The Exchange may obtain
information regarding trading in the Shares and listed bitcoin
derivatives via the Intermarket Surveillance Group (``ISG''), from
other exchanges who are members or affiliates of the ISG, or with which
the Exchange has entered into a comprehensive surveillance sharing
agreement.\15\ In addition, the Exchange may obtain information about
bitcoin transactions, trades and market data from bitcoin exchanges
with which the Exchange has entered into a comprehensive surveillance
sharing agreement as well as certain additional information that is
publicly available through the Bitcoin blockchain. The Exchange notes
that it has entered into a comprehensive surveillance sharing agreement
with Gemini Exchange.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\15\ For a list of the current members and affiliate members of
ISG, see www.isgportal.com.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Information Circular
Prior to the commencement of trading, the Exchange will inform its
members in an Information Circular of the special characteristics and
risks associated with trading the Shares. Specifically, the Information
Circular will discuss the following: (i) The procedures for the
creation and redemption of Baskets (and that the Shares are not
individually redeemable); (ii) BZX Rule 3.7, which imposes suitability
obligations on Exchange members with respect to recommending
transactions in the Shares to customers; (iii) how information
regarding the IIV and the Trust's NAV are disseminated; (iv) the risks
involved in trading the Shares during the Pre-Opening \16\ and After
Hours Trading Sessions \17\ when an updated IIV will not be calculated
or publicly disseminated; (v) the requirement that members deliver a
prospectus to investors purchasing newly issued Shares prior to or
concurrently with the confirmation of a transaction; and (vi) trading
information.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\16\ The Pre-Opening Session is from 8:00 a.m. to 9:30 a.m.
Eastern Time.
\17\ The After Hours Trading Session is from 4:00 p.m. to 5:00
p.m. Eastern Time.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In addition, the Information Circular will advise members, prior to
the commencement of trading, of the prospectus delivery requirements
applicable to the Shares. Members purchasing the Shares for resale to
investors will deliver a prospectus to such investors. The Information
Circular will also discuss any exemptive, no-action and interpretive
relief granted by the Commission from any rules under the Act.
Policy Considerations
The Exchange recognizes that certain policy concerns exist as it
relates to any series of Commodity-Based Trust Shares that are listed
on the Exchange, but that these concerns, as well as certain other
concerns raised by this proposal specifically, are mitigated as it
relates to the Trust and its holdings for the reasons enumerated below.
First, the Exchange believes that the policy concerns related to an
underlying reference asset and its susceptibility to manipulation are
mitigated as it relates to bitcoin because the very nature of the
bitcoin ecosystem makes manipulation of bitcoin difficult.
Particularly, in the OTC markets, the dual elements of principal to
principal trading combined with the large size at which trades are
effected should effectively eliminate the ability of market
participants to manipulate the market with small trades as may be the
case on any individual exchange. As noted above, the OTC desks that
comprise the MVBTCO with which the Trust intends to effect transactions
are well established institutions that comply with AML and KYC
regulatory requirements with respect to trading counterparties and
include entities that are regulated by the SEC and FINRA as registered
broker-dealers and affiliates of broker-dealers. It is the Sponsor's
position that the OTC desks have a better measure of the market than
any exchange-specific reference price, whether individually or indexed
across multiple exchanges. The geographically diverse and continuous
nature of bitcoin trading makes it difficult and prohibitively costly
to manipulate the price of bitcoin and, in many instances, the bitcoin
market is generally less susceptible to manipulation than the equity,
fixed income, and commodity futures markets. There are a number of
reasons this is the case, including that there is not inside
information about revenue, earnings, corporate activities, or sources
of supply; it is generally not possible to disseminate false or
misleading information about bitcoin in order to manipulate;
manipulation of the price on any single venue would require
manipulation of the global bitcoin price in order to be effective; a
substantial over-the-counter market provides liquidity and shock-
absorbing capacity; bitcoin's 24/7/365 nature provides constant
arbitrage opportunities across all trading venues; and it is unlikely
that any one actor could obtain a dominant market share.
Further, bitcoin is arguably less susceptible to manipulation than
other commodities that underlie ETPs; there may be inside information
relating to the supply of the physical commodity such as the discovery
of new sources of supply or significant disruptions at mining
facilities that supply the commodity that simply are inapplicable as it
relates to bitcoin. Further, the Exchange believes that the
fragmentation across bitcoin platforms, the relatively slow speed of
transactions, and the capital necessary to maintain a significant
presence on each trading platform make manipulation of bitcoin prices
through continuous trading activity unlikely. Moreover, the linkage
between the bitcoin markets and the presence of arbitrageurs in those
markets means that the manipulation of the price of bitcoin price on
any single venue would require manipulation of the global bitcoin price
in order to be effective. Arbitrageurs must have funds distributed
across multiple trading platforms in order to take advantage of
temporary price dislocations, thereby making it unlikely that there
will be strong concentration of funds on any particular bitcoin
exchange or OTC platform. As a result, the potential for manipulation
on a trading platform would require overcoming the liquidity supply of
such arbitrageurs who are effectively eliminating any cross-market
pricing differences. For all of these reasons, bitcoin is not
particularly susceptible to manipulation, especially as compared to
other approved ETP reference assets.
Second, the Trust maintains crime, excess crime and excess vault
risk insurance coverage underwritten by various insurance carriers that
will cover the entirety of the Trust's bitcoin holdings. While the
Trust remains fully confident in its system for securing its bitcoin,
insurance coverage of all of the Trust's bitcoin holdings eliminates
exposure to the risk of loss to investors through fraud or theft, which
in turn eliminates most of the custodial issues
[[Page 31026]]
associated with a series of Commodity-Based Trust Shares based on
bitcoin.
Finally, the Sponsor expects that the Shares will be purchased
primarily by institutional and other substantial investors (such as
hedge funds, family offices, private wealth managers and high-net-worth
individuals), which will provide additional liquidity and transparency
to the bitcoin market in a regulated vehicle such as the Trust. With an
estimated initial per-share price equivalent to 25 bitcoin, the Shares
will be cost-prohibitive for smaller retail investors while allowing
larger and generally more sophisticated institutional investors to gain
exposure to the price of bitcoin through a regulated product while
eliminating the complications and reducing the risk associated with
buying and holding bitcoin.
2. Statutory Basis
The Exchange believes that the proposal is consistent with Section
6(b) of the Act \18\ in general and Section 6(b)(5) of the Act \19\ in
particular in that it is designed to prevent fraudulent and
manipulative acts and practices, to promote just and equitable
principles of trade, to foster cooperation and coordination with
persons engaged in facilitating transactions in securities, to remove
impediments to and perfect the mechanism of a free and open market and
a national market system and, in general, to protect investors and the
public interest.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\18\ 15 U.S.C. 78f.
\19\ 15 U.S.C. 78f(b)(5).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Exchange believes that the proposed rule change is designed to
prevent fraudulent and manipulative acts and practices in that the
Shares will be listed on the Exchange pursuant to the initial and
continued listing criteria in Exchange Rule 14.11(e)(4). The Exchange
believes that its surveillance procedures are adequate to properly
monitor the trading of the Shares on the Exchange during all trading
sessions and to deter and detect violations of Exchange rules and the
applicable federal securities laws. Trading of the Shares through the
Exchange will be subject to the Exchange's surveillance procedures for
derivative products, including Commodity-Based Trust Shares. The issuer
has represented to the Exchange that it will advise the Exchange of any
failure by the Trust or the Shares to comply with the continued listing
requirements, and, pursuant to its obligations under Section 19(g)(1)
of the Exchange Act, the Exchange will surveil for compliance with the
continued listing requirements. If the Trust or the Shares are not in
compliance with the applicable listing requirements, the Exchange will
commence delisting procedures under Exchange Rule 14.12. The Exchange
may obtain information regarding trading in the Shares and listed
bitcoin derivatives via the ISG, from other exchanges who are members
or affiliates of the ISG, or with which the Exchange has entered into a
comprehensive surveillance sharing agreement. In addition, the Exchange
may obtain information about bitcoin transactions, trades and market
data from bitcoin exchanges with which the Exchange has entered into a
comprehensive surveillance sharing agreement as well as certain
additional information that is publicly available through the Bitcoin
blockchain. The Exchange notes that it has entered into a comprehensive
surveillance sharing agreement with Gemini Exchange.
The proposal is designed to perfect the mechanism of a free and
open market and, in general, to protect investors and the public
interest in that it will facilitate the listing and trading of
Commodity-Based Trust Shares based on the price of bitcoin that will
enhance competition among market participants, to the benefit of
investors and to the marketplace, and will allow institution and other
substantial investors access to bitcoin exposure without requiring
direct access to the bitcoin market and the associated complications.
Despite the growing investor interest in bitcoin, the primary means for
investors to gain access to bitcoin exposure remains either through
direct investment through bitcoin exchanges, over-the-counter trading,
or bitcoin derivatives contracts. For investors simply wishing to
express an investment viewpoint in bitcoin, investment through
derivatives is complex and requires active management and direct
investment in bitcoin brings with it significant inconvenience,
complexity, expense, and risk. The Shares would therefore represent a
significant innovation in the bitcoin market by providing an
inexpensive and simple vehicle for investors to gain exposure to
bitcoin in a secure and easily accessible product that is familiar and
transparent to investors. Such an innovation would help to perfect the
mechanism of a free and open market and, in general, to protect
investors and the public interest by improving investor access to
bitcoin exposure through efficient and transparent exchange-traded
derivative products.
As noted above, the Sponsor expects that the Shares will be
purchased primarily by institutional and other substantial investors
(such as hedge funds, family offices, private wealth managers and high-
net-worth individuals), which will provide additional liquidity and
transparency to the bitcoin market in a regulated vehicle such as the
Trust. With an estimated initial per-share price equivalent to 25
bitcoin, the Shares will be cost-prohibitive for smaller retail
investors while allowing larger and generally more sophisticated
institutional investors to gain exposure to the price of bitcoin
through a regulated product while eliminating the complications and
reducing the risk associated with buying and holding bitcoin.
The Exchange also believes that allowing cash creations and
redemptions, in addition to the in-kind creations described in Rule
14.11(e)(4)(C)(i), will allow APs that may otherwise be unwilling or
unable to source bitcoin on their own behalf to participate in the
creation and redemption of Shares, further acting to perfect the
mechanism of a free and open market and, in general, to protect
investors and the public interest.
The Exchange also believes that not commencing delisting
proceedings for the Shares if the Shares do not satisfy Rule
14.11(e)(4)(C)(ii)(b) [sic] is consistent with the Act because where a
creation unit is 5 shares, the policy concerns that Rule
14.11(e)(4)(C)(ii)(b) [sic] is designed to address related to minimum
receipts outstanding following the 12 month period following
commencement of trading on the Exchange are mitigated even where there
are significantly fewer shares outstanding. The Exchange believes that
the lower number of Shares is merely a function of price that will have
no impact on the creation and redemption process and the arbitrage
mechanism.
The Exchange also believes that the proposal promotes market
transparency in that a large amount of information is currently
available about bitcoin and will be available regarding the Trust and
the Shares. The Exchange will obtain a representation that the Trust's
NAV will be calculated daily and that these values and information
about the assets of the Trust will be made available to all market
participants at the same time. Quotation and last sale information for
bitcoin is widely disseminated through a variety of major market data
vendors, including Bloomberg and Reuters. The spot price of bitcoin is
available on a 24-hour basis from major market data vendors, including
Bloomberg and Reuters, as well as the MVBTCO. Information relating to
trading, including price and volume information, in bitcoin is
available from
[[Page 31027]]
major market data vendors and from the exchanges on which bitcoin are
traded. Depth of book information is also available from bitcoin
exchanges. The normal trading hours for bitcoin exchanges are 24 hours
per day, 365 days per year. The Trust will provide website disclosure
of its bitcoin holdings daily. The website disclosure of the Trust's
bitcoin holdings will occur at the same time as the disclosure by the
Sponsor of the bitcoin holdings to Authorized Participants so that all
market participants are provided such portfolio information at the same
time. The website for the Trust, which will be publicly accessible at
no charge, will contain the following information: (a) The current NAV
per Share daily and the prior business day's NAV and the reported
closing price; (b) the Bid-Ask Price and a calculation of the premium
or discount of such price against such NAV; (c) data in chart form
displaying the frequency distribution of discounts and premiums of the
Bid-Ask Price against the NAV, within appropriate ranges for each of
the four previous calendar quarters (or for the life of the Trust, if
shorter); (d) the prospectus; and (e) other applicable quantitative
information. The Trust will also disseminate the Trust's holdings on a
daily basis on the Trust's website. The price of bitcoin will be made
available by one or more major market data vendors, updated at least
every 15 seconds during Regular Trading Hours. Information about the
MVBTCO, including key elements of how the MVBTCO is calculated, will be
publicly available at www.mvis-indices.com/. The IIV will be widely
disseminated on a per Share basis every 15 seconds during the
Exchange's Regular Trading Hours by one or more major market data
vendors. In addition, the IIV will be available through on-line
information services.
The Exchange also recognizes that certain broader policy concerns
exist as it relates to any series of Commodity-Based Trust Shares that
are listed on the Exchange, but that these concerns, as well as certain
other concerns raised by this proposal and related to bitcoin
specifically, are mitigated as it relates to the Trust and its holdings
for the reasons enumerated below.
First, the Exchange believes that the policy concerns related to an
underlying reference asset and its susceptibility to manipulation are
mitigated as it relates to bitcoin because the very nature of the
bitcoin ecosystem makes manipulation of bitcoin difficult.
Particularly, in the OTC markets, the dual elements of principal to
principal trading combined with the large size at which trades are
effected should effectively eliminate the ability of market
participants to manipulate the market with small trades as may be the
case on any individual exchange. As noted above, the OTC desks that
comprise the MVBTCO with which the Trust intends to effect transactions
are well established institutions that comply with AML and KYC
regulatory requirements with respect to trading counterparties and
include entities that are regulated by the SEC and FINRA as registered
broker-dealers and affiliates of broker-dealers. It is the Sponsor's
position that the OTC desks have a better measure of the market than
any exchange-specific reference price, whether individually or indexed
across multiple exchanges. The geographically diverse and continuous
nature of bitcoin trading makes it difficult and prohibitively costly
to manipulate the price of bitcoin and, in many instances, the bitcoin
market is generally less susceptible to manipulation than the equity,
fixed income, and commodity futures markets. There are a number of
reasons this is the case, including that there is not inside
information about revenue, earnings, corporate activities, or sources
of supply; it is generally not possible to disseminate false or
misleading information about bitcoin in order to manipulate;
manipulation of the price on any single venue would require
manipulation of the global bitcoin price in order to be effective; a
substantial over-the-counter market provides liquidity and shock-
absorbing capacity; bitcoin's 24/7/365 nature provides constant
arbitrage opportunities across all trading venues; and it is unlikely
that any one actor could obtain a dominant market share.
Further, bitcoin is arguably less susceptible to manipulation than
other commodities that underlie ETPs; there may be inside information
relating to the supply of the physical commodity such as the discovery
of new sources of supply or significant disruptions at mining
facilities that supply the commodity that simply are inapplicable as it
relates to bitcoin. Further, the Exchange believes that the
fragmentation across bitcoin platforms, the relatively slow speed of
transactions, and the capital necessary to maintain a significant
presence on each trading platform make manipulation of bitcoin prices
through continuous trading activity unlikely. Moreover, the linkage
between the bitcoin markets and the presence of arbitrageurs in those
markets means that the manipulation of the price of bitcoin price on
any single venue would require manipulation of the global bitcoin price
in order to be effective. Arbitrageurs must have funds distributed
across multiple trading platforms in order to take advantage of
temporary price dislocations, thereby making it unlikely that there
will be strong concentration of funds on any particular bitcoin
exchange or OTC platform. As a result, the potential for manipulation
on a trading platform would require overcoming the liquidity supply of
such arbitrageurs who are effectively eliminating any cross-market
pricing differences. For all of these reasons, bitcoin is not
particularly susceptible to manipulation, especially as compared to
other approved ETP reference assets.
Second, the Trust maintains crime, excess crime and excess vault
risk insurance coverage underwritten by various insurance carriers that
will cover the entirety of the Trust's bitcoin holdings. While the
Trust remains fully confident in its system for securing its bitcoin,
insurance coverage of all of the Trust's bitcoin holdings eliminates
exposure to the risk of loss to investors through fraud or theft, which
in turn eliminates most of the custodial issues associated with a
series of Commodity-Based Trust Shares based on bitcoin.
For the above reasons, the Exchange believes that the proposed rule
change is consistent with the requirements of Section 6(b)(5) of the
Act.
B. Self-Regulatory Organization's Statement on Burden on Competition
The Exchange does not believe that the proposed rule change will
impose any burden on competition that is not necessary or appropriate
in furtherance of the purpose of the Act. The Exchange notes that the
proposed rule change, rather will facilitate the listing and trading of
an additional exchange-traded product that will enhance competition
among both market participants and listing venues, to the benefit of
investors and the marketplace.
C. Self-Regulatory Organization's Statement on Comments on the Proposed
Rule Change Received From Members, Participants, or Others
The Exchange has neither solicited nor received written comments on
the proposed rule change.
III. Date of Effectiveness of the Proposed Rule Change and Timing for
Commission Action
Within 45 days of the date of publication of this notice in the
Federal Register or within such longer period (i) as the Commission may
designate up to 90 days of such date if it finds such longer period to
be appropriate and
[[Page 31028]]
publishes its reasons for so finding or (ii) as to which the Exchange
consents, the Commission will: (a) By order approve or disapprove such
proposed rule change, or (b) institute proceedings to determine whether
the proposed rule change should be disapproved.
IV. Solicitation of Comments
Interested persons are invited to submit written data, views, and
arguments concerning the foregoing, including whether the proposed rule
change is consistent with the Act. Comments may be submitted by any of
the following methods:
Electronic Comments
Use the Commission's internet comment form (https://www.sec.gov/rules/sro.shtml); or
Send an email to [email protected]. Please include
File Number SR-CboeBZX-2018-040 on the subject line.
Paper Comments
Send paper comments in triplicate to Secretary, Securities
and Exchange Commission, 100 F Street NE, Washington, DC 20549-1090.
All submissions should refer to File Number SR-CboeBZX-2018-040. This
file number should be included on the subject line if email is used. To
help the Commission process and review your comments more efficiently,
please use only one method. The Commission will post all comments on
the Commission's internet website (https://www.sec.gov/rules/sro.shtml).
Copies of the submission, all subsequent amendments, all written
statements with respect to the proposed rule change that are filed with
the Commission, and all written communications relating to the proposed
rule change between the Commission and any person, other than those
that may be withheld from the public in accordance with the provisions
of 5 U.S.C. 552, will be available for website viewing and printing in
the Commission's Public Reference Room, 100 F Street NE, Washington, DC
20549 on official business days between the hours of 10:00 a.m. and
3:00 p.m. Copies of such filing also will be available for inspection
and copying at the principal office of the Exchange. All comments
received will be posted without change. Persons submitting comments are
cautioned that we do not redact or edit personal identifying
information from comment submissions. You should submit only
information that you wish to make available publicly. All submissions
should refer to File Number SR-CboeBZX-2018-040, and should be
submitted on or before July 23, 2018.
For the Commission, by the Division of Trading and Markets,
pursuant to delegated authority.\20\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\20\ 17 CFR 200.30-3(a)(12).
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Eduardo A. Aleman,
Assistant Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2018-14114 Filed 6-29-18; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8011-01-P