
This follows VanEck’s prior BNB proposal and signals accelerating institutional push into altcoins amid clearer U.S. regs.
Grayscale is widening its ETF ambitions beyond bitcoin and ether, filing paperwork with US regulators to launch products tied to Binance’s BNB and the NEAR Protocol token.
In separate moves flagged across recent disclosures, the asset manager filed an S-1 registration statement for a BNB ETF with the US Securities and Exchange Commission, and also submitted an S-1 to convert its Grayscale Near Trust into a spot NEAR ETF.
Here’s What Grayscale Is Trying To Do
The BNB filing would put Grayscale alongside VanEck, which has also sought to bring a spot BNB ETF to market. The BNB product, if approved, would give US investors regulated exposure to a token closely associated with Binance’s ecosystem.
For NEAR, Grayscale’s approach is more familiar: converting an existing trust wrapper into an ETF structure. Coverage of the filing noted NEAR’s price ticked up by more than 3% even as the broader crypto market was under pressure, though moves around single-asset filings can be noisy and short-lived.
Why This Matters In The Broader ETF Race
These filings underscore how quickly the “crypto ETF” label is expanding from the first wave of spot bitcoin and spot ether products into a long tail of altcoins. For issuers, the logic is straightforward: meet demand for diversified or thematic exposure, and capture fees while distribution channels remain hungry for new listings.
Still, the jump from BTC and ETH into assets like BNB and NEAR brings different questions to the fore, including liquidity under stress, concentration of ecosystem risk, and how regulators view the underlying markets. Grayscale’s BNB effort also lands in a space where the token’s identity is tightly interwoven with a single, dominant exchange brand.
What ETF Fans Should Look Out For Next
The filings themselves don’t set an approval timeline. The immediate tell will be whether the SEC engages quickly on structure and disclosures, and whether other issuers pile in with copycat applications.
For crypto investors, the significance is less about a single listing and more about direction: the ETF pipeline is moving down the risk curve. If these products advance, they could open fresh inflow channels for select large-cap altcoins — but they also raise the odds that regulatory, market-structure, or issuer-specific setbacks hit prices with little warning.
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