Crypto-skeptical nonprofit Better Markets urges SEC to deny spot Bitcoin ETFs

Quick Take

  • The non-partisan nonprofit Better Markets has sent a letter to the SEC urging the agency to deny recent applications for spot Bitcoin exchange-traded funds submitted by several financial firms. 
  • In the letter, Better Markets calls crypto “little more than a socially worthless gambling chip.”

The non-partisan nonprofit Better Markets, which lobbies for more stringent financial regulations, has submitted a comment letter to the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) urging the agency to deny several pending applications for a Bitcoin-trading ETF, or exchange-traded fund, a product strongly desired by crypto proponents. 

Better Markets' CEO and co-founder, Dennis M. Kelleher, argues in the letter that the SEC's approval of a spot Bitcoin ETF would pose a "grave threat" to investors, unleashing "...a speculative, volatile, and socially useless financial product on tens of millions of American investors and retirees." 

The SEC's approval of the spot Bitcoin ETF would set a dangerous precedent, Kelleher wrote, making it harder for the agency to win future legal battles and unleashing a maelstrom of "propaganda" by the crypto industry meant to urge "countless retirement savers...to diversify their portfolios" into crypto. 

Kelleher's Qualms

In his letter, Kelleher brought up several specific arguments against the approval of a spot Bitcoin ETF. On the base merits of whether or not the Bitcoin market is mature enough to warrant an ETF, Kelleher rejects that notion, citing the potential for wash trading and the high concentration of Bitcoin among a few owners. 

"The potential for fraud in the spot bitcoin market is so great that the rules of an exchange cannot permit the listing and trading of a spot bitcoin ETP and still be consistent with the requirement that the exchange’s rules be designed to prevent fraud and manipulation and protect investors and the public interest," Kelleher wrote. 

Kelleher also seemingly argues that Bitcoin's volatility should itself disqualify the product from being offered to investors, writing, "A simple chart showing that the price of bitcoin can lie flat for prolonged periods of time and then suffer from wild fluctuations during other periods of time indicates that a spot bitcoin ETP poses risks to the public that are inconsistent with the obligation to protect investors and the public interest." 

Kelleher also claims the regulated market is too small to prevent manipulation and that surveillance-sharing agreements would add little in the way of deterrence, closing by calling the potential approval of the spot Bitcoin ETFs "a regulatory mistake of historic proportions." 

What is Better Markets?

A nonprofit non-partisan organization, Better Markets lobbies for increased financial regulation on Wall Street — the organization was once described by the New York Times as "Occupy Wall Street’s suit-wearing cousin."

The lobbying firm once caught the eye of FTX, which once offered the organization a $1 million donation to support the crypto firm's application for approval to the CFTC. Kelleher loudly rejected the donation, calling it "a direct quid pro quo," and urged the CFTC to reject the application. 

The lobbying firm has been relentless in its criticism of crypto; the new letter is the latest in a series of similar pleas to lawmakers and regulators to stop expanding crypto's regulatory acceptance. The organization, which has earned endorsements from figures such as President Barack Obama, Senator Elizabeth Warren, and current SEC Chair Gary Gensler, spent a total of $3 million in 2022, according to its annual report


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About Author

Zack Abrams is a writer and editor based in Brooklyn, New York. Before coming to The Block, he was the Head Writer at Coinage, a Web3 media outlet covering the biggest stories in Web3. The story he co-reported on Do Kwon won a 2022 Best in Business Journalism award from SABEW. Other projects included a deep dive into SBF's defense based on exclusive documents and unveiling the identity of the hacker behind one of 2023's biggest crypto hacks — so far. He can be reached via X @zackdabrams or email, [email protected].