100 new crypto ETFs in 2026 will share a terrifying “single point of failure” that could freeze 85% of global assets
The SEC's approval of generic listing standards for crypto ETPs on Sept. 17 cut the launch timeline to 75 days and opened the door to plain-vanilla products.
Bitwise predicts more than 100 crypto-linked ETFs will launch in 2026. James Seyffart, senior ETF analyst at Bloomberg, backed the call but added a caveat:
“We're going to see a lot of liquidations.”
That pairing of explosive growth and swift culling defines the next phase, as generic standards solve a timing problem rather than a liquidity problem. For Bitcoin, Ethereum, and Solana, the flood reinforces dominance. For everything else, it is a stress test.
The new rules mirror what the SEC did for equity and bond ETFs in 2019, when annual launches jumped from 117 to over 370. Fee compression followed immediately, with dozens of small funds closed within two years.
Crypto runs the same experiment with worse starting conditions. Custody is heavily concentrated: Coinbase holds assets for the vast majority of crypto ETFs, claiming an up to 85% share of global Bitcoin ETFs.
Additionally, APs and market makers depend on a handful of venues for pricing and borrowing, and many altcoins lack the derivatives depth to hedge creation/redemption flows without moving the market.
The SEC's July 29 in-kind order allowed Bitcoin and Ethereum trusts to settle creations with actual coins rather than cash, tightening tracking but requiring APs to source, hold, and manage tax treatment for each basket. For BTC and ETH, that is manageable.
For thin underlyings, borrow might dry up entirely during volatility, forcing creation halts and leaving the ETF trading at a premium until supply returns.
Plumbing under load
APs and market makers can handle higher creation/redemption volume on liquid coins. Their constraint is short availability: when a new ETF launches on a token with thin borrow, APs either demand wider spreads or step back entirely, leaving the fund to trade on cash creations with higher tracking error.
Exchanges can halt trading if reference prices stop updating, a risk stressed even under the faster approval pathway.
Coinbase's first-mover custody position is now both a revenue engine and a target. US Bancorp revived institutional Bitcoin custody plans, while Citi and State Street are exploring crypto-ETF custody relationships.
Their pitch: do you want 85% of ETF flows dependent on a single counterparty? For Coinbase, more ETFs mean more fees, more regulatory attention, and a higher risk that a single operational glitch spooks the entire category.
Index providers hold quiet power. Generic standards tie eligibility to surveillance agreements and reference indices that satisfy exchange criteria, gating who designs benchmarks. A handful of firms, such as CF Benchmarks, MVIS, and S&P, dominate traditional ETF indexing.
Crypto follows the same pattern of wealth platforms defaulting to indices they recognize, making it harder for new entrants to break through, even with superior methodology.
| Single-asset majors: BTC / ETH “me-too” and fee-cut clones | More zero-fee or low-fee spot BTC/ETH ETFs from second-tier issuers; possible share-class and currency-hedged variants | Coinbase still dominates ETF custody with 80%+ share of BTC/ETH ETF assets; some banks (U.S. Bank via NYDIG, Citi, others) are re-entering but at smaller scale. Concentration risk stays high unless regulators push for diversification. | Mostly direct spot exposure; no index provider, or simple NAV calculation off a single reference rate. Benchmarks from CF Benchmarks, CoinDesk, Bloomberg Galaxy used for NAV and marketing rather than portfolio rules. | SEC now allows in-kind creations/redemptions for crypto ETPs, so APs can deliver or receive native BTC/ETH instead of cash, tightening spreads and reducing slippage. Plumbing is largely “solved,” so competition is mainly on fees and marketing. | No, as long as products fit the generic Commodity-Based Trust Share standards and the underlying assets meet ISG/futures criteria; exchanges can list without a new 19b-4. |
| Single-asset altcoins that meet generic criteria | SOL, XRP, DOGE, LTC, LINK, AVAX, DOT, SHIB, XLM, HBAR, etc., which either already have or are close to having qualifying regulated futures or ETF exposure. | Custody will be thinner and more concentrated: Coinbase plus a handful of specialists that actually support each coin at institutional scale. Smaller custodians will struggle to sign enough mandates to amortize security and insurance costs. | Some funds will be pure single-asset; others will wrap a futures-linked or blended index if spot markets are fragmented. Indexers (CF, CoinDesk, Bloomberg Galaxy, Galaxy, etc.) gain leverage as “gatekeepers” for which markets count for pricing and surveillance. | APs face real borrow and short constraints in thin markets. Even with in-kind allowed, locating borrow for hedging is harder than for BTC/ETH, so spreads will be wider, and creations may be more episodic. Expect more frequent “no-arb” periods where tracking error blows out when funding or borrow spikes. | Often no, if each underlying meets the generic futures/ISG test. But any asset that does not have a qualifying futures market or ETF exposure fails the generic test and would still need a bespoke 19b-4 to list. |
| Single-asset long-tail and meme-coin ETPs | TRUMP, BONK, HYPE, niche gaming and DeFi tokens in the filing queue that lack deep regulated futures or ISG-member spot markets | Very few top-tier custodians will touch the really illiquid names, so these products may rely on smaller or offshore custodians. That concentrates operational and cyber risk in names that already have weak fundamentals. | Pricing more likely to lean on composite indexes built from a handful of centralized exchanges. Any manipulation or wash trading on those venues directly contaminates NAV; index providers’ methodologies become a major systemic risk variable. | APs will often be issuers’ own affiliates or a tiny circle of trading firms willing to warehouse inventory. Creations/redemptions may be cash-only in practice even if in-kind is permitted, because APs don’t want to hold the underlying. Expect chronic wide spreads, persistent NAV discounts/premiums, and frequent creation halts when liquidity vanishes. | Yes in most cases. Without qualifying futures or an ETF that already provides 40%+ exposure under the generic test, these ETPs fall outside the Generic Standards and must use the traditional, slower 19b-4 path – if they are approved at all. |
| Broad large-cap and “top-N” index ETPs | GLDC-style large-cap baskets (e.g., BTC, ETH, XRP, SOL, ADA), “Top 5/10 by market cap,” or “BTC+ETH+SOL” blends; many of the basket/index products in the Seyffart chart sit here | Custody usually consolidated with a single provider across all constituents to simplify collateral and operational workflows. This amplifies the “single point of failure” problem if a dominant custodian has an outage. | Indices from CF Benchmarks, CoinDesk, Bloomberg Galaxy, Galaxy, etc. decide inclusion rules, weights, and rebalancing. Under the Generic Standards, every component still has to meet its own surveillance/futures test, so index design is constrained by what already qualifies. | More creation/redemption line items per basket, but APs can net flows across components and use in-kind baskets to reduce slippage. The main plumbing risk is rebalance days, when several thin alts must be crossed at once. | No for “plain vanilla” index trusts where every component asset meets the Generic Standards. |
| Thematic / sector index ETPs | “L1/L2 smart-contract index,” “DeFi blue chips,” “tokenization plays,” “meme basket,” etc., mixing qualified and non-qualified names | Custody becomes multi-provider if certain tokens are only supported by niche custodians, complicating collateral management and increasing reconciliation and cyber risk. | Indexers must choose between thematic purity and staying inside the generic regime. Many will publish both a broad “research” index and a narrower investable version. | Creations get fragile because APs need to source several illiquid names at once. One broken component can halt creations for the entire ETP. | Often yes. As soon as the index holds even one asset that fails the futures/ISG test, exchanges lose the generic safe harbor. |
| Options-overlay on single-asset BTC/ETH | Buy-write BTC or ETH ETFs, buffered-loss strategies, collar products holding spot or futures and selling options | Uses the same custodians as plain BTC/ETH products, but adds derivatives plumbing. Collateralization and margin become key operational risks. | Some track buy-write indices; others are actively managed. These are no longer simple commodity trust structures. | APs must manage both spot and options liquidity. During volatility spikes, creations may pause, causing large NAV deviations. | Yes in most cases. Actively managed, leveraged, or “novel feature” ETPs fall outside the Generic Standards. |
| Options-overlay on multi-asset or thematic indexes | “Crypto income” funds writing calls on baskets (BTC+ETH+SOL), volatility-targeting or risk-parity crypto ETPs | Requires multi-asset custody plus derivatives infrastructure. Failures at any layer can force trading halts. | Custom indices and proprietary overlays increase differentiation but reduce comparability and platform adoption. | APs face thin alts, limited options markets, and complex hedging models, implying high costs and wide spreads. | Yes. These sit squarely outside the generic template and require full 19b-4 approval. |
The cull
ETF.com tracks dozens of closures each year, with funds below $50 million struggling to cover costs and often shutting down within two years.
Seyffart predicts crypto ETF liquidations by late 2026 or early 2027. The most vulnerable: duplicate single-asset funds with high fees, niche index products, and thematic bets where the underlying market moves faster than the ETF wrapper can adapt.
Fee wars accelerate the cull. New Bitcoin ETFs launched in 2024 at 20-25 basis points, undercutting earlier filers by half. As the shelf gets crowded, issuers will cut deeper on flagship products, leaving long-tail funds unable to compete on fees or performance.
Secondary-market mechanics crack first on thin underlyings. When an ETF holds a small-cap token with limited borrow, demand spikes force premiums until APs source enough coins.
If borrow disappears during volatility, the AP stops creating, and the premium persists.
Several early crypto index ETFs saw net redemptions and persistent discounts as investors stuck to brand-name single-asset funds and traded around mispricings.
For BTC, ETH, and SOL, the dynamic reverses. More ETF wrappers deepen spot-derivative connections, tighten spreads, and reinforce their status as core institutional collateral.
Bitwise predicts ETFs will absorb more than 100% of net new supply in these three assets, creating a feedback loop: a bigger ETF complex, a thicker borrow market, tighter spreads, and greater appeal to advisors prohibited from holding coins directly.
What the rules still gate and who decides
Generic standards exclude actively managed, leveraged, and “novel feature” ETPs, which must file individual 19b-4 proposals.
Want to launch a passively managed spot BTC ETF? Seventy-five days. Want 2x leverage with daily resets? Back to the old regime.
SEC Commissioner Caroline Crenshaw warned the standards could flood the market with products that skip individual vetting, creating correlated fragilities that regulators only discover in a crisis.
The rules channel the flood toward the most liquid, most institutionalized corners of crypto.
The stakes are simple: does ETF-palooza consolidate crypto's institutional infrastructure around a few dominant coins and custodians, or broaden access and distribute risk?
For Bitcoin, the flood is a coronation. Every new wrapper adds another venue for institutional capital, another source of borrow, another reason for banks to build custody.
Coinbase's assets under custody hit $300 billion in the third quarter of 2025. That scale creates network effects and fragility.
For the long tail, more ETFs mean more legitimacy but also more fragmentation, thinner liquidity per product, and a higher likelihood that any given fund will close.
Issuers bet a few will stick and subsidize the rest. APs bet they can extract spread and borrow fees before someone gets stuck holding an illiquid token during a redemption wave.
Custodians believe concentration pays better than competition, until regulators or clients force diversification.
Generic standards made it easy to launch crypto ETFs. They did not make it easy to keep them alive.
The post 100 new crypto ETFs in 2026 will share a terrifying “single point of failure” that could freeze 85% of global assets appeared first on CryptoSlate.
Disclaimer: The content of this article solely reflects the author's opinion and does not represent the platform in any capacity. This article is not intended to serve as a reference for making investment decisions.
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