Us Securities and Exchange Commission (Sec) finds public opinion on the point of Litecoin Exchange-Traded (ETF) proposed at Canary Capital. This shows great progress in the organs of the organs because the encryption ETF trend gains traction.
The SEC takes the Canary Litecoin ETF
According to the submission published on Wednesday, the SEC opened a window for public feedback according to the publication of the Litecoin ETF proposal to the federal registration. This application was submitted in the form of 19B-4 submitted by NASDAQ on January 16 by NASDAQ on January 16, which is necessary for exchanges that offer ETF proposals on behalf of the publisher.
ERIC BALCHUNAS, an analyst at Bloomberg ETF, emphasized the importance of this development, saying that the first Altcoin ETF will be recognized. He also pointed out that “S-1 and SEC’s SEC’s opinion was thrown.” This submission is the farthest place to check all the boxes. ” But he questioned whether the SEC took 240 days to determine or choose a faster approval process. “Unknown” he said.
Competition for encryption -based ETFs is growing, and several companies have submitted applications for products related to cryptocurrency such as Solana and XRP. In addition, some companies have proposed a leverage ETF with Melanie Trump’s First Lady Melanie A Trump, related to US President Donald Trump, and consists of the Trump administration’s more -friendly expectations.
The regulatory environment has also changed to a new SEC leadership. Mark Uyeda, who recently appointed the Hester Peirce Commissioner to supervise a dedicated encryption task force, indicates that he starts from a more stringent approach by a former Gary Gensler in the digital asset sector.
Previously, the SEC approved Bitcoin ETF in January 2024, followed by Ether Leeum ETF at the end of that year. The focus of this institution is now focused on evaluating whether additional cryptocurrencies, such as Litecoin, will be approved for the SPOT ETF transaction.
Also read: former SEC Chairman Gary Gensler returns to MIT as a professor.