A Ripple (XRP) Exchange-Traded Fund (ETF) is a financial product that tracks the price of XRP and allows investors to buy and sell shares of it on traditional stock exchanges, without needing to directly buy, store, or manage the XRP token itself. So far, the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) has greenlit Bitcoin (BTC) and Ethereum (ETH) ETFs.
Robbie Mitchnick, Global Head of Digital Assets at BlackRock, recently sat down with Nate Geraci, President of NovaDius Wealth Management, Host of ETF Prime and Crypto Prime, to talk about XRP ETFs, tokenization, and the SEC’s stance on crypto.
In September, firms like Grayscale, Bitwise, Canary, CoinShares, Franklin Templeton, 21Shares, and WisdomTree all filed amended S-1 statements for XRP ETFs. This serves as a clear sign of progress and an effort to respond to SEC feedback. But one name was missing: BlackRock. Despite managing some of the world’s largest Bitcoin and Ethereum ETFs, the asset management giant hasn’t filed for an XRP ETF.
When asked why, Mitchnick explained that the decision is more complex than people might think. “There are a lot of factors that go into that decision-making process,” he said.
He went on to note that BlackRock constantly evaluates market capitalization, liquidity, maturity, and clarity of investment use cases, weighing how a product would fit into client portfolios over the long term. Liquidity, for example, determines whether clients can enter and exit positions efficiently, while maturity reflects how developed and resilient the ecosystem around a given asset has become. “It’s not a one-time decision,” he added. “It’s an ongoing evaluation.”
Still, optimism for an XRP ETF remains strong. Recently, Crypto News Flash confirmed that the SEC has approved new standards that could streamline the process for spot crypto ETFs, meaning applications wouldn’t need to be reviewed one by one. With exchanges like Nasdaq, NYSE Arca, and Cboe BZX already reflecting those changes in their filings, many in the XRP community are keeping their hopes alive.
Commenting on the tokenization market and ongoing speculation that BlackRock might be exploring tokenized ETFs, Robbie Mitchnick said the space is still in its early days. Over the past several years, plenty of projects have tried tokenizing different types of assets, but so far, adoption has been fairly limited.
The one clear success story, he explained, has been in money market funds. By combining tokenization with stablecoins, the long-standing trade-off between earning full yield on dollar savings and maintaining liquidity has essentially been broken.
With tokenized money market funds, investors can now earn competitive yields while retaining the ability to convert their holdings back into stablecoins at any time, instantly. That means you can generate returns on your savings, but the moment you need digital cash to settle a transaction or make a payment, it’s immediately available, a development he described as a “really powerful unlock.”
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