Authorized participants in ETFs are responsible for the creation and redemption process of the fund through which they create liquidity.
- BlackRock has added Goldman Sachs, Citigroup, UBS, Citadel Securities, and ABN AMRO as authorized participants for the iShares Bitcoin Trust.
- This brings the total number of APs to nine as they join Jane Street Capital, JPMorgan, Macquarie, and Virtu Americas.
- Popular ETFs tend to have over a dozen APs.
BlackRock (BLK) has added five additional authorized participants (APs) to the iShares Bitcoin Trust (IBIT), bringing the total number to nine as the fund continues to attract billions of dollars from investors.
The new APs include Wall Street banking giants Goldman Sachs, Citadel Securities, Citigroup, and UBS as well as clearing house ABN AMRO, according to a prospectus filed with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC). They join Jane Street Capital, JP Morgan, Macquarie, and Virtu Americas.
APs are an integral part of the ETF process as they help create liquidity by changing the supply of shares when there’s a shortage or a surplus. Large ETFs typically have dozens of APs, and in less than three months of existence, IBIT has become fairly sizable with nearly $18 billion in assets under management as of the close yesterday.
The Goldman news recalls that of JPMorgan, whose CEO Jamie Dimon publicly bashed cryptocurrencies for years, but became one of the original APs for BlackRock's IBIT when the fund launched in January.