March 16, 2025
11 11 11 AM
Latest Post
21Shares to Liquidate Two Bitcoin and Ether Futures ETFs Amid Market Downturn Coinbase Stock Decline Can’t Stop Highly Leveraged Long ETF Rollouts Gold ETFs Inflow Takes Over Bitcoin ETFs Amid Historic Rally TON Surges 20% as Telegram Founder Pavel Durov Recovers Passport From French Authorities SEC Commissioner Hester Peirce on the New Crypto Task Force SOL, XRP Zoom 5% Higher as Bitcoin Grapples With $84K Level New Canadian P.M. Carney Closes Gap on Polymarket with BTC-Friendly Poilievre Cardano: Deep Dive on the Trump Reserve Token Whose Blockchain Ignores TVL Court Approves 3AC’s $1.53B Claim Against FTX, Setting Up Major Creditor Battle Weekly Recap: Regulatory Wins, Market Doldrums

Six Bitcoin Mutual Funds to Debut in Israel Next Week: Report

Six mutual funds tracking the price of bitcoin (BTC) will debut in Israel next week after the Israel Securities Authority (ISA) granted permission for the products, Calcalist reported on Wednesday.

All six will start operations on the same day, Dec. 31, a condition imposed by the regulator, Calcalist said. Final approval for the funds was granted last week.

The funds will be offered by Migdal Capital Markets, More, Ayalon, Phoenix Investment, Meitav and IBI, with management fees ranging from as high as 1.5% to 0.25%. One of the funds will be actively managed, trying to beat bitcon’s performance. They will initially transact just once a day, though future products will be able to trade continuously, Globes said in a Tuesday report, citing market sources.

The ISA’s approval comes almost a year after the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) greenlighted spot bitcoin exchange-traded funds (ETFs) in the world’s largest economy, during which the world’s largest cryptocurrency has more than doubled to trade near a record high. The U.S. funds have gathered a net $35.6 billion of investor cash.

“The investment houses have been pleading for more than a year for ETFs to be approved and started sending prospectuses for bitcoin funds in the middle of the year. But the regulator marches to its own tune. It has to check the details,” an unidentified senior executive at an investment house told Calcalist.

This post was originally published on this site