Now that several spot Bitcoin ETFs have been trading for a few months, I'm evaluating whether to include them in my retirement portfolio as a long-term, regulated exposure to crypto, but I'm concerned about the long-term tracking error versus holding actual Bitcoin and the still-significant expense ratios. I'm also unsure how these products will behave during extreme market volatility compared to the underlying asset. For investors who have been analyzing these new instruments, what are your observations on their performance and liquidity so far, and what criteria are you using to choose one fund over another beyond just the management fee?
Short take: spot BTC ETFs can track Bitcoin fairly well most days, but tracking error and liquidity in big moves are the real tests. Fees matter, but liquidity and the fund’s structure often matter more.
Beyond fee, key criteria: look at historical premium/discount to NAV, bid-ask spreads, and how easily new shares can be created or redeemed. If a fund's liquidity is thin, the ETF can trade far from BTC, especially during volatility.
Deeper due diligence: custody and counterparty risk (who holds the coins and under what security), the redemption mechanism (in-kind vs cash), whether the ETF holds actual BTC or uses a derivative-backed structure, and the sponsor's track record. In volatile times, the premium/discount can widen as flows move and liquidity moves around.
Slight disagreement: you might be better with a hybrid approach—keep a core BTC position for true exposure and use a regulated ETF to complement; the ETF may underperform BTC on a big drawdown due to redemptions.
Location matters: US ETFs vs non-US products have different providers, liquidity pools, tax treatment, and regulatory risk. If you’re outside the US, the product set and costs differ; be sure to account for that.
Starter due-diligence outline you can reuse: list 3-5 candidate ETFs, pull 1-year (or longer) tracking error vs BTC, chart premium/discount, check average daily volume and spreads, read the custody and redemption sections, review audit and custodian details, and run a simple TCO model across different market scenarios. Then pick 1-2 to test with a small position.