Bitwise’s year-end barrage of ETF paperwork should have been a perfect spark for “alt season.” On Dec. 30, the issuer filed with the US Securities and Exchange Commission to launch 11 single-token “strategy” ETFs tied to Aave, Uniswap, Zcash, NEAR, Starknet, Sui, Bittensor, Tron, and other protocols.
Each fund would allocate about 60% of its assets to the underlying coin and the rest to related ETPs and derivatives, with an expected effective date in March 2026.
However, crypto prices and flows barely registered the news. That gap is where a market is now showing ETF filing fatigue.
The 11 new Bitwise products land on top of a crowded 2025 pipeline. Grayscale has already filed for a Bittensor ETF, adding to a roster of spot funds for Bitcoin, Ethereum, Solana, XRP, Dogecoin, and Chainlink.
Generic listing standards, approved by the SEC in September, now let exchanges list commodity-based trust shares without the bespoke 19b-4 approval that used to be the main bottleneck.
Between 2021 and 2024, “we filed an ETF” was a tradeable headline. Today, it is closer to background noise.
Math and regulation changed
Part of the shift is simply math.
Crypto products had a breakout year even before Bitwise’s altcoin wave. Recently launched XRP products surpassed $1 billion in net inflows, while Bitcoin ETFs added over $22 billion this year.
Ethereum funds have reached over $12 billion in cumulative flows, and Solana products have approached $800 million.
A single XRP fund from Canary built more than $300 million in assets and set a first-day volume record among US ETFs, while other issuers trailed. S-1 volume is high, but demand is not.
Flows concentrate in a handful of cheap, easily distributed vehicles. Everyone else is fighting for scraps.
Regulation also makes filings less binary than before. Under the generic standards, an exchange can list commodity-based trust shares that meet preset criteria without waiting for a bespoke SEC order.
Law firms that track the regime say most straightforward spot crypto products can now list via an expedited path, particularly where the CFTC regulates an existing futures market.
Bitwise itself is targeting a standard 75-day window from its Dec. 30 filings to a March 16, 2026, effective date for the 11 altcoin ETFs.

For traders, that means an S-1 is no longer a shock that changes the probability of an ETF from “maybe someday” to “likely soon.”
For a plain-vanilla altcoin with listed futures and no obvious regulatory baggage, the base case is now that an ETF will appear at some point.
What moves the needle is the specific listing venue, the fee, and whether the issuer can win shelf space with wirehouses and platforms.
Listing beats filings
The Solana ETF episode illustrates the point. Bitwise used the new rules and an SEC shutdown to sneak its BSOL fund onto NYSE Arca on Oct. 28, becoming the first US spot Solana ETF.
The fund raised about $420 million in its first week, forcing rivals like Grayscale, VanEck, and Fidelity to scramble with copycat products and other altcoin filings, including for XRP.
Prices and flows reacted to the listing, not to the earlier paperwork. The filing date was noise, as the go-live date and first-week AUM tell investors where real demand sat.
Data from Bitcoin and Ethereum products reinforce that shift from “headline” to “history.” Farside Investors notes that crypto ETFs absorbed tens of billions in 2025, even as many holders lost money because they piled in near the highs.


The same outlet shows that single-day flow reversals, such as late-December inflows that snapped a seven-day, $1 billion outflow streak in Bitcoin and Ether ETFs, barely moved spot prices.
Markets cared more about macro, tariffs, and leverage than about a green or red bar on an ETF flow chart.
Distribution beats documentation
The Bitwise 11-ETF salvo lands in that reality. The filings outline an interesting structure, with 60% spot coins and 40% related ETPs and derivatives, and they signal that US regulators are comfortable enough with crypto plumbing to allow single-name products in Aave or Bittensor at all.
But they do not alter the structural constraints that already define the category: asset allocators still run tight risk budgets for illiquid names, most platforms only recently opened to crypto ETFs, and the lion’s share of flows continues to follow the cheapest, most liquid beta.
Vanguard’s late-2025 decision to finally allow clients to trade third-party crypto ETFs is a better indicator of future flow than any one filing.
The firm now permits access to Bitcoin, Ethereum, XRP, and Solana funds but has no plans to launch its own products, echoing its stance on gold.
That tells the market where distribution is quietly changing. The Bitwise altcoin shelf, if and when it launches, will live or die by whether giants like Vanguard, Schwab, and Merrill are willing to carry more than a token subset of the menu.
The boring phase
For crypto markets, the practical takeaway is that ETF headlines have entered their boring phase.
In 2021, a single futures ETF approval could drive double-digit moves in Bitcoin. In 2023-24, each incremental spot filing for Ethereum or Solana was a narrative event.
By the end of 2025, with generic listing standards in place, four major spot assets already live, and flows heavily concentrated in a handful of funds, the marginal S-1 barely updates anyone’s model.
“ETF filing fatigue” is therefore less about apathy than about maturation.
Markets now price the probability of approval well before a press release drops, and they reserve judgment for the things that really matter: fee levels, liquidity, ticker simplicity, and distributor readiness.
Until those change, “11 new crypto ETFs” will keep generating clicks, but not, on day one, new capital.



