BlackRock is about to give Bitcoin investors something Wall Street’s income-obsessed crowd has been waiting for: yield on their BTC exposure without selling the underlying asset.
The firm’s new iShares Bitcoin Premium Income ETF, trading under the ticker BITA, became effective on Friday after filing a Form 8-A with the SEC. Bloomberg ETF analyst Eric Balchunas expects trading to begin around Thursday, June 18.
How BITA actually works
BITA will hold shares of BlackRock’s iShares Bitcoin Trust ETF, known as IBIT, and sell call options against those holdings. The premiums collected from selling those options get distributed as income to BITA shareholders. You get exposure to Bitcoin’s price movements while also receiving regular income payments. The tradeoff is that your upside gets capped when Bitcoin rallies hard, because those call options you sold mean someone else captures the gains above the strike price.
Up to 35% of BITA’s holdings could be allocated to this options-writing activity.
The sponsor fee comes in at 0.65%. That matters because rival covered-call Bitcoin ETFs charge between 0.95% and 0.99%. BlackRock is effectively undercutting the competition by roughly 30 basis points.
Building on a $50 billion foundation
BITA is built directly on top of IBIT, which launched in January 2024 and has since accumulated approximately $50 billion in assets under management. The ticker $BITA first surfaced in an amended S-1 filing back in early April.
Goldman Sachs has its own bitcoin income ETF in the pipeline, but that product isn’t expected to go effective until July 1. By launching roughly two weeks earlier, BlackRock gets first-mover advantage in capturing the attention and capital of income-seeking investors who want institutional-grade Bitcoin products.
What this means for investors
Bitcoin’s volatility actually becomes the product’s best feature in a covered-call structure. Higher volatility means fatter option premiums, which means more income distributed to shareholders.
In a sustained bull market, BITA will underperform IBIT. Those call options that generate income also create a ceiling on returns. If Bitcoin rips 30% in a quarter, BITA holders won’t capture all of that upside. They’ll get the income payments plus whatever price appreciation occurs below the strike prices of the options sold.
BlackRock’s 0.65% fee sets a new benchmark for the category. Existing covered-call Bitcoin ETFs charging nearly 1% will face pressure to either lower fees or justify the premium through demonstrably superior strategy execution.
Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy.

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