In a landmark moment for European digital asset investing, Jacobi Asset Management officially listed Europe’s first spot Bitcoin Exchange-Traded Fund on Euronext Amsterdam on August 15, 2023. The Jacobi FT Wilshire Bitcoin ETF, trading under the ticker BCOIN, marks a significant milestone as European institutional investors gain access to a fully regulated, physically backed Bitcoin investment vehicle — putting Europe ahead of the United States in the race for a spot Bitcoin ETF.
TL;DR
- Jacobi Asset Management launched Europe’s first spot Bitcoin ETF on Euronext Amsterdam
- Ticker BCOIN, benchmarked to the FT Wilshire Bitcoin Blended Price Index
- Custody provided by Fidelity Digital Assets; market making by Flow Traders, Jane Street, and DRW
- First digital asset fund compliant with SFDR Article 8 through a decarbonisation strategy
- Launch came over a year after the fund’s initially planned debut
A Groundbreaking Listing for European Crypto
The Jacobi FT Wilshire Bitcoin ETF represents the culmination of a multi-year effort to bring a regulated spot Bitcoin product to European markets. Approved by the Guernsey Financial Services Commission (GFSC), the fund offers institutional investors direct ownership of the underlying Bitcoin asset — a critical distinction from unsecured or synthetically backed products that have previously dominated the European digital asset landscape.
Bitcoin was trading around $29,170 on the day of the listing, with Ethereum at $1,826, reflecting a market that had been consolidating through the summer months. The broader crypto market capitalization stood near $1.07 trillion, with Bitcoin dominance at approximately 60.4%.
Tier-1 Infrastructure Partners
Jacobi assembled an impressive roster of institutional partners to support the ETF. Fidelity Digital Assets serves as the custodian, providing secure storage for the fund’s Bitcoin holdings. Flow Traders operates as the primary market maker, while Jane Street and DRW serve as Authorized Participants, ensuring robust liquidity and tight spreads for investors.
The fund’s benchmark, the FT Wilshire Bitcoin Blended Price Index, is provided by Wilshire Indexes, a leading institutional-grade index provider. Mark Makepeace, CEO of Wilshire Indexes, called the launch “an important milestone for the digital asset industry and a transformative moment for the global financial industry.”
Europe Moves Ahead of the US
Perhaps the most striking aspect of the BCOIN listing is that it placed Europe definitively ahead of the United States in offering a spot Bitcoin ETF. While American regulators had repeatedly delayed or rejected spot Bitcoin ETF applications, European investors gained access to a fully regulated product backed by direct Bitcoin ownership.
“It is exciting to see Europe moving ahead of the US in opening up Bitcoin investing for institutional investors who want safe, secure access to the benefits of digital assets using familiar and regulated structures like our ETF,” said Martin Bednall, CEO of Jacobi Asset Management.
ESG-Aligned: The Decarbonisation Strategy
What sets the Jacobi ETF apart from other digital asset products is its commitment to environmental sustainability. The fund is the first digital asset fund compliant with SFDR Article 8, the European Union’s Sustainable Finance Disclosure Regulation. In collaboration with digital asset platform Zumo, Jacobi implemented a verifiable Renewable Energy Certificate (REC) solution that quantifies the electricity consumption attributable to the Bitcoin held in the ETF and purchases equivalent RECs.
This approach differs fundamentally from carbon offsetting — instead of purchasing carbon credits, the fund procures clean power certificates that are transparently recorded on a blockchain, providing digital proof of the environmental commitment.
Why This Matters
The BCOIN listing on Euronext Amsterdam represents far more than a single product launch. It signals that European regulators are more receptive to digital asset innovation than their US counterparts, potentially shifting the center of gravity for institutional crypto adoption. The fund’s ESG compliance also addresses one of the most persistent criticisms of Bitcoin investing — its environmental footprint — in a way that satisfies institutional mandates. For altcoin markets and the broader crypto ecosystem, the availability of regulated spot Bitcoin products creates a gateway for traditional finance capital to flow into digital assets, ultimately benefiting the entire market.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial advice. Always conduct your own research before making investment decisions. Past performance is not indicative of future results.
Europe beats the US to a spot BTC ETF and nobody really talks about it. Fidelity custody, Jane Street making markets. The infrastructure was ready, SEC just refused to move
BCOIN being SFDR Article 8 compliant with a decarbonisation angle is smart positioning. European pension funds can actually buy this thing
SFDR Article 8 compliance was the key that unlocked pension fund allocations. without that ESG wrapper most european institutions couldnt touch crypto etfs even if they wanted to
SFDR Article 8 was the skeleton key for european institutional allocation. without the decarbonisation wrapper its just a volatile commodity fund that compliance departments reject on sight
meanwhile gensler was still calling crypto a casino. europe built the regulatory framework first and won the institutional race by default
Marta gensler literally called bitcoin a casino in 2023 while europe was already live with a regulated product. institutional capital went where it was welcome
Gensler calling bitcoin a casino while european pension funds were actively buying BCOIN through regulated channels. the US regulatory hubris cost years of institutional development
Fidelity custody + Jane Street market making. the euro clear infrastructure was ready years ago, SEC just sat on its hands
The Jacobi ETF listing shows Europe’s regulatory approach is working where the US has stalled. Fidelity custody gives institutional confidence.
@Erik N. Completely agree. The institutional capital flowed to where there was clear regulation, not where there was uncertainty.
SFDR Article 8 compliance was indeed the key innovation here. European pension funds can now allocate without regulatory headaches.