HONG Kong is considering allowing staking for exchange-traded funds (ETFs) investing directly in Ether, potentially unlocking a source of passive income that has been removed from prospective US issuers’ plans.
The Securities and Futures Commission (SFC) has held discussions with the city’s cryptocurrency ETF issuers about providing staking services via licensed platforms, after fielding proposals in recent weeks, according to sources familiar with the matter.
The talks are ongoing and there is no clear timeline for a decision, the sources added, asking not to be identified discussing private information. A spokesperson for the SFC declined to comment.
If approved, staking yields could bolster demand for Hong Kong’s spot-crypto ETFs, which have met with lukewarm demand since launching in April. It could also give the Asian finance hub a head start on the US, where prospects of a regulatory green light for spot-Ether ETFs – albeit without staking – have improved recently.
US issuers including Fidelity Investments and Ark Investment Management have scrapped plans for staking the Ether they would purchase for their proposed ETF products. The decisions, while potentially smoothing the path with US regulators, may make the funds less attractive than buying Ether directly on crypto exchanges.
Investors can earn passive income through staking, a process that involves locking tokens on the Ethereum network to help validate transactions. Ether staking currently pays out the equivalent of about 4 per cent annually in the form of more coins.
GET BT IN YOUR INBOX DAILY
Start and end each day with the latest news stories and analyses delivered straight to your inbox.
Serra Wei, chief executive officer of Aegis Custody, said discussions between Hong Kong ETF issuers and regulators on staking have been “healthy”, adding that it would fit within the local regulatory regime.
“It would be a milestone for Hong Kong to add staking into spot ETH ETFs,” said Wei, who has not been involved in talks with the SFC. Aegis provides custody technology solutions to banks in Hong Kong.
Hong Kong is vying with the likes of Singapore and Dubai to become a digital asset hub after rolling out a dedicated regulatory regime last year. Officials are trying to restore the city’s reputation as a modern financial centre following a crackdown on dissent that dulled its allure.
Aside from ETFs, Hong Kong is considering a batch of applications to expand its roster of licensed digital asset exchanges as well as working on a framework for stablecoins, which are typically pegged one-to-one to fiat currency and backed by reserves of cash and bonds. BLOOMBERG