Just now! Wall Street giants are offering "$BTC with training wheels" — is it honey for retail investors or a trap?

Goldman Sachs has submitted a document to the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, applying to establish a covered call exchange-traded fund linked to $BTC. This is the firm’s first direct foray into cryptocurrency investment, and the product prospectus has not yet disclosed specific management fee rates.

The core mechanism of this product is “covered call options.” The fund will hold exposure to $BTC while selling call options based on $BTC, thereby earning premium income. In exchange, if the price of $BTC surges significantly above the strike price, the fund must give up the excess gains to the option buyer, locking in its upside potential. Essentially, it sacrifices some potential gains to secure a stable monthly cash flow.

This move further confirms Wall Street’s strategic intent to incorporate digital assets into mainstream allocations. After Morgan Stanley and BlackRock, Goldman Sachs’s entry signals that traditional finance’s integration of digital assets is accelerating. Notably, Goldman Sachs CEO David Solomon publicly admitted in February this year that he personally owns $BTC. This shift from a previously skeptical Wall Street leader is itself a strong market signal.

This product structure is not innovative but directly transplanted from the $14 trillion US ETF market. In the stock market, options income ETFs experienced explosive growth after the pandemic. According to Strategas Research, such products currently manage over $180 billion in assets and are the largest segment within derivatives ETFs.

JPMorgan’s launch of a covered call ETF in 2020, coded JEPI with an asset size of $45 billion, was a key catalyst and has inspired many imitators. Data shows that net inflows into options income ETFs are about $70 billion in 2025, double that of the previous year. Strategas’s chief ETF strategist Todd Sohn pointed out that these products package complex options trading into accessible tools that generate ongoing cash flow, offering higher yields than traditional dividend ETFs with lower volatility.

In the crypto space, BlackRock applied for a similar product earlier this January, and Roundhill has been operating related products since 2024. Goldman Sachs’s entry makes the institutional lineup in this niche even stronger.

This product design addresses a somewhat ironic pain point: $BTC has long been criticized by traditional investors as a “zero-yield” asset that does not produce dividends or interest. Now, Wall Street is attempting to artificially generate cash flow through financial engineering.

Market observers liken these products to “training wheels for $BTC,” believing they lower the entry barrier while maintaining institutional branding. It is further speculated that it would not be surprising to see Goldman Sachs launch a full spot $BTC ETF in the future. Some analysts also note that Goldman Sachs’s entry further solidifies digital assets as a legitimate investment exposure.

However, the protective effect of this strategy has a clear ceiling. Since hitting its all-time high last October, $BTC has fallen approximately 40%, a stark reminder of its extreme volatility. In an environment where asset prices can fluctuate wildly in both directions, the premium income from selling options will limit profits in a bull market and may be insufficient to hedge large declines in a bear market. The buffer provided by premiums may be very limited in extreme market conditions.


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