BlackRock submitted a fourth amended S-1 registration statement for its iShares Bitcoin Premium Income ETF (BITA) to the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) on June 10, 2026. The filing reveals the Wall Street giant has already seeded the fund with nearly $10 million in net assets.
This specialized product aims to offer investors yield through an actively managed covered-call strategy, primarily selling call options on BlackRock’s own spot Bitcoin ETF, IBIT.
The new filing indicates that BITA will hold a mix of Bitcoin, cash, and shares in the iShares Bitcoin Trust (IBIT). By writing options contracts against these holdings, the fund generates premium income to distribute to shareholders.
This move signals a shift in institutional appetite toward crypto-native income products as the initial wave of spot ETF adoption matures. BlackRock Financial Management has already purchased 198,000 shares at $50 each to provide initial liquidity for the launch.
BlackRock sets sponsor fee for Bitcoin income strategy
In a move that could undercut existing competitors, BlackRock has set the sponsor fee for BITA at 0.65%. While this is higher than the fee for its standard spot Bitcoin ETF, it is significantly lower than current market leaders in the covered-call space. Two existing Bitcoin income ETFs currently command fees of 0.
95% and 0.99%, suggesting BlackRock intends to use its massive scale to capture market share through aggressive pricing.
The timing of the amendment suggests a launch is imminent. Bloomberg ETF analyst Eric Balchunas noted that this is likely the final version of the document, predicting the fund could go live within weeks rather than months. If the SEC grants approval, BITA will trade on the Nasdaq, further cementing the role of traditional exchanges in the digital asset ecosystem.
This development follows a period where Morgan Stanley expanded Bitcoin access for its wealth clients, showing a broader trend of banks and asset managers broadening their crypto offerings. BlackRock’s entry into the income segment is a logical next step for the firm, which already oversees roughly $12.5 trillion in total assets globally.
Seed capital and initial portfolio composition
The filing details exactly how the fund has been structured during its seeding phase. BlackRock Financial Management, acting as the seed investor, facilitated the purchase of approximately 110 BTC and 90,901 IBIT shares. Additionally, the fund has already written 856 options contracts, demonstrating the mechanics of the income-generation strategy in real-time before daily trading begins for the public.
The fund’s reliance on IBIT as an underlying asset creates a feedback loop within BlackRock’s ecosystem. Since IBIT has already attracted over $60.7 billion in inflows since its January 2024 launch, BITA offers a way to leverage that massive liquidity. This strategy is particularly effective when prices are flat, potentially providing a cushion during periods when Bitcoin faces sharp correction risk or lateral movement.
Competition heats up with Goldman Sachs in pursuit
BlackRock is not the only heavy hitter eyeing the crypto income market. Goldman Sachs & Co. LLC filed its own paperwork in April for a Bitcoin Premium ETF, with a reported target launch date around July 1. This “race to market” between two of the world’s most powerful financial institutions highlights the growing legitimacy of Bitcoin as a yield-bearing asset class.
The competition extends to the list of authorized participants for BlackRock’s new fund. BofA Securities, Goldman Sachs, Jane Street Capital, JP Morgan Securities, and Virtu Americas LLC are all named as entities capable of conducting creations and redemptions. Having these major desks involved ensures that the ETF will have the deep liquidity required for institutional-scale investors seeking steady returns.
Market expectations for annual yields
Investors are paying close attention to the potential yield BITA might deliver. Currently, existing Bitcoin income ETFs in the market are generating annual yields between 27% and 41%. While these high numbers come with the trade-off of capped upside potential during major bull runs, they appeal to those who view Bitcoin as a long-term holding but want to realize gains along the way.
The SEC has been reviewing this specific BITA proposal since the Delaware trust was registered in September 2025. After several extensions and a formal review process that began in December 2025, the regulator appears to be nearing a final decision. The custodian for the fund’s Bitcoin holdings will be Coinbase, maintaining the relationship BlackRock established with its spot ETF.
As the market evolves, these complex financial products represent the “second act” of crypto integration. By transforming a volatile commodity into a predictable income stream, BlackRock is targeting a different demographic of conservative, yield-starved investors who may have sat out the initial spot Bitcoin frenzy.
The success of the iShares Staked Ethereum Trust ETF (ETHB), which reached over $435 million in AUM in its first month, suggests there is a clear appetite for crypto products that do more than just track price. With BITA, BlackRock is betting that the future of the industry lies in sophisticated, managed strategies rather than just passive holding.
