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BlackRock wants to slash costs of trading bitcoin

bitcoin

But will the SEC agree that the asset manager’s refiled application will facilitate the democratization of crypto trading?

BlackRock Inc. Chief Executive Larry Fink called bitcoin an “international asset” and said the money manager wants to use its heft to make it less expensive and easier to invest in the cryptocurrency.

“It costs a lot of money right now to transact bitcoin,” Fink said Wednesday in an interview on Fox Business. “We hope our regulators look at these filings as a way to democratize crypto.”

The money management giant filed paperwork last month to set up an exchange-traded fund that invests directly in bitcoin, which prompted a flurry of similar applications from rival issuers and a rally in bitcoin’s price to more than $30,000. Bitcoin rose more than 12% in June alone and is up more than 80% year to date.

Nasdaq recently refiled BlackRock’s application, adding details about the proposal to indicate that Coinbase Global Inc. will provide market surveillance for the new product. BlackRock wants to hear from U.S. regulators such as the Securities and Exchange Commission, Fink said.

“We look at this as an opportunity,” he said. “We work really closely with our regulators.”   

Bitcoin can represent an alternative, international asset akin to “digitizing gold,” Fink said. Initially, he said, he was skeptical because “it was heavily used for, let’s say, illicit activities.”

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