BlackRock files final amendment for Bitcoin Premium Income ETF as race with Goldman Sachs heats up

1 hour ago 13

BlackRock has submitted what appears to be the final amendment to its SEC registration for the iShares Bitcoin Premium Income ETF, trading under the ticker BITA. The fund charges a sponsor fee of 0.65% of net assets, accrued daily, and is expected to launch imminently.

The timing here is not accidental. BlackRock is sprinting to get BITA to market before Goldman Sachs rolls out its own Bitcoin Premium Income ETF, which is expected to become effective around July 1, 2026.

What BITA actually does

BITA is an actively managed ETF that primarily writes options on shares of BlackRock’s existing spot Bitcoin ETF, IBIT. By selling those call options, the fund generates income from premiums while still giving investors exposure to Bitcoin’s price movements. The catch, as with all covered-call strategies, is that upside participation gets capped when Bitcoin rallies hard.

The 0.65% fee is worth paying attention to. The two largest existing Bitcoin covered-call ETFs charge between 0.95% and 0.99%. BlackRock is coming in roughly 30 basis points cheaper, which over time and at scale, adds up to meaningful savings for investors.

BlackRock’s crypto empire keeps expanding

BITA doesn’t exist in a vacuum. It’s built on top of IBIT, BlackRock’s spot Bitcoin ETF that launched in January 2024 and now manages approximately $47 billion to $50 billion in assets.

Since initially filing for BITA in January, BlackRock has made several amendments to refine the ETF’s structure and strategy.

Bloomberg ETF analyst Eric Balchunas has highlighted the urgency behind BlackRock’s push to launch before Goldman Sachs. Goldman filed its own competing Bitcoin Premium Income ETF in April 2026, setting up what could become the most closely watched product race in the crypto ETF space this year.

The bigger picture for Bitcoin income products

For investors considering BITA, the key trade-off is straightforward. In a sideways or mildly bullish Bitcoin market, a covered-call strategy can outperform simple buy-and-hold because the option premiums add to total returns. In a sharply rising market, the strategy underperforms because you’ve sold away some of the upside. And in a severe downturn, the premiums provide only a thin buffer against losses.

The 0.65% fee, while competitive against existing Bitcoin covered-call products, is still significantly higher than what investors pay for plain vanilla equity covered-call ETFs, some of which charge under 0.40%.

One thing to watch: how much of IBIT’s daily trading volume BITA’s options activity might represent, and whether that creates any secondary effects on IBIT’s price dynamics. With IBIT sitting on roughly $47 billion to $50 billion in assets, it has plenty of liquidity to absorb options activity.

The Goldman Sachs product launching around July 1 will provide a direct comparison point on fees, strategy execution, and performance.

Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy.

Read Entire Article