Digital asset manager Grayscale has filed a highly noteworthy proposal with the United States Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC). The filing seeks to convert its current Digital Large Cap Fund (GDLC) — which includes Bitcoin (BTC), Ether (ETH), Solana (SOL), Ripple’s XRP, and Avalanche (AVAX) — into a spot exchange-traded fund (ETF).

Grayscale Looks To Turn Fund With SOL, XRP, AVAX Into ETF

The crypto industry’s largest asset manager, Grayscale, has filed with the SEC to turn its $523 million fund, which tracks the performance of multiple cryptocurrencies, into an ETF.

The New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) requested the conversion on Grayscale’s behalf in an Oct.14 19b-4 form with the Securities and Exchange Commission.

Grayscale’s Digital Large Cap Fund gives investors exposure to major cryptocurrencies, with BTC having the largest weighting in the fund, followed by ETH, SOL, XRP, and AVAX.

In an accompanying 8-K form, Grayscale informed its clients that the fund reflects the rule and listing changes proposed by the NYSE. A transformation to a spot ETF allows investors to purchase and sell shares in a fund more seamlessly. 

“Today, Grayscale filed to uplist Grayscale Digital Large Cap Fund as a diversified multi-crypto asset ETP on NYSE Arca. The fund is currently trading under ticker: GDLC, and continues to meet growing demand by providing diversified exposure to crypto through a portfolio of market-leading digital assets. This filing reflects Grayscale’s steadfast commitment to making the crypto asset class more accessible for all investors,” Grayscale Investments said in a statement.

Grayscale’s latest filing follows noteworthy conversions earlier this year. The SEC greenlighted the company’s proposals to convert its Grayscale Bitcoin Trust (GBTC) and the Grayscale Ethereum Trust (ETHE) into ETFs, as well as two mini versions of the funds. 

It’s worth noting that Grayscale helped pave the way for the SEC approval of crypto ETFs after the court sided with the asset manager in a suit, concurring that the securities watchdog lacked clear grounds for rejecting the proposed conversion of its flagship Bitcoin Trust to an ETF.

XRP ETF Applications On SEC’s Desk

The proposed conversion of the Grayscale fund comes after Canary Capital applied for a Litecoin ETF, lauding Litecoin as one of the longest-running blockchains with 100% uptime. Just a week ago, Canary Capital also filed to list an XRP ETF. 

Earlier this month, asset manager Bitwise submitted an S-1 form to the Securities and Exchange Commission, requesting permission to create a fund tracking XRP.

However, to the disappointment of XRP bulls, Bitwise’s move was swiftly followed by the SEC filing a notice of appeal to the Second Circuit Court of Appeals, pushing back against Judge Analisa Torres’ ruling that Ripple’s programmatic sales to digital asset exchanges did not break federal securities rules.

Despite the enthusiasm around a potential XRP ETF, it remains uncertain whether the SEC could give its regulatory blessing to the pending XRP applications. However, should the agency deny Grayscale’s application, the firm might take the same lawsuit route it took with its GBTC conversion.