Grayscale and VanEck both amended their BNB Crypto ETF spot filings with the SEC on Friday, marking a concrete procedural step forward in what is shaping up to be a two-issuer race for the first U.S.-listed BNB exchange-traded product.
The simultaneous updates immediately caught the attention of ETF analysts, who flagged the changes as evidence of active SEC engagement rather than a dormant filing in the regulatory queue.
For traders monitoring the broader expansion of the altcoin ETF pipeline, coordinated timing has signal weight beyond isolated filing.
Bloomberg ETF analyst James Seyffart characterized the updates as reflecting direct comments from the SEC, stating that there is “definitely movement at the SEC” on BNB and that the amendments suggest the regulator is actively commenting on product mechanics and disclosures rather than letting filings age.
This framing is important: changes generated by SEC comment letters indicate a live review process, not a speculative placeholder. This is a bullish signal for BNB and the spot altcoin ETF category.
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How the BNB Crypto ETF Process Really Works and Why Active SEC Comments Are the Real Story
The mechanism here deserves to be understood precisely. A U.S. spot crypto ETF requires two parallel regulatory paths to be passed before trading can begin.
The first is the S-1 registration statement filed with the SEC’s Division of Investment Management, which covers fund structure, custody arrangements, risk disclosure and investor mechanisms.
The second is a 19b-4 filing made by the listing exchange with the SEC’s Division of Commerce and Markets, seeking approval to change the exchange’s rules to accommodate the new product type.
Amendments to the S-1 are generated when the SEC issues comment letters identifying deficiencies or requesting clarification.
Each set of amendments narrows the gap between the proposed product and an approvable structure. VanEck’s latest update is considered Amendment No. 5 in its filing sequence, a number that indicates a sustained, iterative dialogue with the SEC rather than a first-pass submission awaiting initial review.
Both deposits are structured as direct spot BNB products and do not include staking at launch. This design choice is not accidental.
Staking is a persistent regulatory pressure point in crypto ETF design; Previous discussions of ether ETFs have been significantly complicated by the economics of staking and yield mechanics.
By launching without staking, both issuers are following the same path taken by spot ether ETFs: get the base product approved first, review the return characteristics later.

Both issuers have also designated Coinbase as a custodian in their current projects, consistent with the institutional custody model used in most US crypto ETP proposals.
The amendments to S-1 and the approval of 19b-4 are not the same step, and their confusion leads to an erroneous analytical conclusion about the true situation of these filings.
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