The biggest story in crypto this year was the approval of Bitcoin spot exchange-traded funds, which entered the market in January and were wildly successful. Nearly a year later, these products have helped propel the once-fringe crypto industry into the mainstream and expand its global adoption, according to a new report from blockchain data analytics firm Chainalysis.
The arrival of traditional financial institutions transformed the sector and consolidated the United States as the dominant force. “This was a fundamental game changer in the North American context, but with global ramifications,” said Eric Jardine, head of cybercrime research at Chainalysis. Fortune.
North America accounts for 22.5% of global crypto activity, with an estimated on-chain value of $1.3 trillion, according to this year’s “Geography of Cryptocurrency” report (Mexico n is not included in this section of the report).
The introduction of exchange-traded funds marked a key inflection point for the crypto industry, Jardine said, codifying a place for established traditional financial entities like BlackRock, Fidelity and Goldman Sachs. A remarkable 70% of crypto transfers in North America were over $1 million, “reflecting the growing influence of major financial players in the region’s crypto market,” the report said.
The approval of Bitcoin ETFs in January legitimized the currency, allowing institutions to participate through a well-defined instrument and onboard a new group of participants, Jardine said. “So once that clarity was provided by an SEC decision, you end up with this whole new class of players able and willing to participate and they wouldn’t have been absent from that,” he said. he declared.
Globally, Jardine said North American dominance of the crypto market could be good news for regions of the world that were early adopters. “This could result in a pricing mechanism where assets that had previously been purchased and moved on-chain in years past, all of a sudden your large institutional players bring with them a lot of liquidity that could inflate prices in the long term,” he said.
Jardine also sees North American dominance driving global adoption at the local level. “For example, what we’ll probably see is that other large institutions, traditional financial institutions, in other places, will probably all start participating in this asset class as well, and there will be sort of of diffuse legitimization effect,” he says “Where the US has now declared it, Bitcoin is an asset class in its own right… And that’s just going to pave the way for adoption by more. people.”
Surpassing the wildly popular Gold ETF in its first hundred days, the Bitcoin Spot ETF has become the most popular ETF in history. “This asset class is here, and it will be here essentially for the long term, based on everything we can infer from the data so far,” Jardine said.