BlackRock listed the iShares Bitcoin Premium Income ETF (BITA) on Nasdaq on June 16, 2026, targeting an annual return of 15-25% while aiming to capture at least 70% of bitcoin’s price appreciation through an actively managed covered call overlay.
The asset manager filed its Form 8-A on June 11 and landed on the exchange about two weeks before Goldman Sachs, whose structurally similar Bitcoin ETF income product is expected around early July under the SEC’s standard 75-day filing clock.
ALL TOGETHER: iShares Bitcoin Premium Income ETF $BITA launches TOMORROW (Tuesday). Confirmed by Nasdaq. Additionally, the ETF will target an annual return of 15-25% while trying to capture at least 70% of Bitcoin’s upside. pic.twitter.com/BK0M4cO4mj
– Éric Balchunas (@EricBalchunas) June 15, 2026
This isn’t just another wrapper of bitcoin for spot. This is the first step in a second-generation product cycle, in which institutional crypto issuers move from answering “how do investors hold bitcoin” to “how can they derive a return profile from it.”
BITA was launched as Bitcoin trades today at $62,400, down -2.5% on the day heading into the weekend, which often leads to price volatility in the market.

(SOURCE: TradingView)
BITA Bitcoin Mechanics: How Covered Call Overlay Really Works
The mechanism works as follows: BITA holds exposure to Bitcoin through a combination of direct BTC held at Coinbase and shares of BlackRock’s own IBIT, the iShares Bitcoin Trust which launched in January 2024 and has grown to approximately $48-50 billion in assets, according to BlackRock’s Nasdaq press release dated June 16, 2026.
BlackRock’s SEC S-1 filing states that the fund “seeks to broadly reflect the price performance of bitcoin while providing premium income through an actively managed strategy of writing (selling) call options primarily on IBIT stock.”
It’s important to note that the squeeze is partial: filings and commentary indicate that BITA sells call options on approximately 25-35% of its IBIT exposure, which preserves a substantial amount of upside compared to fully hedged strategies.
Bitcoin’s high implied volatility is the direct source of this return, a point that Jay Jacobs, BlackRock’s U.S. head of thematic and active ETFs, made explicit when he described BITA as a mechanism for converting BTC’s volatility into a cash flow, a framework based on standard Black-Scholes option premium pricing, where higher implied volatility directly feeds into higher premium income.
The context of how Bitcoin’s implied volatility has interacted with macroeconomic tensions and Treasury yields over the past few months is directly relevant to the sustainability of this source of return in different regimes.
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Competitive Positioning: Fee Structure and Goldman Contrast

(SOURCE: BlackRock.com)
BITA’s 0.65% expense ratio is the clearest competitive signal on file. NEOS’ Enhanced Income Bitcoin ETF (BTCI), which has generated over $650 million in net inflows over six months at 0.99% fees and a 26.7% distribution rate, and Roundhill’s Covered Call Strategy Bitcoin ETF (YBTC), priced at 0.99%, are both at the high end of the 0.95-1.00% range that has defined the category.
Grayscale’s comparable covered call bitcoin income fund occupies similar fee territory. BITA undercuts them all while carrying the significant liquidity of IBIT as collateral infrastructure for option layering – an advantage that smaller issuers relying on futures exposure cannot replicate.
Goldman’s next product is structurally distinct: it will not directly hold bitcoin in cash; instead, it will gain exposure through other Bitcoin spot exchange-traded products and their associated options, with a potential subsidiary structure in Cayman. Goldman’s crush is also more aggressive, with documents showing call sales on 40-100% of bitcoin exposure compared to BITA’s partial crush.
This approach could generate higher revenues in sideways markets, but would significantly limit upside participation against BITA in a sustained BTC rally. Goldman’s final fee level, once made public, will be the clearest signal of how aggressively Goldman intends to compete on costs.
Eric Balchunas, senior ETF analyst at Bloomberg, confirmed details of BITA’s launch and described the competitive dynamics with a two-word article on X: “Game on.” This framing is analytically precise. The race is less about the income yield itself and more about which issuer will secure dominance in model portfolios, wireframes and OCIO allocations before the category matures.
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Disclaimer: Coinspeaker is committed to providing unbiased and transparent reporting. This article is intended to provide accurate and current information, but should not be considered financial or investment advice. Because market conditions can change quickly, we encourage you to verify the information for yourself and consult a professional before making any decisions based on this content.

Daniel Frances is a technical writer and Web3 educator specializing in macroeconomics and DeFi mechanics. Hailing from crypto since 2017, Daniel leverages his experience in on-chain analytics to write evidence-based reports and in-depth guides. He holds certifications from the Blockchain Council and is dedicated to providing “insight gain” that overcomes market hype to find real utility for blockchain.


