The U.S. approved spot ether ETFs back in 2024. Hong Kong actually beat them to it - and now its crypto ETF market is quietly scaling up.
Hong Kong's Securities and Futures Commission (SFC) - the city's main markets regulator - just reported that virtual asset spot ETFs have hit HK$4.3 billion (about US$550 million) in market value, up 90% since their 2024 debut.
In April 2024, Hong Kong launched six crypto ETFs: three for bitcoin, three for ether. The idea was to give Asian investors a regulated on-ramp to crypto without having to hold coins themselves.
That's still a fraction of the roughly $58 billion U.S. spot bitcoin ETFs have pulled in since January 2024. But the growth curve matters.
The Growth Nobody Saw Coming
When these ETFs launched, most analysts figured they'd be slow. Hong Kong's market is smaller. Crypto is still a touchy subject for many Asian regulators. And the products themselves are a little unusual.
Hong Kong's funds use an "in-kind" creation model, meaning big investors can swap actual crypto for ETF shares instead of just cash. That's a structural difference from how U.S. spot crypto ETFs were originally set up.
That structure was designed with professional money managers in mind. And the SFC is now leaning into that institutional pipeline - trading volume on licensed virtual asset trading platforms climbed 125% over the past year.
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Why Institutions Are Biting
For a big Asian fund, buying crypto directly is a headache. You need custody, security, compliance - and a lot of trust in an exchange. An ETF solves all of that. It's a familiar wrapper.
Hong Kong's regulators also made a smart call: these ETFs trade during HKEX hours, which lines up with Asian trading desks in Singapore, Tokyo, and Hong Kong. U.S. ETFs trade on New York time, which is the middle of the night for Asian institutions.
That might sound small. But for an institution moving millions of dollars, being able to trade when local desks are staffed isn't a convenience - it's a requirement.
What To Watch
Hong Kong isn't trying to beat the U.S. at the ETF game. It's building a parallel track - one that fits how money moves in Asia.
The next test is regulatory plumbing. The SFC is working with the government on four new rulebooks covering virtual-asset dealing, custody, advisory, and management - aimed at making it clearer who is allowed to do what across the crypto value chain.
Clearer rules tend to mean tighter bid-ask spreads (the gap between buying and selling prices) and steadier turnover. If that happens, the HK$4.3 billion footprint could keep climbing.
For now, the story is simple: a product built around institutional plumbing is growing faster than skeptics expected.
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