Cboe Files Several Amended Documents to Allow Ether Staking in ETFs
The exchange filed amended 19b-4 documents with the Securities and Exchange Commission asking to allow staking of the ETFs.

What to know:
- Cboe has filed to allow staking in spot ether ETFs, a move that could mark a shift in SEC policy under its new leadership.
- The SEC previously blocked staking in ETFs, but with Commissioner Mark Uyeda as acting chair, analysts expect the rule to change this year.
- Beyond ether staking, firms are expanding ETF offerings to other digital assets, including Solana, XRP, Sui, and Aptos.
National securities exchange Cboe is asking the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) to allow staking in several spot ether
Before the funds launched in July, several issuers included staking in their applications. However, the SEC later required them to remove the feature, as the Commission was not allowing it at the time.
Cboe, which is associated with five of the issuers of an ether ETF, including Fidelity, Franklin Templeton, VanEck, and Invesco/Galaxy, on Tuesday, filed amended 19b-4 documents for the Fidelity Ethereum Fund (FETH) and the Franklin Ethereum ETF (EZET), to allow staking.
The move comes after former SEC chair Gary Gensler left the Commission; he resigned shortly before the inauguration of crypto-friendly President Donald Trump in January.
Trump's nominee to run the SEC, Paul Atkins, hasn't been scheduled for a hearing or confirmation vote in the Senate yet. Commissioner Mark Uyeda is the acting chair until Atkins is sworn in. Under Uyeda's watch, the SEC has made several positive moves in regards to other crypto-related ETF applications, spurring hope that staking might see a positive response from Commissioners.
Cboe’s request to stake will likely be approved, said James Seyffart, ETF analyst at Bloomberg Intelligence. “There’s still things that need to be sorted but we expect the SEC will allow staking in the ETFs this year,” he said.
Beyond adding staking, companies have filed to launch ETF products for a range of digital assets. In the last week, companies set up Delaware companies for
Correction (March 11, 2025, 16:40 UTC): Corrects Cboe descriptor.
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