Share this article

Bitcoin ETF Giant Grayscale Introduces a Crypto Staking Fund

The Grayscale Dynamic Income Fund initially includes APT, TIA, CBETH, ATOM, NEAR, OSMO, DOT, SEI and SOL.

By Ian Allison|Edited by Nick Baker
Updated Mar 9, 2024, 2:15 a.m. Published Mar 5, 2024, 4:55 p.m. 2 min read
Grayscale Investments CEO Michael Sonnenshein

Grayscale, the investment firm behind the biggest spot bitcoin ETF, has introduced a new fund that stakes cryptocurrencies to earn income.

The Grayscale Dynamic Income Fund (GDIF), the company said Tuesday, initially will own assets for nine blockchains: Aptos , Celestia (TIA), Coinbase Staked Ethereum (CBETH), Cosmos , Near , Osmosis , Polkadot , SEI Network {{SEI}}, and Solana {{SOL}}. It aims to distribute rewards in U.S. dollars on a quarterly basis.

"As our first actively managed Fund, GDIF is an important expansion of our product suite and enables investors to participate in multi-asset staking through the convenience and familiarity of a singular investment vehicle," Grayscale CEO Michael Sonnenshein said in a statement.

Staking plays a key role in how some blockchains. Whereas the Bitcoin network relies on proof-of-work – in which miners crunch complex numerical puzzles to create new bitcoin proof-of-stake networks like Ethereum instead allow owners of their token to pledge their assets to run the network. Doing so is called staking, and it generates income for the staker.

It's an auspicious occasion to bring crypto products to market with bitcoin hitting an all-time high above $69,000 on Tuesday. Speaking to the crypto rally, Zach Pandl, head of research at Grayscale, said valuations for Ethereum's ether {{ETH}} and most other tokens remain below their highs from the previous crypto cycle.

"If the macro markets backdrop remains favorable, we could see further increases in token valuations – but macro factors could also be a headwind," Pandl said in an email.

More For You

The U.S. Department of Justice headquarters in Washington (Jesse Hamilton/CoinDesk)

Fuller allegedly diverted $6.2 million for personal use and $5.5M for Ponzi-like payments; only 3% of funds went to crypto trading.

What to know:

  • Texas man Nathan Fuller allegedly raised $12.3 million from 150 investors via a false AI crypto bot scheme promising up to 100% returns.
  • Fuller allegedly diverted $6.2 million for personal use and $5.5M for Ponzi-like payments; only 3% of funds went to crypto trading.
  • To cover losses, Fuller used fabricated...