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Goldman Sachs follows up with application for Bitcoin income ETF, Call strategy "sacrificing upside for premium," intensifying Wall Street's crypto competition
Goldman Sachs submits Bitcoin income ETF application to the SEC on Monday, using a Covered Call options strategy, aiming to generate regular premium income while exposing investors to BTC. It could launch as early as the end of June, but this type of design inherently sacrifices upside potential during major market rallies.
(Background: Reuters reports: Goldman plans to acquire crypto companies for tens of millions of dollars, major banks want to buy the dip)
(Additional context: [Goldman Sachs CEO] Lloyd Blankfein is stepping down, leaving the complicated relationship with Bitcoin for Goldman to handle)
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Goldman has joined in. According to CoinDesk, on April 14, 2026, Goldman Sachs filed Form N-1A with the U.S. SEC to establish the “Bitcoin Premium Income ETF,” one of the firm’s first direct crypto investment products, following Morgan Stanley’s Bitcoin ETF launch last week.
Currently, Bitcoin spot price is about $74,545, and market expectations for continued institutional entry remain, but the design logic of this new product differs from typical BTC ETFs.
Core Strategy: Selling options for cash flow, but you lose if prices rise too fast
This ETF operates using a Covered Call strategy: the fund holds exposure through Bitcoin-linked ETPs and sells corresponding call options, collecting premiums as fund income distributed to investors.
In plain language: you receive regular cash income, but if BTC surges 30% in a month, you won’t benefit from gains beyond the strike price. The overwrite (option coverage) ratio is dynamically adjusted between 40% and 100% of BTC exposure by the fund manager.
This structure performs better during sideways or slowly declining BTC markets because the premiums can offset some losses; during strong bull markets, it will clearly underperform compared to directly holding spot BTC ETFs.
The fund is managed by Raj Garigipati and Oliver Bunn of GSAM. According to the application, up to 25% of assets can be invested through the Cayman Islands subsidiary “Goldman Sachs Bitcoin Premium Income Portfolio CFC.”
BlackRock takes the lead, Goldman can only go live after 75 days
This strategy is not original to Goldman. BlackRock’s “iShares Bitcoin Premium Income ETF” (ticker: BITA) uses a nearly identical Covered Call structure and is expected to launch within weeks, ahead of Goldman.
Goldman’s application was filed on Monday, and under SEC rules, the 75-day waiting period means it can earliest start trading around late June or early July.
Within analyst circles, these products are jokingly called “boomer candy”—implying they are designed for retirement funds, conservative institutional investors, or traditional investors who don’t want to hold spot BTC directly but want some crypto market exposure. For this group, regular income is more important than betting on maximum upside.
Solomon’s attitude shift: from indifference to “observer”
Goldman CEO David Solomon’s stance on crypto assets has quietly shifted over the years.
He recently publicly stated that he personally holds “very little BTC, but some,” and calls himself a “BTC observer”—a rare stance for a top Wall Street bank CEO. More notably, Solomon repeatedly emphasizes tokenization as “super important” to financial infrastructure, which he sees as his true long-term bet.
In contrast, Goldman’s pace in crypto product deployment lags behind major competitors: Morgan Stanley only launched a BTC ETF last week, JPMorgan and BlackRock moved earlier, and Goldman is now filling the gap.
But another interpretation is that Goldman’s application, ahead of BlackRock’s official launch of BITA, is about positioning for the same client base rather than chasing an already mature market.
This Wall Street crypto product race now involves at least four top institutions, and product differentiation is just beginning.