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B HODL
As of October 15, 2025 at 20:52 UTC
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About B HODL
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Latest News
5 articlesiShares Ethereum Trust ETF (ETHA) has significantly outperformed VanEck Bitcoin ETF (HODL) over the past year, delivering 28% returns versus HODL's negative 18% return. While ETHA has higher volatility with a 64% maximum drawdown compared to HODL's 49%, the performance gap reflects the different underlying assets and investment theses. The choice between these single-crypto ETFs should be based on belief in the underlying asset rather than cost differences.
FBTC and HODL are two Bitcoin spot ETFs offering pure Bitcoin exposure with key trade-offs. FBTC dominates in scale with $12.7 billion in AUM and in-house asset storage, but charges a 0.25% expense ratio. HODL offers lower fees at 0.2% (waived through July 2026 for first $2.5B) with only $1.2 billion in AUM. Both tracked Bitcoin closely with nearly identical negative returns over the past year, making the choice dependent on investor priorities regarding liquidity, fund size, and fee structure.
Two Bitcoin-focused ETFs offer contrasting investment approaches: HODL provides direct Bitcoin exposure with lower fees (0.20%) but fell 15% over the past year, while WGMI invests in Bitcoin mining companies with higher volatility (beta 6.01) and surged 84% in the same period. WGMI's outperformance stems from mining companies' amplified profits and diversification into AI services, though it carries significantly higher risk and a 0.75% expense ratio.
The iShares Bitcoin Trust ETF has rapidly grown to $88 billion in assets, significantly outpacing the VanEck Bitcoin ETF, which has $2 billion in assets. Both ETFs aim to track Bitcoin's price performance, with slight differences in expense ratios and returns.