According to Coinbase Institutional’s John D’Agostino, head of the strategy, a little-known regulatory limit keeps spot Bitcoin ETF growth from accelerating. While discussing Squawk Box on CNBC, D’Agostino underscored a subtle factor that has escaped notice since Bitcoin ETFs were made available.
Financial brokers are not permitted to recommend these products to their clients directly. D’Agostino warned that a much larger surge in investment from institutions and individuals could be delayed because of this hidden barrier.
Bitcoin is complicated to classify, and D’Agostino noted that treating the largest cryptocurrency as either tech stocks or digital gold would miss essential differences. Bitcoin is sometimes compared to the Nasdaq or gold due to its volatility or durability as a store of value, but it is distinct enough to stand alone in the asset world. He pointed out that Bitcoin’s scarcity, which is determined by mathematics, is a significant reason for its continued demand during times of low supply.
According to D’Agostino, a clear statement emerges from examining ETF inflows. More than $5.5 billion has moved into Bitcoin ETFs since he was last on CNBC two weeks earlier. D’Agostino highlighted that this advance in Bitcoin ETF investments easily outmatched the figures seen for gold-backed ETFs during the same period, further confirming Bitcoin’s ascent among investor choices.
Broker Limitations on Bitcoin ETF Recommendations Still in Place
What stood out most from D’Agostino’s comments was his explanation of the slowness with which old financial advisory systems adapt to Bitcoin. At present, brokers are preventing regulation from actively pushing Bitcoin ETFs to their clients. He emphasized that this requirement creates a gap frequently unrecognized by analysts and the media.
If the restriction is ever removed, and D’Agostino believes it will be, the flow of funds into Bitcoin ETFs may grow rapidly, he said. Many potential investors in retail clients remain unengaged because brokers cannot propose Bitcoin ETFs. Institutional players are involved, but adding the influence of broker-guided retail funds may transform how Bitcoin prices change.
In addition, D’Agostino argued that Bitcoin’s rising correlation with technology stocks and its function as inflationary protection do not fully explain its recent price surge. Instead, he proposed that Bitcoin’s combination of rarity, association with technology, and worldwide liquidity establishes it as a unique asset class, particularly in light of ETFs.
Therefore, as Bitcoin maintains prices above $100,000, infrastructure development, regulatory advances, and improved product accessibility are drawing greater attention. The regulatory permission for financial advisors to recommend Bitcoin ETFs may become the key driver of further acceleration in the market.
According to Squawk Box’s official X account, the surge in ETF investments after D’Agostino’s earlier appearance provides additional evidence that investors are ready to take on more exposure, provided one final regulatory development occurs.
As pending regulatory adjustments become clearer, it is possible that Bitcoin’s ETF story is not over. Instead, it appears that Bitcoin’s ETF journey is set to enter one of its most notable periods of change.