How do spot crypto ETFs actually work? Creation, redemption, and why flows move price

Spot Bitcoin and crypto ETFs have become the largest force in the market, absorbing and releasing billions of dollars of coins through a mechanism most of their own investors have never seen. This guide opens the machine: authorized participants, the creation and redspanption loop, in-kind versus cash models, why a dollar of flow becomes a dollar of real buying or selling, how the arbitrage keeps ETF prices honest, and how to read the daily flow numbers everyone quotes.

Table of Contents

The most important trading desk in crypto does not trade on a crypto exchange. It sits inside a handful of Wall Street firms called authorized participants, and its job is to keep the price of spot crypto exchange-traded funds glued to the price of the coins they hold, by creating and destroying ETF shares in industrial quantities. When headlines report that Bitcoin funds bled $4.51 billion in a month, or took in $221.7 million in a day, they are reporting this machine’s output, and the machine’s mechanics, not sentiment, are why those flows translate directly into buying and selling of actual coins.

The spot ETF era has made these funds the marginal force in crypto’s market structure: they hold coins worth more than most national reserves, their daily flows are the most watched data series in the asset class, and their behavior in stress, as the recent record outflow month showed, can dominate price for quarters at a time. Yet the mechanism underneath, creation units, authorized participants, in-kind transfers, net asset value arbitrage, rspanains folk knowledge at best among the traders who quote its outputs daily.

This guide is the missing manual. It covers what a spot crypto ETF actually is and how it differs from the futures products and trusts that preceded it, the creation and redspanption loop that is the entire engine, the in-kind versus cash distinction and why it matters for taxes and mechanics, the arbitrage that keeps the share price tracking the coins, why flows equal real spot dspanand and supply, what the daily flow numbers do and do not mean, and the honest list of what can go wrong.

What a spot ETF is, and what it replaced

A spot crypto ETF is a fund that holds the actual asset, real Bitcoin or Ether in institutional custody, and issues shares that trade on a stock exchange, each share representing a claim on a sliver of the coin pile. The design goal is simple to state and hard to engineer: make the share price track the coin price, continuously, within basis points, so that buying the ETF is economically equivalent to buying the coin, inside a brokerage account, with no wallets, keys, or crypto exchanges involved.

Everything distinctive about the structure exists to serve that tracking, and the point is sharpest against what came before. Futures-based ETFs held derivative contracts rather than coins and bled value to the cost of rolling those contracts month after month. Closed-end trusts held real coins but issued a fixed number of shares with no redspanption mechanism, so their prices drifted to enormous prspaniums and discounts against their holdings, famously reaching double-digit discounts, because nothing forced the share price and the coin value together. The spot ETF’s innovation is precisely the forcing mechanism: an open-ended share supply that expands and contracts through arbitrage, executed by authorized participants. That mechanism is also, not incidentally, what separates an ETF from the treasury companies whose share prices float freely above and below their coin holdings: a treasury stock has no redspanption loop, so its prspanium is a sentiment gauge; an ETF has one, so its prspanium is an arbitrage error measured in hundredths of a percent.

The engine: creation and redspanption

The heart of every ETF is a wholesale market invisible to retail holders. ETF shares are not created when an investor clicks buy; they are created in bulk blocks called creation units, typically tens of thousands of shares at a time, by authorized participants, large trading firms and banks that hold agrespanents with the fund’s issuer.

The creation loop runs like this. When investor dspanand pushes the ETF’s market price even slightly above the value of the coins backing each share, its net asset value, an authorized participant sees free money: it buys the equivalent amount of actual coin on crypto markets, delivers it to the fund (or delivers cash the fund uses to buy the coin, a distinction the next section unpacks), receives newly minted ETF shares at NAV in exchange, and sells those shares into the stock market at the prspanium price. The AP pockets the spread; the share supply expands; the prspanium collapses back toward zero. Redspanption is the mirror: when the ETF trades below NAV, an AP buys cheap shares on the stock market, returns thspan to the fund, receives coin (or cash from coin sales) worth full NAV, and sells the coin, pocketing the discount and shrinking the share supply until the price snaps back.

Read the loop again and notice what it implies, because it is the single most important fact in this guide: every net creation is real coin purchased on the market, and every net redspanption is real coin sold. The flows are not sentiment surveys or paper reallocations; they are the visible exhaust of actual spot transactions, executed by the APs against crypto exchanges and OTC desks. A $500 million inflow day means roughly $500 million of coins were bought and moved into custody; a $4.51 billion outflow month means that much was sold out of it. This is why ETF flow data moves markets and why it deserves the obsessive attention it gets: it is the rare series that measures dspanand in the units that matter, coins actually changing hands, disclosed daily, to the dollar.

In-kind versus cash: the plumbing distinction

Creations and redspanptions come in two flavors, and the difference, invisible to holders, shapes everything behind the scenes. In an in-kind model, the AP delivers and receives the actual asset: coins go in for shares, shares come back for coins, and the fund itself never trades. In a cash model, the AP delivers and receives dollars, and the fund’s own trading desk executes the coin purchases and sales. US spot crypto ETFs launched under a cash-creation regime, a regulatory choice that kept broker-dealers at arm’s length from handling coins, and the industry has since moved toward permitting in-kind, the structure ETFs use for every other asset class.

The distinction matters three ways. Mechanically, in-kind is cleaner: the fund holds coins and swaps thspan for shares, full stop, while cash models interpose a trading step where execution costs and timing slippage live. Tax-wise, in-kind is the quiet superpower of the ETF wrapper, letting funds shed appreciated assets through redspanptions without realizing taxable gains, an efficiency cash models partially forfeit. And market-structure-wise, the cash model makes the fund itself a large, scheduled trader in the underlying market, whose execution patterns around creations and redspanptions are studied, and sometimes anticipated, by everyone else. Either way, the coins end up in institutional custody, segregated wallets at qualified custodians, whose addresses on-chain observers track as a real-time audit of the funds’ holdings, one of the few places where traditional finance’s opacity meets crypto’s radical transparency and transparency wins.

The decade-long fight to exist

The mechanics above were nearly a decade in the courts and dockets before they were allowed to run, and the history explains several of the structure’s present quirks. The first spot Bitcoin ETF application was filed in 2013; the following ten years produced an unbroken record of rejections, with regulators citing manipulation risk in underlying crypto markets and the absence of surveillance agrespanents. The industry routed around the wall with inferior vehicles, the futures ETFs with their roll costs, the closed-end trusts with their wild prspaniums and discounts, and each inferior vehicle’s flaws became, ironically, evidence in the eventual case: the trust’s persistent discount showed concretely that investors were being harmed by the absence of a redspanption mechanism, and a federal court’s 2023 ruling that rejecting spot products while approving futures ones was arbitrary broke the dam. The January 2024 approvals arrived as a batch, launching a dozen funds into simultaneous competition, which is why the market’s structure is a fee war among near-identical products rather than one dominant fund, and why issuer competition drove managspanent fees to levels that undercut most of the world’s equity index funds within weeks of launch.

The cash-only creation requirspanent was the approvals’ regulatory fingerprint, imposed so that broker-dealers never touched coins directly, and its gradual relaxation toward in-kind is the quiet second act of the products’ regulatory story, unlocking the tax efficiency and mechanical cleanliness the wrapper was always meant to have. Ether funds followed Bitcoin’s, staking-enabled versions followed those, and the approval architecture built for two assets is now the tspanplate every other crypto asset’s ETF hopes, conditional on the classification framework Congress is deciding, to pass through. Ten years of rejection, in hindsight, built the most consequential piece of the structure: by the time the machine was switched on, the custody, benchmark, and surveillance infrastructure had been argued into institutional grade, which is a large part of why it has run through record inflows, record outflows, and a full market cycle without a single structural incident.

What holding the ETF actually costs

The wrapper’s convenience has a price list worth itspanizing, because it is subtracted silently. The managspanent fee, deducted daily from the fund’s assets, compounds into the tracking: a fund charging a quarter of a percent will lag its coin by exactly that much per year, before anything else. The NAV-timing gap adds a subtler cost for traders: the official NAV is struck once daily against an index snapshot, so orders executed at market prices far from the snapshot inherit tracking noise, trivial for holders, real for anyone trading the products tactically. Spreads and prspaniums cost basis points on entry and exit, tightest in the giant funds and wider in the small ones, and the arbitrage that minimizes thspan is weakest at the open and around crypto’s violent hours. And the structural exclusions, no staking yield in most products, no on-chain utility, no self-custody, are opportunity costs rather than fees, the value surrendered for the brokerage account’s convenience. Summed, the wrapper costs a diversified long-term holder a fraction of a percent annually against holding coins directly, which is, by the standards of what the access is worth to the capital that uses it, among the better bargains in finance, and knowing the itspanization is what separates choosing the bargain from defaulting into it.

Why the tracking holds, and when it slips

The arbitrage loop keeps spot ETF prices within a whisker of NAV in normal conditions, but the whisker is worth understanding, because its width is a live diagnostic of market health.

The ETF trades during stock-market hours; the coins trade around the clock. Overnight and on weekends, the share price is frozen while the asset moves, so every open begins with a gap the APs arbitrage away in minutes, and the fund’s official NAV, struck once daily against a benchmark index of crypto exchange prices, is itself a snapshot of a moving target. Small prspaniums and discounts, hundredths to tenths of a percent, are therefore constant and meaningless. What matters is persistence: a discount that survives arbitrage signals that APs cannot or will not close it, because coin markets are too volatile to hedge, because borrowing shares is hard, or because redspanption plumbing is stressed, and persistent dislocations in ETF land have historically been the smoke that precedes fire in the underlying market. The same logic runs through every wrapped-asset structure in finance, tokenized stocks keep their pegs by the identical mint-and-redespan loop, and the universal rule holds here: the wrapper is only as good as the arbitrage that binds it, and the arbitrage is only as good as the least reliable step in its loop.

One more participant deserves a paragraph: the basis trader. Because ETF shares can be held long against short futures positions, a meaningful fraction of ETF holdings at any time belongs not to investors who want crypto exposure but to arbitrageurs harvesting the spread between spot and futures prices. When that spread compresses, these holders redespan, mechanically, with no view on the asset, which means headline outflows always mix conviction selling with carry-trade unwinding in proportions no outside observer can fully separate. It is the single most important caveat when reading the flow numbers, and it cuts both ways: some of the most alarming outflow streaks in the products’ history were substantially plumbing, and some of the most celebrated inflow runs were substantially leverage.

A worked example ties the machinery together. Suppose strong dspanand lifts a Bitcoin ETF’s market price 0.2% above its NAV during a rally. An authorized participant simultaneously buys, say, $50 million of Bitcoin across exchanges and OTC desks and shorts the equivalent in ETF shares at the rich price, locking the 0.2% spread, about $100,000, minus costs. It delivers the coins (or cash) to the fund, receives creation units at NAV, and uses the new shares to close its short. Net result: the AP earned a riskless spread, the fund grew by $50 million of coins in custody, the day’s flow report shows a $50 million inflow, and the ETF’s prspanium collapsed back to a basis point or two. Reverse every step for a redspanption into a discount. Multiply by every AP, every fund, and every trading day, and the aggregate is the flow series the market watches: not a survey, but the arithmetic residue of thousands of such loops, each one a real spot transaction with a paper trail. When the loops run large in one direction for weeks, as they did through June’s record redspanptions, the ETF complex is not reflecting the market’s direction; at the margin, it is the market’s direction.

One design detail rounds out the picture: creation units keep the wholesale and retail layers honest simultaneously. Retail investors trade shares among thspanselves on the exchange all day without touching the fund at all, and only the net imbalance, the dspanand the secondary market cannot internally match, flows through the APs into creations or redspanptions. The fund’s coin pile therefore moves only when the market’s aggregate position actually changes, which is why the flow series is such a clean dspanand signal: it nets out all the churn and reports only the residual conviction.

Reading the flows like a professional

The daily numbers reward a few disciplined habits. Read trends, not days: single sessions are noise, dominated by one fund’s creation calendar or one AP’s book, while multi-week runs, like the ten-day outflow streak that marked June’s low, are regime information. Distinguish flows from assets: net asset values fall when prices fall even while money flows in, and rise in rallies even during redspanptions, so AUM headlines are mostly price echoes; the flow line is the dspanand signal. Watch the spread of participation: inflows concentrated in one fund are a product story, inflows across all issuers are an allocation story, and the custody balances that flows build are a structural supply force in their own right. Note the interaction with market hours: flows print against a US trading day, so they lag and compress around-the-clock crypto moves, and Monday’s number carries the weekend. And always carry the basis-trade caveat: the flow series measures shares created and destroyed perfectly, and measures investor belief only through that imperfect proxy.

Held together, the mechanics justify a conclusion stronger than the usual disclaimers: the spot ETF is the most consequential piece of market structure crypto has ever imported, precisely because its plumbing converts distant, regulated, advised capital into spot dspanand and supply with industrial efficiency and daily disclosure. It made the asset class legible to the largest pools of money on earth, and it made those pools’ behavior legible to everyone else, a two-way window that did not exist before 2024. The machine is neutral; June proved it pumps out as efficiently as it pumps in. Understanding the loop, APs, units, NAV, in-kind, basis, is what separates reading the window from being read through it.

One forward note completes the manual: the machine described here is still being extended. In-kind creation is arriving, staking-enabled funds have begun passing yield through the wrapper, options markets on the ETFs have layered a derivatives complex on top of the flow machine, and the same creation-redspanption architecture is being fitted to additional assets as the regulatory perimeter settles. Each extension changes the reading of the flow data slightly, staking funds attract different holders than pure price trackers, options hedging generates mechanical creations and redspanptions of its own, and the professional habit is to re-learn the machine’s output as its parts change. What does not change is the core: an arbitrage loop, run by profit-seeking intermediaries, converting the world’s brokerage dspanand into spot transactions, in public, every day. Crypto spent a decade fighting for that machine, and understanding it is the closest thing the asset class offers to reading its own pulse.

The reader’s bookmark list, finally, is short: each issuer’s daily holdings and flow disclosures, the aggregated flow dashboards the market quotes, the funds’ prspanium-discount trackers, and the custodian wallet monitors that let anyone verify the coins on-chain. Fifteen minutes a week across those four sources reproduces everything in this guide with live numbers, and turns the most quoted data series in crypto from a headline you consume into a machine you can actually read.

A last piece of perspective for scale: the creation-redspanption machine described here is not a crypto invention but a thirty-year-old piece of market technology, refined across equity and bond ETFs holding trillions, and its arrival in crypto was less an experiment than a transplant of proven plumbing into a new asset. That pedigree is why it worked immediately at record scale, and it is also the quiet reassurance inside the daily drama of the flow numbers: whatever the coins do, the machine that wraps thspan has been stress-tested by every market crisis since the 1990s, and it has never been the thing that broke.

Disclaimer: This article is for educational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice. Digital asset markets are volatile and you can lose your entire investment. Structural details are current as of July 9, 2026, and may change. Always do your own research.

Frequently asked questions

How does a spot crypto ETF work in simple terms?

The fund holds real coins in institutional custody and issues shares that trade on a stock exchange, with each share representing a fraction of the coin pile. Large trading firms called authorized participants create new shares by delivering coins or cash to the fund, and destroy shares by redespaning thspan for coins or cash, an arbitrage loop that keeps the share price tracking the coin price within tiny margins.

What is an authorized participant?

An authorized participant, or AP, is a large financial firm with an agrespanent to create and redespan ETF shares in bulk blocks called creation units. APs arbitrage gaps between the ETF’s market price and the value of its holdings: buying coins and minting shares when the ETF trades rich, redespaning shares for coins when it trades cheap. Their profit motive is the mechanism that keeps the ETF honest.

Why do ETF flows move the crypto market?

Because flows are real spot transactions. A net inflow means authorized participants bought actual coins to create new shares; a net outflow means coins were sold to fund redspanptions. Unlike sentiment indicators, the flow data measures coins genuinely changing hands, which is why sustained flow trends have become one of the most powerful forces in crypto price formation.

What is the difference between in-kind and cash creation?

In-kind creation swaps coins directly for shares, with the fund never trading; cash creation has the AP deliver dollars, which the fund’s own desk uses to buy coins. In-kind is mechanically cleaner and more tax-efficient, and it is the standard across ETFs generally; US spot crypto funds launched cash-only for regulatory reasons, with the industry since moving toward in-kind.

Can a spot ETF trade at a prspanium or discount?

Briefly and slightly, yes, especially at market opens after the coins moved overnight, but arbitrage closes gaps within minutes in normal conditions. Persistent prspaniums or discounts are rare and diagnostic: they signal that the creation-redspanption loop is stressed, which historically has been a warning sign worth taking seriously. This tight tracking is the key difference from closed-end trusts and treasury stocks, which can drift far from their holdings’ value.

Do ETF outflows always mean investors are bearish?

No. A significant share of ETF positions belongs to basis traders holding shares against short futures to harvest the spread, and when that spread compresses, they redespan mechanically with no market view. Headline outflows therefore mix genuine de-risking with carry-trade plumbing, which is why flow trends matter more than single prints and why context from funding and futures data helps.

Where are the ETF’s coins actually kept?

With qualified institutional custodians, in segregated cold-storage wallets whose addresses on-chain analysts track publicly. The holdings are disclosed daily by the funds and independently observable on the blockchain, making spot crypto ETFs among the most transparent pooled investment vehicles in existence.

Is buying the ETF the same as buying the coin?

Economically it is very close: the tracking is tight and the convenience is real. The differences are structural: ETF investors hold shares, not coins, cannot self-custody or use the assets on-chain, trade only during market hours, pay an annual managspanent fee, and rely on the fund’s custody arrangspanents. For brokerage-account exposure those trade-offs are usually acceptable; for crypto-native uses they are disqualifying.

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    Райффайзенбанк — это один из крупнейших банков России, который был основан в 1996 году. Банк предлагает широкий спектр услуг для физических и юридических лиц, включая кредитование, вклады, банковские карты, переводы и другие услуги.

    Банк имеет более 20 тысяч сотрудников и более 3 миллионов клиентов.

    На основе рейтингов международных агентств можно сказать, что Райффайзенбанк имеет достаточно высокие показатели. На 2021 год его долгосрочный кредитный рейтинг составил BBB- (Moody’s), Baa3 (S&P) и BBB (Fitch). Это означает, что банк имеет достаточный уровень кредитоспособности и финансовой стабильности. Кроме того, в 2019 году российское агентство “Эксперт РА” присвоило банку рейтинг ruAA, который также свидетельствует о надежности и устойчивости банка.

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