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Been looking at blockchain ETFs lately and honestly there's more going on in this space than a lot of people realize. Everyone talks about Bitcoin and Ethereum price swings, but the real infrastructure play might be worth paying attention to. Blockchain technology itself has become a legitimate investment category, and some serious money is flowing into it through ETFs.
So what exactly are blockchain ETFs? They're basically funds that let you get exposure to companies building and using blockchain tech without having to pick individual stocks. You're buying a basket of holdings all in one go, which is way simpler than trying to figure out which crypto-adjacent companies to invest in.
I was digging into the biggest blockchain ETFs by assets and found some interesting patterns. The Amplify Transformational Data Sharing ETF (BLOK) sits at the top with around 893 million in assets. What's different about this one is it's actively managed, not just passively tracking an index. They've got 51 holdings spread across mining, platforms, and applications. Top picks include Metaplanet, Robinhood Markets, and Galaxy Digital.
Then there's the VanEck Digital Transformation ETF (DAPP) with 182 million in assets. This one tracks companies getting at least 50 percent of revenue from digital assets and crypto infrastructure. Only 22 holdings but pretty focused. Coinbase shows up here too, along with MicroStrategy.
Fidelity's offering (FDIG) has been gaining traction with 170 million in assets. Their expense ratio is the lowest on this list at 0.4 percent, which matters if you're holding long-term. They've got 49 holdings mostly in tech services.
Global X Blockchain (BKCH) launched more recently in 2021 with 162 million in assets. They track a different index but cover similar ground—mining, applications, digital asset transactions. Second-lowest expense ratio at 0.5 percent.
Rounding out the top five is First Trust (LEGR) with 99 million in assets. This one's interesting because they went deep with 102 holdings, including semiconductor plays like NVIDIA and AMD. Makes sense when you think about it—mining hardware is part of the blockchain ecosystem.
What's worth noting is these blockchain ETFs give you exposure to the infrastructure layer, not just the tokens themselves. Companies like Microsoft and IBM have invested in blockchain for a reason—they see applications in supply chain, fintech, and other sectors beyond crypto.
If you're thinking about getting into blockchain ETFs, the expense ratios matter more than people think. Over time, that 0.4 to 0.73 percent difference compounds. Also worth checking which holdings align with your thesis on where blockchain is actually heading.
Personally, I've been tracking these on Gate to compare performance against direct crypto holdings. The diversification angle is interesting—you get mining, exchanges, infrastructure, all in one fund. Whether that's better than picking individual plays depends on your risk tolerance and how much research you want to do.