ETF BTC
Fees expense ratio, trading, and commission transaction fee
Taxes IRA/401K protection post-tax, and capital gains?
Liquidity broker hours seller/buyer demand
Minimums one share one satoshi + tx fee
Another way I would compare the two is by thinking of BTC as buying a house,
and ETF as being a member of a condominium. With your home, you control ownership. For a condo you don't get ownership of the real land. In each case, the trade-offs
can be related to its level of risk.
Owning a home is direct personal cost.
You bear the burden, repairs, acts of nature, are your responsibility. Also,
you are making slower, single purchases. With this responsibility, you get control.
In contrast with condos, there
are multiple interests. Part of the attraction is freedom from upkeep, and
there is a sense of security from other partners, shared risk. I know of
members that have multiple properties. It's this shared exposure that makes it so you can hold more quantity. At the same time, there are plenty of challenges with decision by committee, and HOA dues.
I am skeptical of the global financial system but short term, I am speculating the price. When I say I don't have to worry about the security of my coins I am referring to my personal management of the coins. I do not have to worry about managing them myself although entrusting third-parties is contradictory to the motive of decentralized currency.
Basically, you're saying is I am just speculating short term price I should buy into the ETF (assuming it's approved) instead of bitcoins ? – Dr.Von – 2017-03-10T15:28:16.923
1the etf won't immediately start trading if it's approved. The effect of the approval on bitcoin's price will have already played out. – hedgedandlevered – 2017-03-10T15:53:47.120