Key Takeaways
The ProShares Bitcoin Strategy ETF (BITO) is the first U.S. Bitcoin-linked ETF, launched on October 18, 2021, and listed on the NYSE Arca exchange.
BITO does not hold actual Bitcoin — it gains exposure through Bitcoin futures contracts traded on the Chicago Mercantile Exchange (CME).
The fund carries an annual expense ratio of 0.95% and may pay a monthly distribution to shareholders.
ProShares offers four Bitcoin-linked ETFs — BITO, BITU, BITI, and SBIT — each built for a different market view and risk tolerance.
Spot Bitcoin ETFs, approved by the SEC in January 2024, hold actual Bitcoin and are structured differently from BITO's futures-based approach.
Investors can buy and sell BITO shares through a standard brokerage account, without the need for a crypto wallet or exchange account.
It launched on October 18, 2021, and trades on the NYSE Arca exchange.
BITO does not hold actual Bitcoin.
Instead, the fund gains exposure to Bitcoin price movements through futures contracts — specifically, contracts traded on the Chicago Mercantile Exchange (CME).
The expense ratio for
BITO is 0.95% annually, meaning an investor with $10,000 in the fund pays roughly $95 per year in management fees.
BITO is registered under the
Investment Company Act of 1940, which places it under standard U.S. regulatory oversight — a layer of protection that direct crypto holdings do not provide.
A futures contract is an agreement to buy or sell an asset at a set price on a future date — without ever touching the asset itself.
BITO buys Bitcoin futures contracts on the CME, which lets the fund track Bitcoin's price without the fund ever holding a single BTC.
Here is the catch: those contracts expire each month.
When one contract approaches expiration, BITO sells it and buys a new, longer-dated contract — a process called "rolling."
When longer-dated contracts cost more than near-term ones — a condition known as contango — the rolling process creates a drag on returns.
This means BITO's performance can diverge from Bitcoin's actual spot price, especially over longer holding periods.
Investors should understand this structural difference before treating BITO as a one-to-one Bitcoin substitute.
ProShares offers four Bitcoin-linked ETFs, each built for a different type of market view.
BITO — ProShares Bitcoin Strategy ETF The original and largest in the lineup, BITO targets standard Bitcoin price exposure through futures contracts and may pay a monthly distribution.
It is designed for short-term tactical trades, not long-term holding, because daily rebalancing causes returns to drift over time.
SBIT — ProShares UltraShort Bitcoin ETF SBIT targets -2x the daily performance of Bitcoin.
Here is how the two structures compare.
BITO holds Bitcoin futures contracts — not Bitcoin itself.
Spot Bitcoin ETFs hold actual Bitcoin in custody, which means their price is designed to track the coin's real-time market value more directly than a futures-based structure.
BITO carries a 0.95% annual expense ratio, reflecting the complexity and cost of managing a rolling futures portfolio.
Spot Bitcoin ETFs have generally carried lower annual expense ratios than BITO's 0.95%, reflecting the difference in operational complexity between holding physical Bitcoin and managing a rolling futures portfolio.
Because BITO must roll futures contracts monthly, its returns can lag behind spot Bitcoin — particularly in markets where longer-dated contracts trade at a premium.
Spot Bitcoin ETFs do not face this rolling cost, so their tracking tends to stay tighter to the actual Bitcoin price over time.
BITO is registered under the Investment Company Act of 1940, which provides familiar investor protections and avoids the need for the fund to directly custody Bitcoin.
Spot Bitcoin ETFs hold the actual asset, which introduces a different risk profile around Bitcoin custody arrangements.
Neither structure eliminates the underlying volatility of Bitcoin itself — both rise and fall with the broader crypto market.
What is the ProShares Bitcoin Strategy ETF (BITO)?
BITO is the first U.S.-approved Bitcoin-linked ETF, launched October 18, 2021, gaining exposure to Bitcoin through CME futures contracts rather than holding the asset directly.
What is BITO's expense ratio?
BITO carries a net expense ratio of 0.95% annually, as confirmed on the ProShares official fund page.
Does the ProShares Bitcoin ETF pay a dividend?
BITO may pay a monthly distribution to shareholders, which is reflected in its total return performance and is distinct from the distributions of spot crypto products.
What is the ticker for the ProShares Bitcoin Strategy ETF?
The fund trades under the ticker BITO on the NYSE Arca exchange.
What is the ISIN for BITO?
The ISIN for the ProShares Bitcoin Strategy ETF is US74347G4405.
What is the ProShares Ultra Bitcoin ETF (BITU)?
BITU targets 2x the daily performance of Bitcoin through futures and swaps, designed for short-term tactical exposure rather than long-term holding.
The ProShares Bitcoin ETF family gives investors multiple ways to access Bitcoin price movements — from standard futures exposure with BITO, to leveraged and inverse strategies with BITU, BITI, and SBIT.
Each fund serves a different purpose, and none of them eliminates Bitcoin's inherent price volatility.
If you want to track the live Bitcoin price alongside your research, you can check the
Bitcoin price on MEXC for real-time market data.