Michael Saylor-Fueled Crypto Complex Gets Bigger With Debt ETF

(Bloomberg) -- By courting retail daredevils and opportunistic hedge funds alike, Michael Saylor has outwitted his Wall Street skeptics to build up a Bitcoin empire, helping create a whole new crypto-investment complex along the way.

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Now that complex is set to grow again. On Friday, a convertible-bonds exchange-traded fund launches focused on companies like Saylor’s newly rebranded Strategy that have Bitcoin on their balance sheets.

The REX Bitcoin Corporate Treasury Convertible Bond ETF, which is making its debut under the ticker BMAX, holds converts, as they’re known in the industry, from firms including Strategy, which turbocharged the approach of selling equity-linked notes to fund its cryptocurrency purchases. Its wild success with the endeavor spurred a number of other companies to copycat the method.

Convertible bonds start their life as low-interest notes but can turn into equities if share prices go high enough. Investors who buy and hold them can profit from their interest payouts or from any potential upside if the bonds are converted to stocks.

These hybrid instruments are typically traded by institutional investors, including the long-only investors and hedge-fund players that employ an arbitrage strategy with them. The new ETF is, therefore, giving retail traders a chance to get exposure to convertibles issued by companies that are actively incorporating Bitcoin onto their balance sheets, all via an easily-tradeable ETF, according to Greg King, CEO of REX Financial.

“Until now, these bonds have been difficult for individual investors to reach. BMAX removes those barriers,” King said in a statement. The fund also holds convertibles from MARA Holdings Inc., which rolled out its converts-for-Bitcoin-purchases after Strategy did.

It’s the latest crypto ETF teeming with complexity for the mass market, testing speculative appetite amid the sweeping selloff hitting risky assets on trade-war fears.

The one-time software-focused company has, under the auspices of its chairman Saylor, been the largest issuer of convertible bonds in recent years, raising nearly $9 billion. The firm and the crypto peers that followed in its footsteps — companies such as MARA, Riot and Bitdeer Technologies Group — have collectively raised billions of dollars over the past four months, accounting for an ever-larger share of the boarder US convertibles market.

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