When Chainlink briefly appeared on a DTCC reference list, the crypto industry jumped to claim a “LINK ETF confirmed.”
In reality, just like with XRP and Bitcoin, this was just a routine DTCC plumbing update, preparing for potential ETFs long before the SEC signs off. LINK had made it into the settlement system, not past the approvals gate.
However, it is generally a good sign. Most crypto ETFs that appear on the list eventually go live within 6 months. Bitcoin ETFs were listed in October 2023 and finally went live in January 2024, while Canary Capital’s XRP ETF appeared on DTCC this month and went live today.
Still, the distinction matters because it helps ground you in reality, as DTCC’s role begins where speculation usually ends. It’s a post-trade clearinghouse, not a regulator, and its data reflects operational readiness, not policy blessing. Bitcoin, Ethereum, and even XRP have undergone a similar rumor cycle.
The difference between BTC and ETH was that these came after the formal filings were already underway, including exchange rule changes and registration statements that form the backbone of ETF approval. Without both, a ticker on DTCC’s website is just scaffolding: an empty doorway with no house behind it.
The real gatekeepers
To reach day-one trading for a crypto ETF, two main approvals are required in a specific order. First, the exchange seeking to list the ETF must obtain approval for a Rule 19b-4 filing. This filing requests SEC permission to change an exchange rule to list the new product.
This step has often been a stumbling block for crypto ETFs. The SEC evaluates whether there is a “market of significant size” to detect and deter manipulation, or if an alternative surveillance arrangement exists that achieves the same goal.
This standard was the issue in Grayscale’s case, forcing the SEC to clarify the criteria. That led to the approval of spot Bitcoin and Ethereum ETFs in 2024.
SEC orders said that oversight deals with markets like CME address manipulation. For Ethereum, exchanges could use correlation analysis to demonstrate that futures and spot prices move together.
Once the 19b-4 approval is in hand, the ETF issuer must submit an S-1 registration statement, detailing the fund’s structure, custodian, pricing, risks, and fees. The SEC reviews this document and may ask follow-up questions, as was the case with the Ether ETF. No trading can begin until the S-1 is declared effective.
In summary, the exchange must first obtain listing approval (19b-4), and the issuer must then obtain offering approval (Form S-1). Only when both approvals are granted can an ETF debut.
In 2025, the SEC introduced a generic-listing framework designed to make these two approval steps simpler for digital-asset ETFs that closely resemble previously approved products. While it certainly shortened the timeline, exchanges still need to demonstrate the underlying market’s liquidity and price reliability. For tokens like LINK, meeting both approval requirements remains challenging.
Why this matters
If a LINK ETF eventually clears all these steps, it could reshape how both crypto natives and everyday investors gain exposure to digital assets.
For the average person, it would mean buying LINK in the same brokerage account where they hold Apple stock or an S&P 500 fund.
No wallet setup, no seed phrases, no learning curve. Tax reporting would also be simpler: 1099 forms instead of the patchwork spreadsheets most self-custody users wrestle with every April.
However, convenience comes with trade-offs. ETF holders pay management fees and may face tracking differences, the small but persistent gap between an ETF’s price and the coin’s actual market value. Early on, spreads can be wide if trading volume is thin.
There’s also a conceptual cost: ETF investors won’t be using LINK in DeFi, staking it (yet), or voting on governance proposals. They’ll be holding exposure, not utility.
Advisors will most likely view altcoin ETFs as a niche asset class in a diversified portfolio, allocating perhaps only a few percentage points of total assets, balanced against the riskier volatility.
Liquidity and the mechanics underneath
ETFs utilize authorized participants and market makers to maintain prices in line with their net asset value. For LINK, thinner markets mean large creations or redemptions could affect prices or DeFi liquidity.
If an ETF holds a significant amount of LINK, it could reduce liquidity on exchanges and staking pools, leading to more pronounced price swings in stressed markets. That’s why the SEC reviews custody and creation-redemption processes closely.
Staking adds complexity. If an ETF stakes LINK, the SEC would likely require more disclosures about the risks akin to BSOL, so it would be harder but entirely plausible.
DTCC’s role is operational, handling settlement and record-keeping. When LINK appeared in its data, it only meant a potential ETF was being readied for possible approval.
Reading the real tells
To distinguish real ETF progress from rumor, focus on official process steps: actual regulatory filings, not screenshots, indicate significant movement toward an ETF launch.
- A 19b-4 approval on the SEC’s website or the Federal Register means an exchange can legally list the product.
- An S-1 going effective on EDGAR means the issuer can actually offer shares to the public.
- DTCC and NSCC listings indicate that the back office is prepared if both events occur, but not before.
- Any SEC discussion of surveillance or correlation analysis, such as the ones cited in the Ethereum approval orders, reveals where the agency’s thinking is headed.
The market now has a clear template, thanks to Bitcoin, Ethereum, Solana, and now XRP; yet, each new asset will face its own liquidity and integrity tests. What matters most to investors is that the structure to make altcoin exposure mainstream is now in place. The next phase will determine who gets to walk through it.
DTCC tickers may cause excitement, but they are only a step in the ETF process. The process only concludes when both of the SEC’s approvals, 19b-4 and S-1, are officially granted.
When this happens, it will be evident through formal filings, not screenshots, marking the actual start of the ETF timeline.
The chance of a Chainlink ETF going live in 2025 sat around 30% but after today’s launch of XRPC from Canary Capital, the timeline could well be moved up.
So, keep an eye out for any of the filings mentioned above if you’re chomping at the bit to buy into a LINK ETF.