Can yield beat Bitcoin? BlackRock’s BITA sparks debate

Source Cryptopolitan

iShares BITA (Bitcoin Premium Income ETF), by BlackRock, made its debut on Nasdaq on June 16, 2026. BITA provides investors with access to monthly cash payouts in the form of premium income from Bitcoin using covered call options. This investment vehicle will provide an annual yield of 15%-25%, which sparked debate in the crypto space regarding how such products can potentially take capital away from Bitcoin itself in the future.

While it is too early to think about a replacement, the thought itself makes sense because BlackRock’s other Bitcoin fund, iShares Bitcoin Trust (IBIT), has amassed almost $49 billion worth of assets since January 2024. However, iShares BITA does not compete with IBIT on a level playing field. BITA issues call options on approximately a quarter or a third of the portfolio per month and earns premiums, which then pay out distributions. There is a cap on income potential because investors earn only about 70% of Bitcoin’s returns, according to Bloomberg ETF analyst Eric Balchunas.

How BITA fund earns income

The BITA Fund consists of spot Bitcoin (held by Coinbase) and IBIT shares, and writes call options against the IBIT position. When Bitcoin trades sideways or drifts higher, option premiums pad returns beyond what a spot holder earns. When Bitcoin surges past the strike price, the fund keeps its premium but gives up the gains above that threshold.

Robert Mitchnick, BlackRock’s Head of Digital Assets, had stated that “A significant segment of our client base is interested in bitcoin but is also highly focused on income generation.” He described BITA as a response to the needs expressed by financial advisers and institutional investors who hadn’t participated in buying Bitcoin because it does not produce any income.

The annual cost of managing the fund is 0.65%, which makes it nearly three times more expensive than the 0.25% fee charged by IBIT but cheaper compared to the fees charged by other competitors. It launched with approximately $10.65 million in net assets, with Susquehanna Securities providing market-making support.

Trade-off investors are making with BITA

On the launch date, Bitcoin price was around $66,500, nearly 23% lower than its late-2025 peak levels. This decline left implied volatility elevated, thus driving up option premiums that BITA earns. When the market remains calm or moves gradually higher, numbers work out in favor of BITA. If the rally accelerates, spot position wins as BITA call options put a lid on the potential upside.

The risk involved with investing with BITA is clear, as “the headline yield is not a gift. It’s the compensation you get for giving up the upside tail.” Historically, Bitcoin rallies were highly concentrated in terms of returns, exactly what a capped return strategy ignores. Investors who earn a premium on a two-year range-bound market are fine. But investors who ride out a doubling period see their gains dwarfed by those of IBIT owners.

Another thing that BITA lacks is any kind of downside protection. For example, a 30% drop in Bitcoin value results in 30% losses for BITA investors too.

Can yield coexist with Bitcoin?

This latest development has once again brought to the fore the ongoing debate in the Bitcoin world—between generating yields or exposing oneself to the full benefits of Bitcoin gains.

Michael Saylor has yet to weigh in directly on BITA, though some of his recent statements on X seem to indicate his position. In a recent X post published on June 16, he said, “Bitcoin does not need to become Ethereum,” adding that Bitcoin is “pure digital capital: scarce, liquid, global and tradeable 24/7.” Saylor emphasized that yield must come through capital & credit markets around Bitcoin—not by altering Bitcoin itself. This view resonates with Bitcoin maximalists who prefer uncapped exposure.

Markus Thielen from 10x Research was more pointed in his criticism of BITA. In his opinion, the downside of covered call Bitcoin ETFs is that they sell away the very moments when Bitcoin is most interesting. As long as the gains in Bitcoin in the long run come from just a few major rallies, covering options against possible profit may turn out to be detrimental to the investor compared to holding spot Bitcoin, wrote Thielen. This kind of trading strategy looks good on paper but can prove to be disappointing in case Bitcoin begins a new rally.

Eric Balchunas, Bloomberg ETF analyst, takes a rather optimistic view of BITA. According to him, BITA is an instrument created specifically to provide its holders with 15%-25% annual yields while maintaining 70% of Bitcoin upside, framing it as a complementary strategy rather than a replacement for spot ETFs. The divide reflects Bitcoin’s evolution as an asset class: a few years ago, the debate centered on whether institutions would buy Bitcoin at all. Today, investors are debating which wrapper—pure spot exposure or income-generating strategies—offers the better risk-reward profile.

What to expect?

Many Bitcoin skeptics acknowledge that BITA is unlikely to displace spot Bitcoin ETFs. Rather, it seems poised as a complementary investment option: IBIT for investors seeking maximum Bitcoin upside and BITA for investors seeking income and lower volatility.

Perhaps the most interesting point raised by the influencer analyses is not whether BITA will be successful. But rather, Bitcoin has progressed far enough that BlackRock thinks there is demand for income-generating investment opportunities above and beyond just Bitcoin exposure – a concept that was unheard of a few years ago.

The first distribution for BITA will show whether yields come in at expected levels of 15% to 25%. This yield figure is dependent upon volatility: higher volatility maintains high premiums, while low volatility reduces them. A yield-bearing Bitcoin ETF may be suitable for investors who want Bitcoin exposure but are not necessarily seeking maximum capital appreciation.

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