Will ‘revenues’ become a determining factor for the 2026 cycle?
At a structural level, the CLARITY Act is under scrutiny, in part because it introduces the concept of yield-bearing stablecoins. If stablecoins start generating returns, capital could flow onto the DeFi native rails, increasing competitive pressure on traditional finance and contributing to ongoing regulatory hesitancy.


At the same time, returns are absorbed into institutional crypto products. BlackRock’s iShares Bitcoin Premium Income ETF (BITA), launching on Tuesday, June 16, reflects this shift as it converts volatility through options on IBIT.
Simply put, instead of pure Bitcoin exposure, BITA generates returns by selling options on iShares Bitcoin Trust for a stable income. It aims for a return of 15-25%, while still aiming for 70% of BTC’s upside.
Basically, the fee it collects for selling these options becomes the income paid out to investors.
In terms of flow, as demand for BITA grows, it buys more IBIT shares, which could lead to IBIT holding more Bitcoin to back them. So the BTC does not go to BlackRock.
Instead, it remains within IBIT, but the demand for BITA can indirectly increase the amount of Bitcoin in the ETF system.
In essence, the shift signals something bigger: cryptocurrency exposure is shifting from pure directional bets to structured income products built on top of Bitcoin. [BTC] inconstancy. So instead of ‘just holding BTC’, issuers are offering investors ways to actively monetize it.
But looking at recent ETF sentiment, this move is clearly more strategic than arbitrary.
Bitcoin ETFs are entering a new phase as returns become the core story
Looking at ETF flows, it is clear that investors are moving away from pure speculation towards more stability.
Yield becomes the bridge in this shift.
Unlike traditional ETFs that offer direct exposure to Bitcoin, BlackRock’s BITA aims to provide stability by generating income from Bitcoin’s volatility rather than simply tracking its price. While this looks like a structural upgrade, it also reflects the rising FUD around both BTC and its ETF ecosystem.
From a technical perspective, BTC has retreated more than 25% this year. This move has weighed on iShares Bitcoin Trust, with shares falling from around $50 to around $37 at the time of writing.
That weakness is also reflected in sentiment, with Bitcoin ETFs seeing net outflows of around $2.5 billion in the second quarter, which in turn has increased pressure on Bitcoin itself, creating a feedback loop in which price weakness triggers outflows, and outflows amplify further downward outflows.


Against this background, BlackRocks launch of an income-based Bitcoin ETF is clearly a strategic move.
The logic is simple: by linking returns to options on iShares Bitcoin Trust, the structure shifts Bitcoin exposure away from pure price speculation and towards generating returns, with volatility itself becoming the source of income rather than just risk.
Therefore, this could be a major turning point for the entire ETF ecosystem, as Bitcoin transitions from a directional asset to a volatility-backed income engine.
Final summary
- BITA generates returns by selling options iShares Bitcoin Trustwhere part of the benefit is given up in exchange for income.
- As more people buy BITA, it buys more IBIT, which can lead to more BTC being held in the ETF system.
