In a single day, more than 30 crypto ETF filings stormed the SEC, unleashing Wall Street’s strongest signal yet that digital assets are entering mainstream finance.
30+ Crypto ETF Filings Slam SEC in One Day as Wall Street Braces for Massive Explosion

Massive Crypto ETF Wave: 30+ Filings Signal Wall Street’s Biggest Bet Yet
A seismic shift is shaking traditional finance as more than 30 cryptocurrency exchange-traded fund (ETF) applications flood the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), underscoring how rapidly institutional interest in digital assets is expanding. Analysts say the surge of filings represents one of the clearest signals yet that Wall Street is preparing for large-scale integration of crypto-based products into regulated investment markets. The flood of applications highlights an intensifying race among fund managers to secure early ground in the crypto ETF arena.
Nate Geraci, president of Novadius Wealth Management, shared on social media platform X on Oct. 3:
30+ crypto-related ETFs filed w/ SEC this afternoon… Just the beginning. Any crypto ETF you can possibly imagine will be filed w/ SEC over next several months. You all have no idea what’s coming.
Geraci’s statement, which captured the momentum behind the filings, references Bloomberg ETF analyst James Seyffart’s statement on X regarding 21 crypto ETF filings by Rexshares and Ospreyfunds. Seyffart wrote:
@REXShares / @OspreyFunds just filed for 21 crypto ETFs … Yes, Twenty One.
The 21 ETFs filed by REX Shares and Osprey Funds include AAVE, ADA + Staking, ATOM + Staking, AVAX + Staking, BCH, CRO + Staking, DOT + Staking, ENA, HBAR, HYPE + Staking, INJ + Staking, LINK, LTC, NEAR + Staking, OKB, SEI + Staking, SUI + Staking, TAO + Staking, TRX + Staking, UNI, and XLM.

In addition, Seyffart also shared that Defiance and Leverage Shares also filed a number of crypto-related exchange-traded products (ETPs). Altogether, more than 30 crypto and crypto-related ETFs were filed in this latest wave, marking a significant step toward bridging traditional and decentralized finance. Supporters say this broad set of filings reflects growing institutional acceptance of digital assets, while critics warn that regulatory scrutiny could still determine the timeline for market entry.














