Wendy O, a popular crypto market commentator, is zeroing in on Wall Street’s latest move into digital assets, arguing that retail investors should be watching institutional behavior far more closely than altcoin hype.
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In a recent video, the host focuses on BlackRock’s newly filed iShares Bitcoin Premium Income ETF and frames it as a clear signal that the asset manager’s conviction still centers on Bitcoin and, to a lesser extent, Ethereum.
BlackRock Files For Bitcoin “Premium Income” ETF
The key development, according to her, is BlackRock’s filing of an S-1 registration statement for the iShares Bitcoin Premium Income ETF. The fund has no ticker or fee disclosed yet, but is designed to track BTC’s price while generating extra yield.
The structure, as described in the video: the ETF will “track Bitcoin price while generating premium income by selling call options on iShares Bitcoin (IBIT) and occasionally ETP indices.” The commentator characterizes this as “a derivative on a derivative” underscoring how far traditional finance is extending its options-based income strategies into crypto exposure.
This move is presented as evidence that BlackRock is still actively building out its Bitcoin product suite rather than treating existing spot ETFs as a one-off play. “If they weren’t placing their bets on Bitcoin they wouldn’t have applied for this brand new ETF” the host says.
Why The Focus Remains On Bitcoin & Ethereum
Wendy O also argues that large asset managers rarely deploy capital without a clear expectation of return, and this incentive structure shapes which cryptoassets can realistically attract institutional scale. In her view, Bitcoin is being positioned as “digital gold” while Ethereum is emerging as the core infrastructure for tokenization of real-world assets.
Citing comments from BlackRock CEO Larry Fink on tokenization, she notes that “65% of all tokenized assets are currently on Ethereum. No other chain.”
That concentration, they claim, explains why BlackRock has so far limited its spot crypto ETF efforts to Bitcoin and Ethereum, despite growing institutional research interest in TOP 20 altcoins like XRP, Solana, Avalanche and Chainlink.
Still, she doesn’t dismiss other networks outright, calling Solana “a great competitor against Ethereum” and acknowledging potential upside in XRP & HBAR. The point, is not maximalism but realism about where large pools of capital are actually moving.
Institutional Timelines Adjust To Derivatives Risks
Wendy O pushes back on retail frustration about sluggish price action, stressing that firms like BlackRock, Vanguard, JPMorgan and Wells Fargo operate on very different timelines. They can “hold on to unrealized gains and losses for a long amount of time” and are “incredibly particular” about how and where they get exposure.
She also draws a parallel to traditional markets, calling the stock market “a massive Ponzi” and highlighting how income-generating derivatives products have become central to yield strategies. By extending covered-call style structures to Bitcoin exposure, BlackRock is effectively importing that TradFi playbook into crypto.
For investors, the final message is blunt: pay attention to what “big money” is doing, keep emotions out of allocation decisions, and maintain diversification rather than playing with unloved altcoins that institutions may never fully embrace.
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The video notes that BlackRock “does have the opportunity” to file for other crypto spot ETFs, but so far has only moved decisively on Bitcoin and Ethereum.
According to the host, roughly 65% of tokenized assets currently sit on Ethereum, which they cite as a core reason for institutional focus there.
The analyst believes some altcoins may still “do incredibly well” and praises Solana as a strong Ethereum competitor, but stresses that capital remains concentrated in BTC & ETH.



