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Wall Street Brings the Bitcoin-Versus-Gold Clash to ETF Masses

(Bloomberg) — The culture clash between Bitcoin (BTC-USD) enthusiasts and gold (GC=F) bugs is about to be played out in the world of exchange-traded funds.

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Tidal Financial Group this week filed to launch a pair of long-short trades — pitting the world’s biggest cryptocurrency against the shiny metal, and vice versa — offering investors a high-conviction bet on the best alternative hedge, in one fell swoop.

Packaged under the Battleshares brand, the novel exchange-traded funds would monetize the long-running debate about the ultimate store of value for those fearing everything from trade wars and geopolitical stresses to fiscal and monetary largesse. The ideological divide among the retail and institutional masses has raged since Bitcoin was born from the ashes of the 2008 crisis, and it comes just as both assets have surged over the past year on starkly different narratives.

The ETFs would, if launched, use a number of different tools to do so, including short sales of securities, swaps and options, according to paperwork submitted to the US Securities and Exchange Commission.

Battleshares declined to comment.

“This is a kind of ‘victory’ for me,” said Dhaval Joshi, chief strategist at Counterpoint, who has long argued Bitcoin and gold belong to the same “non-confiscatable” asset class — immune to inflation, capital controls, or seizure. “Bitcoin will gradually grab market share from gold. So long BTC/short gold should trend higher over time, while short BTC/long gold will trend lower.”

Still, the zero-sum proposition has critics.

“It feels gimmicky and unnecessary,” said Brent Donnelly, president of Spectra FX Solutions. “Most people bullish on Bitcoin are also bullish on gold. These ETFs just add friction to a trade investors could already make by pairing low-cost ETFs like IBIT and GLD,” referring to BlackRock Inc.’s spot Bitcoin ETF and State Street Corp.’s gold fund — both of which have extremely low fees.

This year, gold has notched successive records on haven demand as the trade war stoked fears over the safety of US assets, while Bitcoin plunged in the tariff-spurred turmoil in early April in sympathy with risky stocks. Now, as the White House seeks to ink trade agreements, Bitcoin has roared back in an era in which the US government is going all-in on digital finance.