Hong Kong this month with the first approvals likely to be announced next week, two people familiar with the matter said.
That timeline would make Hong Kong Asia's first city to offer the popular ETFs and is much faster than industry expectations of launches sometime this year.
Regulators have sped up the approval process, according to one of the people.
Having lost much of its shine as a global financial hub due to restrictions during the pandemic, China's faltering economy and Sino-U.S. tensions, Hong Kong authorities have been keen to do what they can to improve the city's attractiveness for financial trading.
«The significance of Hong Kong ETFs is far-reaching as it could bring in fresh global investment as well as pushing crypto adoption to a new height,» said Adrian Wang, CEO of Metalpha, a Hong Kong-based crypto wealth manager.
The U.S. launched the first U.S.-listed exchange-traded funds (ETFs) to track spot bitcoin in January, drawing roughly $12 billion in net inflows, data from BitMEX Research shows.
Bitcoin has gained more than 60% this year and hit an all-time high of $73,803 in March. It was trading at around $69,000 on Wednesday.
At least four mainland Chinese and Hong Kong asset managers have submitted