Grayscale Moves to Turn Aave Trust Into ETF as Wall Street Reopens the Altcoin Door
Grayscale has taken another step toward expanding crypto investment products in the US, filing to convert its existing Aave trust into an exchange-traded fund listed on a major stock exchange.
The move matters because it signals renewed institutional interest in altcoins beyond Bitcoin and Ethereum, even as the broader crypto market remains under pressure.
What Grayscale Filed and What Changes
On Friday, Grayscale submitted a Form S-1 registration statement to the US Securities and Exchange Commission seeking approval to convert its Aave trust into the Grayscale Aave Trust ETF.
If approved, the fund would list on NYSE Arca under the ticker GAVE, charge a 2.5 percent management fee, and rely on Coinbase as both custodian and prime broker.
Unlike strategy-based products, the ETF would hold AAVE tokens directly, offering spot exposure to the decentralized finance protocol.
Context: Why Aave Matters to Institutions
Aave is the largest decentralized finance platform by total value locked, with more than $27 billion locked across its markets, according to DefiLlama.
The protocol allows users to lend and borrow crypto across multiple blockchains, while the AAVE token plays a governance role and can be staked to earn yield. That combination of scale, revenue generation, and on-chain utility has made Aave one of the few DeFi protocols institutions consistently track.
Market Reaction Remains Muted
The filing did not trigger a sharp reaction in the AAVE token. According to CoinGecko, AAVE was down 1.6 percent over the past day, trading near $126 at the time of reporting.
The subdued response reflects how ETF filings are increasingly seen as long-term positioning rather than immediate catalysts, especially during periods of softer market sentiment.
Grayscale Joins Bitwise in the Aave ETF Race
With this filing, Grayscale becomes the second firm seeking US approval for an Aave-focused ETF, joining Bitwise.
Bitwise filed with the SEC in December to launch the Bitwise AAVE Strategy ETF, part of a broader push that also targeted altcoins such as Uniswap’s UNI and Zcash. Its proposal would allocate up to 60 percent of assets directly to AAVE tokens, with the remainder held in related securities.
Grayscale’s approach differs by aiming for full, direct exposure to AAVE rather than a blended strategy.
Investor Psychology Behind the Push
The timing suggests asset managers believe investor appetite for altcoins has not disappeared, only become more selective.
While retail participation has cooled, institutions appear focused on protocols with deep liquidity, long operating histories, and clear on-chain use cases. Aave fits that profile more closely than many smaller DeFi projects.
Global Context Adds Pressure on US Regulators
Outside the US, Aave-linked exchange-traded products already exist. 21Shares launched an Aave ETP on Nasdaq Stockholm in November, while Global X introduced a similar product in Germany in early 2023.
These overseas listings add to the pressure on US regulators as American investors seek comparable access through domestic markets.
What Comes Next
Approval is far from guaranteed, but Grayscale’s filing reinforces a broader trend. Asset managers are increasingly testing how far the ETF wrapper can be extended into decentralized finance.
If successful, Aave-focused ETFs could open a new channel of capital into DeFi, while also setting precedents for other protocol-based funds.