The United States Securities and Exchange Commission will soon reach its deadline to appeal the court decision that ruled in favor of Grayscale Investments, forcing the regulator to review the fund manager’s application for a spot Bitcoin (BTC) fund.
While many observers don’t believe the securities regulator will attempt to appeal the court’s decision, analysts say there could still be ways for the SEC to delay approval of Grayscale’s spot Bitcoin ETF conversion.
On Oct. 13, the SEC must either appeal the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals decision to the U.S. Supreme Court, request the Appeals Court revisit its ruling, or follow the court’s August order and review Grayscale’s bid to change its Grayscale Bitcoin Trust (GBTC) into a spot Bitcoin ETF.
In an Oct. 12 post responding to an X user’s question, Bloomberg ETF analyst Eric Balchunas said an appeal was unlikely, though there could still be other hurdles.
“We think [an] appeal is a longshot […] But there’s always a chance of something else happening.”
Meanwhile, in a separate post, fellow Bloomberg ETF analyst James Seyffart said that an SEC attempt to deny on new grounds was unlikely and a “very difficult needle to thread,” but it could “find ways to keep delaying.”
Not officially. SEC could attempt to deny on new grounds but as @EricBalchunas, myself, @NYCStein, @SGJohnsson, @NateGeraci and many others have said. It would be a very difficult needle to thread and we view as unlikely. They can find ways to keep delaying though IMO.
A September note from law firm Ropes & Gray warned the GBTC application could be sent back for review to the SEC, giving the regulator another chance to reject it on a different basis.
“In this scenario, the new denial could itself then be subject to another appeal by GBTC to the D.C. Circuit,” wrote the firm.
Another delay scenario, according to Ropes & Gray, would be if the New York Stock Exchange has to make a new filing to list GBTC — then it is possible the SEC could take up to eight months to reach a decision on the ETF.
Currently, at least seven spot Bitcoin ETF applications are before the regulator for approval.
Despite all being filed with the regulator earlier in 2023, all have faced delays and pushback from the SEC, leaving the final approval deadlines for most around March 2024 or later.
However, most eyes are on Grayscale’s spot Bitcoin ETF conversion application because, if the SEC approves it, the regulator could struggle to find reasons to knock back other applications.
Shabana Mahmood has become the first ever Muslim woman in British history to serve as home secretary.
After just over a year as justice secretary, which saw her decide to release some prisoners early to free up jail spaces, she will now be in charge of policing, immigration, and the security services.
Shabana Mahmood was born in Birmingham to parents from the Pakistani-administered region of Azad Kashmir.
Soon after they were born, they moved her and her twin brother to the Saudi Arabian city of Taif, where her father worked as a civil engineer and the family would make regular visits to religious sites in Mecca and Medina.
After seven years, they moved back to Birmingham and her father, still employed as a full-time engineer, bought a corner shop and became chairman of the local Labour Party.
She attended an all-girls grammar school and then Oxford University to study law at Lincoln College, where she was elected Junior Common Room president, with a vote from former Prime Minister Rishi Sunak, who was in the year above her.
After university, she moved to London to train as a lawyer, specialising in professional indemnity for most of her 20s.
Image: On a visit to Solihull Mosque, West Midlands, in August 2024. Pic: PA
‘My faith is the centre point of my life’
At the age of 29 in 2010, she was elected MP for her home constituency of Birmingham Ladywood, a safe Labour seat, with a majority of just over 9%, which grew to 82.7% at its peak in the snap election of 2017.
Along with Rushanara Ali and Yasmin Qureshi, this made her one of Britain’s first female Muslim MPs.
In an interview with The Times, she said: “My faith is the centre point of my life and it drives me to public service, it drives me in the way that I live my life and I see my life.”
She held several shadow cabinet positions under Ed Miliband’s leadership, including shadow prisons and higher education minister, and shadow financial secretary to the treasury.
Image: Being sworn in as justice secretary in July 2024. Pic: PA
Often described as ‘blue Labour’, Mahmood returned to the backbenches when Jeremy Corbyn took over as party leader in 2015, telling him as she refused a shadow cabinet position: “I’ll be miserable and I’ll make you miserable as well.”
She had chaired her now-predecessor Yvette Cooper’s failed campaign to beat him to the leadership.
During the Corbyn years, she was elected to the Parliamentary Labour Party’s National Executive Committee and as vice chairman of the party’s National Policy Forum.
When Mr Corbyn was replaced by Sir Keir Starmer, Ms Mahmood became national campaign coordinator and was tasked with preparing Labour for the next general election.
During her two-and-a-half years in that job, she is credited with helping Labour win the Batley and Spen by-election and helping Sir Keir recover from Labour’s defeat in Hartlepool – where the Conservatives won for the first time ever in 2021.
Image: On a visit to HMP Bedford in July 2024. Pic: PA
Image: At the opening of HMP Millsike in March. Pic: PA
Early prison release scheme and views on Gaza
Soon after becoming justice secretary and lord chancellor, Mahmood commissioned a report into the crumbling prison estate.
Carried out by one of her Conservative predecessors, David Gauke, it revealed they were practically full, and triggered a controversial decision to release more than 1,000 inmates early to ease pressure on the system.
Image: Holding a taser at an event to launch a taser trial in a male prison in Oxfordshire in July. Pic: PA
She has also endorsed tougher immigration laws, announcing in August that foreign criminals will be deported after sentencing, and has been critical of their use of human rights lawyers, calling for reform of the European Convention on Human Rights as a result.
Answering questions on Asian grooming gangs, she previously told former Tory minister Michael Gove in The Spectator that there is “still a moment of reckoning” and an “outstanding question of why so many looked the other way”.
Image: Shabana Mahmood shakes hands with US Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem on 8 September. Pic Reuters
She has also been vocal on Labour’s stance on Gaza, warning the prime minister that “British Muslims are feeling a very strong sense of pain” and that the government would have to rebuild their trust.
When she was last re-elected in 2024, she suffered a 42% drop in her majority, facing off an independent candidate whose campaign centred around Palestinian rights.
Like her parliamentary neighbour, Labour MP Jess Phillips, she said the election campaign had been “sullied by harassment and intimidation”.