As the November 12, 2025 statutory deadline established under Section 19(b)(2) of the Securities Exchange Act approaches, the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission must render a definitive approval or denial of Grayscale’s HBAR Spot ETF application, a determination that represents the terminal phase of regulatory scrutiny and carries significant Approval Implications and Market Reaction considerations for issuers, exchanges, and institutional investors. Grayscale filed its proposal on February 28, 2025, and the formal review commenced June 12, 2025, after which the SEC granted multiple postponements, most recently extending review deadlines through September 9, 2025 and designating November 12, 2025 as the final, non-extendable statutory cutoff, thereby constraining procedural leeway and emphasizing the binding nature of the Section 19(b)(2) timetable. The application, submitted under Nasdaq Rule 5711(d) for trust shares based on commodities, seeks to list shares of the Grayscale Hedera Trust, a Delaware Statutory Trust formed August 12, 2025, which will hold HBAR and issue continuously registered shares intended to track HBAR’s spot price net of specified fees and liabilities, with the shares proposed to trade under the symbol “HBAR.” The SEC’s evaluative framework has centered on surveillance adequacy, liquidity parameters, market manipulation risk, and investor protection mechanisms, and should the Commission deny the proposal it is required to publish a detailed explanation, an outcome that would elucidate regulatory thresholds and inform precedent for subsequent altcoin ETF filings. Market participants have observed rising institutional demand for altcoin ETFs and the robust debut volumes of recent launches, as evidenced by strong first-day trading in Spot Solana and Grayscale’s Canary HBAR ETF net inflows, data points that inform models estimating a 60–80% probability of approval by year’s end; nonetheless, the SEC’s cautious posture, motivated by volatility and surveillance concerns and informed by empirical metrics such as HBAR’s circulating supply, trading volume, and market capitalization, will ultimately determine whether this application advances the broader regulatory acceptance of spot altcoin exchange-traded products. The SEC’s final decision date of Nov. 12, 2025 represents the maximum extension permitted under the statute and confirms that no further postponements are possible. Recent market activity also highlights opening-day volumes for new altcoin ETFs as a key indicator for institutional interest. This decision will also reflect the SEC’s ongoing role as a key regulatory authority in overseeing securities in the cryptocurrency space.
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