Franklin Templeton Files for ETFs That Reinvest Stock Dividends Into Bitcoin
Franklin Templeton, the $1.6 trillion asset management giant, filed with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission on Thursday to launch two exchange-traded funds that take an unconventional approach to Bitcoin exposure: automatically funneling stock dividends into the leading cryptocurrency instead of reinvesting them back into equities.
The proposed funds — the Franklin U.S. Equity Bitcoin DRIP Index ETF and the Franklin U.S. Innovation Bitcoin DRIP Index ETF — repurpose the classic dividend reinvestment plan (DRIP) mechanism that has long helped investors compound stock holdings, redirecting those payouts into Bitcoin-linked instruments rather than additional shares. Decrypt first reported on the filing Thursday evening.
How the Bitcoin DRIP ETFs Work
Each fund tracks a VettaFi-branded index and starts with a 95% allocation to U.S. equities and a 5% allocation to Bitcoin. The equity baskets are large — the broad-market fund tracks a roughly 498-security index with market caps ranging from $7.5 billion to $4.9 trillion, while the innovation variant follows a growth-focused index of 100 U.S. companies.
Here's where the structure gets interesting: dividends paid by those underlying stocks are systematically redirected into Bitcoin exposure through several channels — spot Bitcoin ETPs (including Franklin Templeton's own products), Bitcoin futures, options contracts , and in some cases a wholly-owned Cayman Islands subsidiary. The Bitcoin allocation is trimmed back during quarterly rebalances if it exceeds thresholds, with a hard cap of 20% between rebalancing periods.
As Bitcoin Magazine noted, one industry observer described the structure as "an automatic, low-maintenance 5% Bitcoin feed funded entirely by equity dividends." The filing is preliminary and lists no fees yet, but under the SEC rule used, the funds could take effect as early as September 1, 2026 — roughly 75 days after filing.
A Stampede of Crypto ETF Innovation
The Franklin DRIP ETFs enter an increasingly crowded and creative market for crypto-linked exchange-traded products. After the SEC published generic listing standards for crypto funds in late 2025, issuers have been flooding the pipeline with novel structures. Bloomberg Intelligence counted well over 100 crypto ETF filings in the pipeline, with Bitwise predicting more than 100 such ETFs could launch in 2026 alone.
BlackRock, the dominant player in spot Bitcoin ETFs through its iShares Bitcoin Trust (IBIT), launched the iShares Bitcoin Premium Income ETF (BITA) the same week — a covered-call income product targeting annual yields of 15%–25%. The competition is shifting from simple spot exposure toward yield-generating and structured wrappers designed to appeal to income-focused investors and financial advisors.
For Franklin Templeton, these filings represent the latest step in an aggressive digital-asset push. The firm launched a dedicated Franklin Crypto division in 2026 by acquiring 250 Digital (a CoinFund spinoff), struck a tokenization deal with Payward (Kraken's parent), and already has its BENJI tokenized money-market fund live across multiple blockchains.
Market Context
The filings come amid a challenging period for Bitcoin, which trades below $63,000 — down more than 50% from its October 2025 peak near $126,000. Yet institutional product innovation continues unabated, with major asset managers betting that novel structures will draw new categories of investors into digital assets. The DRIP model, in particular, could appeal to conservative equity investors seeking gradual, dividend-funded Bitcoin exposure without having to make active allocation decisions.
The Frankfurt-based asset manager's preliminary filing is now before the SEC for the standard review period. If approved, the two Bitcoin DRIP ETFs are expected to begin trading on U.S. exchanges in early September.
Originally published on TekMag
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