Grayscale files to launch first spot ETF for Zcash privacy coin

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Grayscale Investments has submitted a Form S-3 with the SEC to convert its existing Zcash Trust into a spot ETF, which would trade on NYSE Arca under the ticker ZCSH.

If approved, it would be the first US spot ETF linked to a privacy coin.

What Grayscale is actually proposing

The company wants to convert its closed-end Zcash Trust, which manages over $200 million in assets, into an exchange-traded fund that holds actual ZEC tokens.

The ETF would track the CoinDesk Zcash Price Index, giving investors a regulated vehicle to gain exposure to ZEC without dealing with wallets, exchanges, or the general anxiety of self-custody.

Coinbase Custody is lined up as custodian and prime broker for the fund. Bank of New York Mellon would serve as administrator.

One of the key motivations behind the conversion is structural. Closed-end trusts like Grayscale’s Zcash product tend to trade at persistent discounts or premiums to their net asset value. An ETF structure allows authorized participants to create and redeem shares, which keeps the price tethered much more closely to the underlying asset.

The regulatory backdrop has quietly shifted

The SEC recently closed a review focused on privacy coins without taking any enforcement actions. No lawsuits, no Wells notices, no strongly worded press releases. Just a quiet exit.

Zcash itself occupies an interesting position among privacy coins. Unlike Monero, which enforces privacy by default on every transaction, Zcash gives users a choice between transparent and shielded transactions.

The coin uses a cryptographic technique called zk-SNARKs, which stands for zero-knowledge succinct non-interactive arguments of knowledge, which can prove a transaction is valid without revealing the sender, receiver, or amount.

What this means for investors

ZEC has been trading above $550 following the filing, with some market watchers eyeing a potential move past $600 if broader crypto momentum holds. Bitcoin has been trading above $80,800, providing a favorable tailwind for altcoins.

The risks are real, though. The SEC could still reject the filing or impose conditions that make the product impractical. And Zcash itself, while well-established, has a much smaller market and liquidity profile than Bitcoin or Ethereum, which means the ETF could face challenges around authorized participant activity and tight bid-ask spreads.

There’s also the philosophical tension that won’t go away anytime soon. Privacy coins exist specifically to limit transaction visibility. The entire point of securities regulation is to increase transparency. Those two goals don’t naturally coexist, and any approval would require the SEC to articulate where exactly it draws the line between financial privacy and surveillance obligations.

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