Canary Capital’s LTCC Litecoin ETF sits at $5.4M in assets as demand gets a reality check

Canary Capital’s LTCC Litecoin ETF sits at $5.4M in assets as demand gets a reality check

The first US spot Litecoin ETF has been trading for nearly eight months with modest inflows, raising questions about altcoin ETF appetite beyond Bitcoin and Ethereum.

The crypto industry spent years arguing that spot ETFs would unlock a flood of institutional capital into digital assets. For Bitcoin, that thesis played out beautifully. For Litecoin, the jury is still very much deliberating.

Canary Capital’s LTCC, the first US spot Litecoin ETF, has accumulated roughly $5.43 million in net assets as of mid-June 2026. That’s nearly eight months after it began trading on Nasdaq in late October 2025. To put that number in context, Bitcoin spot ETFs pulled in billions within their first weeks.

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The numbers tell a quiet story

LTCC trades an average of 11,000 to 16,000 shares per day. The fund’s share price has oscillated between roughly $10 and $27 since launch, tracking the broader volatility of Litecoin itself. The ETF charges a sponsor fee of 0.95%, which sits on the higher end compared to the fee wars that erupted among Bitcoin ETF issuers.

The fund itself operates as a Delaware statutory trust, holding actual LTC in cold storage rather than using derivatives or futures contracts. It tracks the LTC/USD reference rate, net of expenses.

Why Litecoin’s ETF isn’t Bitcoin’s ETF

The LTCC launch did carry one notable regulatory milestone. It received SEC approval to list as a spot product, and Litecoin earned a commodity classification from both the SEC and CFTC. No additional LTC ETF approvals or competing products have emerged since LTCC’s launch.

What this means for altcoin ETF investors

Look at the comparison. Bitcoin spot ETFs crossed $10B in assets within weeks of launching. LTCC has $5.43 million after eight months.

The 0.95% sponsor fee also deserves scrutiny. In the Bitcoin ETF space, issuers slashed fees to as low as 0.15% to compete for assets. Canary Capital doesn’t face that competitive pressure with LTCC since no rival Litecoin ETFs exist.

Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy.

Canary Capital’s LTCC Litecoin ETF sits at $5.4M in assets as demand gets a reality check

Canary Capital’s LTCC Litecoin ETF sits at $5.4M in assets as demand gets a reality check

The first US spot Litecoin ETF has been trading for nearly eight months with modest inflows, raising questions about altcoin ETF appetite beyond Bitcoin and Ethereum.

The crypto industry spent years arguing that spot ETFs would unlock a flood of institutional capital into digital assets. For Bitcoin, that thesis played out beautifully. For Litecoin, the jury is still very much deliberating.

Canary Capital’s LTCC, the first US spot Litecoin ETF, has accumulated roughly $5.43 million in net assets as of mid-June 2026. That’s nearly eight months after it began trading on Nasdaq in late October 2025. To put that number in context, Bitcoin spot ETFs pulled in billions within their first weeks.

Advertisement

The numbers tell a quiet story

LTCC trades an average of 11,000 to 16,000 shares per day. The fund’s share price has oscillated between roughly $10 and $27 since launch, tracking the broader volatility of Litecoin itself. The ETF charges a sponsor fee of 0.95%, which sits on the higher end compared to the fee wars that erupted among Bitcoin ETF issuers.

The fund itself operates as a Delaware statutory trust, holding actual LTC in cold storage rather than using derivatives or futures contracts. It tracks the LTC/USD reference rate, net of expenses.

Why Litecoin’s ETF isn’t Bitcoin’s ETF

The LTCC launch did carry one notable regulatory milestone. It received SEC approval to list as a spot product, and Litecoin earned a commodity classification from both the SEC and CFTC. No additional LTC ETF approvals or competing products have emerged since LTCC’s launch.

What this means for altcoin ETF investors

Look at the comparison. Bitcoin spot ETFs crossed $10B in assets within weeks of launching. LTCC has $5.43 million after eight months.

The 0.95% sponsor fee also deserves scrutiny. In the Bitcoin ETF space, issuers slashed fees to as low as 0.15% to compete for assets. Canary Capital doesn’t face that competitive pressure with LTCC since no rival Litecoin ETFs exist.

Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy.