T. Rowe Price Crypto ETF Filing Update and SEC Review

T. Rowe Price filed its second amendment to the registration statement for its actively managed crypto ETF on March 16, 2026, naming Anchorage Digital Bank N.A. as the fund’s crypto custodian while leaving the product’s core structure and 15-asset eligible universe unchanged.

The Amendment No. 2 to Form S-1, filed with the SEC, keeps the fund positioned as an actively managed ETF seeking long-term capital growth through direct investments in crypto assets. The update adds operational specificity rather than signaling a strategic pivot.

The most notable new detail is the formal identification of Anchorage Digital Bank N.A. as custodian. The original S-1, filed on October 22, 2025, did not name a crypto custodian. Custody arrangements are a critical component of crypto ETF filings, as the SEC has historically scrutinized how digital assets are safeguarded against theft and operational failure.

What Actually Changed Between Filings

The March amendment lists 15 eligible crypto assets: BTC, ETH, SOL, XRP, ADA, AVAX, LTC, DOT, DOGE, HBAR, BCH, LINK, XLM, SHIB, and SUI. That list is identical to the one in Amendment No. 1, filed on February 11, 2026.

Some coverage of the March filing framed SUI as a new addition. That framing is misleading. SUI was added in the February amendment, which expanded the eligible universe from 14 to 15 assets compared to the original October filing. The March update did not alter the token roster.

The real substance of the latest amendment is operational: custody disclosure, procedural updates, and the kind of detail the SEC typically requires before advancing a registration review. Cointelegraph summarized the filing as adding operational detail while leaving the proposed fund’s core structure intact.

SEC Review Remains Unresolved

The filing update arrives while the SEC is still reviewing a separate but related proceeding. On January 28, 2026, the agency instituted proceedings on NYSE Arca’s proposed rule change to list the T. Rowe Price Active Crypto ETF under Exchange Act Rule 19b-4.

In that proceeding, the SEC raised concerns under Section 6(b)(5) of the Exchange Act, questioning whether the actively managed crypto-and-stablecoin structure adequately protects investors and deters fraud and manipulation. The comment deadline passed on February 23, with rebuttals due by March 9.

The dual-track process, where the issuer’s S-1 registration and the exchange’s listing proposal move in parallel, means that even a complete S-1 does not guarantee the fund will reach market. The SEC must also approve the listing rule change.

Why Industry Watchers Are Paying Attention

T. Rowe Price manages over $1 trillion in assets, making it one of the largest traditional asset managers to pursue a multi-asset actively managed crypto ETF. The product would not simply track Bitcoin or Ethereum but would allow portfolio managers to allocate across up to 15 tokens based on their judgment.

Nate Geraci, a widely followed ETF commentator, described the original filing’s significance bluntly: “Can’t overstate significance of T. Rowe Price filing for an actively managed crypto ETF out of left field.”

Bryan Armour, an ETF analyst, offered a more measured take: “It’s a surprise to see them as a relatively late entrant, but they’re planning to offer something differentiated to try and break into the space.”

The bull case centers on institutional credibility. A legacy manager with T. Rowe Price’s scale entering the actively managed crypto ETF space signals that traditional finance sees viable product-market fit beyond simple Bitcoin or Ethereum wrappers. The broader wave of crypto ETF filings has accelerated since the SEC approved generic listing standards for commodity-based trust shares in September 2025.

The bear case is procedural but material. The SEC’s decision to institute proceedings, rather than allow the listing proposal to take effect, signals genuine regulatory skepticism. The agency’s questions about manipulation risk and investor protection in an actively managed multi-token structure have not been publicly resolved.

The next concrete milestone will be the SEC’s decision on the NYSE Arca listing proposal. Until that clears, the March S-1 amendment represents preparation, not approval.

Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial or investment advice. Cryptocurrency and digital asset markets carry significant risk. Always do your own research before making decisions.

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