
Gold keeps trading up to new record high prices. Bitcoin, while struggling to break out above recent record levels above $100,000, continues to find more mainstream adoption. But both the classic market safe-haven and its more risky new crypto rival are doing something other than just move up and to the right on the chart for investors: within some exchange-traded funds, they are also generating income.
Investors want exposure to alternative assets that do not move in lockstep with stocks and bonds. That comes at a time when stocks are also at record prices, and returns are concentrated in a handful of mega-cap tech stocks that now represents roughly 40% of the S&P 500. Bonds, meanwhile, have traded with greater volatility than their historical role in a classic 60-40 portfolio would suggest, and that has left investors less comfortable with fixed-income as a traditional component of portfolio diversification strategy.
Even with less confidence in bonds, investors still want the steady income distributions associated with fixed-income. Attaching income overlays to non-yielding alternative such as gold and bitcoin is one way to satisfy these investor demands.
“If your goal is to provide a hedge against volatility in the equity and bond market, then gold can provide a bit of a safe haven. If you’re looking for reward opportunities, bitcoin has been very rewarding,” said Todd Rosenbluth, VettaFi’s head of research, on CNBC’s “ETF Edge.”
“If you’re looking for diverse ways to get income, then these covered call strategies that are here have become increasingly popular,” he added.
The latest sign that Wall Street thinks this approach can work came this week, when the world’s largest asset manager, BlackRock, also the biggest ETF company through its iShares family, filed for a bitcoin premium income ETF.
Simplify Asset Management was one of the first to test this approach. Its Simplify Gold Strategy Plus Income ETF (YGLD) and Simplify Bitcoin Strategy PLUS Income ETF (MAXI) give exposure to gold or bitcoin futures and add an options strategy on top to generate income.
“For clients who are funding this from a bond portfolio, they don’t have to sacrifice on that income potential,” Paisley Nardini, managing director and head of multi-asset solutions at Simplify, said on “ETF Edge.”
Performance of gold and bitcoin in 2025.
Some financial advisors have made the case that as the 60-40 portfolio fails to provide investors what it had in previous decades, larger allocations will be going to cryptocurrencies.
In terms of investor adoption, these ETFs remain relatively small. And compared to the traditional exposure to these alternatives, it’s not even close.
The Simplify Bitcoin Strategy PLUS Income ETF has a little over $51 million in assets under management, according to VettaFi. The iShares Bitcoin Trust ETF (IBIT), which is its largest holding (about 83% of the fund), has roughly $85 billion in assets.
YGLD has approximately $44…
Read More: Gold, bitcoin are moving beyond market hedge to boost portfolio income


