Franklin Templeton filed proposals with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) on June 18 to launch two ETFs that combine U.S. equities with Bitcoin exposure. The two funds plan to use dividends from the underlying index stocks to increase their Bitcoin exposure, rather than reinvesting those dividends in the equities. The filings show that the funds could become effective as early as September 1, though a trading start date has not been confirmed.
How the Bitcoin DRIP ETFs Work
“DRIP” stands for dividend reinvestment plan, a mechanism that uses dividends to buy additional shares rather than receive cash. With Franklin Templeton’s two proposed ETFs, this cash flow will not go back into equities but will instead be used to increase Bitcoin exposure.
According to the filings, both funds will initially start with an approximate weight of 95% U.S. equities and 5% Bitcoin exposure. The Franklin U.S. Equity Bitcoin DRIP Index ETF focuses on U.S. large-cap stocks, while the Franklin U.S. Innovation Bitcoin DRIP Index ETF targets companies in innovation sectors.
All regular and special dividends from the index stocks will be reinvested into Bitcoin at the start of the next trading session following the ex-dividend date. This could cause the Bitcoin weight to gradually increase over time, but this exposure cannot exceed 20% of the portfolio.
At each quarterly rebalancing, if the Bitcoin weight exceeds 5%, the index will reduce this weight back to 4.5%; if the weight is equal to or less than 5%, the fund will keep it unchanged. In the event that Bitcoin exceeds the 20% threshold between rebalancing periods, the index will adjust it back to 4.5% at the close of the second business day after the threshold is breached.
The pace of accumulation remains dependent on the dividend yield of the equity portfolio and Bitcoin’s price performance. A low dividend yield will slow the amount of capital moving into Bitcoin, while a sharp increase in Bitcoin’s price could cause this asset weight to hit the adjustment threshold sooner.
The Assets Behind Bitcoin Exposure
The Bitcoin exposure in the two funds will be created through various investment instruments, rather than solely through holding spot Bitcoin. According to the disclosure, the funds can generate Bitcoin exposure through Bitcoin Exchange-Traded Products (ETPs), including ETPs sponsored by an affiliate of Franklin Templeton; Bitcoin-linked futures and options contracts or Bitcoin ETPs; and depositary receipts representing ownership of Bitcoin. In some cases, the funds may also utilize a wholly-owned subsidiary in the Cayman Islands to gain Bitcoin exposure.
This point is important for investors because the funds’ performance may not perfectly align with spot Bitcoin price movements. Underlying product fees, derivative transaction costs, rebalancing timing, and tracking error could all create discrepancies.
Why the Structure Matters for Crypto ETFs
Instead of launching another spot Bitcoin ETF, Franklin Templeton embeds a Bitcoin accumulation mechanism into a portfolio with a U.S. equity core.
This structure may suit investors who want to gradually increase Bitcoin exposure within their existing portfolios but do not want to open crypto accounts, manage custody wallets, or decide on buy timing themselves. Bitcoin becomes a rules-based add-on allocation, rather than a separate investment requiring active management.
Dividends from the index stocks will be converted into Bitcoin exposure instead of being used to purchase more shares in the portfolio. This is the key difference compared to traditional equity ETFs or dividend reinvestment strategies. However, the index mechanism does not mean the funds will not make cash distributions to shareholders; the prospectus states that the funds still intend to pay out income and capital gains in accordance with applicable tax requirements.
Franklin Templeton’s Crypto ETF Footprint
Franklin Templeton managed approximately $1.78 trillion in assets as of May 31, 2026, according to the latest AUM report from Franklin Resources. This scale shows that the Bitcoin DRIP is a product proposed by a global asset manager that already has a significant presence in the ETF space.
The company has been operating the Franklin Bitcoin ETF (EZBC) since January 11, 2024. EZBC has total net assets of $358.90 million, according to Franklin Templeton data. Franklin Templeton has also launched ETPs tied to Ether, XRP, and a crypto index.

Franklin Bitcoin ETF (EZBC). Source: Franklin Templeton
The two DRIP funds expand this product line into a multi-asset structure. Unlike EZBC, which is designed to track the price of Bitcoin before fees, the new funds combine U.S. equities with a mechanism to accumulate Bitcoin from dividend cash flows.
Risks and Key Details Still Unclear
The initial Bitcoin weight is set at 5%, but it can increase based on dividend flows and price volatility before being adjusted according to the index rules. A sharp decline in Bitcoin will reduce the value of the exposure accumulated from dividends.
The use of Bitcoin ETPs, futures, options, and other investment structures also adds costs, valuation discrepancies, and tracking risks. These factors could cause the funds to track their reference indices less accurately.
The seed capital size, the prioritized basket of Bitcoin instruments, and implementation details prior to the trading date have also not been confirmed. This information will determine the total costs and the fund’s ability to closely follow the stated strategy.
What to Watch Next
The prospectus remains preliminary and may be updated before the filing becomes effective. The SEC has also made it clear that the agency has not approved or disapproved the securities offered in the filing.
Management fees, tickers, listing exchanges, and the VettaFi index methodology have not yet been finalized in the current filing. These details will determine the costs and how the two funds deploy Bitcoin exposure when hitting the market.







