Tuttle Capital Management has expanded its crossover investment options after filing for its “Crypto Blast” single-stock ETFs with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) on November 5, 2025. The filing listed six ETFs tied to familiar names, including MicroStrategy, Nvidia, Coinbase, Tesla, Palantir, and Robinhood.
According to the filing, each fund combines regular company stocks with some exposure to crypto-related ETFs. Tuttle plans to list the funds on the Cboe BZX Exchange, but they are not approved yet. So, nothing is available for trading until regulators review the filings. Tuttle describes the funds as aiming to provide a steady income along with some exposure to crypto markets, especially during changing market conditions.
A ‘Strategic’ structure
The flagship MSTR Crypto Blast ETF mainly invests in MicroStrategy’s stock. Its goal is to earn income and achieve potential growth. The fund uses a put spread strategy on MicroStrategy shares and puts any leftover cash into cryptocurrency ETFs that hold Bitcoin, Ether, and Solana. Bloomberg ETF analyst Eric Balchunas described the setup, saying the fund “implement(s) a put spread strategy on the stock… but then also invest(s) the cash… in crypto ETFs… for the ‘blast.’”
The filing states that the fund will invest at least 80% of its net assets in MSTR-related options and selected crypto ETFs. The expense ratio stands at 0.99%. There are no additional distribution fees. The fund does not attempt to track the exact performance of MicroStrategy. It seeks weekly distribution payouts. However, the filing noted market risks, liquidity risks, and potential underperformance during unstable pricing conditions.
Broader market context
This development arrives as ETF flows around major crypto assets show unusual behavior. Bitcoin and Ethereum spot ETFs recently experienced several days of notable outflows. Analyst Daan Crypto Trades explained that outflows can align with local bottoms if price holds firm. He highlighted that flows should be compared with price action to understand market sentiment. Hence, investors track both movement and response rather than numbers alone.
Meanwhile, Bloomberg’s Eric Balchunas defended a bullish long-term outlook on crypto shared by analyst Tom Lee. He noted that Lee’s optimism rewarded patient holders. “If someone bets big on a team to win and they win by a smaller margin than expected, it is still a victory,” he said. His comment underscored the importance of strategy over exact price targets.
This ETF proposal reflects how traditional finance and crypto markets continue to intersect. It introduces a structure that links stock-based strategies with crypto asset exposure. The approach may influence how investors evaluate risk, allocation, and market behavior across both areas.