Close Menu
Abu Dhabi NewsAbu Dhabi News
  • Home
    • Our Authors
    • Contact
  • Abu Dhabi
  • UAE
  • World
  • Business
  • Economy
  • Technology
  • Health
  • Lifestyle
  • Travel
  • Sport
What's Hot
Dubai AI Tool

Dubai AI Tool Detects Financial Fraud in Seconds

May 11, 2026
Rare Supermoon

A Rare Supermoon Will Illuminate Arabian Skies

May 11, 2026
UAE’s Climate Data Center Goes Live

UAE’s Climate Data Center Goes Live

May 11, 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Abu Dhabi NewsAbu Dhabi News
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram TikTok
Login
  • Home
    • Our Authors
    • Contact
  • Abu Dhabi
  • UAE
  • World
  • Business
  • Economy
  • Technology
  • Health
  • Lifestyle
  • Travel
  • Sport
Subscribe
Abu Dhabi NewsAbu Dhabi News
  • Abu Dhabi
  • UAE
  • World
  • Economy
  • Technology
  • Health
  • Lifestyle
  • Travel
  • Sport
Home»Business
Business

Ethereum ETFs Gain Traction in Gulf Markets

Annie GerberBy Annie GerberMay 11, 2026No Comments5 Mins Read
Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Telegram Email WhatsApp Copy Link
Ethereum ETFs
Ethereum ETFs

Listen to the article

0:00
0:00

Key Takeaways

🌐 Translate Article

Translating...

📖 Read Along

💬 AI Assistant

🤖
Hi! I'm here to help you understand this article. Ask me anything about the content!

Last month, I was sitting in a coffee shop near Abu Dhabi’s corniche when a wealth manager I know slid his phone across the table. An order ticket for a US-listed Ethereum ETF appeared on the screen; it was placed, rather improbably, through his local bank. He claimed that order would have required three platforms and a tiny leap of faith two years ago. Like any other trade, it just sits there now, blinking.

That little fact reveals a lot about the current state of the Gulf markets. Ether ETFs, which were only approved by US regulators in May 2024, have quietly emerged as one of the more talked-about products in the area. It seems that curious retail traders are no longer the only ones driving the appetite. Pension funds, family offices, and even Sharia-screened mandates are beginning to appear in the digital asset space.

Topic Snapshot — Ethereum ETFs in the Gulf Details
Primary Market Hub Abu Dhabi Securities Exchange (ADX)
ETF Trading Surge (March 2026) 183% spike in trade value, YoY
Q1 2026 ETF Trading Value on ADX AED 155 million (228% YoY increase)
Total ETFs Listed on ADX 23 (as of late April 2026)
ETF Market Capitalisation on ADX ~AED 27 billion (~$7.35 billion)
Key Regulator (Dubai) Virtual Assets Regulatory Authority (VARA)
Underlying Asset Ethereum (ETH) — second-largest cryptocurrency
US Approval Date for Spot Ether ETFs May 2024 (US SEC)
Recent ETH ETF Daily Inflow (US) $103.5 million (May 2026)
Notable Cross-Listed Sponsors on ADX KraneShares, BlackRock-linked products
Investor Profile 78% institutional; 47.5% foreign participation in ADX

The numbers are significant in and of themselves. ETF trade value increased by 183% in March alone, according to ADX, and its ETF segment’s Q1 trading reached about AED 155 million, a 228% increase year over year. There are currently 23 listed ETFs on the exchange, and although not all of them directly deal with cryptocurrency, the overall signal is difficult to overlook. Repositioning is capital. And a lot of it is interested in ether in particular, in part because the asset now feels more like infrastructure than speculation.

It’s worthwhile to consider the reasons behind ether rather than just bitcoin. In 2024, Bitcoin ETFs made headlines, and for good reason—the inflows were astounding. Ethereum, however, has a different pitch. Tokenization, settlement rails, and smart contracts. Investors with ties to Gulf sovereigns who are considering the next ten years of finance will view that narrative differently than digital gold. “Bitcoin is the trade,” stated a trader I spoke with in Dubai. The wager on what will happen next is ether.

Ethereum ETFs
Ethereum ETFs

The regulatory environment is also important. Dubai now has a dedicated virtual-asset rulebook with actual licensing teeth thanks to its VARA framework, something that most other jurisdictions still lack. The majority of capital, which detests ambiguity, is drawn to that kind of clarity. Abu Dhabi has adopted a slightly different approach, depending on cross-border collaboration with US issuers such as KraneShares and the listing reforms implemented by ADX. Although the two emirates aren’t directly competing, they also aren’t working together.

As I watch this happen, I’m intrigued by how relaxed everything seems on the ground. No billboards are present. No flashy launches in ballrooms of hotels. Just family offices adding a little exposure, brokers updating their product menus, and sporadic, low-key cross-listing announcements. If there is any hype, it mostly exists on finance Twitter and Telegram channels rather than in the actual order flow, which has been remarkably consistent.

None of this is a guarantee, of course. The price of ether continues to fluctuate. Spot ETH ETFs in the US have experienced weeks of bleeding, but they recently recorded $103.5 million in net inflows in a single day. The situation remains unsettling due to geopolitical noise surrounding the Gulf of Oman, ongoing tensions between the United States and Iran, and larger macro nerves. I was told by a senior banker at DIFC that he is “constructive but not euphoric”—possibly the most Gulf expression I have heard this year.

A more subdued question looms over all of this: how much of the inflow is genuine conviction and how much is positioning ahead of additional regulatory dominoes, like tokenized treasuries and ETFs with staking capabilities. Whether the area wants to be a builder, a buyer, or both is still up for debate. Observing the development of Abu Dhabi’s pitch, I would assume both. However, ambition is less expensive than execution, which is where the Gulf has historically caught people off guard.

As of right now, the trend is significant enough to be taken seriously. Not revolutionary. Not a revolution. Just a steady, somewhat obstinate rotation toward an asset class that most Gulf institutions wouldn’t touch a few years ago. That is the story in and of itself.

Ethereum ETFs
Annie Gerber

Please email Annie@abudhabi-news.com

Keep Reading

Dubai AI Tool

Dubai AI Tool Detects Financial Fraud in Seconds

UAE’s Climate Data Center Goes Live

UAE’s Climate Data Center Goes Live

8-Millisecond Pulsar

The 8-Millisecond Pulsar That Could Redefine Physics

AI Tools Are Quietly Rewriting the Legal Industry

AI Tools Are Quietly Rewriting the Legal Industry

Rocket Lab Defends Exploding Engines Strategy

Rocket Lab Defends Exploding Engines Strategy

The Case for a Global AI Safety Treaty

The Case for a Global AI Safety Treaty

Editors Picks

Rare Supermoon

A Rare Supermoon Will Illuminate Arabian Skies

May 11, 2026
UAE’s Climate Data Center Goes Live

UAE’s Climate Data Center Goes Live

May 11, 2026
Ethereum ETFs

Ethereum ETFs Gain Traction in Gulf Markets

May 11, 2026
NASA Study Points to Strange Activity Beneath Uranus

NASA Study Points to Strange Activity Beneath Uranus

May 11, 2026
8-Millisecond Pulsar

The 8-Millisecond Pulsar That Could Redefine Physics

May 11, 2026

Latest Articles

AI Tools Are Quietly Rewriting the Legal Industry

AI Tools Are Quietly Rewriting the Legal Industry

May 11, 2026
The Search for Life Beneath Europa’s Ice

The Search for Life Beneath Europa’s Ice

May 11, 2026
Rocket Lab Defends Exploding Engines Strategy

Rocket Lab Defends Exploding Engines Strategy

May 11, 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram LinkedIn
© 2026 Abu Dhabi News. All Rights Reserved.
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of use
  • Contact

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.

Sign In or Register

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below.

Lost password?