Franklin Templeton has filed registration paperwork for a pair of proposed exchange-traded funds that would take a familiar stock-market concept and point it toward Bitcoin. The proposed Franklin US Equity Bitcoin DRIP Index ETF and Franklin US Innovation Bitcoin DRIP Index ETF would use dividend income generated by underlying equity holdings to build exposure to Bitcoin-linked instruments, according to the SEC filing.
The idea is simple but unusual: instead of reinvesting dividends back into the same stock portfolio, the funds would route those distributions into Bitcoin exposure. That makes the structure different from a straightforward spot Bitcoin ETF and different from a traditional equity income product. It is effectively a hybrid allocation tool aimed at investors who want broad U.S. equity exposure while allowing income from that portfolio to accumulate in BTC-linked assets over time.
The funds are designed to begin with a roughly 95% U.S. equity and 5% Bitcoin allocation. The Bitcoin sleeve may use several instruments, including Bitcoin-backed exchange-traded products, futures, options or other permitted exposure routes, depending on what the final prospectus allows and what the adviser selects.
The filing also includes guardrails. If the Bitcoin allocation rises above 5%, the portfolio would normally rebalance quarterly back toward 4.5%. The filing also describes a hard cap that prevents Bitcoin exposure from exceeding 20% between rebalances. That matters because Bitcoin can move much more sharply than the underlying equity holdings, meaning a small allocation could expand quickly during a strong rally.
For investors, the key point is that the product is not being pitched as an all-in Bitcoin vehicle. It is a controlled allocation strategy that uses dividends as the funding mechanism. That could appeal to more traditional investors who are curious about Bitcoin but do not want to sell equities or make repeated manual purchases.
Franklin Templeton already operates the Franklin Bitcoin ETF, but these filings suggest issuers are still experimenting with ways to package Bitcoin exposure for different investor profiles. The first phase of the U.S. spot Bitcoin ETF market was about direct access. The next phase appears to be about integration: model portfolios, managed allocations, covered strategies and blended funds that make BTC part of a broader investment workflow.
That is important because Bitcoin adoption inside traditional finance is rarely only about price. It is also about product design. A DRIP-style structure could turn ordinary equity dividend income into a systematic Bitcoin allocation, creating a slow but recurring inflow channel if the funds are approved and attract assets.
There is still a long way to go before that becomes meaningful. The products are preliminary filings and are not active or tradeable today. The anticipated effective date listed in the filing points to September 2026 at the earliest, and regulatory review can change structure, timing or launch plans. Still, the filing shows how major asset managers are looking for new ways to make Bitcoin exposure fit inside familiar investment habits rather than forcing investors to treat it as a separate speculative trade.
This article was written by the News Desk and edited by Samuel Rae.
This report is based on information from SEC filings. at SEC
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