Key Highlights
- On April 2, 2026, Grayscale filed Amendment No. 1 to its S-1, moving the over-the-counter Grayscale Bittensor (TAO) Trust closer to a spot ETF listing on NYSE Arca under ticker GTAO, with in-kind creations and updated valuation.
- Grayscale Chairman Barry Silbert calls decentralized AI “developing quickly,” with Grayscale positioning itself as an early pioneer for regulated, custody-free exposure to open-source intelligence.
- TAO trades near $307 with a ~$3.31 billion market cap as of early April 2026. The network now runs ~128–129 subnets, and its March 2026 breakthrough has driven fresh attention and price strength, showing decentralized AI can compete with Big Tech giants.
Grayscale Investments filed Amendment No. 1 to its S-1 registration on April 2, 2026 with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), advancing plans to convert its existing over-the-counter Grayscale Bittensor (TAO) Trust into a spot ETF listed on NYSE Arca under the ticker GTAO.
The filing registers an indeterminate number of TAO-backed shares for continuous issuance and updates operational details like valuation using the CoinDesk Bittensor Benchmark Rate.
The move comes as the trust, which already holds physical TAO tokens custodied at Coinbase and BitGo, inches closer to regulated exchange trading. The asset manager’s recent private placements added shares brings its total outstanding to about 2 million tokens as of early April.
Why would Grayscale choose TAO?
On the surface, TAO might look like any other mid-cap token in a sea of altcoins. But Grayscale’s bet gives it a calculated credibility, especially toward the intersection of two explosive trends: cryptocurrency infrastructure and artificial intelligence.
Bittensor operates as a decentralized marketplace for machine intelligence. Participants contribute models, data, or compute power across specialized subnets and earn TAO rewards based on performance validated through Yuma Consensus.
The February 2025 dTAO upgrade introduced subnet-specific alpha tokens, creating new incentives and buying pressure on TAO as the gateway asset for staking into high-performing subnets.
Grayscale sees this as more than hype. While Big Tech dominates closed AI systems, Bittensor offers an open, incentivized alternative where intelligence production is distributed and verifiable. Chairman Barry Silbert has highlighted how quickly decentralized AI is evolving, positioning the firm as an early pioneer in giving traditional investors regulated access without the headaches of self-custody.
The firm has a track record of packaging emerging narratives—Bitcoin first, then Ethereum, now AI-themed assets. With institutions hunting diversified exposure beyond the usual suspects, TAO provides a high-conviction play on open-source intelligence rather than proprietary silos.
Bittensor’s market position
As of early April 2026, TAO trades around $307, with a market capitalization near $3.31 billion—as per CoinMarketCap data. Its circulating supply remains under 10.79 million of a 21 million hard cap, bolstered by high staking rates and the first halving in December 2025 that cut daily emissions in half.
The network has grown to over 100 subnets tackling tasks from language models to image generation. Recent breakthroughs, including decentralized models competing at scale, have driven attention and price momentum in early 2026. Grayscale’s own research notes that such wins demonstrate decentralized AI can hold its own against centralized giants.
If the ETF wins approval, it could mirror GBTC’s post-conversion surge by unlocking access for advisors, platforms, and institutional allocators wary of direct crypto holdings.
Still, the setup has tailwinds. AI spending is exploding, and any shift toward open, collaborative models could funnel real economic value into Bittensor’s incentive layer. Subnet growth, combined with TAO’s scarcity mechanics and Grayscale’s distribution muscle, creates a narrative that resonates beyond typical crypto cycles.
In a market recovering from past drawdowns, Grayscale is signaling that this “random” altcoin sits at the convergence of blockchain rails and AI demand. Whether it delivers long-term infrastructure value or fades as another narrative play remains to be seen—but the filing keeps the door open for institutions to decide.
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