Most European investors looking to get exposure to Bitcoin aren’t doing it through spot ETFs — because they can’t. When the US Securities and Exchange Commission approved Bitcoin spot ETFs in January 2024, Americans got a shiny new product. Europeans watched from the sidelines. Regulatory differences mean EU investors access Bitcoin through ETNs — Exchange Traded Notes — which have different legal and fiscal structures but still track Bitcoin’s price. Same destination, different vehicle.
Same destination, different vehicle. Europeans get Bitcoin exposure through ETNs — regulation made sure of that.
And the vehicle options aren’t bad. CoinShares Physical Bitcoin posted the best recent one-year performance with a 0.25% annual cost and over €1,500 million in assets. WisdomTree Physical Bitcoin grabbed the best three-year performance crown with the lowest fees at 0.15%. BlackRock’s iShares Bitcoin ETP also charges 0.15%. Then there’s VanEck at 1.00% and 21Shares at 1.49%, which is… a choice.
Here’s the interesting part. Bitcoin dropped roughly 22% year-to-date in 2026, and European ETN holders didn’t flinch. No panic selling. No major outflows. Just quiet, stubborn holding. That’s either impressive conviction or collective denial — probably some of both. Either way, European investors held firm while the market bled.
The broader context makes their patience easier to understand. Bitcoin finished 2025 down about 6%. Ethereum dropped roughly 11%. Altcoins? Down nearly 60%. The market basically collapsed inward, concentrating around institutional-grade products. Bitcoin and Ethereum ETFs became the survivors. Speculative retail money got obliterated chasing tokens that nobody wanted anymore. Seasoned investors who had adopted a core-satellite approach with stable coins and established cryptocurrencies fared significantly better than those concentrated in speculative altcoins.
On-chain data backs up the stress. Currently, 76% of Bitcoin addresses are in profit — sounds decent until you remember that figure was 96% a year ago. The NUPL metric hit 0.12 on February 2, 2026, breaching what analysts call the fear zone. Historical bear market lows have seen that number fall to 40%. The December 2022 bottom sat at 52%. The situation isn’t catastrophic yet, but it’s not comfortable either.
Meanwhile, institutional capital keeps consolidating around ETF-format products, and ten European banks are reportedly investigating euro-pegged stablecoin issuance. Institutions are building. Retailers are sweating. Futures markets are also flashing caution signals, with the annualized basis compressing to 4.2% futures basis, reflecting faded speculation and reduced appetite for leveraged exposure. For those navigating entry points, European crypto ETNs are physically collateralized with real Bitcoins, meaning the underlying asset is actually held rather than synthetically replicated.