Yorkville America Equities, the asset manager behind a series of exchange-traded funds (ETFs) tied to U.S. President Donald Trump’s Truth Social brand, has filed registration documents for two new cryptocurrency ETFs, expanding its push into the digital asset market.
According to a filing with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) on Friday, the company is seeking approval for the Truth Social Bitcoin and Ethereum ETFs, which would provide exposure to the two largest cryptocurrencies by market capitalization. Yorkville also filed for a second product, the Truth Social Cronos Yield Maximizer ETF, which combines investments into shares the native token of Crypto.com’s Cronos blockchain.
While the two ETFs still need approval from the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), the filings mark an important next step for the political brand investment firm. If approved, the ETFs will be launched in partnership with Crypto.com, which is expected to act as a digital asset custodian, liquidity provider and staking service provider for the new funds.
The Cronos-focused ETF is especially noteworthy for its inclusion of staking rewards, which are typically earned by helping secure proof-of-stake networks like Cronos. That could make the fund an income product in a space still largely dominated by passive spot ETFs.
Both funds will also distribute through Foris Capital US LLC, an SEC-registered broker-dealer affiliated with Crypto.com.
Truth Social first expressed its cryptocurrency ambitions in June 2025, when it filed an S-1 registration statement for a spot Bitcoin ETF under the same brand. A blue-chip digital asset ETF filing followed in July 2025, targeting a basket of large-cap altcoins. Neither product has been launched yet.
President Trump, the majority owner of the Trump Media & Technology Group, which in turn owns Truth Social, has been in trouble politically for his personal business ties to the cryptocurrency industry. This relationship is currently one of the main sticking points in the push for the U.S. Senate’s Digital Asset Market Clarity Act, which would govern regulation of the U.S. cryptocurrency market.
