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French minister Bruno Retailleau pushes for stricter EU migration policy

As the newest minister to partake in the Council of the European Union, Frenchman Bruno Retailleau attended his first meeting of home affairs ministers on Thursday.

Before taking his first steps on the European stage, the French representative had immediately set his political stance: he wants a firmer approach to migration policy.

On his arrival in Luxembourg, the former president of the conservative Republicans party in the French parliament assured everyone that Europe would come together to protect its citizens “from migratory shocks.”

For European Policy Centre political analyst Eric Maurice, Retailleau is in line with the political guarantee he must provide within the minority French government, behind which the shadow of the far right constantly looms.

“Bruno Retailleau is a token given to the French right and the far right in terms of discourse since Bruno Retailleau is quite tough on migration issues,” Maurice told Euronews.

Following the parliamentary elections, no group obtained an absolute majority. The left-wing bloc, the New Popular Front, came out on top, ahead of the presidential camp, Ensemble, and the far-right National Rally.

The Republicans, who now hold the offices of the prime minister and interior minister, received 6% of the vote. This team’s political survival, which relies on the presidential centre and the Christian Democrats, therefore depends on the parties outside the coalition.

A ‘radically different world’

Having pushed for the European Pact on Asylum and Migration, adopted last spring after years of difficult negotiations, Retailleau is now calling for it to be implemented as quickly as possible, or even “in advance”.

The French minister also wants to review the Return Directive, whose guiding principle is to return all illegal immigrants to their country of origin or transit. This text, adopted in 2008, also sets the duration of detention and the treatment of minors.

Retailleau claimed the regulation was drafted and adopted “in a radically different world”.

“It is a misnomer because, in reality, the Return Directive prevents many people from returning,” he said.

In addition, the French interior minister “does not rule out any a priori solution” for transferring migrants to centres outside the EU along the lines of the agreement between Italy and Albania. “All innovative solutions must be used,” he insisted.

This radical approach is echoed across Europe. The far right is gaining ground at the polls in several member countries, Germany has reintroduced controls at its land borders, the Netherlands is reforming its asylum policy, and Hungary was fined 200 million euros by the EU Court of Justice in June on charges of “systematic and deliberate evasion” of European asylum policy.

Domestic target audience

“Perhaps Bruno Retailleau saw this as a political opportunity”, Maurice suggested.

“I think he has a mainly national vision. He is also someone who is not extremely well known on the national political scene. He was within the Senate, he was the leader of the right-wing group in the Senate.”

“But he needs to carve out a national political stature for himself. He needs to assert his political identity. I think we’re talking about a proactive stance to mark out his political territory within the coalition,” Maurice explained.

Retailleau also provoked controversy over the rule of law. He believes that, as a principle, it “is not intangible, nor sacred”, a comment quickly reframed by French Prime Minister Michel Barnier.

However, these comments seem to have won over Hungary’s PM Viktor Orbàn, who admitted to the press at the European Parliament in Strasbourg on Tuesday that he had “a great deal of respect for” the French minister.

Four Reasons Ether ETFs Have Underperformed

For many investors, the performance of spot ether (ETH) exchange-traded funds (ETFs) has been disappointing.

Whereas spot bitcoin (BTC) ETFs processed almost $19 billion in inflows in the course of 10 months, ether ETFs, which began trading in July, have failed to produce the same kind of interest.

Even worse, Grayscale’s ETHE, which existed as an ether Trust prior to its conversion into an ETF, has suffered massive redemptions, and demand for other ether funds has failed to offset them.

That means ether ETFs have, so far, experienced $556 million in net outflows since they launched. Just this week, the products have bled out a net $8 million, according to Farside data.

So why are ether ETFs performing so differently? There are a few possible reasons.

Putting inflows into context

First of all, it’s important to note that ether ETFs only look bad in contrast to bitcoin ETFs. The bitcoin products have broken so many records that they’re arguably the most successful ETFs of all time.

For example, the ETFs issued by BlackRock and Fidelity, IBIT and FBTC, collected $4.2 billion and $3.5 billion each in their first 30 days, smashing the previous record, held by BlackRock’s Climate Conscious fund, which had garnered $2.2 billion in its first month, August 2023.

While ether ETFs failed to replicate these kinds of earth-shattering results, three of the funds are still among the top 25 best performing ETFs of the year, according to ETF Store president Nate Geraci.

BlackRock’s ETHE, Fidelity’s FBTC, and Bitwise’s ETHW have vacuumed up almost $1 billion, $367 million, and $239 million in assets respectively – not bad at all for two-and-a-half months old funds.

“Spot ether ETFs were never going to challenge spot bitcoin ETFs in terms of inflows,” Geraci told CoinDesk.

“If you look at the underlying spot markets, ether is about one-fourth the market cap of bitcoin. That should be a reasonable proxy of where spot ether ETF demand ends up longer-term relative to spot bitcoin ETFs.”

The problem is that Grayscale’s ETHE has drowned out these funds’ performances with its large outflows.

Spun up in 2017 as a trust, ETHE was originally designed, for regulatory reasons, in a way that didn’t permit investors to redeem their ETF shares – the money was stuck in the product. That changed on July 23, when Grayscale won approval to convert its trust into a proper ETF.

At the time of conversion, ETHE had roughly $1 billion in assets, and while some of those assets were moved by Grayscale itself to another of its funds – the ether mini ETF – ETHE has suffered from almost $3 billion in outflows.

It’s worth noting that Grayscale experienced the same thing with its bitcoin ETF, GBTC, which has processed more than $20 billion in outflows since its conversion in January. However, the stellar performances of BlackRock and Fidelity’s spot Bitcoin ETFs have more than offset GBTC’s bleedout.

Lack of staking yield

One of the big differences between bitcoin and ether is that investors can stake ether – essentially locking it into the Ethereum network to earn a yield paid out in ether.

However, in their current form, ether ETFs don’t allow investors to gain exposure to staking. So holding ether through an ETF means missing out on that yield (currently about 3.5%) – and paying a management fee to issuers that can range from 0.15% to 2.5%.

While some traditional investors won’t mind giving up that yield in exchange for the convenience and safety of an ETF, it makes sense for crypto-natives to find alternative ways of holding ether.

“If you’re a competent fund manager with even a basic understanding of the crypto market and you’re managing someone’s money, why would you buy an ether ETF right now?” Adam Morgan McCarthy, an analyst at crypto data firm Kaiko Research, told CoinDesk.

“You pay to get exposure to ETH (and the underlying is custodied at Coinbase) or you buy the underlying yourself and stake it with the exact same provider in return for some yield,” McCarthy said.

Marketing Ethereum to clients

Another obstacle for ether ETFs is that it can be hard for some investors to understand the core use-case for Ethereum because it seeks to lead in several, diverse areas of crypto.

Bitcoin was created with a hard cap on supply: There will never be more than 21 million bitcoin in existence. That makes it relatively easy for investors to see it as “digital gold” and a potential hedge against inflation.

Explaining why a decentralized, open-source smart contract platform matters – and more importantly, why ether stands to accrue in value – is another task altogether.

“One of the challenges for ether ETFs in penetrating the 60/40 Boomer world is distilling its purpose/value into an easy-to-understand soundbite,” Bloomberg Intelligence ETF analyst Eric Balchunas wrote in May.

McCarthy agreed. “Ether is just that bit more complex to get across to people – it’s not built for an elevator pitch,” he told CoinDesk.

It’s no wonder, then, that crypto index fund Bitwise recently launched an educational ad campaign highlighting the technological benefits of Ethereum.

“As investors learn more about stablecoins, decentralized finance, tokenization, prediction markets, and the many other applications powered by Ethereum, they will enthusiastically embrace both technology and the US-listed Ethereum ETPs,” Zach Pandl, head of research at Grayscale, told CoinDesk.

Poor price performance

There’s also the fact that ETH itself hasn’t performed all that well compared to BTC this year.

The second largest cryptocurrency by market capitalization is only up 4% since Jan. 1, whereas BTC has risen 42% and keeps hovering around its 2021 all-time highs.

“One factor contributing to the success of the bitcoin ETFs, which remain mostly retail-driven, has been investor animal spirits and fear of missing out, which itself was fueled by BTC’s 65% rise into the ETF launch and subsequent 33% gain since,” Brian Rudick, director of research at crypto trading firm GSR, told CoinDesk.

“ETH’s 30% price decline since its ETFs launched has put a large damper on retail enthusiasm to buy the funds,” Rudick added. “Sentiment around Ethereum is low, with some seeing it as stuck between Bitcoin as the best monetary asset and Solana as the best high-performance smart contract blockchain.”

Unattractive valuation

Finally, there’s a possibility that traditional investors simply don’t find ether’s valuation attractive at these levels.

At a market capitalization of roughly $290 billion, ether already has a higher valuation than any bank in the world except for JPMorgan Chase and Bank of America, which stand at $608 billion and $311 billion respectively.

And while that might seem like an apples-to-oranges comparison, Quinn Thompson, founder of crypto hedge fund Lekker Capital, told CoinDesk that ether’s valuation also looks high compared to tech stocks.

Ether’s valuation “next to other assets
is now uglier because there is no justification for its price on any sort of valuation framework,” Thompson wrote in September. “Either price has to come down, or a new generally accepted valuation framework for the asset needs to be widely accepted.”