21Shares launched the Canton Network ETF under the ticker TCAN on Wednesday, making it the first US fund to offer investors direct exposure to Canton Coin. The fund opened at $24.72 per share with a 0.50% expense ratio.
What sets TCAN apart from other crypto funds is the network behind it. The Canton Network counts Goldman Sachs, Microsoft, Deutsche Bank, Visa, Nasdaq, Moody’s, and Deloitte among its participants. These institutions either help run the network, test its technology, or take part in its governance.
That kind of institutional backing is rare in crypto, and it’s the main reason this launch is drawing attention.
What Is the Canton Network?
The Canton Network is a blockchain designed for banks and financial institutions. Unlike popular blockchains such as Ethereum where every transaction is visible to the public, Canton was built with privacy at its core. That makes it attractive to large financial firms that need the speed and efficiency of blockchain but can’t afford to have their activity on public display.
The network was developed by a company called Digital Asset and launched in 2023. Its main purpose is helping institutions move tokenized assets between each other quickly, securely, and in compliance with financial regulations.
Visa joined the network as a key operator in January 2026 and later expanded its stablecoin settlement program to include Canton. According to 21Shares, the network now handles over $4 trillion in monthly tokenized asset volume across its participants, though that includes testing and pilot activity.
What Is Canton Coin?
Canton Coin is the token that powers the Canton Network. It’s used to pay for transactions on the network, participate in governance decisions, and reward the operators who help keep the system running.
The token launched in November 2025 and has climbed to number 21 in the global crypto rankings with a market cap of around $5.6 billion. At the time of the ETF launch, Canton Coin was trading near $0.146.
While that price is small compared to Bitcoin or Ethereum, market cap tells a more complete story. At $5.6 billion, Canton Coin is already valued higher than well-known projects like Avalanche and Stellar.
Canton was built for institutions like @Nasdaq and @Visa.
Now for the first time in the US, you can get exchange-traded access to Canton through the new 21shares Canton Network ETF ( $TCAN ).
Why @CantonNetwork?
▪️Scale: Supports $4+ Trillion in monthly tokenized asset volume.¹… pic.twitter.com/k7Z4Q7I5qK— 21shares US (@21shares_us) May 7, 2026
How Does the ETF Work?
TCAN works like any other ETF. You buy shares through your regular brokerage account, the same way you’d buy shares of Apple or an index fund. The fund holds Canton Coin on your behalf, so you get exposure to the token’s price without needing to open a crypto wallet or use an exchange.
21Shares manages the fund and also serves as an active operator on the Canton Network itself, giving it a direct role in the blockchain’s infrastructure. Teucrium Investment Advisors serves as the investment adviser.
The 0.50% expense ratio is in line with other crypto ETFs currently on the market.
What Are the Risks?
As with any crypto investment, there are real risks to consider.
TCAN is a brand new fund tracking a token that’s less than a year old. Early trading volume has been light, which could mean liquidity challenges for investors looking to buy or sell larger positions. The fund’s performance is tied to Canton Coin’s price, which depends heavily on whether institutional adoption of the network continues to grow.
The ETF prospectus also notes that the participation of firms like Goldman Sachs and Microsoft does not amount to an endorsement of Canton Coin as an investment. These companies are using or testing the network’s technology, but that doesn’t mean the token’s value is guaranteed to rise.
As always, never invest more than you can afford to lose, and consider how a speculative crypto fund fits within your broader portfolio.
Why This Launch Matters
The TCAN launch signals a shift in the crypto ETF market. The first wave of funds focused on Bitcoin. The second brought Ethereum. Now a third wave is emerging, with ETFs targeting specific blockchain infrastructure and use cases rather than just the biggest tokens.
For investors, that means more ways to gain targeted exposure to specific trends in the crypto space, like tokenized finance, rather than betting on the market as a whole.
Whether TCAN becomes a long-term success depends on whether Canton’s institutional adoption keeps growing. But the fact that a blockchain backed by Goldman Sachs, Visa, and Microsoft now has its own ETF on Nasdaq marks a notable step in how traditional finance and crypto continue to merge.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial advice. Cryptocurrency investments carry significant risk. Always conduct your own research before making any investment decisions.


















