The firm behind the first U.S. spot XRP ETF has filed registration documents for a new product under the ticker MOG. The filing marks another step in expanding XRP-linked investment options and could deepen market access if approved.
MOG surged roughly 25% after Canary Capital filed for the first-ever exchange-traded fund linked to the MOG token, drawing fresh attention as markets react to the end of the US government shutdown. The filing is being read as a potential validation of meme tokens by institutional players.
Mog Coin (MOG) ticked up Wednesday after Canary Capital filed to launch an ETF tracking the memecoin. The filing drew fresh attention to the token, though any approval remains uncertain.
Canary Capital Group LLC filed with the SEC for a spot ETF tied to memecoin MOG on Nov. 13, 2025, expanding its crypto product slate. The move coincides with an XRP-focused fund beginning to trade on Nasdaq, highlighting growing mainstream access to crypto assets.
Canary Capital submitted an S-1 registration with the U.S. SEC proposing an ETF that would track the price of MOG Coin. The proposal aims to package memecoin exposure into an ETF vehicle, subject to regulatory approval.
Canary Funds has filed for an ETF tracking meme cryptocurrency MOG Coin, marking the token's first proposed entry into traditional markets. The move could broaden access for institutional and retail investors, though regulatory approval remains uncertain.
Canary Capital filed for regulatory approval on Nov. 12, 2025, to launch an exchange-traded fund that would track the MOG coin, the first ETF attempt for that meme coin. The move underscores growing interest from asset managers in packaging meme-coin exposure into regulated products.