SEC Greenlights Nasdaq Bitcoin Index Options
The SEC approved Nasdaq PHLX‘s Bitcoin index options on May 23, giving institutional traders a regulated, cash-settled instrument to hedge spot Bitcoin (BTC) exposure. The approval, confirmed in a filing with the SEC’s EDGAR system, represents the first time a U.S. national securities exchange has received federal clearance to list index options directly tied to Bitcoin’s price.
The move extends Wall Street’s regulated cryptocurrency toolkit beyond spot ETFs and futures.
What the Approval Covers
Nasdaq PHLX’s Bitcoin index options will settle in cash rather than requiring delivery of actual Bitcoin. Cash settlement means traders receive or pay the dollar difference between the option’s strike price and the index value at expiration.
No cryptocurrency custody is required from either side of the trade. That structure lowers the operational barrier for pension funds, insurance companies, and asset managers that face restrictions on holding digital assets directly.
The SEC filing outlines the product structure and underlying index methodology in the annual proxy materials submitted by the exchange’s parent company.
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How We Got Here
Nasdaq PHLX, a subsidiary of Nasdaq (NDAQ) and one of the oldest U.S. options exchanges, filed its initial proposal for Bitcoin index options as part of a broader push to expand cryptocurrency derivatives access for institutional clients. The proposal arrived as spot Bitcoin ETFs were already drawing record inflows through early 2026, accelerating demand from institutions seeking complementary hedging products.
The SEC had previously allowed Bitcoin futures options on commodity venues regulated by the CFTC, but direct index options on a national securities exchange required separate SEC clearance under exchange rules.
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What Comes Next
The approval opens a path for market makers and institutional desks to price and trade Bitcoin volatility through a familiar equity-options framework. Exchanges typically require several weeks of operational preparation before new products go live, so trading is not expected to begin immediately.
Analysts watching the space have pointed to Bitcoin options open interest as a signal of institutional conviction; a liquid index options market on a national securities exchange would add a new data layer to that picture. Bitcoin traded near $75,500 on May 23 as the broader cryptocurrency market faced pressure from macro headwinds and ETF outflows, making the timing of any product launch a variable the exchange will weigh carefully.
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