CME plans Bitcoin volatility futures as hedging demand grows

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CME Group plans to launch Bitcoin Volatility futures on June 1, pending regulatory review. 

Summary

  • CME’s new futures will track Bitcoin volatility, not whether BTC rises or falls in spot markets.
  • The contracts will settle to BVX, CME’s index for 30-day expected Bitcoin price swings.
  • The launch follows CME’s move toward 24/7 crypto derivatives trading for institutional market access.

The product will let traders take positions on Bitcoin’s expected price swings without betting on whether Bitcoin rises or falls. 

The contracts will settle to the CME CF Bitcoin Volatility Index, known as BVX. The index measures 30-day forward-looking implied volatility using real-time Bitcoin options order book data from CME.

CME adds a new Bitcoin risk tool

CME said the futures will serve traders who want exposure to Bitcoin volatility rather than Bitcoin’s spot price. That means users can hedge or trade around expected market movement without taking a direct bullish or bearish view.

Giovanni Vicioso, CME’s global head of cryptocurrency products, said the contracts would give traders a “critical new layer of risk management.” The product adds to CME’s growing crypto derivatives suite as more institutions use regulated tools to manage Bitcoin exposure.

Moreover, BVX does not track Bitcoin’s price directly. It reflects how the options market prices possible Bitcoin movement over the next 30 days.

CME said the index is published every second between 7 a.m. and 4 p.m. CT on CME trading days. This gives traders a live benchmark for volatility expectations during market hours.

The product may appeal to firms that hold Bitcoin but want a cleaner way to manage price swings. It may also support traders who want to express a view on market stress, calm conditions, or changing options demand.

Launch follows CME’s 24/7 crypto shift

The planned launch comes days after CME is set to move crypto futures and options closer to round-the-clock trading. As crypto.news reported, CME plans to begin 24/7 crypto futures and options trading on May 29, pending regulatory review.

That shift would leave only a short weekly maintenance window. The change aims to bring regulated crypto derivatives closer to the always-open nature of digital asset markets.

The same report noted that CME recorded $3 trillion in crypto notional activity in 2025. It also expanded beyond Bitcoin and Ether by adding futures for Cardano, Chainlink, and Stellar.

Bitcoin rebound keeps volatility in focus

Bitcoin (BTC) has recently traded near the $81,000 level after earlier weakness. Crypto.news data showed Bitcoin near $81,800, up over the past day and week at the time of review.

That price move keeps volatility products in focus. CME’s new futures will not decide whether traders are right on Bitcoin’s direction. Instead, they will test whether the market expects Bitcoin to stay calm or move sharply.

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