The SEC just gave Nasdaq the green light to list options tied directly to a Bitcoin price index. Not options on a Bitcoin ETF. Not options on Bitcoin futures. Options on the index itself, settled in cash, traded on a regulated equities exchange.
It’s a distinction that matters more than it sounds. This approval, filed under SEC Release No. 34-105549, lets Nasdaq PHLX list and trade European-style, cash-settled options on the Nasdaq Bitcoin Index. The ticker: QBTC.
What exactly got approved
The Nasdaq Bitcoin Index tracks the CME CF Bitcoin Real Time Index, known as BRTI, which pulls real-time Bitcoin valuations from major spot trading venues. Settlement prices are determined by the CME CF Cryptocurrency Reference Rate, New York Variant (BRRNY). Some reports also reference the ticker XBTX alongside QBTC.
European-style means these options can only be exercised at expiration, not before. Cash-settled means no one is delivering actual Bitcoin when contracts expire. You’re simply paid the difference between your strike price and the settlement value in US dollars, with a minimum trading increment of $0.01.
This isn’t the first crypto-adjacent options product the SEC has blessed. Back in September 2024, the agency cleared options on spot Bitcoin ETFs, including BlackRock’s iShares Bitcoin Trust (IBIT). ETF options are tethered to a specific fund’s share price, which can deviate slightly from Bitcoin’s actual value due to fund flows, premiums, discounts, and management fees. Index options cut out the middleman entirely, referencing Bitcoin’s price as calculated by a widely trusted benchmark rate.
The long road to approval
Nasdaq first filed for Bitcoin index options back in August 2024, shortly after the wave of spot Bitcoin ETF launches that began in January of that year. The formal proposal landed with the SEC in September 2025, and the application went through multiple rounds of public commentary and an extension process before receiving expedited approval on May 22, 2026.
One important caveat: trading isn’t live yet. The approval comes with a note that additional regulatory steps are still pending, potentially including exemptions from the Commodity Futures Trading Commission. Also worth noting: only Bitcoin has been incorporated into this initiative so far. No Ethereum index options, no basket products.
What this means for investors
For institutional players already holding spot Bitcoin ETFs, index options provide a more efficient hedging tool. Instead of managing exposure through ETF-specific options that carry fund-level tracking error, they can hedge against the underlying price directly. Portfolio managers running multi-asset strategies can now express Bitcoin views using instruments that sit neatly within their existing equities infrastructure.
For retail traders, QBTC options could offer a simpler way to take directional positions on Bitcoin without the capital requirements of buying ETF shares or the complexity of navigating crypto futures exchanges. Cash settlement eliminates delivery risk entirely.
The risk to watch is regulatory fragmentation. If the CFTC exemptions take longer than expected, or if jurisdictional disputes create uncertainty around the product’s status, trading could be delayed indefinitely. The SEC’s approval is necessary but not sufficient. Until the CFTC piece is resolved, QBTC options exist in a regulatory limbo that could frustrate early adopters.
Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy.

15 hours ago
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