Nasdaq PHLX is moving forward with plans to list cash-settled Bitcoin index options following conditional approval from the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC). The decision, issued on May 22, 2026, under SEC Release No. 34-105549, allows the exchange to offer European-style options under the ticker symbol QBTC. While the product still requires final clearance from the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC), it marks a major expansion of regulated crypto derivatives infrastructure in the United States.
Nasdaq first filed for these options in August 2024 and submitted a formal proposal to the SEC in September 2025. Unlike existing products that require specialized derivatives accounts, QBTC options will trade on the same platform as major technology stocks. This allows investors to use their existing brokerage accounts to execute hedging strategies or trade volatility. The move comes as Bitcoin exchange supply maintains multi-year lows, reflecting a shift in how institutions manage their digital asset exposure.
David Barrett, Head of U.S. Options for Nasdaq, stated the approval is a “big milestone for regulated crypto derivatives trading in the U.S.” SEC Chairman Paul Atkins has supported bringing such products into regulated environments. In a speech on May 8, Atkins noted the collapse of FTX showed the risk of forcing Americans toward offshore platforms by failing to provide local regulated alternatives.
Specifications of the Nasdaq Bitcoin index options
The QBTC product is designed for precise risk management. Each contract represents exposure to exactly 1 BTC, a significantly smaller size than the 5-BTC contracts offered by the CME Group. To achieve this, Nasdaq uses a 1/100th index scaling factor combined with a standard $100 multiplier. These options are European-style, meaning they can only be exercised at expiration, which protects sellers from the risk of early assignment.
Crucially, the Nasdaq Bitcoin Index tracks one-hundredth (1/100th) of the CME CF Bitcoin Real Time Index (BRTI). This underlying BRTI aggregates data from eight regulated venues every 200 milliseconds to calculate price. Settlement prices will be determined by the CME CF Cryptocurrency Reference Rate, New York Variant (BRRNY). Because the contracts are cash-settled in U.S. dollars, no physical Bitcoin is delivered, which may attract fiduciaries who face restrictions on holding spot assets.
Institutional interest in such regulated tools remains high, even as traders monitor recent rejections at key resistance levels in the spot market. The Options Clearing Corporation (OCC) will manage the clearing and margin infrastructure. Its portfolio margin framework could allow institutions holding Bitcoin ETFs and index options to benefit from margin offsets, improving capital efficiency for large-scale traders.
Regulatory timeline and market entry
Trading is expected to begin in the coming months, with a realistic launch window likely in the second half of 2026. Before the first trade, the product must receive exemptive relief from the CFTC, as Bitcoin is classified as a commodity. Nasdaq PHLX also needs to finalize market-maker incentive structures and position limits. The early 2025 launch of IBIT options on Nasdaq took six weeks from SEC approval to trading, but QBTC may take longer as a new index-based product.
Structural changes to the market could result from this listing. Academic research suggests that deeper options markets can reduce the realized volatility of an underlying asset. For Bitcoin, which has seen 90-day realized volatility average around 80% annualized, more liquid hedging tools may eventually lead to a more stable price environment. This expansion of the “walled garden” of U.S. exchanges aims to offer specialized risk management to retail and institutional participants alike.
