Advisers couldn’t set up strategies to earn extra income from the ETF, or protect against big losses, without actually selling the investment. These kinds of risk-management tools are standard for institutions and often a prerequisite for them to invest at scale.

“Some institutions cannot take a position they cannot also hedge,” Hashdex said in the official announcement. “Some advisor models require the ability to generate yield on holdings. Some risk management frameworks require defined-outcome structures before any allocation can be approved.”

With options, institutions can hedge without liquidating the base ETF position, set up yield-generating strategies and other bets that profit from volatility and time, rather than just price direction, and enter positions with a clear maximum loss, satisfying risk committees and compliance frameworks.

According to Hasdex, the implications go beyond these usual strategies, setting the stage for more sophisticated TradFi-like structured products such as capital-protected crypto notes and defined-outcome ETFs, which cap upside while guaranteeing a floor on the downside.

Booming options industry

Options are derivative contracts that give the right to buy or sell the underlying asset such as a stock or crypto token at a preset price at a later date. A call option gives the right to buy and represents a bullish market bet. A put option offers protection against price declines.

The crypto options market has seen explosive growth over the past five years, with bitcoin and ether contracts listed on Deribit registering daily volumes worth several hundred million dollars and quarterly expiries worth billions, which can sometimes move the spot price.

The ETF options market is catching up quickly. Options tied to BlackRock’s bitcoin ETF (IBIT) now trade at volumes approaching those of bitcoin options on Deribit.

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As stablecoins evolve into core financial infrastructure, North America leads. This report maps the regulation, market shifts, and players driving adoption.

Why it matters:

Stablecoins are entering their third phase of evolution – the institutionalization era – becoming increasingly embedded into core financial infrastructure. As institutions prioritize transparency and compliance, regulated issuers like USDC, RLUSD, and PYUSD are steadily gaining share with RLUSD surpassing $1B in market cap within its first year. North America, leading in regulatory frameworks and institutional distribution, is at the center of it all.

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Rising U.S. real yields, especially on 10-year TIPS, pose a headwind to zero-yielding risk assets like bitcoin.

What to know:

  • Bitcoin demand relative to supply has plunged to 1.3 from over 5.
  • Rising U.S. real yields, especially on 10-year TIPS, pose a headwind to zero-yielding risk assets like bitcoin.
  • Markets expect these tighter financial conditions to persist.

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