The SEC has cleared Nasdaq’s Bitcoin index options for listing, but trading won’t start until the CFTC also gives the green light.
The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission has given Nasdaq the go-ahead to list Bitcoin index options on the Philadelphia Stock Exchange, known as Phlx. The approval was granted on an accelerated basis and was published on the SEC’s website on Friday.

The contracts are European-style, meaning they can only be exercised at expiration. They are also cash-settled, so there is no physical Bitcoin changing hands. Instead, holders receive the difference between Bitcoin’s spot price and the strike price when the contract expires.
The options will be tied to the CME CF Bitcoin Real Time Index. That index pulls pricing data from major cryptocurrency exchanges every 200 milliseconds, and the new Nasdaq contracts track one one-hundredth of that benchmark.
They will trade under the ticker QBTC on Phlx. The minimum price increment is $0.01, and position limits are set at 24,000 contracts per side, which the SEC said is roughly 0.12% of Bitcoin’s total outstanding supply.
David Barrett, head of U.S. options at Nasdaq, said the approval “represents an important step in expanding regulated, transparent access to digital asset derivatives.”
Even with SEC approval in hand, the contracts cannot begin trading. Bitcoin is classified as a commodity, which means the CFTC has jurisdiction over it. The new options will need exemptive relief from the CFTC before they can go live.
CME Group, which has offered Bitcoin futures options since 2020, previously argued in a comment letter that these types of contracts fall under the CFTC’s exclusive authority. The SEC addressed this in its filing, pointing to the Dodd-Frank Act and existing examples of shared jurisdiction, such as mixed swaps and security futures.
Currently, U.S. investors can access Bitcoin-related derivatives through CME Group or through options tied to spot Bitcoin exchange-traded funds like the iShares Bitcoin Trust. The Nasdaq product would bring Bitcoin options directly into the U.S. stock options market.
The approval comes as the SEC under Chairman Paul Atkins moves toward a more crypto-friendly approach. Atkins has dropped several enforcement cases against crypto firms that were started under the previous administration.
In a May 8 speech, Atkins warned against pushing crypto activity offshore, referencing the collapse of FTX in 2022 as an example of what can go wrong when American users turn to unregulated foreign platforms.
The SEC is also working on an “innovation exemption” that would allow blockchain-based trading of tokenized public company shares on decentralized platforms. Lawmakers are separately pushing for passage of the CLARITY Act, which aims to set clearer rules for digital assets.
Many of the world’s largest crypto derivatives exchanges, including Binance and Hyperliquid, continue to operate offshore.
The post SEC Approves Nasdaq Bitcoin Index Options: What Investors Need to Know appeared first on CoinCentral.
