Bitcoin (BTC) options open interest has exceeded futures open interest since July 2025, a structural crossover marking a shift from leveraged speculation toward institutional risk management.
CME Group recorded $3 trillion in cryptocurrency derivatives notional volume in 2025, and Coinbase acquired the world's leading options exchange, Deribit, for $2.9 billion.
The reshaping of crypto derivatives infrastructure is accelerating - and decentralized protocols have yet to keep pace.
What Happened
The options market's expansion in 2025 had two defining events. Coinbase closed its Deribit acquisition on Aug. 14, 2025, folding in the venue that historically controlled the majority of global options volume.
Deribit processed more than $1 trillion in notional volume in 2024 and held approximately $60 billion in open interest at closing.
The second shift came from traditional finance.
BlackRock's iShares Bitcoin Trust ETF options, which launched in November 2024, now account for roughly 52% of total Bitcoin options open interest, according to Checkonchain data. IBIT's growth has eroded Deribit's share from more than 90% five years ago to below 39%.
Why It Matters
Options-heavy markets tend to exhibit lower volatility. Dealers hedge their exposure continuously rather than through leveraged futures that can trigger cascading liquidations. For institutions managing large Bitcoin positions, options provide defined-risk exposure - capping downside for the cost of a premium - that futures cannot replicate.
CME announced 24/7 cryptocurrency futures and options trading beginning May 29, pending regulatory review. The exchange's 2026 year-to-date average daily volume is up 46% compared with 2025.
The move directly addresses a persistent structural gap: Bitcoin trades around the clock while CME derivatives do not, creating weekend price dislocations that have frustrated institutional hedging desks.
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The On-Chain Gap
Decentralized derivatives markets have grown in volume share, driven largely by perpetual futures platforms. On-chain options, however, remain nascent.
Derive - formerly Lyra, rebuilt in 2023 on an OP Stack layer-2 network - has emerged as the leading decentralized options protocol by notional volume.
Unlike automated market maker models common in earlier on-chain options protocols, Derive operates a central limit order book with market-maker quoting and a portfolio margin system that evaluates risk across combined positions rather than charging margin on each leg separately.
Whether decentralized options can scale to institutional relevance remains an open question. Regulatory uncertainty constrained earlier efforts: the CFTC charged Opyn for operating as an unlicensed derivatives exchange.
Regulatory direction has improved since, but on-chain options have not yet produced a protocol with liquidity depth sufficient to attract serious institutional flow.
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