The new offering, pending CFTC approval, aims to democratize seamless crypto risk management Updated May 25, 2026, 7:45 a.m. Published May 25, 2026, 5:56 a.m. 2 min readMake preferred on Nasdaq has moved closer to offering cash-settled bitcoin BTC$77,389.41 index options, a move set to democratize crypto risk management and eliminate legacy operational barriers.Last week, the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission granted Nasdaq PHLX conditional approval to list European-style options under the ticker QBTC. These will be cash-settled, European-style options tracking the CME CF Bitcoin Real Time Index (BRTT).Cash-settled means the options are settled in U.S. dollars. At expiration, the exchange credits or debits the cash difference between the strike price and the final index value and no actual bitcoin is delivered or received.For the average market participant, the new product, still pending approval from the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC), removes operational friction. QBTC options will trade on the same Nasdaq platform as popular technology stocks, allowing participants to execute hedging strategies and bitcoin volatility bets directly through their existing brokerage accounts without needing a separate futures or derivatives account.By contrast, CME's bitcoin options, which have been available since 2020, are also cash-settled but track Bitcoin futures rather than the spot index. They also require a dedicated derivatives account, adding operational complexity.The story doesn’t end there. Each Nasdaq QBTC option contract delivers exposure equivalent to exactly 1 BTC, using a 1/100th index scaling factor with a standard $100 multiplier. By comparison, the CME’s standard Bitcoin option is sized at 5 BTC, often representing hundreds of thousands of dollars in notional exposure. This much smaller contract size opens the door for precise hedging by smaller institutional managers and more affordable volatility trading for retail participants.Options are derivative contracts that give the purchaser the right to buy or sell the underlying asset at a predetermined price on a later date. A call option gives the right to buy and represents a bullish bet, while a put offers protection against price slides.Think of it like paying a small non-refundable deposit to lock in the right to buy/sell a house at today’s price anytime over the next few months. If property prices rise/fall, you can still purchase/sell at the pre-agreed price and benefit from the gain. If you change your mind, you simply walk away, losing only the initial deposit.Crypto options, led by bitcoin contracts, have seen explosive growth in recent years, as institutionalization of the market triggered demand for sophisticated risk management and yield-enhancing strategies. More For YouA new report shows Hyperliquid is rapidly expanding beyond crypto into pre-IPO markets, prediction contracts, and 24/7 asset trading, putting Wall Street giants on high alert.What to know: Crypto derivatives platform Hyperliquid is expanding beyond perpetual futures into pre-IPO trading, prediction contracts and tokenized real-world assets, putting it in more direct competition with traditional exchanges and prediction markets.FalconX said Hyperliquid’s HIP-3 and HIP-4 markets, along with strong inflows into new HYPE exchange-traded funds and a USDC partnership...Read full story