On Friday, the U.S. SEC approved the listing of options products for BlackRock iShares Bitcoin ETF (IBIT) on Nasdaq. The trading platform will treat Bitcoin ETF options similarly to other ETF options, subject to the same rules and trading procedures.

Jeff Park, head of strategy at Bitwise Alpha, published a long article on social media praising the approval, saying that "this move marks the most significant progress that the cryptocurrency market may have made." He believes that due to some special properties of Bitcoin, the price of the currency will rise explosively under the blessing of the rules of the game in the regulated options market. BlockBeats compiled the full text as follows:

With the SEC's approval today for the listing and trading of Bitcoin ETF options, I believe we are about to witness the most extraordinary rise in "volatility" in financial history. I feel this deserves a fuller explanation, so I want to highlight some of the characteristics of Bitcoin, the nature of the regulated options market, and the powerful combination of the two. It is no exaggeration to say that this marks the most significant advancement that the cryptocurrency market is likely to achieve.

For the first time ever. Bitcoin’s notional value will be “partially banked” through ETF options. How does this presumably explain itself? While Bitcoin’s non-custodial, supply-capped nature is its greatest strength, it is also a drag, limiting its ability to create synthetic leverage. Despite Deribit’s efforts, it never adequately addressed the counterparty-to-capital efficiency matrix for achieving widespread adoption. And CME futures options require too much active management. Now, for the first time, Bitcoin will have a regulated market, with the OCC protecting clearing members from counterparty risk. This means synthetic notional exposure to Bitcoin can grow exponentially without incurring JTD risk that would otherwise deter investors. In a liquidity-driven world, unlocking synthetic flows with leverage represents the biggest opportunity for Bitcoin ETFs, which enhances their financial utility compared to spot markets.

Additionally, for the first time, Bitcoin can now use duration as part of the leverage calculation. Retail traders have embraced perpetual options for leverage, but these instruments are not perfect and are more akin to a series of daily 0DTE options that must be constantly rolled. With Bitcoin spot ETF options, investors can now make a portfolio allocation bet based on duration. Especially for the long term. There is a good chance that holding a long OTM call option as a premium expense will give investors more returns than a fully collateralized position. Bitcoin is often compared to call options because of its decaying premium and occasional explosive moves higher. Now, investors can bet on "rising volatility" for the same or lower premium while getting more delta over a longer time frame - a very attractive opportunity.

Bitcoin also has unique volatility characteristics, one of the most important of which is the “volatility smile”. Most stocks/indices exhibit a “volatility skew” where upside volatility is cheaper than downside volatility (i.e. protection is more expensive than speculation). Bitcoin is unique in that upside moves just as often as downside moves, so the market demands a risk premium on both sides. Historically, for call options, as the spot price rises, implied volatility tends to fall. So while the option delta increases (becoming more ITM), the rate of increase slows – this is positive vanna (dA/dvol), which creates some kind of drag. However, Bitcoin options have negative vanna: as the spot price rises, so does volatility, which means delta increases faster. When traders who are short gamma hedge this (gamma squeeze). The situation for Bitcoin becomes explosively recursive. More upside leads to more upside as traders are forced to keep buying at higher prices. A negative Vanna Gamma squeeze is like a rocket.

BlockBeats Note: Option smiles, also known as volatility smiles, are curves that describe the relationship between option implied volatility and strike price. The reason why it is called "volatility smile" is that the volatility of out-of-the-money options and in-the-money options is higher than that of at-the-money options, making the volatility curve appear as a half-moon shape with a low middle and high sides, like a smiling mouth, so it is called a smile option.

The most critical factor that ties all of this together is this: Bitcoin itself cannot be diluted to accommodate this newfound leverage. Compare this to a stock like GME or AMC. Management can issue new shares to take advantage of pricing anomalies, thus limiting the upside of the stock price. Bitcoin can never do this. The reader may ask: "But what about commodities like oil or gas? Aren't they analogous? If so, why is Bitcoin different?" The key difference is that most physical commodities have expiration dates, which means they tend to be traded with futures markets rather than spot markets. Unlike spot markets, where total and notional exposure varies based on expiration and net interest in physical vs. paper, they do not allow for participation focused on one direction (i.e. people trading both long and short on the curve, as well as physical vs. paper). In addition, these markets are subject to supply manipulation by organizations like OPEC.

In summary, the Bitcoin ETF options market is the first time in the financial world that regulated leverage is available on a truly supply-constrained perpetual commodity. Things could get wild. In that case, the regulated market could shut down.

But what’s extraordinary about Bitcoin is that there will always be a parallel, decentralized market that cannot be shut down, unlike GME.

It will be incredibly wonderful.