• CME mulls Bitcoin spot trading to meet Wall Street’s crypto demand.

  • Easier access to “basis trading” is a potential benefit.

  • CME’s Bitcoin expansion could fuel regulated crypto market growth

The Chicago Mercantile Exchange (CME), a leading global derivatives marketplace, is exploring the possibility of launching Bitcoin spot trading. This move comes amid growing demand from Wall Street money managers seeking exposure to the cryptocurrency market through a regulated environment.

While a final decision has not been made, CME has reportedly held discussions with traders who expressed interest in a regulated platform for Bitcoin spot trading. Sources familiar with the discussions suggest that the new product, if approved, would provide Wall Street with a more direct route to participate in the cryptocurrency market.

CME already offers Bitcoin futures trading, but investors are eyeing the potential benefits of spot trading. If implemented,  investors would gain easier access to “basis trading,” a common strategy employed by both professional Bitcoin traders and the U.S. Treasury market. Notably, CME dominates the Treasury basis trading space.

CME has demonstrably profited from the recent surge in institutional interest in Bitcoin. The platform surpassed Binance to become the world’s largest Bitcoin futures market, currently holding approximately 26,000 open positions valued at roughly $8.5 billion.

However, some skepticism surrounds the potential approval of the proposal and CME’s future in the Bitcoin spot trading arena. A cryptocurrency trader expressed concerns about CME’s ability to capture a significant market share if its Bitcoin trading operates across two separate platforms: CME in Chicago and EBS in Switzerland. The trader questioned, “I struggle to see how they would get all the efficiencies available to them.”

The post Wall Street’s Crypto Gateway: CME Considers Bitcoin Spot Trading appeared first on Coin Edition.