Game-Changer For Bitcoin: Nasdaq Targets 1M Option Limit For BlackRock’s IBIT

Bitcoin news Blackrock IBIT options

Nasdaq’s options venue is moving to put BlackRock’s iShares Bitcoin Trust (IBIT) in the same risk tier as the largest, most liquid ETFs in traditional markets, with a new proposal to multiply the ceiling on IBIT options positions to 1 million contracts.

According to a rule filing submitted to the US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), Nasdaq ISE is seeking to raise position and exercise limits for IBIT options from 250,000 contracts to 1,000,000 contracts. In parallel, the exchange wants to remove position limits entirely for physically settled FLEX IBIT options, a bespoke, institution-focused segment of the market.

Why This Is A Major News For Bitcoin

The request comes only months after IBIT options limits were raised from 25,000 to 250,000 contracts. Bloomberg ETF analyst Eric Balchunas noted on X that “they just raised the limit to 250,000 (from 25,000) in July,” adding that “IBIT is now the biggest bitcoin options market in the world by open interest.”

The speed of that progression – 25,000 to 250,000 to a proposed 1,000,000 – is being read as an indication that institutional demand for IBIT options is already pressing against the existing cap. As one commenter put it, the exchanges “only raise limits when demand is genuinely straining the system,” and moving to 1 million “means IBIT options trading has grown so much that the current ceiling is constraining institutional strategies.”

ProCap CIO Jeff Park framed the move as overdue, saying “IBIT options is finally getting the treatment it deserves,” and highlighting that Nasdaq has filed “to increase options limit to 1 MILLION (from 25k a year ago). Institutional vol is finally here.”

On-chain and derivatives analyst James Van Straten emphasized two points: the size of the proposed jump and the treatment of FLEX contracts. “One million contracts and removing limits on physically settled FLEX IBIT options, matching major commodity ETFs like GLD,” he wrote.

In his view, the result is that “Bitcoin liquidity [is] about to get even deeper,” to the point that “70% corrections will be a thing of the past.” When challenged on whether that would also dampen upside, he replied that it “depends on the liquidity size that enters the market,” underscoring that flows, not just structure, determine price dynamics.

Market commentator Adam Livingston described the filing as “INCREDIBLY BULLISH NEWS FOR BITCOIN,” arguing that “Nasdaq just moved IBIT (BlackRock’s Bitcoin ETF) into the same regulatory class as the largest, most liquid equities on Earth.”

He highlighted that the change represents “40× MORE ROOM for institutional derivatives exposure” compared to the original 25,000-contract cap and framed it as the moment “from ‘ETF adoption phase’ to derivatives market phase.” In his words, “Bitcoin just got promoted to Mega-Cap Status,” with the rule filing justifying IBIT’s treatment based on its market cap, liquidity and trading frequency alongside the biggest ETFs.

Structurally, the proposal would deepen the on-exchange derivatives stack built around Bitcoin. A 1 million contract limit broadens the space for hedging, income strategies and structured products, while unlimited physically settled FLEX options give large institutions more room to run customized exposures on a regulated venue instead of shifting overflow into opaque OTC markets.

However, higher limits are not inherently directional. The same capacity that enables larger hedges and call overlays also allows larger outright short or volatility-based positions. Around key macro dates or crypto-specific events, bigger books and more leverage can cut both ways for realized volatility.

For now, the change remains a proposal. The SEC must still review and decide whether to approve, modify, or reject Nasdaq ISE’s request. Until then, IBIT options stay capped at 250,000 contracts, and the “1 million era” of IBIT remains a forward-looking scenario rather than a fait accompli.

At press time, BTC traded at $91,700.

Bitcoin remains above the 100-week EMA, 1-week chart | Source: BTCUSDT on TradingView.com
Featured image created with DALL.E, chart from TradingView.com
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