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Welcome to the On the Margin Newsletter, brought to you by Ben Strack and Casey Wagner. Here’s what you’ll find in today’s edition:
The January launch of US ETFs that directly held bitcoin was a big deal. Now, many expect the upcoming options on those funds to also be a game-changer.
If you missed it on Friday, the SEC gave “accelerated” approval of options on BlackRock’s IBIT — with segment observers expecting the regulator to give similar blessings soon.
SEC approval was not exactly quick, coming eight-plus months after the ETF launched. Other agencies (the CFTC and OCC) still have to give the go-ahead, too, so the exact timeline on when these options will list remains unknown.
A quick reminder: An option is a contract representing the right to buy or sell a financial product at a certain price for a specific period of time.
Grayscale Investments was vocal about the need for swift approval of options on commodity-based ETPs. The firm, which operates GBTC, had essentially argued that if options on bitcoin futures exist, so too should those on spot products.
Options would facilitate price discovery in the ETP shares, Grayscale noted. The SEC acknowledged in its Friday filing that several proposal proponents noted such options would “help investors to hedge their positions and manage crypto-related risk.”
In the words of Bloomberg Intelligence’s Eric Balchunas, the approval “will attract more liquidity, which will in turn attract more big fish.”
To that point, Compass Point Research and Trading analyst Chase White told Blockworks earlier this year that bitcoin ETFs could appeal to institutional investors that lack the mandate to transact in derivatives directly tied to BTC.
Such institutions could look to hedge their downside risk in the funds — whether they’re long or short the ETFs, he noted.
As Bitwise’s Jeffrey Park said Friday in a note posted to X, these options mark “the first time the financial world will see regulated leverage on a perpetual commodity that is truly supply-constrained.”
Love this from @dgt10011 on bitcoin ETF options. In particular, the section about bitcoin's volatility smile and "negative vanna" is really important. The "banana zone" just got even more slippery. https://t.co/MrZY9cCGX0
— Matt Hougan (@Matt_Hougan) September 22, 2024Then there’s the new types of products these options could lead to. Once they’re officially introduced, investors can expect a “flurry” of ETF filings, The ETF Store president Nate Geraci said in an X post.
These include bitcoin defined-outcome ETFs; premium income or covered call funds; bitcoin tail risk ETFs; and convexity funds, he noted.
Roundhill Investments already offers a covered call bitcoin ETF via exposure to options on ProShares’ bitcoin futures ETF, BITO. A covered call strategy typically involves holding a financial product and selling call options on it — potentially generating income through options premiums while giving up possible upside.
Defined-outcome (aka “buffer”) ETFs — gaining popularity in recent years — are true to their name, using options in giving a predefined range of outcomes over a set period. This would theoretically give comfort to investors looking for exposure to a volatile asset given they can assess the product’s specific risk/return characteristics.
We won’t get too technical here about all the other kinds of new ways investors might use options (and how fund managers can package them in products).
But the point is: Though the news of incoming bitcoin ETF options might not be as splashy as the January fund approvals, crypto investing appears poised to take a major step forward because of it.
— Ben Strack
$397 millionThe net inflows tallied last week (Sept. 16-20) by the US bitcoin funds for which options are soon expected to be offered. The category inflow total since the January launches now stands at $17.7 billion.
This sum nearly matched the $404 million the funds brought in the week prior following an eight-day run of net outflows, Farside Investors data shows.
A Monday CoinShares report noted the Federal Reserve’s “more dovish stance than anticipated” — leading to a 50-basis point rate cut — as a likely driver.
SEC Commissioners head back to Capitol HillTomorrow all five SEC commissioners will appear before the House Financial Services Committee for the first time since 2019.
The oversight hearing, scheduled to kick off at 10 am ET, is expected to focus on the SEC’s regulatory agenda and rulemaking — particularly when it comes to how the agency has approached digital assets.
I expect lawmakers will specifically ask Gensler and other commissioners to define the term “digital asset security,” which committee member Ritchie Torres, D-N.Y., said last week appears to have been invented “out of thin air.”
The hearing comes as the end of the US fiscal year approaches. Lawmakers have until Sept. 30 to agree on a funding plan and avert a government shutdown. Given the looming deadline, and at least some lawmakers’ apparent frustration with the SEC’s use of time and money, I’d expect the budget to be a major topic of discussion during Tuesday’s hearing.
Gensler in March requested roughly $2.6 billion to fund SEC operations for fiscal year 2025. The agency received $2.1 billion in 2024, less than Gensler’s requested $2.44 billion.
The added funds are needed to expand the SEC’s team, Gensler said — an action not meaningfully undertaken since 2023, when the agency hired 400 people and brought its size to just above where it was in 2016. Even so, Gensler added, the agency is still about 300 positions below the level authorized by Congress.
Good luck to all the commissioners tomorrow. We certainly do not envy you.
— Casey Wagner
On Our RadarHappy Monday! The Fed rate decision may be behind us, but we have a busy couple of weeks ahead with incoming data on labor conditions and inflation. In a rate-cutting cycle, good data is generally good, while bad data is typically bad.
Here’s what to keep an eye out for over the next few days:
— Casey Wagner
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