Bitcoin’s New Anchor: IBIT Becomes King of Options and Largest ETF
BlackRock’s iShares Bitcoin Trust (IBIT) is reshaping the world of Bitcoin trading, rapidly moving from a newcomer to a dominant force. This shift highlights a major structural change in how big money—specifically Wall Street institutions—accesses and manages Bitcoin.
The New King of Bitcoin Options
The most telling sign of this change is IBIT’s recent takeover of the Bitcoin options market. Options are financial contracts that give traders the right, but not the obligation, to buy or sell an asset at a set price.
For years, the options market was ruled by Deribit, an offshore exchange founded in 2016. Deribit was the go-to place for crypto traders, especially those looking for high-risk leverage (borrowed money) and less regulatory oversight.
However, IBIT has shattered that dominance. As of a recent Friday expiration, the open interest (the total number of outstanding contracts) in options linked to IBIT reached nearly $38 billion. This is a significant jump past Deribit’s open interest of $32 billion.
This is a remarkable achievement, as IBIT options only launched in November 2024. In less than a year, a regulated, US-based product has surpassed the long-time offshore leader. It clearly signals that liquidity—the ease with which an asset can be bought or sold without affecting its price—is now flowing away from decentralized, offshore hubs and into the core of US financial markets.
The ETF Liquidity Engine
IBIT’s growth isn’t just a fluke; it’s a part of a powerful, self-reinforcing liquidity cycle.
The Largest Bitcoin ETF
IBIT has become the world’s largest Bitcoin Exchange-Traded Fund (ETF), managing over $87 billion in assets. An ETF is a fund that trades on a stock exchange, just like a company stock, making it easy for mainstream investors to buy a piece of the fund without having to directly handle the underlying asset, which in this case is Bitcoin.
The fund’s rapid expansion has created a positive feedback loop:
- Rising Liquidity: As more money pours into IBIT, the fund becomes more liquid.
- Institutional Flow: This high liquidity is a massive draw for large institutions—like pension funds, asset managers, and treasurers—who need to move huge amounts of money efficiently.
- Deeper Market Participation: Their participation further fuels the market, making the ETF even larger and more liquid.
Built for Wall Street
IBIT was specifically designed to appeal to traditional finance (TradFi). It offers investors direct Bitcoin exposure without any of the typical hurdles, such as setting up a digital wallet or managing the technical aspects of custody.
The custody—the secure holding of the actual Bitcoin—is managed by Coinbase Prime, an institutional-grade platform, with reporting structures that seamlessly fit into the existing regulatory and reporting requirements of mainstream investors.
Furthermore, its competitive cost structure was a huge selling point. With an expense ratio of 0.25%, which was even temporarily dropped to 0.12% for early investors, IBIT quickly attracted massive capital. This efficiency helped it become the fastest-growing ETF in history, hitting $70 billion in assets in just 341 trading days.
A Structural Market Split
The rise of IBIT and other regulated US products is fundamentally reshaping the Bitcoin ecosystem. Market analysts now foresee the emergence of two parallel systems:
- The Regulated Anchor (TradFi)
This system, anchored by products like IBIT, is focused on institutional interest and risk management. For treasurers and large asset managers, the ability to hedge exposure (protect against losses) through a regulated, familiar venue like IBIT’s options market is a powerful incentive. This is where the bulk of stable, long-term capital is now gravitating.
- The Speculative Frontier (Crypto-Native)
Offshore venues like Deribit still have a place. The platform remains popular among crypto-native traders and still attracts high-risk speculative activity, especially those seeking high leverage and greater oversight flexibility.
In a nod to its continued value, Deribit was even acquired by Coinbase in August for about $2.9 billion. However, the loss of its leadership in options clearly signals that while it retains its community, the major flow of new, institutional capital is now firmly directed toward US-listed, regulated structures like BlackRock’s IBIT.
In short, Bitcoin is moving from being primarily an offshore, leverage-driven asset to a regulated, institutionally-anchored product at the heart of the global financial system.