The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission has approved Nasdaq’s plan to list cash-settled Bitcoin index options on the Philadelphia Stock Exchange (PHLX). The European-style contracts are tied to the Nasdaq Bitcoin Index, a benchmark that tracks one-hundredth of the CME CF Bitcoin Real Time Index, which aggregates data from major crypto venues roughly every 200 milliseconds. The approval, issued on an accelerated basis, was published by the SEC this week. Under the new framework, the options will be cash-settled—holders receive the difference between the Bitcoin spot price and the strike price at expiration. There is no physical delivery of Bitcoin and no risk of early assignment, offering traders a distinct avenue to express views on Bitcoin’s price without holding actual BTC. The contracts will trade under the ticker QBTC on PHLX, with a minimum price increment of $0.01 and a per-side position limit of 24,000 contracts, which the SEC noted equates to roughly 0.12% of Bitcoin’s outs...
Kevin Warsh’s inauguration as chair of the U.S. Federal Reserve places monetary policy at the forefront of institutional scrutiny, with crypto markets and traditional finance alike watching for a potential shift in the policy stance. While a segment of market commentary has anticipated continued tightening, a notable faction—advocates of looser policy—argues for rate reductions in 2026. The new chair inherits a delicate mandate: manage inflation, preserve central-bank independence, and navigate a fiscal posture that could influence liquidity, risk appetite, and regulatory expectations across the crypto and broader financial ecosystems. According to Cointelegraph , Warsh’s appointment arrives at a juncture where policy direction remains unsettled and market participants seek clarity on the Fed’s preferred balance between inflation control and growth support. The debate carries practical significance for crypto firms, exchanges, and banks as policy signals interact with licensing, AML/KY...