When you start getting compared to Apple Inc. (AAPL) and Nvidia Corp. (NVDA), you know you've made it. That's essentially what Nasdaq's International Securities Exchange is saying about BlackRock's iShares Bitcoin Trust (IBIT). In a November 21 filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission, the exchange asked regulators to treat the Bitcoin ETF like a mega-cap stock or the SPDR S&P 500 ETF (SPY)—by raising its options position limits from 250,000 contracts to a full million.
If approved, IBIT would join an elite tier reserved for the market's heavyweights. Not bad for a product that only launched in January 2024. But more than bragging rights, this signals something bigger: Bitcoin exposure is evolving from speculative side bet to core institutional infrastructure.
Why Position Limits Matter
Nasdaq's argument is straightforward—the current 250,000-contract cap is too restrictive. It prevents traders from executing legitimate hedging strategies and building the kind of risk-managed positions that institutional desks need. Analysts say raising the limit would give market makers and structured-product teams the breathing room to create more sophisticated exposures, which in turn should deepen liquidity and tighten spreads.
"This will allow institutions to build more interesting structured products for IBIT," Lai Yuen of Fisher8 Capital told Decrypt, adding that the change should support long-term ETF inflows. This is Nasdaq's second push for expanded limits in less than a year, which tells you everything about how quickly demand for Bitcoin derivatives is outpacing the regulatory framework designed to contain it.
The exchange is also asking for an exemption that would eliminate position limits entirely for customized, physically delivered FLEX options. The idea here is to pull activity out of murky over-the-counter markets and onto regulated, transparent exchanges where everyone can see what's happening.
What It Means for Other Bitcoin ETFs
While Nasdaq's proposal is IBIT-specific, the benefits could ripple across the entire spot Bitcoin ETF landscape. When the market leader gets more derivatives firepower, it makes the whole category more functional for institutional investors—especially those who need paired hedges or volatility overlays to justify allocations. Research from NYDIG, cited by CoinDesk, suggests that higher options limits on Bitcoin ETFs could actually lower volatility and boost demand for the underlying spot ETFs, making Bitcoin a more palatable holding for traditional portfolios.
That's potentially good news for Grayscale Bitcoin Trust (GBTC), ARK 21Shares Bitcoin ETF (ARKB), and Bitwise Bitcoin ETF (BITB). While GBTC still attracts tactical traders, ARKB and BITB—both popular with active crypto allocators—could see incremental flows if structured-product desks start designing multi-ETF strategies instead of concentrating everything in IBIT.
Over time, expanded options capacity for IBIT might also create pressure on other issuers and exchanges to pursue similar frameworks for competing products. If one Bitcoin ETF gets institutional-grade derivatives infrastructure, the rest will want it too.
The bottom line: what started as a niche product less than a year ago is now being positioned alongside the market's most liquid, most traded instruments. Whether you think that's exciting or terrifying probably depends on how you feel about Bitcoin—but either way, it's happening fast.