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NYSE Removes 25,000-Contract Options Limits on 11 Crypto ETFs

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NYSE Arca and NYSE American have removed the 25,000-contract position limits on options tied to 11 cryptocurrency ETFs, eliminating a key constraint that had capped how large a derivatives position any single entity could hold on these funds.

Funds Affected

11

Crypto ETFs — options position cap removed by NYSE Arca & NYSE American

NYSE Removes the 25,000-Contract Cap From 11 Crypto ETF Options

The two NYSE exchanges acted on options for 11 crypto ETF products, spanning both Bitcoin and Ethereum spot funds. The previous 25,000-contract ceiling applied uniformly across these products, matching the standard limit imposed on many equity ETF options.

NYSE Arca and NYSE American are both regulated national securities exchanges. The decision to lift the cap was an exchange-level rule change covering all 11 funds simultaneously, rather than a piecemeal adjustment to individual products.

The affected funds include spot Bitcoin ETFs and spot Ethereum ETFs that had options listed on these exchanges. The removal applies to both sides of the market, meaning neither call nor put positions are subject to the former 25,000-contract threshold.

Previous Position Limit (Now Lifted)

25,000

Contracts — the options cap NYSE exchanges removed across 11 crypto ETF products

What the Lifted Cap Means for Crypto Options Markets

A position limit caps the total number of options contracts a single entity can hold on one side of the market for a given product. The 25,000-contract ceiling forced large traders to either split positions across multiple accounts, roll contracts more frequently, or simply accept a smaller exposure than their strategy required.

Removing that limit benefits institutional players most directly: market makers, hedge funds running delta-neutral books, and large asset managers writing covered calls against ETF holdings. These participants can now scale their hedging strategies without bumping against an artificial ceiling, potentially increasing options flow and tightening spreads on the affected products.

For context, the 25,000-contract limit was not unique to crypto ETFs. Many equity ETF options carried the same cap. However, the removal now brings crypto ETF options treatment closer to parity with heavily traded equity and commodity ETF options, where position limits are often significantly higher or effectively absent.

Whether additional reporting or surveillance requirements accompany the change remains part of the broader exchange oversight framework. Exchanges and the SEC’s market surveillance programs continue to monitor for manipulative positioning regardless of formal contract limits.

Crypto ETF Options Access Has Expanded Rapidly Since 2024

This limit removal is the latest step in a regulatory arc that began with the SEC’s approval of spot Bitcoin ETFs in January 2024. That approval opened the door for derivatives layered on top of those funds, and options on spot Bitcoin ETFs launched later that year.

Options on spot Ethereum ETFs followed in 2025, expanding the crypto derivatives ecosystem further. Each step, from ETF approval to options launch to position limit removal, has moved crypto products closer to the same market infrastructure that traditional assets enjoy.

The trajectory matters for the broader crypto market structure. Larger options markets create better price discovery, more efficient hedging, and deeper liquidity. Institutional participants who had previously limited their crypto exposure due to infrastructure constraints now face fewer barriers to deploying capital at scale.

Comparable equity ETFs like SPY and GLD have operated with far higher or no effective position limits for years, making them attractive vehicles for large-scale options strategies. The crypto ETF market is now closing that structural gap.

For exchanges, the competitive implications are also clear. Crypto platforms have been strengthening their market infrastructure throughout 2025 and 2026, and the removal of options caps on regulated exchanges adds another layer of institutional-grade access that centralized and decentralized venues cannot easily replicate.

The SEC has not indicated any objection to the exchange-level changes. As spot crypto ETFs continue to attract regulatory attention across multiple fronts, the options market expansion appears to be proceeding on a parallel, less contentious track.

Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial or investment advice. Cryptocurrency and digital asset markets carry significant risk. Always do your own research before making decisions.

About the author

About the author

Pizza

Pizza is a crypto market editor at CoinLineup covering altcoin markets, NFTs, and emerging blockchain ecosystems. Focused on identifying market trends and providing balanced analysis of new cryptocurrency projects and token economies.

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