NYSE American and NYSE Arca have scrapped the 25,000-contract position limit on options tied to 11 spot Bitcoin and Ether ETFs, with the SEC waiving its standard 30-day review period to make the changes effective immediately on March 23, 2026.
The two exchanges each filed three separate rule changes in the Federal Register on March 10, 2026, totaling six filings aimed at eliminating position caps across the full suite of crypto ETF options they list.
The affected ETFs include BlackRock's iShares Bitcoin Trust (IBIT), Fidelity Wise Origin Bitcoin Fund (FBTC), ARK 21Shares Bitcoin ETF (ARKB), Grayscale Bitcoin Trust ETF (GBTC), and several Bitwise Bitcoin and Ether ETFs, covering 11 products in total.
What the Position Limit Removal Actually Changes
A position limit caps the total number of options contracts a single entity can hold on one side of the market. The 25,000-contract ceiling was imposed as a precautionary measure when crypto ETF options first launched in November 2024, reflecting regulatory caution around a new asset class entering the derivatives market.
Removing that cap means hedge funds, market makers, and institutional asset managers can now build significantly larger options positions on Bitcoin and Ether ETFs. Strategies previously constrained by the limit, such as covered-call overlays, protective-put hedging, and cross-product arbitrage, are now viable at institutional scale.
The rule changes also enable FLEX options trading on these crypto ETFs. FLEX options allow customizable strike prices and expiration dates, a feature already available for commodity-based ETF options like those on SPDR Gold Trust (GLD) and iShares Silver Trust (SLV).
In practical terms, crypto ETF options are now treated identically to other commodity-based ETF options at every major U.S. exchange. The distinction that singled out crypto products for tighter restrictions has been formally eliminated.
An Industry-Wide Shift, Not an Isolated Filing
NYSE's move is part of a broader alignment across all major U.S. exchanges. Nasdaq and Cboe have undertaken parallel changes to bring their crypto ETF options rules in line with standard commodity ETF treatment. The result is a uniform regulatory framework for crypto derivatives across the three largest options venues in the country.
The SEC's decision to waive the standard 30-day waiting period signals confidence in the liquidity and market structure surrounding these products. Rather than requiring a public comment period, the commission allowed the changes to take effect on the same day it acknowledged them.
This regulatory posture aligns with a broader shift in how U.S. agencies are approaching crypto market infrastructure. Fidelity recently pressed the SEC's Crypto Task Force for clarity on on-chain settlement rules, and the SEC and CFTC issued their first joint crypto taxonomy earlier this year, both pointing toward a maturing regulatory environment.
Institutional Infrastructure Expands While Retail Sentiment Craters
The timing of this structural upgrade is notable. The Fear & Greed Index sits at 8, deep in "Extreme Fear" territory, and recent liquidations have rattled leveraged positions across the market.
Yet the removal of position limits is not a sentiment-driven event. It is a structural change to market plumbing that expands the toolkit available to institutional participants regardless of where prices sit today. Larger options markets typically deepen spot liquidity and narrow bid-ask spreads over time, effects that benefit all market participants.
For market makers, the removal of caps means they can warehouse more risk and quote tighter markets. For asset managers, it opens the door to options overlay strategies on Bitcoin and Ether ETF holdings that were previously impractical under the 25,000-contract ceiling.
What to Watch Next
With all three major U.S. options exchanges now treating crypto ETF options on equal footing with commodity ETFs, the next milestone to watch is whether open interest in Bitcoin and Ether ETF options accelerates in the coming weeks. The original November 2024 launch saw steady growth despite the position limits, and the removal of those constraints could catalyze a step-change in derivatives volume.
Traders and institutions should also monitor whether the SEC extends similar treatment to any newly approved crypto ETFs, which would signal that the position-limit era was a temporary safeguard rather than an ongoing regulatory posture toward digital asset derivatives.
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.