CME Group, one of the worldβs largest derivatives exchanges, is set to expand its cryptocurrency product suite with the planned launch of Bitcoin Volatility futures on June 1, pending regulatory approval. The move comes as institutional demand for crypto risk-management tools continues to rise amid persistent market turbulence.
Unlike traditional Bitcoin futures, which track Bitcoinβs price direction, the new contracts will focus on how much Bitcoinβs price is expected to fluctuate. This allows traders to hedge or speculate on volatility itself rather than market direction.
Why would anyone want to trade volatility?
The contracts will be settled against the CME CF Bitcoin Volatility Index (BVX), a 30-day forward-looking benchmark derived from real-time Bitcoin options data. The index is designed to measure implied volatility rather than spot price movements.
CME said the product is intended to help investors βisolate volatility risk from price direction,β giving portfolio managers and institutional traders a new way to hedge against sharp crypto market swings.
Because Bitcoin is famous for its high volatility. It can drop by 30% or rise by 50% in a single week. So anyone who buys volatility is betting on big price swings, while those selling it are betting on Bitcoin remaining calm. Instead of guessing the direction, people are guessing intensity.
Trading volatility has been around for years, as seen when the CBOE launched the VIX in 1993 to measure the level of turbulence the stock market expects over the next 30 days.
What exactly is CME launching, and how does it work?
CME Group is launching a futures contract on Bitcoin Volatility under the ticker BVI.
According to CMEβs official product page, each contract is worth $500 times the value of the BVX index. The contract is also cash-settled and settled to the CME CF Bitcoin Volatility Index, which indicates what the market expects Bitcoinβs price to do over the next 30 days.
Data from CF Benchmarks indicates that the BVX monitors live Bitcoin options orders on CMEβs exchange every second during trading hours (7 AM to 4 PM Central Time).
The BVX launched as a non-tradable benchmark in April 2024, and the December 2025 version was built specifically to serve as the foundation for the tradable futures contracts CME is now launching.
βWith our new Bitcoin volatility futures, traders will be able to invest or hedge against the future volatility of Bitcoin, allowing them to access a critical new layer of risk management.β Giovanni Vicioso, Global Head of Cryptocurrency Products, CME Group
Who is this product for, and why does it matter that it is regulated?
The product was built for professional and institutional investors who want to buy or sell exposure to Bitcoin volatility directly, in a single contract, without any of the side effects.
βBitcoin volatility futures will be an important tool for market participants to better manage portfolio risk by directly trading volatility,βΒ says David Schlageter, Managing Director and Head of Derivatives Sales, Morgan Stanley.
Morgan Stanleyβs endorsement shows that institutional clients have long needed this solution, and the market is ready for it. While other crypto-native exchanges like Deribit already offer Bitcoin volatility futures, they remain unregulated, so pension funds, university endowments, and bank trading desks canβt use them.
How does this fit into everything else CME has been doing in crypto?
In December 2017, CME launched its first Bitcoin futures, but institutional investors couldnβt bet on Bitcoinβs volatility in the meantime.
According to CME Groupβs November 2025 press release, Bitcoin options contracts now trade at nearly $46 billion. In 2026, CME announced futures on Cardano (ADA), Chainlink (LINK), and Stellar (XLM) earlier this year, as it had never offered regulated futures products before.Β
CME also reports a strong financial yield, as its Q1 2026 earnings exceeded analyst expectations of $3.31 and came in at $3.36. Revenue reached $1.9 billion, crossing analyst predictions of $1.85 billion.
Sui Chung, CEO of CF Benchmarks, even said the implications extend beyond this single product.
In the official press release, he said:
βFor years, the CME CF Bitcoin Reference Rate has served as the benchmark spot price, allowing regulated derivatives, ETFs, and ETPs as well as lending markets to flourish. The CME CF Bitcoin Volatility Index extended that infrastructure into a new dimension: forward-looking Bitcoin volatility.β
He added that with the launch of these CFTC-regulated futures contracts, they anticipate a similar flourishing of regulated financial products.
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