TL; DR
- Deribit Insights says participation in Wall Street has changed Bitcoin’s market structure.
- The episode points to lower volatility, compressed basis trades and stronger institutional market forces.
- The option range becomes large enough to be important for short-term behavior on the spot market.
Bitcoin’s market structure looks different after ETFs
A new episode of Deribit Insights argues that Wall Street’s entry into spot Bitcoin ETFs has materially changed Bitcoin’s volatility, liquidity and derivatives profile.
The episode, titled ‘How Wall Street Changed Bitcoin Forever’, features Imran Lakha, David and Jonathan Issan, Co-Head of Crypto Trading at Marex. The discussion focuses less on short-term price forecasts and more on the structural changes that followed institutional adoption.
The main argument is that Bitcoin is increasingly traded as part of a deeper, more professionalized market. Hedge funds, asset managers, pension-related products and structured product desks have all changed the way exposure is created and hedged.
Why volatility has remained lower
One of the most interesting points from the episode is the idea that Bitcoin’s implied and realized volatility has remained relatively subdued, despite periodic spot drops. In previous crypto cycles, sharp moves have often been accompanied by dramatic volatility expansions.
The Deribit discussion points to institutional market makers, structured products and improved risk management as factors that can dampen volatility. As more professional participants enter the market, dislocations can materialize more quickly and options markets can absorb some of the stress that previously hit spot markets directly.
Basic trading is another example. The podcast notes that basic returns have compressed as institutional arbitrageurs have entered the market. That means opportunities that were once unusually rich may become smaller as more capital competes for them.
Options Gamma is becoming an increasing force
The episode also highlights the growing role of options gamut. Simply put, when options market makers hedge their exposure, these hedging flows can influence spot price behavior – especially when the options market becomes large relative to the short-term liquidity of the underlying market.
That doesn’t mean that options firms control the price of Bitcoin. It does mean that the derivatives market is becoming large enough that traders increasingly need to understand how positioning, expiration dates and hedging flows impact spot demand.
For readers, the value of the episode is that it views Bitcoin less as a purely retail-driven speculative asset and more as a mature macro-linked market. That can be good for liquidity and institutional access, but it can also lead to fewer easy inefficiencies and a more complex trading environment.
This report is based on Deribit Insights’ Crypto Options Unplugged episode 115.
The ETF effect also changes the way traders think about flows. In previous cycles, crypto-native narratives and exchange positioning often dominated the conversation. Now, ETF demand, macro hedging, institutional rebalancing, and option dealer positioning can all contribute to the same Bitcoin price action. That makes the market deeper, but it also means that simple retail sentiment indicators may not tell the full story as much as they used to.
Read the official message on the Deribit Insights.
