Share this article

CME Says Bitcoin Futures Gaining Interest From Big Investors

The CME touts the success of its bitcoin futures contract, as the battle for institutional investors heats up thanks to competition from Bakkt.

Updated Sep 14, 2021, 1:51 p.m. Published Oct 14, 2019, 10:20 p.m.
The CME Group logo
The CME Group logo

CME Group, the Chicago-based exchange operator, said its bitcoin futures contracts grew in popularity last quarter, with the number of open contracts up 61 percent from a year earlier because of growing demand from institutional investors.

Open interest, or the number of outstanding positions, rose to 4,629 contracts, up from 2,873 in the third quarter of 2018, CME said Monday in a statement. And despite the quarter's 25 percent drop in bitcoin price, according to CoinDesk, the open interest in the CME's contracts was down just 1 percent from second-quarter levels.

STORY CONTINUES BELOW
Don't miss another story.Subscribe to the Crypto Daybook Americas Newsletter today. See all newsletters

The average daily volume of contracts traded during the quarter was 5,534, up 10 percent from the year-earlier period. It was the equivalent of 27,670 bitcoin, or $289 million, according to the exchange.

"Institutional flow remained strong, with 454 new accounts added, compared with 231 added in the third quarter of 2018," CME said. Entities holding more than 25 bitcoin, used as a proxy for large investors, rose to 47, from 45 in the second quarter and 34 in the third quarter of 2018.

CME debuted its bitcoin futures in 2017 and outlasted a rival offering from another exchange company, Cboe Global Markets, which aborted its own contract earlier this year.

But the CME faces new competition from Bakkt, a startup sponsored by Atlanta-based Intercontinental Exchange, which debuted a new bitcoin-futures contract in September, aiming to attract institutional investors who might want to make bets on the cryptocurrency.

Some 50 percent of the CME's bitcoin-futures trading volume during the third quarter was outside the U.S., with 26 percent coming from the Asia Pacific region and 21 percent from Europe and the Middle East, according to the exchange.

CME HQ via Shutterstock

More For You

Cryptos crumble, bitcoin falls through $66,000, as Friday's bounce fades

boring, bored

With so many other asset markets in rally mode, investors for the moment appear to have moved on from crypto.

What to know:

  • Friday's crypto bounce is sharply reversing on Wednesday, with bitcoin falling back below $66,000.
  • Fading Fed rate cut hopes are weighing on markets, but the crypto bear market began last year as the U.S. central bank was cutting rates.
  • The hard data, along with anecdotal evidence, suggests crypto investors have lost interest and moved on to any number of other rallying markets.