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Part 2: 🚨 The Leveraged Atomic Bomb
Here we go – this part of the story is getting even hotter!
On January 7, Nasdaq files with the SEC to remove the 25,000-contract limits for #Bitcoin and #Ethereum ETF options. On January 21, it becomes effective. Immediately. Without the usual 30-day waiting period. On January 29, #Bitcoin crashes.
I posted about it at the end of January and asked: “Are these new tools being used to buy or to hedge?” Now we know the answer – and it’s worse than both options.
Nasdaq is not an organization that rushes things. They know exactly what unlimited options contracts mean. Yet they push for immediate implementation. Right in the middle of weak crypto markets.
One possible explanation currently being discussed on CT: One or several funds have already been underwater since October. A Prime Broker needed the limits gone to even be able to liquidate the positions. The old caps would have blocked it.
I don’t know if that’s true. But the timeline fits together suspiciously well.
What I do know: Since January 21, there are no more guardrails on IBIT options. @TheOtherParker_ himself calls it a “leveraged atomic weapon without seatbelts”.
And that’s exactly what we saw yesterday. $10.7B volume. $900M in options premium. Both all-time records. A single day produced more IBIT volume than most weeks combined.
The crypto market has changed. The risk epicenter is no longer at Binance or Bybit. It’s at IBIT. And there are no limits anymore.
The question that remains: Was the removal of the limits the rescue for a Prime Broker – or the accelerant for the next blow-up?
I’ll keep tracking this. If I’m right, the proof will show up in the 13F filings in mid-May.
Follow along – Part 3 coming! 🤝
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