How IBIT Options Went Vertical as Bitcoin Hit 60K Intraday
In early February 2026, Bitcoin experienced another dramatic bout of price volatility that drew attention not just from crypto traders but from institutional investors as well. What made this move especially noteworthy wasn’t just the price swing itself Bitcoin briefly dropped to around $60,000 before rebounding above $70,000 but how that volatility was expressed in regulated markets, particularly through options tied to a major exchange traded fund.
The central story in this episode is the iShares Bitcoin Trust, commonly known by its ticker IBIT, and the extraordinary activity in its options market. During this turbulent session, IBIT options volume exploded, trading millions of contracts in a single day. That record-breaking day saw roughly 2.33 million options contracts change hands, while the ETF itself printed over 284 million shares and more than $10 billion in notional turnover. This level of institutional activity right at Bitcoin’s most unstable moment provides a clear snapshot of what “Wall Street crypto” looks like today.
Why does this matter? Historically, the fastest visible sign of stress in Bitcoin markets tended to show up offshore, in high leverage perpetual swap markets where forced liquidations could turn minor sell-offs into waterfall declines. But this episode revealed another way volatility shows up: onshore, in regulated ETF options chains where institutional capital, hedging demand, and professional risk management live and breathe.
From Offshore Chaos to Onshore Risk Management
For most of Bitcoin’s history, offshore platforms like Deribit dominated derivatives trading. Traders seeking leverage or protection placed bets far from US financial infrastructure, and price stress was measured by liquidation cascades or funding rate spikes. But that paradigm is changing. Recent data from 2025 showed IBIT overtaking offshore venues as a dominant source of Bitcoin options liquidity, signaling a major shift in where risk is warehoused and traded.
What this means in practical terms is that institutions aren’t just dipping a toe into crypto; they are using regulated products as primary tools for expressing views and hedging risk. Rather than using unregulated perpetual swaps or exotic offshore instruments, asset managers can buy put options on IBIT to protect portfolios, secure downside floors, or express volatility views all cleared through US exchanges and familiar clearinghouses.
Consider this: a put option is effectively insurance. It costs a premium upfront and pays out if the price falls below a specified level. For institutional allocators with Bitcoin exposure, this is a highly efficient way to set protection without liquidating core positions. When Bitcoin can swing thousands of dollars in a single session as it did when it dipped near $60,000 the demand for protection naturally surges.