Clarus Financial Technology

Bitcoin Meets OTC Derivatives

I attended the FIA event last week in Chicago.  Much of the same stuff.  Bank capital, swaps regulation, clearing, MIFID.  And the obligatory panel on bitcoin.

Over the past couple years, Bitcoin panels in our industry have tended to start out with the moderator making clear “we’re not going to talk about bitcoin the currency, but rather the blockchain”, and over the course of 75 minutes you would hear each panelist ponder how great it would be to settle a syndicated loan in 30 seconds instead of 30 days.  Basically everything that Jamie Dimon extolls as the valuable part of bitcoin technology.

But this panel was different.  This panel was about bitcoin the asset class.  It was a refreshing perspective on changes within the derivatives industry in response to one of most exciting and volatile asset classes in a decade.

Don Wilson (Mr DRW) led the panel with representatives from across the industry.  The panel, and a small background on them:

It’s clear from the discussion that the ecosystem for bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies is coming together.  Basically, you now have, or will soon have, liquidity providers (DRW and others), institutional exchanges (eg GDAX and Kraken for physical, LedgerX for derivatives), listed futures (at CBOE), clearing houses (LedgerX), and custody firms (eg BitGo).  Basically all of the plumbing required for an asset class to absorb institutional sized trading.  And of course whispers of ETFs.

There was one particular highlight of the panel that stood out to me.  To set the scene, this was mostly your typical derivatives industry crowd:  a bunch of old men in suits.  Maybe a few khakis.  Then, during the Q&A, the mic gets passed to a young exec at a crypto exchange, dressed in his finest t-shirt and hoodie.  He proceeded to ask his question about any perceived downside price risk in crypto, complete with a caveat “Dude, don’t get me wrong, I am super-super bullish”.

Couple other notable points:

LedgerX Data

The day after the event, I got wind of a press release (or blog) from LedgerX announcing they had gone live that week, and had completed over $1,000,000 worth of notional in bitcoin derivatives.  While our industry is used to numbers in the trillions of notional, that is quite an increase from zero!

And because LedgerX is fully registered with the CFTC as both a DCO and a SEF, I knew there must be some data out there.  So in true Clarus fashion, we loaded that up into CCPView.

So we can see some activity across both “swaps” and “options”.  Some caveats/observations:

How Volatile Is Bitcoin

One excellent outcome of swaps and options data is we could theoretically begin to build a BTC forward curve and imply some volatility.

To be fair, there have been exchanges such as Kraken and Poloniex which have allowed leveraged short selling of crypto, so there has been some (thin) data on lending rates, which we could use to generate a forward curve.  But having forwards and options on an exchange together gives us a lot to work with.  Only small problem being we only have 1-day forwards to work with, yet we seem to be working with 1-week options.

Heck, let’s not get tied down in nitty gritty of spot and forward rates, and lets just get some numbers out.

Using LedgerX data, we can start to get a feel for how the market is pricing bitcoin vol:

Let’s just call it 75 vol for the time being.  And that’s a 1-week option.

Granted I’ve dumbed this down to using mid spot rates, no forward points, and we’re stuck observing a single option that was on opposite ends of the smile after 2 days.   So we’re going to need more data to refine this.  But let’s not get too picky here.  This was week one of a soft-launch.

Worth putting this into context.  We’re talking 75 vol.  1-week vol across all G7 currency pairs are trading in the single-digits.  So you can see why this market might be attracting attention.

Summary

Bitcoin now has much of the requisite ecosystem to facilitate institutional participation in OTC derivatives.  Exchanges, SEFs, liquidity providers, custody, and DCOs.

Exciting times in OTC derivatives.

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