The market view

Bitcoin and ether dominate the cryptocurrency landscape accounting for approximately 65% of the entire cryptocurrency market cap. Until now, participating in the cryptocurrency market required taking a directional view on either bitcoin, ether, or both. EBR futures allow institutional investors to position themselves to address broader market dynamic questions through the anticipated strength of one currency over the other.

The new futures contracts allow institutional investors a divergence play to react to questions such as: “what will have greater market impact; staking of ETH vs the halving of BTC?” or “What will accelerate faster; tokenization using ETH vs adoption of BTC as a store of value?”

Sophisticated traders may now execute an operationally easy, relative value trade between Ether futures (ETH) and Bitcoin futures (BTC) in one transaction, bypassing the need for individual leg execution.

Historically, bitcoin and ether have been highly correlated. Over time, as the two assets have grown in their own capacities, market dynamics may affect the performance of one cryptocurrency more than the other.

Bitcoin continues to dominate the crypto market and could see some strong inflows as the macro-economic environment shifts. Large investors may continue to prefer BTC exposure for its liquidity, market cap, and relative stability. Simultaneously, ether has practical applications as the currency of the Ethereum smart contract network. Some see ether being more than a store of value and think there could be further ether outperformance on the Ether futures-based exchange-traded fund (ETF) narrative. Ether/Bitcoin Ratio futures enable professional participants to efficiently position themselves to benefit from the relative impact of these developments on the price relationship between ether and bitcoin.

Executing a notionally equivalent bitcoin ether spread trade manually may lead to price slippage and lost opportunity. The EBR futures seamlessly allow market participants the ability to rebalance positions between two different portfolios to benefit from better pricing and better liquidity. The innovative product also completes the cryptocurrency triangle allowing the ability to arbitrage synthetically, for the first time, all three futures legs: the BTC/USD, ETH/USD legs, and the ETH/BTC cross. EBR futures may also allow investors more flexibility when hedging positions in non-dollar offshore markets.

The ETH/BTC ratio

Like all cryptocurrency futures contracts offered by the world's largest derivatives marketplace, Ether/Bitcoin Ratio futures will be cash-settled. The ratio is determined as the daily value of CME Group Ether futures (ETH) final settlement price, divided by the corresponding CME Group Bitcoin futures (BTC) final settlement price. Using the idea of convergence to an index, the futures contracts settle to the quotient of the FCA registered and BMR compliant CME CF Ether Dollar Reference Rate divided by the CME CF Bitcoin Reference Rate. The value of the contract is found by multiplying the ratio by $1,000,000 resulting in a notional value of approximately $55,000 at current market levels.

Although spread trading is common in the institutional capital markets, the Ether/Bitcoin Ratio futures offering is the first of its kind, with CME Group being the only regulated platform to offer this functionality.

Much like the gold/silver ratio in the precious metals space, relative value trades executed through a ratio structure, enable participants to express their view where they generally expect one side of the ratio to predominate over a certain period of time, as it responds to macroeconomic or market-specific developments that may have a positive or negative impact on the price of one or both ratio assets.

Ratio futures, like inter-commodity spreads, can help maintain price alignment between the two underlying contracts, potentially improving the bid-ask spreads for the outright contracts. The spread functionality enhances liquidity and market efficiency by providing arbitrage between different futures' order books.

Ether/Bitcoin Ratio futures may be expected to reflect the impact of dominant developments important to these two blockchains. For instance, a relative value trade could be placed by an investor who believes bitcoin will outperform ether on the basis that the first U.S.-listed spot crypto ETF is one that invests in bitcoin, vs. the probability that it’s an Ether ETF. In such a scenario, a trader may expect bitcoin’s price to rise and ether’s price to remain the same.

Using a price of $1,885 for ether and $30,580 for bitcoin, the ratio is 0.061642 ($1,885 ÷ $30,580). The trader would sell the EBR contract at a notional value of $61,642 ($1,000,000 multiplier x current ratio). Assume bitcoin rises 5% while ether’s price remained the same, she would later buy the contract for $1,885 (ETH * 100%) ÷ $32,109 (BTC * 105%) = 0.058706 or notional value of $58,706, effectively making $2,936 per EBR contract on the trade.

Capitalize on crypto market correlations

Figure one: Markets for ZN, TN, and NON

Low volatility environment