Bitcoin Stocks Get a New Member As Cboe Launches Bitcoin Futures on Sunday, Dec. 10

The price of bitcoin, the oldest and largest cryptocurrency by market cap, has skyrocketed 1,578%, from less than $1,000 to $15,973 in 2017, as of 4:00 p.m. EST on Dec. 7. (The price provided here is from the Bitcoin Index on the NYSE, which jumped 19.3% today.)

Investing directly in bitcoin via a decentralized bitcoin-specific exchange or by buying Bitcoin Investment Trust, which holds bitcoins, is very risky. While the price of bitcoin could continue to defy gravity for some time, it could also plummet at any time.

There’s a less risky way for investors to get a piece of the bitcoin craze: lnvest in one of the two holding companies, Cboe Global Markets (NASDAQ: CBOE) and CME Group (NASDAQ: CME), that own the U.S. financial exchanges on which bitcoin futures will soon start trading.

Symbol for bitcoin in front of a stock chart.
Symbol for bitcoin in front of a stock chart.

Image source: Getty Images.

Bitcoin futures trading in the U.S. starts this Sunday

Chicago-based Cboe Global Markets will kick off bitcoin futures trading in the U.S. on Sunday, Dec. 10, with fellow Windy City-based CME Group following suit on Monday, Dec. 18. The Nasdaq, owned by Nasdaq Inc., is planning to offer bitcoin futures in early 2018, according to reports from several outlets. The NYSE, owned by Intercontinental Exchange, is taking a "wait-and-see approach" regarding bitcoin futures, CEO Jeff Sprecher was recently quoted by Market Watch as saying.

As to specifics on the upcoming launch, Cboe Futures Exchange is slated to offer trading in Cboe bitcoin futures starting at 5:00 p.m. Central time on Sunday under the ticker symbol "XBT." The exchange will be waiving all of its transaction fees for XBT futures during December -- a move that I'd venture to guess is intended to help fuel initial trading and perhaps help Cboe capture business that might otherwise go to CME beginning on Dec. 18. XBT futures are cash-settled contracts based on the Gemini Trust Company's auction price for bitcoin, denominated in U.S. dollars. (Gemini is the virtual-currency exchange founded by the Winklevoss twins, Cameron and Tyler, best known for allegedly coming up with the idea upon which Facebook was built.)

The adoption of bitcoin futures trading by U.S. exchanges should help to further legitimize the cryptocurrency. At the very least, it represents a mainstreaming of bitcoin. This factor has the potential to further increase demand for the hot cryptocurrency. On the other hand, bitcoin futures trading could make it easier to short bitcoin, which could "potentially [undermine] the current buyer-heavy market," Intercontinental Exchange's Sprecher said, according to Market Watch.