The post Ardoino on building rails that won’t snap appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. When crypto sells off, the market doesn’t so much walk down the stairs as it slips on the first step and discovers there never were any handrails. Everyone knows why: perps are a stadium, options are a side alley, and insurance in a storm is hard to buy. Paolo Ardoino, the CTO of Bitfinex, knows what the missing handrails are: credit, clearing, margin, and products professional traders actually use when it’s raining. In an exclusive interview with CryptoSlate, he argued that real hedging is a distribution problem masquerading as a philosophy debate. “If we make sophisticated tools more accessible and connected, institutions can operate with greater efficiency.” Seatbelts for a market that loves speed Options are supposed to be the seatbelts of volatile markets, but in the crypto industry, they’ve mostly been decorative. There are, of course, the inevitable bursts of liquidity around expiring strikes, a few large players playing calendar chess. But when the tape turns red, spreads widen, size disappears, and everyone reaches for the exits at once. The result is the spiral we’ve all become familiar with: protection is scarce, so risk is cut with blunt instruments, which deepens the drawdown, which then makes protection even scarcer. Ardoino’s view is that the fix starts with giving serious desks a familiar toolkit, wired into rails that don’t snap under stress. “Market makers need advanced tools to hedge and manage risk, and they will gravitate toward platforms that help build a more stable market,” he said. This is why Bitfinex has been rolling out instruments that speak to how risk is actually managed: not just directional bets, but volatility itself. Volatility perpetuals, contracts that track the forward-looking choppiness of BTC and ETH, are the sort of thing pros reach for when they don’t want to bet on “up or… The post Ardoino on building rails that won’t snap appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. When crypto sells off, the market doesn’t so much walk down the stairs as it slips on the first step and discovers there never were any handrails. Everyone knows why: perps are a stadium, options are a side alley, and insurance in a storm is hard to buy. Paolo Ardoino, the CTO of Bitfinex, knows what the missing handrails are: credit, clearing, margin, and products professional traders actually use when it’s raining. In an exclusive interview with CryptoSlate, he argued that real hedging is a distribution problem masquerading as a philosophy debate. “If we make sophisticated tools more accessible and connected, institutions can operate with greater efficiency.” Seatbelts for a market that loves speed Options are supposed to be the seatbelts of volatile markets, but in the crypto industry, they’ve mostly been decorative. There are, of course, the inevitable bursts of liquidity around expiring strikes, a few large players playing calendar chess. But when the tape turns red, spreads widen, size disappears, and everyone reaches for the exits at once. The result is the spiral we’ve all become familiar with: protection is scarce, so risk is cut with blunt instruments, which deepens the drawdown, which then makes protection even scarcer. Ardoino’s view is that the fix starts with giving serious desks a familiar toolkit, wired into rails that don’t snap under stress. “Market makers need advanced tools to hedge and manage risk, and they will gravitate toward platforms that help build a more stable market,” he said. This is why Bitfinex has been rolling out instruments that speak to how risk is actually managed: not just directional bets, but volatility itself. Volatility perpetuals, contracts that track the forward-looking choppiness of BTC and ETH, are the sort of thing pros reach for when they don’t want to bet on “up or…

Ardoino on building rails that won’t snap

When crypto sells off, the market doesn’t so much walk down the stairs as it slips on the first step and discovers there never were any handrails. Everyone knows why: perps are a stadium, options are a side alley, and insurance in a storm is hard to buy.

Paolo Ardoino, the CTO of Bitfinex, knows what the missing handrails are: credit, clearing, margin, and products professional traders actually use when it’s raining. In an exclusive interview with CryptoSlate, he argued that real hedging is a distribution problem masquerading as a philosophy debate.

Seatbelts for a market that loves speed

Options are supposed to be the seatbelts of volatile markets, but in the crypto industry, they’ve mostly been decorative. There are, of course, the inevitable bursts of liquidity around expiring strikes, a few large players playing calendar chess. But when the tape turns red, spreads widen, size disappears, and everyone reaches for the exits at once.

The result is the spiral we’ve all become familiar with: protection is scarce, so risk is cut with blunt instruments, which deepens the drawdown, which then makes protection even scarcer. Ardoino’s view is that the fix starts with giving serious desks a familiar toolkit, wired into rails that don’t snap under stress.

This is why Bitfinex has been rolling out instruments that speak to how risk is actually managed: not just directional bets, but volatility itself. Volatility perpetuals, contracts that track the forward-looking choppiness of BTC and ETH, are the sort of thing pros reach for when they don’t want to bet on “up or down” but “how wild?”

He explained that this is exactly what clients wanted during rough markets:

Bitfinex doesn’t seem to be all talk, as it’s growing its derivatives business where the rules match the experiment. The company relocated Bitfinex Derivatives to El Salvador, a bet on regulatory clarity that, in Ardoino’s words, is less about ideology and more about permission to build boring, useful infrastructure at speed. He told CryptoSlate that policy alignment matters because it anchors long-horizon work:

A core piece of that plumbing is the “universal account.” In a typical options setup, collateral sits in silos: futures in one bucket, options in another, spot in a third. The risk engine treats these positions separately, so traders over-post margin, withdraw to move funds, and lose precious time during market chaos.

A universal account solves this fragmentation. One wallet funds spot, perps, options, and structured products, and a single risk engine sees offsets across the whole portfolio. Ardoino believes that this is a powerful concept that can fundamentally change capital efficiency by reducing the amount of idle collateral. He explained that it also comes paired with risk-based margining:

In his view, the payoff here is market-wide:

Plumbing, not hype

There’s a reason options participation skews to a small set of venues: onboarding, fragmentation, and the cognitive tax of managing risk across a dozen partial solutions.

Bitfinex’s goal, through its integration with Thalex, is to treat convenience is a liquidity strategy. If traders can route into an options venue without a second round of paperwork, they won’t feel like they’re margin trapped on one island. Distribution and access are the real product here, at least according to Bitfinex’s vision.

Thalex is a dedicated crypto options venue focused on BTC and ETH, built around a low-latency matching engine and portfolio-aware risk. Bitfinex integrated Thalex to give its customers direct access to listed options without separate onboarding. The companies have since announced a merger to bring Thalex’s options stack under the Bitfinex umbrella, aligning accounts, settlement, and risk so that options, perps, and spot can sit behind one set of rails. In practice, that means a single login and a unified margin system across a broader product set.

While phrases like “stable settlement” and “predictable risk engines” might sound like empty branding, they’re actually what keeps market makers quoting through stress. Ardoino’s repeated emphasis here is on the institutional fit:

The rest follows from shipping what pros need:

The other axis of legitimacy is the US, where listed products have a habit of setting the tone for everyone else. Asked whether US instruments, including CME listings and ETF options, will siphon the flow away from offshore venues, Ardoino flips the frame.

And for Bitfinex’s role in that expansion, the strategy is explicit:

What changes if hedging gets easy

Imagine another sell-off like the one we’ve seen last week, but this time with better plumbing. A miner that wants crash insurance can buy puts that actually fill in size, funded against the rest of its book in a single account. A basis desk can lean into skew without sacrificing its inventory to margin silos. A market maker can quote through the shock because its risk engine recognizes offsets instead of punishing them.

None of that will make prices go up, though, but it will make the path down significantly less painful. Wicks shorten when insurance is available at a known price, and forced sellers become optional sellers. If BTC and ETH are going to shake the “cliff dive, dead cat, doom loop” pattern, it starts with a margin system that rewards hedge discipline and a product set that lets traders express risk cleanly.

This is also how options grow from a curiosity to a habit. You probably won’t see venues that win this race for options advertised on crypto arenas. The venues that position themselves at the very top of this market will most likely look like nothing more than basic trading infrastructure. That means being boring about uptime during chaos and opinionated about product design when it counts.

Bitfinex’s roadmap, which now includes volatility products, stablecoin-settled instruments, universal accounts, and regulatory posture tuned for building, looks like an operator’s answer to a trader’s week.

The test is whether market makers answer the call and whether the venue can prove, day after day after day, that execution and risk are handled like a utility, not a casino. Ardoino emphasized again that attracting truly credible balance sheet depends on providing a stable, mature, and efficient trading environment.

So if crypto wants to trade like the asset class it insists it is, this checklist is now long overdue.

Mentioned in this article

Source: https://cryptoslate.com/bitfinexs-options-playbook-ardoino-on-building-rails-that-wont-snap/

Market Opportunity
Threshold Logo
Threshold Price(T)
$0.009957
$0.009957$0.009957
+0.37%
USD
Threshold (T) Live Price Chart
Disclaimer: The articles reposted on this site are sourced from public platforms and are provided for informational purposes only. They do not necessarily reflect the views of MEXC. All rights remain with the original authors. If you believe any content infringes on third-party rights, please contact [email protected] for removal. MEXC makes no guarantees regarding the accuracy, completeness, or timeliness of the content and is not responsible for any actions taken based on the information provided. The content does not constitute financial, legal, or other professional advice, nor should it be considered a recommendation or endorsement by MEXC.

You May Also Like

Taiko Makes Chainlink Data Streams Its Official Oracle

Taiko Makes Chainlink Data Streams Its Official Oracle

The post Taiko Makes Chainlink Data Streams Its Official Oracle appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. Key Notes Taiko has officially integrated Chainlink Data Streams for its Layer 2 network. The integration provides developers with high-speed market data to build advanced DeFi applications. The move aims to improve security and attract institutional adoption by using Chainlink’s established infrastructure. Taiko, an Ethereum-based ETH $4 514 24h volatility: 0.4% Market cap: $545.57 B Vol. 24h: $28.23 B Layer 2 rollup, has announced the integration of Chainlink LINK $23.26 24h volatility: 1.7% Market cap: $15.75 B Vol. 24h: $787.15 M Data Streams. The development comes as the underlying Ethereum network continues to see significant on-chain activity, including large sales from ETH whales. The partnership establishes Chainlink as the official oracle infrastructure for the network. It is designed to provide developers on the Taiko platform with reliable and high-speed market data, essential for building a wide range of decentralized finance (DeFi) applications, from complex derivatives platforms to more niche projects involving unique token governance models. According to the project’s official announcement on Sept. 17, the integration enables the creation of more advanced on-chain products that require high-quality, tamper-proof data to function securely. Taiko operates as a “based rollup,” which means it leverages Ethereum validators for transaction sequencing for strong decentralization. Boosting DeFi and Institutional Interest Oracles are fundamental services in the blockchain industry. They act as secure bridges that feed external, off-chain information to on-chain smart contracts. DeFi protocols, in particular, rely on oracles for accurate, real-time price feeds. Taiko leadership stated that using Chainlink’s infrastructure aligns with its goals. The team hopes the partnership will help attract institutional crypto investment and support the development of real-world applications, a goal that aligns with Chainlink’s broader mission to bring global data on-chain. Integrating real-world economic information is part of a broader industry trend. Just last week, Chainlink partnered with the Sei…
Share
BitcoinEthereumNews2025/09/18 03:34
Kalshi Prediction Markets Are Pulling In $1 Billion Monthly as State Regulators Loom

Kalshi Prediction Markets Are Pulling In $1 Billion Monthly as State Regulators Loom

The post Kalshi Prediction Markets Are Pulling In $1 Billion Monthly as State Regulators Loom appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. In brief Kalshi reached $1 billion in monthly volume and now dominates 62% of the global prediction market industry, surpassing Polymarket’s 37% share. Four states including Massachusetts have filed lawsuits claiming Kalshi operates as an unlicensed sportsbook, with Massachusetts seeking to permanently bar the platform. Kalshi operates under federal CFTC regulation as a designated contract market, arguing this preempts state gambling laws that require separate licensing. Prediction market Kalshi just topped $1 billion in monthly volume as state regulators nip at its heels with lawsuits alleging that it’s an unregistered sports betting platform. “Despite being limited to only American customers, Kalshi has now risen to dominate the global prediction market industry,” the company said in a press release. “New data scraped from publicly available activity metrics details this rise.” The publicly available data appears on a Dune Analytics dashboard that’s been tracking prediction market notional volume. The data show that Kalshi now accounts for roughly 62% of global prediction market volume, Polymarket for 37%, and the rest split between Limitless and Myriad, the prediction market owned by Decrypt parent company Dastan. Trading volume on Kalshi skyrocketed in August, not coincidentally at the start of the NFL season and as the prediction market pushes further into sports.  But regulators in Maryland, Nevada, and New Jersey have all issued cease-and-desist orders, arguing Kalshi’s event contracts amount to unlicensed sports betting. Each case has spilled into federal court, with judges issuing preliminary rulings but no final decisions yet. Last week, Massachusetts went further, filing a lawsuit that calls Kalshi’s sports contracts “illegal and unsafe sports wagering.” The 43-page Massachusetts lawsuit seeks to stop the company from allowing state residents on its platform—much the way Coinbase has had to do with its staking offerings in parts of the United States. Massachusetts Attorney General…
Share
BitcoinEthereumNews2025/09/19 09:21
[Pastilan] End the confidential fund madness

[Pastilan] End the confidential fund madness

UPDATE RULES. Former Commission on Audit commissioner Heidi Mendoza speaks during a public forum.
Share
Rappler2026/01/16 14:02