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Goldman Sachs is pushing further into the nascent market for derivatives tied to digital assets.
The firm is close to announcing that it is the first major U.S. bank to trade an over-the-counter crypto transaction, CNBC has learned. Goldman traded a bitcoin-linked instrument called a non-deliverable option with crypto merchant bank Galaxy Digital, according to the two firms.
The move is seen as a notable step in the development of crypto markets for institutional investors, in part because of the nature of OTC trades. Compared to the exchange-based CME Groupbitcoin products that Goldman began trading last year, the bank is taking on greater risk by acting as a principal in the transactions, according to the firms.
That Goldman, a top player in global markets for traditional assets, is involved is a signal of the increased maturity of the asset class for institutional players like hedge funds, according to Galaxy co-president Damien Vanderwilt.
«This trade represents the first step that banks have taken to offer direct, customizable exposures to the crypto market on behalf of their clients,» Vanderwilt said in an interview.
The options trades are «much more systematically-relevant to markets compared to cleared futures or other exchange-based products,» Vanderwilt said. «At a high-level, that's because of the implications of the risk banks are taking on; they're implying their trust in crypto's maturity to date.»
Hedge funds have been seeking derivative exposure to bitcoin, either to make wagers on its price without directly owning it, or to hedge existing exposure to it, the firms said. The market for these instruments is mostly controlled by crypto-native firms including Galaxy, Genesis and GSR Markets.
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