CME Group just made it a lot easier to bet on the broader crypto market without picking individual winners. The exchange giant launched its Nasdaq CME Crypto Index futures on June 8, giving traders exposure to eight leading cryptocurrencies through a single contract.
The futures track eight tokens via the Nasdaq CME Crypto Index: BTC, ETH, SOL, XRP, ADA, LINK, BCH, and XLM. The weighting is continuous and based on market capitalization, meaning Bitcoin and Ether dominate the index while smaller tokens like Stellar contribute proportionally less. The contracts settle to the Nasdaq CME Crypto Settlement Price Index, known as NCIS. They’re financially settled, which means no actual crypto changes hands.
CME is offering two contract sizes. The standard version runs $10 per index point, while the micro contract comes in at $1 per index point.
Why this matters for institutional crypto
CME has been methodically building out its crypto derivatives menu for years. Bitcoin futures launched back in 2017. Ether futures followed. Micro versions of both came later. But all of those are single-asset products.
Giovanni Vicioso, a key executive involved in the launch, described it as a milestone in digital asset market expansion. The partnership with Nasdaq adds credibility that pure-crypto exchanges can’t easily replicate.
The launch also fits into a broader pattern at CME during the second quarter of 2026. The exchange rolled out futures for Avalanche (AVAX) and Bitcoin volatility products during the same period.
The liquidity question and what to watch
There has been no significant trading volume or pricing data reported since the June 8 launch, which is entirely normal for this stage.
Eight tokens is a decent basket, but the crypto market has hundreds of liquid assets. A market-cap weighted index dominated by Bitcoin and Ether might not provide as much diversification as the marketing suggests. Depending on BTC and ETH’s combined weight, the index could behave almost identically to a simple Bitcoin-Ether blend.





