Your group chat lights up on a Tuesday: “Binance is paying weekly BTC.” A link follows. It is Binance’s new BTC Yield, a covered-call wrapper that turns your Bitcoin into a ticker called BTCY and promises potential Friday distributions in BTC. Suddenly, passive income is the conversation again.
The day before, you saw headlines about BlackRock listing a covered-call Bitcoin ETF on Nasdaq. Same idea, different wrapper. Spot BTC plus call options to skim premium. And like that, strategies that used to live in DeFi vaults and options chatrooms are now on the biggest exchange and the biggest asset manager’s shelf.
This is not about hot new coins. It is about packaging an old options trade so it fits where people already keep their Bitcoin.
Covered-call income has moved from niche to mainstream. Binance just announced BTC Yield, ticker BTCY, a BTC-denominated income product that converts subscribed BTC into BTCY and aims to pay out weekly BTC distributions to participants PR Newswire (Binance announcement). In parallel, BlackRock’s iShares Bitcoin Premium Income ETF, ticker BITA, started trading on Nasdaq in mid-June with a similar approach, but inside an ETF wrapper for brokerage accounts The Block.
Why now? A few things lined up. More spot Bitcoin has migrated to regulated lanes. Options market depth is better than it was a few cycles ago. And there is steady demand from holders who would like some cash flow from an asset that mostly just sits in cold storage.
Two years ago, if you wanted this trade, you were probably wiring to Deribit, or parking assets in a DeFi vault that automated covered calls. It worked for power users. Everyone else watched from the sidelines.
Binance’s move is straightforward: turn “run a covered call” into “tap subscribe.” Binance’s announcement outlines that BTC you deposit becomes BTCY on the platform, with potential weekly BTC distributions if the strategy collects premium that week PR Newswire (Binance announcement). CoinDesk’s reporting also flagged a revenue share detail that many missed: Binance keeps 15% of gross option premiums before calculating user yield, and the distributions have been noted for Fridays CoinDesk.
BlackRock took the other route: an ETF you can buy in a brokerage account. The firm filed a Form 8-A on June 11 to register BITA with the SEC, a step analysts read as signaling an imminent listing CoinDesk. BITA listed June 16 and, per launch coverage, publicly targeted roughly 15 to 25 percent annualized yield from selling calls while charging a 0.65% expense fee The Block.
Strip out the marketing and you are left with a simple engine: you own BTC and sell someone else the right to buy your upside beyond a chosen strike for a fixed time. You collect an upfront option premium for selling that right. If BTC rips past the strike, you give up gains above it. If BTC chops or drifts lower, you keep the premium.
None of this removes Bitcoin’s price risk. The premium can cushion small drawdowns, but if BTC drops hard, the strategy still loses value. Think of it as trading some upside potential for potential income.
Different wrappers, overlapping mechanics. Here are the practical differences users tend to care about right now, using only what is publicly stated or reported.
Feature Binance BTCY BlackRock BITA DIY on options venue Wrapper Exchange product, BTC converted to BTCY unit U.S.-listed ETF on Nasdaq Self-managed account Income schedule Potential weekly BTC distributions, noted Fridays Monthly income objective Whenever positions expire or are rolled Manager take/fee 15% of gross premiums retained by Binance 0.65% annual expense ratio Trading fees, funding, margin costs Overwrite target Not publicly specified About 25%–35% of BTC exposure Flexible Account type Exchange account with BTC balance Brokerage account Derivatives venue account Payout asset BTC USD cash distributions Varies by setup
Sources: Binance announcement for BTCY structure PR Newswire; CoinDesk for BTCY’s 15% premium retention and Friday note CoinDesk; BlackRock BITA details from launch coverage, including the 0.65% fee, the 25%–35% overwrite target, June 16 listing, and indicative yield target range The Block; SEC registration signal reported via Form 8-A filing coverage CoinDesk.
If you mostly hold BTC on Binance and want payouts in BTC, BTCY is the path of least resistance, with the trade-off that Binance keeps 15% of the gross premiums before your cut. If you run money in a brokerage and want a 1099 and cash distributions, BITA is the fit, and you pay 0.65% a year while giving up 25%–35% of upside each month as the base setting.
These products are not set-and-forget savings accounts. They are for specific moments and profiles.
You believe in BTC over years, not days. You would not sell your core stack anyway. In slow or sideways markets, harvesting call premium can be rational. When momentum returns, you may get capped on part of your stack.
Advisors and family offices often cannot run options on crypto venues. An ETF like BITA slots into existing mandates, whereas an exchange product like BTCY suits exchange-native capital that prefers distributions in BTC.
Covered calls pay best when implied volatility is rich relative to realized moves. If the market is calm and everyone is selling calls, the juice thins out. If vol spikes, yields look bigger, but assignment risk rises with it.
The packaging is just starting. Expect more exchanges and asset managers to offer flavors of the same idea: dynamic overwrite levels, laddered expiries, or even collars that use some premium to buy downside puts. None of that changes the core trade. It just slices the risk in neater ways for different audiences.
I would also watch how managers communicate yield. BlackRock’s launch coverage mentioned a roughly 15%–25% annualized target for BITA, but that range depends on volatility and positioning, not magic. Binance’s BTCY may pay on Fridays, but if the week is quiet and strikes were conservative, the distribution could be light or even nil. The packaging is polished; the engine is still market-driven.
If you want a steady pulse on how these structures evolve and how yields line up with on-chain flows, Crypto Daily tracks both exchange launches and ETF filings in one place. You can skim the latest coverage and market context here: Crypto Daily.
No. BTC does not have native staking. BTCY uses a covered-call options strategy. You are effectively selling potential upside for potential weekly BTC premium, after Binance’s 15% take of gross premiums as reported CoinDesk.
The overwritten slice of your exposure is capped at the strike. You still benefit up to that level and on any portion not overwritten, but you will likely underperform holding pure spot during big upside weeks or months.
No. Payouts depend on collecting option premium and the product’s settings. BTCY intends weekly distributions, often noted on Fridays, but quiet markets or conservative strikes can reduce or eliminate a week’s payout. BITA targets monthly income but is also market dependent.
Launch materials and coverage put BITA’s overwrite at roughly 25%–35% of its BTC exposure, with a 0.65% annual fee to investors The Block.
With ETFs, you can sell during market hours at prevailing prices. With exchange products, rules vary by platform. Check BTCY’s redemption or conversion terms inside Binance before subscribing, including any windows when conversions are paused.
It is simpler, not necessarily safer. You outsource execution and risk controls. You still face market, fee, and platform risks. Power users may prefer DIY for control, but most holders value the packaging.
Disclaimer: This article is provided for informational purposes only. It is not offered or intended to be used as legal, tax, investment, financial, or other advice.


