Fast answer
Crypto-options signal checks prove whether strike, expiry, premium, volatility, and risk were reviewable.
Before accepting a crypto options signal result, record the underlying, contract venue, option type, strike, expiry, premium, quantity, breakeven, bid/ask spread, implied-volatility context, exit rule, and final close or expiry.
If a provider posts an options gain without contract, premium, expiry, spread, and exit records, the result may hide most of the risk.
Options checks
What to inspect in crypto options signal records.
Contract identity
The record should show underlying, venue, option type, strike, expiry, multiplier, and settlement terms.
Premium and spread
Entry premium, bid/ask spread, fees, and liquidity matter because options can be hard to exit cleanly.
Volatility context
Implied volatility, event timing, and time decay can drive option value even when spot price moves modestly.
Expiry outcome
The final record should show close price, expiry result, breakeven, partial exits, and remaining contracts.
Source context
Options signals need contract, strike, expiry, premium, breakeven, liquidity, and exit records.
CME lists cryptocurrency options on futures across Bitcoin, Ether, Solana, and XRP products and highlights expiries, contract sizes, and execution flexibility. A crypto-options signal should therefore be reviewed as a specific contract record, not as a generic bullish or bearish call.
Review standard
A reviewable crypto-options signal connects contract terms to premium and expiry outcome.
For CSR evidence review, crypto options records should include underlying, venue, option type, strike, expiry, premium, size, spread, volatility context, breakeven, stop or exit rule, updates, and final close or expiry.