Derive is excited to integrate into Haruko to push institutional adoption of crypto options.
Professional trading desks care about how trades appear in their risk systems, how P&L is reconciled, how exposures are tracked across venues, and how everything ties into finance and compliance reporting. If a venue doesn’t integrate cleanly into those workflows, it rarely gets approved internally. That’s the modus operandi behind our integration.
What is the bottleneck?
Over the past few years, Derive has focused on building an onchain derivatives venue that behaves like infrastructure institutions already understand: orderbooks, RFQs, portfolio margining, and cross-asset collateral.
Execution quality is only one piece of the puzzle. For many firms, the harder problem is what happens after the trade.
When a new venue is added, operations teams still need to:
- reconcile trades across multiple venues
- track Greeks and exposures across books
- explain P&L to risk committees and investors
- feed clean data into finance, compliance, and reporting systems
Historically, onchain venues forced institutions to either build custom internal tooling or treat onchain activity as a small side pocket.
What the Haruko integration entails
Haruko provides post-trade analytics and reconciliation infrastructure used by institutional trading firms to consolidate activity across CeFi exchanges, OTC desks, and onchain venues.
With Derive integrated into Haruko’s platform:
- Derive trades flow directly into institutional portfolio and risk views
- Positions appear alongside CeFi and OTC exposures
- P&L, Greeks, and risk metrics update in real time
- Reporting and reconciliation can be handled within existing workflows
For firms already using Haruko, Derive activity simply becomes part of the same dataset used to manage the rest of their trading operations.
Broad takeaway
Institutions onboard venues when risk, ops, and finance teams are comfortable signing off. Onchain derivatives need fewer excuses for ops teams to say no and this integration lowers that barrier materially. Firms already using Haruko don’t need to redesign their internal processes to trade on Derive. Integrations like this reduce that friction.