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SEC removes huge pattern day trader barrier to allow retail investors to day trade Bitcoin with just $2k margin

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The SEC has approved a rule change that eliminates one of Wall Street’s most recognizable barriers for small traders: the old $25,000 minimum tied to pattern day-trading restrictions.

Regulators signed off on FINRA’s proposal to scrap a framework that long made it harder for smaller investors to make rapid-fire stock trades, replacing it with a system aimed at measuring intraday risk.

The change might not be a rewrite of crypto regulation per se, but it carries certain implications for Bitcoin because the same retail crowd that speculates in stocks and options often moves through crypto too.

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Apr 16, 2026 · Gino Matos

What the old rule was and why it existed

Day trading means buying and selling a stock on the same day, trying to profit from short-term price swings rather than holding for weeks or months.

Under the old FINRA Rule 4210 framework, anyone who executed four or more of these same-day trades within a rolling five-business-day period could be classified as a “pattern day trader.” Once that label was applied, the trader was required to maintain at least $25,000 in their margin account at all times. Fall below that threshold, and the broker would lock you out until your balance recovered.

The rule dates back to 2001, when regulators were trying to contain the fallout from the dot-com crash.

Millions of retail traders had piled into overvalued tech stocks using margin accounts, and when the bubble burst, the losses were severe. The $25,000 requirement was designed as a capital buffer, a way to ensure that people making frequent, leveraged bets had enough to absorb the inevitable hits.

It made sense a lot of regulatory sense at the time. In practical terms, it meant that wealthier traders could move fast while smaller investors were told to sit still.

For anyone with a $5,000 or $10,000 account, the PDT rule was essentially a gate, and the workarounds were miserable: spreading trades across multiple brokers, switching to cash-only accounts with slower settlement, or avoiding day trading altogether.

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Apr 12, 2026 · Andjela Radmilac

What the SEC actually changed

The SEC’s Release No. 34-105226, granted on an accelerated basis, eliminates the pattern day trader designation entirely.

It also removes the $25,000 minimum equity requirement and all related day-trading buying power provisions. In their place, FINRA is introducing a new intraday margin standard under Rule 4210 that focuses on real-time calculations of actual position risk rather than counting trades.

The old system tried to control behavior by identifying and restricting smaller traders.

The new system measures the actual risk of each position as it develops during the trading day, with brokers calculating intraday margin requirements based on the size and volatility of what a trader holds at any given moment.

The minimum account equity to open a margin account now drops to $2,000, the existing baseline for standard margin accounts. Full implementation could take up to 18 months as brokers upgrade their systems, meaning adoption across the industry may stretch into late 2027.

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Apr 15, 2026 · Oluwapelumi Adejumo

The 0DTE factor and why regulators are moving now

Markets today look almost nothing like the markets the PDT rule was built for.

Commission-free apps have eliminated cost friction. Mobile platforms have made it possible to place trades in seconds from anywhere. And one of the most dramatic shifts in market structure has come from the explosion of zero-days-to-expiration options, or 0DTE contracts, which expire on the same day they are traded.

0DTE options are bets on where a stock or index will move before the market closes. Because these contracts expire within hours, their prices can swing violently on even small moves in the underlying asset. A modest rally can produce an outsized gain, and a modest dip can wipe the position out entirely.

They represent the kind of fast, leveraged speculation that the original PDT rule was designed to curb, except they weren’t part of the landscape when that rule was written.

The scale of growth these options have seen is nothing short of staggering.

According to Cboe Global Markets, 0DTE SPX options averaged 2.3 million contracts daily in 2025 and accounted for 59% of total S&P 500 index options volume, a fivefold increase over three years.

Retail traders now make up roughly 50 to 60% of SPX 0DTE activity, and total US-listed options volume topped 15.2 billion contracts in 2025, the sixth consecutive record year. Citadel Securities data shows that average daily retail options volume in early 2026 is running about 14% above 2025 and nearly 47% above the 2020-2025 average.

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