Bitcoin Options Expiry
This week’s batch of Bitcoin options contracts has a put/call ratio of 0.94, which means that bulls and bears are evenly matched with similar numbers of long (call) and short (put) contracts expiring.
There is also over $1.3 billion in OI at the $110,000 and $1.2 billion at $110,000 strike prices, with derivatives speculators remaining bullish.
Key levels were major resistance at the all-time high of $108,000 and $99,000 as support, “with some disagreement on whether a pullback to $90,000 is possible in the near term.”
It added that multiple traders were holding $108K short calls for the January 24 expiry while acknowledging significant upside risk.
In a separate post, Greeks said that “the implied volatility (IV) differential between January and March has declined, with the market given to anticipating greater uncertainty as Trump nears his inauguration.”
Meanwhile, Deribit commented that the US PPI and CPI inflation data helped BTC spot markets climb higher on the macro front, adding that “the March $120,000 calls, bought when BTC was trading at $95,000, pushed IV higher as they were accumulated.”
In addition to today’s Bitcoin options, around 182,000 Ethereum contracts are expiring as well. These have a notional value of $617 million and a put/call ratio of 0.35. This brings Friday’s combined crypto options expiry notional value to around $2.8 billion.