March 12, 2025
11 11 11 AM
Latest Post
Bitcoin’s Four-Year Compounded Annual Growth Rate Drops to Record Low of 8% Metaplanet Increases Bitcoin Holdings With $13.5M Purchase and Bond Issuance Franklin Templeton Joins XRP ETF Rush, Files Preliminary Application With SEC Bitcoin Sees Relief Run to $82K; SEC Delays XRP, DOGE, LTC ETF Filings Bitcoin CME Futures Spread Slides to $490, Undoing The ‘Trump Bump’ in BTC Japanese Tech Giants Sony and LINE Join Forces in Blockchain Deal U.S. House Votes to Overturn IRS DeFi Broker Rule Crypto Payments Firm Mesh Raises $82M as Stablecoin Adoption Soars Ukraine Ceasefire Breakthrough Sends Markets Into Green; Bitcoin Retakes $83K Bahrain-Regulated Crypto Exchange Enters $1B Tokenized Gold Market as RWA Demand Grows

Bitcoin’s $100K Call Takes the Crown From $120K Bet as Most Popular Options Play on Deribit

The recent crypto market downturn has caused the once-popular $120,000 bitcoin (BTC) options bet to lose its crown to the $100,000 bet in a sign that traders are reassessing their bullish expectations.

At press time, the $100,000 call was the most popular BTC options contract on the exchange, boasting a notional open interest of $1.55 billion. The notional open interest represents the dollar value of the number of active option contracts at a given time.

Meanwhile, the $120,000 call, the former leader up until last month, stood at the number two position, with a notional open interest of $1.33 billion.

A call gives the purchaser the right but not the obligation to purchase the underlying asset at a predetermined price at a later date. A call buyer is implicitly bullish on the market. Hence, a significant built-up of open interest in higher strike out-of-the-money calls, such as $100,000 and $120,000, reflects bullish expectations.

The shift lower in the most preferred call to the $100,000 strike likely shows traders opting for a more conservative bet in the wake of the recent price crash to under $80,000. Additionally, it may signal a broader reassessment of bullish sentiment.

The 25-delta risk reversals, which measure the difference between implied volatility (demand) for higher strike calls relative to lower strike puts, show negative readings or bias for protective put options out to the May end expiry. It’s representative of fears of an extended price slide in the market.

The pricing remains bullish in favor of call options after May. Besides, the dollar value of the total number of calls open at press time was over $16 billion – nearly twice more than $8.35 billion in put options.

This post was originally published on this site