The crypto market is once again roaring with volatility. Bitcoin recently punched through the historic $100,000 level amid a flurry of bullish news, climbing back above six figures for the first time in months. Ethereum’s long-awaited “Pectra” upgrade was successfully completed last week, igniting a double-digit ETH rally as investors cheered improved scalability and staking features. Meanwhile, fresh ETF inflows are pouring in — over $900 million into Bitcoin funds in just the past week — signaling surging institutional interest. Even meme coins and altcoins are whipsawing wildly; in one of the most volatile weeks on record, tokens like PEPE and DOGE notched double- and triple-digit gains in mere days. For seasoned crypto traders, such a high-volatility environment presents both opportunities and risks.
How can you navigate these turbulent markets strategically? Options offer a powerful toolkit. By combining calls, puts, and underlying holdings in clever ways, traders can profit from big swings or protect their portfolios against adverse moves. Below, we break down five options strategies — call spreads, put spreads, straddles, strangles, and protective puts — that thrive in volatility. For each, we’ll explain how the strategy works, its pros and cons, and give real-world crypto examples from this week’s action. We’ll also discuss how to execute each strategy on PowerTrade’s platforms — whether via their centralized exchange or the decentralized PowerDEX — so you can put these ideas into practice. Let’s dive in.
1. Call Spreads — Riding the Upside with Limited Risk
A call spread (specifically a bull call spread) is a smart way to bet on a crypto’s price increase without paying the full price of a call option. The strategy involves buying a call option at a lower strike price and selling another call at a higher strike price (same expiration). The purchased call gives you upside exposure, while the sold call generates premium to offset the cost. The result is a net debit trade that profits if the underlying rises, but with limited risk and capped profit.
- How it works: Suppose Bitcoin is trading around $100K after its recent breakout. You expect further upside but recognize that option premiums are high in this volatile market. Instead of buying an expensive long-dated call outright, you could buy a BTC call with a strike of $105,000 and sell a call with a $120,000 strike. This bull call spread will pay off if BTC keeps climbing, but because you sold the higher strike call, your maximum profit is limited to the difference between strikes (here $15,000) minus net premium paid. If Bitcoin’s rally stalls or reverses, your loss is limited to that initial net premium. In our example, Bitcoin’s surge to ~$101K (4.7% daily gain) after breaching $100K would put the spread solidly “in the money”. You’d profit as long as BTC stays above $105K at expiry, with peak profit if it ends at or above $120K.
- When to use it: Call spreads shine in moderately bullish scenarios, where you expect an underlying (like BTC or ETH) to rise, but not exponentially beyond a certain point. They are ideal when volatility (and thus option prices) is high — as is the case now — because the call you sell helps finance the one you buy. For instance, after Ethereum’s post-upgrade rally above $2,000, traders bullish but cautious could use call spreads to participate in further upside while defining their risk. The call spread’s breakeven is lower than a standalone call’s, and time decay is more forgiving since the short call partially offsets the long call’s decay.
- Benefits & Limitations: The key benefit is cost reduction. By selling a call, you cut the net premium outlay versus a single long call, making it easier to profit from the move. Risk is limited to that net premium paid — no surprises. However, you cap your maximum gain if the asset moons beyond the upper strike. In a runaway bull market, a call spread will make only a fraction of what an outright call could. Thus, use call spreads when you’re bullish but expect gains to be restrained (or simply want to be prudent in a frothy market).
- Execution: Implementing a call spread is straightforward. On PowerTrade’s centralized platform (a user-friendly web/mobile CEX), you can simultaneously buy the lower strike call and sell the higher strike call in a single order ticket. The platform will display your net cost and payoff, simplifying the trade. For example, a trader might enter a spread on BTC by buying a 105K call and shorting a 120K call for the same expiry; the interface helps calculate the net premium. Alternatively, you can execute the same strategy on PowerDEX, PowerTrade’s on-chain options exchange. PowerDEX runs on Ethereum’s Base network and features the same interface and order flow as the CEX. This means you could connect your wallet and set up the call spread in a few clicks, with the smart contract handling the two-legged position. Whether on the centralized app or via your Web3 wallet, the process is seamless — you’ll see a combined position reflecting the spread. (To explore call spreads on PowerTrade, visit their centralized platform, or try PowerDEX for an on-chain experience.)
2. Put Spreads — Profiting from Dips or Hedging Downside
A put spread (often a bear put spread) is the bearish counterpart to the call spread. It involves buying a put option at a higher strike price while selling another put at a lower strike (same expiry). This structure generates a net debit that will pay off if the underlying asset falls, but — like the call spread — the profit is capped (at the lower strike) and the risk is limited to the net premium. Put spreads are an excellent strategy when you expect a moderate drop or want cheap protection against a decline.
- How it works: Imagine you’re concerned that the recent euphoria in crypto might lead to a pullback. Ethereum, for example, jumped over 12% post-upgrade, and you think it could retrace some gains. To bet on a downside move with defined risk, you could buy an ETH put at a strike of $2,000 and simultaneously sell a put at $1,800. This bear put spread will become profitable if ETH falls in price. If Ethereum drops below $1,800 by expiration, you’d earn the maximum profit (the difference between $2,000 and $1,800, minus cost). If ETH stays flat or rallies further (above $2,000), your puts expire worthless and your loss is just the net premium paid. This week’s market provided a perfect illustration: after altcoins like Solana and Cardano saw rapid run-ups, they experienced steeper single-day declines than BTC when a market correction hit (SOL fell sharply on May 13). A trader holding those altcoins could have used put spreads as an inexpensive hedge to mitigate the damage of such a drop.
- When to use it: Use put spreads when you are moderately bearish or want downside protection that’s cheaper than buying puts outright. In a high-volatility environment, puts can be pricey, so selling the lower strike put helps offset the cost. For instance, if Bitcoin surges to $105K and you foresee a short-term pullback (perhaps due to profit-taking or a news scare), a put spread lets you profit from a slide back toward, say, $90K, without taking unlimited short risk. It’s also a common hedging approach: if you hold a portfolio of altcoins that have spiked (many meme coins soared 40–70% this week alone), a put spread on an index or on a highly correlated asset can provide partial insurance against a broad downturn. Unlike a simple protective put, the spread sacrifices some protection (beyond the lower strike) in exchange for the lower cost.
- Benefits & Limitations: The chief benefit is risk control at a lower cost. Your maximum loss is limited to the net premium spent, which is smaller than a single put’s premium thanks to the offset from the sold put. This makes put spreads more capital-efficient for bearish bets or hedges. They also allow you to tailor your view — for example, targeting a drop to a certain price level. The limitation is that your profit potential is capped once the underlying falls below the lower strike. If a true crisis or crash occurs (say a flash crash well below $1,800 in the ETH example), the put spread won’t gain beyond that point — whereas a lone long put would keep increasing in value. In other words, you’ve insured only up to a point. Additionally, if the market doesn’t move as much as anticipated, both puts could expire worthless and you lose the premium (same as any insurance).
- Execution: Executing a put spread on PowerTrade is just as easy as a call spread. On the centralized platform, you would select the two put options and place a combined order to buy the higher strike put and sell the lower strike put. The trading interface will show your net entry cost and the payoff diagram, so you clearly see the max gain and loss before confirming. Because PowerTrade lists options on over 80+ crypto assets with multiple expiries, you can construct put spreads on everything from large caps to DeFi tokens — useful if you’re hedging a specific altcoin’s downside. On PowerDEX (the decentralized exchange), the same trade can be done via your Web3 wallet. PowerDEX’s smart contracts handle multi-leg positions atomically, meaning both sides of your put spread are executed together or not at all, ensuring you don’t end up legged in. This is crucial in fast-moving markets — you wouldn’t want to buy a put and fail to sell the other if prices are swinging by the minute. By using the integrated interface on either venue, you can secure your put spread in one go. (Both the centralized PowerTrade platform and PowerDEX support multi-leg options strategies, so traders can seamlessly enter put spreads on their preferred venue.)
3. Straddles — Long Volatility for Big Moves (Any Direction)
When markets are whipsawing, a long straddle is a go-to strategy for traders who expect explosive movement but aren’t sure which direction it will go. A long straddle involves buying a call and a put with the same strike price and expiration (typically at-the-money). This delta-neutral combination bets on volatility itself: you’ll profit if the underlying asset’s price swings far enough either up or down, exceeding the total premium paid. In a straddle, you don’t care which way the breakout occurs — only that it’s significant.
- How it works: Let’s say Bitcoin is hovering around the $100K mark after its big run-up, and the market is bracing for the next volatile move. Perhaps there’s an upcoming macro event or ETF decision; you suspect BTC could either rally to new highs or tumble back below $90K, but you’re uncertain which. By purchasing both a $100K call and a $100K put (same expiry), you set up a straddle. The cost might be substantial (since implied vol is high), but in return you have unlimited upside on either tail. If Bitcoin rockets to $110K+ or crashes under $90K, the straddle will yield a profit — one of the options will be deep in the money. If BTC remains stuck near $100K, both options decay and you lose premium. This week offered a classic case for straddles: before Ethereum’s Pectra upgrade, implied volatility spiked as traders anticipated a big move. Some expected ETH to soar on successful implementation, others feared a sell-the-news drop. A straddle (buying both call and put around $1,900 strike pre-upgrade) would have paid off as ETH’s 12% surge past $2,100 delivered a sizable gain on the call, more than covering the losing put. Straddles were similarly effective for major news events; for example, rumors of a Bitcoin ETF approval could send BTC violently in either direction depending on the outcome — an ideal scenario for a long straddle.
- When to use it: Deploy straddles when you expect volatility to increase or a major catalyst is on the horizon, but you aren’t confident on direction. They are commonly used around major announcements (upgrades, government regulations, ETF decisions, earnings for stocks, etc.) or in uncertain environments. In the current climate, with Bitcoin at six figures and debates on whether this is a top or just a pitstop on the way to $150K, a straddle lets you cover both outcomes. Note that timing is key — straddles suffer if volatility collapses. For instance, if the event passes and the market settles down into a tight range, the straddle will lose value quickly. Also, cost management is crucial: only enter a straddle if you believe the asset can move beyond the breakeven points (strike ± premium paid). Given that, in May 2025, implied volatilities for 1-week to 6-month options are relatively elevated (some longer-dated options are priced with vol premiums above 50%), you’d want a truly big swing to justify the expense.
- Benefits & Limitations: The primary benefit of a long straddle is that it offers unlimited profit potential in both directions — you’re effectively long volatility. You don’t have to predict direction correctly, only that “something’s gotta give.” This can be psychologically freeing in uncertain times. Additionally, if a sudden news bomb drops (e.g. a surprise rate hike or an exchange hack) sending prices haywire, a straddle can capture that upside. The downside, however, is cost. You pay premiums for two options instead of one, which in volatile markets can be hefty. Thus, a straddle often needs a very large move to breakeven (it must overcome the combined cost of the call and put). The passage of time (theta decay) and a drop in implied volatility after the event are the straddle holder’s enemies — both erode option value if the expected move doesn’t materialize quickly. In summary, long straddles are high-risk, high-reward plays on volatility: great for capturing wild swings, but they can bleed value if those swings don’t come.
- Execution: Constructing a straddle is straightforward on modern trading platforms. You simply buy one call and one put at the same strike. On PowerTrade, you can do this as a single combined trade (the interface might even have a “straddle” strategy ticket). For example, you’d select the BTC $100K strike for both call and put, choose the same expiry date, and enter a buy order for each. The platform will show your total debit (premium outlay) and the payoff curve shaped like a “V”. Thanks to PowerTrade’s deep liquidity (it offers 100,000+ options contracts across 80+ crypto markets), even ATM options on majors like BTC and ETH can be traded with tight spreads, an important factor when putting on a straddle. On PowerDEX, the decentralized side, executing a straddle means buying the two legs in a single transaction from your wallet. Since PowerDEX shares liquidity with the CEX and mirrors its interface, you don’t sacrifice ease-of-use or pricing by going on-chain. Once executed, you will have a long call and long put in your portfolio — which together form the straddle. Keep an eye on the breakeven points (often displayed in the order confirmation): these tell you the approximate prices above or below which your straddle starts making money at expiration. Monitoring those levels in a fast market will help you decide if/when to take profits or cut losses.
4. Strangles — Cheaper Volatility Bets with Wide Goalposts
If straddles seem too expensive but you still want to bet on big volatility, a long strangle might be the answer. A strangle is similar to a straddle in that you buy both a call and a put — but at different strike prices (out-of-the-money options). For example, you might buy a slightly out-of-the-money call and a slightly out-of-the-money put. This lowers the cost compared to an at-the-money straddle, at the expense of needing an even larger move for big profits. A long strangle profits if the underlying price swings beyond the two strike prices in either direction.
- How it works: Consider Bitcoin again around $100K. Instead of buying the $100K call and put (straddle), you decide to set a wider band: buy a $110K call and a $90K put. These options are out-of-the-money, so they cost less in premium. Your total debit might be, say, $10 (in BTC terms) for this strangle. Now, you will profit only if BTC’s price moves beyond the breakeven points: substantially above $110K or below $90K (in our example, roughly above $120K or below $80K by expiration, given the $10 total premium). Essentially, you’re saying “I don’t know if it’ll moon or crash, but I expect something big.” If Bitcoin blasts to $130K on a wave of new ETF-driven buying, your call becomes very valuable (intrinsic value ~$20K at expiry in this scenario, minus premium). If instead a negative shock sends BTC down to $70K, your put pays out handsomely. However, if BTC merely drifts around $100K or even $105K/$95K (inside the strikes), the strangle will likely expire worthless and you lose the premium. Real-world example: suppose an altcoin is trading at $10, and due to a pending mainnet launch you expect extreme volatility — either a surge to $20+ on success or a collapse to $5 on failure. A strangle could be buying the $12 call and $8 put. This week’s altcoin mania saw coins like Pepe and Floki make huge upside moves; traders who anticipated volatility but not sure of direction could have entered strangles (e.g., on PowerTrade, which even lists options on meme coins like PEPE and FLOKI). In one case, a meme coin strangle returned multiples as the coin first spiked and then rapidly retraced — hitting both legs at different points in time (advanced traders sometimes dynamically manage long strangles by taking profit on one leg when a big move happens).
- When to use it: Use long strangles when you expect very high volatility but want to keep initial costs lower than a straddle. They are useful if you think the market is underestimating the potential for a massive move. Right now, for instance, implied vols might not fully price in tail scenarios like Bitcoin blowing past its all-time high or conversely a sudden regulatory ban causing a crash. A strangle gives you exposure to those tail moves at a relatively lower entry cost (because OTM options are cheaper). Strangles are also common when traders have a target corridor for no movement — for example, you might avoid buying expensive ATM options and instead pick strikes at the edge of an expected trading range. Note that a strangle’s breakeven range is wider than a straddle’s, so you need even more movement to profit. This means strangles are a bit more speculative; they usually pay only in very volatile outcomes. If you just foresee “volatility” but not an extreme tail event, a straddle might be safer; strangles are for when you suspect the markets could really explode or implode.
- Benefits & Limitations: The big benefit of a strangle over a straddle is lower cost. By avoiding ATM options, you save premium — which reduces your maximum potential loss. This also can make it psychologically easier to hold through choppy, indecisive market periods because your time decay per day is less (OTM options have lower theta). Moreover, if a move does happen, the upside can be tremendous; one leg can theoretically go deep in the money. However, the flipside is a lower probability of profit: because you chose wider strikes, the underlying has to travel further to hit paydirt. There is a real chance that the asset makes a decent move, yet not far enough to put your OTM options in the money — in which case the strangle could still lose money even though you “guessed right” on increased volatility. Additionally, like straddles, if the expected big move doesn’t occur before expiration, both options decay to zero. So, strangles are best for scenarios where you truly expect a seismic price shift or want a lottery-ticket style position with limited downside.
- Execution: Entering a strangle on PowerTrade is nearly as easy as a straddle. You’ll pick a higher strike call and a lower strike put (usually equidistant around the current price, but not necessarily symmetric). The trading interface might not have a one-click “strangle” template, but you can manually select the two options and place a simultaneous order to buy both. For example, you’d choose the BTC $110K call and $90K put and add them to your order cart before executing. The platform will sum the premiums to show your total debit and calculate approximate breakeven points for you. One nice feature on PowerTrade is the ability to see risk graphs for multi-leg positions; this visualizes the payoff, which for a strangle looks like a wide “U” shape with a flat valley between the strikes (your max loss zone). On PowerDEX, multi-leg trades like strangles are executed in one transaction as well — ensuring that you enter both the call and put together at known prices. This is important on-chain because you don’t want to suffer slippage legging one side. By using the combined order on PowerDEX, you also minimize fees with just a single transaction fee for both legs (a thoughtful advantage of their design). After execution, manage a strangle similarly to a straddle: monitor how close the underlying is getting to each strike and decide if you want to take profit on one leg early if it moves deep in-the-money. You could even convert a strangle into a risk-free trade by selling one leg after a big move, leaving the other as a “free ride” — a tactic some advanced traders used during the meme coin frenzy to lock in gains while still keeping upside for a potential reversal.
5. Protective Puts — Insurance for Your Crypto Holdings
Not all volatile market strategies aim to profit from volatility; some are meant to shield you from it. A protective put, often called a married put, is essentially an insurance policy on your crypto holdings. In practice, it means you buy put options while holding the underlying asset (e.g., holding BTC or ETH). The put option gives you the right to sell your asset at a certain strike price, effectively putting a floor under your losses. If the market crashes, your put will increase in value, offsetting losses on your coins. If the market keeps rising, you let the put expire and enjoy the gains minus the premium paid (just like paying insurance). In today’s volatile climate, protective puts are popular among investors who want to stay long crypto but sleep better at night knowing large downside is limited.
- How it works: Suppose you own 1 BTC at $100,000 (nice job catching that rally!). You worry that a sudden reversal — perhaps news of a harsh regulation or simply a technical correction — could send Bitcoin spiraling lower. To protect your gains, you purchase a put option with a strike say at $90,000, expiring in a few months. This put might cost a few thousand dollars in premium. Now, no matter what happens, you’ve capped your downside: if BTC plummets below $90K, you can exercise the put (or sell it) and effectively still get $90K for your Bitcoin. Your maximum loss on the position is thus the $10K drop from $100K to $90K, plus the premium paid — as opposed to unlimited loss if BTC went to $70K, $50K, etc. On the upside, if Bitcoin moonshots to $130K, you participate in the gains (you still hold the BTC), just reduced by the cost of the put. A real example from this week: many traders who rode the altcoin rally (say you held a bag of an alt that jumped 50% in a month) bought protective puts to lock in profits. When some of those alts quickly pulled back amid market volatility, those with protective puts were cushioned. For instance, after Ethereum’s upgrade rally, an investor holding ETH could buy $1,900 strike puts; when ETH briefly dipped from $2,100 back toward $1,950, the puts gained value, offsetting the portfolio dip. Similarly, miners or long-term BTC holders often use protective puts around events like ETF decisions — if price tanks on bad news, the puts pay; if price soars on good news (BTC breaking new highs), they’re happy with the gains on holdings (the puts expire worthless, essentially the cost of peace of mind).
- When to use it: Protective puts are best used when you want to stay invested in an asset for the upside potential, but you recognize the risk of a major downside swing in the near term. They are common before major uncertain events or after a big run-up when a correction is possible. In volatile markets, protective puts can be expensive (high implied vol means high premiums), so timing and strike selection matter. Often, sophisticated traders will buy puts during lulls (when vol is a bit lower) to prepare for the next storm. If you’re a long-term holder (HODLer) who normally doesn’t trade options, using protective puts around especially risky periods can be prudent. It’s essentially paying for safety. For instance, if Bitcoin is at $100K and you believe in the long run it’s going higher, you might not want to sell — but you also acknowledge it could easily drop to $80K in a shakeout. A protective put lets you hedge that tail risk without giving up your position. In summary, use protective puts when your outlook is bullish long-term but you’re concerned about short-term turbulence and you’re willing to sacrifice a small percentage of your holdings’ upside to guard against a large drop.
- Benefits & Limitations: The benefit is clear: downside protection. With a protective put in place, you have a guaranteed worst-case selling price (the strike) for your asset, so violent downturns won’t devastate your portfolio. This can provide enormous psychological comfort in volatile times — you can weather dips without panic selling your holdings, knowing you have a safety net. You also retain unlimited upside beyond the cost of the put, so you still gain if the asset continues to rally (unlike, say, a stop-loss order, which would kick you out of the position entirely). The main limitation is cost. Like any insurance, buying puts eats into your returns if the adverse event doesn’t happen. High volatility means high premiums, so protective puts can be expensive and need to be budgeted as part of your investment strategy. Over time, repeatedly buying protection can drag on your performance (just as paying insurance premiums year after year adds up). Another limitation: the protection is temporary (until the option’s expiration). If the risk extends, you might need to roll the puts to later dates, incurring more cost. Also, picking the right strike is important — a very tight protective put (strike just below current price) will limit even small dips but costs more, whereas a farther strike (deep out-of-the-money) is cheaper but only protects against a more severe crash. There’s a trade-off between cost and coverage.
- Execution: Setting up a protective put on PowerTrade is intuitive. It’s essentially two separate actions: you buy the asset (if you don’t already hold it) and buy a put option for that asset. On the PowerTrade centralized exchange, you could, for example, buy 10 ETH on the spot market (or hold existing ETH in your account) and then navigate to ETH options to purchase, say, a 3-month put at your desired strike. The platform will show the premium in USDC terms, which you pay to enter the position. Once done, your portfolio would show a long ETH position and a long ETH put — which together form a protected position. Notably, PowerTrade allows you to use USDC collateral for options, and since a protective put is typically done on a 1:1 basis (one put per asset unit), margin isn’t complicated — you just pay the premium. On PowerDEX, executing a protective put means you’d need to have the asset in your own wallet and then buy a put via the DEX. Because PowerDEX is on-chain, your put will be an ERC-20 style option or a position NFT (depending on their implementation), and your asset stays in your wallet as well. This arrangement is actually very secure: you hold your ETH in your wallet, and separately hold an on-chain put option — no custody risk, but you’re protected. The PowerDEX interface (and even some wallets) may eventually allow linking the two to visualize the combined payoff, but even if not, you can mentally combine them. (If you’re using PowerTrade, you can find the available put options on their platform or via the PowerDEX interface if you prefer self-custody.) Once in place, monitor your protective put — if the market tanks, you can exercise or sell the put for profit to offset losses. If the market remains strong, you might let the put expire and consider it the cost of staying in the game.
Conclusion
Volatility can be a double-edged sword for crypto traders. On one hand, rapid price swings are rife with profit opportunities; on the other, they can wreak havoc on an unhedged portfolio. The five options strategies we explored — call spreads, put spreads, straddles, strangles, and protective puts — are valuable tools to have in your arsenal in these stormy market conditions. They allow you to express nuanced views: from bullish or bearish with limited risk, to pure volatility bets, to full-on insurance for your holdings. This week’s events (Bitcoin’s six-figure milestone, Ethereum’s upgrade surge, record ETF flows, and altcoin fireworks) underscore how quickly the market can move. By judiciously deploying options strategies, traders can not only survive such volatility but thrive in it — capitalizing on big moves or safeguarding hard-won gains.
Importantly, sophisticated strategies are now accessible to regular traders thanks to user-friendly platforms. PowerTrade, for instance, offers a unified experience across its centralized exchange and PowerDEX, the decentralized alternative. Whether you prefer the fast execution of a CEX or the self-custody of a DEX, you can implement these strategies with just a few clicks, benefitting from the same liquidity pool and intuitive interface. As always, be mindful of the risks: options can be complex, and while they limit risk in some ways, they introduce considerations like time decay and implied volatility. It’s wise to paper trade or start small to get comfortable. But with practice, these strategies can become powerful ammo in your trading toolkit.
The current crypto market is not for the faint of heart — but with the right options strategy, a volatile market can be an opportunity-rich environment rather than a threat. By riding the waves with call/put spreads, straddles or strangles, or by insulating yourself with protective puts, you put yourself in a position to navigate whatever twists and turns lie ahead. Volatility is the norm in crypto; those who learn to master it, rather than fear it, will be the ones writing about their successful trades when the dust settles. Good luck, stay hedged, and happy trading!
Sources: The facts and examples in this article are backed by recent market data and news reports, as cited throughout. Key references include Reuters for Bitcoin’s price milestones, analysis of Ethereum’s Pectra upgrade impact, TradingNEWS on surging Bitcoin ETF inflows, and firsthand accounts of altcoin volatility from industry publications. For details on executing these strategies on PowerTrade’s platforms, see the official PowerTrade Medium announcements. Each strategy’s description draws on well-established options theory and current market conditions to ensure the content is informative and grounded in reality. Also data collected from PowerTrade’s blog: https://power.trade/blog and market data: https://power.trade/markets
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5 Crypto Options Strategies That Thrive in Volatile Markets was originally published in The Capital on Medium, where people are continuing the conversation by highlighting and responding to this story.