The market enters the final days of 2024 with a new record for the largest Bitcoin options expiry in history. Today, a total of $18 billion worth of Bitcoin and Ethereum options contracts will expire.
Exciting and unexpected developments may be ahead for options traders and investors.
What Does the Record-High Crypto Options Value Indicate?
According to data from Deribit, this Bitcoin options expiry includes 88,537 contracts—four times more than last week. Similarly, Ethereum options contracts expiring today total 796,021, which is 4.5 times higher than the previous week.
The total value of expiring Bitcoin options has reached a record $14.38 billion, while Ethereum’s options total $3.7 billion. The higher the value of expiring options, the greater the traders’ expectations for profit and the rising demand for risk hedging.
For Bitcoin, the expiring options have a maximum pain price of $85,000 and a put-to-call (P/C) ratio of 0.69. In theory, a low P/C ratio (below 1) reflects positive sentiment, as more call options (bets on price increases) are being purchased, indicating bullish expectations. However, compared to historical data, Bitcoin’s P/C ratio has been trending upward throughout the final quarter of the year, potentially signaling increased hedging sentiment.
“Demand for downside protection has been rising for a few weeks now, perhaps partially fueled by players looking to protect their 2024 calendar year performance metrics. The put/call ratio on December 27 options open interest doubled from 0.35 in October to over 0.70 currently,” David Lawant, Head of Research at FalconX, commented.
Meanwhile, Ethereum options contracts have a maximum pain price of $3,000 and a P/C ratio of 0.41. This ratio has decreased from 0.97 at the end of October, reflecting growing bullish sentiment toward ETH.
At the time of writing, BTC and ETH are trading at $96,300 and $3,300, respectively, significantly above the aforementioned maximum pain prices. The maximum pain price refers to the price level at which all investors holding options contracts (both call and put options) experience the most losses (or “pain”) at expiry.
Some investors and analysts use maximum pain price as an indicator to predict potential price directions. The reasoning is that markets often gravitate toward the price to optimize profits for options sellers (typically large financial institutions).
“With the market heavily leveraged to the upside, any significant downside move could trigger a rapid snowball effect. All eyes are on this expiry to define the narrative heading into 2025,” Deribit commented.
The post Record-Breaking $18 Billion Bitcoin and Ethereum Options Set to Expire Today appeared first on BeInCrypto.