Bitcoin is likely to continue rising in the next couple of days, and the reason is quite straightforward—there are $23.6 billion worth of options contracts expiring tomorrow.
The biggest pain point for these contracts is set at $96,000 (in other words, the price where options sellers can earn the most and buyers lose the most). Currently, Bitcoin is around $87,800, which is actually a friendly level for the bulls.
Why does the expiration of large options contracts push the market? It’s a bit technical—market makers hedge their risk exposure by buying and selling spot assets. When a large number of open interest contracts accumulate near a certain strike price, their hedging activities create market pressure. That maximum pain point often becomes an "attraction," and the market tends to gravitate toward it. This is not a coincidence but a result of the collective behavior of market participants.
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BearMarketMonk
· 8h ago
Basically, the big players are dancing while retail investors are counting money... I've heard this "inevitable rise" logic too many times, but how did it end up?
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ImpermanentPhilosopher
· 21h ago
Coming back with the same move? 23.6 billion in options dumped, basically the big players are accumulating.
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ServantOfSatoshi
· 21h ago
$96,000? Well, okay, here we go again. Every time options expire, they say it will attract, but what happens? It just gets hammered down again.
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ThesisInvestor
· 21h ago
$96,000? Haha, here we go again. Every time options expire, I have to support it.
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SleepyValidator
· 21h ago
96000 is still too far away; it feels like the bulls aren't that strong either.
Bitcoin is likely to continue rising in the next couple of days, and the reason is quite straightforward—there are $23.6 billion worth of options contracts expiring tomorrow.
The biggest pain point for these contracts is set at $96,000 (in other words, the price where options sellers can earn the most and buyers lose the most). Currently, Bitcoin is around $87,800, which is actually a friendly level for the bulls.
Why does the expiration of large options contracts push the market? It’s a bit technical—market makers hedge their risk exposure by buying and selling spot assets. When a large number of open interest contracts accumulate near a certain strike price, their hedging activities create market pressure. That maximum pain point often becomes an "attraction," and the market tends to gravitate toward it. This is not a coincidence but a result of the collective behavior of market participants.