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I've been watching the Bitcoin options market, and something caught my attention: with quarterly expirations approaching, the 20,000-dollar put options are the third most popular strike price. The notional value is about $596 million. That's quite significant.
Of course, with such large put buying activity, at first you might think, "Are they worried about a decline?" But in reality, most of this position is likely set up by sellers trying to earn premiums. Because right now, Bitcoin is trading around $70k, and a drop to $20,000 would be a 70% crash. I doubt many are directly betting on such an extreme scenario.
Looking at the overall options market, it’s more bullish than bearish. The put-call ratio is 0.63, meaning there are more calls than puts. Of Deribit's total notional value of $13.5 billion, open interest is 195,719 BTC, with 120,236 BTC in calls and 75,482 BTC in puts. These numbers tell the market sentiment.
Another point to note is that $75,000 is the maximum pain level. This indicates that options makers tend to push the expiry price toward this level. In other words, it’s the price where the majority of market participants would experience maximum losses.
Additionally, it’s interesting that the World Liberty Financial WLFI token has recently dropped 12%. They used their governance tokens as collateral to borrow stablecoins and drained the Dolomite pool. This is a classic example of systemic risk. Falling token prices reduce borrowing capacity, which in turn lowers collateral value—a vicious cycle. When markets cool down, such structural vulnerabilities tend to surface.