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Bitcoin Put Option Trade With $1M Premium Highlights Concern Over Declining BTC Price

Puts trade pricier than calls out to the May-end expiry reflecting concerns of a price drop.

Updated Apr 1, 2025, 3:03 p.m. Published Apr 1, 2025, 9:31 a.m.
The Q1 ended with a notable bearish BTC block options bet. (jarmoluk/Pixabay)
The first quarter ended with a notable bearish BTC block options bet. (jarmoluk/Pixabay)

What to know:

  • A significant bitcoin options trade on Deribit suggests bearish sentiment, with a trader spending over $1 million on $70,000 put options expiring April 25.
  • The market shows increased demand for BTC puts, reflecting investor anxiety over potential economic impacts from anticipated U.S. tariff announcements.

A large bitcoin (BTC) options bet crossed the tape on Deribit as the first quarter drew to a close on Monday, revealing bearish sentiment from the trader behind the move.

The so-called block trade carried a premium of more than $1 million for 1,180 contracts of the $70,000 put option expiring April 25, according to data tracked by Amberdata.

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A put option gives the purchaser the right, but not the obligation, to sell the underlying asset at a predetermined price at a later date. A put buyer is essentially bearish on the market, in this case, anticipating a price drop to below $70,000 from the current $84,000.

A block trade is a large, privately negotiated transaction executed outside the public market, typically by institutions, to avoid affecting the going market rate.

Other notable trades included a put ratio spread, featuring long positions in the $75,000 strike put and double short positions in the $70,000 put; and a risk reversal, involving a long position in the $90,000 call and a short position in the $70,000 put, as Pelion Capital founder Tony Stewart noted.

BTC's block options trades. (Amberdata/Deribit)
BTC's block options trades. (Amberdata/Deribit)

The bearish flow in the $70,000 put follows purchases of put options expiring April 4 in the $78,000 to $85,000 range last week and increased demand for the $76,000 put option expiring on April 25.

Broadly speaking, BTC puts are trading at a premium to calls, exhibiting downside sentiment out to the May-end expiry, as evident from the negative values in risk reversals.

BTC risk reversals. (Amberdata/CoinDesk)
BTC risk reversals. (Amberdata/CoinDesk)

The bias for puts offering downside protection likely reflects investor anxiety surrounding President Donald Trump's expected reciprocal tariffs announcement on Wednesday. An aggressive move could weigh on risk assets, including cryptocurrencies.

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What to know:

  • Bitcoin look weak after failing to keep gains above $70,000.
  • Weakness in large caps could soon filter through to small caps, which have been resilient lately.
  • On-chain data suggest the market is in a stress phase without a clear capitulation bottom.
  • Debates rage over impact of quantum-computing risks, a controversial BIP-110 spam-reduction proposal and shifting institutional flows.