In a market characterized by choppy price action and uncertainty, large traders of major cryptocurrencies are quietly taking divergent paths.
While bitcoin (BTC) investors are bracing for volatility with non-directional option plays, some XRP (XRP) traders are betting on the opposite, recent block trades on crypto options exchange Deribit show.
Over the past week, strangles accounted for 16.9% of bitcoin option blocks traded on the platform, while straddles made up 5%. Both are non-directional volatility strategies, betting on significant price moves, whether up or down. XRP traders, in contrast, shorted strangles, in effect betting against increased volatility.
A strangle involves buying out-of-the-money (OTM) call and put options with the same expiry but different strike prices equidistant from the spot price, offering a cost-effective way to profit from large swings. For instance, if the spot price is $104,700, then the simultaneous purchase of the $105,000 call and the $104,400 put constitutes a long strangle.
A straddle involves purchases of at-the-money call and put options at the same strike price, resulting in a higher initial cost but greater sensitivity to volatility.
Both strategies can lose the premiums paid if the anticipated volatility does not materialize. Note that the bet here is on volatility, and does not necessarily imply a bullish or bearish price outlook.
According to Deribit CEO Luuk Strijers, taken together these non-directional BTC strategies exceed 20% of total block flows, an unusually high figure.
“This suggests a market grappling with uncertainty, where traders anticipate significant price moves but remain unsure about the direction,” Strijers told CoinDesk.
Block option trades are large, privately negotiated transactions involving significant quantities of options contracts, typically executed outside of the open market to minimize their impact on price. They are primarily conducted by institutional investors or large traders and enable the discreet execution of sizable positions without triggering market volatility or revealing trading intentions prematurely.
The preference for non-directional strategies underscores why the crypto options market has been flourishing: It enables traders to speculate on volatility along with price direction, facilitating more efficient risk management.
Deribit’s BTC options market is worth over $44 billion in terms of notional open interest, offering crypto traders the most liquid avenue to hedge risk and speculate.
The ether (ETH) market is worth over $9 billion and has featured a bias for a put diagonal spread over the past week.