However, with BTC recently tapping $100K, some aggressive bets were also placed on the $120K target.
Despite the bullish outlook from the options market, BTC could face wild price swings on what analysts have blamed on high-leveraged (borrowed money) players and greed. According to CryptoQuant’s JA Martunn, the recent flash crash from $104K to $90.5K was driven by leverage.
“Leverage-driven pumps indicated significant risk, as the price surge was fueled by leverage. Open interest rose by more than 15%,” wrote Martunn.
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Photo: CryptoQuant
Historically, leverage-driven rallies have led BTC to face sharp pullbacks and local tops. Additionally, they trigger wild volatility as leveraged positions are liquidated, exacerbating price swings. The recent BTC flash crash exposed the broader market to $1B of liquidations.
Sharing his thoughts on the same, Jake Ostrovsksis, options and OTC (Over the Counter) trader at market maker Wintermute, cautioned that the BTC market was susceptible to 2-way volatility.
“Flow remains undeniably strong with topside continuing to block, however, funding rates indicate the significant use of leverage… this leaves us susceptible to 2-way volatility,” Ostrovsksis told Bloomberg.
That meant that despite the bullish sentiment in Options, the market could still witness a +$10K price swing on either side, just like on December 5.
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Photo: TradingView
That being said, BTC price was back in its short-term ascending channel chalked since mid-November. However, it was muted below a key roadblock at $98K. A surge above it could push it to the mid-range and the short-term upside target of $105K.
However, a breach below the channel could still push the cryptocurrency to the recent lows at $90.5K or $85K.