Bitcoin Options Expiry and Volatility
"More than $10 billion in Bitcoin options expire in 48 hours. After that, expect volatility. Once the dust settles, the market could finally choose a direction for the next quarter."
ℹ️ In shortOver $10 billion in Bitcoin options expire in 48 hours, which could cause volatility and set the market's direction for the next quarter.
This prediction is awaiting verification.
Details
For informational purposes only. Not investment, financial, legal or tax advice. Full disclaimer
… lose to a bottom because you need everybody to capitulate, everybody to sell. And man, where you guys been for the last six months? It's been nothing but pain and capitulation and suffering and pulling and of hair and nashing of teeth. Are you kidding me? Come on. Come on, man. You guys just masochists out here, I tell you. Titan of uh crypto says more than $10 billion in Bitcoin options expire in 48 hours. After that, expect volatility. Once the dust settles, the market could finally choose a direction for the next quarter. So potential rocky end to the week. It's a lot of Bitcoin options expiring. Enough money of coming in expireies to move the market around a little bit after that. We'll see. Maybe we'll get a little bit of a tailwind picking up here for BTC. Uh real quick update. Of course, my Bitcoin uh revenge trade got stopped. It was like a $300 loss. That's f …
Related claims by Lark Davis
Interest Rate Cut and Bull Run Forecast
The author predicts interest rates will be cut, inflation recalculated, and the job market ignored, leading to an unprecedented bull run until Trump is out of office.
SpaceX Insider Share Unlocks
SpaceX insiders own 95% of shares, with their holdings gradually unlocking for open market sale over several months post-IPO.
SIMD547: Activity-Based Solana Burns
SIMD547 introduces activity-based burns via resource pricing, meaning high demand periods automatically reduce supply, leading to deflation as Solana usage increases.
Impending Financial Storm
A massive financial storm is brewing, driven by over $1.3 trillion in toxic consumer credit debt and brutal corporate refinancing at high interest rates.