Bitcoin’s recent price behavior is evidence of growing influence from the derivatives market, rather than pure spot demand. At press time, Bitcoin [BTC] was trading at around $71,500, positioning the asset within a dense cluster of Options exposure ahead of a $1.89 billion Options expiry.
This setup matters because large derivative positions often shape short-term price direction through hedging flows.
Calls were concentrated near $71,570 and $72,000, where roughly 2,292 contracts formed a visible upside barrier. Meanwhile, puts gathered between $70,500 and $71,500 and created a defensive support band under the price.
As these positions expanded, market makers hedged gamma exposure, gradually compressing volatility around this corridor.
At the same time, implied volatility near 40.39% hinted at restrained expectations, while $47.53 billion in perpetual Open Interest alluded to heavy leveraged positioning across the market.
Sitting between major Options clusters
Bitcoin’s derivatives structure tightened as the 13 March Options expiry approached, drawing attention to the $69,000 max pain level.
This strike represented the point where the largest share of Options expired worthless, minimizing payouts for market makers. With BTC hovering near $71,500, the roughly 2.6% gap between spot and max pain created a natural hedging magnet. Source: Deribit/ X