Bitcoin is approaching a key options expiration on June 26 with a skewed derivatives landscape that could make it harder for bulls to regain control. With roughly $13 billion in Bitcoin optio
Bitcoin is approaching a key options expiration on June 26 with a skewed derivatives landscape that could make it harder for bulls to regain control. With roughly $13 billion in Bitcoin options open interest set to expire, market structure currently points toward downside risk—at least for the near-term window around the monthly settlement.
According to data from Deribit, where most of the activity is concentrated, put options (sell) are positioned more favorably than call options (buy). That imbalance has traders watching not only the current price around the $63,000 area, but also whether the positioning traps bullish momentum as the expiry approaches.
Key takeaways
- Deribit’s June 26 options open interest totals about $13B, with puts holding the advantage versus calls.
- Calls are heavily concentrated above $72,000, leaving upside bets more vulnerable if BTC fails to rebound quickly.
- Puts show less concentration at the deep-down strike area, increasing their odds of retaining value across more price outcomes.
- Market concentration matters: Deribit accounts for about 79% of the options open interest.
Deribit dominance and why the strike mix matters
Options positioning is not just about totals—it’s also about where the contracts are concentrated across strike prices. Deribit is the center of the June 26 contract universe, holding $10.4 billion in open interest, or 79% of the market share. OKX is next with around 6%, while Binance and CME each account for 5%. Bybit follows at 4%.
On Deribit specifically, total call open interest is about $6 billion, but 78% of that call exposure is tied to strikes at $72,000 or higher. With less than a week until expiration, that type of concentration is typically less forgiving if price fails to climb quickly.
Put options tell a different story. Deribit’s put open interest is about $4.5 billion, and only 28% of it is dependent on BTC falling to $57,000 or below. In practical terms, that means a larger share of put exposure could remain relevant across a wider range of downside scenarios leading into settlement.
The broader implication for holders of call options is straightforward: if BTC doesn’t regain higher levels fast enough, a major portion of call OI may lose effective value. Meanwhile, the structure of the put book creates a more durable hedge profile for bears as the expiry nears.
Strategy activity, ETF flow pressure, and regulatory uncertainty
The derivatives setup doesn’t exist in a vacuum. Earlier bullish expectations appear to have been influenced by spot buying and optimism around the US policy outlook—but the macro signals have shifted.
Some of the earlier bullish overreach is traced to Strategy’s aggressive BTC accumulation in April and May. The firm added 62,841 BTC in four weeks, a move that helped support price strength and pushed BTC above $73,000 in May. However, sentiment deteriorated as US-listed spot Bitcoin ETFs began experiencing outflows starting in mid-May, according to coverage linked to Cointelegraph’s reporting on ETF outflows beginning in mid-May.
Market pressure also intensified alongside regulatory uncertainty. Bulls had placed hopes on the Digital Asset PARITY Act, which—if passed—would have aimed to exempt certain mining and staking rewards from taxes until sold. Those hopes faded as the outlook worsened, and the market reacted to Strategy’s sale of 32 BTC, as referenced in Cointelegraph coverage at Strategy’s purchase activity and related context. The resulting ETF outflows added further weight to the bearish narrative, even as parts of traditional markets showed strength.
For investors, the key tension is that bullish spot narratives are not translating into consistent support in derivatives positioning. When ETF flows weaken and regulatory timelines become less favorable, call-side conviction often struggles to hold through expiry cycles—even if large holders continue to buy at times.
What the June 26 expiry scenarios suggest for bulls
With calls clustered above higher strikes and puts distributed across a broader downside band, the June 26 outcomes are currently modeled to favor bearish instruments. Based on current price trends and the cited open interest distribution, four scenario bands have been outlined for the Deribit expiry at June 26:
- $57,000–$61,000: net result favors puts by $3.4 billion
- $61,001–$65,000: net result favors puts by $2.7 billion
- $65,001–$69,000: net result favors puts by $1.7 billion
- $69,001–$71,000: net result favors puts by $1 billion
Even under a bullish attempt to regain ground, the structure remains unfavorable for call holders. The analysis indicates that a 12% rally from around $63,000 would not be enough to swing the June expiry decisively in favor of calls. That doesn’t necessarily confirm control through the next month, but it does suggest that the June 26 settlement could weigh on bullish sentiment as traders reset positions for July.
Investors should note the asymmetry: for calls to materially benefit, BTC likely needs to move toward—and ideally sustain above—levels where the call OI is concentrated, particularly around the $72,000 and higher strikes. If price remains below that zone, call-side exposure may decay faster with time, while put-side positions can still retain value across more moderate downside outcomes.
Why this matters beyond one expiry
Monthly options expirations often act like psychological and liquidity inflection points. When call dominance is absent and put advantages remain consistent across plausible price ranges, traders may treat rallies as less “clean” and more likely to face selling pressure into key levels.
Going forward, the market will likely focus on whether BTC can regain levels fast enough to challenge the concentrated call strikes before June 26. Until then, the most immediate question for traders is whether the current bearish derivatives balance will amplify sell pressure into settlement—or whether a late-stage rebound can force a repricing of call value as expiration approaches.
This article was originally published as $13B Bitcoin Options Expiry Approaches: Key June Volatility Test on Crypto Breaking News – your trusted source for crypto news, Bitcoin news, and blockchain updates.