Bitcoin pinned below $90K after $28B options expiry as bearish technicals emerge

Building on mid-week weakness and gold's record surge, Bitcoin's price stayed suppressed below $90,000 amid a $300 million gamma options expiry on December 26, 2025, unleashing potential for sharp moves. Over $28 billion in Bitcoin and Ethereum options expired on Deribit, amplifying crash risks, with technical patterns signaling further downside.

The December 26, 2025—Boxing Day—options expiry, anticipated earlier amid U.S. session slumps below $88,000, drove cryptocurrency market volatility. Bitcoin traded below $90,000, trapped by a $300 million 'gamma trap': an $85,000 put wall ($98.8M put gamma) anchoring downside and $90,000 call wall ($36.2M call gamma) capping upside, forming a negative gamma loop where dealers sold rises and bought falls.

Market analyst David noted: 'Price is locked in a cage,' compelled by 'dealer hedging math' over sentiment. With 58% of the gamma complex expiring, the pin could break, targeting a gamma flip at $88,925 to amplify moves.

Deribit saw $23B Bitcoin and $4B Ethereum options expire, Bitcoin skew bullish (put-call 0.38, max pain $96,000), Ethereum 0.43-0.45 ($3,000 pain). Price fell below $87,000 from $89,000 high, echoing 0.7% Dow drop in thin holiday volume.

Bearish technicals include rising wedge, bearish pennant, looming death cross (50/200-day WMAs). Drop targets: $80,000-$75,000.

Context: gold up 40% YTD (best since 1979), Bitcoin down 20%. Crypto Tice: 'Gold moved first. Bitcoin loading.' Divergence signals stress, metals beating crypto.

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Dramatic illustration of Bitcoin's retreat to $70,000 amid Iran war escalation, oil price surge, strong USD, and looming options expiry.
Image generated by AI

Bitcoin retreats toward $70,000 as Iran war intensifies, ahead of options expiry

Reported by AI Image generated by AI

Following a mid-week rally above $68,000, Bitcoin retreated toward $70,000 by early March 6, 2026, erasing $110 billion in market capitalization amid worsening Iran conflict, rising oil prices, and a strengthening U.S. dollar. The pullback occurs despite ongoing institutional adoption, with $2.6 billion in Bitcoin options set to expire, heightening volatility risks.

Continuing the pattern of weakness during U.S. trading hours, bitcoin slipped below $88,000 on Monday, December 22, 2025, after failing to hold $90,000 gains, while gold surged to a record $4,475 per ounce. Traders eye a record $28.5 billion options expiry on Deribit this Friday amid volatility, with bitcoin miners pivoting to AI outperforming peers.

Reported by AI

Bitcoin's options market, with open interest near $55.76 billion, shows heavy concentration around a December 26, 2025, expiry date and $100,000 strike levels. This positioning influences hedging activities and potential market flows as the spot price hovers around $92,480. Traders and dealers are closely watching these levels for impacts on liquidity and price movements.

Bitcoin fell below $100,000 for the first time since June on Tuesday, marking a technical bear market with a drop of more than 20% from its October all-time high. Despite the plunge, cryptocurrency experts remain optimistic about a potential recovery amid ongoing volatility. The sell-off coincides with outflows from U.S. spot Bitcoin ETFs and sales by long-term holders.

Reported by AI

Bitcoin fell below $86,000 on December 15, 2025, continuing a pattern of weakness during U.S. market hours. The cryptocurrency slid to around $85,600, down about 3.6% over the past 24 hours, while ether dipped under $3,000. Crypto-related stocks also declined sharply, outpacing broader market losses.

Bitcoin dropped below $93,000 on November 17, 2025, erasing all its year-to-date gains and marking a 27% decline from its October record high. The sell-off intensified bearish sentiment across cryptocurrencies, with altcoins plunging to five-year lows and related stocks tumbling. Analysts suggest a local bottom may be forming as short-term holders capitulate.

Reported by AI

Bitcoin experienced volatility on February 18, 2026, trading in a tight range before dropping to around $66,000 in the U.S. afternoon following hawkish Federal Reserve minutes. Crypto-related stocks initially rebounded but later reversed gains, while liquidations neared $200 million. Geopolitical tensions and macroeconomic uncertainty contributed to the market's choppy performance.

 

 

 

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