Bitcoin (BTC) bulls flipped the table on March 4's options expiry after a 14% rally on Feb. 28. Holding the price above $43,000 confirms a decoupling from traditional markets. For instance, the MSCI Emerging Markets Equities Index is down by 3.5% in five days, while the United States Russell 2000 Small-Capitalization Index gained 0.9%.
Investors are increasingly concerned about the ramifications of the U.S. Federal Reserve rate hikes expected throughout 2022. As a result, in the past 30 days, some big names took a hit. For instance, Paypal PYPL traded down 38%, META corrected 34% and Shopify SHOP lost 31.5%.
The 40-year high U.S. Consumer Price Index 7.5% inflation data caused investors to take profits on riskier assets and the U.S. Dollar Index (DXY) to reach its highest level in 20 months at 97.6. The DXY measures the dollar's strength against a basket of top foreign currencies and increases when traders seek shelter in the North-American money.
Bitcoin's recent strength surprised most investors as its correlation versus the Nasdaq Composite index reached 73% on Feb. 20, nearing the 74% five-year high in 2020.
Call (buy) and put (sell) option instruments are evenly matched for the March 4 options expiry but bears were caught by surprise after the Bitcoin price stabilized above $43,000 this week.
A broader view using the call-to-put ratio shows a balance between the $450 million call (buy) open interest versus the $440 million put (sell) options. However, the 1.02 call-to-put indicator is deceptive because most bearish bets will become worthless.
For example, if Bitcoin's price remains above $43,000 at 8:00 am UTC on Feb. 11, only $155 million worth of those put (sell) options will be available. This difference happens
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