Bitcoin has remained confined to a narrow trading band near $70,000 since mid-February, with volatility indices for the cryptocurrency declining noticeably over the period. Market observers point to a specific pattern of institutional trading activity as a likely driver of this unusual price stability. The dynamic involves the mechanics of options markets and how large participants manage their exposure.
Institutional investors holding bitcoin have been employing a strategy known as selling covered call options against their existing positions. This approach allows large holders to collect additional income, or yield, on top of any gains from simply holding the asset. The practice has become a notable feature of the current market environment, with significant sums involved.
By selling these call options in volume, institutional players have transferred a considerable amount of what traders call gamma exposure onto market makers. Gamma refers to the rate at which an option’s sensitivity to price changes shifts as the underlying asset moves. When market makers accumulate positive gamma positions, their hedging behavior tends to have a stabilizing effect on prices.
Market makers managing positive gamma are required to hedge their books by selling the underlying asset when prices rise and buying when prices fall. This mechanical hedging activity effectively acts as a counterweight to price movements in either direction. The result is a dampening of the swings that might otherwise occur in a less constrained market.
This hedging dynamic appears to have contributed directly to the compression seen in bitcoin volatility indices. As market makers continuously adjust their positions to remain hedged, the natural price discovery process is tempered. Analysts note that the suppression of volatility is a mechanical consequence of the positioning rather than a reflection of reduced interest or trading volume in bitcoin markets.
Originally reported by CoinDesk.
