Bitcoin Holds Gains Above $72K As Options Data Reveals Cautious Sentiment

BlockChainReporter
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Bitcoin (BTC) is trading near the upper end of its recent range after the latest ceasefire headlines lifted risk appetite across global markets, but the mood beneath the surface is still cautious rather than euphoric. At the time of writing, BTC was around $72,266, after trading between $70,568 and $72,944 during the session. Glassnode’s latest read fits that backdrop neatly, arguing that the market has become quieter and better balanced, but not yet fully healthy or conviction driven.

The main takeaway from Glassnode’s options analysis is that volatility has compressed sharply across the curve. The firm said short dated implied volatility had dropped back toward the low 40s, with the six month tenor around 45 percent, a clear sign that traders have pulled back from paying up for near term movement. Glassnode also said the ceasefire announcement accelerated an already developing decline in implied volatility, reinforcing the idea that the market is now pricing a quieter near term environment.

That softer volatility backdrop has not erased caution. Glassnode said option skew still leans toward puts, which means downside protection continues to trade at a premium even as overall volatility falls. In plain terms, traders are willing to accept lower implied volatility, but they are not willing to let go of protection against a selloff. The put bias has eased somewhat week over week, yet the market still looks more defensive than aggressive.

The same message shows up in Glassnode’s DVOL and realized volatility work. DVOL has been sliding after spending much of March in the mid 50s, and Bitcoin’s 30 day realized volatility has now fallen to 42.5 percent. That matters because the spread between realized and implied volatility has nearly closed, which Glassnode described as a zone where options look more fairly priced. Historically, that kind of setup has often been more interesting for volatility buyers, not because the market is calm, but because it may be underpricing the next move.

There is also a clear shift in flow behavior. Glassnode said the tape over the past week has become more balanced, but still leans negative in delta terms, with short calls and long puts dominating the mix. That is the sort of positioning that usually shows up when traders are not chasing a trend but are instead using rallies to hedge or fade risk. In other words, upward bursts are still being treated more like opportunities to reduce exposure than as proof that the market has turned decisively bullish.

Calm Amid the Storm?

Dealer positioning adds another layer to that cautious picture. Glassnode said long gamma has formed between about $69,000 and $71,500, which may help cushion declines in the near term, while short gamma remains stacked above the current spot and becomes more important beyond $80,000. That structure suggests the market has developed a short term support pocket below the spot, but it also leaves the price vulnerable if that support fails.

Glassnode warned that a break below the $69,000 to $71,500 area could open the door to faster downside movement toward the mid $60,000s as another short gamma pocket comes into play. The bigger story is that the market has calmed down, but calm is not the same as strength. Glassnode’s conclusion was explicit: spot participation remains weak, futures activity has contracted, and even with modestly positive ETF flows, the market still lacks the depth of demand normally associated with a durable rebound.

That is why the firm framed the current structure as cleaner and more balanced after the recent washout, but still short of a fully constructive trend. For a stronger move to emerge, Glassnode said the market would likely need firmer spot demand, broader participation, and more decisive engagement from derivatives traders. The geopolitical backdrop helps explain why the market has found some breathing room, but also why conviction is still thin.

The U.S. and Iran agreed to a two week ceasefire after requests from Pakistan, sparking a relief rally across stocks, bonds, currencies, and other risk assets. Reuters noted that the truce looks fragile, with tensions still simmering and investors reluctant to fully chase the move. However, it can actually end the war as well, as per other experts. Bitcoin benefited from that same risk tone, as it was last up 2.95 percent at $71,342 during the move. That lines up with the idea that BTC is being lifted by a macro relief bid, not necessarily by a new wave of strong crypto specific demand.

At the same time, the policy backdrop is not standing still. On April 9, U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent urged Congress to pass a crypto market structure bill, arguing that clearer federal rules are needed to keep crypto development and investment anchored in the United States. That does not give Bitcoin an immediate price catalyst, but it does reinforce a wider theme that institutional investors care about more than just price. They also care about regulatory clarity, and that remains one of the most important medium term variables for the asset class.

For now, Bitcoin looks like a market that has escaped stress, but not yet found conviction. The combination of lower implied volatility, near zero volatility risk premium, soft spot demand, and put biased skew points to a market that is stabilizing without fully trusting the move. In that sense, Glassnode’s message is more subtle than a simple bullish or bearish call. Stress has faded, and the violent part of the move may be behind it for the moment, but the market still seems to be asking for evidence before it is willing to commit.

As long as BTC stays near the top of its recent range and holds the support band around the high $60,000s to low $70,000s, the path of least resistance may remain choppy rather than directional. In other words, Bitcoin has moved from panic into pause. The trade is less about chasing a breakout right now and more about watching whether this quieter regime turns into real accumulation, or simply becomes another low conviction holding pattern before the next catalyst arrives.

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