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Ethereum price options: All $250M in bearish bets for Friday are underwater

Bears are in deep trouble as ETH bulls are likely to pocket $115 million from Friday's options expiry.

Ether (ETH) has been facing a bearish regression channel since Sept. 1, although it is currently battling to break its resistance.

But despite some headwinds, ETH bulls will likely profit $115 million on Friday's weekly Ether options expiry. The 21% pump over the past week was just enough to make the entire $250 million worth of neutral-to-bearish put options worthless.

Ether price in USD at Coinbase. Source: TradingView

Regulatory fear limits the upside

Understandably, negative headlines about increasing regulatory scrutiny toward crypto may have subdued prices last month, particularly as China outright banned all cryptocurrency activity in the country. 

Major crypto exchanges, including Binance and Huobi, halted most of their services in mainland China, and a couple of the largest Ethereum mining pools were forced to shut down completely.

The negative press followed. 

Founder of Citadel Securities, one of the world's biggest market-making firms, said the company does not trade cryptocurrencies due to the sector's regulatory uncertainties. The Russian State Duma Committee on Financial Markets chairman is also talking about ramping up regulations to protect retail investors; and so on.

Based on the negative newsflow, it is possible to understand why bears placed 86% of their bets at $3,200 or lower. However, the past weeks definitively caused those put (sell) options to lose value quickly.

The Oct. 8 expiry will be a strength test for bears because any price above $3,500 means a bloodbath with the absolute dominance of call (buy) options.

Ether options aggregate open interest for Oct. 8. Source: Bybt

At first sight, the $250-million neutral-to-bearish instruments dominated the weekly expiry by 16% compared to the $210-million call (buy) options.

However, the call-to-put ratio is deceiving because the recent ETH rally will likely wipe out most of their bearish bets if Ether's price remains above $3,500 at 8:00 am UTC on Friday. There is no value on a right to acquire ETH at $4,000 if it's trading below that price.

Bears should throw the towel and take the $115 million loss

Notably, 94% of the put options, where the buyer holds a right to sell Ether at a pre-established price, were placed at $3,500 or lower. These neutral-to-bearish instruments will become worthless if ETH trades above that price on Friday morning.

Below are the four likeliest scenarios considering the current price levels, as the imbalance favoring either side represents the potential profit from the expiry.

The data shows how many contracts will be available on Friday, depending on the expiry price.

  • Between $3,100 and $3,300: 14,300 calls vs. 9,800 puts. The net result is somewhat balanced between bulls and bears;
  • Between $3,300 and $3,500: 21,650 calls vs. 1,900 puts. The net result favors bulls by $66 million;
  • Between $3,500 and $3,700: 32,050 calls vs. 0 puts. The net result favors bulls by $115 million;
  • Between $3,700 and $3,900: 43,300 calls vs. 0 puts. Bulls profit increases to $165 million.

This crude estimate considers call (buy) options used in bullish strategies and put (sell) options exclusively in neutral-to-bearish trades. However, this oversimplification disregards more complex investment strategies.

Related: Bitcoin bears risk getting trapped if BTC price remains above $50K — Here’s why

For example, a trader could have sold a put option, effectively gaining a positive exposure to Ether above a specific price. But, unfortunately, there's no easy way to estimate this effect.

There's a $47 million gain from the bear's perspective by pressuring below $3,500, as the above estimate shows. On the other hand, bulls could increase their advantage by $49 million by taking Friday's options expiry price above $3,800.

As things currently stand, bulls have absolute control going into the Oct. 8 expiry, and the incentives for both sides to try pushing the price $200 above or below seem balanced. Therefore, bears should throw the towel and regroup for next week's expiry.

The views and opinions expressed here are solely those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of Cointelegraph. Every investment and trading move involves risk. You should conduct your own research when making a decision.

SEC’s Mark Uyeda has strong chance of becoming next chair — Lawyer

Billionaire Ken Griffin slams crypto as ‘jihadist call’ against the greenback

Hedge fund manager Ken Griffin signaled out crypto as a threat to the US dollar, and stated that "I wish all this passion and energy that went to crypto was directed towards making the United States stronger."

Hedge fund billionaire Ken Griffin and former U.S. President Donald Trump have both slammed digital currencies as a threat to the U.S. dollar.

Griffin, the founder of the $38 billion hedge fund Citadel LLC, told the Economic Club of Chicago on Oct. 4, that crypto is "a jihadist call that we don't believe in the dollar."  He expressed his dismay over the younger generation working on dollar alternatives in the crypto sector:

"What a crazy concept this is, that we as a country embrace so many bright, young, talented people to come up with a replacement for our reserve currency."

"I wish all this passion and energy that went to crypto was directed towards making the United States stronger," he added.

Griffin however doesn't not seem opposed to making money out of crypto in the future. He said that Citadel is yet to follow the plunge of other hedge funds and traditional financial institutions into crypto because of the “lack of regulatory certainty.”

The hedge fund manager said that U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission Chairman Gary Gensler was “spot on” in his comments from August, when he said that if crypto is going to achieve its potential it “needs to come within public policy frameworks.”

"Doing so will make it a smaller market, because it'll become a far more competitive market when there's regulatory clarity," Griffin said. "And that will be good. A small market, less people involved who are frankly just trying to make a quick buck."

Meanwhile former US President Donald Trump warned against the threat to the dollar from China’s digital yuan.

During an interview with Yahoo Finance’s Adam Shapiro on Oct. 5, Trump provided his take on China, the U.S. economy and the crypto sector.

Speaking on the Chinese government’s moves to ban crypto in the country led by Xi Jinping, Trump said the clampdown was a part of Jinping’s moves to squash competition as he works on “his own currency, whether it’s crypto or otherwise,” and suggested that the U.S. government should do the same:

“I'm a big fan of our currency and I don't want to have other currencies coming out and hurting or demeaning the dollar in any way.”

“If you look at a monetary system based on the dollar, if you start losing credibility, all of a sudden you're going to lose that strong monetary system,” Trump said. The controversial former president said the U.S. government’s “horror show” with the Mexican border and pull back from Afghanistan had also affected the credibility of the greenback.

Trump is also no fan of cryptocurrency. In late August, he stated that crypto was “potentially a disaster waiting to happen” as he questioned whether digital assets were “fake”:

“They [cryptocurrencies] may be fake. Who knows what they are? They are certainly something that people don’t know very much about.”

SEC’s Mark Uyeda has strong chance of becoming next chair — Lawyer