Hedged Market Shrouded in Fear: Bitcoin May Need Extended Consolidation
Original Article Title: A Market Hedged in Fear
Original Article Authors: Chris Beamish, CryptoVizArt, Antoine Colpaert, Glassnode
Original Article Translation: AididiaoJP, Foresight News
Bitcoin trading below a key short-term holder cost basis indicates exhausted demand and waning momentum. Long-term holders are selling into market strength, while the options market shifts to a defensive posture with increasing demand for put options and heightened volatility, signaling a cautious phase before any sustainable recovery.
Abstract
· Bitcoin trading below short-term holder cost basis indicates waning momentum and exacerbated market fatigue. Multiple failures to reclaim have increased the risk of entering a more prolonged consolidation phase.
· Long-term holders have accelerated selling since July, now disposing of over 22,000 BTC daily, signaling continued profit-taking putting pressure on market stability.
· Open interest has reached an all-time high, but market sentiment leans bearish as traders prefer put options over call options. Short-term bounces are met with hedging activity rather than new optimism.
· Implied volatility remains elevated, and realized volatility has caught up, ending a period of calm low volatility. Market makers' short positions have amplified selling and suppressed rebounds.
· Both on-chain and options data indicate the market is in a cautious transition phase. Market recovery may hinge on the emergence of new spot demand and a moderation in volatility.
· Bitcoin has gradually retraced from its recent highs, stabilizing below the short-term holder cost basis of around $113,000. Historically, this structure often heralds the start of a mid-term bearish phase as weaker holders begin to capitulate.
· In this issue, we assess the current state of market profitability, examine the scale and sustainability of long-term holder spending, and finally determine whether this pullback is a healthy consolidation or a sign of deeper weakness to come by evaluating sentiment in the options market.
On-chain Insights
Testing Conviction
Trading near the short-term holder cost basis signifies a crucial stage where the market tests the conviction of investors who bought near recent highs. Historically, breaking below this level after setting new all-time highs has led to a decline in profit-supply percentage to around 85%, meaning over 15% of the supply is in a loss position.
We are now witnessing this pattern for the third time in the current cycle. If Bitcoin fails to reclaim the key level around $113.1K, a deeper retracement could flush out a larger portion of the supply, intensify selling pressure from recent buyers, and potentially set the stage for a broader market capitulation.

Key Threshold
To further grasp this structure, understanding why reclaiming the short-term holder cost basis is crucial for sustaining the bullish phase is key. The supply percentile cost basis model, mapping the 0.95, 0.85, and 0.75 percentiles, provides a clear framework indicating that 5%, 15%, and 25% of the supply is at a loss, respectively.
Currently, Bitcoin is not only trading below the short-term holder cost basis ($113.1K) but also struggling to stay above the 0.85 percentile at $108.6K. Historically, failing to hold this threshold signals a weakened market structure and typically foreshadows a deeper pullback towards the 0.75 percentile, currently around $97.5K.

Depletion of Demand
The third retracement to the short-term holder cost basis and below the 0.85 percentile in this cycle has sparked structural concerns. From a macro perspective, repeated depletion of demand suggests the market may need a more extended consolidation phase to regain strength.
Examining the spending behavior of long-term holders makes this depletion even clearer. Since the market peak in July 2025, long-term holders have steadily increased their spending, with the 30-day simple moving average rising from a baseline of 10,000 BTC to over 22,000 BTC daily. Such sustained distribution indicates that experienced investors are facing profit-taking pressure, a key factor in the current market vulnerability.

Having assessed the risk of a prolonged bearish phase resulting from demand depletion, we now turn to the options market to gauge short-term sentiment and observe how speculators are positioning amid rising uncertainty.
On-Chain Insights
Rising Open Interest in Futures
Bitcoin futures' open interest has reached a new all-time high and continues to expand, signaling a structural evolution in market behavior. Investors are increasingly using futures to hedge risk exposure or speculate on volatility rather than selling spot. This shift reduces direct selling pressure in the spot market but amplifies short-term volatility driven by market maker hedging activities.
With the growth of open interest in futures contracts, price volatility is more likely to be driven by funding flows in the futures and perpetual contract markets, led by Delta and Gamma. Understanding these dynamics is becoming increasingly important, as options positions now play a dominant role in shaping short-term market trends and amplifying reactions to macro and on-chain catalysts.

Volatility Regime Shift
Since the liquidation event on the 10th, the volatility pattern has undergone a significant change. Implied volatility is now around 48 across all maturities, up from 36-43 just two weeks ago. The market has not fully absorbed this shock yet, and market makers are cautious, not selling volatility cheaply.
The 30-day realized volatility is at 44.1%, while the 10-day realized volatility is at 27.9%. As the realized volatility gradually cools off, we can expect the implied volatility to follow suit and normalize in the coming weeks. For now, the volatility remains elevated, but it appears more like a short-term repricing rather than the start of a sustained high-volatility regime.

Increased Put Option Demand
In the past two weeks, demand for put options has steadily risen. The surge in large-scale liquidations has driven a sharp increase in put option skew, which, although briefly reset, has since stabilized at a structurally higher level, indicating that put options are still more expensive than call options.
The skew in the 1-week maturity over the past week has been oscillating but staying in a highly uncertain territory, while all other maturities have further shifted 2-3 volatility points towards put options. This inter-maturity widening indicates a cautious sentiment spreading across the entire curve.
This structure reflects a market willing to pay a premium for downside protection while maintaining limited upside exposure, balancing short-term fears with long-term prospects. Tuesday's minor rebound illustrates this sensitivity, with put option premiums halving within hours, showing how tense the market sentiment still is.

Shift in Risk Premium
The 1-month volatility risk premium has turned negative. For months, implied volatility remained high while actual price volatility stayed calm, allowing volatility sellers to enjoy consistent returns.
Now, actual volatility has surged to match implied volatility, erasing this advantage. This marks the end of the calm regime: volatility sellers can no longer rely on passive income and are instead forced to actively hedge in a more volatile environment. The market has transitioned from a state of quiet contentment to a more dynamic, swiftly reacting environment, with the return of real price volatility putting increasing pressure on short positions.

Defensive Fund Flow
To focus the analysis on the very short term, we zoom in on the past 24 hours, observing how options positions responded to the recent bounce. Despite the price rebounding from $107.5k to $113.9k, a 6% increase, the buying pressure on call options didn't offer much confirmation. Instead, traders increased their put option exposure, effectively locking in at a higher price level.
This position layout has market makers holding a bearish posture on the downside and a bullish one on the upside, a setup that usually leads them to dampen rallies and accelerate selling, creating a dynamic that will continue to act as resistance until the positions reset.


Premium
Glassnode's aggregated premium data, segmented by the strike price, confirmed the same pattern. At the $120k call options, the premium sold increased as the price rose; traders are curbing the uptrend and selling volatility during what they perceive to be a temporary strength. Short-term profit seekers are taking advantage of the surge in implied volatility by selling call options on the rebound rather than chasing the rise.

Looking at the $105k put options premium, the pattern is reversed, affirming our argument. As the price rises, the net premium for the $105k put options increased. Traders are more eager to pay for downside protection rather than purchase upside convexity. This indicates that the recent bounce faced hedging rather than conviction.

Conclusion
Bitcoin's recent pullback to the short-term holder cost basis ($113k) and below the 0.85 quantile ($108.6k) highlights the growing exhaustion of demand as the market struggles to attract new inflows while long-term holders continue to distribute. This structural weakness suggests that the market may require a longer consolidation phase to rebuild confidence and absorb the sold supply.
Meanwhile, the options market reflects a similarly cautious tone. Despite record high open interest, the position layout leans defensive; the put skew remains elevated, volatility sellers are under pressure, and the short-term bounce faces hedging rather than optimism. In conclusion, these signals indicate that the market is in a transitional phase: a period of waning enthusiasm and suppressed structural risk-taking, with recovery likely dependent on reviving spot demand and alleviating volatility-driven fund flows.
You may also like

Giannis Antetokounmpo's Investment in Kalshi Sparks Outrage: Idol Crossover or Insider Trading Scheme?

Mr. Beast Acquires Step: Top Streamer Enters Teen Finance Race?

Not Just Guessing Right or Wrong, Market Prediction Is Getting More and More “Fun”

$55,000 will be Bitcoin's make-or-break level

February 10th Key Market Information Gap, A Must-See! | Alpha Morning Report

About ERC-8004: Everything You Need to Know

ai.com's Debut Flop: After $70 Million Transaction, Did It Get a '504' Timeout?

FedNow versus The Clearing House: Who Will Win the Fed Payments Fray?

Recovering $70,000 in Lost Funds: The "Fragile Logic" Behind Bitcoin's Rebound

Mr. Beast acquires Step, Farcaster Founder Joins Tempo, what are the international crypto circles talking about today?

February 9th Market Key Intelligence, How Much Did You Miss?

After being questioned by Vitalik, L2s are collectively saying goodbye to the "cheap" era
WEEX AI Trading Hackathon Paris Workshop Reveals: How Retail Crypto Traders Can Outperform Hedge Funds
Witness how WEEX's Paris AI Trading Hackathon revealed AI's edge over human traders. Explore key strategies, live competition results & how to build your own AI trading bot.

U.S. Oil (USOR) Price Prediction 2026–2030
Key Takeaways U.S. Oil (USOR) is a speculative Solana-based crypto project that aims to index the United States…

USOR Surges on Meme Narrative Despite No Real-World Asset Backing
Key Takeaways: USOR, a Solana-based token, has seen a notable surge driven by speculative narratives rather than verifiable…

How to Buy U.S. Oil Reserve (USOR) Cryptocurrency
Key Takeaways U.S. Oil Reserve (USOR) is a Solana-based token primarily traded on decentralized exchanges (DEXs). Claims have…

USOR vs Oil ETFs: Understanding Why the ‘Oil Reserve’ Token Doesn’t Track Crude Prices
Key Takeaways The U.S. Oil Reserve (USOR) token has become noteworthy for its claims, yet it does not…

Trend Research Reduces Ether Holdings After Major Market Turbulence
Key Takeaways: Trend Research has significantly cut down its Ether holdings, moving over 404,000 ETH to exchanges recently.…