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I just saw in the options market that traders' fear really spiked this week. Buyers of put options for downside protection are spending record amounts — reaching as high as $685 million last month. The put/call open interest ratio rose to 0.84, the highest level since June 2021, and put premiums relative to spot volume hit an all-time high of 4 basis points. This seems to signal serious anxiety in the market.
But here's the interesting part — while sentiment is defensive, the actual price action has become more stable. Realized volatility has dropped from around 80 down to 50, and funding rates for leveraged positions have fallen to 2.7% from 4.1%. Meaning, speculative bets are weakening. So we see a disconnect — spot prices are stabilizing, but fear indicators are at record levels. It’s like insurance premiums are rising while the actual risk is decreasing.
Here’s the kicker based on VanEck data — historically, when we see such extreme fear readings, they usually mark turning points rather than further crashes. Over the past six years, similar options skew levels have been followed by an average 13% Bitcoin gain over 90 days and 133% over 360 days. So, the record-high downside protection premium could be a contrarian signal worth monitoring. On-chain selling pressure from miners remains controlled, and realized losses have dropped to around $400M daily from a peak of $2 billion, suggesting forced selling is easing.