The crypto market is under the spotlight this week as approximately $14 billion in Bitcoin (BTC) options are set to expire at 08:00 UTC this Friday (March 27) on Deribit—the platform accounting for the vast majority of global Bitcoin options liquidity. This event unfolds as BTC prices hover around the $70,000 mark, significantly lower than the $75,000 level where a large concentration of derivatives positions is clustered.

Notably, the expiry coincides with the period mentioned in Donald Trump’s recent “5-day ceasefire” proposal, raising the possibility that derivatives and geopolitical factors could simultaneously influence market sentiment.

The $75,000 level could act as a short-term ‘magnet’ for Bitcoin, drawing prices toward major strike clusters or trigger heightened volatility once options expire.

$14B Bitcoin Options Expiry Due Friday

According to Deribit, approximately $14 billion in Bitcoin options is scheduled to expire at 08:00 UTC on Friday, equivalent to around 200,000 contracts in open interest on the platform. A put/call ratio of 0.62 indicates that positioning remains slightly tilted toward call options, while the sheer scale of this expiry makes it the focal point of the derivatives market this week.

Open Interest by Strike Price.

Open Interest by Strike Price. Source: Deribit

Open interest distribution shows that the bulk of positions is concentrated at strikes around the $75,000 level, often considered “max pain”—the point where the greatest number of contracts are likely to expire worthless.

BTC price chart (4H).BTC price chart (4H).

BTC price chart (4H). Source: TradingView

Meanwhile, Bitcoin is currently trading around the $69,000–$71,000 range, approximately $4,000–$6,000 below the liquidity-heavy zone. This gap places the market in a sensitive state as the expiry nears, with attention focused on how the price reacts around major strike clusters in the short term.

$75K Emerges as a Magnet for Bitcoin Price Action

The current positioning structure places the $75,000 level at the center of short-term price behavior. Deribit data reveals heavy open interest concentration at strikes in this area, where both call and put contracts hold significant volume.

Jean-David Péquignot, CCO of Deribit, told CoinDesk that the $75,000 level is currently creating a “gravitational pull” on the market while Bitcoin continues to trade below this level.

This effect stems primarily from market maker hedging activities. When the price is below major strike levels, they tend to buy to hedge risks from the contracts they have sold. Conversely, if the price moves above, they sell to rebalance their positions.

This mechanism creates a two-way “magnet” effect around the $75,000 price point—pulling the price toward the max pain area while also providing a push once the price breaks through. Consequently, the market often experiences “price pinning,” where the price fluctuates around major strike clusters before expiry. In the current context, this increases the likelihood of Bitcoin being drawn toward the $75,000 area in the short term, unless a breakout strong enough to shift the hedging structure occurs.

Bitcoin’s Reaction to Previous Big Expiries

Previous major expiries show that Bitcoin’s price behavior typically follows a relatively consistent pattern, where hedging activities dominate short-term fluctuations before the market releases pressure post-expiry.

In the December 2025 expiry (~$23.6 billion), Bitcoin fluctuated within a multi-week accumulation zone due to year-end liquidity declines. After the contracts expired on December 26, the price remained stable.

In the November 2025 expiry (~$13.3 billion), BTC traded significantly below max pain but recorded a recovery rally leading up to the expiry date to move closer to that zone—clearly reflecting the “magnet” effect.

Additionally, the March 2025 expiry (~$12.1 billion) occurred amid a bullish market with strong ETF inflows. A low put/call ratio (~0.49) showed buyers in control, pulling the price toward major call strikes without leading to negative volatility after expiry.

These past market reactions indicate that prices are often pinned around key levels before expiry, while true volatility tends to increase after the contracts have lapsed.

Scenario Analysis: Price Drift vs Range-Bound

Base Case: Price Drifts Toward $75K 

In the most common scenario, with Bitcoin currently trading around $69,000–$71,000, it may continue to be drawn toward the $75,000 zone as hedging activity intensifies before the expiry date. With the majority of open interest concentrated around this area, market maker risk-management mechanisms tend to dampen volatility and keep the price within a narrow range. In this case, the market could see a slow upward drift, with controlled fluctuations as the price nears the open interest concentration.

Bitcoin Remains Range-Bound Below $75K 

Conversely, if buying pressure from the spot market weakens, Bitcoin may continue to consolidate within a narrow range around $69,000–$71,000.

While Max Pain sits at $75,000, the price zone around $70,000 is also a “not-bad zone” for Market Makers. At the $70,000 strike, Open Interest for both Calls and Puts is in a state of relative equilibrium. This allows market makers to maintain a neutral position without engaging in costly hedging activities. If buying momentum in the coming days is insufficient, Bitcoin is likely to anchor around the 70k zone until the deadline.

Regardless of the scenario, the low Put/Call Ratio (0.62) suggests that long-term optimistic sentiment still prevails, even if prices may be temporarily suppressed by options structures.

What’s Next for Bitcoin After Options Expiry

While the impact of the expiry event is considered short-term for the crypto market, it partially influences BTC’s overall positioning and trend during this period.

Once contracts expire over the weekend, hedging pressure will subside, and the market tends to return to more fundamental drivers such as spot demand, ETF flows, and the macro environment. This is typically when real trends begin to take shape.

Crucially, this expiry occurs close to the timeline of the “5-day ceasefire” proposal recently mentioned by Donald Trump. If the US-Iran conflict scenario turns more positive, Bitcoin could enter a period of heightened volatility once derivatives factors no longer dominate the short term. Conversely, if geopolitical factors do not unfold as expected, post-expiry volatility could become even more unpredictable.

This suggests that while the $75,000 mark may act as a “magnet” leading up to expiry, Bitcoin’s true direction will likely be determined by external catalysts in the following days.

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