Bitcoin’s implied volatility has dipped to yearly lows as price action remains muted in a tight $100K–$110K range. Traders are now pushing bullish bets into September, amid fading near-term catalysts.

Bitcoin in a Lull as Market Awaits Catalyst

Bitcoin is showing signs of summer slumber as implied volatility (vol) measures continue to decline, marking fresh one-year lows. Despite appearing “cheap” on an options pricing basis, and realized volatility, the actual movement in BTC price has been even more subdued, reinforcing the market’s sideways drift.

According to QCP’s latest insights, history shows that such summer slowdowns are not unusual. Data from the past 2 years suggests that front-end vols tend to soften into July. A similar pattern played out in 2023 when 1-month at-the-money vols fell from 80v in March to 40v by midsummer as BTC repeatedly failed to break the $70,000 barrier.

Currently, bitcoin is range-bound between $100,000 and $110,000, with no clear fundamental driver in sight to spark a breakout. Macroeconomic news, including last Friday’s stronger-than-expected US jobs report, moved equities and gold, but left BTC flat. Spot ETF inflows have tapered, perpetual open interest has softened, and bullish sentiment appears delayed rather than dead.

Options traders are repositioning accordingly. Significant rolling of July topside strikes out to September, suggests that investors have shifted their expectations for any meaningful rally later into Q3.

For now, traders eye upcoming US economic data, such as Wednesday’s CPI and Thursday’s PPI and unemployment claims, as potential catalysts. Until then, the market may remain stuck in neutral, with fading excitement and tightening trading ranges.


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