© 07-01 , 10:27

Ethereum Options Signal Split Outlook as Short-Term Hedging Rises

TokenPost.ai

Ethereum (ETH) options positioning is sending a mixed message: longer-dated open interest remains skewed toward upside exposure, while the latest 24-hour flow shows slightly stronger demand for near-term downside protection. The split suggests traders are broadly maintaining a constructive medium-term bias but increasingly hedging against short-term volatility.

As of Tuesday 02:22 UTC, data compiled by Coinglass showed total Ethereum options 'open interest' (OI) at $3.60059 billion, while 24-hour options turnover reached roughly $970.09 million. Calls accounted for 57.55% of total OI versus 42.45% for puts, indicating a larger stock of outstanding bullish contracts. However, over the past 24 hours, calls represented 48.10% of trading volume compared with 51.90% for puts—an inversion that points to more active demand for short-dated hedges.

The divergence between accumulated positioning and recent flow is often interpreted as a market balancing two narratives at once: expectations for higher prices later in the year alongside caution about near-term drawdowns. In practice, that can mean traders are holding longer-dated call structures while using short-term puts to manage risk around potential catalysts and abrupt price swings.

On Deribit, the largest OI concentrations were clustered in long-dated call contracts expiring Dec. 25, led by the $3,200 strike, followed by $2,200 and $3,500 calls. The heavy weighting toward higher strikes highlights the extent to which some participants remain positioned for a broader recovery or year-end upside, even if the timing is uncertain.

By contrast, the most actively traded contracts over the past day were concentrated in short-dated expiries on Bybit, reflecting traders’ focus on immediate price action. The top contract by 24-hour volume was a $1,650 call expiring June 30, followed by a $1,575 put expiring the same day, and a $1,600 call—an arrangement consistent with rapid repositioning into the front end of the curve as spot conditions fluctuate.

Options are derivatives that allow investors to express leveraged views or hedge existing exposure. A 'call option' grants the right to buy an asset at a predetermined price, typically used for bullish positioning, while a 'put option' grants the right to sell, commonly used to hedge or express downside expectations. 'Open interest' measures the number of outstanding contracts and is often used to gauge how much positioning has accumulated, in contrast to volume, which reflects the latest trading activity.