Weekly Bitcoin options expired on July 3 with 31,000 contracts settling, as reported by on-chain options data. The put-call ratio of 0.7 confirmed that calls outnumbered puts significantly. With a max pain point of $61,000, the settlement mechanics leaned toward a script familiar to options sellers: pinning price to a level where the most value evaporates.
Max pain theory holds that options writers — often market makers with net short gamma — have an incentive to hedge in a way that nudges spot toward the strike where the aggregate open interest of both puts and calls would expire worthless. This isn’t a conspiracy; it’s a product of delta-hedging flows. When 31,000 contracts are at stake across multiple strikes, the hedging activity amplifies drift toward $61,000. A similar setup appeared in a larger expiry earlier this year, when $6.25 billion in Bitcoin options pushed max pain to $75,000 against a heavy call wall.
A put-call ratio below 1 is typically read as bullish — there are more calls than puts. But traders who track options flows understand that elevated call buying can also reflect hedging of short positions or the sale of covered calls, which is bearish. The July 3 profile, with 0.7, suggests the retail crowd was leaning long, but it doesn’t guarantee follow-through. During the last large expiry, nearly $2.9 billion in combined BTC and ETH options expired with market participants watching $74,000 and $2,100 levels carefully, underscoring how these expiries act as pivot zones rather than directional triggers.
Options don’t exist in a vacuum. Recent data on spot Bitcoin ETF flows reveals that institutional capital continues to concentrate into BTC. Bitcoin ETFs pulled in $786 million in a single week, far outpacing altcoin products. That persistent bid absorbs sell-side pressure around any expiry-driven dips.
Meanwhile, exchange whale concentration data indicates that the largest wallets are moving coins off exchanges, which typically reduces immediate selling potential. Bitcoin whale concentration on exchanges recently hit an 11-year high, with 64% of inflows coming from just 10 wallets. That metric usually rises during periods of accumulation, even if it can flash caution when those whales start depositing.
Even as short-term options mechanics tug at price, broader liquidity indicators suggest Bitcoin’s fair value sits much higher. Global liquidity models peg fair value near $165,000, based on Bitcoin’s historically tight correlation with central bank balance sheets and money supply trends. That doesn’t mean price will reach that level next week, but it provides a powerful gravitational pull that makes sustained drops below $60,000 harder to justify over a multi-month horizon unless liquidity conditions deteriorate sharply.
The July 3 expiry passed without a violent dislocation, and that alone is a signal. Max pain at $61,000 worked as described, flattening open interest expectations without triggering a cascade. The put-call ratio of 0.7 reveals a market still betting on upside, but the structural backdrop of ETF inflows and whale accumulation is the more durable narrative. Options expiries matter mostly when they break, not when they pin. Right now, Bitcoin is absorbing these weekly resets without breaking the broader liquidity-driven thesis. That’s not a call to buy blindly — it’s a recognition that the path of least resistance hasn’t changed yet.
<p>The post 31,000 Bitcoin Options Expire with $61K Max Pain as Markets Parse a 0.7 Put-Call Ratio first appeared on Crypto News And Market Updates | BTCUSA.</p>


