Litcius/Paper detail

Net buying pressure and the information in bitcoin option trades

Carol Alexander, Jun Deng, Jianfen Feng, Huning Wan

2022Journal of Financial Markets32 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Bitcoin prices are driven by upward as well as downward jumps and so the bitcoin implied volatility surface behaves differently from those of established options markets. We analyze tick-level Deribit option price data, demonstrating increasing support for the limits-to-arbitrage hypothesis. Hence market makers are managing order imbalance and inventory more effectively as Deribit bitcoin options trading volumes increases. On the demand side, volatility traders drive both at-the-money and out-of-the-money option prices, the latter also being driven by directional traders. Directional effects were most pronounced during the price bubble of 2021. Further refinements of our tests assess time-to-maturity and time-of-day effects.

Topics & Concepts

Volatility (finance)EconomicsMoneynessArbitragePrice discoveryMonetary economicsOrder (exchange)Limits to arbitrageFinancial economicsImplied volatilityEconomic bubbleMaturity (psychological)FinanceFutures contractPsychologyDevelopmental psychologyBlockchain Technology Applications and SecurityMarket Dynamics and VolatilityFinancial Markets and Investment Strategies