According to a recent report shared by David Lawant, head of research at Anchorage Digital, demand to hedge against downside risks in Bitcoin options remains elevated. The study indicates that both crypto-focused investors and participants in exchange-traded funds are intensifying efforts to protect themselves from potential declines.
Three markets analyzed together
The report reviews option activity across Deribit, BlackRock’s iShares Bitcoin Trust (IBIT), and shares of Strategy (MSTR). Anchorage Digital highlights that analyzing these three platforms together provides a broader view of trends among crypto-native investors, institutional players, and retail participants compared to a single market perspective.
Anchorage Digital is recognized as a US-based financial firm that provides custody, trading, and infrastructure services in digital assets. The report notes that a strong preference for puts persisted on both Deribit and the IBIT options market. This trend shows that investors are opting to pay premiums for downside protection instead of betting on major price rallies.
The report finds that defensive positioning has reached the 82nd percentile in IBIT’s history and the 84th percentile in Deribit’s last five years.
Short term risk perception comes to the fore
The research points to a notable volatility structure in Bitcoin options through 2026. Specifically, the market has priced implied volatility for the upcoming week higher than that for the next month nearly half the year. The report states that, while such inversions have historically appeared occasionally and briefly, this time macroeconomic, geopolitical, and crypto-specific events have made the pattern stand out more sharply.
This landscape suggests that option investors are prioritizing management of short term uncertainties rather than making firm directional bets. Lawant notes that a return of one month implied volatility outpacing weekly levels would imply that the market has grown more comfortable looking beyond immediate risks.
Pressure mounts on Strategy, but no panic signals
Anchorage Digital’s analysis shows a cautious approach among Strategy investors, yet no sign that participants are bracing for a severe downturn. Despite recent weakness in both its preferred and common shares, the level of stress in Strategy’s options market has not reached those witnessed during previous sharp corrections.
Strategy’s perpetual preferred share, STRC, slid to as low as $82.53 on June 22, trading about 17% below its $100 nominal value. After the company announced its cash reserves had risen to $1.3 billion, the share price partially recovered. As of Thursday, STRC was trading around $77, roughly 23% below nominal value.
The weakness did not stop at STRC. Yahoo Finance data shows Strategy’s common stock, MSTR, has fallen about 78% over the past year and was changing hands near $87 on Thursday.
Nevertheless, the report underscores that the put demand in MSTR options has not approached levels associated with forced deleveraging or fears of a broader crisis. Led by Michael Saylor as its executive chairman, Strategy became one of the early adopters of the corporate Bitcoin treasury model in 2020. The company currently holds 847,363 BTC on its balance sheet.




