The idea that bitcoin (BTC) typically moves in lockstep with the S&P 500 is generally accepted by now. The positive correlation, however, may be tested in the lead-up to the U.S. elections as options market pricing points to diverging trends.
On Monday, bitcoin options listed on dominant crypto exchange Deribit exhibited a noticeable skew (bias) for short-term calls relative to puts, capturing the U.S. election and its result, due Nov. 8, according to data tracked by analytics platform Block Scholes.
Meanwhile, short-term options tied to Wall Street’s benchmark equity index, the S&P 500, showed a bias for put options.
The relatively stronger demand for bitcoin calls is a sign of traders anticipating upside volatility or higher price movements around election time. A call option gives the buyer an asymmetric upside, allowing the entity to hedge against or profit from a price rally.
The bias for the S&P 500 puts suggests fears of downside volatility because a put option offers protection from price losses. Note that it’s common for the index options skew to show a bias for puts due to several reasons, including tail risk hedging by portfolio managers.
Still, the divergence between bitcoin and S&P 500 options is “setting the stage for something big,” according to Block Scholes’ CEO and Founder Eamonn Gashier.
“Either the strong positive correlation between BTC and the S&P 500 is about to break and flip negative, or one of these markets is mispriced. The excitement lies in the uncertainty — are we on the brink of seeing Bitcoin decouple from equities, or are traders in one market about to get caught off-guard?,” Gashier told CoinDesk.