Bitcoin’s Wild Ride: How Market Makers Turned a Dip into a Disaster

Ah, the crypto market-where fortunes are made and lost faster than you can say “blockchain.” Recently, Bitcoin took a nosedive from a lofty $77,000 to a less-than-lofty $60,000, leaving investors clutching their digital wallets and wondering what on earth just happened. Was it the macro forces? The ETF holders capitulating like a bad reality TV breakup? Sure, those played a part. But let’s not forget the unsung heroes of financial chaos: the market makers. Yes, those folks who keep the trading world humming along-until they don’t.

According to Markus Thielen, the brain behind 10x Research, these market makers were busy being “short gamma” between $60,000 and $75,000. If that sounds like financial gibberish, think of it as standing on a ladder that’s missing a few rungs. As Bitcoin tumbled, these ladder-standers had to sell Bitcoin in the spot and futures markets to keep their balance, which, of course, only made the ladder wobble more. It’s like trying to stop a sneeze by yelling “DON’T SNEEZE!”-it just makes things worse.

Thielen estimates that a whopping $1.5 billion in negative options gamma between $75,000 and $60,000 acted like a financial black hole, sucking Bitcoin downward. “Negative gamma” is just a fancy way of saying, “We’re in trouble, and we’re dragging everyone with us.” As prices fell, market makers sold more Bitcoin to hedge their bets, creating a self-feeding cycle of despair. It’s the financial equivalent of a snowball fight where the snowballs are made of concrete.

But hey, it’s not all doom and gloom. Remember late 2023? Market makers were short options above $36,000, and when Bitcoin surged past that, they had to buy BTC to rebalance, sending prices soaring above $40,000. So, they’re not always the villains-just occasionally the architects of financial rollercoasters.

In the end, Bitcoin’s plunge wasn’t just about macro pressures or ETF holders losing their nerve. It was a perfect storm of hedging, gamma, and a dash of financial panic. So, the next time you see Bitcoin take a wild ride, remember: it’s not just the market moving-it’s the market makers, quietly (or not so quietly) steering the ship. Or, more accurately, accidentally sinking it.

Read More

2026-02-09 13:32