Over $15 billion in crypto options contracts expire today, March 27, marking a rare triple settlement at the close of the week, the month, and the first quarter of 2026. The massive notional value makes this one of the largest options expiry events of the year, with traders bracing for heightened volatility around the Deribit settlement window.
$15B Options Expiry: Why the Triple Confluence Matters
The expiry covers both Bitcoin and Ethereum options, with combined notional value exceeding $15 billion. Deribit, which handles the vast majority of BTC and ETH options volume, processes settlement at its standard 08:00 UTC cut.
End-of-quarter expiries tend to be the largest of any given year. Weekly, monthly, and quarterly contracts all converge on a single date, stacking open interest far beyond a typical Friday settlement. This concentration of expiring contracts amplifies what traders call “pinning pressure,” where spot prices gravitate toward strikes with the highest open interest as market makers hedge and unwind positions.
The scale of today’s event dwarfs routine weekly expiries. Previous end-of-quarter settlements have historically coincided with elevated intraday volatility in the hours leading up to and immediately following the Deribit cut. This quarter’s expiry arrives amid a period of already choppy price action, with Bitcoin ETF flows swinging sharply in recent sessions.
Max Pain and the Price Levels Traders Are Watching
The key metric heading into any large expiry is the “max pain” price, the strike at which option sellers (primarily market makers) face the least aggregate loss. Spot prices tend to drift toward max pain as expiry approaches, since dealers adjust hedges that push price in that direction.
The put/call ratio across expiring contracts signals whether the options market leans bearish or bullish heading into settlement. A ratio above 1.0 indicates more protective puts than speculative calls, suggesting hedging demand outweighs directional bets. The gap between current spot price and the max pain strike, expressed as a percentage, tells traders whether pinning pressure is pulling price up or down.
Open interest clusters at round-number strikes act as gravity points. For Bitcoin, large clusters of call open interest above spot create resistance, while concentrations of put open interest below act as support. Ethereum follows the same dynamic, though with thinner liquidity and wider spreads that can produce sharper moves. Traders watching broader crypto market developments will want to monitor these levels closely into settlement.
What to Watch After the 08:00 UTC Expiry Cut
Once settlement clears, the immediate question is whether volatility compresses or expands. If spot price sits near max pain at the cut, dealers’ hedges are largely flat, and a “vol crush” typically follows as gamma exposure drops. If spot is far from max pain, the unwinding of hedges can trigger a sharp directional move in either direction.
Liquidity thins heading into the weekend, which can amplify any post-expiry price swings. End-of-quarter fund rebalancing across traditional equity markets adds another variable, as institutional flows sometimes spill into crypto. The key BTC and ETH support and resistance levels defined by today’s open interest clusters remain the levels to watch through the weekend, particularly as broader market sentiment continues to shift.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial or investment advice. Cryptocurrency and digital asset markets carry significant risk. Always do your own research before making decisions.