Bitcoins [BTC] falls below $84,000 before option expiration, and timing matters.
Bitcoin price trends are lower on the daily chart, making lower highs since October, indicating weakening momentum. Volume increases during sales; therefore, sellers remain active.
Source: Deribit/X
Meanwhile, DVOL rose about 9% to 41.6, at the time of writing, due to rising demand for protection. This volatility peak is consistent with the expiration position and not with a deep structural break.

Source: Deribit/X
Still, the structure showed caution where the market failed to reclaim the $90,000 zone and the recovery quickly faded.
Market sentiment has shifted to a defensive stance rather than a panicky stance. Overall, expiration pressure is amplifying the dip, while the broader trend remains vulnerable.
The expiration of options calls the price cautious
BTC is trading sideways, ahead of its January 30 expiration, and options data increases near-term excitement.
At the time of writing, Total Notional The value was approximately $7.26 billion, underscoring the size of the capital clustered around this event.
In the last 24 hours, BTC Put/Call ratio rose to 1.11, reflecting a short-term bias towards downside protection. However, the overall positioning still shows a lower put/call ratio of 0.44, meaning that calls dominate the overall open interest.

Source: Deribit
This split signals caution rather than capitulation. Traders hedge short-term risks while maintaining broader upside exposure. Meanwhile, the maximum pain is at $90,000, reinforcing its role as a price magnet, while the spot hovers just below.
As expiration approaches, positioning could push BTC near this level or amplify sharp hedge-driven volatility around key strikes.
Ethereum [ETH] reflects caution, but with a softer conviction.
Total options fictional amounts to almost $1.17 billion, confirming significant capital clustered around key strikes.

Source: Deribit
Over the past 24 hours, ETH’s Put/Call ratio has risen to 1.38 at the time of writing, signaling increased demand for downside protection.
However, the broader Open Interest showed a Put/Call of 0.67 ratioThis means that calls still dominate structurally, despite short-term hedging.
Maximum pain at $3100 anchors expectations and limits aggressive directional bets. Overall, the positioning suggests that the market is experiencing constructive but fragile sentiment.
Traders remain structurally optimistic, but still respect the short-term risk. So the expiration is likely to increase volatility around key levels rather than decisively resolving the broader trend.
The drop in the BTC hashrate reinforces the market’s vulnerability
Bitcoins hashrate records the biggest drop since October 2021, and the catalyst is clear. Severe US winter storms forced miners offline, causing the hashrate to drop by about 12% to around 970 EH/s.
However, the decline started earlier, as BTC corrected from $126,000 to almost $100,000, squeezing miners’ margins.

Source: CryptoQuant/X
When the BTC price fell, less efficient platforms were closed, amplifying the hashrate decline. Historically, the hashrate goes up over time, with the drops marking periods of stress.
In 2021, a sharp drop in hashrate preceded consolidation and then a strong recovery.
Likewise, restoring power, stabilizing prices and improving mining profitability could see hashrates rise again, restoring confidence and supporting broader market sentiment.
Final thoughts
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Expiration-based positioning, rising volatility and miner stress point to a defensive market, not panic, with BTC vulnerable to short-term swings around key levels.
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Despite the price weakness and a 12% hashrate drop, historical patterns indicate that network recovery and stabilization could restore confidence once the temporary shocks pass.
