
Bitcoin Falters as Cryptocurrency Gains Traction in Washington and on Wall Street
Bitcoin Stalls at $80,000 Amid Shift in Investor Sentiment
Bitcoin has stalled around $80,000 despite a steady drumbeat of developments that suggest digital assets are becoming more deeply embedded in mainstream finance. In Washington, lawmakers are moving ahead with a closely watched crypto market structure bill. JPMorgan Chase & Co. is expanding its tokenized finance efforts. Charles Schwab Corp. is widening access to spot-Bitcoin and Ether trading. Large financial groups continue to back new crypto infrastructure bets.
However, the price of Bitcoin itself has barely moved. The disconnect may reflect a shift in how investors express optimism about the sector. The more revealing signal is not in the spot market, but in derivatives, where traders appear unconvinced that any of this amounts to an immediate catalyst for Bitcoin itself.
| Derivative Trading | Implied Volatility | Short-Dated Options |
|---|---|---|
| Lowest levels of the year | Near | Trading near lowest levels of the year |
Read also: Bitcoin Price Sinks 6% Below $66,500 Amid ETF Outflows and Institutional Selling
According to crypto analytics firm Block Scholes, short-dated Bitcoin options are trading near their lowest implied volatility levels of the year, suggesting little appetite to pay for protection against sharp price swings. Seven-day contracts still carry a modest premium for downside hedging, but not the sort of anxiety or directional conviction usually associated with a market anticipating a breakout or a selloff.
Traders appear to be assigning little event risk to the Senate's expected markup of crypto legislation, despite the political attention surrounding it. This stands in contrast to options on Coinbase Global Inc. shares, where contracts spanning the debate period carry a clearer implied volatility premium. The implication is that, if Washington does prove market-moving, investors increasingly see crypto-linked companies rather than Bitcoin itself as the more direct vehicle for that trade.
That marks a notable shift. Bitcoin long served as the market's blunt instrument for crypto optimism, rising on regulatory enthusiasm, institutional endorsements or infrastructure developments whether or not they directly affected the asset. However, the recent data suggests that investors are increasingly looking to other areas of the market to express their optimism.
There are still sources of support. Bitcoin exchange-traded funds have absorbed nearly $2 billion over the past month, underscoring persistent demand even as the broader macro backdrop has become less accommodating. Meanwhile, one of Bitcoin's more reliable sources of supply appears to be easing. Bitfinex analysts say long-term holders continue to accumulate while miners, helped by stronger economics, are selling less inventory into the market. That should gradually tighten available supply, though more likely over months than days.
Read also: Bitcoin's Inflation-Hedging Potential Erodes as Price Falls Below $70,000
The result is a market that appears structurally supported but tactically indifferent.
Investor Takeaway
Investors may be expressing optimism about the crypto sector through derivatives rather than spot market activity.
More in General

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