
Ethereum Options Traders Exhibit Relative Strength vs. Bitcoin
Recent derivatives data reveals a notable divergence in sentiment between the two largest cryptocurrencies. While the broader crypto market remains cautious, Ethereum options traders are positioning with less bearishness than their Bitcoin counterparts. This suggests professional traders perceive a lower immediate downside risk for ETH compared to BTC, a view supported by recent relative price performance. Ethereum is down approximately 19% since October, while Bitcoin has declined 25% over the same period.
Analyzing the Skew: A Tale of Two Markets
The key metric highlighting this divergence is the options skew. For longer-dated 90-day contracts, Ethereum’s skew sits at -1.7%, which analysts describe as “noticeably more bullish” than Bitcoin’s -4% skew. A negative skew indicates a greater demand for protective put options over bullish calls, but the depth of that negativity is crucial. “Traders are more eager to buy insurance for Bitcoin than for Ethereum,” noted Sean Dawson, head of research at Derive.
Catalysts Behind Ethereum’s Relative Resilience
Several fundamental factors are contributing to Ethereum’s firmer footing in the derivatives market. Analysts point to a combination of network upgrades, institutional activity, and shifting macroeconomic expectations as key drivers.
The Fusaka Upgrade and Institutional Support
The recent Fusaka upgrade, designed to improve layer-2 network efficiency, has provided a positive technical catalyst. Furthermore, significant treasury purchases by entities like BitMine have demonstrated institutional confidence. Thahbib Rahman of Block Scholes draws parallels to the market structure in May 2025, which preceded a major rally fueled by similar catalysts and strong ETF inflows.
Macroeconomic Tailwinds
Improving macroeconomic uncertainty, with markets increasingly pricing in potential Federal Reserve rate cuts, has created a more favorable backdrop for risk assets like Ethereum. This macro shift is helping to thaw the deep bearish sentiment that has dominated recent months.
Caution Remains Despite Improved Sentiment
Despite the improved skew, experts urge caution. The market is “very far from the bullish sentiment we saw at the start of Q4,” Dawson advised. While the BlockScholes Risk-Appetite Index for Ethereum shows signs of bottoming—a historical precursor to sentiment turnarounds—a sustained rally likely requires a missing ingredient: consistent inflows into spot Ethereum ETFs.
Retail vs. Professional Sentiment Divergence
Interestingly, retail prediction markets paint a different picture. On platforms like Myriad, users give Bitcoin a 75% chance of hitting $100,000 before falling to $69,000, a far more bullish outlook than the 49% chance they assign Ethereum reaching $4,000 before dropping to $2,500. This highlights a significant gap between retail optimism for Bitcoin and the more measured, slightly less bearish professional positioning on Ethereum seen in options data.
In summary, while neither market is pricing in a dramatic “Santa rally,” Ethereum’s derivatives landscape shows a tentative reduction in bearish positioning relative to Bitcoin. The convergence of technical upgrades, institutional buying, and a friendlier macro outlook has provided ETH with a measure of resilience, though sustained ETF inflows remain the key to unlocking a more decisive bullish move.





