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Bitcoin's Implied Volatility Reaches 2021 Peak Amid Elon Musk Drama

source-logo  u.today 17 May 2021 16:33, UTC

Bitcoin's implied volatility spiked to its highest level in 2021 over the weekend after a series of tweets by Tesla CEO Elon Musk caused a ruckus within the cryptocurrency community, according to data provided by Skew.

The mercurial centibillionaire came up with a scaling proposal for Dogecoin, criticized Bitcoin's alleged centralization, called out "obnoxious" Bitcoiners, implied that Tesla might have sold all of its Bitcoin and then clarified that that was not the case the day after tanking the market.

One-week implied volatility for Bitcoin has now spiked to a whopping 146.5 percent.

Implied volatility

The largest cryptocurrency dropped to its lowest level since Feb. 8 earlier today before clawing back some of the losses. It is currently trading at $44,778 on the Bitstamp exchange.

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More turbulence ahead?

Implied volatility, as the name suggests, reflects the options market's expectations regarding how volatile Bitcoin is going to be over a certain period of time.

The recent spike suggests that traders expect the roller coaster ride to continue. On the other hand, falling implies volatility portends sideways price action.

Following Bitcoin's pandemic-induced 50 percent crash on March 13, implied volatility soared 50 points and went on to reach its highest level since Skew started recording it together with the Cboe Volatility Index.

u.today