Bitcoin’s options market is the quietest it has been since last summer. The Volmex Bitcoin Volatility Index, or BVIV, dropped to 36.11 on May 26, its lowest reading in nine months and a sharp decline from 38% just four days earlier.
Bitcoin was trading near $77,000 during the volatility dip.
The volume problem
Spot trading volumes have contracted by 81% since their October 2025 peak, returning to levels last seen during the 2023 bear market.
Several factors are contributing to the calm. Geopolitical tensions, particularly around Iran, have eased considerably. Then there’s the structural side. Institutional funds have been actively engaging in call overwriting, a strategy where holders of Bitcoin sell call options to collect premiums. When large players systematically sell options, they push implied volatility lower, creating a self-reinforcing cycle of calm.
Institutional buyers aren’t waiting around
Strategy, formerly known as MicroStrategy under ticker MSTR, acquired 171,238 BTC during 2026. To put that in perspective, only 63,450 BTC were mined during the same period. One company bought nearly three times the entire new supply created by the Bitcoin network.
What this means for investors
The last time BVIV readings were this low, back around August 2025, Bitcoin was in the early stages of the run that would eventually push trading volumes to their October peak.
When implied volatility is low, options are cheaper to purchase, meaning protective puts or speculative calls can be acquired at a relative discount.
Investors watching this space should pay close attention to two signals: any uptick in spot trading volumes, which would suggest speculative interest is returning, and changes in the options skew, which would indicate whether the smart money is positioning for upside or downside.
Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy.

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