As Bitcoin prices hover near the $88,000–$89,000 range, analysts are closely watching the December quarterly options expiry and rising global bond yields, two factors that have historically influenced near-term BTC price behavior during low-liquidity periods.
Bitcoin price today is hovering close to $88,500, posting a modest 0.33% daily gain, while 24-hour trading volume of roughly $16.9 billion points to subdued weekend participation, according to aggregated exchange data.
Bitcoin hovers near $88K–$89K amid rising Japan bond yields and a $23B options expiry, with potential short-term volatility before a possible reversal. Source: @TedPillows via X
Market participants note that low liquidity has kept the BTC price compressed within a narrow range. Similar conditions have been observed ahead of previous quarterly options expiries this year, where Bitcoin often traded sideways for several days before volatility expanded post-expiry.
Crypto analyst Ted Pillows, who frequently comments on short-term market structure, highlighted the current indecision, stating: “$BTC is hovering between the $88,000–$89,000 level for now. Not much movement due to weekends, but next week is very crucial.”
Short-term Binance charts support this view, showing Bitcoin consolidating above local support with limited directional conviction. For now, Bitcoin prices remain stable, but traders are increasingly positioning for a volatility shift.
One of the most significant near-term drivers is the December 26 quarterly options expiry, which derivatives data from major options venues suggest represents approximately $23 billion in notional open interest.
After a +36% correction, Bitcoin is poised for a bullish breakout, with early entry opportunities now before FOMO-driven buying floods the market. Source: @CryptoFaibik via X
Historically, quarterly expiries have coincided with compressed price action 3–5 days beforehand, followed by sharper moves once dealer hedging pressure unwinds. This pattern helps explain why many Bitcoin price prediction scenarios today include short-lived downside volatility before a potential rebound.
In derivatives markets, traders are closely monitoring BTC liquidation heatmap clusters around $86,800 on the downside and $91,800 on the upside. These zones often act as volatility accelerators rather than precise support or resistance levels, increasing the risk of abrupt price swings around expiry.
From a technical standpoint, TradingView analyst Pejman_zwin noted that Bitcoin declined from the $89,230–$87,720 resistance zone, met its downside objective, and is now attempting to reclaim that range.
Bitcoin tests a key resistance zone around $89,230–$87,720, aiming for a breakout toward $90,217 after completing an Elliott Wave B pattern. Source: pejman_zwin via X
Using an Elliott Wave framework, he suggested Bitcoin completed a wave B within the $85,400–$83,900 support zone, forming what is known as an expanding flat structure. This pattern typically signals heightened volatility rather than immediate trend continuation, aligning with expectations for sharp intraday swings.
Pejman_zwin also pointed to Bitcoin’s ongoing correlation with the S&P 500 (SPX), noting that a constructive equity outlook increases the probability of another upside attempt as the new trading week begins.
“If Bitcoin confirms a breakout above the $89,230–$87,720 zone,” he said, “a move toward $90,217 becomes the minimum upside target.”
Bitcoin is approaching a critical inflection point as tightening price action, macro uncertainty, and the $23 billion quarterly options expiry combine to elevate short-term volatility risk.
Bitcoin was trading at around 88,509, up 0.33% in the last 24 hours at press time. Source: Bitcoin price via Brave New Coin
For short-term traders, the primary challenge is navigating potential whipsaw price moves around expiry, while longer-term holders may view current consolidation as structural noise unless BTC decisively loses the $85,000 support zone. Whether Bitcoin sustains a move above $90,000 or faces renewed rejection will likely depend on post-expiry positioning, bond market dynamics, and broader risk sentiment in the days ahead.

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