Gamma Squeeze in Crypto Explained: How Dealer Hedging Can Accelerate Big Moves
A gamma squeeze happens when option positioning forces dealers or market makers to keep buying into a rising market or selling into a falling one, which can amplify the move instead of dampening it. In crypto, that dynamic can become especially sharp when large call open interest sits near the money and spot starts pushing through key strikes.
Most large crypto moves are explained after the fact with the same short list of causes: ETF flows, macro news, liquidations, or whale activity. Sometimes those explanations are right. Sometimes they miss an important part of the move, which is the options book itself.
A gamma squeeze is one of the clearest examples of how options positioning can stop being background structure and start affecting spot behavior directly because of hedging.
When dealers or market makers are short options, especially short calls, their delta exposure changes as the market rises. If that change is strong enough, they may need to buy more of the underlying asset or a related futures contract to keep their book hedged. That buying can push price higher, which increases their hedge requirement again, which can create a self-reinforcing loop.
That loop is what traders mean when they talk about a gamma squeeze.
What gamma actually measures
Gamma is the rate at which an option’s delta changes when the underlying price moves. Delta measures how much an option price changes for a move in the underlying, while gamma measures how much that delta itself changes as the underlying moves.
That matters because a dealer hedging an options book is usually trying to manage delta exposure. If gamma is small, the hedge does not need to change much when price moves. If gamma is large, the hedge may need to change quickly and repeatedly.
Gamma is usually highest around at-the-money options and tends to become more important as expiry gets closer. That is why squeezes often become more serious when the market is trading near a crowded strike in the final stretch before expiry.
How dealer hedging creates the squeeze
Imagine a large amount of call buying has taken place above current spot. The dealer who sold those calls is now short gamma. As spot rises toward those strikes, the option delta increases. Gamma is how quickly delta changes, and if a dealer is hedging an options position delta-neutral, the dealer needs to buy or sell delta as the market moves.
If the dealer is short calls and spot rises, that usually means buying more underlying to stay hedged. That buying can push the market up further. If the market keeps moving through additional call-heavy strikes, the hedge demand can build instead of fading.
This is why a gamma squeeze often feels faster than an ordinary rally. The move is not being driven only by fresh bullish opinion. It is also being amplified by forced hedging behavior from the short-gamma side of the options market.
Why crypto is especially vulnerable to this dynamic
Crypto options markets are still smaller and more concentrated than the largest traditional options markets, even though they are much more mature than they were a few years ago.
That matters because concentrated flows can have a bigger effect: strike clusters, dealer hedging, and large call or put interest can affect the behavior of BTC and ETH around important price levels and expiries.
Crypto is also more vulnerable because it trades around the clock and often alongside perpetual futures books that are already sensitive to liquidation dynamics. That means a gamma squeeze can collide with momentum trading, breakout trading, and perp liquidations at the same time.
In practical terms, that makes crypto squeezes feel more explosive. Dealer hedging may be the ignition, but the wider derivatives market can turn the move into something much larger once leverage and liquidity get involved.
Why call-heavy positioning matters most on the way up
A classic upside gamma squeeze usually begins with heavy call ownership and dealer short-call exposure. As spot rises toward those strikes, calls move closer to or into the money, their deltas rise, and the dealers who sold them need more long hedge exposure. That can mean buying spot, buying perpetuals, or using other derivatives to offset the risk.
Market makers with negative gamma were forced to hedge by buying more of the underlying, which created a positive feedback loop. The asset there was an equity, not BTC or ETH, but the hedging logic is the same. In crypto, this often becomes most visible when there is already a large call wall at round-number strikes and the market starts trading through them with strong momentum.
Why the move can reverse just as fast
Once the market moves far enough through the strike cluster, or once expiry passes, or once the options positioning changes materially, the hedging pressure can fade. At that point the same market that felt impossible to stop can suddenly lose one of its strongest mechanical buyers.
This is one reason traders should be careful about confusing a gamma squeeze with a new fundamental trend. The squeeze can extend and accelerate a move, but it does not guarantee that the move will hold once the hedging loop weakens.
The reverse is also true on the downside. If the market rolls back through the same strike area, short-gamma hedging can force dealers to sell as price falls, which can accelerate the reversal.
That is why gamma-driven markets often feel unstable rather than steadily bullish or bearish. The hedge flows are reactive, not ideological.
What traders should actually watch
The first thing to watch is open interest by strike and expiry. A market cannot produce a meaningful gamma squeeze without enough options interest sitting in the right places. Large call open interest around round numbers matters much more than scattered positions across a wide range of strikes.
The second thing is spot location relative to those strikes. A big call wall far above the market is less urgent than a big call wall the market is about to push through.
The third thing is time to expiry. Gamma usually matters more when expiry is close and the option deltas are changing quickly.
The fourth thing is the wider derivatives context. If perpetual funding is already rich, if shorts are crowded, or if liquidations are nearby, then a gamma squeeze can combine with other forced flows and become much more violent.
What a gamma squeeze is not
A gamma squeeze is not just a rally with a dramatic name. It is also not the same thing as a short squeeze, even though the two can happen together. A short squeeze is driven by short sellers being forced to close as price rises. A gamma squeeze is driven by options sellers or dealers needing to hedge changing delta exposure as price rises.
The distinction matters because the positioning data that explains each event is different. One lives mainly in short interest and leveraged directional positioning. The other lives in the options book, especially in how much gamma sits near the market.
Conclusion
A gamma squeeze in crypto happens when the options market stops being passive and starts forcing hedging flows into the underlying market.
As spot rises toward crowded call strikes, dealers who are short gamma may need to buy more of the underlying or related futures to stay hedged. That buying can push price up further, which increases hedge demand again and creates a self-reinforcing move.
Crypto is especially sensitive to this because options positioning can interact with perpetual funding, liquidation flows, and thin liquidity at the same time. That can make the squeeze feel much larger than the options book alone would suggest.
The right way to read a gamma squeeze is simple. It is not magic and not pure sentiment. It is market structure turning into price action through hedging. Once that is clear, the move becomes much easier to understand.
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Filed under: Bitcoin - @ April 12, 2026 11:23 am