Jul 17, 2026, 7:28 a.m.
2 min read

Summary
- A trader placed a roughly $28 million notional long straddle on ether, buying 7,500 calls and 7,500 puts at a $1,875 strike that expire July 24.
- The bet is a high-conviction wager on sharp ether price volatility in either direction, with profit driven by big moves rather than by a specific price target.
- The trader paid about $852,000 in premium, which is the maximum loss if ether stays range-bound.
A massive bullish ether volatility bet hit the tape this week, designed to pay off handsomely from sharp price swings in either direction by July 24.
The trade, a monstrous 15,000-contract "long straddle," involved the simultaneous purchase of 7,500 calls and 7,500 puts at the $1,875 strike price level, expiring on July 24, according to data source Laevitas. It’s like buying two lottery tickets at once: One that pays out if prices explode higher, and another that pays if they collapse. So any massive move, either way, can make money.
The trade, therefore, represents a high-conviction bet that ether's price is likely to move rapidly in either direction over the next nine days. As of this writing, ether changed hands at $1,825, down 2% since midnight UTC, according to CoinDesk data. Prices recently hit highs above $1,900, having put in a low near $1,500 in late June.
Profit from volatility and not price direction
The straddle buyer is essentially saying, "I don't know where the price is going, but I know we aren't staying here, and there will be a big move in either direction."
It shows that major participants are not just "long-only" or "short-only" speculators; they are increasingly treating volatility as a separate asset class and using complex options Greeks, specifically vega (sensitivity to volatility) and gamma (sensitivity to price acceleration), to extract profit from market turbulence.
Inside the $28 million straddle
Notional value represents the total market value of the underlying asset controlled by the trade, rather than the cash paid to enter it.
The straddle involved the purchase of 15,000 contracts, with each contract representing 1 ETH. The notional value, therefore, is calculated by multiplying 15,000 by the market price of ETH on the day of execution. That amount comes to roughly $28 million.
According to Laevitas, the trader paid a premium of $852,000 to establish this $28 million notional straddle. That premium represents the maximum amount at risk if ether remains range-bound or quiet through the July 24 expiry, leading to a "time-decay" in option value.
Now, turning to the maximum possible gain: it is theoretically unlimited. This stems from the fact that volatility itself has no upper bound, as asset prices can, in principle, move dramatically in either direction.
Caveat
While the prospect of profiting from a move in either direction is enticing, the high cost of entry and the relentless decay of time value serve as a stark warning.
Without a professional-grade risk plan and a deep mastery of the "Greeks," an investor’s capital can evaporate just as quickly as the market’s volatility.
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