Bitcoin ripped past $79,000 on Wednesday, April 22, its highest price since early February. The largest crypto rose 4.5% over the past 24 hours, leading major altcoins ether, BNB, Solana, and XRP higher. The broad-market CoinDesk 20 Index advanced 3.5%.
The move caught bears off guard. Badly. Out of $34.23 million in total Bitcoin liquidations within a single hour, $33.46 million came from short positions. That means 97.7% of all losses were borne by bears betting against the rally. Total market liquidations reached $394.32 million in 24 hours, with the overwhelming majority hitting short positions.
This is the breakout that Bitcoin traders have been watching for since February. The question now is whether $80,000 holds or rejects.
Why Did Bitcoin Surge Past $79,000?
Two catalysts converged within hours of each other.
First, President Trump announced late Tuesday that the US-Iran ceasefire would be extended indefinitely. The original truce was hours from expiring. By removing that deadline, Trump eliminated the single biggest tail risk hanging over crypto and equities. Bitcoin opened April 22 near $76,342 and reached an intraday high at $79,214 before settling around $78,800 to $78,900, up approximately 4.1% on the day.
Second, the short squeeze. Bears had been stacking positions for weeks, betting that Bitcoin would get rejected at $78,000 the same way it had been rejected at $75,000, $76,000, and $77,000 throughout March and April. When the price blasted through that level, those shorts started liquidating in a cascade.
According to CryptoQuant data, with Bitcoin at $78,400, funding dropped to -0.02%, meaning bears were aggressively pressing the market, paying a 0.02% premium every eight hours, or about 22% annually, just to maintain short exposure. That level of conviction turned into fuel for the rally when price moved against them.
What Does the $80,000 Level Mean for Bitcoin?
The $79,000 to $80,000 zone is not just a round number. It carries real technical weight.
The True Market Mean, currently around $78,200, represents the average cost basis of actively traded coins and is acting as immediate resistance. The Short-Term Holder cost basis, near $79,200, reflects the average entry price of recent buyers, who remain underwater and could add to sell pressure if the level is not reclaimed.
In plain English: the people who bought Bitcoin in the last few months are sitting around breakeven right now. Many of them have been underwater for weeks. When price reaches their entry, a lot of them sell to get their money back rather than hold for more upside. That creates a wall of selling pressure right at $79,000 to $80,000.
K33 Research analyst Vetle Lunde wrote that “rising leverage alongside deeply negative funding suggests shorts are steadily building in perps, increasing both the likelihood and potential magnitude of a short squeeze.” He added: “We continue to see strong breakout potential for BTC, with concentrated shorts providing ample fuel for a move higher.”
If Bitcoin can push through $80,000 and hold it for a few days, the technical picture changes significantly. The next major resistance sits at $85,000 to $88,000, where the 200-day moving average lives. Reclaiming that level would confirm a full trend reversal from the bear channel that has been in place since October 2025.
How Did Crypto Stocks React to the Rally?
The rally was not limited to Bitcoin itself. Strategy jumped 10% while stablecoin issuer Circle gained 9% and crypto exchange Coinbase rose 6%. Bitcoin miners MARA Holdings and Riot Platforms added 6% to 7%.
Strategy’s outperformance makes sense. The company holds 815,061 BTC and its stock acts as a leveraged play on Bitcoin’s price. Every dollar Bitcoin gains adds roughly $815 million to Strategy’s balance sheet. At $79,000, Saylor’s position is comfortably in profit for the first time in weeks.
Circle’s 9% jump is notable because the stablecoin issuer recently went public and its stock has been volatile. A risk-on day in crypto tends to lift USDC volumes, which directly benefits Circle’s revenue.
What Could Stop the Bitcoin Rally?
The ceasefire extension removed the immediate war risk, but it did not end the war. The US naval blockade of Iranian ports continues. Iran’s foreign minister called it “an act of war.” No Iranian delegation has confirmed attendance at the Pakistan talks. The ceasefire could collapse if either side escalates.
Oil remains around $89 per barrel, elevated enough to keep inflation concerns alive. The FOMC meets on April 28 and 29. The Fed is not expected to cut rates, but the tone matters. If Chair nominee Kevin Warsh signals tighter policy during his transition period, risk appetite could fade quickly.
The Aave liquidity crisis is another overhang. DeFi’s total value locked dropped $15 billion in four days after the Kelp DAO hack. Altcoins have underperformed Bitcoin throughout this rally, suggesting that risk appetite has not fully returned across the market.
Is Bitcoin Breaking Out of Its Bear Channel in 2026?
This is the big question. Bitcoin has been trading inside a descending channel since its October 2025 all-time high of $128,198. Every rally since then has been sold. The $79,000 push is the first time BTC has tested the upper boundary of that channel with genuine momentum behind it.
A clean weekly close above $80,000 would break the channel for the first time in six months. That does not guarantee new highs, but it changes the conversation from “how low can Bitcoin go” to “how high can the recovery reach.” The 200-day EMA at roughly $87,500 becomes the next meaningful target.
If $80,000 rejects and price falls back below $76,000, the bear channel remains intact and the breakout was a false alarm. That is still a real possibility, especially with geopolitical uncertainty far from resolved.
Frequently Asked Questions
Why did Bitcoin hit $79,000 on April 22, 2026?
Bitcoin surged to $79,000 after Trump extended the US-Iran ceasefire indefinitely, removing the biggest source of market uncertainty. A massive short squeeze amplified the move, with $394 million in liquidations in 24 hours and 97.7% of losses hitting short sellers.
What is the next resistance level for Bitcoin above $79,000?
The immediate resistance zone is $79,200 to $80,000, which aligns with the short-term holder cost basis. Above that, $85,000 to $88,000 marks the 200-day moving average, which needs to be reclaimed for a confirmed trend reversal.
What is a Bitcoin short squeeze?
A short squeeze happens when traders betting against Bitcoin (shorting) are forced to buy back their positions as the price rises, which pushes the price even higher. Negative funding rates indicate heavy short positioning, and when those positions get liquidated, it creates a cascade of forced buying.
Could Bitcoin reach $80,000 in April 2026?
Bitcoin is currently testing $79,000 with strong momentum. Analysts at K33 Research and JPMorgan have flagged $80,000 to $85,000 as the next target if the ceasefire holds and institutional demand continues. A break above $80,000 would be the first since early February 2026.
What risks could reverse the Bitcoin rally?
The main risks are a collapse of the Iran ceasefire, an oil price spike above $100, a hawkish FOMC statement on April 29, or continued DeFi contagion from the $292 million Kelp DAO hack that has frozen liquidity on Aave.


















