For most of 2026, the crypto market has had one speed: Bitcoin goes up, everything else watches. The rallies were narrow, the altcoin season index stayed stuck in “Bitcoin Season” territory, and every bounce felt like it could fade by Tuesday. Today is different. Bitcoin hit $77,000 this morning. Ethereum is pushing toward $2,400. Solana reclaimed $90. XRP jumped to $1.46. Dogecoin is up 4%. Total crypto market cap is back above $2.6 trillion with 24-hour trading volume surging nearly 70% to $135 billion. For the first time in months, the market has breadth.
What Changed
Three headwinds that had been compressing the market all eased at once this week, and the combination is producing a rally that looks structurally different from the single-asset spikes that characterised the first quarter.
The biggest catalyst landed this morning. Iran declared the Strait of Hormuz fully open to all commercial shipping under the ceasefire framework. Oil, which had been holding between $100 and $120 on the back of supply disruptions for weeks, dropped sharply. The energy price premium that was feeding into inflation expectations and keeping the Federal Reserve locked in “higher for longer” mode began to unwind in real time. When oil falls, inflation expectations fall. When inflation expectations fall, rate cut expectations rise. When rate cut expectations rise, every risk asset on the planet catches a bid.
The dollar hit a one-and-a-half-month low while oil retreated, both of which improved general risk appetite. On top of that, Bitcoin’s rally was helped by the Bank of Japan signalling it is unlikely to raise rates at its April 28 meeting. That matters because tighter Japanese policy had been one of the risks hanging over global carry trades and speculative assets.
Three sources of pressure easing simultaneously: geopolitics, energy, and central bank policy. That is not a single headline driving a single asset. That is a macro environment shifting in favour of risk assets broadly.
Why Breadth Matters
When Bitcoin rallies alone, it typically means capital is hiding in the safest large-cap crypto asset while everything else bleeds. That is what most of Q1 looked like. Bitcoin dominance stayed above 57%, the altcoin season index hovered around 34 out of 100, and Ethereum underperformed BTC on almost every timeframe.
Bitcoin is having a strong day, but Ethereum is stronger. When ETH is beating BTC on a green day, the market is often signalling broader risk appetite, not only defensive Bitcoin strength. That usually tells you the market is not just buying the safest large-cap coin. It is rotating further out the risk curve.
Ethereum is up roughly 7% on the week, outperforming Bitcoin’s 3.5%. Spot ETH ETFs have posted inflows for six consecutive days, their longest positive streak of the year. Ethereum’s network just printed a record 200.4 million transactions in Q1. The fundamental case is backing up the price action.
XRP is climbing about 3% to around $1.37, while CoinGecko’s gainers included XRP Ledger ecosystem tokens. When traders start broadening from Bitcoin into Ethereum and then into altcoin ecosystems, it usually signals that confidence is improving at the margin even if the macro backdrop is still fragile.
The Equity Backdrop Is Helping
Crypto is not rallying in isolation. The Nasdaq has logged ten consecutive winning sessions, its longest streak since 2021. The S&P 500 is pushing toward all-time highs. Wall Street banks reported record trading revenues this quarter. Corporate earnings are beating expectations even as the Iran conflict continues.
Total crypto market capitalisation hovered above $2.8 trillion, with Bitcoin dominance steady around 55%. Bitcoin’s correlation with traditional safe-haven assets like gold has strengthened in recent months, helping it outperform equities during periods of geopolitical stress.
When equities are making new highs and crypto is rallying alongside them, the combined effect on investor psychology is powerful. It removes the “crypto is a risk asset and risk is off” narrative that dominated Q1. The question becomes not whether to own crypto, but how much.
The Short Squeeze Factor
Beneath the macro story, there is a mechanical one. Bitcoin perpetual funding rates have been negative for weeks, meaning traders have been paying to hold short positions. That is an unusual setup: the crowd was positioned for lower prices even as spot demand kept accumulating.
Deeply negative Bitcoin perpetual funding rates show the market was heavily short heading into the spike, raising the risk of a sharp squeeze that some traders say could push prices toward $125,000 in the coming months if sustained.
The Hormuz announcement was the lighter. When a genuinely bullish headline lands on a market that is crowded short, the resulting squeeze produces outsized moves because shorts are forced to buy to cover their positions, adding buying pressure on top of the organic demand. That is why Bitcoin went from $74,700 to $77,000 in a matter of hours.
What Could Go Wrong
The ceasefire expires on April 22. The Islamabad peace talks collapsed last weekend without a deal. Trump says the US is “very close” to an agreement, but the demands from both sides remain far apart. If the ceasefire breaks down and oil spikes back above $110, the same risk-off pressure that compressed the market for two months returns.
The CLARITY Act’s stablecoin yield text is unlikely to be finalised this week, according to Senator Tillis. The FOMC meets on April 28 and 29. And Bitcoin still has a $450 million sell wall sitting above $76,000 that it broke through this morning but has not yet cleared convincingly on a closing basis.
Today’s rally has the three things that make crypto moves durable: a genuine macro catalyst, broad participation beyond Bitcoin, and a short squeeze providing mechanical fuel. Whether it lasts depends on whether the Strait of Hormuz stays open and whether April 22 produces an extension or a collapse. For now, the market is pricing in peace, and for the first time this year, it is doing so with real conviction.


















