There are two versions of the crypto market right now, and they are telling completely different stories. The first version is the institutional one. Spot Bitcoin ETFs pulled in nearly $1 billion in net inflows last week, their best performance since January. Strategy bought $2.54 billion in Bitcoin. Bitmine added $230 million in Ether. Morgan Stanley launched a Bitcoin trust that attracted $120 million in six days. The institutional bid has never been stronger.
The second version is the geopolitical one. Iran opened the Strait of Hormuz on Friday and closed it again on Saturday with gunfire. Bitcoin hit $78,000 and fell back to $75,000. The biggest short squeeze of 2026 came and went in a single session. And the ceasefire that has been holding the entire market together expires tomorrow, April 22.
Both versions are true at the same time. That is what makes this the most important week of the year for crypto.
The ETF Numbers Are Remarkable
Spot Bitcoin ETFs pulled in nearly $1 billion in weekly inflows. Friday alone brought in $663.9 million, the biggest single-day total of the week. Total net assets across all spot Bitcoin ETFs climbed above $101 billion.
To understand why that matters, consider what was happening while those inflows were landing. Iran was opening and closing the Strait of Hormuz. Oil was swinging by 10% in a day. Bitcoin was whipsawing between $75,000 and $78,000. And through all of that, institutional investors were buying nearly $1 billion in Bitcoin through regulated products.
ETF flows are not day traders reacting to headlines. They are pension funds, wealth managers, family offices, and endowments making allocation decisions that take weeks to execute. The fact that these investors kept buying through one of the most volatile weeks of the year tells you something about how they view Bitcoin’s long-term trajectory regardless of what happens with Iran tomorrow.
Ethereum ETFs also had a strong week, pulling in roughly $276 million in inflows. That is notable because Ethereum ETFs spent most of Q1 bleeding capital. The rotation into ETH products alongside Bitcoin products suggests institutional appetite is broadening, not narrowing.
What the Ceasefire Expiry Means
The two-week ceasefire between the US and Iran expires on April 22. As of Sunday evening, no extension has been announced. No formal talks are scheduled. Pakistan continues to mediate but both sides remain far apart on the core issues: Iran wants sanctions relief and oversight of the strait. The US wants denuclearisation and permanent freedom of navigation.
Friday’s brief Hormuz reopening and Saturday’s reversal showed exactly how fragile the situation is. The market rallied $3,000 in hours on the opening headline and gave most of it back within 24 hours on the closure. If the ceasefire expires without an extension, oil prices will spike, inflation expectations will rise, and the Fed’s path to rate cuts gets blocked again. That is the scenario where Bitcoin retests the $72,000 to $74,000 range.
If the ceasefire extends, even without a permanent deal, the relief trade resumes. Oil stays below $90. The Fed’s December rate cut path stays alive. Bitcoin retests $78,000 and potentially pushes toward $80,000 for the first time since early February.
The Week Ahead
Tomorrow is not the only thing happening this week. Here is the full calendar:
Tuesday April 22 is the ceasefire expiry. That is the single biggest binary event for the market. Every other catalyst is secondary to what Iran and the US decide to do.
The FOMC meets on April 28 and 29. The Fed is not expected to cut rates, but the tone of the statement and the press conference will signal whether the oil shock has permanently delayed cuts or whether the recent drop to $85 created enough inflation relief to keep December on the table.
Tesla reports earnings this week. Tesla has become a proxy for crypto sentiment because of its Bitcoin treasury, its correlation with risk appetite, and Elon Musk’s role in the broader tech-political ecosystem. A strong Tesla report lifts sentiment across crypto-adjacent equities. A weak one adds to the risk-off mood.
Bitcoin’s $7.9 billion April options expiry is also approaching. With Bitcoin above the “max pain” level, heavy positioning at the $75,000 strike creates mechanical pressure that could amplify moves in either direction.
The DeFi Overhang
The Kelp DAO hack is still reverberating through the market. AAVE dropped 22.9% over the weekend, the worst performer in the CoinDesk 20 index. DeFi’s total value locked fell 7% to $86 billion. Dozens of protocols have frozen their LayerZero bridges. The contagion from a single $290 million exploit has spread far wider than the hack itself.
For altcoins, the Kelp fallout adds a layer of risk that did not exist a week ago. Investors who were rotating into DeFi tokens are now questioning the security of the infrastructure those tokens depend on. That caution could suppress altcoin performance even if Bitcoin rallies on a ceasefire extension.
Where That Leaves Us
The institutional story and the geopolitical story are on a collision course this week. One says buy: ETF inflows at their strongest since January, Strategy accumulating at record pace, Bitmine scaling its Ether treasury, Morgan Stanley launching new products. The other says wait: the ceasefire could collapse tomorrow, oil could spike, and the Fed meeting next week could confirm that rate cuts are off the table for 2026.
Both stories resolve in the next seven days. By the time the FOMC statement drops on April 29, we will know whether the ceasefire held, whether oil stabilised, and whether the Fed sees a path to easing. Until then, the market is trading on hope and headlines, which is exactly what it has been doing all month. The difference this week is that the hope has a deadline.


















