For weeks, the single biggest drag on crypto markets was not a broken protocol, a regulatory crackdown, or a macro data print. It was a war. The US-Iran conflict that began in late February disrupted global oil supply, sent crude above $112 per barrel, stoked inflation fears, and gave the Federal Reserve every reason to hold rates higher for longer. On Tuesday night, a ceasefire changed that calculation instantly. Oil crashed, equities surged, Bitcoin broke $72,000, and traders who had spent weeks building bearish positions were forced to cover in a matter of hours. The question every market participant is now asking is a simple one: does this hold?
What the Ceasefire Actually Says
The agreement, mediated by Pakistan with peace talks scheduled for Friday in Islamabad, is conditional and temporary. Trump described it as a two-week suspension of military action, contingent on Iran’s commitment to reopening the Strait of Hormuz. Iran confirmed the ceasefire, stating that if attacks against Iran were halted, its armed forces would cease defensive operations. It added that oil tankers could safely transit the Strait of Hormuz for two weeks via coordination with Iran’s armed forces and with due consideration to technical limitations.
That qualifier about technical limitations is not a throwaway line. It signals that the reopening is managed rather than unconditional, and that Iran retains leverage over the pace and scope of tanker passage. QCP Capital noted: “This remains a pause rather than a durable settlement, with the ceasefire conditional on how Iran manages passage through Hormuz over the coming weeks. That caution matters because the physical damage narrative has not gone away.”
What Oil Did and Why It Matters for Crypto
The oil price reaction was violent and immediate. Crude oil prices fell over 14% on the ceasefire announcement, alleviating fears of a 20% disruption to global oil supply and triggering a broad-based risk appetite recovery across equities, gold, silver, and cryptocurrencies. West Texas Intermediate fell to approximately $95 per barrel from a peak above $112, and Brent crude similarly collapsed.
The significance for crypto goes beyond the immediate price move. Throughout the conflict, elevated oil prices had one specific consequence that mattered deeply to digital asset markets: they kept inflation elevated and gave the Federal Reserve no room to cut interest rates. The bull scenario for Bitcoin hinges on two catalysts: a confirmed and sustained US-Iran ceasefire that brings oil below $100, and passage of the CLARITY Act expected in late April, which institutional market participants are closely watching as a regulatory unlock. Tuesday’s ceasefire delivered the first of those two catalysts, at least temporarily.
While oil is down to around $95, it remains approximately $30 higher than before the conflict started on February 28. Moreover, for oil to drop further, Hormuz tanker traffic and insurance rates need to normalise to pre-war levels, a process that takes weeks even after a genuine de-escalation. The inflation relief, in other words, is real but incomplete.
How Every Major Asset Class Moved
The ceasefire triggered a simultaneous repricing across virtually every corner of global finance. Bitcoin briefly topped $72,750 and tech stocks surged, with QQQ up over 3.3% as volatility declined across both crypto and traditional markets. The 10-year bond yield fell to 4.2%, signalling reduced macro stress. Gold rose over 2% to $4,800 per ounce.
In equity markets, the reaction was equally dramatic. European stocks opened sharply higher on Wednesday, with the pan-European Stoxx 600 rising 3.4%, with all sectors besides oil and gas in the green. Travel stocks led gains, rising 7.3%. In Asia, Japan’s Nikkei rose approximately 5% and South Korea’s KOSPI gained 6%, temporarily triggering an automatic trading halt. The dollar weakened sharply as Treasury yields fell, a combination that historically supports risk assets including crypto.
Within crypto specifically, the total market capitalisation rallied past $2.40 trillion on April 8, with Bitcoin climbing to approximately $71,295, extending its seven-day gains to 5.4%. Zcash emerged as the top performer among the top 100 tokens with a 27% breakout, while Ethereum, Solana, and XRP all posted gains between 5% and 8%.
The Fed Wrinkle Nobody Is Talking About
There is one important complication in the ceasefire’s bullish narrative for crypto. Markets priced out all 2026 rate cuts following the ceasefire, as the removal of war-driven inflation pressure paradoxically made the Fed’s job easier but removed the urgency for emergency cuts that some traders had been pricing in. A Fed that no longer faces oil-driven inflationary emergency is a Fed that can stay patient, meaning the rate cut catalyst that crypto bulls have been waiting for does not arrive any faster from a ceasefire alone.
That nuance matters for the sustainability of the rally. Lower oil prices reduce inflation pressure, which is unambiguously positive for risk assets over time. But they do not accelerate the Federal Reserve’s timeline for cutting rates from 3.5% to 3.75%, where they currently sit. The macro tailwind is real but incremental rather than immediate.
What the Key Levels Say
Technically, Bitcoin has now sustained above $70,000 with more conviction than at any point since mid-March. The Chaikin Money Flow indicator, which measures buying and selling pressure by combining price and volume data, entered positive territory for the first time since mid-March, suggesting institutional capital is beginning to flow back in after weeks of net outflows during the conflict.
The bull case requires Iran’s compliance with Hormuz reopening to hold through the two-week window, oil to stabilise below $95, and ETF inflows to sustain above $400 million per week. Under that scenario, BTC consolidates above $72,000 and targets $75,000, where the next material resistance cluster sits. The bear case has BTC retracing to $68,269, the intraday low recorded during Tuesday’s volatile session, with deeper support near $66,000 if risk-off conditions reassert.
Analysts note that $74,000 is the level that really matters. It has acted as a significant resistance barrier for the past two months and a clear daily close above that level would signal a genuine structural shift rather than another short-squeeze headfake. Until that close happens, the rally is real but its durability remains conditional on events in Islamabad over the next two weeks.
The Bottom Line
The Iran ceasefire has done something that no single piece of crypto-native news could have done in the current environment: it removed the dominant macro headwind that had been capping Bitcoin since late February. Oil is lower, inflation pressure is easing, global equities are rallying, and the crypto market is breathing again. But the agreement is temporary, the Hormuz reopening is managed rather than unconditional, and Iran has been explicit that this is not the end of the conflict.
Charu Chanana, investment strategist at Saxo, put it plainly: “The key question is whether negotiations make progress over the next two weeks. That will determine whether this remains merely a relief rally or develops into a lasting de-escalation.” For crypto markets, the answer to that question will determine whether April 2026 goes down as the month the recovery began, or just the month that produced the biggest single-day short squeeze of the year.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial, investment, or legal advice. Cryptocurrency markets are highly volatile. Always conduct your own research before making any investment decisions.















