Bitcoin has finally shattered the stubborn $73,000 resistance level that had capped rallies for six weeks, triggering massive liquidations as short sellers were forced to cover positions during Monday’s surge to $74,484.
The breakthrough came as President Trump indicated willingness to restart diplomatic talks with Iran, even while maintaining the U.S. blockade of the Strait of Hormuz. This shift in tone helped risk assets rally across global markets, with stocks erasing all losses from the Iran conflict.
The price surge unleashed $534 million in crypto liquidations across 180,000 traders, with short positions bearing the brunt of the pain. Bearish bets accounted for $430 million of the total liquidations, marking the second major short squeeze in less than a week.
Bitcoin alone was responsible for $229 million in liquidations, while Ethereum contributed $136 million to the carnage. The largest single liquidation hit $12.4 million on a BTC-USDT short position on the Aster exchange.
The 12-hour liquidation window saw concentrated damage, with $379 million wiped out during that period. The roughly 4-to-1 ratio of short to long liquidations reveals how heavily positioned traders remained for failure at the $73,000 level, despite last week’s ceasefire bounce already punishing similar trades.
Ethereum outperformed Bitcoin during the rally, jumping 7.7% to $2,366 and posting weekly gains of 12.4%. The strong showing from ETH helped drive broader altcoin momentum across major cryptocurrencies.
Solana climbed 4.6% to $85.80, extending its weekly gains to 7.6%. BNB Chain’s native token gained 3.3% to $615.80, while XRP rose 2.9% to $1.36. Even meme tokens participated in the rally, with Dogecoin adding 2.7% to reach $0.094.
All assets in the top 10 by market capitalization showed green on both daily and weekly charts, reflecting the broad-based nature of the crypto recovery. The rally coincided with the heading for its eighth consecutive day of gains, the longest winning streak since September.
Energy markets provided additional support for risk assets as fell 1.3% to $98 per barrel. Markets began pricing in the possibility of fresh diplomatic talks before the April 7 ceasefire expires next week.
Treasury yields also declined one basis point to 4.28% as cheaper oil helped ease inflation concerns. The bond market reaction suggests investors view the current geopolitical stance as a targeted pressure tool rather than escalation toward broader conflict.
Trump ordered the Hormuz blockade after weekend talks in Islamabad failed to produce a breakthrough. However, discussions between the U.S. and Iran about another round of talks have helped shift market sentiment away from pure risk-off positioning.
For Bitcoin, breaking above $73,000 removes a key technical hurdle and opens the path toward the next major resistance level. Analysis from identifies the Traders’ Realized Price near $79,000 as the next significant barrier.
This level represents the point where active traders who bought during the recent drawdown would return to breakeven and historically tend to take profits. The path between current levels and $79,000 shows less technical resistance than at any point since the conflict began.
The broader crypto market structure appears healthier following the liquidation event, as leveraged short positions that had built up during the extended consolidation have been flushed out. This clearing action often precedes more sustained upward moves.
While geopolitical risks remain elevated with the ceasefire set to expire next week, the market’s interpretation of current events as potentially leading to diplomatic solutions rather than escalation has shifted the risk-reward calculus for crypto traders. The blockade itself is being viewed as a calculated pressure mechanism designed to limit Iran’s oil revenues while keeping the door open for eventual shipping resumption.
The resilience shown by crypto markets in the face of ongoing geopolitical uncertainty demonstrates the asset class’s growing maturity and its ability to differentiate between various types of global risks.
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