Bitcoin’s spring rebound has hit a wall that matters. is trading around $75,996 in U.S. afternoon hours, off 1.01% on the session and down 2.95% on a 24-hour view, having retreated more than 4.6% from the 12-week high of $79,488 printed on Monday. Tuesday’s open at $77,368 represented a 1.6% slide from Monday’s $78,661 print, and the token continued to leak lower into the morning, briefly testing $76,472 by 7:10 a.m. ET before settling near the $76,000 handle. The drawdown sits squarely against a macro backdrop that has flipped from constructive to hostile inside 48 hours: the Strait of Hormuz remains shuttered into its second month following the February 28 closure, U.S.-Iran negotiations have stalled after Trump dismissed Tehran’s reopening offer, punched back above $111, and the FOMC is now hours away from a decision that markets are pricing with rising uncertainty around the post-Powell Fed leadership transition.
The pricing environment for risk assets has been reconfigured by the Hormuz event in ways that are showing up in every cross-asset correlation. U.S. CPI is now tracking toward 3.3%, fed by energy passthrough, freight cost compression, and fertilizer-input inflation that is rippling through the global supply chain. has been climbing back toward the 99 handle, last printing 98.74, up 0.25% on the session. The U.S. 2-year, 5-year, and 10-year yield complex is grinding higher, with up 6.7 basis points to 4.374% — a yield-curve setup that historically sucks marginal capital out of zero-yielding scarcity assets like BTC.
The Bank of Japan held its policy rate at 0.75% earlier Tuesday in a 6-3 split decision. Three dissenting members called for an outright hike to 1.00% on the view that Hormuz-driven supply-side risks have skewed price risks decisively to the upside. The BOJ revised its FY2026 core inflation outlook sharply higher to 2.8% from 1.9%, materially above its 2.0% target, while cutting growth to 0.5% from 1.0%. That hawkish tilt under the surface of a held rate is exactly the template Powell is expected to follow on Wednesday — a hold framed in a way that does not fight inflation expectations, but does not commit to easing either. For Bitcoin, that combination is the worst of both worlds: a real-yield environment that does not inflect lower, paired with a hawkish dollar that compresses the speculative bid.
Layer on the AI-complex selloff that hammered the by 1.30% to 24,562 — driven by the Wall Street Journal’s reporting that OpenAI is missing internal revenue and user-growth targets — and the speculative bid that has been a structural tailwind for crypto throughout April has been visibly drained. gave back 2.96%, sank 4.04%, and closed off 4.85%, breaking an 18-session winning streak. When the AI trade unwinds, the crypto trade typically follows within hours, and Tuesday’s tape proved that correlation is alive and well.
The four-hour technical setup is unusually clean. Bitcoin has been carving out an ascending channel since early April, and every test of the lower boundary has triggered rebounds in the 8% to 10% range, mechanically driving price back toward — and occasionally through — the upper trendline. The current consolidation is parked directly on that lower support zone between $76,800 and $77,500, a level that aligns with both the 20-period exponential moving average (green) and the 50-period EMA (red) on the four-hour chart. That confluence of trend-channel support and dynamic moving-average support is precisely the kind of price node that either holds and rebounds, or breaks and accelerates lower.
A successful defense of $76,800–$77,500 sets up a measured move toward $82,700, the upper boundary of the channel and the 1.618 Fibonacci retracement extension. From the current $76,000 print, that is roughly a 7.7% upside to the channel top before the trade gets crowded. A rejection here, on the other hand, exposes BTC to $73,600, where the 0.786 Fibonacci line converges with the 200-period four-hour EMA (blue). Below that, the technical structure deteriorates rapidly toward the $68,000 zone.
The weekly perspective on BTC remains structurally bullish, and that is the part the bears keep missing. The long-term setup is built on four converging structural foundations that have not been broken by the recent retracement. First, the rebound from the $60,000 psychological level in February held the 0.618 retracement of the entire 2022 to 2025 uptrend — a textbook major retracement that historically marks the end of a corrective phase rather than the start of a deeper one. Second, BTC executed a clean breakout from the bearish wedge that formed between November 2025 and January 2026, and that breakout has not been invalidated. Third, the former 2020 highs that previously capped price action have flipped to act as support, the most reliable sign that a major resistance level has been absorbed. Fourth, the recovery from the deeply oversold conditions that previously appeared near $15,000 in 2022 indicates the long-term momentum cycle has reset.
The pivot level that matters for confirming the next bullish leg has shifted upward to $80,000 — the convergence of the trendline and the parallel channel that has connected higher highs and higher lows since February. A weekly close above $80,000 opens an immediate path to $83,000 and $90,000, with $97,000 as the secondary upside target. That is a roughly 28% range from current levels to the $97,000 target if the breakout confirms.
The flip side: a sustained drop below $73,000 — the channel midpoint — reinforces a near-term bearish stance toward $68,000. A close below $68,000 would extend drawdown risk toward $60,000, $56,000, and ultimately the $48,000 zone before the broader bullish trend would have a chance to resume. The all-time high of $128,198.07 set on October 6, 2025, remains the long-term magnetic target if the structural bull case reasserts.
The Market-Value-to-Realized-Value framework is sending a constructive signal that contradicts the price action. BTC has reclaimed the MVRV -0.5 standard deviation band at approximately $72,750, a level that has historically functioned as both support and resistance across multiple market cycles. The MVRV bands quantify how far the spot price has drifted from the aggregate on-chain cost basis of all holders, and a reclaim of the lower deviation band from below typically signals that the market is no longer trading at a deep discount to its realized value. In both 2014 and 2018, identical reclaims of the green band as support preceded short-term rallies toward the mean band — the yellow line in the framework — which currently sits near $94,500.
The on-chain analyst Willy Woo has flagged the $79,000 level as the cost basis of recent investors and assigned 30% odds to BTC cleanly breaking above that level on this attempt. That is a measured probability, not a high-conviction call, but it captures the asymmetry: the floor at $65,000 is well-defined and structurally defended, while the upside requires a single decisive break of $79,000 to reset the recovery narrative. The next six weeks will determine whether the move evolves into a sustained trend reversal or becomes another failed breakout attempt.
The on-exchange liquidity backdrop is materially better than the price chart suggests. Binance has logged nearly $6 billion in net stablecoin inflows across March and April combined, including $3.5 billion in April alone, per CryptoQuant data. That is a sharp reversal from the prior $7.6 billion in net outflows that characterized the late-2025 slump, and it represents deployable capital sitting on the largest crypto venue waiting for a directional catalyst. Stablecoin inflows are the cleanest proxy for traders preparing to re-enter risk, and the magnitude of the reversal is unusual.
The implication: liquidity is not the problem. Sentiment is. Capital has rotated back into exchange wallets despite the U.S.-Iran tensions and the elevated oil tape, but it has not yet been deployed because the macro setup — Fed meeting, mega-cap earnings, geopolitical overhang — keeps marginal participants on the sidelines. The release of that pent-up liquidity into spot bids is the most plausible mechanism for the next leg higher if the technical structure holds.
The institutional architecture supporting BTC has evolved materially over the past month and now provides a structural floor that did not exist in prior cycles. Spot Bitcoin ETF inflows are pacing for $5 billion in April, double the March pace — an acceleration that is showing up directly in the spot tape via authorized-participant creations. On the corporate treasury side, Michael Saylor’s has bought $4.1 billion in BTC during April alone, including a $255 million purchase last week funded by common stock issuance. The corporate treasury holding now stands at 818,334 BTC valued at over $63 billion, surpassing BlackRock’s (BLK) client holdings on the spot ETF. MSTR shares last printed $162.49, off 3.97% on the session.
The mechanic here matters: when MSTR funds BTC purchases via equity issuance, the dilution is real but the BTC accumulation is also real, and over time the strategy compounds the company’s BTC-per-share metric. For traders watching MSTR as a leveraged BTC proxy, the equity-funded acquisition cycle is dilutive in a sideways tape but accretive in a rising tape. The risk is that an extended drawdown below $68,000 would trigger a sympathetic deleveraging in MSTR that would reflexively pressure BTC.
The $80,000 level has emerged as the critical psychological battleground in this cycle. BTC Markets analyst Rachael Lucas flagged $80,000 as the zone where many recent buyers approach breakeven, generating predictable profit-taking pressure. That dynamic was visible in the rejection from the $79,488 high on Monday — sellers materialized inside the $79,000–$80,000 range almost immediately as Trump’s skepticism on Iran’s Hormuz proposal leaked, and the token retreated to test the $76,000 zone within 24 hours.
The implication for tactical positioning: the next legitimate breakout requires a decisive, sustained close above $80,000, ideally on rising spot volume, to invalidate the profit-taking pressure that has capped the recent rally attempts. Anything less is noise inside the $73,000 to $80,000 consolidation range that has defined the past three weeks.
The longer-term institutional thesis for BTC has been articulated cleanly by Jordi Visser, who argued on the Bankless podcast that the AI cycle is structurally bullish for Bitcoin precisely because it commoditizes everything that is not scarce. Visser’s framework: AI accelerates the long-running shift from labor-driven income to capital concentration, intensifying inequality by boosting productivity while reducing demand for labor, and pushing more wealth into capital ownership outside the traditional financial system. AI destroys traditional moats — software, intellectual property, code — but cannot manufacture genuine scarcity, which is why scarcity-defined assets get repriced in an AI-saturated economy.
The argument is intellectually clean: if AI commoditizes digital products, then assets defined by hard-coded scarcity get a relative-value uplift. BTC’s 21-million-coin supply cap is the ultimate hard-coded scarcity. The market has not yet repriced BTC fully as a scarcity asset relative to its potential under that framework, and Visser’s view is that the repricing is coming soon. Whether that thesis holds in the timeframe relevant to current positioning is the open question — but it provides the strategic backdrop that explains why corporate treasuries and spot ETF flows have not capitulated despite the tactical drawdown.
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