Key Takeaways
- BTC climbed to a 12-week peak of $79,399 before retreating, representing its fourth unsuccessful attempt to surpass $80,000 recently
- The surge followed news that Iran proposed reopening the Strait of Hormuz, though momentum quickly faded
- April has seen Bitcoin gain 16%, with Strategy accumulating $3.9 billion in BTC during the month
- Equity futures declined Sunday evening as crude oil surged past $100 per barrel amid escalating Iran concerns
- Critical central bank meetings from the Fed and ECB coincide with major technology sector earnings releases this week
Bitcoin surged to $79,399 in overnight trading before encountering resistance and retreating during Monday’s Asian session. The digital asset stabilized near $77,705, representing a modest 0.4% decline over the previous 24-hour period.
This marked the fourth occasion in recent sessions that bitcoin encountered selling pressure below the $79,000 threshold. The pattern of rejections is establishing a defined resistance zone that traders are monitoring closely.
The upward movement was catalyzed by an Axios report indicating Iran had presented a fresh proposal to restore access to the Strait of Hormuz, connecting nuclear negotiations to the removal of a US naval blockade. The development sent risk-sensitive assets higher initially.
Asian stock markets demonstrated robust gains. The MSCI Asia Pacific Index climbed 1.7%, emerging market indices reached new peaks, and Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing jumped 6%. Bitcoin participated in the rally momentarily before momentum evaporated.
Rachael Lucas, an analyst at BTC Markets, noted that the $80,000 price zone represents a breakeven point for numerous recent purchasers. This technical level typically generates selling activity as traders who held losing positions seek to exit without further losses.
The Resistance at $80K Remains Stubborn
Perpetual swap funding rates continue showing negative territory at -0.13% on a seven-day average, data from Coinglass indicates. This dynamic means short position holders are compensating long holders, creating conditions that could produce a short squeeze if bitcoin maintains support above current levels.
Bitcoin is tracking toward its first monthly gain exceeding 10% since May 2025. Strategy executed its largest monthly acquisition in twelve months, purchasing $3.9 billion worth of bitcoin in April, Bloomberg data shows.
Alternative cryptocurrencies also experienced declines. Ether decreased 2.4% to $2,329, Solana retreated 1.9% to $86, while BNB slipped 1.2% to $630.
Equity index futures weakened during Sunday’s overnight session. Dow Jones Industrial Average futures declined approximately 0.2%, with S&P 500 and Nasdaq 100 contracts each falling roughly 0.2%.
The futures weakness contrasted with last week’s strength, where both the S&P 500 and Nasdaq Composite achieved fresh record closing levels. The S&P 500 advanced more than 9% throughout April while the Nasdaq jumped over 15%.
Critical Week Ahead for Markets
Oil prices extended their advance on geopolitical uncertainty. Brent crude increased approximately 2% to levels exceeding $100 per barrel, with West Texas Intermediate climbing above $96.
Both the Federal Reserve and European Central Bank have monetary policy announcements scheduled this week. This particular Fed meeting holds added significance as one of the final meetings likely chaired by Jerome Powell before Kevin Warsh assumes leadership.
Multiple Magnificent Seven technology companies will report quarterly results this week. Market participants view these earnings as a critical gauge of how mega-cap equities are performing amid current economic conditions.
For bitcoin holders, the focus remains on whether a Fed policy signal or strong corporate earnings can provide the momentum needed to finally breach the stubborn resistance range.
Current market data shows bitcoin trading at $77,705 with persistently negative funding rates and the $80,000 level remaining unconquered after multiple attempts.
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