Bitcoin sits on a knife edge but holds $71k as “no Iran deal” spooks market over the weekend

Bitcoin kept part of the ceasefire bounce, but the chain still has not confirmed the move

Bitcoin is still holding above $71,000 after the weekend’s ceasefire-driven risk bounce, even as the macro story behind that move has already started to fray. That leaves the market in an awkward middle ground. Price kept part of the upside. The chain still has not confirmed that the move reflects broad underlying demand.

That gap is the real story right now. The first reaction came from geopolitics and cross-market repricing, not from obvious on-chain urgency.

Since then, the ceasefire narrative has weakened, ETF flows have steadied, and Bitcoin has held enough ground to keep the bullish case alive. What remains unresolved is whether this is the start of a more durable demand cycle or simply a macro reflex that outran conviction.

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After just a few days, the first move is already old news. On April 8, U.S. crude settled at $94.41, Brent at $94.75, the S&P 500 was up 2.5%, and the Dow was higher by 1,325 points after President Donald Trump announced a two-week ceasefire with Iran.

By the next session, the reset was already wobbling. April 9 showed stocks recovering from early losses to finish modestly higher, while oil stayed elevated after its rebound, and the ceasefire already looked fragile.

As of Sunday, April 12, the macro backdrop looks even less settled. AP reported today that U.S.-Iran talks in Islamabad ended without an agreement, with both sides blaming each other, and the two-week truce still under strain. That pushes the market one step further away from the easy version of the bullish case that treated the ceasefire as a stable reset in risk appetite.

Bitcoin still held part of the move. CryptoSlate data shows Bitcoin price at $71,568.66 as of April 12, down 1.83% over 24 hours, up 6.81% over seven days, and down 0.65% over 30 days. The asset is still trading far above the panic low near $67,000 that framed the earlier bounce, even after the macro backdrop lost coherence.

That sequence leaves the market asking, “What happens when a geopolitical catalyst hits first, then starts to fade before the chain ever shows signs of urgent confirmation?”

So far, the evidence still points to a confirmation gap. YCharts shows Bitcoin’s average transaction fee at $0.3162 on April 11, down from $0.4525 the day before and 79.79% lower than a year earlier. Even after the ceasefire shock, the base layer still looks cheap to use.

Glassnode’s April 8 note, “Bouncing in a Bear,” described Bitcoin’s rebound from $67,000 to $72,000 as a recovery that still lacked strong conviction because spot demand remained weak and futures activity had softened. That frame still holds up today. Price moved quickly. The chain still looks restrained.

The market, therefore, has three facts sitting together at once. The initial macro impulse was real. The impulse weakened quickly. Bitcoin kept part of the move anyway. The chain has not yet repriced to signal broad settlement urgency. That combination is more useful than a simple bullish or bearish label.

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Macro moved first, then the ceasefire started losing coherence

Day one brought the sharp relief move, with oil plunging below $95 and the Dow surging 1,325 points. Day two brought the first visible stress, with stocks dipping early, oil rebounding, and the session finishing with a much smaller gain.

By April 12, the truce looks shakier still. The failed Islamabad talks make clear that the ceasefire did not mature into a durable political settlement over the weekend. It remained a pause under pressure.

That changes the way Bitcoin should be framed. The move cannot be treated as a stable relief rally that simply needs on-chain confirmation to catch up. It looks more like a fast macro impulse that outran conviction, then lost part of its outside support before the chain ever started behaving like a fresh demand cycle was underway.

Bitcoin’s price action still deserves respect inside that sequence. The asset is holding the low-$70,000 area even after the easiest macro tailwind weakened. A full retrace would have sent a different signal. Holding part of the move keeps the setup alive.

The distinction is that “alive” and “confirmed” are not the same thing. A market can absorb a geopolitical shock, keep part of the rebound, and still fail to show broad internal urgency. That is exactly the gap now visible between Bitcoin’s price and the condition of its fee market.

YCharts shows 558,574 Bitcoin transactions for April 8, up 3.64% from the prior day and 53.47% above a year earlier. That says the network is active in absolute terms. It does not say users are competing aggressively for scarce block space.

The fee data makes that distinction clearer. Average fees of $0.3162 on April 11 indicate a network processing transactions without the kind of squeeze usually associated with speculative urgency. Bitcoin is expensive again. Using Bitcoin is still unusually cheap.

That leaves the on-chain frame as a test rather than the whole thesis. The main driver sat outside crypto first. The chain’s job now is to show whether broader participation is actually building behind the move. Until that happens, price is carrying more of the argument than network conditions are.

Glassnode’s April 1 note, “No Catalyst, No Range Break,” describes the market before the ceasefire shock arrived. Bitcoin was rangebound between $60,000 and $70,000, spot demand showed early absorption, and conviction was still too soft for a sustained breakout. The macro shock changed the price first. It did not automatically change the deeper structure.

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Fees stayed subdued even as ETF flows turned back up

The confirmation gap becomes more revealing when the chain is placed next to the wrapper channels. Farside’s full Bitcoin ETF flow table shows how quickly ETF demand swung around the ceasefire sequence. U.S. spot Bitcoin ETFs took in $471.4 million on April 6, then saw $159.1 million of net outflows on April 7 and $93.9 million of net outflows on April 8.

That looked unstable at first. It looks more balanced now. Farside’s table then shows flows snapping back to $358.1 million of net inflows on April 9 and another $240.4 million on April 10.

Those figures matter for the interpretation of price. They show a demand channel large enough to support Bitcoin even while the base layer remains quiet. They also show why a price rebound can arrive faster than a fee repricing on the chain itself.

If ETF and broker rails are doing more of the lifting than the base layer, then Bitcoin can hold part of a macro move without showing broad congestion. The asset can look resilient while still carrying an open confirmation question.

The two sets of data, therefore, need to be read together. Average fees remain subdued. ETF flows have improved after a sharp wobble. Weak spot demand and softer futures activity continue. That mix says price support exists, although the support still looks more flow-driven than settlement-driven.

The chain is active. ETF demand has turned positive again after the early-week wobble. Bitcoin kept part of the move even as the truce looked less stable.

Those are constructive features. They still stop short of broad confirmation.

A fee market near $0.32 per transaction does not describe users urgently repricing block space. A market holding above $71,000 while external talks fail and ETF flows rebound does describe an asset with some resilience. Bitcoin held up better than the macro sequence alone might have implied, while the chain still has not joined price in a decisive way.

ETF flows can respond within hours. Spot and futures positioning can react just as quickly. Base-layer demand often takes longer to show up in a cleaner way, especially when the first catalyst comes from war-risk repricing rather than from a crypto-native event.

The first catalyst has already weakened. The flow picture improved. The chain still looks cheap. Bitcoin is holding enough of the bounce to keep the question open.

The next test is whether price can keep holding while the chain stays quiet

The tactical framework for the next session or two remains fairly tight. One path is that Bitcoin continues to hold a meaningful share of the ceasefire bounce, even as the macro backdrop remains unstable and the chain remains cheap to use. In that case, the move looks more like a liquid risk-asset reflex with support from ETF and exchange channels than the start of a broad new settlement-demand cycle.

The other path is that support starts to broaden. That would show up through steadier ETF inflows, calmer cross-market conditions, firmer spot participation, and some rise in fees as block-space demand begins to catch up. That sequence would give the price a stronger internal foundation.

Today’s failed U.S.-Iran talks make that test more immediate because they remove any lingering assumption that the ceasefire itself solved the market’s macro problem. It did not. The truce stayed fragile, the diplomacy broke down, and Bitcoin is now trading in the aftermath of that failed handoff.

Glassnode’s view that the rebound still lacks strong conviction, therefore, remains current. Average fees at $0.3162 on April 11 still describe a network operating without broad fee pressure. ETF inflows on April 9 and April 10 still indicate a large, improving support channel. Bitcoin at $71,568 today still shows the asset holding part of the move.

Taken together, those datapoints describe a market that absorbed a fading macro impulse better than expected, but still fell short of full validation.

If Bitcoin holds gains while fees remain subdued and the ceasefire framework continues to weaken, the move will continue to look more like a macro- and wrapper-driven reflex than a fresh demand cycle on the chain.

If flows remain firm and fees begin to rise, the rebound looks more durable.

The post Bitcoin sits on a knife edge but holds $71k as “no Iran deal” spooks market over the weekend appeared first on CryptoSlate.

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