Bitcoin loses $77,000, ether, solana slide as Hormuz standoff lifts oil to 3-week high
Bitcoin traded at $76,923 on Tuesday morning, down 2.4% over 24 hours after rejecting $79,400 the previous day, with the entire top 10 closing red as Brent crude extended its rally to a seventh straight day.
What to know:
- Bitcoin has been rejected near $79,000 three times in eight sessions, leaving the level as the de facto ceiling of its current trading range even as major cryptocurrencies trade lower over the past day.
- Analysts are split on whether the latest rally is driven by renewed spot demand from retail and institutions or by a short squeeze in derivatives markets, with negative funding rates suggesting both squeezes and their unwinding remain in play.
- Upcoming Federal Reserve policy decisions and megacap tech earnings this week could provide the catalyst to push bitcoin decisively above $80,000, or else cement the recent rejections as a durable top of the range.
Brent crude rose 1% to above $109 a barrel, extending its rally to a seventh day after Iran’s interim deal proposal to reopen the Strait of Hormuz failed to advance over the weekend. The White House said US officials were discussing the latest Iranian proposal but maintained “red lines” on any deal to end the eight-week war.
The MSCI Asia Pacific Index was little changed, with Japanese stocks supported by the Bank of Japan’s 6-3 split decision to keep policy unchanged. The yen strengthened 0.3% to around 159 per dollar.
Two readings of the bitcoin tape are circulating among market analysts.
Mike Novogratz of Galaxy Digital said in a note that US retail investors have returned to the market and the combination of retail demand, institutional capital, and limited supply creates the foundation for further upside. Santiment data shows whales accumulated more than 40,000 BTC over the past two weeks, and the firm flagged a sharp shift in sentiment from fear to fear-of-missing-out over a short period.
