TLDR
- Bitcoin surged 4.8% to around $71,825, its highest price since mid-March
- A 14-day U.S.-Iran ceasefire triggered a broad crypto market rally
- Ethereum, XRP, Solana, and Dogecoin all posted gains between 4.4% and 7%
- Oil prices dropped more than 10%, with WTI crude falling to around $95 a barrel
- Nearly $600 million in leveraged crypto futures were liquidated, mostly short positions
Bitcoin jumped sharply on Wednesday after the U.S. and Iran agreed to a 14-day ceasefire, easing tensions that had been weighing on risk assets for over a month.
Bitcoin rose 4.8% to around $71,825 early Wednesday. At one point it hit a high of $72,699, according to CoinDesk data. That puts it at its highest level since mid-March.

The ceasefire was announced by President Donald Trump on Truth Social just before an 8 p.m. ET deadline on Tuesday evening. Trump wrote that he agreed to “suspend the bombing and attack of Iran for a period of two weeks,” citing military objectives being met and progress toward a long-term peace agreement.
Trump Halts Iran Strikes for Two Weeks Amid Ceasefire Push
U.S. President Donald Trump said on Truth Social that, following discussions with Pakistani Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif and Field Marshal Asim Munir, and conditional upon Iranâs agreement to the immediate, full, and⌠pic.twitter.com/npInV48tUR
— Wu Blockchain (@WuBlockchain) April 7, 2026
Iran confirmed the ceasefire shortly after. Iran said its armed forces would “cease their defensive operations” if attacks on Iran stopped. It also said oil tankers could safely pass through the Strait of Hormuz, though noted some “technical limitations” and a need for coordination with its military.
Oil Prices Drop Sharply
Oil markets reacted fast. West Texas Intermediate crude fell more than 10% to around $95 a barrel. Brent crude saw a similar drop. For weeks, rising oil prices had added to inflation fears and kept pressure on risk assets including crypto.
U.S. stock futures also climbed. S&P 500 futures rose 1.9%, Nasdaq futures gained 2.2%, and Dow Jones futures jumped around 1.8%.
The broader crypto market moved with Bitcoin. The CoinDesk 20 Index rose 5% to 2,034 points.
Ethereum gained 7%. XRP rose 5.5%. Solana climbed 6.5%. Dogecoin was up 4.4%.
Short Sellers Hit Hard
The price jump triggered nearly $600 million in leveraged crypto futures liquidations. More than $400 million of that came from short positions â traders who had bet on prices falling.

That kind of forced buying from short sellers can add extra upward pressure on prices, a dynamic known as a short squeeze.
Before the ceasefire, traders had been building bearish positions in crypto futures. The ongoing conflict had kept Bitcoin’s upside capped even as other markets moved.
Over the past month, the Iran war had created persistent uncertainty. Bitcoin mostly traded sideways during that period, unable to push higher as oil rallied and inflation concerns grew.
With the ceasefire now in place, those headwinds eased quickly. Iran’s confirmation that Hormuz could reopen to oil and LNG tankers helped settle energy market nerves, even with the caveats attached.
The ceasefire is set to last two weeks while negotiations for a permanent deal continue.







