Bitcoin a du mal à détenir 71 000 $ après l'échec des négociations avec l'Iran, laissant le rallye sans confirmation complète
Burns Brief
Bitcoin se maintient toujours à près de 71 000 $ après que le sentiment du marché U soit devenu positif, les traders et les analystes soulignant un potentiel de dynamique de suivi au cours des prochaines sessions. Surveillez la réaction de $ BTC $ ETH $ NEAR – un mouvement décisif au-dessus ou en dessous des niveaux clés confirmera la prochaine tendance.
Bitcoin is still holding near $71,000 after U.S.-Iran talks ended without a deal, but the rebound now looks more fragile than it did at the start of the weekend. Price has kept part of the move. The chain still has not confirmed that broader demand is building behind it. That gap is the real story right now. Bitcoin kept part of the ceasefire bounce, but the chain still has not confirmed the move 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. Related Reading Bitcoin’s rebound looks like a trap as real Hormuz threat may not be over Banks and energy forecasters see a slower repair in oil flows, keeping inflation and Fed risk alive for Bitcoin. Apr 8, 2026 · Gino Matos 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. Why this matters Bitcoin is no longer trading on the simple relief story that a ceasefire resets risk appetite. That backdrop weakened over the weekend, so the market now has to prove the rebound can stand on firmer ground through flows, spot demand, and on-chain activity rather than headline relief alone. 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
Key Takeaways
- -Iran talks ended without a deal, but the rebound now looks more fragile than it did at the start of the weekend
- The chain still has not confirmed that broader demand is building behind it
- Bitcoin kept part of the ceasefire bounce, but the chain still has not confirmed the move 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