- Bitcoin rebounded above $82,000 after a $1,200 drop triggered by Trump’s Iran comments.
- Iran rejected US nuclear demands raising tensions but peace talks remain active for now.
- Tuesday CPI above 3.3% could push Bitcoin toward $75,000 by killing rate cut hopes.
Bitcoin pushed back above $82,000 on Monday, rising over 1% to a high of $82,358 and approaching last Wednesday’s peak. The move came despite escalating US-Iran tensions that briefly sent prices sharply lower over the weekend.
However, the market’s next major direction will likely be decided by Tuesday’s April CPI inflation data, not the Middle East.
Why Iran Rattled Markets but Did Not Break Them
Iran submitted its response to the latest US peace proposal through Pakistani mediators on May 9. The response demanded war reparations, confirmed Iranian sovereignty over the Strait of Hormuz, called for an end to sanctions, and requested the unfreezing of Iranian assets.
Trump called the response “completely unacceptable” on social media. Bitcoin dropped $1,200 from $81,500 to $80,300 within 40 minutes, liquidating $81 million in long positions. Then, with no new positive news, Bitcoin reversed and climbed $1,800 back to $82,100, liquidating $48 million in shorts. All of it happened within two and a half hours on a low liquidity weekend.
Despite the moves, no further military action has followed Trump’s verbal response. Peace talks remain active. The situation is tense but manageable, and Bitcoin has reflected that by resuming its upward momentum rather than collapsing.
At press time, Bitcoin is trading slightly below the $81,000 mark.
Related: Why Bitcoin Didn’t Correlate With the Rally in the S&P 500 and Nasdaq
Why Tuesday’s CPI Is the Real Catalyst
Bitcoin has been locked in a tug of war around $83,000 for the past week with neither bulls nor bears making a decisive move. Both sides are waiting for Tuesday’s April CPI release.
Two scenarios are in play. If inflation comes in above the expected 3.3% or closer to 3.5%, Federal Reserve rate cut expectations will take a serious hit. A stronger dollar and rising Treasury yields would tighten liquidity and pressure Bitcoin toward the $70,000 support level.
If inflation shows signs of cooling, the opposite applies. Easing market sentiment would support risk assets and could push Bitcoin above $90,000.
The Broader Market Context
US equity markets have now posted six consecutive green weeks across the board. The NASDAQ, S&P 500, Russell 2000, and Dow Jones have all closed higher for six straight weeks. That sustained risk-on momentum in traditional markets is providing a supportive backdrop for Bitcoin even as geopolitical uncertainty lingers.
The key level to watch is $83,000 on the upside and $70,000 on the downside. Tuesday’s CPI print will likely determine which one gets tested first.
Related: Strategy Says It May Sell Bitcoin to Fund Dividends
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