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On April 20-21, 2026, Bitcoin quickly rebounded from its intraday lows, surging to $76,469 at one point, with a 24-hour increase of about 2.08%. The total market capitalization of the global crypto market recovered to $2.55 trillion, with trading volume up 15%. This rebound was driven by three combined forces:
First, a phased easing of geopolitical risks. The temporary reopening of the Strait of Hormuz reduced extreme risk aversion in the market, supporting risk asset recovery. Second, accelerated institutional inflows. The US spot Bitcoin ETF continued to show strong net inflows—on April 20, a single-day net inflow of $238 million, with BlackRock’s IBIT contributing $256 million. The ETF has maintained net inflows for five consecutive days. Strategy (formerly MicroStrategy) made a one-time purchase of 34,164 BTC for $2.54 billion, the largest single buy-in in over a year. Third, slowing inflation data improved macro sentiment, further boosting the appeal of risk assets.
On-chain and derivatives data reveal structural divergences behind the rebound. CryptoQuant analysts pointed out that long-term holders net added about 354k BTC over the past 30 days, indicating structural buying. However, about 60k BTC were transferred to exchanges during the same period, and realized profit/loss ratios remain below 1, suggesting some holders are reducing positions at losses—characteristic of a "bear market rebound" rather than a trend reversal.
Signals from the derivatives market are more cautious. Perpetual contract funding rates have been negative for 46 consecutive days, with the seven-day moving average funding rate dropping to -0.008%, a new low since 2023. This indicates a significant increase in short-position bets, with futures market sentiment leaning bearish. This "futures market alertness versus spot ETF buying" pattern clearly reflects differing perspectives between short-term traders and long-term institutional investors.
Glassnode’s analysis also confirms this tug-of-war: spot accumulation volume delta has shifted from positive to negative, indicating rising selling pressure; however, the ETF MVRV ratio has increased, and ETF holders’ profitability has improved, suggesting institutional demand continues to provide a bottom support.
From a macro perspective, Bitcoin is increasingly integrating with the broader digital risk asset sector, forming links with large tech stocks, semiconductors, and AI infrastructure. The S&P 500 is expected to achieve double-digit earnings growth for the sixth consecutive quarter. The four major tech giants are projected to invest a total of $700 billion in AI by 2026. This macro environment supports risk assets. Meanwhile, stablecoin market cap continues to expand, DeFi activity remains active, and the combination of stablecoins and tokenized assets is building an "invisible pipeline" in the crypto market, providing liquidity for the rebound.
On a micro level, continuous accumulation by Strategy and the rebound of Coinbase Premium form stable buying support. Market liquidity is gradually improving, with corporate finances, ETF inflows, and US spot demand working together. The demand structure is shifting from retail-driven to institution-led.
Technically, the $76,000–78,000 zone constitutes a dense resistance area. If Bitcoin can break through and hold above this zone, it may test $77,000–78,000 higher. If the breakout fails or geopolitical tensions worsen again, a pullback to the $74,000 support level is possible. The RSI remains above 70, indicating strong short-term momentum, but high levels also suggest overbought risks.
Overall, the market is in a critical phase of bullish and bearish contest. Continuous institutional allocation and cautious derivatives sentiment are at odds, with macro data improvements intertwined with geopolitical uncertainties. For investors, close attention should be paid to the final outcome of US-Iran negotiations, the sustainability of ETF inflows, and whether the $76,000–78,000 resistance can be broken, avoiding chasing highs on a single positive signal.