Markets Exhale Post-Holiday.
Ceasefire Talks Pull Oil Back From the Edge.
US equities return post-Easter with S&P 500 and Nasdaq futures edging higher as ceasefire talks between the US, Iran, and regional mediators circulate via Axios and Reuters. A potential 45-day pause — which could lead to a permanent end to hostilities — pulled Brent crude back from intraday highs near $112 to approximately $109 by mid-morning. Crypto majors are trading flat to slightly higher, digesting three days of holiday-thinned price action. BTC is holding near $69,500, up modestly on the session. Fear & Greed has improved from the extreme fear lows of last week (as low as 8–9) to around 13 — still firmly in fear territory, but a meaningful shift. The Iran deadline and the April 8 FOMC Minutes remain the two events that could move markets most decisively this week.
The dominant market mover today is a reported framework for a 45-day US-Iran ceasefire, cited by Axios and Reuters, which sourced four people with knowledge of the talks. Under the proposal, hostilities would pause — potentially leading to a permanent end to the conflict that began when US and Israeli forces launched strikes on Iran on February 28. Brent crude opened near $111.43 before pulling back to approximately $108.67–$109 on the ceasefire headlines, after earlier rising close to $112 on fresh Trump rhetoric.
The situation remains volatile and the devil is in the detail. Iran rejected immediately reopening the Strait of Hormuz, which has been effectively closed to commercial traffic since early March, disrupting approximately 17.8 million barrels per day of global oil flow. Trump has set a Tuesday deadline — warning of strikes on Iran’s power plants and bridges if the Strait remains shut. The IRGC issued a counter-warning Monday that attacks on US economic interests would intensify if Iranian civilian infrastructure continues to be targeted. OPEC+ agreed on Sunday to a token 206,000 barrel per day production increase for May — an increase that analysts say is largely theoretical given that most members cannot raise export volumes while the Strait remains closed.
Before this war started, Brent crude was trading at approximately $70 per barrel. It has now gained roughly 60% since hostilities began. Goldman Sachs has raised its 2026 Brent average forecast and warned that prices could approach 2008 all-time highs if disruptions persist. The oil market remains the most important leading indicator for crypto this week — more than any on-chain metric or technical level.
The relationship is indirect but significant. Elevated oil prices feed into headline inflation expectations. Higher inflation expectations reduce the probability of Fed rate cuts — the Fed’s own March 17-18 FOMC meeting already raised its 2026 PCE inflation forecast to 2.7%. When rate cut expectations fall, all risk assets including crypto face headwinds because the liquidity conditions that drive speculative capital into higher-risk investments become less favourable.
Every meaningful ceasefire headline this year has briefly lifted BTC and risk assets. Every escalation has reversed those gains. The pattern is now so well-established that the market is treating it with growing scepticism — any move today on ceasefire headlines should be assessed against whether the Strait of Hormuz actually reopens, not just whether diplomats are talking. Until tankers are moving through the Strait at normal volumes, the oil risk premium remains in place and the macro ceiling on risk assets remains lower than it would otherwise be.
The most important thing to watch today is not the price of BTC. It is the Brent crude chart. Oil dropping below $105 on credible ceasefire progress would be the most powerful positive catalyst available to crypto markets right now — more so than any ETF flow data, technical breakout, or regulatory headline. Conversely, any escalation that pushes Brent back above $115 would likely drag BTC toward the lower end of its recent range near $65,000–$66,000.
Sentiment has improved meaningfully from last week’s lows without breaking out of fear territory. The Fear & Greed Index hit a floor of 8–9 during the Trump address selloff on April 2 — one of the lowest readings since the Terra-Luna collapse in June 2022. It has since recovered to approximately 13, reflecting a cautious but less panicked positioning. This is consistent with the price action: BTC, ETH, and SOL are all range-bound rather than directional.
ETF flow data tells the more nuanced story. US spot Bitcoin ETFs recorded $1.32 billion in net inflows during March — the first positive month after a four-month outflow streak that shed approximately $6.18 billion from November 2025 through January 2026. That reversal is a meaningful signal that institutional allocators are returning to the asset class at current prices, even as the macro environment remains challenging. The last pre-holiday session, however, saw approximately $87 million in net outflows — a reminder that flows remain fragile and sensitive to geopolitical headlines.
On the regulatory front, the SEC has scheduled a CLARITY Act roundtable for April 16 — a concrete step toward resolving the long-standing question of whether the SEC or CFTC has jurisdiction over digital assets. This is a neutral-to-positive development for the sector that has not yet been priced into market sentiment given the current dominance of the Iran narrative.
Today’s tone is cautiously better than last week’s, but the improvement is fragile. Ceasefire talks are real but preliminary — Axios itself noted that chances of a partial deal in the next 48 hours are low. Iran has rejected immediately reopening the Strait. Trump has set a Tuesday ultimatum. The same pattern that played out on April 1 (de-escalation rally) and April 2 (Trump address reversal) could repeat tonight.
The underlying crypto thesis has not changed. $316 billion in stablecoins remains parked on the sidelines. Bitcoin ETFs recorded their first positive monthly inflow in five months in March. The GENIUS Act is law. The CLARITY Act roundtable is scheduled. The structural case for digital assets is intact.
What remains absent is the catalyst to rotate that sideline capital back into BTC, ETH, and SOL. A credible and sustained ceasefire — one that produces observable tanker traffic through the Strait — would be that catalyst. Absent that, the FOMC Minutes on Wednesday are the next best opportunity. Watch oil. Everything else follows from there this week.