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SnatchProfits Hydra RR
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Road to $50,000

2.61%
$1,307 / $50,000

Probabilistic AI engine trained on ~7 years of Bitcoin market data + strict risk controls. Built to survive volatility and compound patiently.

Built by Darius Šilkaitis — ML + trading systems R&D since 2017.

Start$1k$5k$10k$25k$50k
Start $800
Current Profit $507
Current Equity $1,307
Goal $50,000
(2.61% to goal)
Performance (from start)
Net profit relative to $800 start.
+63.39%
+$507
Equity (USD)
Equity chart
BTCUSD
BITSTAMP
RR Bot Status
Accuracy floor
SHORT BOT ACTIVE
Balance $814
Open Amount $0
Average Entry $69,672.50
Stop Loss
$72,111
LONG BOT FROZEN (accuracy floor)
Balance $477
Open Amount $-40
Average Entry $84,500.50
Stop Loss $81,543
Accuracy floor protects capital.
Latest AI Signal
Model: 36_combo
Current price
$75,857
BUY
SELL 0.02% NEUTRAL 3.42% BUY 96.56%
Probabilities, not advice.
Accuracy + Volume
55% floor
Monthly Up Accuracy 81.06%
Monthly Down Accuracy 0.00%
Monthly Combined Accuracy 81.06%
Half-Year Up Accuracy 54.71%
Half-Year Down Accuracy 76.26%
Quarter Combined Accuracy 58.05%
Volume (7 days) $30
Volume (30 days) $30
55% floor: 55.00% Above floor
Internet sentiment score
24x / day Latest 9 hours ago
bullish lead +30%
LONG Open trading
SHORT No action
Bullish
65%
Bearish
35%
Updated every hour — the panel reflects the latest completed sentiment snapshot.
30D hourly sentiment history
+30% now
2026-04-03 1h sentiment snapshots 2026-04-18
Last 24 Bitcoin Macro Signals
Most recent
2026-04-18 13:46:46 2026-04-18
+30% bull BULL 65% / BEAR 35%
The dominant 7-day bias for BTCUSD remains moderately bullish because cross-asset conditions are still easing rather than tightening into the April 18 to April 25 window. The single most important market-moving development from the last 24 hours is Iran’s confirmation that the Strait of Hormuz is open to commercial shipping, which triggered a sharp collapse in crude and a broad risk-on response across global markets. That development improves liquidity and risk appetite at the margin because cheaper oil reduces the immediate inflation threat, eases pressure on long-duration rates, and removes a major macro headwind that had been leaning against Bitcoin. The main counterforce is that Iran also signaled the opening could be reversed if U.S. blockade pressure persists, so the relief is real but still geopolitically fragile rather than fully durable. On financial conditions, the U.S. 10-year yield has backed off recent stress highs but is still around the low 4.3% area, the dollar is no longer in a clean squeeze regime, and volatility has cooled from the prior panic rather than fully disappearing. On the broader liquidity layer, U.S. M2 is still running above year-ago levels and supports the higher-timeframe backdrop, but there is still no fresh synchronized central-bank easing impulse and both ongoing ECB balance-sheet runoff and the BOJ’s April 2026 JGB-purchase reduction plan keep liquidity expansion from looking explosive. Bitcoin-specific structure confirms rather than contradicts the macro lean: U.S. spot Bitcoin ETFs just printed a strong $663.9 million net inflow on April 17 after a softer April 16, stablecoin supply remains near record highs above $313 billion, and BTC is holding near $75,960 instead of breaking down. This is strong enough to justify a reading above 60 because macro relief, volatility compression, and renewed institutional Bitcoin demand are aligned at the same time, but it is not strong enough for a 70-plus signal because yields are not decisively falling, the Hormuz relief can still reverse on headlines, and the next few sessions still include the April 20 Fed discount-rate meeting, the April 22 20-year Treasury auction, and the April 23 S&P Global PMIs and jobless claims that could quickly reprice rates and the dollar. The most likely 7-day BTC environment is an upside-biased range with dip buying favored, unless oil jumps back up or Treasury supply and data re-tighten financial conditions.
2026-04-18 12:40:38 2026-04-18
+28% bull BULL 64% / BEAR 36%
The dominant 7-day bias for BTCUSD remains modestly bullish because cross-asset conditions are still easing rather than tightening into the April 18-25 window. The single most important market-moving development from the last 24 hours is Iran’s statement that the Strait of Hormuz is open to commercial traffic, which drove a fresh oil collapse, pushed the U.S. 10-year yield down toward 4.24%, and helped risk assets extend the relief move. That development improves liquidity and risk appetite at the margin because lower crude reduces the immediate inflation impulse, softens the chance of another bond-market tightening wave, and removes a key macro drag that had been pressuring Bitcoin. The main counterforce is that this remains headline-driven geopolitical relief rather than a durable policy reset, so tanker disruption, sanctions friction, or renewed conflict could reverse the easing quickly. On the rates and financial-conditions layer, yields have backed off recent highs, the dollar is no longer in a clean squeeze regime, volatility has cooled into the high teens, and U.S. M2 is still trending higher year over year, but the Fed balance sheet is not meaningfully re-expanding and ECB balance-sheet runoff is still a mild offset. On energy and geopolitics, the sharp drop in crude is clearly supportive for near-term risk appetite, but the Middle East backdrop is still fragile enough that oil cannot yet be treated as a stable disinflation tailwind for the full week ahead. Bitcoin-specific structure broadly confirms the macro improvement: U.S. spot Bitcoin ETFs have posted strong net inflows on April 14-16 despite a small April 16 total, stablecoin supply remains near record highs around the low-$320 billions, and treasury-adoption and friendlier U.S. regulatory posture remain incremental positives. This is not strong enough for a higher bullish reading above 60 by much more than the low 60s because the next 72 hours still include the April 20 Fed Board closed meeting on discount rates, April 21 Governor Waller remarks, the April 22 20-year Treasury auction, and April 23 flash PMI, jobless claims, and 5-year TIPS supply that can quickly reprice yields and the dollar. It is also not strong enough for a 70-plus reading because global liquidity is improving without a fresh synchronized central-bank easing impulse, the relief rally is still geopolitically reversible, and Bitcoin is being helped by macro easing more than by an overwhelming standalone demand shock; the most likely 7-day BTC environment is an upside-biased range with dip buying favored unless oil, yields, or the dollar re-accelerate higher.
2026-04-18 12:01:30 2026-04-18
+28% bull BULL 64% / BEAR 36%
The dominant 7-day bias for BTCUSD remains modestly bullish because the cross-asset backdrop is still easing rather than tightening into the April 20-25 window. The single most important market-moving development from the last 24 hours is Iran’s confirmation that the Strait of Hormuz is open for commercial traffic, which drove an oil collapse of roughly 9% to 10%, pushed the U.S. 10-year yield down toward 4.24% from about 4.32%, and supported a broad risk rally. That development improves liquidity and risk appetite at the margin because cheaper crude reduces near-term inflation pressure, lowers the probability of another bond-market tightening impulse, and removes a major macro drain that had been weighing on Bitcoin. The main counterforce is that this is geopolitical relief rather than a durable policy reset, and tanker traffic, sanctions, or war headlines can still reverse the move quickly. On the rates and financial-conditions layer, Treasury yields have backed off, the dollar is no longer in a clear squeeze regime, volatility has cooled into the high teens, and the Fed’s balance sheet is still drifting lower year over year, so conditions are better but not fully loose. On energy and geopolitics, the oil shock has clearly softened, but the Middle East backdrop is still fragile enough that lower crude cannot yet be treated as a permanent disinflationary tailwind. Bitcoin-specific structure is confirming the macro improvement: U.S. spot Bitcoin ETFs have recently shifted back to positive net flow territory with strong April 15-16 inflows, stablecoin supply has expanded to fresh highs around the $320 billion area, and corporate treasury adoption remains incrementally supportive. This is not strong enough for a materially higher bullish reading above 60 by much more than the low-60s because the next 72 hours bring U.S. March retail sales on Tuesday, April 21, followed by the April 22 20-year Treasury auction and April 23 flash PMIs, jobless claims, and a 5-year TIPS auction, all of which can quickly reprice yields and the dollar. It is also not strong enough for a 70-plus reading because global liquidity is improving without a fresh synchronized central-bank easing impulse, the relief rally is still headline-sensitive, and the upcoming macro calendar leaves the setup constructive but fragile; the most likely 7-day BTC environment is an upside-biased range with dip buying favored unless oil, yields, or the dollar re-accelerate higher.
2026-04-18 00:01:37 2026-04-18
+26% bull BULL 63% / BEAR 37%
The dominant 7-day bias for BTCUSD remains modestly bullish because the cross-asset backdrop is easing rather than tightening into the April 20-24 window. The single most important market-moving development from the last 24 hours is Iran’s statement that the Strait of Hormuz is fully open for commercial traffic, which triggered a sharp oil collapse and pushed the U.S. 10-year yield down to about 4.24% from roughly 4.32% late Thursday. That development improves liquidity and risk appetite at the margin because cheaper crude reduces near-term inflation pressure, lowers the odds of another bond selloff, and supports easier financial conditions for risk assets including Bitcoin. The main counterforce is that this is geopolitical relief, not a durable policy reset, and it can reverse quickly if shipping security, sanctions, or war headlines deteriorate again. On the broader liquidity layer, U.S. M2 is still rising and reached a record 22,667.3 billion dollars in February 2026, but there is no fresh synchronized central-bank easing impulse right now and the ECB’s weekly statement still shows balance-sheet runoff and slightly lower base money, so global liquidity is supportive but not explosively expanding. On rates, dollar, Treasury, and volatility context, yields have backed off, the dollar is not in a fresh squeeze regime, and volatility has cooled with equities pushing to record highs, but conviction is capped by Tuesday April 21 U.S. retail sales within the next 72 hours, followed by the April 22 10-year and 20-year Treasury auctions and April 23 flash PMIs plus a 5-year TIPS auction. On oil and geopolitics, the drop toward roughly 83.85 WTI and 90.38 Brent is a real tailwind for Bitcoin because it removes a liquidity drain, but the Middle East backdrop is unresolved enough that energy relief cannot yet be treated as permanent. Bitcoin-specific structure is confirming rather than contradicting the macro view: BTC is near 77130, U.S. spot Bitcoin ETFs printed another 88.1 million dollars of net inflows on April 17 after 411.4 million, 186.1 million, and 26.1 million on the prior three sessions, and stablecoin supply has continued to expand toward about 320 billion dollars. This is strong enough to justify a low-60s reading because macro relief, easier yields, calmer volatility, and positive Bitcoin flow data are aligned at the same time instead of fighting each other. It is not strong enough for a 70-plus reading because the relief is still headline-sensitive, the next few sessions carry meaningful macro and Treasury-supply event risk, and global liquidity is improving without yet showing a broad new acceleration across major central banks; the most likely 7-day BTC environment is a constructive but fragile upside-biased range with dip buying favored unless oil, yields, or the dollar re-accelerate higher.
2026-04-17 16:01:20 2026-04-17
+24% bull BULL 62% / BEAR 38%
The dominant 7-day bias for BTCUSD remains modestly bullish because the macro tape is still easing rather than tightening into the April 20-24 window. The single most important market-moving development from the last 24 hours is that Iran said the Strait of Hormuz is open again, which drove a fresh oil collapse and helped push the U.S. 10-year yield down to about 4.22% from roughly 4.32% late Thursday while BTC traded near $77,800. That development improves liquidity and risk appetite at the margin because lower crude cuts near-term inflation pressure, reduces the odds of a renewed bond selloff, and supports looser financial conditions for global risk assets. The main counterforce is that this is still geopolitical relief rather than a durable policy reset, so one reversal in shipping security, sanctions, or war headlines could quickly reprice oil, yields, and Bitcoin. On broader financial conditions, yields have backed off, the dollar is not in a fresh squeeze regime, and volatility has eased from the war scare, but the setup is still vulnerable to next week’s U.S. March retail sales release on Tuesday, April 21, the 20-year Treasury auction on Wednesday, April 22, and Thursday, April 23 flash PMIs, jobless claims, and a 5-year TIPS auction. On energy and geopolitics, the sharp drop in crude is a real tailwind for BTC because it removes a liquidity drain, but the Middle East backdrop is unresolved enough that oil cannot yet be treated as a one-way disinflation signal. Bitcoin-specific structure is confirming more than contradicting the macro view: U.S. spot Bitcoin ETFs saw strong inflows earlier this week including about $411 million on April 14 and about $257 million on April 10, while U.S. M2 has continued to expand and February 2026 M2 was roughly 4.9% above February 2025, which is a supportive background for scarce assets. This reading is strong enough to stay above 60 because macro relief, easier yields, calmer volatility, and still-constructive Bitcoin demand are aligned at the same time instead of fighting each other. It is not strong enough for a 70-plus reading because the geopolitical relief could still reverse and the next 72 hours contain enough macro and Treasury-supply event risk to send yields and the dollar back higher if data run hot or auctions tail. The most likely 7-day BTC environment is a constructive but fragile upside-biased range with dip buying favored unless oil, yields, or the dollar re-accelerate upward again.
2026-04-17 14:01:22 2026-04-17
+22% bull BULL 61% / BEAR 39%
The dominant 7-day bias for BTCUSD is modestly bullish because the macro tape has improved rather than tightened into the weekend. The single most important market-moving development from the last 24 hours is that the Strait of Hormuz reopened and oil fell sharply, with the U.S. 10-year yield also easing to about 4.24% from 4.32% as inflation-risk pressure came out of the bond market. That development improves liquidity and risk appetite at the margin because cheaper energy reduces the probability of a fresh inflation scare, lowers discount-rate pressure, and supports the idea that financial conditions are loosening instead of re-tightening over the next several sessions. The main counterforce is that this is still geopolitical relief rather than a durable macro reset, so one adverse headline around Iran, shipping security, or sanctions could quickly reverse oil, yields, and volatility. On rates and risk conditions, Treasury yields have backed off, the dollar does not appear to be in a fresh squeeze regime, equities are still trading firm, and volatility looks contained rather than panic-driven, which is supportive for Bitcoin but not yet a full green light for aggressive risk. On energy and geopolitics, the oil collapse is a real tailwind versus the prior war premium, but the conflict backdrop is unresolved enough that energy cannot yet be treated as a clean one-way liquidity positive. Bitcoin-specific structure is confirming rather than fighting the macro setup: BTC is back near $77,343, U.S. spot Bitcoin ETFs printed net inflows of about $411.4 million on April 14, $186.1 million on April 15, and still stayed positive at roughly $26.1 million on April 16, while stablecoin supply remains near record highs around the $317 billion to $320 billion area. This move is strong enough to justify a 60+ bullish reading because macro relief, lower yields, calmer volatility, and still-positive Bitcoin demand are aligned at the same time, but it is not strong enough for a 70+ reading because the next 72 hours bring March retail sales on Tuesday, April 21, followed by flash PMIs and jobless claims on Thursday, April 23, then durable goods and final Michigan sentiment on Friday, April 24, any of which could push yields and the dollar back higher again. The most likely 7-day BTC environment is a constructive but still fragile upside-biased range with dip buying favored unless geopolitical stress or incoming U.S. data re-tighten financial conditions.
2026-04-17 08:01:22 2026-04-17
+18% bull BULL 59% / BEAR 41%
The dominant 7-day bias for BTCUSD remains modestly bullish, with macro conditions still leaning toward risk support rather than a fresh tightening shock. The single most important market-moving development from the last 24 hours is that markets continued to trade the Iran ceasefire and extension talks as broadly holding, which kept oil off its panic highs and helped risk assets digest another record U.S. equity close. That development improves liquidity and risk appetite at the margin because it reduces the immediate probability of another energy-led inflation spike or dollar squeeze over the next week. The main counterforce preventing a stronger reading is that the ceasefire is still fragile and expires next week, so one adverse headline could quickly reprice oil, yields, and volatility higher again. On financial conditions, the U.S. 10-year Treasury yield closed near 4.32% on April 16 after easing from late-March highs near 4.44%, the dollar is still sitting in a softer 98-99 zone rather than breaking into a new uptrend, and VIX near 18 shows calmer hedging demand but not full complacent risk-on conviction. On energy and geopolitics, oil has clearly come off the worst war premium, but supply and shipping risk tied to Iran are not fully normalized, so energy is no longer a panic drain yet still not a clean liquidity tailwind. Bitcoin-specific structure is supportive but not explosive: BTC is holding near $75,000, U.S. spot Bitcoin ETFs still printed a net inflow of about $26 million on April 16 after much larger inflows earlier in the week, and stablecoin supply remains at record highs, which argues that crypto liquidity is still expanding rather than contracting. This is not strong enough for a 60+ bullish reading because the key macro event inside the next 72 hours is March U.S. retail sales on Monday, April 20, followed by flash PMIs and jobless claims on Thursday, April 23, and any upside growth surprise could push yields and the dollar back up quickly. It is not strong enough for a 70+ bullish reading because global liquidity is only mildly supportive, the geopolitical relief is still reversible, and Bitcoin demand is confirming the backdrop rather than overwhelming macro fragility; the most likely 7-day BTC environment is a constructive but fragile upward-leaning range with ETF-supported dip buying unless rates or oil re-accelerate.
2026-04-17 00:01:12 2026-04-17
+16% bull BULL 58% / BEAR 42%
The dominant 7-day bias for BTCUSD remains modestly bullish because the cross-asset backdrop is still leaning toward geopolitical relief and softer dollar conditions rather than a fresh tightening shock. The single most important market-moving development from the last 24 hours is that a 10-day Israel-Lebanon ceasefire has taken effect while diplomacy continues around extending the broader Iran-related pause, helping equities hold record highs. That development improves liquidity and risk appetite at the margin because it lowers the immediate tail risk of another oil spike and keeps the market treating the Middle East shock as containable rather than as a new durable inflation impulse. The main counterforce preventing a stronger reading is that the relief is still reversible, with Brent still roughly in the mid-$90s to near-$100 zone and any failed negotiation capable of quickly re-tightening inflation expectations. On rates and broader financial conditions, the U.S. 10-year yield is still around 4.31%, the dollar remains relatively soft near the high-98 area rather than breaking higher, volatility has cooled from March stress levels, and next week’s April 22 20-year bond auction plus April 23 5-year TIPS auction keep duration-supply pressure alive. On energy and geopolitics, the market is benefiting from ceasefire headlines, but shipping and sanctions risk around Iran is not fully normalized, so oil is no longer a full panic signal yet still not a clean liquidity tailwind. Bitcoin-specific structure is supportive: BTC is holding around $75,132, U.S. spot ETF flows have been net positive over the last several sessions despite some day-to-day reversals, Morgan Stanley’s April 8 Bitcoin trust launch broadens institutional access, and stablecoin supply is still broadly elevated rather than contracting. This is not strong enough for a 60+ bullish reading because the macro confirmation is still incomplete, with March retail sales due on April 21 and flash PMIs plus jobless claims due on April 23 capable of hardening yields or reviving the dollar within the next 72 to 144 hours. It is not strong enough for a 70+ bullish reading because global liquidity is only mildly supportive rather than decisively accelerating, oil and Treasury supply still present real friction, and Bitcoin demand is confirming the move rather than overpowering macro fragility. The most likely 7-day BTC environment is a constructive but fragile upward-leaning range in which ETF-supported dip buying persists, but upside is still capped unless oil cools further and next week’s macro calendar does not reprice rates higher.
2026-04-16 20:24:30 2026-04-16
+14% bull BULL 57% / BEAR 43%
The dominant 7-day bias for BTCUSD remains modestly bullish because the cross-asset backdrop is still leaning toward relief rather than renewed systemic tightening. The single most important market-moving development from the last 24 hours is that mediation efforts are still pushing for an extension of the U.S.-Iran ceasefire before next week’s expiry, while risk assets held near record highs even as Brent crude rebounded sharply. That development is still net supportive for liquidity and risk appetite because the dollar is sitting near six-week lows around 98 and the market is still trading the conflict as containable rather than as a fresh durable inflation shock. The main counterforce preventing a stronger reading is that oil rose back near $99 and reminds markets that one failed diplomatic step could quickly re-tighten inflation expectations and financial conditions. On rates and broader conditions, the U.S. 10-year yield is still around 4.30%, real yields remain firm, Treasury supply risk is still alive with the 20-year auction on April 22 and the 5-year TIPS auction on April 23, and volatility has cooled materially from the March stress phase but has not disappeared. On energy and geopolitics, the market is clearly pricing some de-escalation hope, but crude is still far above its pre-war level and the ceasefire path remains fragile enough that shipping or sanctions headlines could reverse the relief trade quickly. Bitcoin-specific structure is constructive rather than explosive: U.S. spot Bitcoin ETFs just absorbed another large inflow day of about $411.5 million on April 14, Morgan Stanley’s new spot Bitcoin trust broadens institutional distribution, and stablecoin supply has continued to expand into early April, all of which supports dip buying. This is not strong enough for a 60+ bullish reading because macro confirmation is still incomplete, with Governor Waller speaking on April 17 and March retail sales due on April 21, either of which could harden yields or revive the dollar before Bitcoin gets a clean liquidity tailwind. It is not strong enough for a 70+ bullish reading because global liquidity is only mildly supportive rather than decisively accelerating, oil is still elevated, and Bitcoin demand is confirming the move rather than overpowering macro fragility. The most likely 7-day BTC environment is a constructive but fragile upward-leaning range in which ETF-supported demand persists, but upside remains capped unless oil cools and the ceasefire extension becomes more credible.
2026-04-16 19:51:41 2026-04-16
+14% bull BULL 57% / BEAR 43%
The dominant 7-day bias for BTCUSD remains modestly bullish because cross-asset conditions are still leaning toward relief rather than renewed systemic tightening. The single most important market-moving development from the last 24 hours is that diplomacy to extend the Iran ceasefire is still active even as Brent crude jumped 4.7% to $99.39 on Thursday, keeping markets in a relief-with-friction state instead of a full all-clear. That mix is still net supportive for liquidity and risk appetite because U.S. equities are holding near record highs and Bitcoin is trading around $75,290, but the rebound in oil preserves inflation pressure and drains some of the macro tailwind. The main counterforce preventing a stronger reading is that the ceasefire path still looks reversible, so another disruption to shipping, sanctions, or Strait of Hormuz flows could quickly tighten financial conditions again. On rates and broader conditions, the 10-year Treasury yield is around 4.30% after ticking up on firmer jobless-claims data, the dollar is softer than its March stress highs but not breaking down, and volatility has cooled materially from the March panic without disappearing. On the liquidity layer, U.S. M2 has reaccelerated year over year and global central-bank liquidity is less restrictive than it was during the March shock, but the Fed is not actively easing and that keeps the backdrop supportive rather than powerful. Bitcoin-specific structure is confirming the bullish lean: U.S. spot Bitcoin ETFs followed a $411.4 million net inflow on April 14 with another $186.1 million on April 15, BTC has reclaimed the mid-$70,000s, and stablecoin supply remains elevated enough to support dip demand. This is not strong enough for a 60+ bullish reading because the next 72 hours do not yet deliver a clean macro confirmation, and the next seven days still include Fed Governor Waller on April 17, U.S. retail sales on April 21, the 20-year Treasury auction on April 22, and flash PMIs plus the 5-year TIPS auction on April 23, any of which could re-tighten yields or the dollar. It is not strong enough for a 70+ bullish reading because oil is still too high, geopolitics are still one headline away from reversing the relief trade, and Bitcoin demand is confirming the move rather than overwhelming macro risk. The most likely 7-day BTC environment is a constructive but fragile upward-leaning range in which ETF-supported dip buying persists, but upside remains capped unless oil cools and yields stay contained.
2026-04-16 18:55:43 2026-04-16
+12% bull BULL 56% / BEAR 44%
The dominant 7-day bias for BTCUSD remains modestly bullish, but it is still a liquidity-supported advance rather than a fully clean breakout regime. The single most important market-moving development from the last 24 hours is that diplomacy to extend the Iran-war ceasefire is still active while Brent crude has rebounded sharply to about $99.74, keeping the market in a relief-with-friction state instead of a true all-clear. That development is still net supportive for risk appetite because equities are holding near record highs and the dollar has stayed softer than its March stress highs, but the oil rebound worsens the liquidity impulse by preserving inflation and cash-flow pressure. The main counterforce preventing a stronger reading is that the ceasefire path remains reversible, with shipping and sanctions risk still capable of reigniting an oil shock quickly. On financial conditions, the backdrop is constructive but not loose: the 10-year Treasury yield is back around 4.31%, jobless claims at 207,000 show the U.S. labor market is not cooling enough to force easier policy soon, and the broad dollar is no longer surging but also is not collapsing in a way that would clearly re-open global liquidity. On the liquidity layer, U.S. M2 has continued to reaccelerate year over year, China has added support with an April reserve-ratio cut, and the BOJ is tapering bond purchases more slowly from this month, while Fed and ECB balance-sheet restraint still stops this from becoming a powerful global easing wave. Oil and geopolitics remain the biggest macro tax for Bitcoin over the next week, because even with ceasefire-extension efforts the market is still trading a Middle East risk premium and not a durable de-escalation. Bitcoin-specific structure is confirming rather than contradicting the bullish lean: BTC is near $74,832, U.S. spot Bitcoin ETFs printed another solid net inflow of about $186.1 million on April 15 after $411.4 million on April 14, and stablecoin supply remains near record highs, which supports dip-buying. This is not strong enough for a 60+ bullish reading because yields are still elevated, oil is still too high, and next week’s March retail sales on April 21 plus the 10-year and 20-year Treasury auctions on April 22 and flash PMIs with the 5-year TIPS auction on April 23 could easily tighten the dollar and real-rate backdrop again. It is not strong enough for a 70+ bullish reading because the macro picture is only moderately supportive, volatility and geopolitics still inject headline fragility, and Bitcoin demand is confirming the move rather than overpowering the remaining energy and rates constraints; the most likely 7-day BTC environment is a constructive but fragile upward-leaning range with ETF-supported dip demand and upside capped unless oil cools and yields stay contained.
2026-04-16 16:01:48 2026-04-16
+14% bull BULL 57% / BEAR 43%
The dominant 7-day bias for BTCUSD remains modestly bullish, but it is still a liquidity-supported advance rather than a clean breakout regime. The single most important market-moving development from the last 24 hours is that ceasefire-extension diplomacy around Iran is still alive, yet Brent crude has rebounded to roughly $98 while markets wait for proof that the war pause will hold. That mix helps risk appetite by keeping equities near record highs and preventing a fresh worst-case oil shock, but the oil rebound itself slightly worsens the liquidity impulse because it keeps inflation and cash-flow pressure elevated. The main counterforce preventing a stronger reading is that this geopolitical relief is incomplete and can reverse quickly if talks fail or shipping stress returns. On financial conditions, the backdrop is constructive but not loose: the 10-year Treasury yield has eased to about 4.26% from 4.30% earlier in the week, the broad dollar has softened materially from mid-March levels, and volatility has cooled back into the high teens, which is supportive for Bitcoin but not an outright tailwind strong enough to overwhelm macro fragility. On the global liquidity layer, U.S. M2 rose to about $22.67 trillion in February 2026 versus about $21.61 trillion a year earlier, the BOJ has slowed the pace of bond-buying reductions from April, and China is maintaining ample liquidity even without a major new stimulus burst, while the ECB is still in runoff, so the net picture is supportive but not explosively expanding. Bitcoin-specific structure confirms the upside lean: BTC is trading around the mid-$74,000s, U.S. spot Bitcoin ETFs just swung back to a roughly $411.5 million daily net inflow after a prior outflow, stablecoin supply remains near record highs, and Morgan Stanley's new Bitcoin ETP adds another institutional access channel. This is not strong enough for a 60+ bullish reading because oil is still elevated, the geopolitical path is still headline-sensitive, and next week's U.S. March retail sales on April 21, the 10-year and 20-year Treasury auctions on April 22, and the April flash PMIs plus 5-year TIPS auction on April 23 could still re-tighten yields and the dollar. It is not strong enough for a 70+ reading because the macro picture is only moderately supportive, not decisively easing, and Bitcoin demand is confirming the move rather than overpowering the remaining energy, rates, and event-risk constraints; the most likely 7-day BTC environment is a constructive but fragile upward-leaning range with dip support from ETF demand and liquidity expansion, while upside extension remains capped unless oil cools and yields stay contained.
2026-04-16 14:01:37 2026-04-16
+16% bull BULL 58% / BEAR 42%
The dominant 7-day bias for BTCUSD remains modestly bullish because cross-asset liquidity is still better than it was during the late-March oil shock, but the setup is still relief-driven rather than fully durable. The single most important market-moving development from the last 24 hours is that markets are still trading around attempted Iran ceasefire extension talks, which has kept equities near record highs while preventing a fresh oil spike. That development improves short-horizon liquidity conditions because it caps the worst inflation and cash-flight scenario, even though crude is still materially above its pre-war zone and the diplomatic path remains fragile. The main counterforce preventing a stronger score is that this relief is reversible and sits directly ahead of a dense macro calendar that includes the March U.S. retail sales release on April 21, the 20-year Treasury auction on April 22, and the April flash S&P Global PMIs plus 5-year TIPS auction on April 23. On financial conditions, the backdrop is constructive but not clean: the 10-year yield recently eased toward the mid-4.2% area from 4.30%, TLT is only stabilizing rather than breaking out, the dollar is no longer delivering a major tightening impulse, and volatility has cooled from the war-stress highs without fully disappearing. On the energy and geopolitical layer, Brent has come down from the panic highs but is still around the mid-$90s, so oil remains a partial liquidity drain and the Iran headline path can still reprice inflation expectations quickly. On the broad liquidity layer, U.S. M2 rose to about $22.67 trillion in February 2026 versus about $21.61 trillion in February 2025, while China has continued to lean on targeted liquidity support even as the ECB remains in balance-sheet runoff, which leaves global liquidity supportive but not explosively expanding. Bitcoin-specific structure is helpful: BTC is holding around the mid-$73,000s, U.S. spot Bitcoin ETFs just reversed a prior outflow with a roughly $411.5 million daily inflow on April 14, and stablecoin supply remains near record highs, all of which suggests real institutional and crypto-cash support on dips. This is not strong enough for a 60+ bullish reading because the macro tailwind still depends too much on oil staying contained and on next week's U.S. data and Treasury supply passing without a renewed rise in yields or the dollar, and it is not strong enough for a 70+ bullish reading because the geopolitical relief is not yet durable, oil is still elevated, and Bitcoin demand is confirming rather than overwhelming macro. The most likely 7-day BTC environment is a constructive but headline-sensitive upward-leaning range with upside support from ETF demand and expanding liquidity, but with breakout strength capped unless yields stay calm and Middle East stress keeps fading.
2026-04-16 08:02:12 2026-04-16
+14% bull BULL 57% / BEAR 43%
The dominant 7-day bias for BTCUSD remains modestly bullish because cross-asset liquidity has improved from the late-March stress phase, but the move is still relief-driven rather than fully durable. The single most important market-moving development from the last 24 hours is that the U.S.-Iran de-escalation path remains unstable, with fresh headlines showing resistance to extending the ceasefire and renewed U.S. threats of secondary sanctions on Iranian oil-linked activity. That development only partly helps liquidity because crude has stayed well below the war-spike highs and markets have not re-entered panic mode, but it also keeps an oil reacceleration risk alive that can quickly tighten inflation expectations. The main counterforce preventing a stronger score is that this geopolitical relief is reversible and sits only days ahead of the April 21 U.S. retail sales release, the April 22 20-year Treasury auction, and the April 23 S&P Global PMI prints, all of which can move yields and the dollar. On rates and financial conditions, the backdrop is somewhat better than the prior reading: the U.S. 10-year Treasury yield eased to about 4.26% on April 14 from 4.30% on April 13, the 2-year fell to about 3.76%, the dollar has softened toward the high-98 area, and the VIX has cooled into the high teens rather than confirming a fresh risk-off impulse. On the liquidity layer, U.S. M2 has continued to edge higher, reaching about $22.43 trillion in February 2026 versus about $21.61 trillion in February 2025, while China has still been using targeted injections this year, so broad money is supportive but not explosively expanding. Oil and geopolitics have improved versus the war highs, with Brent trading back in the mid-$90s rather than above $110, but energy is still materially above the pre-war zone near $70 and that keeps a residual inflation drag in place. Bitcoin-specific structure is supportive: U.S. spot Bitcoin ETFs followed a $411.4 million net inflow on April 14 with another $186.1 million net inflow on April 15, Morgan Stanley's MSBT launch remains a positive institutional-access signal, stablecoin supply has kept expanding in early April, and spot BTC is holding near $74,700 rather than breaking down. This is not strong enough for a 60+ bullish reading because macro improvement still depends too heavily on fragile Middle East diplomacy and softer yields holding through next week's calendar, and it is not strong enough for a 70+ bullish reading because oil is still elevated, the ceasefire path is not secure, and the most likely 7-day BTC environment is a constructive but headline-sensitive upward-leaning range rather than a breakout regime.
2026-04-16 00:01:40 2026-04-16
+14% bull BULL 57% / BEAR 43%
The dominant 7-day bias for BTCUSD is modestly bullish, with improving cross-asset liquidity conditions favoring upside continuation but not a fully secure breakout regime. The single most important market-moving development from the last 24 hours is the in-principle agreement to extend the U.S.-Iran ceasefire for more diplomacy, which helped keep the S&P 500 at fresh highs and stopped oil from reaccelerating toward the worst war-spike zone. That development improves liquidity at the margin because it reduces near-term oil-shock inflation risk, lowers the need for defensive dollar positioning, and supports duration-sensitive risk assets like Bitcoin. The main counterforce is that this relief is still negotiation-based and reversible, so a single adverse headline on strikes, shipping, sanctions, or ceasefire enforcement could quickly tighten conditions again. On the liquidity layer, U.S. M2 has continued running above year-ago levels, rising from about $21.61 trillion in February 2025 to about $22.67 trillion in February 2026, while China has continued modest net liquidity support through recent PBOC operations, so broad money is better than it was in the late-2025 tightening phase. Rates and financial conditions have improved but are not easy: the U.S. 10-year yield recently eased toward 4.25% from 4.30%, the dollar has softened from its late-March firmness, and volatility has cooled into the high-teens rather than signaling panic; there is no top-tier U.S. CPI, PPI, or payroll release due within the next 72 hours, but the April 22 20-year Treasury auction and April 23 S&P Global PMIs can still move yields and the dollar next week. Oil and geopolitics have shifted from acute headwind to partial relief, but crude remains elevated versus pre-war levels, so energy is still a drag on full risk-on conviction rather than a clean tailwind. Bitcoin-specific structure is supportive, with U.S. spot Bitcoin ETFs rebounding from a $291.0 million net outflow on April 13 to a $411.4 million net inflow on April 14, Morgan Stanley’s MSBT spot Bitcoin product having launched on April 8, and stablecoin supply still expanding in early 2026; even so, that is not enough for a 60+ bullish reading because macro improvement is still mostly relief-driven instead of being confirmed by a clearer drop in yields, a more decisive dollar downtrend, and lower oil. It is also not strong enough for a 70+ bullish reading because the ceasefire path is still fragile, crude is still high enough to re-tighten inflation fears if diplomacy slips, and the most likely 7-day BTC environment is a constructive but headline-sensitive upward-leaning range rather than a regime-confirmed breakout tape.
2026-04-15 16:01:13 2026-04-15
+8% bull BULL 54% / BEAR 46%
The dominant 7-day bias for BTCUSD is modestly bullish but still fragile, with improving risk appetite rather than a clean liquidity expansion driving the setup. The single most important market-moving development from the last 24 hours is the renewed market belief that U.S.-Iran talks may restart, which pushed oil lower again and helped global equities extend their recovery toward prior highs. That development improves liquidity at the margin because lower crude reduces near-term inflation pressure, softens the need for defensive dollar demand, and eases the rate shock channel that hit Bitcoin during the war-driven oil spike. The main counterforce is that this relief remains negotiation-based and reversible, so one adverse headline on talks, shipping, or sanctions could quickly reprice oil, yields, and crypto risk. Rates and financial conditions are better but not easy: the 10-year Treasury yield is still around the low-4.3% area, the dollar has retreated from its late-March peak but remains firm rather than weak, and volatility has cooled only into a mid-teens to high-teens zone instead of collapsing into full risk-on complacency. Energy and geopolitics have shifted from acute headwind to partial relief, but crude is still elevated versus pre-conflict levels and the next 72 hours include U.S. retail sales, industrial production, and jobless claims on Thursday, which can quickly move yields and the dollar if growth or inflation optics re-tighten. Bitcoin-specific structure is constructive, with U.S. spot Bitcoin ETFs rebounding from a roughly $291.0 million net outflow on April 13 to about $411.4 million of net inflow on April 14, while U.S. M2 remains higher year over year and stablecoin supply trends still point to broad crypto liquidity resilience. This is not strong enough for a 60+ bullish reading because the macro improvement is still mostly tied to geopolitical relief rather than a decisive drop in yields, a clearly weaker dollar, or a confirmed run of softer inflationary inputs. It is also not strong enough for a 70+ bullish reading because oil risk is not fully neutralized, Treasury conditions are still restrictive enough to cap duration-sensitive risk, and the next 7-day BTC environment is most likely a choppy upward-leaning range rather than a regime-confirmed breakout tape.
2026-04-15 14:02:18 2026-04-15
+8% bull BULL 54% / BEAR 46%
The dominant 7-day bias for BTCUSD is modestly bullish, but it remains a fragile recovery setup rather than a clean macro-led expansion. The single most important market-moving development from the last 24 hours is the renewed expectation of another U.S.-Iran negotiation round, which pushed oil lower for a second day and helped the dollar continue to retreat. That improves liquidity at the margin because lower oil reduces near-term inflation stress, a softer dollar eases global funding pressure, and the drop in energy shock risk reduces the immediate need for defensive cash positioning. The main counterforce is that this relief is still negotiation-driven rather than settlement-driven, with the U.S. blockade path, the April 22 truce deadline, and Hormuz-related supply risk still able to reverse sentiment quickly. Rates are somewhat better but not easy: the U.S. 10-year Treasury yield eased to about 4.26% on April 14 from 4.30% on April 13, while volatility has cooled from the late-March stress spike, yet the yield level is still high enough to keep financial conditions from turning decisively supportive. Energy and geopolitics therefore moved from acute headwind to partial relief, but Brent and WTI are still sitting in the mid-90s and low-90s area rather than back at pre-war norms, so oil is no longer an escalating drain but not a full macro tailwind either. Bitcoin-specific structure is constructive, with U.S. spot Bitcoin ETFs swinging back to roughly $411.5 million of net inflows on April 14 after the prior day's outflow, Morgan Stanley's new spot product broadening distribution, and U.S. M2 continuing to re-expand to a new cycle high at $22.667 trillion in February while reserve balances also rose in the latest Fed balance-sheet data. This is not strong enough for a 60+ bullish reading because the macro improvement is still mostly tied to reversible geopolitical relief, and the next several sessions still contain catalyst risk from the April 16 industrial production release, China GDP, and the April 21 U.S. retail sales release that can quickly reprice growth, yields, and the dollar. It is also not strong enough for a 70+ bullish reading because yields are only modestly lower, oil is still elevated, geopolitics remain unresolved, and Bitcoin demand is improving without the kind of broad cross-asset confirmation that would make a sharp reversal unlikely. The most likely 7-day BTC environment is a volatile upward-leaning range with better dip support than earlier this month, but still below high-conviction bull conditions.
2026-04-15 08:01:43 2026-04-15
+8% bull BULL 54% / BEAR 46%
The dominant 7-day bias for BTCUSD is still modestly bullish, but it remains a fragile recovery setup rather than a clean macro-led expansion. The single most important market-moving development from the last 24 hours is the renewed effort to arrange another round of U.S.-Iran talks, which pushed Brent down to about $94.79 on April 14 and helped the U.S. 10-year yield ease to roughly 4.25% from 4.30% as broad risk assets rallied. That development improves liquidity at the margin because lower oil reduces near-term inflation stress, softer yields reduce discount-rate pressure, and calmer cross-asset positioning lowers the immediate need for defensive cash hoarding. The main counterforce is that this is still headline-driven de-escalation rather than a durable settlement, and the Strait of Hormuz and sanctions path remain unresolved enough that oil, yields, and volatility could reverse quickly. Macro conditions are therefore better than earlier in the month but still mixed: March CPI was hot at 3.3% year over year and March PPI accelerated to 4.0%, so the recent easing in yields has not yet translated into genuinely easy financial conditions or a clear dollar downtrend. On the liquidity side, the background remains mildly supportive because U.S. M2 has continued to re-expand to a fresh high and Treasury has signaled bill supply should contract into early May around the April 15 tax date, but that is a secondary tailwind rather than a fresh impulse strong enough to dominate the next week. Bitcoin-specific structure is constructive, with U.S. spot Bitcoin ETFs swinging from a $291.0 million net outflow on April 13 to a $411.4 million net inflow on April 14, Morgan Stanley having just launched its own spot Bitcoin product last week, and stablecoin supply still near record highs, which confirms institutional access and liquidity plumbing are improving rather than deteriorating. This is not strong enough for a 60+ bullish reading because the next 72 hours still include top-tier macro event risk around the April 16 retail sales and industrial production releases, while the recent relief in oil and yields is still too dependent on geopolitics and has not yet produced a decisive easing in overall financial conditions. It is also not strong enough for a 70+ bullish reading because global liquidity is only gradually improving, inflation pressure remains elevated, geopolitical relief is reversible, and Bitcoin demand has improved but not with the kind of sustained macro confirmation that would make a sharp reversal in the next few sessions unlikely; the most likely 7-day BTC environment is a volatile upward-leaning range with better support on dips than last week but still below high-conviction bull conditions.
2026-04-15 00:01:51 2026-04-15
+8% bull BULL 54% / BEAR 46%
The dominant 7-day bias for BTCUSD is modestly bullish, but it remains a recovery-with-fragility setup rather than a clean trend regime. The single most important market-moving development from the last 24 hours is the renewed market belief that U.S.-Iran talks may restart, which drove WTI back down to roughly $91, pulled the 10-year Treasury yield toward 4.25%, lifted equities, and improved broad risk tone. That development helps liquidity at the margin because lower oil reduces inflation shock pressure while lower yields and a softer dollar reduce the immediate discount-rate and safe-haven squeeze that had been restraining Bitcoin. The main counterforce is that this looks like de-escalation by headline rather than a durable settlement, with the current truce still expiring on April 22 and a failed negotiation cycle capable of reversing oil and yields quickly. Rates and financial conditions are better than earlier in the month, with the 10-year off recent highs and volatility cooling toward the high-teens, but financial conditions are not easy and there is still no fresh broad easing impulse from the Fed or a new global central-bank liquidity wave. Oil and geopolitical stress have clearly improved versus the weekend spike, yet the Strait of Hormuz and sanctions risk are still unresolved enough to keep a residual war premium embedded in crude and in cross-asset hedging behavior. Bitcoin-specific structure is constructive but mixed: U.S. spot Bitcoin ETFs rebounded to a net inflow of about $146 million on April 14 after the sharp $291 million outflow on April 13, Strategy just added another 13,927 BTC, and stablecoin supply remains elevated, but institutional demand has not yet re-entered with enough consistency to call the move fully confirmed. This is not strong enough for a 60+ bullish reading because the macro relief is still conditional, the next 72 hours include the March retail sales and April 16 industrial production releases plus Treasury supply announcements that can quickly reprice yields and the dollar, and Bitcoin ETF demand only just recovered from a meaningful outflow shock. It is also not strong enough for a 70+ bullish reading because global liquidity is not clearly reaccelerating, geopolitical risk has not been durably removed, and Bitcoin-specific demand is supportive but not powerful enough to overpower a renewed oil or yield spike if the macro backdrop turns again; the most likely 7-day BTC environment is a volatile upward-leaning range with better support than last week, but still below high-conviction bull conditions.
2026-04-14 16:01:39 2026-04-14
+2% bull BULL 51% / BEAR 49%
The dominant 7-day bias for BTCUSD is slightly bullish but still fragile rather than decisively trending. The single most important market-moving development in the last 24 hours is the combination of a cooler-than-feared March PPI release on April 14, 2026 and renewed headlines pointing to another round of U.S.-Iran talks, which pushed Bitcoin back toward $75,367, pulled the U.S. 10-year yield to about 4.28%, and kept Brent near $99 instead of back above the recent spike zone. That mix improves liquidity at the margin because softer rate pressure and lower oil reduce the immediate inflation-shock and cash-hoarding impulse that had been suppressing risk appetite. The main counterforce is that global liquidity is only modestly supportive rather than clearly expanding, with no fresh broad easing wave from the Fed, ECB, or BOJ and with geopolitics still capable of re-tightening conditions quickly. Rates and financial conditions are better than they were at the start of the week, but they are not easy: the VIX is still around 19, the dollar backdrop is only mildly softer, and Treasury supply risk remains relevant ahead of the April 16 20-year bond announcement and next week’s 7-year note cycle. Oil and war risk have improved, but this still looks like headline-driven de-escalation rather than a durable settlement, so any breakdown in talks could lift crude, yields, and volatility again within days. Bitcoin-specific structure is mixed, because Strategy disclosed another 13,927 BTC purchase for about $1.0 billion and stablecoin supply is still expanding, but U.S. spot Bitcoin ETFs recorded a sharp net outflow of roughly $291.0 million on April 13, which weakens institutional confirmation. This is not strong enough for a 60+ bullish reading because ETF demand just flipped negative, broad liquidity is not clearly reaccelerating, and the next 72 hours still contain April 15 Beige Book risk plus April 16 retail sales and industrial production that can quickly reprice yields and the dollar. It is also not strong enough for a 70+ bullish reading because the macro relief is still conditional on geopolitics, volatility is only partially normalized, and Bitcoin-specific flows are not aligned cleanly enough with the improving cross-asset backdrop. The most likely 7-day BTC environment is a volatile recovery-to-range phase with mild upside bias, but not yet a clean high-conviction bull regime.
2026-04-14 14:02:07 2026-04-14
-4% bear BULL 48% / BEAR 52%
The dominant 7-day bias for BTCUSD is still slightly bearish, but the setup has improved enough to be less defensive than the prior reading. The single most important market-moving development in the last 24 hours is the renewed push toward another round of U.S.-Iran talks, which helped Brent crude fall to about $97, pulled the 10-year Treasury yield down to roughly 4.29% from 4.30%, softened the dollar, and supported a rebound in risk assets. That development improves liquidity at the margin because lower oil, steadier yields, and a less bid dollar reduce the immediate cash-flight and inflation-shock impulse that had been weighing on Bitcoin. The main counterforce is that this is still diplomacy-by-headline rather than a durable de-escalation, and today’s March PPI still showed final demand up 0.5% month over month and 4.0% year over year even if that was cooler than feared and heavily energy-driven. Rates and financial conditions are therefore better than they looked at the start of the week, but they are not easy: the curve is still relatively firm, China’s March credit and money data did not signal a fresh easing wave, and the Eurosystem balance sheet is still edging lower rather than re-expanding. Oil and geopolitics remain the key swing factor because crude is still far above its pre-war range, the Hormuz situation remains reversible, and any failed follow-through in talks could quickly re-tighten yields, the dollar, and volatility. Bitcoin-specific structure is mixed rather than cleanly confirming upside, with BTC back near $75,480 and Strategy disclosing another 13,927 BTC purchase for about $1.0 billion, but U.S. spot Bitcoin ETFs printed a large net outflow of roughly $291 million on April 13 after the prior week’s inflow streak. This is not strong enough for a 60+ bullish reading because the macro relief is only partial, ETF demand just flipped negative, and the next seven days still include industrial production on April 16, the 20-year Treasury bond announcement on April 16, ongoing Fed speakers, and March retail sales on April 21 that could easily reprice yields and the dollar again. It is also not strong enough for a 70+ bullish reading because there is still no clear global liquidity expansion impulse, volatility has eased but not vanished, and Bitcoin-specific flows are not aligned cleanly enough with the improving cross-asset backdrop. The most likely 7-day BTC environment is a volatile range-to-rebound phase with reduced panic and modest upside reflex potential, but not yet a clean structural bull regime.
2026-04-14 08:01:13 2026-04-14
-10% bear BULL 45% / BEAR 55%
The dominant 7-day bias for BTCUSD remains modestly bearish, though the setup has improved from the prior reading because cross-asset stress faded rather than intensified. The single most important market-moving development from the last 24 hours is that hopes for renewed U.S.-Iran talks pulled crude back below $100, knocked the dollar lower, eased Treasury yields after Monday’s gap-up, and lifted broad risk sentiment. That development helps liquidity at the margin by reducing the immediate oil-shock and cash-flight impulse, but it is still only partial relief because the U.S. blockade posture remains in place and the ceasefire framework is still fragile. The main counterforce preventing a larger bearish score is that the initial geopolitical panic failed to compound, yet the main counterforce preventing a bullish flip is that this is not a confirmed de-escalation and the next 72 hours include March PPI on Tuesday, the Beige Book and import/export prices on Wednesday, and retail sales, industrial production, plus the Treasury 20-year bond announcement on Thursday. Rates and financial conditions are better but not easy: the 10-year Treasury yield closed around 4.30% on April 13 after trading as high as roughly 4.35%, the 2-year reversed lower after an early jump, the dollar has softened, and volatility has eased toward the high-teens, but none of that yet amounts to a clean loosening impulse. On the liquidity layer, there is still no fresh major central-bank easing wave to power a durable upside move, with the Fed balance sheet still well below prior-cycle peaks and broad money conditions only modestly supportive rather than clearly reaccelerating. Oil and geopolitics remain the key drag because crude is still elevated enough to keep inflation sensitivity alive, and any failure of follow-up diplomacy could quickly re-tighten conditions through energy, yields, and the dollar. Bitcoin-specific structure is mixed rather than cleanly supportive: BTC is holding near $74,500, stablecoin supply remains near cycle highs, and spot ETF demand was strong on April 9 and April 10, but the latest April 13 U.S. spot ETF print flipped to a sizable net outflow of about $291 million, which weakens short-term confirmation. This is still not enough for a 60+ bullish reading because a stronger signal would require several sessions of softer oil, a softer dollar and lower yields together, and a clean pass through this week’s macro data without reigniting inflation or auction stress; it is also not enough for a 70+ bullish reading because macro liquidity, geopolitics, and Bitcoin flow confirmation are not all aligned in the same positive direction. The most likely 7-day BTC environment is a volatile range with less immediate panic than before, but with downside pressure still slightly dominant unless energy stress keeps fading and ETF demand quickly re-stabilizes.
2026-04-14 00:01:58 2026-04-14
-14% bear BULL 43% / BEAR 57%
The dominant 7-day bias for BTCUSD remains modestly bearish because macro liquidity is still being constrained more by energy and geopolitical stress than helped by a clean easing in financial conditions. The single most important market-moving development from the last 24 hours is that the failed weekend U.S.-Iran talks rolled into a blockade posture, but markets then partially faded the initial shock as oil gave back much of its spike, the S&P 500 recovered, and the 10-year Treasury yield eased to about 4.29% from 4.31%. That improves risk appetite versus the worst-case overnight setup, but it does not yet repair liquidity because crude is still elevated enough to keep inflation risk and policy caution alive. The main counterforce preventing a more bearish score is that cross-asset panic did not deepen on Monday and Bitcoin itself is holding firm near $74,515 instead of breaking lower. Rates and financial conditions are still not truly easy: the Fed balance sheet is still smaller year over year, euro-area M3 growth slowed to 3.0% in February from 3.2% in January, and the dollar/oil shock has not been fully unwound even with yields slightly softer. Oil and geopolitics remain the main drag because the ceasefire relief from April 8 has clearly proved fragile, the blockade posture keeps Hormuz disruption risk alive, and this is still an inflationary rather than liquidity-positive geopolitical mix. Bitcoin-specific structure is constructive but secondary, with U.S. spot ETF flows strongly positive on April 9 and April 10 after the large April 6 inflow surge, stablecoin liquidity still near record highs, and that helping BTC absorb macro stress better than many risk assets. That is still not enough for a 60+ bullish reading because a durable bullish shift would require crude to break materially lower again, the dollar and yields to soften together rather than only marginally, and the immediate macro calendar to pass cleanly; the next 72 hours include March PPI on April 14, import/export prices and the Beige Book on April 15, plus retail sales, industrial production, and the Treasury 20-year bond announcement on April 16. It is also not enough for a 70+ bullish reading because macro liquidity, geopolitics, and Bitcoin demand are not all aligned in the same positive direction, so the most likely 7-day BTC environment is a volatile range with downside pressure still dominant unless energy stress fades again quickly.
2026-04-13 16:01:27 2026-04-13
-18% bear BULL 41% / BEAR 59%
The dominant 7-day bias for BTCUSD remains modestly bearish because macro liquidity is still being constrained more by renewed energy and geopolitical stress than supported by a clean easing in financial conditions. The single most important market-moving development from the last 24 hours is that weekend U.S.-Iran talks failed and Washington moved toward a blockade of Iranian port flows starting Monday, which pushed crude back above $100 and revived Hormuz disruption risk. That worsens the near-term liquidity backdrop because higher oil reopens the inflation channel, makes it harder for yields and the dollar to stay soft, and keeps global risk appetite fragile even if panic is not yet dominant. The main counterforce is that cross-asset reaction has been much more measured than during the initial oil shock, with U.S. stocks relatively steady, volatility well below the March war highs, and Bitcoin still holding around $71,847 rather than breaking down. Rates are not giving strong bullish relief: the Fed’s April 10 H.15 release showed the 10-year Treasury at 4.29% and the 2-year at 3.78% on April 9, which is off the worst levels but still not loose enough to signal a materially easier discount-rate regime, while the dollar’s earlier ceasefire-linked softness has only partially held. Oil and geopolitics remain the key drag because last week’s ceasefire relief has clearly proved fragile, the truce still expires on April 22, and the next few sessions can still be whipped by blockade, shipping, or sanctions headlines. Bitcoin-specific structure is constructive but secondary: U.S. spot Bitcoin ETF demand has turned net positive again after the large April 6 inflow surge, stablecoin supply remains near record highs, and that helps explain why BTC is absorbing macro stress better than many risk assets. That is still not strong enough for a 60+ bullish reading because a durable bullish shift would require crude to move convincingly back below $100, the dollar and Treasury yields to soften further, and the next 72 hours of macro calendar risk to pass cleanly; the immediate calendar includes PPI on April 14, Beige Book and Barr appearances on April 15, and retail sales plus industrial production on April 16. It is also not strong enough for a 70+ bullish reading because macro liquidity, geopolitics, volatility, and Bitcoin-specific demand are not all aligned in the same positive direction, so the most likely 7-day BTC environment is a volatile range-to-down structure with institutional dip-buying underneath but upside still capped unless oil stress fades quickly again.
Last 12 Trades
Most recent
Age Trade Date
8 hours before Buy $30 @ $76,159 2026-04-18 15:11:06
1 month before Sell $30 @ $69,756 2026-03-03 08:44:16
1 month before Sell $30 @ $70,126 2026-03-03 08:30:24
1 month before Sell $20 @ $69,672 2026-03-03 08:46:43
1 month before Sell $10 @ $69,673 2026-03-02 16:11:09
1 month before Sell $30 @ $69,434 2026-03-03 08:55:11
1 month before Sell $30 @ $64,832 2026-02-28 15:41:10
1 month before Sell $30 @ $64,957 2026-02-28 15:36:07
1 month before Sell $10 @ $64,713 2026-02-28 15:31:10
1 month before Sell $10 @ $64,720 2026-02-28 15:31:10
1 month before Sell $10 @ $64,720 2026-02-28 15:31:10
1 month before Sell $30 @ $64,431 2026-02-28 15:21:08
Experimental R&D. Not financial advice.   © SnatchProfits.com
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