Somewhere in the dusty corridors of the crypto world, $273 million in bearish bets vanished like a mirage on a hot April afternoon, all because whispers of a US-Iran ceasefire made traders blink and stumble.
$273 million in short positions evaporated in less than a day as ceasefire rumors set nerves on fire
The poor bears paid dearly on Monday. Bloomberg noted that shorts swallowed most of the $273 million carnage, a grim ratio of nearly three to one over the longs. The spark came from Axios, reporting that the US, Iran, and a few regional mediators might sign a 45-day ceasefire. Within hours, risk assets shot skyward like startled jackrabbits, forcing beleaguered shorts to pay the piper.
Bitcoin’s 24-hour dance saw it sway from $66,634 to $69,350, a $2,700 rollercoaster that left short-sellers wincing like farmers watching a storm roll in over the valley.
A Short Squeeze Cooked Up on Geopolitical Whiffs
Ethereum led the charge, climbing 5.1%, a testament to how crowded the bear camp had become. SOL added 2%, XRP nibbled up 2.2%, while ADA, AVAX, and LINK all saw open interest spike like scarecrows in a windstorm, stretching the risk-on mood well beyond Bitcoin’s modest promenade.
The total crypto market cap crossed back above $2.5 trillion, reclaiming about $70 billion in a day-as if the market had decided to play a prank on everyone who doubted it.
Why the Bears Were Piled In Like Tomatoes in a Crate
Before Easter, sentiment was as grim as a drought-hit field, battered by weeks of US-Iran scare stories and ceasefire hopes that never bore fruit. The Bitcoin derivatives market was perched precariously between a $1.143 billion long wall below $65,000 and a $754 million short pocket above $68,000. Like a coiled spring, the market was wound tight and ready to snap.
The traders betting on further decline were counting on the $65,000 to $73,000 “war range” holding steady-or falling. Monday’s ceasefire gossip tore that confidence apart in hours, leaving shorts in the dust.
Open Interest Tells a Tale of Fresh Appetite, Not Just Panic
Monday’s move wasn’t a simple headline-driven blip. Open interest in Bitcoin and Ethereum climbed faster than prices, hinting at new money flowing in rather than just battered shorts closing out. That matters: a plain short squeeze peters out fast, but fresh capital keeps the story alive.
Crypto.news pointed out that a confirmed ceasefire could lower oil prices and ease inflation, giving the Federal Reserve reason to smile-or at least frown a little less. Still, caution lingers. Polymarket puts the odds of a ceasefire by April 30 at roughly 30%, and tokens like BCH and HYPE still wear their bearish jackets, showing the bears haven’t entirely fled the field.
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2026-04-06 21:52