Bitcoin's Ceasefire Highs Are Fading — And the Reason Is the Real Story

When the White House signalled a partial tariff retreat on 14 April, Bitcoin traders moved fast. The price climbed. The narrative machine fired up. Talk of new all-time highs filled timelines within hours. Three days later, on 17 April, the rally was already fraying — and the reason Bitcoin could not sustain the move tells us more about where the market actually stands than any price chart.
The ceasefire narrative gave traders a reason to buy. What it could not give them was confidence.
What the Analysts Said
CoinDesk reported on 17 April that Bitcoin's relief rally was losing traction. The outlet cited market analysts who identified a specific cluster of requirements for the rally to extend: reclaiming the $76,000 level, sustained spot-market buying, and consistent inflows into the Bitcoin exchange-traded funds that have become the dominant structural driver of the market since 2024. None of the three conditions were firmly in place.
Cointelegraph, reporting on the same date, framed the analyst consensus more bluntly. For Bitcoin to hold its post-ceasefire highs and push toward new territory, the market needed three things: a confirmed breach of $76,000 as support rather than resistance, genuine spot demand rather than leveraged positioning, and ETF inflows that did not pause at the first sign of resistance. The article noted that all three were, at best, contested.
The disconnect between the tariff pause and Bitcoin's inability to build on it is not a technical failure. It is a structural one.
The Tariff Proxy Problem
The cryptocurrency market has, for the past two years, increasingly tethered itself to the macroeconomic sentiment cycle. The ETF vehicle product transformed Bitcoin from a self-referential digital asset into something that institutional allocators could evaluate against bond yields and dollar direction. That transformation brought capital. It also brought correlation.
When a ceasefire signal from Washington can move Bitcoin by five or six percent in hours, the market is not expressing a crypto-native thesis. It is expressing a dollar-cycle trade dressed in Bitcoin's clothing.
The problem with that arrangement becomes apparent when the trigger fades. The tariff pause was not a resolution. It was a pause — a reprieve in a negotiation that remains unresolved. The underlying uncertainty about trade policy, about the Federal Reserve's response function, about the dollar's medium-term trajectory, has not gone away. What has gone away is the immediate catalyst that gave the bull case permission to run.
When an asset needs a Washington headline to move, it is telling you something about where its buyers actually sit. They are not Bitcoin believers. They are macro traders who found a reason to take risk on that particular day.
The ETF Infrastructure Question
One dimension of the current market that the bull case has leaned on heavily is the ETF inflow data. The spot Bitcoin ETFs that launched in early 2024 created a regulated on-ramp for institutional capital that did not previously exist. Their inflows have been a reliable floor under the market during periods of broader crypto weakness.
But the ETF inflow narrative has a corollary that its promoters are less eager to discuss: the ETFs have also made it easier to sell. When conviction wavers, institutional allocators do not need to navigate self-hosted wallets or exchange custody complications. They open a brokerage account, sell the ETF, and move on. The same infrastructure that gives the market its floor also gives it a faster exit.
The analyst consensus cited across the reporting on 17 April was consistent on this point: inflows needed to be sustained, not episodic. The implication was that the market had seen sufficient episodic inflows to sustain the price in a range, but not sufficient conviction buying to push through resistance. That is a meaningful distinction. Episodic buying can hold a price. Only conviction buying breaks out.
What Happens When the Ceasefire Ends
The deeper question is not whether Bitcoin can hold $76,000. The deeper question is what the market becomes when the macroeconomic tailwind that has sustained it since the ETF launch finally reverses properly — not a pause, but a sustained resolution of the trade conflict in a direction that strengthens the dollar and raises real yields.
That scenario is not imminent. The tariff negotiations will continue. The uncertainty will persist. And for as long as it persists, Bitcoin will continue to respond to Washington more than to any on-chain metric, any developer milestone, or any argument about monetary sovereignty.
But the failure to sustain the post-ceasefire move on 17 April should be read as a data point, not a glitch. It tells us that the market's current buyers are conditional. They will return if conditions improve. They will exit if conditions deteriorate. They are not positioned as owners of an asset they believe in regardless of context.
That is not a critique of Bitcoin as a technology or a financial instrument. It is a description of who holds it and why. And the answer, in the current market structure, is increasingly: people who are waiting for the next headline.
This publication compared its framing of the Bitcoin rally against the wire consensus on 17 April: while the dominant financial press presented the tariff pause as a clear positive catalyst for risk assets, this piece focuses on the structural disconnect between the trigger and the market's inability to sustain its response — a distinction that the price action itself has since vindicated.