Bitcoin falls after Iran rejects temporary ceasefire headlines turned into a brutal risk-off trade, with Tehran refusing a short truce and reports of U.S. strikes on Kharg Island pushing crypto traders back into defense mode.
Public CoinGecko market data showed Bitcoin at $68,230, down 1.57% over 24 hours, as optimism around a temporary ceasefire evaporated and the market gave back the prior session's push above $70,000.
The reversal was violent because Bitcoin had jumped about 3% to roughly $69,000-$70,000 on April 6, 2026, a squeeze that triggered $273 million in short liquidations before the story flipped.
The market psychology is the real story here. A pop to $69,000-$70,000 and a retreat to $68,230 inside roughly 24 hours told traders that every ceasefire headline now carries reversal risk.
The Ceasefire Trade Broke Fast
Iran rejected a 45-day temporary ceasefire proposal floated by Egyptian, Pakistani, and Turkish mediators, and an Iranian diplomatic official said "We only accept an end of the war with guarantees that we won't be attacked again".
PBS also reported that Tehran wanted a permanent end to hostilities rather than a short pause. That distinction mattered because the earlier 3% Bitcoin relief rally was pricing a quick cooling-off period, not a harder negotiation over guarantees, reconstruction, and sanctions relief.
Tehran's foreign ministry spokesman added that "negotiations are entirely incompatible with ultimatums, crimes and threats of war crimes". That tone helped turn Bitcoin's 1.57% daily drop into a clean headline-driven sell-off rather than a story about long-term Bitcoin fundamentals.
Bitcoin's 1.57% daily pullback also drowned out the steadier demand narrative in recent Bitcoin ETF inflow coverage. When macro tension is dictating a 24-hour move, traders tend to ignore slower institutional-flow stories.
Why Kharg Island Changed the Mood
NBC News reported that U.S. forces struck dozens of military targets on Kharg Island overnight on April 6-7, 2026, roughly 12 hours before President Trump's Tuesday deadline. The same report described Kharg as the terminal for up to 90% of Iran's crude shipments with storage of around 30 million barrels.
The exact target count and casualty toll were still unclear in the reporting cited here. But a site tied to 90% of Iranian crude exports was enough to make Bitcoin traders think about energy shock first and crypto beta second.
The island's link to 90% of Iran's crude shipments is why macro stress moved ahead of the more constructive setup described in spot ETF inflow momentum. A military headline around a strategic oil terminal can overpower even a healthy spot-demand story when traders are already reacting to a 1.57% daily slide.
Trump then set an 8 p.m. ET Tuesday deadline for Iran to reopen the Strait of Hormuz and warned that the entire country could be taken out in one night, according to NBC and PBS. A hard deadline arriving about 12 hours after the Kharg strikes gave traders a concrete point to price.
What Traders Watch Next
The Crypto Fear & Greed Index stood at 11, an Extreme Fear reading that matched the market's shift from ceasefire euphoria to escalation pricing.
That 11 reading, paired with Bitcoin's 1.57% daily loss, suggests traders are treating Iran-US headlines as the dominant market input for now. Even narrower crypto narratives, including tokenized real-estate pitches, are struggling to compete with war-risk pricing.
The near-term script is simple: traders will watch the 8 p.m. ET Tuesday deadline and any sign that Washington or Tehran is moving off its current terms. As long as Iran insists on a permanent end to hostilities rather than the rejected 45-day proposal, Bitcoin looks tied to geopolitics instead of setting its own story.
With the 11 Fear & Greed reading still in Extreme Fear and the 8 p.m. ET Tuesday deadline still hanging over the market, traders are more likely to fade rallies even with supportive context from institutional inflow trends.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial or investment advice. Cryptocurrency and digital asset markets carry significant risk. Always do your own research before making decisions.