
More than $273 million in bearish crypto positions were unwound in under 24 hours on April 6, as reports of US-Iran ceasefire talks triggered a sudden and sharp shift in market sentiment.
Summary
- Bloomberg reported that roughly $273 million in bearish crypto bets were unwound within 24 hours as ceasefire headlines hit, with short sellers accounting for the overwhelming majority of losses
- Ethereum led altcoin gains with a 5.1% move, while Bitcoin climbed more than 3% and the total crypto market cap crossed back above $2.5 trillion
- Rising open interest in both Bitcoin and Ethereum outpaced spot price gains, pointing to fresh capital entering the market rather than a purely mechanical short squeeze
Bears paid a heavy price on Monday. Bloomberg reported that roughly $273 million in bearish crypto bets were unwound within 24 hours, with short positions absorbing the vast majority of losses in a near 3-to-1 ratio over longs. The trigger was an Axios report that the US, Iran, and a group of regional mediators are discussing a potential 45-day ceasefire. Within hours of the report surfacing, risk assets snapped higher and over-leveraged bearish positions were forced to cover.
Bitcoin’s 24-hour range ran from $66,634 to $69,350, a $2,700 swing that caught the worst of the short positioning built up over the Easter weekend.
Ethereum led the major assets with a gain of 5.1%, the largest percentage move among top tokens and a direct reflection of how concentrated bearish exposure had become on the second-largest network. SOL added 2%, XRP climbed 2.2%, and ADA, AVAX, and LINK all posted double-digit increases in open interest alongside positive funding rates, extending the risk-on move well beyond Bitcoin.
The total crypto market cap crossed back above $2.5 trillion, recovering roughly $70 billion on the day.
Why the Short-Side Was So Crowded
Heading into the Easter break, sentiment had collapsed after weeks of escalating US-Iran war headlines and a string of ceasefire hopes that failed to convert into anything concrete. As crypto.news reported, the Bitcoin derivatives market had been sitting between a $1.143 billion long liquidation wall below $65,000 and a $754 million short pocket above $68,000. That structure left the market tightly wound and vulnerable to a sharp move in either direction.
Traders who had positioned for continued downside were essentially betting the $65,000 to $73,000 war range would hold or break lower. Monday’s ceasefire headlines upended that positioning in a matter of hours.
Open Interest Data Points to More Than a Squeeze
What separates Monday’s move from prior headline-driven spikes is how open interest behaved. In both Bitcoin and Ethereum, open interest climbed at a faster pace than spot prices, suggesting fresh capital flowing into the market rather than mechanical short covering alone. That distinction matters: a pure short squeeze exhausts itself quickly, while new capital entering can sustain a move.
As crypto.news noted in its analysis of Monday’s ceasefire developments, a confirmed deal could reduce oil prices and ease inflation pressures, improving the case for a more accommodative Federal Reserve stance. Caution remains warranted. Polymarket currently puts the odds of a ceasefire by April 30 at roughly 30%, and several major tokens including BCH and HYPE are still showing negative funding rates, signalling pockets of bearish positioning that have not yet been cleared.