Bitcoin pushed above $82,000 on Wednesday as markets rallied around fresh hopes that the US and Iran are moving closer to a framework agreement that could cool the conflict and ease pressure on global energy markets.
The move extended Bitcoin’s recovery from its early-February low near $60,000, putting the asset up more than 36% from that level. It also added weight to a technical shift that began in late April, when BTC broke above a major downtrend line that had capped price action since the October 6 all-time high at $126,199. After confirming the breakout with a successful retest, Bitcoin has climbed roughly 10% over the past seven days.
Deal Hopes Trigger Risk-On Bid For BitcoinThat distinction matters for markets. This is not yet a final peace agreement, and officials cited by Axios warned that Iran’s leadership remains divided. But for investors, even a credible path toward de-escalation was enough to reprice risk assets sharply.
Secretary of State Marco Rubio framed the process as incomplete but potentially actionable. “We don’t have to have the actual agreement written in one day. This is highly complex and technical.” Rubio added that Washington needed a diplomatic solution clear enough on “the topics they are willing to negotiate on” and the concessions available at the outset.
The crypto rally arrived alongside a broader macro move. Crude oil fell sharply as traders priced in the possibility that restrictions around global energy flows could ease if the US-Iran framework progresses. WTI crude fell to $94.32, while Brent went down 6.7% to $102.56.
Equity futures also strengthened. US stock index futures extended gains after the Axios report, Nasdaq 100 futures were up 1.26% and S&P 500 up 0.81% in pre-market trading.
At press time, BTC traded at $82,149.




















