Bitcoin surged past $75,000 for the first time since early February on Tuesday, posting its strongest intraday move in weeks as traders reacted to signals of renewed US-Iran diplomatic contact and covered short positions that had been accumulating around the $73,000 to $75,000 resistance zone. The move triggered approximately $200 million in short liquidations, accelerating the upside momentum in a market that had spent more than a month confined to a narrow range between $68,000 and $75,000. The catalyst was the same Trump statement that briefly lifted equity markets: his claim that Iranian representatives had contacted his administration “to work out a deal.” Whether that contact amounts to a meaningful diplomatic breakthrough or a tactical gesture remains unclear, but the crypto market did not wait for confirmation. Bitcoin climbed 5.9 percent, Ethereum rallied 8.6 percent, XRP gained 4.2 percent and Solana was up 6.3 percent on the session. The rally faces structural tests in the immediate coming days. The April 15 tax deadline has historically generated meaningful crypto selling as US investors liquidate positions to meet obligations, with analysts estimating approximately $2.8 billion in tax-related selling pressure this year. The ceasefire between the US and Iran is scheduled to expire on April 22, creating a binary event that could trigger sharp reversals if talks fail again. The FOMC meeting on April 28-29, likely Jerome Powell’s last as chair before Kevin Warsh takes over, adds a monetary policy variable to an already volatile geopolitical picture. The sustained hold above $70,000 through the Islamabad talks collapse and the Hormuz blockade announcement has been interpreted by many analysts as a sign that the crypto market is pricing in ongoing Middle East risk and no longer treats each escalation as fresh negative information. The all-time high for Bitcoin was $126,198 in October 2025. The current price represents a 41 percent discount to that peak. Institutional buyers, including Strategy’s continued accumulation programme, have provided demand beneath the leverage-driven moves throughout the war period.