Bitcoin and major cryptocurrencies have staged a notable recovery over the past two weeks, with BTC climbing back toward the $80,000 area from lows near $75,000 — a move underpinned by renewed institutional demand and easing geopolitical risk, according to the market insights team at QCP Capital, one of Asia’s largest digital asset trading firms.
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The broader crypto market has moved in step with the recovery. Ethereum, XRP, and Solana have each posted gains alongside Bitcoin over the period, reflecting a return of risk appetite across the digital asset space.
The catalyst, as QCP’s analysis frames it, is a combination of supportive ETF flows and a partial de-escalation of tensions surrounding the Strait of Hormuz — a geopolitical variable that has weighed heavily on risk assets since early in the year.
ETF Flows Doing The Heavy Lifting
According to QCP Capital’s most recent market update, spot ETF flows remain a key pillar of the current recovery. The firm noted approximately $163 million in net inflows last week, with outflows recorded between April 27 and April 29 — likely tied to month-end rebalancing and basis trade adjustments — more than offset by a single-session inflow of approximately $630 million on Friday.
That flow pattern matters. April closed as the strongest month for spot Bitcoin ETF demand in 2026, with $2.44 billion in net inflows, according to data tracked by Investing.com — nearly double March’s figure and enough to push total cumulative inflows since the January 2024 launch above $58.5 billion. BlackRock’s iShares Bitcoin Trust (IBIT) led the monthly tally, accounting for the bulk of net capital across the eleven US-listed products.
The picture is not without caveats. As CoinDesk reported, cumulative inflows remain roughly $2.5 billion below the October 2025 peak of $61.19 billion — a gap that reflects the $6.38 billion in outflows recorded between November 2025 and February 2026. The recovery, in other words, is real but incomplete.
The Real Test For The Bitcoin Price: $80,000
QCP’s analysis points to the macro backdrop as the other swing factor. The firm noted in an earlier market update that the conflict premium tied to Hormuz tensions has not fully washed out, leaving BTC’s current strength reading more as relief than regime shift.
Fresh shorts, per QCP’s observations, continued to be added into recent strength rather than being fully forced out — a positioning dynamic that leaves the market tactically vulnerable to squeezes but stops short of signaling a decisive sentiment shift.
That view is echoed elsewhere. Analysts at Marex described $80,000 as the key psychological barrier. A clean break and sustained hold above that level, they noted, would shift the market into a momentum-driven trade with room to extend. A rejection, by contrast, invites profit-taking back toward the mid-$70,000 range.
Key risks flagged by QCP include the possibility of renewed US-Iran tensions, with energy markets still sensitive to any Hormuz disruption, and the continued overhang of US tariff policy on countries importing Iranian crude.
This development marks a pivotal juncture for Bitcoin and the broader nascent sector. The next few sessions will prove whether the current recovery has the structural conviction to hold above $80,000 or remains a rally trading on borrowed relief.
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As of this writing, Bitcoin trades at around $79,500 after briefly topping $80,000 during Asian hours, consolidating near the critical level that analysts say will determine the near-term direction of the market.

Bitcoin price crossing above $80,000 on the daily chart, a close above this level on higher timeframes might kick off a bigger rally. Source: BTCUSD on Tradingview
Cover image from Grok, BTCUSD chart from Tradingview

