Bitcoin has returned to the spotlight after recording a notable rise and reclaiming the $74,000 level, an important psychological threshold it had not reached for about a month, following weeks of volatile trading and geopolitical tensions. The move comes as part of a broader recovery in the cryptocurrency market, reflecting renewed investor confidence and fresh capital inflows.
Recent Bitcoin price movements
Current price: Bitcoin is currently trading near the $73,000–$74,000 range, with daily highs briefly surpassing $74,000, its highest level since early February.
Daily gains: The cryptocurrency has climbed about 8% over the past 24 hours, continuing its upward trend.
Market activity: Trading volume exceeded $74 billion over the past 24 hours, while Bitcoin’s dominance reached around 60% of the total cryptocurrency market.
Support levels: Previous declines below $66,000 created strong buying zones, helping establish a new support level that may sustain further gains.
Factors driving Bitcoin’s rebound
Institutional interest:
Spot Bitcoin exchange-traded funds recorded inflows of $680 million this week, reflecting strong institutional participation.
Crypto-related stocks:
Shares of companies linked to cryptocurrencies, such as Coinbase and Galaxy Digital, have risen alongside Bitcoin, signaling improved confidence across the market.
Market dynamics:
Short covering has helped accelerate prices, as many short positions were closed after Bitcoin broke through key resistance levels, adding upward momentum.
Geopolitical influence:
Bitcoin stabilized after the initial shock of Middle East tensions, and as risk appetite improved investors returned to buying digital assets.
Altcoin gains:
Cryptocurrencies such as Ethereum and Ripple recorded notable gains, helping push the total cryptocurrency market capitalization higher by roughly $100 billion.
Broader cryptocurrency market performance
Ethereum: Trading above $2,050 alongside Bitcoin’s gains.
Solana and BNB: Posted daily gains between 3% and 6%, reflecting rising investor risk appetite.
Ripple: Trading near $1.39, contributing to the broad rally.
Market trend: The rally is not limited to Bitcoin, indicating broad participation from investors.
Technical outlook and market indicators
Resistance breakouts: Bitcoin successfully moved above the $69,000 and $70,000 levels, opening the path toward a potential test of $75,000 if momentum continues.
Support levels: Previous lows around $66,000 have now turned into strong support, reinforcing the bullish outlook.
Trading volume and momentum: The sharp increase in trading volumes suggests active investor participation rather than a temporary spike.
Analyst views: Regaining levels above $71,000 represents a shift in market structure that could pave the way for further gains.
What this means for investors
Opportunity zone: The $74,000 level may offer short-term entry opportunities or profit-taking zones.
Portfolio strategy: Long-term investors may view the rally as confirmation of Bitcoin’s recovery cycle, strengthening its position as a strategic asset.
Volatility caution: Despite the rebound, markets remain vulnerable to volatility, as any economic or geopolitical developments could quickly reverse the trend.
Bitcoin’s return to the $74,000 level marks an important milestone for the cryptocurrency market, reflecting a combination of institutional inflows, technical breakouts, and overall market optimism. While caution remains necessary given the volatile nature of digital assets, the rebound highlights the market’s resilience and the return of confidence among traders and investors.
Oil prices rose on Thursday, extending their rally as the US–Israeli war against Iran expanded and disrupted supply and shipping routes, prompting some major producers to cut output while others took steps to secure supplies.
Brent crude rose by $1.72, or 2.1%, to $83.12 per barrel by 11:06 GMT, marking its fifth consecutive session of gains. US West Texas Intermediate crude also climbed $1.95, or 2.6%, to $76.61 per barrel.
John Evans, an analyst at PVM, said oil markets had become tighter, noting that the Chinese government had asked the country’s largest refining companies to suspend diesel and gasoline exports.
Two refineries in China and India also shut down crude processing units due to supply disruptions, as both countries rely heavily on oil imports from the Middle East.
Amid expectations of tighter fuel supplies, European diesel futures surged to their highest level since October 2022 at $1,130.
Analysts at ANZ Group said in a note on Thursday that oil markets remain tense due to ongoing risks to supplies following the attacks in the Middle East, with concerns focused on trade flows through the Strait of Hormuz.
Continued attacks on oil tankers
Attacks on oil tankers continued on Thursday, as the Bahamas-flagged crude tanker Sonangol Namibe reported a hull breach following an explosion near Iraq’s Khor Al-Zubair port.
According to vessel tracking data from Vortexa and Kpler, about 300 oil tankers remain inside the Strait of Hormuz, while traffic entering and leaving the vital waterway has nearly halted since the outbreak of the war, excluding some smaller vessels from the count.
In another development, Iran launched a wave of missiles at Israel early Thursday morning, forcing millions of residents into shelters as the conflict entered its sixth day, just hours after efforts in Washington to halt US attacks had failed.
A US submarine sank an Iranian warship off the coast of Sri Lanka on Wednesday, killing at least 80 people, while NATO air defenses intercepted an Iranian ballistic missile launched toward Turkey.
Risk of supply disruptions from Iraq and Kuwait
Analysts at JPMorgan warned that crude supplies from Iraq and Kuwait could begin to halt within days if the Strait of Hormuz remains closed, potentially cutting output by about 3.3 million barrels per day by the eighth day of the conflict.
Officials told Reuters that Iraq, the second-largest crude producer in the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC), had reduced production by about 1.5 million barrels per day due to a lack of storage capacity and the absence of export routes.
Meanwhile, QatarEnergy — the largest liquefied natural gas producer in the Gulf — declared force majeure on gas exports on Wednesday, with sources saying that returning to normal production levels could take at least a month.
The US dollar resumed its advance on Thursday after a brief pullback from its highest levels in three months, as the ongoing fallout from the conflict in the Middle East kept investors on edge and pushed them toward the US currency as a safe haven.
Earlier hopes for easing tensions faded after Iran warned that Washington would “deeply regret” the sinking of an Iranian warship off the coast of Sri Lanka.
As a result, demand for the dollar remained strong, with the euro falling 0.18% to $1.1610, while the British pound declined 0.1% to $1.3358.
The dollar index, which measures the US currency against a basket of six major peers, rose 0.18% to 98.99.
Nick Rees, head of macro research at Monex, said: “Everyone is operating in the dark.”
He added: “Most investors recognize that they do not have a high degree of confidence when it comes to forecasting these tensions, which makes markets extremely sensitive even to small developments in news headlines.”
Safe-haven behavior disrupted
As investors rushed toward safe assets amid the turmoil, renewed concerns about inflation further complicated the outlook, causing some traditional safe havens to behave unexpectedly and forcing investors to reassess which assets truly provide protection.
Germany’s benchmark 10-year government bond yield rose 6.1 basis points to 2.807% on Thursday, as bond prices declined.
Bas van Geffen, senior macro strategist at Rabobank, said: “It seems there is almost no escape. Traditional safe havens such as gold are not playing their usual role.”
He added: “With the sharp rise in the dollar index, dollar liquidity appears to be king.”
Dollar among the biggest winners this week
The dollar has risen about 1.37% since the start of the week, emerging as one of the few assets posting gains during volatile sessions that have seen stocks, bonds, and even precious metals — which are usually considered safe havens — move lower.
The surge in energy prices driven by the Middle East war has reignited fears of returning inflation, which could complicate interest rate expectations for major central banks.
According to the CME FedWatch tool from CME Group, traders are now pricing only a 31.5% probability of a Federal Reserve rate cut in June, compared with nearly 46% a week ago. This shift is partly due to stronger-than-expected US economic data released on Wednesday.
Expectations for rate cuts by the Bank of England have also been scaled back, while money markets have increased bets on the possibility that the European Central Bank could raise interest rates earlier this year.
Thierry Wizman, global FX and rates strategist at Macquarie Group, said: “Alongside market participants, monetary policymakers are also increasingly watching the possibility of inflation returning as a concern.”
He added: “US interest rate expectations are among the most sensitive to change if the world experiences a new wave of inflation in 2026 due to constrained energy supplies.”
Moves in other currencies
The Japanese yen also retreated after early gains, falling 0.2% to 157.35 per dollar.
In China, the government on Thursday set its economic growth target for 2026 in a range between 4.5% and 5%, slightly lower than last year’s 5% growth rate. The target leaves room for stronger — though not decisive — measures to curb industrial overcapacity and rebalance the economy.
The Chinese yuan recovered from a one-month low to trade little changed at 6.8951 per dollar, after the People’s Bank of China set the daily reference rate for the currency at its strongest level in nearly three years.
Cryptocurrencies
In the cryptocurrency market, both Bitcoin and Ethereum fell by less than 1% each, following strong gains recorded in the previous session.
Gold prices rose in the European market on Thursday, extending gains for a second consecutive session, supported by strong demand for the metal as a safe haven amid the escalating conflict in the Middle East.
However, those gains were limited by the renewed rise of the US dollar against a basket of global currencies, supported by continued buying as the most attractive available investment, as expectations for Federal Reserve interest rate cuts during the first half of this year continued to fade.
Price Overview
Gold prices today rose by 1.05% to $5,195.13, up from the opening level of $5,140.93, while recording a session low of $5,121.10.
At Wednesday’s settlement, gold prices posted gains of more than 1.0%, as part of a recovery from a two-week low of $4,996.10 per ounce.
The Iran war
Israel launched a wave of large-scale airstrikes on Tehran on Thursday, targeting what it described as infrastructure belonging to Iranian authorities, after Iranian missiles forced millions of Israelis to take shelter.
The US dollar
The US Dollar Index rose by 0.25% on Thursday, resuming gains that had temporarily paused in the previous session, approaching once again its highest levels in four months, reflecting renewed strength of the US currency against a basket of global currencies.
This rise comes as investors continue to favor the dollar as the most attractive available investment, amid fading expectations that the Federal Reserve will cut interest rates during the first half of this year.
US interest rates
On Wednesday, US President Donald Trump officially nominated former Federal Reserve Governor Kevin Warsh to lead the US central bank.
In its latest Beige Book report released on Wednesday, the Federal Reserve said US economic activity expanded slightly, prices continued to rise, while employment levels remained largely stable in recent weeks.
According to the CME Group’s FedWatch tool, markets are pricing a 97% probability that US interest rates will remain unchanged at the March meeting, while the probability of a 25 basis-point rate cut stands at 3%.
To reassess those expectations, traders are awaiting the release of weekly US jobless claims later today, followed by the US February employment report on Friday.
Gold outlook
Hamad Hussein, economist at Capital Economics, said that on one hand, safe-haven demand for gold could increase amid the conflict in the Middle East. On the other hand, the risk of persistently high energy prices, which could eliminate the possibility of rate cuts and increase the likelihood of further tightening, may limit additional gains.
SPDR Gold Trust
Holdings of the SPDR Gold Trust, the world’s largest gold-backed exchange-traded fund, declined by around 18 metric tons on Wednesday, marking the second consecutive daily drop, bringing the total to 1,081.04 metric tons, the lowest level since February 19.