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Iran's $1-Per-Barrel Crypto Toll Shocks Hormuz — Bitcoin Hits $73K, CPI Explodes 0.9%, Vance Flies to Islamabad as Ceasefire Fractures on Day 43

Iran $1 per barrel Bitcoin crypto toll Strait of Hormuz — Bitcoin surges to $73K, March CPI explodes 0.9 percent, JD Vance departs for Islamabad peace talks as Iran ceasefire fractures on Day 43 April 11 2026

Davit Cho
CEO & Crypto Tax Specialist · LegalMoneyTalk
Published: April 11, 2026 · Updated: April 11, 2026 · 22 min read

Bitcoin (Apr 11)~$72,975 (+1.4% post-ceasefire hold)
WTI Crude (Apr 10)~$95.63 (−17.8% from $116 peak)
Brent Crude~$97.78 (Hormuz still restricted)
Gold (GCJ26)~$4,791 (+3.0% week; CPI-driven)
DXY~99.44 (−0.5% post-CPI)
US Gas (Avg)$4.25/gal (+42% since pre-war)
March CPI (m/m)+0.9% — largest since 2022
War DayDay 43 (Apr 11, 2026)
Tax DeadlineApril 15 — 4 days
⏰ Ceasefire ExpiryApril 22 — 11 days remaining
πŸ•Š️ Vance–Iran TalksIslamabad, Saturday April 12

Key Takeaways

  • Iran has imposed a $1-per-barrel crypto toll on oil tankers transiting the Strait of Hormuz — payments accepted in Bitcoin and cryptocurrency. Per-ship costs can reach ~$2 million. Only ~10 vessels have cleared in 48 hours, with a hard cap of 15 ships per day. More than 600 vessels including 325 tankers remain stranded in the Gulf.
  • The ceasefire is fracturing on Day 43. Iran accuses Israel of violating the deal with massive strikes on Lebanon. Netanyahu declared "there is no ceasefire in Lebanon" and vowed to continue bombing Hezbollah. Trump warned Iran: "the shootin' starts" if Hormuz isn't fully reopened.
  • March CPI printed at +0.9% month-over-month — the largest monthly increase since the 2022 inflation crisis — driven by Iran war energy costs. Gas hit $4.25/gal national average. The Fed's April 28–29 FOMC meeting now faces a stagflation trap.
  • Vice President JD Vance departs for Islamabad on Friday, April 11, leading a delegation including Jared Kushner and Steve Witkoff for Saturday talks with Iran. Tehran threatened to boycott over Lebanon strikes but confirmed its delegation has arrived.
  • Bitcoin holds above $72,900 — now testing the 6th sell-the-news rally since the war began. The pattern is 5-for-5 in fading. Key difference: Morgan Stanley's spot BTC ETF launched April 8 and DXY dropped below 99.50 post-CPI. The April 15 tax deadline is 4 days away.
  • Oil remains near $96 WTI — down 18% from peak but the Hormuz "reopening" is a trickle, not a flood. Iran's 15-ship daily cap means less than 1% of normal traffic. If the ceasefire collapses on April 22, J.P. Morgan's $120–$130 squeeze scenario reactivates.

1. Iran's $1-Per-Barrel Crypto Toll: The Hormuz Shakedown

Iran imposes $1 per barrel Bitcoin cryptocurrency toll on oil tankers transiting Strait of Hormuz — only 9 ships cleared in 2 days with $2 million per vessel maximum toll payment under Iranian Armed Forces coordination April 2026

The ceasefire was supposed to reopen the Strait of Hormuz. What it actually created is something no one predicted: the world's first sovereign crypto toll booth on the most strategically important waterway on earth.

On April 9, 2026, the global shipping industry woke up to a new reality. According to reports from the Indian Express, the Hill, and the Financial Times via Moneycontrol, Iran has imposed a formalized transit toll on all vessels passing through the Strait of Hormuz — approximately $1 per barrel of oil on board, with payments demanded in Bitcoin or other cryptocurrency. For a fully loaded VLCC (Very Large Crude Carrier) carrying approximately 2 million barrels, the toll can reach $2 million per vessel.

The mechanics are medieval in concept but digital in execution. Breakbulk News reported that tanker captains must email cargo manifests to Iranian authorities, who calculate the toll and provide crypto wallet addresses for payment. Once payment is confirmed on the blockchain, the vessel is cleared for transit through a newly designated shipping lane under Iranian naval escort. Iran has simultaneously imposed a hard cap of 15 vessels per day, according to MSN.

The results so far have been devastating for global shipping. Al Jazeera reported that more than 600 vessels, including 325 tankers, remain stranded in the Gulf. The Economic Times confirmed that only four tankers and six bulk carriers had cleared the strait from the ceasefire start through Thursday — a rate representing less than 1% of the strait's normal daily throughput of approximately 60–70 vessels. The New York Post reported that 300–400 ships have been approved "under Iranian military coordination," but only 10–15 are actually moving through per day.

Trump's response was immediate and unambiguous. On Thursday evening, he posted on social media: "There are reports that Iran is collecting tolls... they better not be." The Hill reported that Trump subsequently warned that "the shootin' starts" if Iran doesn't fully reopen the strait. Yet hours later, in what may be the most dissonant moment of the entire war, Trump reportedly proposed a joint US-Iran toll collection venture — suggesting the two countries could split the revenue from Hormuz transit fees.

"There are reports that Iran is collecting tolls… they better not be." — President Donald Trump, April 10, 2026 (The Hill)

The crypto dimension is the part that matters most for this publication's readers. Iran is effectively creating a state-level Bitcoin use case — using cryptocurrency to collect tolls from global shipping while circumventing the very sanctions regime that the US has imposed on Iranian banks. If this system persists even for the remaining 11 days of the ceasefire, it establishes a precedent: a sovereign nation collecting hundreds of millions of dollars in crypto from the world's most critical energy chokepoint. The implications for Bitcoin's role in geopolitical finance, sanctions evasion, and institutional legitimacy are enormous — and largely unexplored.

⚠️ Hormuz Status (Apr 11): 15-ship daily cap · ~10 vessels cleared in 48 hours · 600+ ships stranded · $1/barrel crypto toll · Bitcoin/crypto payment required · Normal throughput: 60–70 vessels/day · Current: ~1% of normal capacity

πŸ“Ž Related: The Ceasefire Shock: Trump's 11th-Hour 2-Week Pause — Oil Crashes 14%, Bitcoin Surges Past $72K, Iran's 10-Point Gambit | Day 40


2. Ceasefire Fractures: Lebanon, Netanyahu, and the Violation Spiral

The ceasefire announced on April 8 was always fragile. By Day 43, it is actively disintegrating along three fault lines.

Fault Line #1: Lebanon. Less than 24 hours after the ceasefire was announced, Israel launched a massive wave of airstrikes targeting Hezbollah across Lebanon. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu declared unambiguously: "There is no ceasefire in Lebanon." He added that Israel would "continue to strike Hezbollah with force," as confirmed by CNN, Al Jazeera, and Anadolu Agency. This directly contradicts Iran's 10-point counter-plan, which explicitly demanded a halt to Israeli strikes against Hezbollah as a precondition for any lasting peace.

Fault Line #2: Iran's violation claims. Iran's government has formally accused the United States and Israel of violating the ceasefire terms, as CBS News reported. Tehran's position is straightforward: the ceasefire was supposed to halt attacks on Iran and its allies. Israel is openly attacking Hezbollah — Iran's most important regional proxy — while claiming the ceasefire doesn't apply to Lebanon. Iran threatened to cancel the Islamabad talks in response.

Fault Line #3: The Hormuz semantics. The ceasefire's core promise — the reopening of the Strait of Hormuz — has been technically met but practically nullified. Iran agreed to allow "safe passage via coordination with Iran's Armed Forces." What that looks like in practice is a 15-ship-per-day trickle through an Iranian-controlled corridor, with crypto tolls, military escorts, and a 600-ship backlog. Reuters reported that shippers are seeking clarity and finding none. KCTV5 confirmed that the strait's status remains fundamentally unclear.

The White House's own posture reflects the fragility. Reuters reported that Trump's aides opted against a televised address about the ceasefire, fearing they would "oversell" a deal whose details remained unclear. This is the administration effectively acknowledging that the ceasefire is, at best, a framework for further negotiation — not a resolution.

"There is no ceasefire in Lebanon. We are continuing to strike Hezbollah with force." — Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, April 9, 2026 (Al Jazeera)

πŸ“Ž Related: Trump's 48-Hour Ultimatum: Hormuz or Hell — Weekend Countdown for Oil, Bitcoin & $4.08 Gas


3. CPI Explodes 0.9%: The Iran War Inflation Shock Has Arrived

US CPI March 2026 surges 0.9 percent month-over-month — largest monthly inflation increase since 2022 driven by Iran war energy costs gas prices $4.25 per gallon oil at $96 WTI

The number everyone feared arrived on Thursday, April 10. The Bureau of Labor Statistics reported that the Consumer Price Index for All Urban Consumers (CPI-U) increased 0.9% on a seasonally adjusted basis in March 2026 — the largest monthly increase since the cost-of-living surge in 2022. Bloomberg confirmed the headline: "US CPI Jumps on Surge in Gas Prices, But Underlying Inflation Is Tamer."

The driver is obvious and singular: energy. The Iran war sent oil from the mid-$60s in February to $116 by early April. Gas prices nationally hit $4.25 per gallon as of this week — up 42% from pre-war levels, according to AAA and Finder. California drivers are paying over $5.90. The CPI's energy component absorbed this shock with a lag, and March was the month it hit the data.

Fox Business reported that core CPI — excluding food and energy — was slightly hotter than February, with month-over-month core rising 0.2% and year-over-year core at 2.5%. XTB noted that headline CPI year-over-year actually slowed to 1.0%, coming in below the anticipated 1.2% — a result of the base effect from high energy prices a year earlier. But the monthly figure is what markets are trading: 0.9% in a single month tells the Federal Reserve that the Iran war has re-ignited the inflation pipeline.

The implications for the April 28–29 FOMC meeting are severe. The Fed held rates at 3.50–3.75% in March, and the March dot plot showed expectations for gradual cuts later in 2026. That narrative is now under direct assault. A 0.9% monthly CPI print, if it repeats in April (when the full oil spike will be reflected), annualizes to over 10%. The Fed cannot cut into rising inflation. But it also cannot hike without crushing an economy already staggering under $4.25 gas and war uncertainty. This is the textbook definition of stagflation — and the Fed has no good options.

⚠️ CPI Impact Chain: Iran war → oil $60s→$116 → gas $2.98→$4.25 → CPI +0.9% (largest since 2022) → Fed stagflation trap → April 28–29 FOMC = most important meeting of 2026 → Rate cut hopes frozen → Bitcoin/equities caught between inflation fear and liquidity hope

πŸ“Ž Related: Iran War Day 30: How $100 Oil Is Crushing Markets — and Why Bitcoin Refuses to Die


4. Vance to Islamabad: The Saturday Talks That Could End — or Restart — the War

Vice President JD Vance departed Washington on Friday, April 11, heading to Islamabad, Pakistan for what may be the most consequential diplomatic meeting of the war. CNN reported that the talks are set to begin Saturday morning local time at a luxury hotel in Islamabad. The US delegation includes Vance, Jared Kushner, and special envoy Steve Witkoff. Pakistan's Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif is serving as the mediator.

Vance's pre-departure remarks were characteristically direct. Speaking to reporters, he warned Iran: "Don't try and play us." He added that Trump had given him "clear guidelines" for the negotiations, as The Guardian reported. He told the press he expected "positive" results, while simultaneously noting that the US is "prepared for any outcome." Al Jazeera confirmed the delegation's departure.

The Iranian side nearly didn't show up. The New York Times reported that Iran threatened to call off the meeting over Israel's continued strikes on Lebanon, which Tehran views as a direct ceasefire violation. But as of Friday evening, Iran's delegation had arrived in Islamabad, per The Hill. Tehran stated that negotiations would be based on its 10-point proposal — the same plan that demands a permanent end to the war, sanctions relief, and reparations.

Al Jazeera reported that Pakistan has set a "modest goal" for the summit: simply getting both sides to agree to keep talking. That framing tells you everything about where expectations stand. The gap between Iran's demand for permanent peace guarantees and Trump's two-week tactical pause remains as wide as it was on April 8. The Saturday talks are not expected to produce a comprehensive deal — they are expected to produce, at best, a framework for continuing negotiations past the April 22 ceasefire expiry.

"Don't try and play us." — Vice President JD Vance, April 11, 2026, before departing for Islamabad (The Guardian)

πŸ“Ž Related: Trump Declares Victory, Markets Rally, Iran Says No — Day 33 and the $400 Billion Question


5. Oil at $96: The Trickle vs. the Flood

WTI crude oil closed at approximately $95.63 on April 10, according to Trading Economics — down 2.29% on the day and down roughly 17.8% from the $116 peak hit on April 7 when Defense Secretary Hegseth announced the "largest volume of strikes" of the war. Fortune reported Brent at $97.78. OilPrice.com noted that prices "remain close to $100 per barrel despite the ceasefire."

The reason oil hasn't crashed further is the Hormuz math. Normal Strait of Hormuz traffic is approximately 60–70 vessels per day, carrying roughly 20 million barrels of oil — about 20% of global supply. Iran's 15-ship daily cap, even if fully utilized, represents less than 25% of normal throughput. And in practice, only 10 vessels cleared in the first 48 hours. The ceasefire has converted a total blockade into a controlled trickle, but a trickle is not a restoration of supply.

For American consumers, the pipeline lag means gas prices will not drop soon. The national average of $4.25/gal reflects oil prices from 2–3 weeks ago in the refinery-to-pump chain. If Brent sustains below $100 through late April and the ceasefire holds, gas could retreat toward $3.70–$3.90 by mid-May. If the ceasefire collapses on April 22 and oil snaps back above $110, gas heads toward $4.75–$5.25 by early May — and J.P. Morgan's squeeze scenario of $120–$130 WTI reactivates in full.

⚠️ Oil Scenario Fork (Updated Apr 11):
Bull (ceasefire holds + Hormuz expands): WTI $80–90, gas → $3.50–$3.80 by May
Base (ceasefire extended, Hormuz trickle): WTI $90–100, gas → $3.90–$4.10
Bear (ceasefire collapses Apr 22): WTI $110–130, gas → $4.75–$5.25+

πŸ“Ž Related: Iran War Sends Oil Past $119 — Why Bitcoin Just Rallied to $71K Anyway


6. Bitcoin's $73K Test: 6th Rally or Real Breakout?

Bitcoin surges past $73,000 on April 11 2026 — sixth rally test in sell-the-news pattern during Iran war ceasefire, scoreboard shows 5-for-5 previous fades with current $73K breakout attempt and $70K resistance level

Bitcoin opened Friday, April 11 at approximately $72,974, according to Yahoo Finance. BTC futures on the CME were trading at $73,630, up 1.85% on the session. This places Bitcoin at its highest sustained level since March 17 — and squarely inside the 6th sell-the-news test since the war began on February 28.

The scoreboard entering this test is 5-for-5 in fading. As we tracked across Article #36: Rally #1 (March 13, $72K → fade), Rally #2 (March 23, $71.2K → reversal), Rally #3 (March 30, $68.5K → gave back), Rally #4 (April 1, $69.2K → fell to $66.8K), Rally #5 (Easter weekend, $69K → faded to $68.5K). Every single presidential headline suggesting de-escalation produced a Bitcoin rally that reversed within 24 to 72 hours.

Three structural factors make Rally #6 potentially different from the previous five:

Factor 1: Morgan Stanley's spot Bitcoin ETF. Investing News reported that Morgan Stanley's spot BTC ETF made its market debut on April 8 with a 0.14% management fee — the lowest in the category. This provides a new institutional on-ramp that didn't exist during rallies #1 through #5. Finance Magnates noted that whale wallets are accumulating, and the $427M in short liquidations triggered by the ceasefire announcement cleared significant overhead resistance.

Factor 2: DXY below 99.50. The US Dollar Index dropped to 99.44 on April 11 according to Seeking Alpha — falling from 100.18 before the ceasefire and accelerating downward after the CPI report. Paradoxically, the hot CPI data weakened the dollar because markets interpreted it as a one-time energy shock rather than broad-based inflation, given that core CPI remained relatively contained. A DXY below 99 has historically correlated with BTC rallies of 3–5%.

Factor 3: The Iran crypto toll precedent. This is harder to quantify but impossible to ignore. A sovereign nation collecting Bitcoin as toll revenue from the world's most critical energy chokepoint is the kind of narrative that crypto markets reflexively rally on — it validates the "Bitcoin as geopolitical asset" thesis that has been building since the war began.

The bearish case remains the same as it has been for all five previous rallies: the ceasefire resolves nothing structurally, Iran's 10-point demands are unmet, the April 22 expiry creates a binary event, and the Crypto Fear & Greed Index remains in deep fear territory. If Bitcoin cannot hold above $70,000 through the Islamabad talks this weekend, the pattern is 6-for-6 and the war-era ceiling is confirmed.

Sell-the-News Scoreboard — Testing #6:
#1: Mar 13 ($72K → fade) ❌ | #2: Mar 23 ($71.2K → reversal) ❌ | #3: Mar 30 ($68.5K → gave back) ❌ | #4: Apr 1 ($69.2K → fell) ❌ | #5: Easter ($69K → faded) ❌ | #6: Apr 11 ($73K → ???) ❓
New variables: Morgan Stanley ETF · DXY < 99.50 · Iran crypto toll narrative · Vance talks tomorrow

πŸ“Ž Related: Bitcoin's Worst Q1 Since 2018: What 13 Years of Data Say About Q2 — and the 5 Catalysts That Will Decide It


7. Gold, Dollar, and Equity Reaction

Gold closed Thursday at approximately $4,791 per ounce on the COMEX April contract, according to MarketWatch. USA Today reported the spot price at $4,766.42 at 8:15 AM ET on April 10. Gold is up approximately 3% on the week — a rally driven not by the ceasefire (which should reduce gold's geopolitical premium) but by the CPI shock (which reignites gold's inflation-hedge bid).

Gold's dual identity is on full display. The ceasefire pulls it down; inflation pushes it up. The net result is a modest weekly gain that keeps gold within striking distance of the Goldman Sachs year-end target of $5,400 and the more aggressive forecasts in the $6,000 range. The structural drivers — central bank buying, de-dollarization trends, and US deficit concerns — remain completely independent of the Iran war's daily headlines.

The US Dollar Index (DXY) fell to 99.44 on April 11, extending its decline from 100.18 before the ceasefire. The dollar weakened despite the hot CPI — an unusual move that reflects the market's nuanced interpretation: the energy-driven inflation spike is transitory in the sense that it depends on the war's duration, while the ceasefire (if it holds) would eventually normalize energy costs and give the Fed room to cut.

US equities were mixed on Thursday. The Times of India reported that at 10:15 AM ET, the Dow was down 109.60 points (−0.23%) at 48,076.20, while the S&P 500 gained 10.56 points and the Nasdaq was up on tech gains. The market is caught between two narratives: the ceasefire is positive for risk assets, but the CPI print suggests the Fed is trapped. JPMorgan has already slashed its S&P 500 year-end target from 7,500 to 7,200.

πŸ“Ž Related: JPMorgan Bitcoin $266K Target: Why Smart Money Is Buying the Crash


8. Market Snapshot — April 11, 2026

Asset Price Change Source
Bitcoin (BTC)~$72,975+5.8% from pre-ceasefireYahoo Finance
BTC Futures (CME)$73,630+1.85%Yahoo Finance
WTI Crude~$95.63−17.8% from $116 peakTrading Economics
Brent Crude~$97.78Hormuz still restrictedFortune
Gold (GCJ26)~$4,791+3.0% week (CPI-driven)MarketWatch
DXY~99.44−0.7% post-CPISeeking Alpha
S&P 500~6,370 (mixed)Dow −0.23%, Nasdaq +ToI
US Gas (Avg)$4.25/gal+42% since pre-warEIA
March CPI (m/m)+0.9%Largest since 2022BLS
Fed Funds Rate3.50–3.75%Hold (next: Apr 28–29)Fed

9. April 15 Tax Deadline: Crypto Filing Under War Conditions

The IRS filing deadline for 2025 federal income tax returns is Tuesday, April 15, 2026 — four days from now. For crypto holders, this tax season is unlike any in history because the war has created simultaneous volatility, loss-harvesting opportunities, and a completely new reporting landscape.

The 1099-DA reality. 2025 is the first year that exchanges were required to issue Form 1099-DA reporting your crypto dispositions. CoinLedger confirmed that the April 15 deadline applies to the 2025 tax year. If your 1099-DA shows a $0 cost basis — which many do because exchanges lacked historical transfer data — you may appear to owe dramatically more than you actually do. This is the single most important issue to resolve before Tuesday. We covered the fix in detail in our $0 cost basis guide.

War-era loss harvesting. Bitcoin traded as low as $65,000 in late March — down 48% from the $126K all-time high set in late 2024. If you sold at those levels, those capital losses can offset gains from earlier in 2025 when BTC was above $100K. The ceasefire rally to $73K has narrowed the loss-harvesting window — if you were waiting to sell at $66K to maximize the deduction, that opportunity may have passed. Crypto still enjoys the wash-sale exemption: you can sell at a loss and immediately repurchase without a 30-day waiting period. Report on Form 8949 and Schedule D.

New for 2026 filing season. Yahoo Finance reported two key rule changes: starting with 2025 transactions, exchanges must report on 1099-DA with specified identification of cost basis, and per-wallet accounting is being phased in. Fidelity confirmed that the IRS is expecting significantly more granular reporting than in previous years.

If you need more time: File Form 4868 for an automatic extension to October 15, 2026. This extends your filing deadline but does NOT extend your payment deadline. If you owe taxes, estimate and pay by April 15 to avoid penalties.

πŸ“‹ 4-Day Checklist:
✅ Check your 1099-DA for $0 cost basis errors — fix before filing
✅ Calculate war-era losses (BTC $126K ATH → $65K low = potential 48% loss deduction)
✅ Wash-sale exemption still available for crypto — sell and rebuy same day if needed
✅ Report on Form 8949 + Schedule D
✅ If not ready: File Form 4868 by April 15 for automatic extension to Oct 15
✅ Pay estimated taxes by April 15 even if you file for extension

πŸ“Ž Related: Your 2026 Crypto Tax Filing Checklist: 1099-DA, Form 8949, and 5 Costly Mistakes to Avoid · Crypto Tax Guide 2026: Everything the IRS Expects You to Report · Your 1099-DA Shows $0 Cost Basis — The IRS Thinks You Owe Thousands More


10. The 11-Day Countdown: Scenarios for April 12–22

The ceasefire expires on approximately April 22. Between now and then, five catalysts will determine whether markets enter a sustained relief rally or plunge back into war-era chaos:

April 12 (Saturday): Islamabad Talks. The Vance-Iran meeting is the most important near-term binary event. A positive outcome — agreement to extend the ceasefire, framework for permanent negotiations, or any signal of Hormuz expansion — sends oil below $90 and BTC toward $75K. A breakdown — Iranian walkout, accusations of bad faith, or no joint statement — reverses the entire post-ceasefire rally within hours.

April 15 (Tuesday): Tax Deadline. Crypto-specific selling pressure as holders realize gains or losses before the filing deadline. Historically, the 48 hours around April 15 see elevated volatility in crypto markets. This year, the war adds a layer of complexity as holders decide whether to harvest losses at $73K or wait for a potential post-ceasefire-expiry dip.

April 16–21: Hormuz Expansion Test. If the Islamabad talks produce an agreement to expand Hormuz traffic beyond 15 ships/day, the oil market will price this in immediately. Each additional 10 ships/day represents roughly 2–3 million barrels of supply returning. Markets need to see 40+ ships/day to believe the supply crisis is genuinely resolving.

April 22: Ceasefire Expiry. The most important date on the calendar. If no extension or permanent deal has been reached, Trump faces the same choice he has faced three times: escalate or extend. Iran's 10-point demands — sanctions relief, security guarantees, reparations — are not the kind of issues resolved in 14 days. The most probable outcome is a ceasefire extension of another 2–4 weeks, but the second most probable outcome is a resumption of hostilities.

April 28–29: FOMC Meeting. The Federal Reserve's next policy decision arrives one week after the ceasefire expiry. If oil has normalized below $85 and the ceasefire has been extended, the Fed can signal future rate cuts — a catalyst for both Bitcoin and equities. If the ceasefire has collapsed and oil is back above $110 with CPI running at 0.9%/month, the Fed faces a stagflation nightmare with no historical playbook.

Scenario BTC WTI Gold Probability
Bull: Ceasefire extended + Hormuz expands + talks progress$78K–$85K$80–$88$4,600–$4,80030%
Base: Ceasefire extended but Hormuz stays restricted + talks stall$68K–$74K$90–$100$4,800–$5,00045%
Bear: Ceasefire collapses + Hormuz re-blocked + war resumes$60K–$66K$110–$130$5,000–$5,40025%

πŸ“Ž Related: The 48-Hour Verdict: F-15 Down, Oil +11%, Bitcoin Fades — Bull Trap Confirmed


11. Frequently Asked Questions

Is Iran really collecting Bitcoin as a toll for Hormuz passage?

Yes. Multiple credible sources including the Financial Times (via Moneycontrol), the Hill, Indian Express, and Breakbulk News have confirmed that Iran is charging approximately $1 per barrel of oil on board, with payment in Bitcoin or other cryptocurrency. Tanker captains email cargo manifests to Iranian authorities, receive crypto wallet addresses, and transit is approved after blockchain-confirmed payment. For a fully loaded VLCC, this can reach ~$2 million per transit.

How many ships have actually passed through Hormuz since the ceasefire?

Approximately 10 vessels in the first 48 hours — four tankers and six bulk carriers, according to the Economic Times. Iran has imposed a 15-ship-per-day cap. Normal traffic is 60–70 vessels per day. More than 600 ships, including 325 tankers, remain stranded in the Gulf per Al Jazeera's reporting.

What did the March CPI report show?

CPI-U increased 0.9% month-over-month in March 2026, the largest monthly increase since 2022, driven almost entirely by energy costs from the Iran war. Core CPI (excluding food and energy) rose 0.2% m/m and 2.5% y/y. The headline year-over-year figure actually slowed to 1.0% due to base effects. Gas prices hit $4.25/gal national average.

When are the Vance-Iran talks in Islamabad?

Saturday, April 12, 2026, morning local time in Islamabad. VP JD Vance leads the US delegation with Jared Kushner and Steve Witkoff. Pakistan PM Sharif is mediating. Iran's delegation has arrived despite earlier threats to boycott over Lebanon strikes. Iran says talks will be based on its 10-point proposal.

Is it too late to harvest crypto losses before April 15?

The window has narrowed significantly. Bitcoin is at ~$73K, up from the ~$65K war-era low in late March. If you purchased BTC above $73K, you can still sell at a loss. The wash-sale rule does not apply to crypto, meaning you can sell and immediately repurchase. Report on Form 8949 and Schedule D. If you need more time, file Form 4868 for an automatic extension to October 15 — but pay estimated taxes by April 15 to avoid penalties.

What happens when the ceasefire expires on April 22?

Three outcomes are possible. Most probable (45%): the ceasefire is extended for another 2–4 weeks while talks continue. Second most probable (30%): a broader framework agreement is reached that extends the pause indefinitely. Least probable but highest impact (25%): the ceasefire collapses and hostilities resume with oil immediately repricing above $110. The Islamabad talks on April 12 will provide the first signal of which direction this is heading.

Will gas prices come down soon?

Not immediately. There is a 2–4 week lag between crude oil prices and prices at the pump. The current $4.25/gal average reflects oil from late March/early April. If crude sustains below $100 through late April and the ceasefire holds, gas could retreat to $3.70–$3.90 by mid-May. If the ceasefire collapses, gas heads toward $4.75–$5.25.

πŸ“Ž Complete Crypto Tax Resources:
Crypto Tax Guide 2026: Everything the IRS Expects You to Report
Best Crypto Tax Software 2026: CoinLedger vs Koinly vs CoinTracker vs Awaken
Per-Wallet Cost Basis 2026: The New IRS Rule — Complete Migration Guide
Crypto Tax Havens vs Traps: 0% to 55% (2026 Global Guide)
Bitcoin's Worst Month Since 2022: Sell at a Loss or Hold? A Tax Decision Framework


Disclaimer: This article is for informational and educational purposes only and does not constitute financial, tax, or legal advice. Consult a qualified CPA or tax professional for advice specific to your situation. Cryptocurrency investments carry significant risk. Past performance does not guarantee future results. LegalMoneyTalk may hold positions in assets discussed in this article.

The Ceasefire Shock: Trump's 11th-Hour 2-Week Pause — Oil Crashes 14%, Bitcoin Surges Past $72K, Iran's 10-Point Gambit | Day 40

Trump announces two-week ceasefire with Iran hours before 8 PM deadline — oil crashes 14 percent, Bitcoin surges past 72,000 dollars, one trillion dollar market rally April 8 2026

Davit Cho
CEO & Crypto Tax Specialist · LegalMoneyTalk
Published: April 8, 2026 · Updated: April 8, 2026 · 22 min read

Bitcoin (Apr 8)~$72,000 (+4.5% post-ceasefire)
WTI Crude (Apr 8)~$96.17 (−14.5%)
Brent Crude (Jun)~$96–100 (est. −12%)
Gold (GCJ26)~$4,650 (−0.6%)
DXY~100.18
S&P 500 FuturesSurging post-close (~$1 trillion inflow)
US Gas (Avg)$4.09/gal (+37% since pre-war)
War DayDay 40 (Apr 8, 2026)
Tax DeadlineApril 15 — 7 days
⏰ Ceasefire2 weeks (conditional on Hormuz reopening)

Key Takeaways

  • Trump announces a two-week ceasefire with Iran at approximately 6 PM ET on Tuesday, April 8 — less than two hours before his own 8 PM deadline to "destroy every bridge and power plant" in the country. Pakistan brokered the deal. Israel agreed.
  • Iran's Foreign Minister Araghchi confirms Tehran will cease defensive operations "if attacks against Iran are halted" and will allow safe passage through the Strait of Hormuz for two weeks "via coordination with Iran's Armed Forces."
  • Iran had formally rejected the 45-day ceasefire proposal and submitted its own 10-point counter-plan through Pakistan demanding a permanent end to the war, lifting of all sanctions, and reparations for war damage.
  • Before the deal, Israel killed IRGC intelligence chief Major General Majid Khademi and struck the South Pars petrochemical complex — Iran's largest gas field. Gas outages reported across Tehran.
  • The missing F-15 airman was rescued alive after surviving 48 hours on a 7,000-foot Iranian ridgeline — removing the most volatile political wildcard.
  • Oil crashes 14.5% — WTI plunges from ~$116 to ~$96.17. An estimated $1 trillion floods back into global equity markets in after-hours trading.
  • Bitcoin surges past $72,000 — its highest since March 17. Crypto market sees $206 million in liquidations in one hour. The 5th sell-the-news test is now in play.
  • The critical question: is this the real offramp, or offramp #3 in a pattern that has failed every time?

Table of Contents

  1. The 11th-Hour Deal: What Trump and Iran Actually Agreed To
  2. Iran's 10-Point Counter-Plan: The Demands Behind the Deal
  3. South Pars Struck, Spy Chief Killed: The Escalation Before the Pause
  4. The Rescued Airman: 48 Hours on a Mountain
  5. Oil Crashes 14%: WTI $116 → $96 and the Sustainability Question
  6. Bitcoin's $72K Surge: 6th Rally or Real Breakout?
  7. Gold, Dollar, and Market Reaction
  8. Market Snapshot — April 8, 2026
  9. The Two-Week Clock: What to Watch Apr 8–22
  10. Scenario Update: Revised Price Matrix Post-Ceasefire
  11. Frequently Asked Questions

1. The 11th-Hour Deal: What Trump and Iran Actually Agreed To

Trump three ultimatum timeline — March 21 offramp, April 5 Easter deadline, April 8 final 8PM deadline leading to two-week ceasefire with Iran 2026

On Tuesday, April 8, 2026 — Day 40 of Operation Epic Fury — the pattern that markets had come to expect finally broke. At approximately 6 PM Eastern Time, less than two hours before his own 8 PM deadline to begin the "complete demolition" of Iran's infrastructure, President Donald Trump announced that he had agreed to suspend the bombing and attack of Iran for a period of two weeks. The announcement, confirmed simultaneously by Politico, CNN, the New York Times, and NBC News, came after Pakistan's Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif urged Trump via a post on X to extend the deadline, writing that "diplomatic efforts for peaceful settlement of the ongoing war in the Middle East are progressing steadily, strongly and powerfully."

The deal's terms, as they emerged from multiple sources on Tuesday evening, are straightforward but fragile. Trump agreed to pause attacks on Iranian civilian infrastructure — the bridges, power plants, and desalination facilities he had spent the previous 48 hours threatening to obliterate. The ceasefire is conditional on Iran reopening the Strait of Hormuz. Iran's Foreign Minister Seyed Abbas Araghchi confirmed in a statement that Tehran would cease its defensive operations "if attacks against Iran are halted" and that "for a period of two weeks, safe passage through the Strait of Hormuz will be possible via coordination with Iran's Armed Forces and with due consideration of technical limitations." A White House official, speaking anonymously to Politico, confirmed that Israel has agreed to the two-week ceasefire.

The timeline leading to this moment deserves examination because it reveals just how close the world came to a dramatic escalation. At 7:44 AM on Tuesday morning, Trump posted on social media that "a whole civilization will die tonight, never to be brought back again." At a Monday press conference, he had stated explicitly: "Every bridge in Iran will be decimated by 12 o'clock tomorrow night, and all power plants will be burning, exploding, and never to be used again." Asked about war crime concerns, the president responded: "No, not at all." Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth announced that Monday saw the "largest volume of strikes" on Iran since the war began on February 28, with even more planned for Tuesday. The American military had bombed more than 13,000 ground targets, according to U.S. Central Command. The Pentagon was reportedly running out of strategically important targets and expanding its acceptable target list to include dual-use energy sites.

"I hope I don't have to do it." — President Donald Trump, on whether he would follow through on threats to bomb Iranian civilian infrastructure, April 7, 2026 (Politico)

This is the third time Trump has issued an ultimatum and then found an offramp. On March 21, he demanded Hormuz open in 48 hours, then extended by five days citing "productive conversations." On April 5, he issued a second 48-hour ultimatum that expired without action on Easter Sunday. On April 8, he announced a two-week ceasefire hours before a deadline he had called "final." As PBS documented, the pattern of escalating threats followed by last-minute de-escalation is now the defining feature of the conflict's diplomatic trajectory. The question for markets is whether offramp #3 holds — or whether this ceasefire, like the previous signals, collapses within days.

Ceasefire Terms Summary: US suspends strikes on Iranian civilian infrastructure for 2 weeks · Iran allows safe passage through Strait of Hormuz "via coordination" with its armed forces · Israel agrees to pause · Pakistan brokered the deal · Iran's 10-point demands remain unresolved · No permanent peace framework established · Ceasefire expires approximately April 22


2. Iran's 10-Point Counter-Plan: The Demands Behind the Deal

Iran rejects US 45-day ceasefire proposal and submits 10-point counter-plan through Pakistan demanding permanent end to war sanctions lifted security guarantees April 2026

The ceasefire did not emerge from agreement — it emerged from the gap between two irreconcilable positions. On Sunday, April 6, Iran and the United States both received a draft proposal, mediated by Pakistan, Egypt, and Turkey, calling for a 45-day temporary ceasefire and the phased reopening of the Strait of Hormuz. Iran rejected it categorically. Tehran's state-run IRNA news agency reported that Iran instead submitted its own 10-point counter-plan through Pakistan, demanding not a temporary pause but a permanent end to the war.

The 10 demands, as compiled from NDTV, RBC Ukraine, and Firstpost, include: guarantees that Iran will not be attacked again; the lifting of all US sanctions; a halt to Israeli strikes against Hezbollah in Lebanon; an end to all regional conflicts involving US-allied forces; reconstruction support for war damage; safe transit rules in the Strait of Hormuz under Iranian coordination; and reparations. Mojtaba Ferdousi Pour, head of Iran's diplomatic mission in Cairo, told the Associated Press: "We only accept an end of the war with guarantees that we won't be attacked again." He added that Iran no longer trusts the Trump administration after the US bombed the Islamic Republic twice during previous rounds of talks.

The gap between Iran's 10-point plan and the two-week ceasefire Trump accepted is enormous. Tehran wants a permanent peace; Washington has agreed to a two-week pause. Iran demands sanctions relief; the US has offered none. Iran wants reconstruction reparations; the US has bombed 13,000 targets. The ceasefire, in other words, resolves nothing structurally — it buys time. A regional official involved in the negotiations told the AP that "efforts had not collapsed" and that mediators were "still talking to both sides." Whether those talks can bridge the chasm between a two-week pause and Iran's demand for permanent guarantees will determine whether this ceasefire leads to a lasting resolution or becomes the prelude to the most devastating phase of the war yet.

"We only accept an end of the war with guarantees that we won't be attacked again." — Mojtaba Ferdousi Pour, Head of Iran's Diplomatic Mission in Cairo (AP)

3. South Pars Struck, Spy Chief Killed: The Escalation Before the Pause

Israel strikes South Pars petrochemical complex Iran largest gas field and kills IRGC intelligence chief Major General Majid Khademi April 6 2026

The ceasefire did not arrive in a vacuum of calm — it arrived in the aftermath of the war's most consequential 72 hours of military escalation. On Sunday night and Monday, April 6–7, the Israeli Air Force launched a wave of attacks that struck at the heart of Iran's energy infrastructure and intelligence apparatus. The Times of Israel confirmed that Israel attacked the South Pars petrochemical complex — Iran's largest gas field, located along the Persian Gulf coast — causing significant damage to the facility that produces a substantial share of Iran's non-crude petroleum exports. Separately, a targeted strike in Tehran killed Major General Majid Khademi, the intelligence chief of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, as confirmed by the Tribune India, Deutsche Welle, and Saudi Gazette.

The South Pars strike represents the most significant attack on Iran's energy infrastructure since the war began. DW reported that gas outages were reported across parts of Tehran after a separate strike hit a university campus connected to a gas distribution network. The assassination of Khademi — a figure described as one of the most powerful intelligence operatives in Iran's security establishment — marks the highest-ranking military official killed in a targeted strike since the war began. Israel claimed credit but offered no immediate details. Iran's state broadcaster reported a new wave of strikes on Tehran early Tuesday.

Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth's announcement that Monday would see the "largest volume of strikes" since Day 1 of Operation Epic Fury — with "tomorrow, even more than today" — suggests that the military escalation was not merely background noise to the diplomatic process but an active component of the pressure campaign. The Pentagon had conducted more than 200 dynamic strikes in a single night in late March, according to Hegseth, and was now running out of strategically important targets. Politico reported that the Pentagon was expanding its acceptable target list to include energy sites serving both civilian and military purposes — a move that experts characterized as a potential mechanism to avoid war crime accusations while still striking civilian-adjacent infrastructure.

⚠️ Day 38–40 Escalation Summary: South Pars petrochemical complex struck (Iran's largest gas field) · IRGC intelligence chief Majid Khademi killed in targeted assassination · Gas outages across Tehran · "Largest volume of strikes" since war began (Hegseth) · 13,000+ ground targets bombed total · New wave of strikes on Tehran early Tuesday · Israel's train network threat · Then: ceasefire announced at 6 PM


4. The Rescued Airman: 48 Hours on a Mountain

US Air Force F-15E weapons officer rescued after 48 hours on 7,000-foot Iranian mountain ridgeline by special operations forces April 5 2026

One of the most significant developments of the Easter weekend — and one that substantially altered the political calculus leading to the ceasefire — was the successful rescue of the missing F-15 weapons officer. As we reported in Article #35, the shootdown of three F-15E Strike Eagles on April 3–4 represented the war's most significant air combat losses, with one crew member's fate unknown as search-and-rescue operations were underway.

On Saturday, April 5, President Trump announced that the missing airman had been recovered alive. The New York Times reported that the weapons officer had evaded Iranian forces for more than 24 hours, at one point hiking up a 7,000-foot ridgeline before being located by US special operations forces in a mountain crevice. Time Magazine detailed the rescue as a large-scale operation involving special operations forces and multiple aircraft. The Air & Space Forces Magazine described it as one of the most complex combat rescues in modern American military history. Trump said the airman was wounded but "will be just fine."

The rescue's significance extends far beyond the human drama. As we noted in Article #35, a captured American pilot would have created overwhelming domestic political pressure for either dramatic escalation or immediate withdrawal — either of which would have sent markets into chaos. The successful extraction eliminated this wildcard and gave Trump the political space to pursue a ceasefire without appearing to abandon an American service member. In market terms, the rescue removed the single highest-volatility tail risk from the equation, contributing to the environment in which a deal became possible.


5. Oil Crashes 14%: WTI $116 → $96 and the Sustainability Question

WTI crude oil crashes from 116 to 96 dollars per barrel minus 14 percent after Trump Iran ceasefire announcement Hormuz reopening April 8 2026

The market reaction to the ceasefire was immediate and violent. WTI crude oil, which had surged to $116.36 on Monday as Hegseth announced the largest strike volume of the war, plunged approximately 14.5% to $96.17 following the ceasefire announcement, according to Trading Economics. Brent crude followed a similar trajectory, dropping from approximately $111 to the mid-$90s range. The Times of India had reported earlier in the day that Brent was at $110.34 and WTI at $113 — prices that now appear to be the war's peak.

The crash reflects the market pricing in the single most important variable: the reopening of the Strait of Hormuz. Iran's Foreign Minister Araghchi's statement that "safe passage through the Strait of Hormuz will be possible via coordination with Iran's Armed Forces" — even with the caveat of "technical limitations" — represents the first concrete commitment to reopening the strait since Iran effectively closed it in early March. If sustained, this would begin to restore the approximately 20 million barrels per day of oil that normally transits the strait, representing roughly 20 percent of global supply.

However, the sustainability of the oil price decline depends entirely on the ceasefire holding. As we documented across Articles #33 through #35, every previous de-escalation signal — on March 13, March 23, March 30, and April 1 — produced an oil price decline that reversed within 24 to 72 hours when the underlying reality reasserted itself. The critical difference this time is that Iran has explicitly committed to Hormuz passage, whereas previous signals were unilateral US claims that Iran denied. The critical similarity is that the ceasefire resolves none of Iran's 10-point demands, the war's underlying causes remain unaddressed, and the two-week window is extraordinarily short for the kind of diplomatic progress required for a lasting peace.

For American consumers, gas prices will not drop immediately even if oil stays below $100. The national average of $4.09 per gallon reflects oil prices from weeks ago in the refinery-to-pump pipeline. If Brent sustains below $100 through April, gas could retreat toward $3.50–$3.70 by early May. If the ceasefire collapses and oil spikes back above $110, the J.P. Morgan squeeze scenario of $120–$130 reactivates and gas heads toward $4.50–$5.00.

⚠️ Oil Scenario Fork (Updated): Ceasefire holds + Hormuz reopens → WTI $80–90, Brent $75–85. Ceasefire collapses within days → WTI snaps back to $110–120. Iran's "technical limitations" caveat on Hormuz = partial reopening only → WTI $90–100 range. Gas at the pump: 2–4 week lag behind crude moves.


6. Bitcoin's $72K Surge: 6th Rally or Real Breakout?

Bitcoin surges past 72,000 dollars after Trump Iran ceasefire — 206 million in crypto liquidations in one hour — sixth rally-and-reversal test April 8 2026

Cryptopolitan confirmed that Bitcoin surged above $72,000 following the ceasefire announcement — its highest level since approximately March 17. KuCoin reported that the crypto market saw $206 million in liquidations in a single hour as short sellers were violently squeezed. An estimated $1 trillion flooded back into global markets in after-hours trading as S&P 500 futures, ASX futures, and crypto all surged simultaneously.

The rally's magnitude — approximately 4.5% from the pre-announcement level of ~$68,900 — is the largest single-session ceasefire-driven move of the war. But it must be evaluated against the pattern we have tracked across five previous rallies. The sell-the-news scoreboard entering this moment was 5-for-5: March 13 ($72K → fade), March 23 ($71.2K → reversal), March 30 ($68.5K → gave back), April 1 ($69.2K → fell to $66.8K), and the Easter weekend rally to $69K that faded to $68.5K by Monday. Every single presidential headline suggesting de-escalation produced a rally that reversed within 24 to 72 hours.

What makes this rally potentially different from the previous five is the structural component. The earlier rallies were triggered by rhetoric — Trump's speeches, his social media posts, unverified claims of "talks." This ceasefire is accompanied by a specific, verifiable commitment: Iran's agreement to allow passage through the Strait of Hormuz. If ships begin transiting Hormuz in the coming days, the rally has a fundamental anchor that the previous five lacked. If the strait remains effectively closed despite Araghchi's statement — which referenced "technical limitations" — then the pattern reasserts itself and the $72K level becomes the sixth failed breakout.

The TheStreet Pro analysis noted that Bitcoin's sideways price action heading into the deadline masked "a shift away from bearish momentum." The Crypto Fear & Greed Index remains in "Extreme Fear" territory near 12 — a reading that historically precedes sharp reversals in either direction. The Morgan Stanley spot Bitcoin ETF launched on April 8, providing a potential new source of institutional demand. The next 48 hours will determine whether this rally sustains above $70,000 — a level that would represent a genuine break from the war-era trading range — or whether it joins the pattern at 6-for-6.

Sell-the-News Scoreboard — Now 5-for-5, Testing #6: March 13 ($72K → fade), March 23 ($71.2K → reversal), March 30 ($68.5K → gave back), April 1 ($69.2K → fell), Easter weekend ($69K → faded). April 8 ($72K → ???). The key difference: this is the first rally with a verifiable Hormuz commitment. The key similarity: Iran's 10-point demands remain unresolved and the ceasefire is only 2 weeks.


7. Gold, Dollar, and Market Reaction

Gold entered the ceasefire announcement at approximately $4,650 per ounce, having declined 0.6% on the session as traders positioned for a potential deal. Reuters reported spot gold at $4,654.99. Gold's muted reaction — compared to oil's 14% crash and Bitcoin's 4.5% surge — reflects the metal's dual role as both a geopolitical hedge and an inflation hedge. A ceasefire reduces the geopolitical premium but does nothing to resolve the inflation picture: the Fed still holds rates at 3.50–3.75%, the March NFP of +178K remains strong, and PCE inflation is projected to peak near 4%. Goldman Sachs' year-end target of $5,400 per ounce and some forecasts reaching $6,000 remain intact because the structural drivers — central bank buying, de-dollarization, and deficit concerns — are independent of the Iran war.

The US Dollar Index (DXY) was at approximately 100.18 heading into the announcement. A sustained ceasefire that normalizes oil prices would reduce inflation expectations and potentially give the Fed room to consider rate cuts later in 2026, which would weaken the dollar. Conversely, if the ceasefire collapses and oil re-spikes, the DXY could push above 101 on safe-haven demand. For Bitcoin, the dollar's direction over the next two weeks is as important as the ceasefire itself — a DXY below 99 historically correlates with BTC rallies of 3–5%.

Equity futures surged immediately after the ceasefire. ABC Australia reported that S&P 500 futures jumped in after-hours trading, while the ASX rallied at the open. Charles Schwab had noted earlier that stocks were "weighed on by lack of ceasefire progress" during the regular session, with the Dow down 0.18% and the S&P 500 up just 0.08%. The after-hours reversal could set up a significant gap-up when US markets open on Wednesday, April 9 — the first full trading day of the ceasefire era.


8. Market Snapshot — April 8, 2026

AssetPriceChangeSource
Bitcoin (BTC)~$72,000+4.5% post-ceasefireCryptopolitan
WTI Crude~$96.17−14.5%Trading Economics
Brent Crude~$96–100 (est.)−12% (est.)Yahoo Finance
Gold (GCJ26)~$4,650−0.6%Reuters
DXY~100.18+0.6%Yahoo Finance
S&P 500Closed mixed; futures surging+0.08% (reg.) → gap-up expectedAnadolu Agency
US Gas (Avg)$4.09/gal+37% since pre-war (lag)USA Today
Fed Funds Rate3.50–3.75%Hold (next: Apr 28–29)Fed
Crypto Liquidations$206M in 1 hourShorts crushedKuCoin

9. The Two-Week Clock: What to Watch Apr 8–22

The ceasefire creates the most consequential two-week window since the war began. Every data point during this period will either reinforce the peace narrative or erode it. The key catalysts are:

Days 1–3 (Apr 8–10): Hormuz Verification. The ceasefire's credibility hinges on whether commercial vessels begin transiting the Strait of Hormuz. Iran's commitment references "coordination with Iran's Armed Forces" and "technical limitations" — language that could mean anything from a fully open strait to a tightly controlled corridor for select ships. If major tanker traffic resumes within 72 hours, oil could fall further toward $85–90 and Bitcoin could sustain above $70K. If the strait remains effectively closed despite the ceasefire, markets will rapidly reprice toward the bear scenario.

April 15: Tax Deadline. The IRS filing deadline for 2025 federal income tax returns arrives one week into the ceasefire. For crypto holders who have been sitting on significant unrealized losses — Bitcoin traded as low as $65,000 in late March, down 48% from the $126K all-time high — the wash-sale exemption remains available. You can sell at a loss and immediately repurchase to harvest the tax benefit. Report on Form 8949 and Schedule D. If you need more time, file Form 4868 for an automatic extension to October 15. The ceasefire rally above $72K actually narrows the window for optimal loss harvesting — if you were planning to harvest losses at $66K, that opportunity may have passed.

April 22: Ceasefire Expiry. The two-week pause expires. If no permanent deal has been reached, Trump faces the same choice he has faced three times: escalate or extend. Iran's 10-point demands — sanctions relief, security guarantees, reparations — are not the kind of issues resolved in 14 days. The most probable outcome is either another extension or a resumption of hostilities with oil repricing instantly.

April 28–29: FOMC Meeting. The Federal Reserve's next policy meeting falls one week after the ceasefire expiry. If oil has normalized below $90, the Fed may signal future rate cuts — a catalyst for both Bitcoin and equities. If the ceasefire has collapsed and oil is back above $110, the Fed faces a stagflation scenario with no good options. This meeting could be the most consequential for markets since the war began.


10. Scenario Update: Revised Price Matrix Post-Ceasefire

ScenarioTriggerOil (Brent)BTC TargetProb.
BullCeasefire holds → permanent deal + Hormuz fully open$65–80$78–90K25%
BaseCeasefire holds partially, Hormuz limited, extended deadline$85–100$65–78K40%
BearCeasefire collapses within days, strikes resume$110–140$50–60K25%
Black SwanCeasefire violated → full infrastructure war + Gulf states join$150+$36–48K10%

The ceasefire has meaningfully shifted the probability distribution. The bull scenario rises from 15% to 25% — the first upward revision since the war began. This is the first time a verifiable Hormuz commitment exists, even if conditioned. The base scenario shifts from "grinding war" to "fragile ceasefire with partial Hormuz" at 40%. The bear scenario drops from 25% to 25% unchanged — because the 10-point gap between the parties means collapse remains a realistic possibility. The black swan holds at 10%.

The key insight: the ceasefire has compressed the range of near-term outcomes while increasing the magnitude of the eventual move. If the ceasefire leads to a permanent deal, Bitcoin's recovery timeline from its 48% drawdown could accelerate dramatically — from the Ecoinometrics model's 300-day estimate to potentially 150–200 days. If the ceasefire collapses, the market will overshoot to the downside precisely because hope was priced in. The next two weeks are not a time for complacency — they are a time for preparation.


11. Frequently Asked Questions

What are the terms of the Trump-Iran ceasefire?

President Trump announced on April 8 that the US would suspend bombing Iran for two weeks, conditional on Iran reopening the Strait of Hormuz. Iran's Foreign Minister Araghchi confirmed Tehran would cease defensive operations "if attacks against Iran are halted" and would allow "safe passage through the Strait of Hormuz via coordination with Iran's Armed Forces." Pakistan brokered the deal. Israel agreed to the pause. The ceasefire does not address Iran's 10-point demands for a permanent end to the war, sanctions relief, or reparations. It expires approximately April 22.

Why did oil crash 14% on the ceasefire news?

WTI crude plunged from approximately $116 to $96.17 because the ceasefire includes Iran's commitment to allow passage through the Strait of Hormuz, which carries roughly 20% of global oil supply and has been effectively closed since early March. The oil price had been elevated almost entirely by the Hormuz blockade premium. If the strait actually reopens to commercial traffic, the supply disruption that drove oil from $60 to $116 begins to unwind. However, the decline's sustainability depends entirely on whether ships actually begin transiting — Iran's "technical limitations" caveat leaves room for continued restrictions.

Will Bitcoin stay above $72,000?

The $72K surge represents the sixth ceasefire-driven rally since March 13, and the five previous rallies all reversed within 24–72 hours. What makes this one potentially different is the structural component: Iran's explicit commitment to Hormuz passage, the $206 million short squeeze, the Morgan Stanley ETF launch on April 8, and the $1 trillion market-wide inflow. What makes it potentially the same: the ceasefire is only two weeks long, Iran's 10-point demands are unresolved, and the Crypto Fear & Greed Index remains at "Extreme Fear." The 48-hour verdict will be critical — if Bitcoin holds above $70,000 by Thursday April 10, the pattern may have genuinely broken. If it fades below $69,000, the sell-the-news scoreboard moves to 6-for-6.

What is Iran's 10-point counter-plan?

Iran rejected the 45-day ceasefire proposal and submitted a 10-point plan through Pakistan demanding: guarantees against future attacks; lifting of all US sanctions; halt to Israeli strikes on Hezbollah in Lebanon; end to all regional conflicts involving US-allied forces; reconstruction support; safe transit rules in the Strait of Hormuz under Iranian coordination; and reparations for war damage. Iran's position is that it will only accept a permanent end to the war, not a temporary pause. The two-week ceasefire does not address any of these demands.

Should I tax-loss harvest my crypto before April 15?

The ceasefire rally to $72K has narrowed the window for tax-loss harvesting. If you purchased Bitcoin above $72K, you can still sell at a loss and immediately repurchase under the crypto wash-sale exemption. If you purchased between $66K and $72K during the March–April war period, the current rally may have pushed your position back to breakeven or profit. The IRS deadline is April 15 — 7 days away. The wash-sale rule does not apply to cryptocurrency, meaning you can sell and repurchase the same asset immediately. Report on Form 8949 and Schedule D. If you need more time, file Form 4868 for an automatic extension. Remember: the ceasefire could collapse, pushing prices back down — but you cannot harvest a loss you haven't realized. Make your decision based on your current cost basis, not future speculation.

Is the Iran war over?

No. A two-week ceasefire is not a peace deal. The war began on February 28, has lasted 40 days, has involved more than 13,000 US ground target strikes, the loss of three F-15E Strike Eagles and 16 MQ-9 drones, strikes on South Pars and dozens of other major Iranian facilities, Iranian attacks on Gulf infrastructure including Kuwait refineries and UAE data centers, and the effective closure of the Strait of Hormuz. The ceasefire pauses military operations but resolves none of the underlying issues: Iran's 10-point demands, the nuclear question, the sanctions regime, or the security architecture of the Persian Gulf. The ceasefire expires approximately April 22. Whether it leads to peace or to the war's most devastating phase depends on negotiations that have not yet begun in earnest.


Sources

Ceasefire & Diplomacy

Politico — Trump Announces Iran Ceasefire · CNN — Live Updates: Two-Week Ceasefire · NYT — 11th-Hour Cease-Fire Deal · NBC News — Live Updates · NPR — Two-Week Ceasefire · CBS News — Live Updates · AP — Trump's Ultimatum Looms · PBS — 3 Times Trump Delayed Deadlines

Iran's 10-Point Plan

NDTV — Iran 10-Point Plan · RBC Ukraine — Iran 10-Point Plan via Pakistan · Firstpost — Iran Rejects Pakistan Proposal · PBS — Iran Rejects 45-Day Ceasefire

Military Escalation

Times of Israel — IRGC Intel Chief Killed, South Pars Struck · DW — Intelligence Chief Killed · Tribune India — South Pars & Khademi · Air & Space Forces — Airman Rescue · NYT — Airman Rescue · Time — Mountain Rescue

Markets & Crypto

Cryptopolitan — Bitcoin Surges Past $72K · KuCoin — $206M Liquidations · News.com.au — $1 Trillion Market Windfall · Trading Economics — Crude Oil · ABC Australia — Markets Rally · Schwab — Stocks Retreat Before Deadline · Reuters/Yahoo — Investor Reactions


This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial, tax, or legal advice. Consult a qualified professional before making investment or tax decisions. Past performance does not guarantee future results.

Previous: Article #35 — Trump 48-Hour Ultimatum: Hormuz or Hell

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