Key Takeaways
- On May 19, bitcoin rebounded above $77,000 following Donald Trumpโs delayed military action in Iran.
- Bitfinex analysts noted that weak demand for spot ETFs has left crypto liquidity at its worst since February.
- Future recovery depends on fresh capital to exceed the current $2.8 billion in onchain flows.
Geopolitical Relief
Bitcoin climbed back above $77,000 on the morning of May 19, rebounding from a lateโMonday dip to $76,000. The recovery remained uneven, with the cryptocurrency whipsawing through sharp volatility before stabilizing near $77,200 by 3:50 a.m. EST.
The primary catalyst for the modest rebound appeared to be an announcement by U.S. President Donald Trump postponing the resumption of military action against Iran. The looming threat of all-out war had rattled global markets, driving West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude oil past $111 per barrel.
While previous social media declarations from the President regarding Iran triggered sharp market turnarounds, institutional reaction to this latest โTACOโ momentum remains decidedly mixed. In Asia, the Nikkei and Hang Seng indices remained largely flat, while South Koreaโs Kospi plunged nearly 250 points (3.25%). In Europe, the CAC and FTSE saw modest opening gains of under 1%, while the DAX led the region with a 1.3% bounce.
Despite regaining $1,000 in intraday trading, bitcoinโs recent bleeding has effectively erased all of its May gains. Analysts at Bitfinex warn that the breach below the critical $78,000 threshold exposes severe structural rot beneath the surface of the crypto market. Specifically, the two primary engines of marginal demandโspot ETFs and leveraged yield vehiclesโare sputtering simultaneously, just as macroeconomic headwinds intensify.
โThis is making Bitcoin highly vulnerable to exogenous shocks and a potential โhigher-for-longerโ interest rate regime at a time when liquidity conditions have deteriorated to their worst levels since February,โ Bitfinex analysts warned.
According to a new Bitfinex report, on-chain capital flows tell a sobering story. Current flows sit at a meager $2.8 billionโa stark contrast to the $10 billion typically required to sustain a durable breakout. Without the aggressive institutional conviction that propelled previous bull cycles, analysts warn that the shelf life of this current recovery now hinges almost entirely on whether fresh, net capital can be injected into the market in the coming days.