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Bitcoin (BTC) experienced a significant surge over the Easter weekend, with its price jumping by 9% and crossing the $91,000 threshold on April 22. This rally contrasted sharply with the stock market's modest rebound and mirrored gold's bullish behavior, which briefly touched a new all-time high of $3,500. The derivatives market also showed a bullish signal, with Bitcoin open interest (OI) soaring by 17% to reach a two-month high. This increase in
indicates a growing bullish sentiment among traders, as it measures the total capital invested in BTC derivatives.The market is currently in contango, a situation where futures prices are higher than the spot price. This typically occurs because investors anticipate rising prices and take advantage of leverage tools offered by exchanges, allowing them to gain greater exposure through futures than they could with direct spot purchases. This raises questions about who is driving the buying momentum and why.
One key metric for understanding investor composition is the
Bitcoin Premium Index, which measures the percentage price difference between Bitcoin on Coinbase Pro and Binance. Since Coinbase Pro caters predominantly to US-based institutional investors, while Binance has a broader global retail audience, this premium can indicate where the buying pressure is coming from. While the first half of April showed strong retail dominance, April 21–22 saw institutional demand kick in, with the Coinbase premium rising to 0.16%.Michael Saylor’s strategy could be among those buyers. On April 21, Saylor announced the acquisition of 6,556 more BTC for approximately $555.8 million at an average price of ~$84,785 per coin. This brings MicroStrategy’s total holdings to 538,200 BTC, worth approximately $48.4 billion at current prices. On a smaller scale, Japan-based Metaplanet also added 330 BTC to its treasury, pushing its total to 4,855 BTC.
Investors who favor traditional financial instruments over direct Bitcoin holding have also begun to renew their interest. On April 21, BTC ETFs recorded $381 million in inflows — a much-needed reversal after a prolonged period of heavy outflows. Since February, ETFs had suffered 33 days of net outflows versus just 21 days of inflows, with outflows strongly dominating in volume. The recent reversal suggests renewed confidence, particularly from TradFi-aligned investors.
Since tariff fears took grip of the market, institutional investors have kept Bitcoin and equities at arm’s length, but something shifted over the Easter weekend. Crypto analyst Rekt Capital noted that Bitcoin has decisively broken out of its multimonth downtrend. “The multimonth downtrend is over. And when a technical downtrend is broken, technical uptrends emerge.”
Another, more macroeconomic, factor may be the increasing tension between US President Donald Trump and Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell. Their growing rift, centered on concerns about inflationary pressure from tariffs and the Fed’s reluctance to cut rates, has cast a shadow over the US dollar. The US Dollar Index, which tracks the dollar’s value against a basket of currencies, has been in freefall since February, reaching lows last seen in 2022. Trump’s public pressure on Powell, and speculation that he might attempt to remove him or other Fed officials, is fueling anxiety over the Fed’s independence — a foundational pillar of the US financial system.
The potential consequences of a falling dollar for the global economy are difficult to predict, but one thing is clear: Bitcoin stands poised to be a major beneficiary. A decentralized, censorship-resistant money governed solely by code, with a fixed supply schedule and no central authority to manipulate its issuance. As confidence in traditional monetary systems continues to erode, Bitcoin’s narrative grows ever stronger.

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