Key Takeaways
- Bitcoin briefly surged to $71,200 after President Trump announced a five-day pause on strikes against Iran, pulling it further from the critical $65,000 liquidation zone.
- Over $400 million in crypto positions were liquidated within hours as markets swung sharply on conflicting headlines between Washington and Tehran.
- With BTC now hovering around $70,000, the $3 billion in long positions clustered below $65,000 remains a live threat as geopolitical uncertainty persists.
Bitcoin caught a brief but significant boost on Monday after U.S. President Donald Trump announced a five-day pause on military strikes targeting Iran’s energy infrastructure, describing the move as the result of “very good and productive” talks aimed at a complete resolution of hostilities. The announcement sent Bitcoin surging from $67,500 to above $71,200 within hours, temporarily widening the distance between BTC’s price and a critical $65,000 liquidation zone.
The move followed a weekend of geopolitical threats and a subsequent de-escalation, with broader asset classes and benchmark indices reacting together. For Bitcoin bulls sitting on leveraged positions, the rally offered a moment of relief.
Relief, Then Reversal
The rally did not hold. Iran’s Foreign Ministry denied any communication had taken place with the United States, framing the five-day suspension as a retreat rather than diplomacy. Bitcoin, shown at $70,464 in one snapshot, retreated to levels seen in early February after multiple failed attempts to convincingly surpass $75,000. The $400 million in liquidations indicates positions were both sizable and tightly clustered around optimistic breakouts toward $75,000. Bitcoin settled back around $70,000, although still above $65,000, but not a comfortable price level. Investors also weighed the potential impact on other risk assets.
The $3 Billion Risk Remains
Before Monday’s geopolitical headlines, Coinglass data had already flagged a dangerous build-up of over $3 billion in long positions concentrated below the $65,000 level across Binance, OKX, and Bybit. That exposure has not disappeared. Bitcoin has traded between $70,533 and $64,700 since early February, forming a tight range. Heavy liquidation clusters remain around $70,500 on the upside and $65,000 on the downside.
Analysts describe such concentrations as “liquidation magnets,” that is, price levels where a large volume of forced closures can compound selling pressure once breached. The October 10 event, which saw $19 billion wiped from the crypto market in a single day, followed a near-identical pattern of heavy leveraged build-up before a key level broke.
What Comes Next
As traders watch whether Bitcoin can reclaim $70,000 and fill the CME gap, one open question persists: will current liquidity and geopolitical developments allow BTC to return to breakout attempts near $75,000, or has this episode reset expectations for a lower, more volatile trading band?
For now, the Trump ceasefire announcement has bought the market some breathing room. But with Iran denying any talks and a break above $70,000 still needed to signal renewed bullish momentum toward $75,000.
🚨 ALERT: Over $3 billion in long positions risk liquidation if $BTC drops below $65,000. pic.twitter.com/EaiPNwDt1E






