Bitcoin traders entered April leaning bullish after a burst of seasonal strength and a softer Fed backdrop, but the setup was never as simple as one mystery calendar date. The cleaner reading is that relief around slower balance-sheet runoff met a fresh inflation test, leaving the rally vulnerable to the next official Fed signal.
TLDR Keypoints
- April seasonality and a gentler Fed stance helped traders frame Bitcoin as a bullish macro trade.
- The strongest verified Fed date was the release of the March meeting minutes, not a single all-explaining catalyst.
- Inflation data, policy language, and post-event price action mattered more than headline simplification.
Why Bitcoin’s April gains have traders leaning bullish
On March 25, 2025, Cointelegraph said CoinGlass data showed Bitcoin averaging more than 12.9% in April, and QCP Group wrote the same day that Q2, especially April, has historically been one of the best periods for risk assets.
That optimism still maps onto current positioning because the supplied market snapshot showed Bitcoin at $68,370, which keeps macro-sensitive traders focused on whether buyers will keep paying up ahead of the next policy signal.
BTC spot price$68,370
The same snapshot had BTC up 2.65% over 24 hours, the kind of short-term strength that can crowd momentum trades when a widely watched macro date is approaching.
BTC 24-hour change+2.65%
Trader positioning gets fragile when seasonality becomes consensus
The risk in a seasonal trade is that popular data can become consensus positioning. Because the 12.9% April average was already circulating, the bullish case depended on fresh confirmation rather than on seasonality alone, much as macro headlines have driven the setups in Bitcoin Price Rises After Trump Delays Iran Strikes and BTC Dominance Break May Decide Altcoin Rally or Crash.
The Fed calendar date that could flip the rally overnight
The verified Fed tailwind came from the March 19, 2025 FOMC statement, where officials kept the target range at 4.25%-4.50% and said the monthly Treasury runoff cap would drop from $25 billion to $5 billion starting in April while the agency MBS cap stayed at $35 billion.
The headline’s one-date framing is less clean than the evidence. The official FOMC calendar points first to the April 9, 2025 release of the March meeting minutes and then to the May 6-7, 2025 meeting, while the inflation shock traders actually traded into was the March 28, 2025 PCE release.
That BEA report showed headline PCE up 0.3% month over month and 2.5% year over year, with core PCE up 0.4% and 2.8%. Those readings mattered because a sticky core number could complicate the softer liquidity message from the March Fed statement.
Upside path if the minutes confirm the softer policy read
If the April 9 minutes reinforced the slower-runoff message from March 19, traders had a clear case for extending the move: easier balance-sheet policy plus seasonal strength. That matched Juan Pellicer’s view that the Fed’s recent easing of monetary tightening could support prices in the near term.
Downside path if inflation and Fed timing reprice together
According to a single reported framing, one Fed date could flip the rally overnight, but the official record suggests a chain reaction instead: hot 2.5% headline PCE and 2.8% core PCE, a less-dovish read of the April 9 minutes, and renewed caution around the May 6-7 meeting. That kind of momentum failure is also why broader risk rotations can spill into weaker segments, a pattern echoed by The Old Token Playbook Is Dead: Why Most Crypto Launches Failed in 2025.
What traders should watch after the Fed catalyst
After the Fed catalyst, traders needed a practical screen rather than a grand narrative.
- Price action: does BTC hold the breakout zone built after the seasonal bid and the latest spot rebound?
- Volatility: do candles stay orderly after the minutes release, or does macro repricing hit risk assets immediately?
- Sentiment: does the market keep favoring Bitcoin leadership, as in BTC Dominance Break May Decide Altcoin Rally or Crash, or rotate back to defense?
If Bitcoin could absorb the April 9 minutes and still carry strength toward the May 6-7 FOMC meeting, the April rally would look resilient rather than merely seasonal. If volatility spiked instead, the safer conclusion would be that traders had been cheering a real move but oversimplifying the macro calendar that could reverse it.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial or investment advice. Crypto markets are volatile, and readers should do their own research before making decisions.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial or investment advice. Cryptocurrency and digital asset markets carry significant risk. Always do your own research before making decisions.







