Everyone watching Bitcoin this week is watching the Federal Reserve, while the more important tell may be sitting in the Treasury market, where the 10-year yield has compressed into one of its tightest ranges of the year just as a dense macro calendar opens.

Bitcoin’s recovery now rests on renewed institutional inflows and the assumption that liquidity conditions will not tighten again. If Treasuries choose a direction before that assumption is tested, the bond market could drive Bitcoin’s next move independently of any crypto-specific catalyst.

The 10-year yield spent Apr. 1 through Apr. 24 inside a band of 4.26% to 4.35%, closing at 4.31% on Apr. 24 per FRED data.

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The US 10-year Treasury yield held inside a 4.26%-4.35% band throughout April, its tightest Bollinger Band compression since Jan. 16.

Barron’s reported that the 10-year Bollinger Bands had narrowed to their tightest since Jan. 16, a classic coiled setup, and Reuters’ technical commentary placed the yield inside a larger symmetrical triangle that frequently precedes a sharp directional move.

On Apr. 27, the 10-year had ticked back toward 4.32%, with commodity prices and geopolitical risk feeding inflation expectations, adding inputs to yield direction that run well outside the Fed’s control.

A compressed yield range is a market storing energy before a decision.

The event cluster that could release that energy arrives in rapid succession. The FOMC meets Apr. 28-29, the BEA publishes the advance first quarter GDP estimate alongside March Personal Income and Outlays and the PCE deflator on Apr. 30, while the Employment Cost Index also lands that morning.

That is three macro readings in two days, enough to move Treasuries materially in either direction and enough to change the financial conditions backdrop that Bitcoin is currently relying on.

The key points

Bitcoin is where a Treasury repricing could first show up, as the crypto bid has rebuilt into an already fragile technical area.

CoinShares’ latest weekly report recorded $1.2 billion in crypto investment product inflows, the fourth consecutive positive week and the third straight above $1 billion, with $933 million flowing to Bitcoin, $192 million to Ethereum, and total assets under management climbing to $155 billion.

Farside Investors’ daily ETF data show that US spot Bitcoin ETFs posted nine straight positive sessions from Apr. 14 to Apr. 24, totaling over $2 billion in inflows.

The risk is that buyers return just before Treasuries choose a direction. CoinShares’ Mar. 23 note shows that weekly inflows slowed sharply and crypto products suffered $405 million in post-FOMC outflows once markets read that meeting as a hawkish pause.

The crypto bid at the time was genuine, and a macro repricing overtook it anyway.

That episode is directly relevant now because Bitcoin is approaching its $80,000 test with the same ingredient in place and the same unresolved variable of what the bond market decides to do next.

Bitcoin drew $1.2 billion in weekly institutional inflows across four consecutive positive weeks while pressing into a profit-taking zone at $80,100.

What on-chain data shows

Glassnode’s Apr. 22 report noted that Bitcoin reclaimed the True Market Mean at $78,100, with the short-term holder cost basis at $80,100 as the immediate resistance ceiling.

ETF flows turned modestly positive again, and spot demand showed early recovery, while the short-term holder realized profit spiked to $4.4 million per hour.

Glassnode also noted that Bitcoin’s own implied and realized volatility has compressed, leaving no premium in options pricing. Treasuries and Bitcoin markets are coiled at the same time, and the rates market is the one with more immediate cause to move first, given the macro calendar sitting directly in front of it.

Glassnode’s framework gives the battleground its coordinates, as sustained demand through $80,100 would confirm the institutional bid has enough depth to absorb profit-taking.

A failure there that pushes BTC back toward $78,100 would leave the True Market Mean as the last meaningful support before Glassnode’s $75,000 downside-acceleration area comes into play.

The bond market’s direction will determine which of those outcomes resolves.

Potential outcomes

The bull case flows from yields moving lower. If the 10-year closes below the April floor near 4.26%, and especially if it breaks through Reuters’ 4.23% technical pivot, Bitcoin gets the cleanest macro environment its current rally could ask for.

Falling yields reduce the discount-rate drag on risk assets, support the liquidity trade, and give the $1.2 billion weekly inflow pace a better chance of forcing BTC through the $80,100 resistance ceiling, with enough absorption to hold.

In that setup, the nine-session ETF streak and CoinShares’ four consecutive positive weeks would read as early evidence of a durable demand regime, and the rally’s test period would be over.

The October 2025 total AUM peak of $263 billion serves as the relevant benchmark for how far the institutional re-engagement has yet to go.

The bear case flows from yields breaking higher. If the 10-year pushes above 4.35% and starts moving toward Reuters’ 4.6% upside resolution area, financial conditions will tighten at exactly the moment Bitcoin is pressing into a zone where more than 54% of recent buyers are sitting on profit.

BTC stalls at $80,100, the profit-taking that Glassnode is already flagging at $4.4 million per hour accelerates, and sellers test the True Market Mean at $78,100.

If that level fails, Glassnode’s $75,000 downside-acceleration area comes into play, and markets would reframe the entire inflow streak as institutional capital that arrived before the bond market closed the door.

The March precedent makes that sequence concrete, as even $1 billion-plus weekly demand could not prevent $405 million in post-FOMC outflows once the macro read turned hawkish. The same mechanism is available again.

Scenario What happens in Treasuries BTC response Key levels What it means
Bull case The 10-year closes below the April floor near 4.26% and breaks through Reuters’ 4.23% technical pivot Bitcoin gets the cleanest macro backdrop, ETF and ETP inflows gain support, and BTC has a stronger chance of clearing and holding above $80,100 10-year: below 4.26%, then below 4.23% | BTC: clears $80,100 and stays above $78,100 Lower yields validate the institutional bid and turn the recent inflow streak into evidence of a more durable demand regime
Neutral / flow-dependent case The 10-year stays inside the April range between 4.26% and 4.35% Bitcoin remains dependent on continued ETF, ETP, and spot demand to absorb supply around resistance, with no clear macro tailwind or headwind 10-year: 4.26%–4.35% | BTC: holds between $78,100 and $80,100 Macro stays unresolved, so the rally lives or dies on whether institutional flows can keep doing the work by themselves
Bear case The 10-year breaks above 4.35% and starts moving toward Reuters’ 4.6% upside resolution area Financial conditions tighten as BTC presses into a profit-heavy zone, Bitcoin stalls at $80,100, sellers test $78,100, and $75,000 comes into play if support fails 10-year: above 4.35%, then toward 4.6% | BTC: fails at $80,100, loses $78,100, risks $75,000 Higher yields reprice liquidity, and the bond market turns Bitcoin’s inflow streak into another macro-driven failed rally

Bitcoin’s next move may originate in the Treasury market. The institutional bid has returned across enough channels to confirm a broad recovery in demand.

However, the bid has returned before the bond market has signaled if macro conditions will help or work against it.

If Treasuries fall, Bitcoin’s $80,000 test gets materially easier, and the institutional thesis gets its first real macro confirmation. If Treasuries jump, duration repricing becomes the deciding factor and the rally fails on macro grounds alone.

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