DCB
Daily Crypto Briefing - 2026-04-15
Crypto markets rallied on April 14 on a sharp risk-on snapback, with short covering accelerating as oil cooled and Wall Street signaled deeper institutional engagement via new bitcoin ETF filings.
DCB
Crypto markets rallied on April 14 on a sharp risk-on snapback, with short covering accelerating as oil cooled and Wall Street signaled deeper institutional engagement via new bitcoin ETF filings.
DCB
Crypto markets steadied after weekend risk-off as oil prices cooled, while U.S. policy signals and euro-area rate expectations kept macro-sensitive positioning in focus.
DCB
Crypto markets softened on April 12 as Middle East escalation triggered a risk-off move, while derivatives leverage stayed elevated and macro narratives refocused on the inflationary impulse from energy.
DCB
Crypto markets stayed largely range-bound on April 11 as geopolitical and inflation uncertainty kept risk appetite capped, even while on-chain signals hinted at waning seller pressure and Washington’s market-structure debate continued.
DCB
Bitcoin and majors stayed range-bound as traders waited for key inflation signals, while leverage quietly rebuilt beneath the surface and U.S. policy headlines turned more material.
General
Crypto, geopolitics and why decentralization matters Whenever geopolitical tensions rise, global financial markets usually react in a predictable way. Investors begin reducing exposure to volatile assets and shift capital into traditional safe-haven positions such as gold, U.S. Treasuries or the U.S. dollar. Uncertainty tends to trigger a flight
Strategy
One of the biggest misconceptions in crypto trading is the idea that traders have to choose between leverage trading and spot investing. In reality, both approaches serve completely different purposes, and when used correctly they can complement each other extremely well. At Blocksignal we look at the market through multiple
Data-driven crypto signals, market analysis, and education by Blocksignal, delivered with clear context, structure, and a risk-first approach.