Major cryptocurrencies moved higher after President Donald Trump signaled that the war with Iran could be nearing its end, helping reverse part of the risk-off pressure that had weighed on markets. Ether climbed back above the key $2,000 level, while Solana and XRP also posted strong gains as traders reacted to the prospect of reduced geopolitical stress and lower energy-market disruption. CoinDesk reported that the shift in tone from Washington helped spark a broader recovery across digital assets.
The rally was not limited to crypto. Broader markets also responded positively after Trump suggested the conflict was “very complete” and could wrap up soon. Oil prices fell sharply as traders started pricing in a lower probability of a prolonged supply shock, and that drop in crude helped improve sentiment across risk assets. Reuters reported that Brent and WTI both posted their steepest one-day declines since 2022 after the comments, which eased fears about the Strait of Hormuz and the wider economic fallout from the war.
Within crypto, the move favored large altcoins more than bitcoin. Barron’s reported that bitcoin rose as well, but ether, XRP and other majors outperformed on a percentage basis as traders rotated back into higher-beta parts of the market. That pattern fits the way crypto often behaves during relief rallies: bitcoin stabilizes first, then capital moves further out on the risk curve into assets like ETH, SOL and XRP once confidence improves.
Even so, the bounce did not erase the bigger uncertainty hanging over markets. Trump’s public messaging was mixed, with optimistic talk about a near-term end to the conflict sitting alongside warnings that the U.S. would keep up pressure if needed. Analysts quoted in broader market coverage noted that investors were responding mainly to the immediate de-escalation signal, not to a fully resolved geopolitical picture. That leaves the rally vulnerable if the conflict drags on or if energy markets tighten again.
The main takeaway is that crypto’s move higher was driven less by internal industry news than by a macro relief trade. As the market reassessed the odds of a prolonged Iran war, oil fell, sentiment improved, and altcoins snapped higher alongside other risk assets. For now, the rebound shows that digital assets remain tightly tied to global macro headlines, especially when geopolitical events are large enough to shift inflation expectations and overall risk appetite.





































































































