April is ending with a bang — and not the good kind. Between a sliding Bitcoin price, an explosive Fed
decision, North Korea's most devastating hack month on record, and fresh institutional moves, today's
market is one of the most eventful days of the year. Here's everything you need to know.
■ Bitcoin Slides to $76,316 as April Closes in the Red
It has been a rough morning for crypto bulls. Bitcoin opened April 30 at $76,316.44 — down $844 from
yesterday's open and sitting approximately $17,880 below where it stood just one year ago. Crypto prices
have moved progressively lower each morning this week as traders continue pulling back from risk assets.
Ethereum is not faring much better. ETH opened the day at $2,252.45 — its lowest opening price since
April 13 — before edging up slightly to around $2,268.50 by mid-morning. The culprit? Reports that
President Trump is considering additional military action in Iran to reopen peace talks and the Strait of
Hormuz are rattling nerves across risk markets globally.
Bitcoin has now failed twice to break above the key $80,000 resistance level over the past week. The
Coinbase Premium Index has flipped negative, signaling weakening U.S. institutional demand, while the
30-day Treasury yield just crossed 5% — an ominous signal for risk assets. Analysts at CoinDesk noted
that over $524 million in long positions face liquidation if BTC drops below $76,080, making the next 24
hours critical for market structure.
■ Fed Holds Rates — But the Vote Tells the Real Story
Yesterday's Federal Reserve FOMC meeting delivered what markets expected — no rate cut — but the
internal drama was anything but routine. The Federal Open Market Committee voted to maintain the
federal funds rate between 3.50% and 3.75%, but the vote split 8-4, representing the highest level of
internal dissent since 1992.
Governor Stephen Miran voted in favor of a 25-basis-point cut, while Presidents Neel Kashkari, Lorie
Logan, and Beth Hammack pushed back hard against any dovish language being included in the policy
statement. The fractured vote signals serious disagreement inside the Fed about where the economy is
heading — and markets are paying close attention.
In a surprising twist, outgoing Chair Jerome Powell announced he will remain on the Board of
Governors after his chairmanship expires on May 15, rather than departing entirely. His continued
presence on the board is expected to create friction for incoming Chair Kevin Warsh, who is widely seen
as more hawkish on inflation.
■ North Korea Just Had Its Most Devastating Month in Crypto History
In what blockchain intelligence firm TRM Labs is calling an unprecedented security crisis, North Korean
state-backed hackers have stolen $577 million in cryptocurrency across just two attacks in April
2026 — representing a staggering 76% of all global crypto hack losses this year. Their cumulative theft
since 2017 has now crossed $6 billion.
The two attacks breaking records this month:
• Drift Protocol (April 1) — $285 million: North Korean operatives spent three weeks of on-chain
preparation and months of targeted social engineering — including in-person meetings with Drift
employees — before exploiting a Solana durable nonce feature to drain the protocol in 31
transactions executed in just 12 minutes.
• KelpDAO Bridge Exploit (April 18) — $292 million: Attackers compromised two internal RPC
nodes, then DDoS'd external nodes to force a single-verifier LayerZero bridge to rely on poisoned
data, approving a fraudulent cross-chain message. The fallout triggered $10 billion in Aave outflows
and sent shockwaves through 20+ connected protocols.
THORChain has emerged as North Korea's preferred money laundering exit ramp, converting hundreds of
millions in stolen ETH to Bitcoin with no operator intervention. April 2026 is now officially the worst month
for crypto hacks since the $1.4 billion Bybit breach in February 2025.
■■ MARA Holdings Makes a $1.5 Billion Power Play
Bitcoin mining giant MARA Holdings is making one of the boldest moves in its history: a $1.5 billion
acquisition of Long Ridge Energy, an Ohio-based facility that includes a 505 MW gas plant and 1,600
acres of land with over 1 GW of future power capacity. MARA plans to use the site for both Bitcoin mining
expansion and AI data center infrastructure — a dual-purpose bet on the convergence of crypto and
artificial intelligence.
Separately, Meta has quietly rolled out stablecoin payments across its platforms, four years after the
collapse of its controversial Libra project. The move signals that big tech's appetite for crypto infrastructure
is far from dead — and could accelerate mainstream adoption of stablecoin payments at scale.
On the ETF front, April ends on a surprisingly positive institutional note overall: Bitcoin ETFs recorded
$2.44 billion in net inflows for the full month of April, signaling that despite this week's price
weakness, institutional demand for Bitcoin exposure remains structurally strong.
■ What to Watch Into the Weekend
Event Why It Matters
BTC $76,080 Support US Q1 GDP Release Strategic Bitcoin Reserve Iran/Strait of Hormuz HYPE Token Unlock $524M in longs liquidate if this level breaks — critical for market structure
A weak print could fuel recession fears and push crypto lower
White House expected to formalize the reserve announcement soon
Geopolitical escalation is suppressing risk appetite across all markets
4.16% supply unlock (~$409M) could create fresh selling pressure
■ Bottom Line
April 2026 will be remembered as one of the most consequential months in crypto's history — for better
and worse. Regulatory clarity from the SEC's ACT Strategy, $2.44 billion in ETF inflows, and institutional
plays like MARA's energy acquisition paint a bullish long-term picture. But North Korea's record-shattering
$577 million hack spree, a fractured Fed, geopolitical tension in the Middle East, and a BTC price sitting
on a knife's edge at $76K are keeping the bulls firmly in check.
The next 48 hours are crucial. Hold the $76,080 support level and sentiment could stabilize
heading into May. Lose it — and the $524 million liquidation cascade could be the most dramatic end to a crypto month we've seen all year.