Bitcoin Bulls Set Sights on $125,000 as US-Iran Peace Talks Fuel Market Optimism

Bitcoin was trading at approximately $74,700 during Asian morning hours on Friday, experiencing a minor 0.4% decline over 24 hours but still maintaining a 3.5% weekly gain, as the 10-day global equities rally paused ahead of the impending US-Iran ceasefire deadline. Meanwhile, Ether retreated 1.4% to $2,327 but continued to lead the majors with a 6% weekly gain, extending its outperformance from earlier in the week. Other notable movements included XRP holding steady at $1.43 with a 6.4% weekly increase, Solana rising 2.7% to $87.67, BNB adding 0.7% to $629.89, and Dogecoin surging 5.6% on the week to $0.0976. The MSCI All Country World Index reached a record high on Thursday before slipping 0.1% in Asia, while the S&P 500 also achieved an all-time high. However, Brent crude fell 1.2% to $98.20 following President Donald Trump's statement that a permanent Iran ceasefire was 'looking very good,' despite lacking evidence. Trump claimed that Tehran had agreed to abandon its nuclear ambitions, surrender nuclear materials, and reopen the Strait of Hormuz as part of the deal, although Iran has not confirmed these concessions. A separate 10-day ceasefire between Israel and Lebanon was announced on Thursday, with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu confirming the truce in a video message. Markets are reacting to the headlines as if a deal is imminent, resulting in equities shedding most of their war premium while crude remains near $98 and the Strait of Hormuz remains effectively closed. Nevertheless, some traders are focused on the underlying setup driving the flat bitcoin price action. Bitcoin perpetual funding rates have turned deeply negative in recent sessions, reaching levels last seen in 2023. Funding rates represent the periodic payments exchanged between perpetual futures traders to keep contract prices aligned with spot prices. When funding rates become negative, it indicates that shorts are paying longs, which only occurs when the market is heavily positioned against the price. According to Daniel Reis-Faria, CEO of ZeroStack, 'Funding rates this negative signify that the market is heavily short. If Bitcoin continues to rise despite this, many of those positions could be liquidated, and the move can accelerate quickly.' Reis-Faria predicts that bitcoin could reach $125,000 within the next 30 to 60 days if the short base gets squeezed out. On the other hand, on-chain analyst CryptoVizArt notes that bitcoin's 'True Market Mean,' a metric estimating the average cost basis of active investors by filtering out lost and dormant coins, suggests that the average active holder is currently underwater. Historically, meaningful stretches below the True Market Mean have coincided with bitcoin's worst periods, including the 2018-19 bear market and the 2022-23 unwind after the Luna and FTX collapses. These two perspectives do not necessarily conflict, as a short squeeze from negative funding and a structural drawdown from underwater holders can both be true, with the former potentially triggering the kind of outsized rally that ultimately gets sold into by the latter. The dominant scenario likely depends on whether the US-Iran ceasefire extension holds past next week.