The latest crypto signal on Monday morning came not from a chart but from a diplomatic report: Iran is considering abandoning uranium enrichment as a concession to end the war, a development that lifted bitcoin off its worst weekend levels and back toward $71,085 as markets processed what a genuine nuclear deal could mean for oil prices and risk assets.
Summary
- Reuters and CNN live updates reported on Monday that Iranian officials are internally debating whether to offer the abandonment of uranium enrichment as a negotiating concession, which would address the core US demand that ended the Islamabad talks; the reports are unconfirmed and Iran has not made any official statement on the matter.
- Bitcoin moved from its post-Islamabad lows near $70,600 back toward $71,085 on the Monday morning reports, echoing the pattern from April 7 when the original ceasefire announcement sent BTC from $68,500 to $72,700 in under 12 hours and liquidated $427 million in short positions.
- The original ceasefire rally provides the template for what a genuine nuclear deal could produce: oil crashed 16 percent on that announcement, rate cut expectations immediately repriced higher, and bitcoin surged 5 percent within hours; a full peace deal with nuclear concessions could be a larger catalyst than the temporary ceasefire was.
Adam Saville Brown, Head of Commercial at Tesseract Group, described the pattern clearly in an earlier note: “When Iran closed the Strait of Hormuz, Bitcoin dropped into the low $60s alongside everything else.” His observation captures what the nuclear concession reports are reversing, at least provisionally: the assumption that the war has no near-term diplomatic exit. As CNN’s live updates noted, the blockade order went live Monday even as these reports circulated, creating a split signal for markets: military escalation on one track, potential diplomatic breakthrough on another.
The uranium enrichment question was the specific sticking point that ended the Islamabad talks. Trump said Iran refused to commit to giving up its nuclear program, calling it the only issue that “really mattered.”
A ceasefire paused the conflict. A nuclear deal would end it. Those are structurally different outcomes for markets. A ceasefire removes near-term escalation risk but leaves the underlying dispute unresolved, which is why bitcoin stayed range-bound between $68,000 and $75,000 even after the April 7 announcement. A deal that includes Iranian abandonment of uranium enrichment would remove the fundamental driver of the conflict and allow for a genuine reopening of the Strait of Hormuz, an oil price collapse, and a sustained shift in inflation expectations that the Fed could act on.
What Would Have to Happen for a Deal to Actually Close
The reports remain unconfirmed and Iran has made no public statement. Internally, the debate over nuclear concessions is politically explosive in Tehran, where hardliners have consistently blocked any deal that touches the enrichment program. The Islamabad talks ended in part because Iran’s negotiators were unwilling to commit to positions that required domestic political backing they do not yet have. Any movement toward a genuine nuclear concession would require visible signals from Iranian leadership, not anonymous sourcing.
What the Market Is Watching and What Crypto.news Has Tracked
As crypto.news has reported, bitcoin’s sensitivity to every diplomatic signal in the Iran conflict has been one of the defining market dynamics of 2026, with the asset tracking geopolitical headlines more closely than any on-chain metric. As crypto.news has noted, the sell-off since the Islamabad collapse has been driven more by macro fear than by structural bitcoin weakness, meaning any genuine de-escalation signal could produce a fast and sharp reversal.
Source: https://crypto.news/latest-crypto-iran-nuclear-talks-lift-bitcoin-monday/








