Bitcoin Navigates a Pivotal April Amid Jobs Data and Regulatory Moves
The cryptocurrency market, with Bitcoin at its forefront, faces an unusually consequential start to April. Two distinct events—the latest U.S. employment report and potential legislative progress on the CLARITY Act—threaten to disrupt the asset’s prolonged period of consolidation.
A Singular Focus on Employment Data
The release of the non-farm payrolls report on Good Friday created a unique trading environment. With major traditional exchanges like the NYSE and Nasdaq closed, along with bond markets, Bitcoin stood as one of the few highly liquid markets able to react to the data in real time. The report showed the U.S. economy added 178,000 jobs in March, a figure that comfortably exceeded analyst forecasts. Bitcoin’s initial response was muted, with its price holding near the $67,000 level.
The crypto market will digest this data in isolation until equity trading resumes on April 6. Should the jobs number meaningfully alter interest rate expectations, the absence of other active markets removes a typical buffer, potentially amplifying volatility for digital assets.
Macroeconomic Pressures: Oil and Inflation
Broader macroeconomic concerns continue to exert pressure. The ongoing conflict involving Iran has fueled a sustained rally in oil prices. Since the conflict’s onset, both Brent Crude and U.S. West Texas Intermediate have gained approximately 60 percent. Analysts have revised their average 2026 Brent price forecast to $82.85 per barrel, up sharply from $63.85 as recently as February. The resulting inflation fears are a headwind for risk-sensitive investments, a category that includes Bitcoin.
This context makes March’s modest performance notable. After five consecutive months of losses that saw the total crypto market capitalization decline by roughly $1.57 trillion, March closed with a 1.8 percent gain. While not indicative of a decisive trend reversal, it marks the first positive monthly close since September.
Structural Shifts: ETF Flows and Regulatory Clarity
Signs of renewed institutional interest are emerging. U.S. spot Bitcoin exchange-traded funds (ETFs) recorded net inflows of $1.32 billion in March. This represents a significant turnaround from the net outflows of approximately $500 million witnessed across the entire first quarter. Notably, asset manager BlackRock purchased around $98 million worth of Bitcoin for its iShares Bitcoin Trust on March 31 alone.
Concurrently, regulatory developments are coming into sharper focus. Paul Grewal, Chief Legal Officer at Coinbase, stated on April 1 that significant progress on the CLARITY Act was anticipated within 48 hours. The legislation, which would establish a first-ever federal regulatory framework for digital assets for institutional investors, passed the House of Representatives with a 294 to 134 vote. Its progress in the Senate, however, is stalled due to a dispute over stablecoin regulations. A markup in the Senate Banking Committee is scheduled for the latter half of April, following the Easter recess ending on April 13. According to prediction market Polymarket, the probability of the bill being signed into law this year currently stands at 72 percent, up from 60 percent the prior week. Should the legislation fail, one of the most significant remaining regulatory catalysts for the U.S. crypto market would likely be delayed until 2027.