Bitcoin Surpasses $80,000 for the First Time Since January
Bitcoin broke above $80,000 on Monday, May 4, gaining 2.7% within three hours amid a rally in Asian equity markets. This marks the highest level since January 31, 2026.

1-week BTC/USD chart and 200 EMA (source: Bitstamp)
The rally began at 00:25 GMT, with price rising from $78,415 and breaking $80,000 within approximately 75 minutes. By 03:20 GMT, Bitcoin reached $80,617, according to Bitstamp.
At the same time, the MSCI AC Asia index rose 2.3% to 245.2 points, surpassing its previous high of 243.6 recorded on February 22.
Image caption: MSCI AC Asia index performance (source: investing.com)
Other crypto assets also gained:
- Ethereum +3.9%;
- XRP +2.4%;
- BNB +3.3% over the last 24 hours.
Institutional Demand and Regulatory Progress
The rally comes amid strengthening crypto industry positioning in Washington. Banking and crypto sector representatives reached a compromise on stablecoin yield rules within the CLARITY Act, with Senate consideration expected this month.
U.S. spot Bitcoin ETFs recorded net inflows on 11 of the last 14 trading days. On Friday, May 1, inflows reached $629.8 million, the strongest result in two weeks.
Nearly +30% from 2026 Lows
The move back to $80,000 represents a nearly 30% increase from the 2026 low (~$62,000) recorded on February 5.
MN Trading Capital founder Michael van de Poppe stated that Bitcoin does not need a new narrative to return to six-digit levels—the narrative forms naturally as price rises.
Attention is also focused on a potential U.S. strategic Bitcoin reserve. White House crypto advisor Patrick Witt recently hinted at a “major announcement” expected in the coming weeks.
Conclusion
Bitcoin’s recovery is driven by a combination of factors:
- steady institutional demand via ETFs;
- strong performance in Asian markets;
- ongoing regulatory progress in the U.S.
The upcoming announcement regarding a Bitcoin reserve could serve as an additional market catalyst.
AI Perspective
Historical patterns show that after $2.5 billion in ETF outflows in February 2026, steady inflows followed—mirroring March 2025 behavior. The current move to $80,000 confirms that institutional capital uses corrections as entry opportunities rather than exit signals.
However, Asian markets typically act as leading—not guaranteeing—indicators for U.S. markets. A more significant long-term driver may be Bitwise’s forecast of $426 billion in institutional inflows by the end of 2026.
The key question now: can Bitcoin hold above $80,000 once U.S. trading begins? That will likely set the tone for the entire week.
Українська
Русский
English

