April 13, 2026 ChainGPT

Fidelity's Timmer: Bitcoin May Be Forming a $65K Base as 'Paper Hands' Exit

Fidelity's Timmer: Bitcoin May Be Forming a $65K Base as 'Paper Hands' Exit
Bitcoin may be carving out a base around $65,000 as “paper hands” get flushed from the market, says Jurrien Timmer, director of global macro at Fidelity Investments — and that matters for crypto traders watching macro signals. Timmer describes the current market as “another wild ride,” with a parade of strange headlines each week. Still, he told CoinDesk he’s relatively constructive: markets appear to be “pricing in some form of resolution” to the Iran-related tensions sooner rather than later. Why that matters for crypto and markets - Oil briefly surged above $100 a barrel after the flare-up, but the futures curve is in pronounced backwardation — contracts further out trade roughly $40 below the front month. That structure suggests the market sees the supply disruption as short-lived rather than permanent. - The S&P 500, which earlier was down about 9%, recovered to a drawdown nearer 1%, and credit spreads have stayed contained — signs that systemic stress is limited. - Gold and Treasuries have been moving together more than usual. Timmer attributes that to countries constrained in moving energy through the Strait of Hormuz selling ultra-liquid assets (gold and U.S. Treasuries) to raise cash, creating unusual correlations. A direct hit to crypto: the ceasefire headline Crypto markets got a quick lift after U.S. President Donald Trump announced a two-week ceasefire with Iran, which sent oil tumbling more than 17% intraday and helped equities rally. WTI later rebounded to trade around $100. Bitcoin acting more like gold — and vice versa Timmer says bitcoin is behaving increasingly like gold, while gold sometimes trades with bitcoin-like characteristics. After bitcoin hit roughly $126,000 in October, fast-moving capital rotated out of crypto and into gold (visible in ETF flows). With bitcoin now down about 50–60% from that peak, Timmer argues most of the quick sellers — the “paper hands” — have been washed out. That leaves selling pressure largely absorbed and makes BTC technically more interesting. Key crypto takeaways from Timmer - Support: Timmer sees the $65,000 level as solid support and says bitcoin could be forming a base there — though a fresh catalyst will likely be needed to fuel the next leg up. - Positioning: With fewer weak hands left, the market is less likely to cascade lower on headline shocks. - Relative vulnerability: Gold, after a big run, may be more vulnerable to a pullback even as Timmer remains bullish on both gold and bitcoin. Macro context that matters to crypto investors - Timmer argues markets were already in a constructive backdrop before the Iran news: policy improvements (including a Supreme Court rollback of tariffs) and a lack of an AI-driven bubble helped. - Investor skepticism on AI and software valuations is healthy, he says — it keeps markets from overheating. - Risks remain: a worst-case escalation in the Middle East targeting Gulf energy infrastructure could be destabilizing. About 20% of global oil flows through the Strait of Hormuz; a prolonged disruption could trigger a stagflationary shock (higher inflation with weak growth). - Other watch-items: concentration risk in the “Magnificent Seven” tech stocks and interest-rate risk. The 10-year Treasury yield is approaching 4.5% and could head toward 5% — rising yields would be a key signal for markets. A trader’s mentality in choppy times Timmer frames volatility as an opportunity: disciplined investors who act as liquidity providers — rebalancing and buying when others panic — become price makers rather than takers. Fidelity’s approach is to lean into volatility and provide liquidity during stress, he says. His final point: hiding on the sidelines out of fear isn’t a strategy — diversified portfolios and active engagement during dislocations can deliver the best outcomes. Price snapshot At publication Bitcoin was trading in the low $70,000s. Timmer’s watchlist: $65,000 support, ETF flows, oil-market signals (backwardation), Treasury yields, and geopolitical headlines as the likely drivers of the next move. Read more AI-generated news on: undefined/news