
Crypto markets enter a holiday-shortened U.S. week with several macro events that could affect Bitcoin, Ethereum, and broader risk assets.
Summary
- U.S. markets close Monday for Memorial Day, leaving crypto to react first to fresh headlines.
- April PCE and Q1 GDP data land Thursday, giving traders new clues on Fed policy.
- Crypto.news reported Iran peace hopes have already moved Bitcoin, stocks, oil, and risk appetite this month.
The week begins with attention on possible U.S.-Iran agreement details. The Kobeissi Letter described the setup as a “short but busy week ahead,” with the deal update listed as the first major event.
Crypto traders are watching the talks because Iran headlines have already moved risk assets this year. Crypto.news reported that Bitcoin stabilized near $78,000 after President Donald Trump said U.S.-Iran talks were nearing completion, easing fears of longer Strait of Hormuz disruption.
A confirmed deal could lower oil-risk pressure and support Bitcoin, altcoins, and crypto-linked equities. A failed or delayed agreement could have the opposite effect, especially if energy prices rise and inflation fears return.
Meanwhile, Bitcoin (BTC) traded at around $76,700 at press time, showing a 2% increase in the past 24 hours and 2% decline in the past week. Ethereum (ETH) traded at around $2,100 (based on crypto.news data.)
Crypto.news also reported that U.S. stocks added about $400 billion in value at Friday’s open after peace rumors spread. The report called the move rapid risk repricing rather than a change in company fundamentals.
U.S. holiday may thin liquidity
U.S. equity and bond markets will close Monday for Memorial Day, with no major economic reports scheduled. Crypto markets will remain open, meaning Bitcoin and altcoins could react before traditional markets reopen Tuesday.
Holiday trading can produce sharper price moves because liquidity may be thinner. That matters if major Iran headlines arrive while U.S. desks are closed.
Tuesday brings May consumer confidence data. In April, the Conference Board index edged up to 92.8 from 92.2, but consumers stayed cautious as Iran war concerns affected financial expectations.
A stronger confidence reading may support risk appetite, helping crypto if investors view the economy as stable. A weaker number could weigh on altcoins if traders move away from higher-risk assets.
PCE inflation and GDP take center stage
Thursday is the main macro test. The Bureau of Economic Analysis will release April personal income and outlays data, which includes PCE inflation, at 8:30 a.m. The BEA will also publish the second estimate of Q1 2026 GDP and corporate profits at the same time.
PCE matters because it is closely watched by the Federal Reserve. Kiplinger reported that April PCE is expected to show inflation remains elevated, with BofA Securities forecasting headline PCE up 0.4% month over month and core PCE up 0.3%.
Hotter inflation could pressure crypto by lowering rate-cut hopes and supporting the U.S. dollar and Treasury yields. Softer inflation could help Bitcoin and Ethereum if traders price in easier policy later this year.
GDP will also shape risk appetite. A stronger reading could ease growth fears, but it may also support a higher-for-longer rate view. A weaker reading could raise recession concerns and pressure speculative tokens.
Meanwhile, April new home sales also land Thursday. Housing data matters because it reflects credit conditions, consumer demand, and rate pressure.
Strong housing numbers may suggest the economy is still absorbing higher borrowing costs. Weak numbers may add to growth concerns and reduce appetite for risk assets, including smaller crypto tokens.

