Iran war jitters attack once more, knocking investors out of risk assets and dragging the broader crypto market into the red. Bitcoin’s slide has kicked back in after a short-lived push above 70,000 dollars with BTC slipping about 2.3% into the high‑60,000s dollars.
Bitcoin: A Snapshot Of The Uncertainty In Numbers
For weeks, Bitcoin (BTC) has been struggling to hold above $70,000: on Monday it briefly pushed above 70,000 dollars, only to reverse and drop as much as 2.3% to 67,834 dollars in early European trading, before stabilizing around 68,100 dollars by 8:10 a.m. in London. This comes after a rejection near the $90k–$100k region in late 2025, lining up with US and Israel airstrikes on Iranian nuclear sites and fears around a possible closure of the Strait of Hormuz, which triggered classic risk‑off flows across crypto and other assets.
A Broader Sentiment
However concerning this may be for an asset known as the “digital gold”, this is not just a BTC issue. Ethereum, Solana and the rest of the large‑cap complex traded lower alongside it, confirming this as a broad risk‑off move. This seems to indicate that the risk of a prolonged war involving Iran is weighing on global risk appetite, and crypto appears to be trading firmly as a high‑beta risk asset. Investors continue to rotate into classic havens such as gold while selling crypto. This reinforces the idea that Bitcoin is still closely tied to broader risk sentiment during geopolitical unrest and not necessarily benefitting from it.
It should be noted that, as Bloomberg reports, the Iran situation also feeds into fears of higher oil prices and stickier inflation. This could keep interest rates elevated for longer and further pressure speculative assets like cryptocurrencies.
What Traders Are Watching For
Traders appear to be trading headline to headline for now. For short‑term holders who bought into strength above 70,000 dollars, every hawkish Fed comment or fresh Iran escalation keeps their entries underwater and raises the odds they’ll be forced to cut at a loss, especially if Bitcoin makes a clean move toward the 60,000 dollar “line in the sand.” For long‑term holders, however, sitting on older, deeply profitable coins, the same headlines are more an exercise in patience than survival. A deeper sweep into the low‑60,000s would hurt mark‑to‑market, but it is still well inside a multi‑year profit zone and historically has been where these players either sit tight or quietly add.
Once again, the numbers prove that the market is just as fragile as human’s fears.
Cover image from ChatGPT, BTCUSD chart from Tradingview.
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Iran war jitters attack once more, knocking investors out of risk assets and dragging the broader crypto market into the red. Bitcoin’s slide has kicked back in after a short-lived push above 70,000 dollars with BTC slipping about 2.3% into the high‑60,000s dollars.
Bitcoin: A Snapshot Of The Uncertainty In Numbers
For weeks, Bitcoin (BTC) has been struggling to hold above $70,000: on Monday it briefly pushed above 70,000 dollars, only to reverse and drop as much as 2.3% to 67,834 dollars in early European trading, before stabilizing around 68,100 dollars by 8:10 a.m. in London. This comes after a rejection near the $90k–$100k region in late 2025, lining up with US and Israel airstrikes on Iranian nuclear sites and fears around a possible closure of the Strait of Hormuz, which triggered classic risk‑off flows across crypto and other assets.
A Broader SentimentHowever concerning this may be for an asset known as the “digital gold”, this is not just a BTC issue. Ethereum, Solana and the rest of the large‑cap complex traded lower alongside it, confirming this as a broad risk‑off move. This seems to indicate that the risk of a prolonged war involving Iran is weighing on global risk appetite, and crypto appears to be trading firmly as a high‑beta risk asset. Investors continue to rotate into classic havens such as gold while selling crypto. This reinforces the idea that Bitcoin is still closely tied to broader risk sentiment during geopolitical unrest and not necessarily benefitting from it.
It should be noted that, as Bloomberg reports, the Iran situation also feeds into fears of higher oil prices and stickier inflation. This could keep interest rates elevated for longer and further pressure speculative assets like cryptocurrencies.
What Traders Are Watching For
Traders appear to be trading headline to headline for now. For short‑term holders who bought into strength above 70,000 dollars, every hawkish Fed comment or fresh Iran escalation keeps their entries underwater and raises the odds they’ll be forced to cut at a loss, especially if Bitcoin makes a clean move toward the 60,000 dollar “line in the sand.” For long‑term holders, however, sitting on older, deeply profitable coins, the same headlines are more an exercise in patience than survival. A deeper sweep into the low‑60,000s would hurt mark‑to‑market, but it is still well inside a multi‑year profit zone and historically has been where these players either sit tight or quietly add.
Once again, the numbers prove that the market is just as fragile as human’s fears.
Cover image from ChatGPT, BTCUSD chart from Tradingview.